46 THE FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGIST 
DR. NEWELL DEAN OF AGRICULTURE 
As we go to press the announcement is made that the Board 
of Control at their last meeting placed Dr. Wilmon Newell in 
charge of the Agricultural College, Experiment Station and Ag- 
ricultural Extension as well as the Plant Board. This places all 
of the agricultural activities on the campus under one head, thus 
ensuring perfect cooperation between the different departments. 
Mr. A. H. Beyer has resigned from the Bureau of U. S. Ento- 
mology to take up the work of assistant in the Departments of 
Plant Pathology and Entomology in the Experiment Station. 
A JAPANESE ORANGE FRUIT FLY 
In a Bulletin of Imperial Agric. Central Experiment Station 
T. Miyake describes a serious orange fruit fly, thus reminding 
us of one of Florida’s advantages. Florida, California and some 
of the West Indies are the only citrus sections on earth which 
have no fruit flies—no worms in their oranges. 
Printing for All Purposes 
Carefully Executed 
Delivered on Time 
Pepper Printing Company 
Gainesville, Florida 
WANTED—To buy or exchange for northern species, southern 
Chrysopidae (Lace-winged-flies). All stages desired, especially 
material for biological studies. Will determine specimens. Dr. 
Roger C. Smith, U. S. Ent. Lab., Charlottesville, Va. 
I WANT to buy common native or foreign butterflies in quan- 
tities. State prices to J. G. White, Wellington Grove, Waltham, 
Mass. 
When writing to advertisers mention The Florida Entomologist 
