- 178 - 
ebraska M.H^Swenk (July 15). "The usual number of complaints of injury by this 
pes$ were received during the past month." 
regon A.L.Lovett (July 12). "Serious injury from July 5 in southern Oregon 
and at The Dalles." 
-QNIOIj_ 
ONION. TERIPS ( Thrins ta'naci Lind.) 
assachusetts H.T.Fernald (July 3l) . "The onion thrips, which is frequently 
very abundant by this time, has not been observed up until the 
past week and even now is not doing any amount of appreciable 
damage." 
ississippi R.W.Harnsd (July 10). "A small patch of onions at A & M. College 
heavily infested. c 
SPOTTED CUTWORM (A^rotis c-n ip-rum L. ) 
assachusetts H.T.Fernald (July 21). "On July 19* this insect was found attacking 
onions in Sunderland district in the Connecticut Valley, the larvae 
cutting the half grown to nearly full grown plants nearly to the 
bulb. The field infested was directly west of a heavy clover sod 
which had just been cut. It seems evident that the cutworms migrated 
from this clover field. In two days they had worked into the field 
14 rows. In another case where recently cut clover was near oy t 
they had migrated to corn and onions. It was not uncommon to find 
from Z to 3 well grown larvae in a single onion leaf,," 
SU GAR BEET 
. . SUGAR-BEET 1T7 EB T7T ORTv! ( LoxosteP-e sticticalia L.) 
ontana A. L. Strand. "Preparations are under way to induce all growers 
in the Yellowstone Valley to combat a heavy infestation of the 
sugar-beet webworm. " 
