OMOLOGICAL NEWS. 79 
Notes and News. 
OGICAL GLEANINGS FROM ALL QUARTERS 
” OF THE GLOBE. 
ND ye the record of the capture of a specimen of Coipodes ethlius 
f. This insect was once taken at West Farms, N. Y., about 4o 
10, I believe. The specimen referred to was taken by me herein 
D. C., over a bed of Canna on September 19, 1903.—Cuas. 
¢ ). W. Baxnertr is back in the Bureau of Plant Industry of the 
. A., after a very pleasant summer and autumn among the cacao 
ions of Trinidad, B. W. L, in the study of cacao pests and diseases 
Basan would Be to suggest that some of 
y society butterflies contribute a fund toward the promulgation 
about the metamorphoses of insects The 
R = 
n SS 
h I gave in Horticultural Hall is a lie. It is mace out of the 
th and there is nothing whatever to tt.’ 
wise did James W. Paul, Jr., emphatically stamp this story, 
first in Philadelphia and later in papers throughout the 
SENIDEAi ins eceusioned inet only eaasemest but indignation 
here. 
d to think of such a thing being done,’ continued Mr. 
ne nan Setent gece as thene 
stories had it they would have been transformed into larve 
s before their arrival bere. It is all absolutely untrue.’ 
back from New York yesterday that ‘15,000 
blazed the way for Miss Mary Astor Paul's en- 
entire ball Cost $100,000." 
' it that ‘the piece de resistance came when, at 
ht of the festivities, s00 beautiful butterflies, gathered from all 
s of the earth, were released over the heads of the magnificently 
and jeweled women and the bravely dressed men who had gath- 
das Mr. Paul's guests.’” 
' New Pustication, Tuk Jovaera. or Economic Enxtomo.ocy, 
a # | organ of the Association of Economic Entomologists. Editor, 
Porter Albany, N. Y, State Entomologist, New York; Associate 
, A. F. Burgess, Washington, D. C., Secretary Association Eco- 
. Entomologists; Business Manager, E. Dwight Sanderson, Dur- 
ham N. H., Director N. H. Agricultural Experiment Station; Advertising 
