Tiger aud Leopard Millers 129 



THE YELLOW BEAR 



The yellow bear, common every^vhere in our 

 garden, is a hairy caterpillar. Unlike the Isabella, 

 the hairs are very mieven in length, but because it 

 is so common we must mention it along with the 

 Isabella caterpillar. Almost any sort of vegetable 

 seems to suit the yellow bear's appetite. The moth 

 is a snow}'^ white with seldom more than three dots 

 on each wing. 



THE SALT-MARSH MILLER 



This is a common white miller with black dots 

 on its wings. Although it is called the salt-marsh 

 miller, it does not confine its attention to meadow 

 lands along the sea-coast. Every boy knows it, 

 but every boy does not know that the male and 

 female millers differ in the color of the wings. The 

 female is a white miller, but the male only partially 

 so. Only the upper part of the fore-wings of the 

 male are white and underneath they are yellow, 

 the hind-wings also being yellow. 



THE TIGER-MAID MILLER 



The tiger maiden wears a velvet gown of black. 

 The decorations of pink or yellow are formed like 



