8 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
Populus tremula, Linn.—Leaves aborted and curled, thickly 
inhabited by aphides. , St. 
P. nigra, Linn.—Pemphiqus marsupials, Courchet. Mx., Sy. 
From Messrs. E. B. Bishop and L. J. Tremayne :— 
Malva moschata, Linn.—Eriophyes gymnoproctus, Nal. Bucks. 
ELuonymus europeus, Linn.—E. convolvens, Nal. Sy. 
Ononis repens, Linn.——H. ononidis, Can. Wales and Hants. 
Potentilla procumbens, Sibth. — Xestophanes wpotentille, Retz. 
Kent. 
Pyrus torminalis, Ehrh.—Hriophyes pyri, Pagnst. Mx. 
Lythrum salicaria, Linn.—Perrisia salicaria, Kieff. Kent. 
Achillea Millefoliwm, Linn.—(i) Leaves covered with silky white 
hairs. Hriophyes. Sy. (ii) Yellow or red fleshy galls rising from 
the upper surface of the leaf, and also showing less markedly below. 
Each contains one midge larva, pale yellow in colour. Sussex. 
Artemisia vulgaris, Linn.—Eriophyes artemisie, Can. Sy. 
Centaurea Scabiosa, Linn.—Loéwiola centawree, F. Low. Sy. 
Fraximus excelsior, Linn.—Hriophyes (Houard no. 4646). Bucks. 
Solanum Dulcamara, Linn.—E. cladophthirus, Nal. Hants. 
Quercus cerris, Linn.—Andricus testaceipes, Hartig. Sy. 
Salix fragilis x pentandra.—Rhabdophaga heterobia, H. Low. Sy. 
Populus pyramidalis, Rozier.— Pemphigus bursarius, Linn. Kent. 
MORE NOTES ON THE LEPIDOPTERA OF LA SAINTE 
BAUME, VAR, SOUTH FRANCE, 1914. 
By F. E. Lows, M.A., F.E.S. 
We started for the Continent as lght-heartedly as other 
holiday makers, little anticipating the altered conditions under 
which we should return. Even when we left Ste. Baume for 
Corsica no hint had reached us of the disturbed state of Europe. 
On Thursday, July 80th, I got a letter saying it would be as well 
to return to the mainland as uncomfortable rumours of war were 
in the air. This of course had been written some three days 
before. We started the next day for Bastia and Nice, and by a 
very slow train were carried to Marseilles. There we found our- 
selves the sport of circumstances. The French mobilisation 
had begun. To get to Paris and thence to England took just a 
week, and was a work requiring both endurance and diplomacy. 
By abandoning our ‘‘ grand baggage”’ to the care of the hotel in 
Paris, we were able to make up hand packages containing a few 
necessaries, and all our captures! We felt on arrival in London 
something of the pride and content of a battery which, in a 
harassed retreat, has saved the guns. 
The only connection of our adventures with these ‘‘ Notes” 
is that they account for my long delay in offering them to the 
