Tennessee 
North Carolina 
-194- 
A. C. Morgan and assistants (June 26): The tobacco flea 
beetle was not so numerous as usual on plant beds and is do- 
ing very little injury on young plants in the field. 
TOBACCO HOHHTWOPMS ( Protoparce spp.) 
C.H. Brannsn (June 20): Tobacco hornworms are causing very 
severe damage in tobacco fields over the entire State. 
Tennessee A. C. Morgan and assistants (June 26): The moths of P. 
quinquemaculata Haw. and P. sexta Joh. are moderately numerous 
and the early infestation of larvae is greater than last year. 
TOBACCO BUDWGEM ( Heliothis virescens -Pab . ) 
Forth Carolina C. H. Brannon (June 20): Tobacco budworm injury is wide- 
spread over Jthe tobacco sections. This pest causes tremend- 
ous damage to tobacco when no control measures are used. 
COHIT ROOT WEBWOEM ( Crambus caliginosellus Clem. ) 
Tennessee A. C. Morgan and assistants (June 26): This insect is mod- 
erately injurious to tobacco near Clarksville. 
SHEEN JUNE 32FTL5 ( Cotinis nitida L. ) 
Tennessee .-.. C. Morgan and assistants (June 26): This grub sericusly 
injured the early planting on about 300 acres of tobacco in 
the northern part of Montgomery County^ 
FOREST AND SHADE-TRE-E INSECTS 
Ohio 
Illinois 
Iowa 
A correction - The note on Chrys omuhalus tenebricosus 
Comst. \>y J. 3. Mclvilly, of Mississippi, in Insect Pest 
Survey Bulletin, Vol. 9, No. 4, p. 145, should have been 
C. obscurus _st. 
PiiRIODICAL CICADA ( Tibicina septendecim L. ) 
J. S. Houser (June 18): I wish to report that in company 
ith B. P. Deitz, I heard t" - o individuals of the 17-year lo- 
cust singing at Tooster on June 15. 
\7. P. Flint (June 19): "e have received definite records 
of adults of 3rood III of the periodical cicada from Pike, 
Cass, Schuyler, Montgomery, Hancock, and Knox Counties. At 
some points, especially in Knox County, adults were reported 
as being very numerous. 
C J. Drake (June): The 17-year locust has apoeared in 
large numbers in a number of counties, but they are confined 
