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FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGIST 
Official Organ of The Florida Entomological Society, Gainesville, 
Florida. 
PROFESSOR JR: WATSON: 2220352) ee Editor 
DR: WILMONINEWHDL: = V0 eS ee Associate Hditor 
DR oH Ws BERGER. 540242. 2 Business Manager 
Issued once every three months. Free to all members of the 
Society. 
Subscription price to non-members is $1.00 per year in ad- 
vance; 25 cents per copy. 
“LITTLE GATEWAYS TO SCIENCE.”’—We trust that all who 
have received the previous issue of the Entomologist have or- 
dered copies of “Hexapod Stories” and “‘Bird Stories,” published 
by the Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston, Mass. The author of 
these two books, Miss Edith M. Patch, is one of only a few lady 
entomologists in America and we are glad to advertise her books. 
We hope that the membership of the Florida Entomological 
Society and subscribers to the Entomologist will respond hear- 
tily. Prices, postpaid, are 90 cents and $1.00, respectively. 
THE TORONTO MEETING.—The editor has just returned from 
the meeting of the Am. Ass. for the Advancement of Science at 
Toronto. Meeting with the Association, as usual, were the 
American Entomological Society and the Am. Association of 
Economic Entomologists. Some papers on entomological sub- 
jects were read at the meetings of the Ecological Society of 
America which also held one joint meeting with the entomolo- 
gists as did also the phytopathologists. The meeting was quite 
successful, over 1800 being in attendance, and favored with very 
mild weather. Other members of our Society in attendance were 
Prof. Herbert Osborn, H. L. Dozier of Ohio State and Dr. Carl J. 
Drake of Syracuse, N. Y., and Mr. C. S. Weigel of U. S. Bureau 
of Ent. Another former Floridian met was Dr. Sherbakoff of 
the Tennessee station. 
The Entomologists’ dinner on Friday evening was a particu- 
larly enjoyable affair. As Toronto was the birthplace and 1921 
the 32d anniversary of the formation of the Association of Eco- 
nomic Entomologists the addresses were largely of a reminiscent 
nature. The circumstances of the founding of the Association 
were recounted by some of the ‘‘old imagoes” for the benefit of 
the “second instar nymphs.” <A “nymph,” a lepidopterist, was 
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