Historic, arcliived document Do not assume content reflects current scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. [Bulletins 164 to 175 constitute the Report for 1909. In binding, pages i-xii at the end of this bulletin should be detached and placed before Bul- letin 164, which begins with page i] Maine Agriciiltiiral Immi Station BULLETIN No. 175. DECEMBER, 1909. FINANCES, METEOROLOGY, INDEX. CONTEXTS. PAGE ^Meteorological Observations 329 Report of Treasurer .' 332 334 CoHeded set. MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION ORONO, MAINE. THE STATION COUNCIL PRESIDENT GEORGE E. FELLOWS DIRECTOR CHARLES D. WOODS JOHN A. ROBERTS, Norway . CHARLES L. JONES, Corinna SAMUEL W. GOULD, Skowhegan . AUGUSTUS W. OILMAN, Foxcroft EUGENE H. LIBBY, Auburn CHARLES S. POPE, Manchester RUTILLUS ALDEN, Winthrop President Secretary I Committee of j Board of Trustees Commissioner of Agriculture State Grange State Pomological Society State Dairymen's Association A.ND THE HEADS AND ASSOCIATES OF STATION DEPARTMENTS THE STATION STAFF. f CHARLES D. WOODS, Sc. D . . Director I HARRY M. WOODS, A. B. Asst. to the Director ADMINISTRATION ■< BLANCHE F. POOLER BIOLOGY CHEMISTRY ENTOMOLOGY RALPH K. JONES, B. S. CHARLES J. DUNN GRACE M. COLBURN . RAYMOND PEARL, Ph. D FRANK M. SURFACE, Ph. D. ^ MAYNIE R. CURTIS, A. M WALTER ANDERSON. . LOTTIE E. McPHETERS. 'JAMES M. BARTLETT, M. S. -{ HERMAN H. HANSON, M. S. JOSEPH F. MERRILL, B. S. ALBERT G. DURGIN. M. S. EDITH M. PATCH, B. S. ■< OSKAR A. JOHANNSEN, Ph. D [ALICE W. AVERILL WALTER W. BONNS, B. Stenographer Librarian Treasurer Bookkeeper Biologist A ssociate Assistant Poultryman Computer Chemist A ssociate Assistant Assistant Entomologist Associate Laboratory Assistant HORTICULTURE WALTER W. BONNS, B. S. Associate PLANT r WARNER J. MORSE, M. S . Pathologist P^THCLOGy -! CHARLES E. LEWIS, Ph. D. . Associate 'jOHN SUMMERS Laboratory Assistant HIGH MOOR FARM WELLINGTON SINCLAIR . Superintendent ROYDEN L. HAMMOND . . Seed Analyst and Photographer HENRY A. MILLETT . . . Meteorological Observer and Janitor D. FEB Of D. £3 13i3 METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS. Lat. 44° 54' 2" X. Lon. 68° 40' 11" W. Elevation 150 feet. The instruments used at this Station are the same as those used in preceding years, and include : ^^'et and dry bulb ther- mometers ; maximum and minimum thermometers ; rain-guage ; self-recording anemometer, vane, and barometer. The observa- tions at Orono now form an almost unbroken record of forty- one vears. 330 MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. I909. OC CO •J9qni803(j S 05 "S Oi S O B •.qnp 00 M 10 O CC (M O ' C^i CO ^ >< a < w =• S O TJ o s a! O e bJ .2 ^ -s ■.> -r _5 # C g o 0 S ^ h-f ^ c. a ^ & S c a Z Z Z H METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS. ■I'nox Si 513 •jaqtnaAOf; ■jaqraajdag •jsnSny •9nnf ■|uclv ■A"JT!njqaj REPORT OF TREASURER FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING JUNE 30, 1909. NATIONAL FUNDS. Receipts. Hatch Fund. Adam.s Fund, Geu'l Acct. Balance July 1, 1908. . , . . . Treasurer of United States. Sale^, etc . . . . Total Disbursements. Salaries Labor Publications Postage and stationery . ......... Freight and express Heat, light and power Chemical supplies Seeds, plants and sundry supplies. Fertilizers Feeding stuffs Library Tools, implements and machinery. Furniture and fixtures Scientific apparatus Live stock Traveling expenses Contingent expenses Buildings Balance June .30, 1909 Total 15,000 00 .$11 ,000 00 815,000 00 .S8,647 9; 244 74 10 .35 367 58 247 99 481 89 77 32 340 68 1 ,002 04 523 03 594 11 74 07 134 75 531 45 712 05 259 98 750 00 ■Sll ,000 00 $15,000 00 $1 ,830 41 2,902 00 :,732 41 ■ ,6.59 13: SI ,404 50 24 60 112 23 1 00 7 70 60 01 10 87 57 306 65 28 26 45 955 74 152 S3 S 25 321 79 693 09 441 77 1 49 14 11 10 37 889 02 62 96 6 9C .5 25 436 41 78 06 529 86 313 51 1 ,137 83 $11 ,000 00 S4 ,732 41 REPORT OF TREASURER. 333 REPORT OF TREASURER FOR STATE FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1909. STATE FUNDS. Receipts. Printing. Inspections. State appropriation . Analyses, fees, etc Total . . DiSBVRSEMENTS. Salaries Traveling expenses ... Freight and express Office supplies Light ami heat Laboratory supplies Printing bulletins and reports Balance Dec. .31. 1909 Total S4,500 00 $4 ,500 00 2 ,932 44 1 ,567 56 «4,o00 OC $9 .000 00 1 .457 36 $10 .4,57 36 S7,672 17 1 .290 15 57 31 607 52 132 .33 560 39 137 49 !B10 .4.57 36 INDEX. PAGE Adelges abieticolens 279 coccineus 279 strobilobius 279 Alfalfa 98 Alternaria solani 2 Apemon 241 gracilis 243 maudse 244 nigriventris 245 pectoralis 243 pulchra 244 Apple diseases 185 cultural studies 192 inoculation experiments 186 literature cited 199 rots ~ 3 scab 4 trees, affected by weather 12 crotch injury 17 Announcements vi Ascospora beyerinckii 195 Asindulum 234 coxale 234 flavum 235 montanum 234 Bacillus amylovorus 18 phytophthorus 31 1 solanicola 311 solanisaprus 311 Bibliography, fertility and hatching of eggs I57 Bitter rot of apple, treatment 10 Blackleg of potato 310 character and appearance 312 economic aspects 319 geographical distribution 318 means of distribution 31S means of prevention 323 spread by decayed seed tubers 317 INDEX. 335 PAGE Blight and rot of tlic potato i, 165 resistant potatoes 92 Bolitophila 218 cinerea 219 disjuncta 218 fusca 219 hybrida 219 montana 220 Bolitophilinae 217 Bordeaux mixture 174 for apple scab 9 Brooder house, nioditications 34 Buildings for poultry 32 Ceroplatinje 233 Ceroplatus 235 carbonarius 236 clausus 237 militaris 237 terminalis 236 Cerotelion 238 apicalis 239 bellulus 239 longimanus 240 Chermes abieticolens 277 bibliography 289 migrations 282 abietis 203, 279, 290 bibliography 293 consolidatus 297 floccus 283, 299 green-winged 203 host plants 296,301,306 in Europe 306 lariciatus 294 laricifoliae 296 methods of study 304 new species 306 of Maine conifers 277 key to 306 remedial measures 287, 293 pine leaf 201, 277 pinicorticis 278, 303 pinifolise 201,277,281 bibliography 288 similis 301 strobilobius 297 wing vein nomenclature 305 Coniothyrium pirina 186 336 INDEX. PAGE Coryneum bej-erinckii igi foliicolum i86 Cresol soap 37 Crotch injury of apple trees 17 Cylindrosporum pomi 189 Diadocidia 231 borealis 233 ferruginosa 232 flavicans 232 terricola 232 Diadocidiinse 231 Diseases of plants in 1908 i Disinfectant, liquor cresolis compositus 36 Ditomyia 227 euzona 227 Dry rot of the potato 2 Egg fertility and hatching, relation between 112 term defined ill Egg producing ability, inheritance of 49 production, correlation between mother and daughters.... 61 details of experiments 50 distribution with unregistered pullets 74 measurement 46 of daughters of 200-egg hens 49 of registered and unregistered pullets 73 physiology- of 29 seasonal distribution 41 record sheets 39 records of mothers and daughters 51 of registered hens 53 Eggs, fertility and hatching 105 bibliography 157 in second year 136 "infertile, percentage produced 123 relation between production and hatching quality' 133 of fertility to hen 122 of production to fertility 128 testing for fertility 110 value affected by distribution 45 variation in fertility and hatching quality 119 with age 30 Epicoccum granulatum 189 Euphrosyne 265 Fecundity in hens, inheritance of " 49 significance of term 81 Fertility and hatching of eggs 105 Fertilizer experiments with potatoes • .' 85 Fertilizers, home mixed, formulas 86 INDEX. 337 PAGE Field exiK'i imcms in 1906-8 85 Formaldehyde for blackleg 324 Fruit trees affected by weather 12 F"ungus gnats, characters 210 habits and economic relations 214 North American 209 remedial measures 216 table of subfamilies 216 Fusarium oxysporium 2 Galls on spruce 203, 284, 290 Germicide, liquor cresolis compositus 36 Glomerella rufomoculans 10 Green winged Chermes 203 Hendersonia mali 186 Hens, see Poultry conditions of breeding 108 registered, records 53 relation of fertility to 122 tests of inheritance of fecundity 60 Hesperinus 220 brcvifrons 221 Hesperodcs 241 johnsoni 241 Highmoor Farm Hospital house for poultry 32- Insects affecting the pine 28 Leaf blights of the potato i Leaf-spot of apple, treatment 10 Lime as affecting potato scab 4 effects on clover 102 in seeding down lOI Liquor cresolis compositus as a germicide 36 Macroneura 231 ^facrocera 365 clara 271 concinna 272 diluta 267 formosa 270 geminata 272 hirsuta 269 immaculata 269 inconcinna 268 nel)ulosa 269 Macrocerinaj 265 Meteorological observations 329 Mustard, wild, eradiction 100 Mycetobia 223 divergens 223- 338 INDEX. PAGE marginalis 223 persicse 223 sordida 223 Mycetobiinx 222 Mycetophstus 222 Mycetophilidse of North America 209 Orchard diseases of the year 3 Oviduct of the hen, physiology of 29 Palasoplatyura 224 aldrichii 225 johnsoni 226 Pedigree poultry, breeding methods 35 Phoma maH 195 Phytophthora infestans 1,165,330 Phyllosticta limitata 187 Pine bhght 21 insect enemies 28 leaf Chermes 201,277 remedial measures 203 winter injury 21 Plant diseases in 1908 i Platyura 246 diluta 261 divaricata 265 elegans 254 elegantula 264 fasciola 251 fascipennis 257 fasciventris 258 genualis 262 ignobilis 257 inops 252 lurida 253 melasoma 255 mendica 260 mendosa 259 mimula 255 moerens 262 moesta 259 nigrita 256 notabilis 257 parva 250 pictipennis 253 pullata 256 scapularis 263 setiger 252 subterminalis 261 tseniata 264 INDEX. 339- PAGE Plesiastina 228 Potato diseases of the year i blight and weather conditions 173 seed, means of disinfecting 323 scab on limed soils 4 scab and Bordeaux mixture 9 Potatoes, blight resistant varieties 92 causes of decay 182 decay in storage ■ 181 effectiveness of spraying 180 epidemics of blight and rot 165 fertilizer experiments 85 high ridge culture 88 improper methods of spraying 176 trial of fungicides 96 when to spray 178 Poultry breeding methods 35 new buildings for 30 notes for igo8 29 technical studies published 29 Publications viii Raphanus raphanistrum 100 Rhizoctonia 313 Rot and blight of potatoes 165 Sciara Thomas 215 militaris 215 Self-boiled lime-sulphur for apple scab 9 Sinapis arvensis 100 Sphoeropsis malorum 187 Spraying for plant lice 203 methods for potatoes 176 Spruce gall ^ 203, 284, 290 Staff, changes in xi Sun scald of apple 18 Symmerus 228 annulata 231 bifasciata 229 lauta 231 lenis ' 229 mexicana 230 tristis 229 zonata 229 Target brand fungicide on potatoes 96 Trapnest, improved form 34 Treasurer's report 332 Two hundred-egg hens 49 Venturia inaequalis 4 340 INDEX. PAGE Weather as cause of crotch injury 17 effect upon fruit trees 12 report 331 White pine, winter injury 21 Wild mustard, eradication 100 Wing veins of Chermes, nomenclature 305 Winter injury of white pine 21 of fruit trees 12 Zelmira 246 THIRTY-FIFTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Maine Apicultural Experiment Station ORONO, MAINE. 909 STATE OF MAINE. 1910. MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION ORONO, MAINE. ORGANIZATION JANUARY TO JUNE 1909.. THE STATION COUNCIL. PRESIDENT GEORGE E. FELLOWS DIRECTOR CHARLES D. WOODS JOHN A. ROBERTS, Norway . CHARLES L. JONES, Corinna . SAMUEL W. GOULD, Skowhegan AUGUSTUS W. GILMAN, Foxcroft EUGENE H. LIBBY, Auburn . CHARLES S. POPE, Manchester RUTILLUS ALDEN, Winthrop JAMES M. BARTLETT FREMONT L. RUSSELL EDITH M. PATCH WARNER J. MORSE RAYMOND PEARL HERMAN H. HANSON FRANK M. SURFACE CHARLES E. LEWIS President Secretary I Committee of Board of Trustees Commissioner of Agriculture State Grange State Pomological Society State Dairymen's Association Members of the Station Staff CHARLES D. BIOLOGY THE STATION STAFF. WOODS RAYMOND PEARL . FRANK M. SURFACE FREMONT L. RUSSELL MAYNIE R. CURTIS . WALTER ANDERSON I LOTTIE E. McPHETERS I JAMES M. BARTLETT j HERMAN H. HANSON JOANNA C. COLCORD I JOSEPH F. MERRILL [ REX C. GELLERSON I EDITH M. PATCH I ALICE W. AVERILL 1 WARNER J. MORSE { CHARLES E. LEWIS [ FRANK D. STERRY ROYDON L. HAMMOND . CHEMISTRY ENTOMOLOGY PLANT PATHOLOGY Director Biologist Associate Assistant A ssistant Poultryman Computer Chemist Associate A ssistant A ssistant Inspector Entomologist Laboratory Assistant . Pathologist Associate Laboratory Assistant Seed Analyst and Photographer ANNIE M. SNOW . BLANCHE F. POOLER HENRY A. MILLETT Clerk and Stenographer to the Director Stenographer Meteorological Observer and Janitor MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION ORONO, MAINE. ORGANIZATION JULY TO DECEMBER. 1909. THE STATION COUNCIL. PRESIDENT GEORGE E. FELLOWS DIRECTOR CHARLES D. WOODS JOHN A. ROBERTS, Norway . CHARLES L. JONES, Corinna SAMUEL W. GOULD, Skowhegan AUGUSTUS W. OILMAN, Foxcroft EUGENE H. LIBBY, Auburn . CHARLES S. POPE, Manchester RUTILLUS ALDEN, Winthrop . President Secretary Committee 0} Board of Trustees Commissioner of Agriculture State Grange State Pomological Society State Dairymen's Association AND THE HEADS AND ASSOCIATES OF STATION DEPARTMENTS THE STATION STAFF. ADMINISTRATION BIOLOGY CHEMISTRY ENTOMOLOGY HORTICULTURE PLANT PATHOLOGY CHARLES D. WOODS, Sc. D. . Director HARRY M. WOODS, A. B.. Asst. to the Director BLANCHE F. POOLER . . Stenographer RALPH K. JONES, B. S. . . Librarian CHARLES J. DUNN . . . Treasurer GRACE M. COLBURN . Bookkeeper RAYMOND PEARL, Ph. D. . . Biologist FRANK M. SURFACE, Ph. D. . Associate MAYNIE R. CURTIS, A. M. . Assistant WALTER ANDERSON . Poultryman LOTTIE E. McPHETERS Computer JAMES M. BARTLETT, M. S. Cliemist HERMAN H. HANSON, M. S. . Associate JOSEPH F. MERRILL, B. S. . Assistant ALBERT G. DURGIN, M. S. . Assistant EDITH M. PATCH, B. S. . Entomologist OSKAR A. JOHANNSEN, Ph. D. Associate ALICE W. AVERILL WALTER W. BONNS, WARNER J. MORSE, CHARLES E. LEWIS, JOHN SUMMERS HIGH MOOR FARM ROYDEN L. HAMMON HENRY A. MILLETT . Laboratory Assistant B. S. . Associate M. S. Pathologist Ph. D. . Associate . Laboratory Assistant WELLINGTON SINCLAIR . Superintendent D . . . Seed Analyst and Photographer Meteorological Observer and Janitor The publications of this Station will be sent free to any address in Maine. All requests should be sent to Agricultural Experiment Station, Orono, Maine. CONTENTS. PAGE Organization of the Station ii Announcements vi Historical Notes vii Notes on Plant Diseases, 1908 (Bulletin 164) i Poultry Notes (Bulletin 165) 29 Inheritance of Fecundity (Bulletin 166) 49 Field Experiments, 1906-8 (Bulletin 167) 85 The Fertility and Hatching of Eggs (Bulletin 168) 105 Two Epidemics of Potato Blight and Rot (Bulletin 169) 165 Apple Diseases Caused by Coryneum joliicolum and Phoma malt (Bulletin 170) 185 The Pine-leaf and Green-winged Chermes (Bulletin 171) 201 Fungus Gnats Part I. (Bulletin 172) 209 Chermes of Maine Conifers (Bulletin 173) 277 Blackleg, a Bacterial Disease of the Irish Potato (Bulletin 174) 309 Meteorology (Bulletin 175) 329 Report of Treasurer (Bulletin 175) 332 Index 1909 (Bulletin 175) 334 ANNOUNCEMENTS. THE AIM OF the; station. Every citizen of Maine concerned in agriculture has the right to apply to the Station for any assistance that comes within its province. It is the wish of the Trustees and Station Council that the Station be as widely useful as its resources will permit. In addition to its work of investigation, the Station is -pre- pared to make chemical analyses of fertilizers, feeding stuffs, dairy products and other agricultural materials ; to test seeds and creamery glassware; to identify grasses, weeds, injurious fungi and insects, etc. ; and to give information on agricultural matters of interest and advantage to the citizens of the State. All work proper to the Experiment Station and of public benefit will be done without charge. Work for the private use of individuals is charged for at the actual cost to the Station. The Station offers to do this work only as a matter of accommo- dation. Under no condition will the Station undertake analyses, the results of which cannot be published, if they prove of gen- eral interest. CORRESPONDENCE. As far as practicable, letters are answered the day they are received. Letters sent to individual officers are liable to remain unanswered, in case the officer addressed is absent. All com- munications, should, therefore, be addressed to the Director or to the Agricultural Experiment Station, Orono, Maine. The post-office, railroad station, freight, express and telegraph address is Orono, Maine. Visitors to the Station can take the electric cars at Bangor and Old Town. The Station is connected by telephone. ( HISTORICAL NOTES FOR 1909. HiGHMOOR Farm. The Legislature of 1909 appropriated $10,000 for the pur- chase of a farm on which the Maine AgricuUural Experiment Station shall conduct experiments in orcharding and with corn and other farm crops. The committee on selection have decided upon Highmoor Farm situated in the counties of Ken- nebec and Androscoggin, and largely in the town of Monmouth, The farm consists of 225 acres, about 200 of which are in orchards, fields and pastures. There are in the neighborhood of 4,cco apple trees upon the place which have been set from 10 to 20 3'ears. The fields that are not in orchard are well adapted to experiments with corn, potatoes and similar general farm crops. The house is two-storied with a large wing and contains about 15 rooms and is well arranged for Experiment Station offices and the home of the farm superintendent. The barn is large ; arranged for 32 head of cattle and 6 horses. The buildings are supplied with running water from a never failing spring situated on the farm. The Farmington branch of the iMaine Central Railroad bounds the farm on the west and it is expected that a flag station will be made at the farm. The farm is purchased in the name of the State but by law "the Director of the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station shall have the general management, supervision and control of the said farm and of all investigations thereon." The property was acquired so late in the season that no inves- tigational work could be undertaken in 1909. It is planned to begin another season studies upon orchard management, corn and oat breeding and potato culture. The farm will be used not merely for practical field experiments in horticulture and agri- culture but also for studies of practical problems by the ento- mologists, plant pathologists and biologists of the Station. viii MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. I909. Publications. The Station is organized so that the work of investigation is distinct from the work of inspection. The results of investi- gation are published in the bulletins of the Station. These make up the annual report for the year. The results of the work of inspection are printed in publications known as Official Inspections. These are paged independently of the bulletins and are bound in with the annual report as an appendix thereto'. Miscellaneous publications consisting of newspaper notices of bulletins, newspaper bulletins and circulars which are not paged consecutively and are not included in the annual report are issued during each year. All of the bulletins issued by the Station are sent to the names upon the official mailing list prepared by the Office of Experi- ment Stations, to all newspapers in Maine and to libraries and to agricultural exchanges. Bulletins which have to do with general agriculture and the Official Inspections which bear upon the feeding stuffs, fertilizer and seed inspections are sent to a general mailing list composed chiefly of farmers within the State. The publications having to dO' with the food and drug inspection are sent to a special list including all dealers in Maine and other citizens who request them. The annual report is sent to directors of experiment stations and to libraries. Copies of all publications are sent to the newspapers within the State and to the press on the exchange list outside of the State. BULLETINS PUBLISHED IN I909. No. 164. Notes on Plant Diseases, 1908 28 pages No. 165. Poultry Notes 20 pages No. 166. Inheritance of Fecundity in Poultry 36 pages No. 167. Field Experiments in 1906-8 20 pages No. 168. The Fertility and Hatching of Eggs 60 pages No. 169. Two Epidemics of Potato' Blight and Rot. 20 pages No. 170. Apple Diseases caused by Coryneum folli- colum and Phoina mali 16 pages No. 171. Pine Leaf and Green Winged Chermes. . . 8 pages No. 172. Fungus Gnats, Part 1 68 pages No. 173. Chermes of Maine Conifers 32 pages No. 174. Blackleg: A Bacterial Disease of Potatoes 20 pages No. 175. Meteorology, Finances, Index 12 pages HISTORICAL NOTES. ix MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS IN I909. No. 338. Fertilizer manufacturers affidavit i page No. 339. Official Inspections 7 8 pages No. 340. Abstract of Bulletin 166 4 pages No. 341. Official Inspections 8 8 pages No. 342. Official Inspections 9 16 pages No. 343. Notice of hearings i page No. 344. Official Inspections 10 28 pages No. 345. Crown Gall of the Apple i page No. 346. Newspaper Notice, Bulletin 164 i page No. 347. List of Bulletins i page No. 348.- Newspaper Notice, Bulletin 165 i page No. 349. Newspaper Notice, Bulletin 166 i page No. 350. Official Inspections 11 12 pages No. 351. Newspaper Notice, Bulletin 167 i page No. 352. How to Keep Poultry Free From Lice. . . 4 pages No. 353. Official Inspections 12 20 pages No. 354. Newspaper notice, Circular 353 i page No. 355. Deformed Apples in Maine i page No. 356. Not printed. No. 357. Official Inspections 13 8 pages No. 358. Offxial Inspections 14 40 pages No. 359. Tiger Aloths and Woolly Bear Caterpillars 4 pages No. 360. Seed letter i page No. 361. Official Inspections 15 12 pages No. 362. Field Day at Highmoor Farm i page No. 363. Abstract Bulletin 168 8 pages No. 364. Not printed. No'. 365. Official Inspections 16 12 pages No. 366. Form for describing seed samples i page No. 367. Newspaper Notice, Bulletin 169 i page No. 368. Official Inspections 17 16 pages No. 369. Poultry work of the Station 8 pages No. 370. Official Inspections 18 12 pages BIOLOGY PUBLICATIONS. 1909. No. 9. The Use of Atropin Sulphate in Anesthetizing Birds for Surgical Experiments. By R. Pearl and F. 'SI. Surface. Journ. Amer. ^led. Assoc. Vol. LII, PP- 382. 383. 1909. X MAINE AGRICUI.TURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. I909. No. 10. Studies on the Physiology of Reproduction in the Domestic Fowl. II. Data on the Inheritance of Fecundity Obtained from the Records of Egg Production of the Daughters of "200-egg" Hens. By R. Pearl and F. M. Surface. Maine Agr. Expt. Station, Bulletin No. 166, pp. 48-84. 1909. No. II. Selection Index Numbers and their Use in Breeding. By R. Pearl and F. M. Surface. Amer. Nat. Vol. XLIII, pp. 385-400. 1909. No. 12. Is there a Cumulative Effect of Selection? Data from the Study of Fecundity in the Domestic Fowl. By R. Pearl and F. M. Surface. Zeitschr. f . Abst.-u. V ererb.-Lehre. (In press). No". 13. Studies on the Physiology of Reproduction in the Domestic Fowl. III. A Case of Incomplete Hermaphroditism. By R. Pearl and M. R. Curtis. Biol. Bulletin, Vol. XVII, pp. 271-286. PI. I & II, 1909. No. 14. Studies on the Physiology of Reproduction in the Domestic Fowl. IV. Data on Certain Factors Influencing the Fertility and Hatching of Eggs. By R. Pearl and F. M. Sur- face, Maine Agr. Expt. Statio'n, Bulletin 168, pp. 105-164. 1909. No. 15. A Triple Yolked Egg. By R. Pearl. Zool. Anz. (In press). ENTOMOLOGY PUBLICATIONS, 1909. No. 33. Homologies of the Wing Veins of the Aphididas, Psyllidje, Aleurodidse, and Coccidje. Annals of the Ento- mological So'ciety of America. Vol. II. No. 2. pp. 101-129. 1909. No. 34. Pemphigus venafuscus n. sp. Entomol. News. p. 319. 1909. No. 35. The Desmodium Aphid, Microparsus variabilis n. sp. Entomol. News. p. 337. 1909. No. 36. Downy Psyllid of Alder, Psylla Hoccosa n. sp. Canadian Entomol. p. 301. 1909. No. 37. The Pine-leaf Chermes. The Green-winged Chermes. Maine Agr. Expt. Sta. Bulletin 171. 1909. No. 38. The Fungus Gnats of North America. Me. Agr. Expt. Station Bulletin 172. No. 39. Chermes of Maine Conifers. Me. Agr. Expt. Sta. Bulletin 173. HISTORICAL NOTES. xi OFFICIAL INSPECTION'S, I909. No. 7. Standards for beverages. No. 8. Bleached flour, benzoate of soda, sulphur dioxide, ice cream standards, flavoring extracts. No. 9. Fertilizer Inspection. Analyses of Manufacturers Samples. No. 10. Feeding Stufi^ Inspection. No. II. Soda and cream of tartar, sweet corn, maple sugar, spices and pepper, sweet spirit of nitre, rice, alcohol. No. 12. Text of the laws regulating the sale of: Agricultural seeds, apples, creamery glassware, feeding stuffs, fertilizers, and foods and drugs. No. 13. Coffee, gelatine, sweet oil, honey. No. 14. Food and Drug Law Standards and Regulations. No. 15. Apples, catchup, cocoa, extracts, spirit of nitrous ether, oysters. No. 16. Thickeners for ice cream, jams, jellies, preserves, chemicals in food, whiskey, and rice. No. 17. Seed Inspection, 1909. No. 18. Analyses of drugs. The druggist and the law. CHANGES IN STAFF. June 30, 1909, Prof. F. L. Russell, resigned from the Station Staff to devote his whole time to teaching in the University. Doctor Russell had been a member of the Experiment Station staff since its reorganization and enlargement in 1888. Frank D. Sterry, Laboratory Assistant in Plant Pathology resigned from the Experiment Station June i, 1909. IMiss Joanna C. Colcord, Assistant Chemist; Miss Annie M. Snow, Clerk and Stenographer to the Director; Mr. R. C. Gellerson, Inspector, resigned from the Experiment Station staff June 30, 1909, and ]\rr. Joseph F. Merrill, Assistant Chemist, resigned December 6, 1909. July I, 1909, Mr. Albert G. Durgin, M. S., was appointed Assistant Chemist; Mr. Harry M. Woods, A. B., Assistant to the Director ; Mr. Wellington Sinclair, Superintendent of High- moor Farm ; and Mr. John Summers as Laboratory Assistant in Plant Pathology. xii MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. I909. September i, 1909, Oscar A. Johannsen, Ph.D., came to the Station as Associate Entomologist, and Mr. Walter W. Bonns, B. S., as Associate Horticulturist. September i, 1909, Mr. Charles J. Dunn of Orono succeeded Hon. I. K. Stetson of Bangor as Treasurer of the Station. 0 m \