-262- 
: 
General 
Ohio and 
Michi n.n 
General 
Georgia 
Ohio 
Indian^ 
EUROFEAN CORN BORER ( Pyrausta iiubilelis Hbn. ) 
L. K. 'vorthley (August 20): The following is a complete list to 
te of all counties frpm which .ie- township records for the Ej- 
ropean corn "borer have been received this season: Allen, Aug;Iaige , 
Coshocton., Delaware, F ranklin . Hardin, Holmes, Knox, Licking . Lo- 
r — -> Madison. Ivi rion, Hercer . Miami , Morrow, Shelby , Tuscarawas, 
¥£122., and V^n Wert, OHIO} Adam s, Allen, Kcrci-s>p, LaGrange, 
Noble, Wells, and Whitley, INDIANA; CU^ton and Eaton, MICHIGAN; 
Bedford, Columbia, Payette . Huntingdon, Men tour , Horthumberland , 
Somerset, UhjLcn, 
anc. 
-•-.. 
yoming . P2MSYL7ANIA; Delaware , ' I ' YORK. 
' 
xiiose underlined are new county records also. Although the 
degree of infestation found and the chance- of spread from these 
are/js before fall are extremely slight, a change in the quaran- 
tine line is contemplate:! as soon as more territory has been cov- 
ered by the scouts. 
^onthly Letter,- Bur, lit. IW 159, (July, 1927); Adfatsiofi the-, 
mported pare si t a: Fxor i^j-eq rob or- tor 7-b, have been 
recovered in the par-^i.t:; conservation cages at Monroe and Erie, 
Mich, , and at Sandusky, Ohio. 
Monthly Letter, Eur. Eht. Ho. 159, ( July, 1927,) : A portion of the 
foreign parasites of the corn borer which have been shipped from 
Arlington to the Middle West for liberation in the field have in- 
cluded adults of AngLtia •pun ctoria Roman, which '-ere reared from 
corn-borer material collected in New England. This foreign par- 
asite of the corn borer, originally introduced into New England, 
has been recovcrel in increasing numbers each year in that area, 
and is now being used for recolonisa tion, 
COSH EAR HOEH (H eliothis obsole te Eab. ) 
H. b. Swingle (July 28): The corn ear "'orn is causing considera- 
ble damage to late corn in this section. In one field as high 
as five larvae were found feeding on the top of a single plant. 
ractically every plant in' one section of the field was injure''.. 
E. W. Mendenhall (August 13): The corn ear worm is very serious 
and general in Ohio this ye-r. 
". J. Davis (July 30): The corn ear worm has been reported within 
the past few do.ys eating into the developing tassels* of corn from 
InUan-iDolis, Rushville, and C-mpbellsburg, 
H. K, il y (August 20): The corn enr worm was reported damaging 
et corn at Huntington and Warsaw, and popcorn at Cicero. 
C. N. Ainslie (August 13): S'-eet com in gardens is almost univer- 
