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mostly on truck crop insects in the South and West. While 

 in Honolulu (July 1910 to February 1911) he was Assistant 

 Entomologist at the Board of Agriculture and Forestry. His 

 work in Hawaii was almost entirely practical, consisting of 

 experiments with different spraying mixtures applied to the 

 control of some of our field crops and vegetable pests. How- 

 ever, considerable biological work was carried on at the same 

 time, and his accounts of the beet webworm and the imported 

 cabbage webworm, published by the Bureau, are excellent in 

 every way. 



Publications on his work here are the following: 



"Keport of the Assistant Entomologist." Bienn. Kept. Bd. 

 Agr. and For. Hawaii, pp. 152-159, 1910 (1911). 



"Some Observations on the Crysanthemum Plaut-Louse 



(Macrosiphum solanifoUl osbof-ni Gillette).'' Bienn. 



Kept. Bd. Agr. and For. Hawaii, pp. 100-172, 1910 

 (1911). 



''The Hawaiian Beet Webworm." Bui. 109, pt. I, Bur. 

 Ent. U. S. Dept. Agr., Nov. 6, 1911. 



''The Imported Cabbage Webworm." Bui. 109, pt. Ill, 

 Bur. Ent. U. S. Dept. Agr., April 5, 1912. 



While he has been gone from Hawaii for some years he is 

 well remembered here by those with whom he was associated, 

 especially on account of his cheerful disposition and keen inter- 

 est in his profession. 



D. T. FULLAWAY, 

 O. H. SWEZEY, 



Committee. 



