New York. N, Y. State Coll. Agr. News Letter (July 3l)i Quite abundant on 
untreated prunes in Niagara County, 
Michigan. R. Hutson (August 22): Scattered infestations over most of the State. 
Infestations observed at Mason, East Jordan, East Lansing, Dowagiac, Fen- 
ville, and Grand Rapids. 
PACIFIC MITE ( Paratetranychus pacif icus McG. ) 
Washington. L. G. Smith (August l)j In the vicinity of the Prosser Experiment 
Station it is attacking raspberries and pears, the latter showing consider-, 
able damage, 
APPLE 
CODLING MOTH ( Carpooapsa pomonella L.) * 
New York, D. W. Hamilton (August 21): In bait traps at Poughkeepsie peak capture, 
of adults occurred from July 31 through August 2, but relatively heavy 
captures continued through August 11, Number of moths captured has de- 
creased daily since August 12. Injury is now severe in orchards untreated 
during August, where first-brood injury was prevalent. 
N. Y. State Coll. Agr. News Lotter (August 7)i In western New York littl- 
damage noted in Monroe County from second brood, but in Niagara County 
fresh larval injury began to show up in the middle of the week on apples 
and a little earlier on pears. Larval injury noted in the lake zone, 
wherever the first brood was not controlled. 
New Jersey. E. Kostal (August 5 ): Second brood has caused heavy infestations at 
Morganville, Monmouth County, even in treated orchards. 
Delaware. L. A. Stearns (August 23): Considerable adult activity during the 
last week in July and the first week in August, with the peak, as indicated 
by bait-trap catches, on August 1. Infestation generally greater than in 
193S. 
Virginia. A. M. Woodsido (August 2l): Infestation in Augusta CoUnty considerably 
heavier than last year. Plight of first-brood moths still fairly heavy in 
the ' orchards. 
Tennessee. G. M. Bentley (August 2l): Pound on apples at Columbia, Maury County. 
Indiana. L. F. Steiner (August 23): First-brood adults coming to traps in the 
Vincennes area in uniformly large numbers since the peak of activity in mid 
July, Second-brood adult activity increasing rapidly since August 19. In- 
jury to fruit well above normal. (August 24): The 1,328 moths captured 
August 22-23 may be the peak for the second brood. It was the largest 
catch since July 15 and slightly exceeds the maximum catch of spring-brood 
moths. Most of the many fresh injuries now appearing in well-sprayed 
orchards believed to be third— brood. Mature larvae leaving apples in in- 
creasingly large numbers only since August 19, 
