92 



carpenter bee, G 



cave cricket, G 



chinch bug, G 



clover-hay worm, D 



codling moth, G 



Colorado potato beetle, G 



corn plant louse, G 



currant borer, G 



cut worm 



dragon fly, G 



fish moth, G 



flea beetle 



flesh fly, G 



gall fly 



grain moth, G 



guest fly, G 



hawk moth 



ichneumon fly, G 



lady beetle 



lady bug 



leaf folder 



leaf hopper 



leaf roller 



pine leaf scale 



plant louse, G 



red legged locust 



saw fly 



scurvy bark louse, G 



silk worm 



span worm 



squash vine borer 



tussock moth, G 



two lined prominent 



white ant, G, D ( ?) 



carpenter-bee, D 



cave-cricket, D 



chinch-bug, D 



clover hay-worm, G 



codling-moth, D 



Colorado potato-beetle, D 



corn plant-louse, D 



currant- borer, D 



cut- worm 



dragon-fly, D 



fish-moth 



flea-beetle, D 



flesh-fly, D 



gall-fly, D 



grain-moth, D 



guest-fly, D 



hawk-moth, D 



ichneumon-fly, D 



lady-beetle 



lady-bug 



leaf-folder, G, D 



leaf-hopper, G, D 



leaf-roller, D 



pine-leaf scale, G, D 



plant-louse, D 



red-legged locust, G, D 



saw-fly, D 



scurvy bark-louse, D 



silk-worm 



span-worm, D 



squash-vine borer, G, D 



tussock-moth, D 



two-lined prominent, G, D 



white-ant, D 



carpenterbee 

 cavecricket 

 chinchbug 

 clover hayworm 

 codlingmoth 

 Colorado potatobeetle 

 corn plantlouse 

 currentborer 

 cutworm, G, D 

 dragonfly, G 

 fishmoth, D, G 

 fleabeetle, G 

 fleshfly, G 

 gallfly, G 

 grainmoth 

 guestfly 

 hawkmoth, G 

 ichneumonfly 

 ladybeetle, G, D 

 lady bug, G, D 

 leaffolder 

 leaf hopper, G 

 leafroller, G 

 pineleaf scale 

 plantlouse 

 redlegged locust 

 sawfly, G 

 scurvy barklouse 

 silkworm, G, D 

 spanworm, G, D 

 squash vine borer 

 tussockmoth 

 twolined prominent 

 whiteant 



NOTES FROM MARYLAND ON THE PRINCIPAL INJURIOUS INSECTS 



OF THE YEAR. 



By Willis G. Johnson, College Parle, Md. 



The white ant. — The season of 1898 has been a very exceptional one 

 from the entomological point of view up to the present time. The so- 

 called white ant (Termes flavipes) was the first insect of any particular 

 economic importance to come to my attention. I noticed an account in 

 a local paper, April 7, that a swarm of insects had appeared in the 

 Sunday school room of the Protestant Episcopal Church of All Saints 

 in Baltimore during the session of the school which so completely 

 demoralized the scholars that it was impossible to restore order. I 

 made an examination of the place April 8, and found a very serious 

 condition of affairs. The church is a large one, built of stone and brick, 

 with the Sunday school room on the first floor and the auditorium 



