1895] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 157 



previous to this which I gave a second coat on the 9th, as there had been 

 a rain the next night after the application." I received, at my request, 

 specimens of the worst infested twigs, on which the scales were massed 

 so as to conceal the bark entirely, and here also I failed to find a single 

 living insect. I do not believe that we need quite despair of eradicating 

 the scale, provided we can bring the farmers to a realizing sense of the 

 importance of the matter, and this I think can be done in New Jersey at 

 least. 



Notes and. News. 



ENTOMOLOGICAL GLEANINGS FROM ALL QUARTERS 

 OF THE GLOBE. 

 [The Conductors of Entomological News solicit, and will thankfully receive items 

 of news, likely to interest its readers, from any source. The author's name will be given 

 in each case for the information of cataloguers and bibliographers.] 



To Contributors.— All contributions will be considered and passed upon at our 

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Now READY. — The new Supplement to Henshaw's List of Coleoptera 

 of America north of Mexico, has been completed, and will be mailed on 

 receipt of price, 50 cents per copy. Application for copies should be 

 made to the Treasurer. See advertisement elsewhere. 



Mr. Philip L.auren r contemplates a Spring collecting trip to Florida. 



The Cotton Scale Insect. — In 1856, Fitch described as a new spe- 

 cies, Aspidiotus gossypii, found at Ningpo, China. This insect has not 

 been seen since, but the short description might apply to immature speci- 

 mens of some Chionaspis or Diaspis. All things considered, I should 

 prefer to place it in the former genus, pending its rediscovery on the origi- 

 nal food-plant at the original locality, or an examination of the types if 

 they still exist. The purpose of this note is partly to draw attention to the 

 species, and perhaps so lead to its re-discovery; but also to protest against 

 the introduction of the name into our faunal lists, by Mr. Ashmead, as an 

 Aleyrodes. (Ins. Life, vol. vii, p. 323). What possible reason there can 

 be for identifying an Aleyrodes from Mississippi with Fitch's Chinese in- 

 sect, I cannot imagine. 



As having some bearing on the matter, I may add that at Kingston, 

 Jamaica, I found numbers of Chionaspis minor Mask., and Diaspis 

 amygdali form lanatus, on stems of cotton, mixed together. The orange- 

 red r^ of Diaspis were hatching on Aug. 8, 1892.— T. D. A. Cockerell. . 



