274 
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY 
[Vol. 11 
Sacramento, Calif., temporarily to Alhambra, Calif., for work on coccinellids; Messrs. 
Edmonston and Hofer, temporarily from Colorado Springs, Col., to Tuscon, Ariz., 
for work on insects destructive to Mesquite cordwood; F. B. Milliken, Wichita, Kan., 
to New Orleans, La., mill and grain storage insects; D. E. Fink, Norfolk, Va., to 
Riverton, N. J., in charge of a new field station for work on truck crop insects; J. D. 
Smith, southern field crop insects, Valdosta, Ga., to deciduous fruit insects, Washing¬ 
ton, D. C.; T. C. Barber, Federal Horticultural Board, to southern field crop insects, 
Audubon Park, New Orleans, La.; Charles E. Smith, Muscatine, Iowa, temporarily 
to College Station, Tex.; Marion R. Smith, Plymouth, Ind., temporarily to Baton 
Rouge, La.; F. R. Cole, Hood River, to Corvallis, Ore.; P. R. Erbaugh, Illinois, to 
Michigan and Indiana. 
The following appointments have been made in the Bureau of Entomology: J. H. 
Wagner of Colorado, special field agent for apicultural work in Montana, northern 
Idaho, Washington and Oregon; David Running of Michigan, special field work for 
apicultural extension work in New York state for the winter season; W. J. Price,' 
formerly of the Virginia Crop Pest Commission, special field agent under the Food 
Production Act, to take up extension work with deciduous fruit insects in Virginia, 
with headquarters at Blacksburg; Robert M. Fulton, a graduate of the Washington 
State College, special field agent under the Food Production Act for work in deciduous 
fruit insect control in Washington, with headquarters at Pullman; R. C. Pickett of 
Wisconsin, for work with truck crop insects, College Station, Tex.; C. H. Gable, 
formerly commissioner of agriculture on the Island of Madeira, specialist on alfalfa 
insect investigations, Tempe, Ariz.; H. B. Parks, for extension work in cereal and 
forage crop insects, Texas; A. H. Sherwood, extension work, grasshopper control, 
South Dakota; H. L. Seamans, extension work in Montana; R. E. Snodgrass, assigned 
to cereal and forage crop insects; J. R. Horton has been placed in charge of the lab¬ 
oratory at Wellington, Kan.; Rollin La Follette, extension work with citrus fruit 
insects in California; William T. Ham, special field agent in extension work in Wash¬ 
ington and Oregon; R. L. Strand, special field agent in control of cereal and forage 
crops insects, Montana; F. J. Rimoldi, deciduous fruit insects, and Quincy S. Lowry 
and George Codding, truck crop insects, extension work in Massachusetts, Rhode 
Island and Connecticut; W. H. Foster of Colorado, for apicultural work in Montana, 
Washington and Oregon. 
Mailed April 19, 1918. 
