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are far rerroved froir the generally infested erea in the Connecticut 
River Vail ey. 
EAGWORM ( Thyridootery x eph emeraeformis Haw. ) 
Virginia. N. R. H"unt (October 23): Bag^orms seer to he rrore ahundant than 
"usual around Clarendon, ~)erhat>s because evergreens are getting irore 
numerous in hoTe Plantings. 
Alaharra. J. M. Robinson (October 23): Bagworms continued to be active gen- 
erally over Alabama. 
PIGEON TREMEX ( Trem ex col umba L. ) 
Ohio. T. H, Parks (October 17): Adults were received during October from 
Knox and Montgomery Counties, with the statement that they ^ere taken on 
maple trees and ^ere so comron on hickory trees as to cause their death. 
It is our belief that the;v ^ere attacking hickory trees already injured. 
Nebraska. M. H. Swerik (October 30): A specimen ^as sent in on October 11 
from Lincoln County, where they were attacking elm trees. 
LONG-HORNED BEETLES (Cerambycidae) 
South Dakota and Nebraska. N. D. Tvy^ant (September): A snecies of Prionus 
va.B found killing euite a fe** green ash (C aragana ) and honeylocust seed- 
lings in the Plains Shelterbelt Nursery at Pierre, S. Dak., early in Sen- 
tember. Tylonotus bim acr'lptus Hald. is quite common and abundant in the 
old green ash tree claims and farmstead nlantings from 40 to 50 years 
old in central Nebraska and South Dakota. The trees attacked by this in- 
sect die branch by branch, starting at the tot). 
BEECH 
BEECH SCALE (Cryoto c occus fagi Baer. ) 
Maine. H. B. Pierson (October): A light outbreak of the felted beech scale 
has been found on Mount Desert Island. 
CATALPA 
CATALPA LEAP MINER (Agromyza ci treifrons Mall, ) 
Ohio. J. S. Houser (August 31): Catalpa leaves submitted by a correspondent 
show as much as one-third of the leaf occupied hy the mines of the Catalpa 
leaf miner. 
Ill 
AN APHID ( Dreyfus la piceae Ratz. ) 
New York. H. J. MacAloney (October): This aohid. has been found in Ne^ York 
