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ny of the plant hoppers are such nuisances to us, there is one family of hoppers that is seldom a nuisance. THE COMICAL TREE HOPPERS Do you know the tree hoppers,--absurd little jokers that they are? Oh, yes, they are hard and three cornered, like animated beechnuts, as somebody has said. Yes, some of them have humps on their backs and some have horns. [Illustration] John says he once made a collection of tree hoppers and put them in a box with a reading glass over the top, and showed them to his friends to make them laugh. May says she saw them, and they reminded her of Brownies. Would it not be fun to have a tree hopper Brownie book! The tree hoppers jump about on the bushes and eat the juices of the plants, but there are not usually enough of them to do damage. They seldom come in swarms like some of the leaf hoppers, though sometimes they do. THE JUMPING PLANT LICE The jumping plant lice are nearly related to the tree hoppers, but they do not look at all like them. Under the magnifying glass they look like tiny cicadas. See, here is a picture of one enlarged. [Illustration] Their natural size is no larger than a plant louse. Have you not often seen them clustered close together on the young twigs of pear trees--tiny, light-colored things that jumped in all directions when you touched the twig? The name of the plant louse that infests pear trees is the pear-tree psylla. It is very destructive to pear trees, sucking out the juices of the young shoots. The pear trees can be saved by spraying them with kerosene emulsion as soon as the young leaves have opened in the spring. THE APHIDS Now, let us go in search of the aphids, or aphides, as they are also called. We shall not have to search far. [Illustration] In a very dry season we generally need not search at all. All we need do is to examine the nearest weed to find plenty of aphides. Yes, they are the little plant lice that seem at times to cover every growing thing. Sometimes they are green, sometimes brown, or gray, or reddish, in color. They are tiny creatures, but what they lack in size they more than make up in numbers. Go now, and find some aphides. Ah, here you all come, each bearing a leaf or a twig on which are aphids. There was no trouble in finding them! They do not hop like the jumping plant lice when they are disturbed. They remain where they are unless they are
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