Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Nebraska.-Governor A. E. Shallenberger, ex officio State veterinarian, Lincoln; Paul Juckniess, deputy State veterinarian, Lincoln.

A. T. Peters, experiment station veterinarian, Lincoln. Nevada.-T. F. Richardson, State veterinarian, Goldfield.

New Hampshire.-N. J. Bachelder, secretary State board of cattle commissioners, Concord.

New Jersey.-State board of agriculture: E. B. Voorhees, president, Freehold; Franklin Dye, secretary, Trenton.

Commission on tuberculosis in animals: E. B. Voorhees, president, Freehold; Joseph B. Ward, vice-president, Lyons Farms; Franklin Dye, secretary, Trenton; C. H. Cook, treasurer, Trenton; A. A. Cortelyou, Neshanic; William C. Parry, Hainsport; B. E. Tine, Stanton.

New Mexico. Cattle sanitary board (having charge also of horses and mules): E. Godwin Austin, secretary, East Las Vegas; W. C. McDonald, Carrizozo; Charles L. Ballard, Roswell; W. H. Jack, Silver City; Filiberto Gallegos, Clayton; Cole Railston, Socorro; W. J. Linwood, Raton.

Sheep sanitary board (having charge also of goats): Harry F. Lee, secretary, Albuquerque; Solomon Luna, Los Lunas; H. W. Kelly, Las Vegas; Charles Sleter, Clayton; A. D. Garrett, Roswell, and J. W. Akers, Santa Fe.

New York.-R. A. Pearson, commissioner of agriculture, Albany. J. F. DeVine, chief veterinarian, Albany.

North Carolina.-W. A. Graham, commissioner of agriculture, Raleigh. W. G. Chrisman, State veterinarian, Raleigh. W. J. Hartman, assistant veterinarian, Raleigh.

G. A. Roberts, experiment station veterinarian, West Raleigh.

North Dakota.-State live-stock sanitary board: W. L. Richards, secretary, Dickinson; W. F. Crewe, veterinarian and executive officer, Devils Lake; Andrew Veitch, Grand Forks; E. J. Walsh, Willow City; J. W. Robinson, Cold Harbor.

L. Van Es, experiment station veterinarian, Agricultural College.

Ohio.-Paul Fischer, State veterinarian, Columbus.

A. P. Sandles, secretary State live-stock commission, Columbus.

Oklahoma.-G. T. Bryan, superintendent live-stock inspection, Guthrie; J. K. Callicotte and W. B. McAlester, veterinarians to State board of agriculture, Guthrie.

A. J. Emery, chief dairy inspector, Guthrie.

L. L. Lewis, experiment station veterinarian.

Oregon.-W. H. Lytle, State veterinarian and sheep inspector, Pendleton. Pennsylvania.-State live-stock sanitary board: Governor Edwin S. Stuart, president; Leonard Pearson, secretary and State veterinarian; Louis A. Klein, deputy State veterinarian, all at Harrisburg.

Porto Rico.-Thomas A. Allen, veterinary inspector, health office, San Juan. Rhode Island.-State board of agriculture: John J. Dunn, secretary, Providence; John S. Pollard, veterinarian, Providence.

South Carolina.-M. Ray Powers, State veterinarian, Clemson College; R. O. Feeley, assistant veterinarian, Clemson College.

South Dakota.-State live-stock sanitary board: Thomas H. Hicks, chairman and State veterinarian, Milbank; C. L. Eakin, secretary, Blunt; J. N. Long, Wanbay; P. H. O'Neil, Faulkton; F. R. Cock, Bellefourche; Frank Stewart, Buffalo Gap; W. W. Davis, Mount Vernon.

E. L. Moore, experiment station veterinarian, Brookings.

Tennessee.-John Thompson, commissioner of agriculture, Nashville.

J. H. McDowell, State live-stock commissioner, Nashville.
Moses Jacob, experiment station veterinarian, Knoxville.

Texas.-State live-stock sanitary commission: R. H. Harris, chairman, San
Angelo; A. S. Gage, San Antonio; T. F. McClure, Stamford.

E. L. Forbes, State veterinarian, Fort Worth.

M. Francis, experiment station veterinarian, College Station.

Utah.-A. Carrington Young, State veterinarian, Salt Lake City.

State board of sheep commissioners: L. R. Anderson, chairman, Manti; Arthur A. Callister, secretary, Salt Lake City; Thomas W. Jones, Salt Lake City; J. S. Ostler, Nephi.

H. J. Frederick, experiment station veterinarian, Logan.

T. B. Beatty, secretary State board of health, Salt Lake City. Vermont.-H. S. Willson, State cattle commissioner, Arlington. Virginia.-J. G. Ferneyhough, State veterinarian, Burkeville.

State board of veterinary examiners: H. S. Willis, Rapidan; Thomas Fraser, Richmond; S. C. Neff, Staunton; H. Bannister, Roanoke. Washington.-S. B. Nelson, State veterinarian and experiment station veterinarian, Pullman.

West Virginia.-J. B. Garvin, secretary State board of agriculture, Charleston. Consulting veterinarians: W. C. Atkeson, Buffalo; J. C. Callander, Parkersburg; L. N. Reefer, Wheeling; W. M. Stanley, Charleston.

Wisconsin.-State live-stock sanitary board: Herbert Lothe, secretary, Madison; D. B. Clark, State veterinarian, Madison; M. P. Ravenel, bacteriologist, Madison; George McKerrow, Pewaukee; George Wylie, Morrisonville; Grant U. Fisher, Janesville.

A. S. Alexander, experiment station veterinarian, Madison. Wyoming.-William F. Pfaeging, State veterinarian, Cheyenne.

State board of live-stock commissioners: George R. Eyken, Laramie; Fred G. S. Hesse, Buffalo; Addison A. Spaugh, Manville; Thomas Durbin, secretary, Cheyenne.

State board of sheep commissioners: William Daley, president, Rawlins; W. D. McKeon, Newcastle; J. M. Wilson, Douglas; George S. Walker, secretary-treasurer, Cheyenne.

O. L. Prien, experiment station veterinarian, Laramie.

PUBLICATIONS OF THE BUREAU IN 1908.

Following is a list of publications issued by the Bureau of Animal Industry during the year 1908, excepting regulations, which are to be found in the appendix to this report. A circular giving a list of the available publications of the Bureau and indicating how they may be obtained will be sent free upon request.

Publications in the following list for which no price is indicated will be sent free of charge to persons in the United States, so long as the editions permit, on application to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C.

Applications for publications to which a price is affixed should be made to the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., the officer designated by law to sell Government publications. All payments should be made to him and not to the Department of Agriculture, and should be sent by postal money order, express order, or New York draft. Currency may be sent at the sender's risk, but postage stamps, foreign money, and uncertified checks will not be accepted. No charge is made for postage on documents forwarded to points in the United States, Guam, Hawaii, the Philippine Islands, or Porto Rico, or to Canada, Cuba, or Mexico. To other countries the regular rate of postage is charged, and remittances must cover such postage. To residents of foreign countries the price of 6 cents a copy, including postage, has been fixed for publications for which no price is indicated in the list.

REPORTS.

Twenty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry. By A. D.
Melvin, Chief of Bureau. Pp. 478, pls. 24, figs. 35. Price, 60 cents.
Report of the Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry for [the fiscal year ended
June 30] 1908. Pp. 68.

BULLETINS.

Bulletin 39. Index-Catalogue of Medical and Veterinary Zoology. By Ch.
Wardell Stiles, Consulting Zoologist, and Albert Hassall, Assistant in
Zoology. Part 20. Authors: N to Nyström. Pp. 1493-1574. Price, 15
cents.
Same, Part 21. Authors: O to Ozzard. Pp. 1575-1624.
Bulletin 101.

Price, 10 cents.

The Available Energy of Red Clover Hay. (Investigations with the respiration calorimeter in cooperation with the Pennsylvania State College Agricultural Experiment Station.) By Henry Prentiss Armsby and J. August Fries. Pp. 61, diagrams 4. Price, 10 cents.

428

Bulletin 102. Further Experiments Concerning the Production of Immunity from Hog Cholera. By M. Dorset, C. N. McBryde, and W. B. Niles, of the Biochemic Division. Pp. 96. Price, 15 cents.

Bulletin 103. Experiments in Beef Production in Alabama. By J. F. Duggar, Director Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station, and W. F. Ward, Scientific Assistant. Pp. 28, pls. 11. Price, 10 cents.

Bulletin 104. Medical Milk Commissions and the Production of Certified Milk
in the United States. By Clarence B. Lane, Assistant Chief of the Dairy
Division. Pp. 43, pls. 6, figs. 11. Price, 10 cents.
Bulletin 105. Varieties of Cheese: Descriptions and Analyses. By C. F.
Doane, Assistant Dairyman, Dairy Division, and H. W. Lawson, Office of
Experiment Stations, Department of Agriculture. Pp. 72. Price, 10 cents.
Bulletin 106. Experiments on the Digestibility of Prickly Pear by Cattle. By
R. F. Hare, Professor of Chemistry in the College of Agriculture and
Mechanic Arts of the Territory of New Mexico. Pp. 38, pl. 1, fig. 1. Price
10 cents.

Bulletin 107. The Analysis of Coal-Tar Creosote and Cresylic Acid Sheep Dips.
By Robert M. Chapin, Assistant Chemist, Biochemic Division. Pp. 35, fig. 1.
Price 10 cents.

Bulletin 108. Feeding for Meat Production. By Henry Prentiss Armsby, Director, Institute of Animal Nutrition, The Pennsylvania State College; Expert in Animal Nutrition, Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 89, fig. 1. Price 10 cents.

Bulletin 109. Proteolytic Changes in the Ripening of Camembert Cheese. By Arthur W. Dox, Chemist in Cheese Investigations, Dairy Division. Pp. 24. Price 5 cents.

CIRCULARS.

Circular 23 (third revision). Direcciones Para el Uso de la Vacuna Contra la Morrina Negra (Directions for the Use of Blackleg Vaccine). (Spanish edition.) By Victor A. Nörgaard; translation by Manuel Fraile. Pp. 9, figs. 3.

Circular 97 (revised). How to Get Rid of Cattle Ticks. By R. P. Steddom, Chief of the Pathological Division. Pp. 4, fig. 1.

Pp. 4.

Circular 113 (revised). Classification for American Carriage Horses. By
George M. Rommel, Animal Husbandman.
Circular 120. Some Observations on Rabies.

By E. C. Schroeder, Superin(Reprint from the Twenty-third

tendent of Experiment Station. Pp. 16.
Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry.)

(Reprint from the TwentyIndustry.)

(Reprint from the TwentyIndustry.)

Circular 121. Osteoporosis or Bighead of the Horse. By John R. Mohler, Chief of the Pathological Division. Pp. 8, figs. 5. third Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Circular 122. Epizootic Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis of Horses. By R. W. Hickman, Chief of the Quarantine Division. Pp. 8. third Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Circular 124. Suggestions for Horse and Mule Raising in the South. By George M. Rommel, Animal Husbandman. Pp. 15. Twenty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry.) Circular 125. The Federal Meat Inspection Service. By A. D. Melvin, Chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 40, pls. 15, fig. 1. (Reprint from the Twenty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry.)

(Reprint from the

Circular 126. A Simple Method of Keeping Creamery Records. By B. D. White, Assistant Dairyman in Charge of Creamery Investigations, Dairy Division. Pp. 12.

Circular 127. Tubercle Bacilli in Butter: Their Occurrence, Vitality, and Significance. By E. C. Schroeder, Superintendent of Experiment Station, and W. E. Cotton, Expert Assistant at Experiment Station. Pp. 23. Circular 128. White Diarrhea of Chicks. With Notes on Coccidiosis in Birds. By George Byron Morse, Assistant in Bacteriology and Pathology, Pathological Division. Pp. 7.

Circular 129. Rabies and Its Increasing Prevalence. By George H. Hart, Assistant in Pathology and Bacteriology, Pathological Division. Pp. 26, fig. 1.

Circular 130. Paraffining Butter Tubs. By L. A. Rogers, Bacteriological
Chemist, Dairy Division. Pp. 6, fig. 1.
Circular 131. Designs for Dairy Buildings.
Dairy Division. Pp. 26, figs. 35.

By Ed. H. Webster, Chief of the (Reprint from the Twenty-third Annual

Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry.) Circular 132. A Practical Method for the Detection of Beef Fat in Lard. By James A. Emery, Assistant Chief of the Biochemic Division. Pp. 9. Circular 133. Report and Recommendations Regarding Veterinary Colleges in the United States.

Pp. 13.

Circular 134. Classified List of Available Publications of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 8.

Circular 135.

Officials, Organizations, and Educational Institutions Connected with the Dairy Interests (1908). By Ed. H. Webster, Chief of the Dairy Division. Pp. 31.

Circular 137. The Preservation of Our Native Types of Horses. By George M. Rommel, Animal Husbandman. Pp. 63, pl. 1, figs. 19. (Reprint from the Twenty-fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of Animal Industry.)

Circular 141. Foot-and-Mouth Disease.

By D. E. Salmon and Theobald Smith; (Reprint from Special Report on

Revised by John R. Mohler. Pp. 8.
Diseases of Cattle.)

SEPARATES FROM TWENTY-THIRD ANNUAL REPORT.

The Danish Hog Industry. By Andrew Fossum, of the Editorial Office.
The Susceptibility of Tubercle Bacilli to Modification.

Pp. 28.

By John R. Mohler and
Pp. 55, pls. 4.

Henry J. Washburn, of the Pathological Division. Investigations in Animal Nutrition. By Henry Prentiss Armsby, Director Pennsylvania State College Institute of Animal Nutrition; Expert in Animal Nutrition, Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 23, pls. 3, figs. 2.

FARMERS' BULLETINS.

Farmers' Bulletin 137. The Angora Goat. By George Fayette Thompson; revised by Edward L. Shaw, Assistant in Animal Husbandry in Charge of Sheep and Goat Investigations, Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 48, figs. 8. Farmers' Bulletin 205 (revised). Pig Management. By George M. Rommel, Animal Husbandman, Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 45, figs. 22. Farmers' Bulletin 345. Some Common Disinfectants. By M. Dorset, Chief of the Biochemic Division, Bureau of Animal Industry. Pp. 12.

« AnteriorContinuar »