October, ’18] 
CURRENT NOTES 
439 
The Hawaiian Beet Webworm. Bui. 109, pt. Ill, Bur. Ent., U. S. Dept. Agr., Nov. 
6, 1911. 
Report of the Assistant Entomologist. Bienn. Rpt. Bd. Agr. & For., Hawaii, pp. 152- 
159, 1910 (1911). 
Some Experiments on the Chrysanthemum Plant-Louse (Macrosiphum solanifolii 
Osborni Gillette). Bienn. Rpt. Bd. Agr. & For., Hawaii, pp. 160-172, 1910 
(1911). 
The Imported Cabbage Worm (joint with F. H. Chittenden). Bui. 109, pt. Ill, Bur. 
Ent., U. S. Dept. Agr., Apr. 5, 1912. 
The Sugar-beet Webworm. Bui. 109, pt. VI, Bur. Ent., U. S. Dept. Agr., Sept. 16, 
1912. 
The Horse-radish Webworm. Bui. 109, pt. VII, Bur. Ent., U. S. Dept. Agr., Jan. 
30, 1913. 
The Striped Beet Caterpillar. Bui. 127, pt. II, Bur. Ent., U. S. Dept. Agr., May 19, 
1913. 
Life-history of the Diamond-back Moth. Jour Agr. Research, U. S. Dept. Agr., 
July 2, 1917. 
Notes on the Life Cycle of the Sugar-beet Webworm. Jour. Econ. Ent., Dec., 1917, 
pp. 543-544. 
In addition to the list of publications above furnished, Mr. Marsh 
had contributed a considerable amount of work on other topics, in¬ 
cluding reports on the onion thrips in Colorado, on the larger beet 
leaf-beetle, on the false chinch-bug, on the bean leaf-beetle, and on the 
western cabbage flea-beetle. 
F. H. C. 
Current Notes 
October, 1918 
Mr. J. L. Horsfall has been appointed assistant in entomology at the Iowa College 
and Station. 
Mr. R. H. Smith has been appointed entomologist of the Idaho Station vice A. C. 
Burrill, resigned. 
Dr. Charles T. Brues has been promoted to be assistant professor of economic 
entomology in Harvard University. 
The field laboratory of the Bureau of Entomology formerly located at Wellington, 
Kansas, has been removed to Wichita. 
Surgeon-General William C. Gorgas accompanied Secretary Baker on his visit to 
the French battle front in September. 
Mr. George Gilbertson, instructor in entomology at the South Dakota College and 
Station, is now in the military service. 
Dr. L. O. Howard, chief of the Bureau of Entomology, during the summer, visited 
all of the field stations throughout the western states. 
Professor E. R. King, assistant professor of entomology at Cornell University, has 
been commissioned second lieutenant in the Aviation Corps. 
