6 
2. Recent Work of the Federal Horticultural Board. C. L. Marlatt. 
3. Horticultural Inspection Methods in California. Lee A. Strong. 
4. The Fight Against the Gipsy Moth in New Jersey. T. J. Headlee, 
New Brunswick, N. J. 
5. Status of Hydrocyanic Acid Gas Treatment of Nursery Stock. 
J. J. Davis, LaFayette, Ind. 
6. Important Foreign Insect Pests Collected on Imported Nursery 
Stock in 1923. E. R. Sasscer. 
7. American Plant Production under Quarantine 37. R. Kent 
Beattie, Washington, D. C. 
Reports of Committees. 
Selection of Officers. 
Adjournment. 
Program 
American Association of Economic Entomolggists 
Monday morning , December ji, io a. m.; Chemistry Auditorium. 
Report of the Secretary. 
Report of Subscription Agent, by C. W. Collins, Melrose Highlands, 
Mass. 
Report of the Executive Committee, by President A. G. Ruggles. 
Report of the Delegate Appointed to Attend the International Confer¬ 
ence of Phytopathology and Economic Entomology at Wageningen, 
Holland, by L. O. Howard, Washington, D. C. 
Report of the Representative to the National Research Council, by 
George A. Dean, Manhattan, Kansas. 
Report of the Committee on Policy, by P. J. Parrott, Geneva, N. Y. 
Report of the Trustees of the Crop Protection Institute, by W. C. 
O’Kane, Durham, N. H. 
Report of the Representatives on the Council of the Union of American 
Biological Societies, by A. L. Quaintance, Washington, D. C. 
Report of the Committee on Nomenclature, by Edith M. Patch, Orono, 
Me. 
Report of the Committee on Index to Economic Entomology, by E. P. 
Felt, Albany, N. Y. 
