46 THE FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGIST 
PERSONALS 
Dr. Carl J. Drake is now state entomologist of Iowa. 
Dr. Wilmon Newell has been called north by the death of his 
father. 
Mr. W. L. Goethe is teaching science in the Live Oak High 
School. 
The potato growers of the Hastings district sent Dr. C. D. 
Sherbakoff to Maine to select seed for them. 
Mr. C. M. Berry spent part of the summer in New York State 
inspecting sources of seed used by the Sanford growers. 
Dr. W.S. Blatchley left Indianapolis on November 14 for Rio de 
Janeiro, Brazil. He expects to return to Dunedin the last of 
March. 
Mr. A. H. Beyer, assistant entomologist of the Experiment 
Station, plans to spend several weeks at Harvard studying en- 
tomogenous fungi. 
According to Science Mr. John Belling, former plant breeder 
in the Experiment Station and now of the Eugenics Laboratory 
at Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y., received the doctorate from the - | 
University of Maine in June. 
Dr. H. S. Dozier, former assistant in the Experiment Station, 
is in charge of the camphor scale investigations of the U. S. 
Bureau of Entomology and is stationed in New Orleans. He 
received the doctorate from Ohio State in June. 
REPORT OF MEETINGS OF THE FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGI- 
CAL SOCIETY 
September 25. The Society met in Language Hall at 4:30 
o’clock, President Stirling in the chair. Those present were: 
Beyer, Chaffin, Goodwin, Merrill, Montgomery, Rogers and Wat- 
son. New members elected were: Miss Georgia Berger, teacher 
of Biology in Tampa High School; Miss Bernice Dew and Ru- ~ 
dolph Baldwin, teacher and student in Alachua High School; and 
Mr. S. E. Neal, of the firm of Neal & Neal of Jacksonville. 
