- 162 - 
several townships in Price County. Over 10,000 bushels of poisoned 
bran mash have already been distributed." 
Nebraska M.H.Swenk (July 13). "Grasshopper injury continues most ser&oas in 
Scottsbluff, Morrill, Sheridan, and Sious Counties in western Nebraska. 
A serious local outbreak in southeastern Washington County developed 
late in June." 
Iontana A,L. Strand. "The two-striped grasshoppar has increased enormously 
through the Yellowstone Valley and is causing considerable damage, 
especially to alfalfa, n 
A, L. Strand. "The clear -winged grasshoppsr, Camnula nellucida Scudd.^ 
is especially abundant throughout the Marias River counties which wfre*** 
very dry last season (Glacier, Toole, Pondera, Liberty, and Chout3a& 
Counties). As one proceeds farther southward the number of warrior 
grasshoppers decreases and the lesser migratory grasshopper Melanonlus 
atlanis Biley preponderates. This last-named grasshopper is very 
abundant throughout the sections of northern and eastern Montana in 
Eill, Blaine, Chouteau, Cascade, Phillips, Valley, and* Lewis and Clark 
Counties. In soire places many of the hoppers of this species are 
already winged, while in. other localties they have just hatched," 
Claude Waksland (July 3). "In the vicinity of Rexburg they had serious 
trouble with grasshoppers, and it is quite probable that the unusual 
abundance of blister beetles observed this year is connected with this 
grasshopper outbreak," 
H. J. Pack (July 26). "The black cricket (Anabrus simplex B ald) has 
reappeared in Ucntah and Cache Counties and even in greater numbers 
just over the State line in Idaho where a strip of country at least 
5 miles wide and fifteen miles long is infested. Farmers and business 
men have joined in "cricket drives" pending the outcome of poisoned 
bait experiments . " 
C.^.Creel (July 10). "County agent of Blbo County reports grasshoppers 
coming off the foothills and invading cultivated lands in South Fork, 
Lamoille, Starr, and Metropolis Valley. The majority of these grass- 
hoppers are still wingless. In some wfto*£ , fields the crop has beBn 
totally destroyed." 
Mississippi R.W. Earned (July 18). "Th3 differential grasshoppsr is causing consider- 
able damage at different places in Mississippi. In TallahatcMe County 
25 acres of soybeans have been almost wholly destroyed and they were 
working in a 250-acre field. In Monroe County the grasshoppers were 
destroying everything in a garden, including potatoes, tomatoes, and 
beaaa." 
Idaho 
Idaho & 
Jtah 
