12 



JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY 



[Vol. 8 



West Virginia, Morgantown, — L. M. Peairs. 

 Control of apple woolly aphis. Work along new lines merely started. 



Investigations Dealing with Lepidoptera 



Arkansas, Fayetteville, — George C. Becker. 

 '' Life history, control of Sanninoidea exitiosa. Substantial progress. 



Colorado, Fort Collins —C. P. Gillette. 

 Codling moth; in progress for several years. Much data. 



Hawaii, Honolulu,— J. F. IlUngworth. 

 Palm-leaf roller {Omoides blackhurni Butl.), seasonal activity, life history, parasites. 



Begun 1913, well under way. 



Indiana, Indianapolis, — C. H. Baldwin. 

 Apple-leaf skeletonizer, life history, control. Begun 1914. Progress satisfactory. 



Indiana, Lafayette, — James Troop. 

 Life history, control, codling moth. Begun 1913. Will run one or two years more. 



Iowa, Ames, — R. L. Webster. 

 Strawberry leaf-roUer {Ancylis comptana). Begun 1913. Considerable data. 

 Variegated cutworm {Peridroma margaritosa) . Begin in 1914. Many observations. 

 Corn-ear worm {Heliothis obsoleta). Seasonal history. Begun in 1914. 



Kansas, Lawrence, — S. J. Hunter. 

 Codling moth, control. S. J. Hunter and P. W. Claassen. 



Indian meal-moth, life history and economic importance. S. J. Hunter & R. H. 

 Beamer. 



Cut-worms and army-worms, economic phases. H. B. Hungerford and Geo. H. 



Vansell. 

 Bee-moth. Geo. H. Vansell. 



Kansas, Manhattan, — Geo. A. Dean. 

 Life history and control of the the corn-ear worm. J. W. McCoUoch. 

 Life history and control of the apple-leaf skeletonizer {Canarsia liammondi). J. H. 



Merrill. 



Maryland, Baltimore, — W. M. Scott. 

 Experiments for the control of the peach tree borers. Begun 1913. 



Missouri, Columbia, — L. Haseman. 

 Life history; paints for control of peach tree borer. L. Haseman and M. E. Hays. 

 Life history, injury, control of corn-ear worm. M. E. Hays. 



Missouri, Mountain Grove, — M. P. Somes. 

 Life history and control of peach tree borer. Considerable progress. 



Montana, Bozeman,^ — R. A. Cooley. 

 Life histories and control of cutworms. 



Nebraska, Lincoln, — Myron H. Swenk. 

 Cutworm injury to Nebraska crops. Considerable data. 



New Jersey, New Brunswick, — T. J. Headlee. 

 Corn-ear worm investigations; methods of applying powdered poisons. C. H. 



Richardson and T. J. Headlee; see Repb., 1913. 

 Peach borer: study of protective coatings. H. B. Weiss and T. J. Headlee. See 



Repts., 1913, 1914. 



New York, Albany,— E. P. Felt. 

 EjSiciency of codling moth sprays. Mostly pubHshed. Begun in 1909. 



