22 
Iowa —Ft. Madison : 
About July 7, moths appeared. 
“Caught moths in the Fall of 1875 and Spring of 1876 in great 
numbers, by sugaring, looking in both seasons very fresh.”— 
(Hoffmeister.) 
New York —Schenectady : 
July 7,-21. 
August 7, 18, 16, 18, 19, 21, 25, 26, 28, 30. 
September 2, 4, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 18, 20, 22, 25, 27, 39, 30. 
October 2, 4, 6 (1875).—(Lintner.) 
Clyde, Wayne Co.: 
First appearance June 23; subsequent captures not recorded. 
Plenty at sugar.—(Devereaux.) 
Long Island: 
Moths commenced appearing June 21 (1880).—(Comstock.) 
Albany: 
Latter part of May; from a single pupa found.—(Meske.) 
Penn sylva nia —Re a ding : 
“Flies into my lamp in evenings in August and part of Sep¬ 
tember.” 
“Found one in mid-winter.”—(Strecker.) 
Massachusetts —South Shore : 
About 1st September, in immense numbers.—(Boston Daily Ad¬ 
vertiser, quoted by Piiley.) 
Cambridge : 
October 27, at sugar.—(Mann.) 
“Until late in October."—Thaxter.) 
Canada —St. Catharines : 
June 2.—(Norman.) 
Maine —Bangor: 
x\bout the last of August.—(Packard.) 
Woldsborough: 
Worms collected August 14; became pupae the 20th; first moths 
appeared September 6, and continued coming out until Sep¬ 
tember 16.—(Goodale—teste Packard.) 
FlitteSy Point: 
“Appeared at sugar in small numbers July 25, and was common 
from that time till October 1. On the evening of August 8, 
an immense swarm visited my sugar, and though I had more 
than seventy square feet of surface sugared, there was not 
room for all that came. They were crowded on the trees and 
boards as thickly as they could pack, and I estimated that 
there were at the very least 10,000 specimens on the sugar at 
a time. They diminished rapidly in numbers as the evening 
went on, and by ten o’clock there were about the usual 
number. The next evening they were in no greater numbers 
than usual.—(Pi. Thaxter.) 
Southern States —Prof. Comstock reports having received specimens 
of the moth “from Texas, Alabama and Georgia, all through 
the winter.” 
