100 
No. 
No 
No. 
No. 
See 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
78. June 25. Wilson farm, near Greenup. From conta¬ 
gion box No. 54. 
79. July 1. Jackson farm, near Greenville. From conta¬ 
gion box No. 54. 
80. June 20. Filson farm, Xenia. From contagion box 
No. 54. 
Spontaneous Outbreak of Muscardine. 
76. October 6. Hurd farm, near Odin. 
also No. 53, June 5; No. 55, June 7 and June 19; No. 57, 
concluding discussion; No. 60, June 19; Nos. 63-67, etc. 
Effect of Moisture on Chinch-bugs. 
72. June 1. Bugs confined in saturated air. 
Experiments with Barriers and Traps. 
81. July 10. University farm, furrow experiment. 
82. July 11. University farm, furrow and post-hole exper¬ 
iment. 
July 12. University farm, furrow and post-hole exper¬ 
iment. 
84. July 12. University farm, coal-tar and post-hole ex¬ 
periment. 
85. July 13. University farm, coal-tar and post-hole ex¬ 
periment. 
86.. July 10. University farm, coal-tar and post-hole ex¬ 
periment. 
87. June 27. Bartley farm, near Edgewood, furrow exper¬ 
iment. 
88. June 28. Smith farm, near Farina, furrow and log 
experiment. 
89. June 15. Filson farmer, near Xenia, furrow, post-hole, 
and kerosene emulsion experiment. 
90. June 23. Mayo farm, near Falmouth, furrow experi¬ 
ment. 
91. June 25. Wilson farm, near Greenup, furrow and log 
experiment. 
OUTLINE OF EXPERIMENTS WITH CHINCH-BUG MUSCARDINE FUNGUS 
(Sporotrichum globuliferum , Speg.) Nos. 1-80.* 
April 21 to October 10, 1894. 
No. 1. April 21. Agar culture, from dead insect larva. 
No. 2. May 7. Neutral corn-meal culture in fruit-jars. 
No. 64. August 6. Field experiment, Bartley farm. (See 
also under 68.) 
' * 
* The subordination and dependence of these experiments, one upon another, is indicated by 
the indentation of the items on this list. For example, all the material for the first fifty-two num¬ 
bers was derived, directly or indirectly, from the dead insect larva referred to under No. 1; experi¬ 
ments 64, 65, etc., dow T n to 75, were begun with Sporotrichum grown as stated under No. 2; the 
cabbage worms mentioned under Nos. 15 and 16 were infected from the acid culture No. 14, itself 
the third remove from the dead insect—and so on through the list. The numbers in this outline 
correspond, of course, to those used in the full description of experiments next following. It 
should be noted, however, that No. 72 and the barrier experiments, Vos. 81 to 91, are not represented 
in this list. 
