REPORT OF STATE ENTOMOLOGIST. 26/ 



No. 15 contains in the upper row from left to right a salt 

 marsh moth and caterpillar, Estigmene acraea, and a tiger 

 species. The second row contains specimens of tiger moths 

 and the third row is life history of the Geometrid moth^ 

 Ennomos magnarius. 



No. 16 shows a tiger swallow-tail butterfly and caterpillar, 

 Papilio glaucus turnus; a monarch butterfly and caterpillar, 

 Anosia plexipiis; a male, female, caterpillar and chrysalis of 

 the cabbage butterfly, Pontia rapae, and in the bottom row a 

 black swallow-tail, Papilio polyxenes, a viceroy, Basilarchia 

 archippiis, and a male and female sulfur, Eurymos philodice. 



No. 17 contains specimens of butterflies, at the top a mourn- 

 ing cloak, Euvanessa antiopa, its caterpillar, chrysalis and para- 

 sites. The lower row contains a Vanessa atalanta, and two 

 wood butterflies. 



No. 18 is a mount of grasshoppers and crickets. 



No. 19 shows a caddis fly, harvest fly. Cicada tihicen, and a 

 stone fly in the top row ; two tree hoppers, a soldier bug, the 

 cast skin of the harvest fly, and three spice bugs in the second 

 row ; a large dragon fly, Libellula pulchella, a dobson fly, Cory- 

 dalis cornuta, and a small dragon fly in the last row. 



No. 20 shows several enemies of the pine. Four borers, 

 Dendroctoniis terebrans, Rhagium lineatum, Conophorus coni- 

 perda, and some of their work, also eggs of pine lice. 



No. 21 contains injurious beetles, "June bug," Lachnosterna 

 fusca, potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, larder beetle, 

 Dermestes lardarius, and rose chafer, Macrodactylus suh- 

 spinosus. 



No. 22 shows a mount of beneficial bugs and beetles ; scaven- 

 gers, burying beetles, tiger beetles, and "Lady bugs." 



No. 23 contains scale insects and a fungous disease, San 

 Jose scale, Aspidiotus perniciosus, Lecanium scale, Eulecanium 

 cerasifex, Scurfy scale, and black-knot, Plozvrightia morbosa. 



No. 24 shows galls taken from golden-rod, willow and rose 

 bushes. 



ENTOMOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS. 



In these days of advancing thought and research along lines 

 that aim to give a general uplift to our whole educational system 

 it would seem that one's education could not be complete unless 

 it embraced some knowledge of our natural world about us. 



