Extension News Letter (March 30) "Some damage expected."" .. 
Illinois. -W. p. Flint (April 16). "Adult' male, was taken March 26 and every 
warm- night thereafter at Urbana. First gravid female' taken April 4." 
Kansas. Extension News Letter (March'. 30)*' "Much darrare to wheat in southern 
part of the: State. . Poison "bait "is being effectively used against them*'" 
Texas. E. E. Scholl (April 18). "On March 14, a number of noctuid larvae 
were sent in from Crosby County. In northwest. Texas they were re- 
ported by Mr. B.-E. Karper;, - Superintendent of Substation No. 8, lo~ • 
cated at Lubbock, as doing 'considerable damare to young wheat in a 
few places in Crosby County. In one ple.ce practically all the 
wheat in a ten-acre field had been eaten to the ground. On April 
5 Mr, Karper reported that the outbreak had not become serious as 
a general proposition but that some individual farmers suffered 
heavy damages." 
FALL ARMY WORM . ' Las hyena f rur fo erda . 
Kansas. S. J. Hunter .(March 17). "Thr F^ll Ar,-/ SFarc is. doing considerable 
dai-age to vvheat in Stafford County." .:■/.' 
. ' MIS CELLM CTJS "T^FaT TKGIhITS ': " 
Chori ;:.- ry; ti_2. sp, ' ■ ■ 
Kansas. G. .,:. Deaii (March 14). "For nearjy three weeks we have been receiv- 
ing many reports frcm south central counties of Cut-worn injuriiir 
wheat and alfalfa, owing to mild weather they, have appeared two or 
three weeks earlier this seat on than in past years. In some cases 
they ;vere distributed over the greater partb of the fields, while in . 
others they were more numerous along the edge of wheat fields adjoin- 
ing pastures. n 
Cutworta undet ermined^ . 
Oklahoma. C. E. Sanborn (March 29). "Considerable damage has oeen done this 
spring even as early as Janyary by a worm which I took to be a gran- 
ulated cutworm, damage being similar to arm:/ worm damage. The main 
brood is now in the pupal stage." 
Ne matod es 
Kansas. Geo. A. Dean (March 19). "Chase County Farm Agent has sent samples of 
alfalfa roots injured apparently by Nematodes. We are. unable to find 
Nematodes present, but the roots are- full of little long burrows. In 
1919 Mr. McColloch and Mr. Tanquary found large numbers, of , Nematodes. ■ , 
present in Chase and Greenwood counties. ' Some fields have' been almost 
completely killed, 
