C 578 ] 
c oat any Remedy yet found out to deffroy them y 
c they have no Eyes, as can be feen. Whether they 
c are in their ultimate State, or are to be Flies, I 
c know not, for we could find no Aurelia. The 
* firft News we heard of them was about two Years 
4 ago, by a Gentleman who lives near Norwich , 
‘ and then were fuppofed to be new Comers. This 
£ Summer they have been much in High Suffolk , 
c to the Farmers and Graziers great Lofs; and we 
c now hear they are likewife in feme Part of Effex > 
c they are often difeover'd by Hogs, who, as> I am 
e inform'd, are greedy of them at firft, but having 
< once had their Bellies full, never care for them 
‘ after.' 
Of thefe Grubs Mr. Arderon gives the following 
Information. — -They are, fays he, a Species of In- 
feds but too common about Norwich , and, to my 
own Knowledge, have been more or lefs numerous in 
this County for thefe twenty Years paft. They are 
the Erne# of the Scarahxus arbor eus vulgaris major 
of Mr. Ray , that is the Tree-Beetle, or blind Beetle, 
vulgarly in Norfolk called the Dor . 
In different Parts of England they are called the 
Brown Tree Beetle, the Blind Beetle, the Chafer, the 
Cock-Chafer, the Jack Horner,, the )effry-Cock, the 
May-Bug, and the Dor. By the j Dutch they are named 
Baiim-kaefcr , Rouh-kaefer , Koren Worm y or Corn- 
Worm, becaufc they deftroy the Roots of Corn j and in 
Zealand , Molenaers or Miller s> as Goedartius fays. 
Chap. 78. becaufe they bite the Leaves of feveral 
Sorts of Trees into Particles as fmall as if they were 
ground. In EnAand I have likewife heard them 
called. 
