296 AMERICAN POMOLOGY. 



were prepared for a limited region, and do not mention 

 several insects that are common in other parts ■ of the 

 country than the States for which these reports were 

 prepared. It were much to be desired, that every State 

 Society would have gimilar reports, respecting the insects, 

 peculiar to its state. 



Thus the author found himself compelled to investigate 

 this broad field of study for himself — ^it became necessary 

 to grasp the elements of the classification, and to go into 

 the field and the orchard, to use his eyes, and to ob- 

 serve for himself. This was a labor of time, and required 

 considerable effort; but it brought its own reward in the 

 pleasure attendant upon this delightful study. At the 

 same time there was great satisfaction in the thought 

 that all these facts, gathered from the works of men of 

 science, confirmed by personal observation, and rendered 

 useful and applicable in practice by his fellow laborers in 

 the garden and orchard, wonld be a valu.ible contribution 

 to them, and would constitute a useful portion -of the 

 American Pomology he was then preparing. 



Unfortun.ately for himself, he has discovered that his 

 collections, in this department, covered several hundred 

 pages of manuscript, and that, if printed, they would ren- 

 der his volume too cumbrous. Upon consulting with his 

 publishers, it was concluded best to lay the matter aside, 

 for the present at least, and to prepare anew a brief ac- 

 count of some of the insects most injurious to the orch- 

 ard, with short suggestions as to the best methods of 

 combating their ravages. This conclusion has been the 

 more readily yielded to, because the public now have a 

 medium of communication with the scientific eutomolo- 



