and pleasant, but reputed as inducing diarrhoea when recently gatliered. A fermented deeoetion is used as l)e«r. .See t'AROB; HoNEY-LocusT; and Plate accompanying Lime-Tree.
LOCUST-TREE INSECTS. The insects that
attack the locust (/{uhiiiiu psetidacacia) are
numerous, and the tree suiters from some of
them very seriously in certain parts of the United
States. I'orty-one species of insects feeding upon
this tree are treated in Packard's Report on For-
est Insects. Of those which affect the trunk, the
locust-borer, the larva of a long-horned beetle
(Cyllcne robinice). is one of the most imjjortant.
It is a black beetle with yellow transverse bands,
and, like its near relative (Cyltenc picttts) which
infests the hickory, has a superficial resemblance
to certain wasps, and has thus liecn cited as a
case of protective mimicry. Anotlier borer, the
lan'a of a sesiid niotli {Sci<iptiron robini(r). is
destructive to locust-trees as well as to i)opIars
on the Pacific coast; and the locust twig-borer
(Ecdiitolupha insiticiana) causes a thickened
growth of certain twigs for a distance of from
one to three inches. The adult of this species is
a tortricine moth. ( See Leaf-Roller. ) Many of
the leaf-feeders are leaf-rollers and leaf-miners,
but the larva of a very striking Initterlly known
as the 'locust-skipper' {Eiidniniis tili/nis) has
this habit also. A leaf-mining beetle (Odontota
scutcllaris) disfigures the leaves with its larval
mines throughout the Eastern States. The
larva of the locust saw-fly {Xcnititus siniilaris)
feeds upon the leaves and occasionally defoliates
trees. Consult Packard, Fifth Report of the
United Slates Entomological Commission (Wash-
ington, 1890).
LODE (AS. lad, way, course, from lijian, Goth.
leipan, OIIG. Ildan, to go. to travel). A miners'
term for veins in which minerals occur. They
are crevices, more or less vertical, produced by
contraction or meclianieal disturbaiue of the
rock, which have subsequently been tilled with
metallic ores. See Ore Deposits; Mining;
Com STOCK Lode. '
LO-DE'BAR. A place in Gilead which (if
the reading be correct) was the residence of
ilachir. son of Ammiel, with whom Jtmathan's
son, Mephibosheth, lived at the beginning of
David's reign ( IL Sam. ix. 4-.')). Machir and
Lo-debar are mentioned again in chapter xvii. 27
in connection with David's flight in consequence
of Absalom's rebellion. Probably the same place
is meant in Joshua xiii. 2(i (cf. Revised Version,
margin), and some authorities think it is re-
ferred to in Amos vi. 13. The location has not
been identified. A village, Idbar, seven miles
east of Mkes ( Gadara ) has been suggested.
LODEMAN, Ifi'df-man, Ernest Gustavus
(1807-90). An American horticulturist and au-
thor. He was born in Xeuchntel. Switzerland,
but came to America with his parents in 1870, his
father having been appointed professor of modern
languages in the Jlichigan State Xormal School.
He was graduated from the Agricultural College
of Michigan in 1889. In 1890 he became assistant
to Prof. L. H. Bailey in Cornell L'niversity and
shortly afterwards instructor in that institution.
While there he originated the spray calendar, a
placard which gives in concise form approximate
dates for spraying insect and fungous enemies
of various crops, together with formulre for pre-
paring the principal fungicides and insecticides.
He also published the results of many investi-
gations in bulletins of the Cornell Agricultural
Experiment Station. The iSprayimj of Plants
(Xew York, 1890), his only book, was ])repared
after cnmprcliensive field work, and embraces
not only the results of his exhaustive studies at
home and al)road, but all that was then consid-
ered valuable on the subject.
LODER'S GAZELLE. See Gazelle.
LODESTAR, LOADSTAR (lode, AS. lad,
way, course + star), Leaui.ng Star, or Guiding
St.r. Terms applied to the Pole-star, which is
the last star in the tail of the Little Bear. It is
a star of the second magnitude, located about 1"
20' from the North Pole.
LODESTONE, or LOADSTONE. See Magnetite.
'LODEVE, 16'dev'. The capital of an arron-
disscment in the Department of Herault. France,
situated in a beautiful valley on the Ergue. 30
miles northwest of Montpellier by rail (ilap:
France, K 8). It retains its mediieval walls and
has a cathedral dating from the thirteenth cen-
tury. It is noted for its manufactures of army
clothing and woolens. Lodeve is the Gallic
Luteva and the Roman Forum Neronis. Previous
to the Revolution it was the seat of a bishop.
Cardinal Fleurv was a native of Lodfeve. Popu-
lation, in 1900, 8200.
LODGE, Edmund (1"56-1839). An English
biographer and historian, born in London. He
held various heraldic positions, and his studies
in that field include: Illustrations of Brilish
History, Biography, and Manners in the Reigns
of Henry 17//., Edward VI., Mary, Eli::aheth,
and James I. (1791), a selection from contem-
porary manuscripts in the College of Arms; Por-
traits of Illustrious Personages of Great Britain
(1814), a work costing more than £40.000; and
The Genealogy of the Existing British Peerage
(last ed. 1859). Lodge's Peerage is not Lodge's
work; he merely lent his name to the compilers,
the Misses Innes.
LODGE, Gonzales (1863—). An American
classicist, born at Fort Littleton, Pa. He re-
ceived the bachelor's degree from .Johns Hop-
kins in 1883. and his doctorate in 1886. From
1889 to 1900 he was professor of Latin in Bryn
Mawr, and afterwards became professor of Cireek
and Latin in the Teachers College at Columbia
L^niversity. He was joint author of the Gilder-
sleeve-Lodge Latin Grammar (New York, 1894);
editor of Plato's Gorgias (Boston, 1891); and
was also made managing editor of the Gildcr-
sleeve-Lodge Latin Series. In 1902 his great
Lexicon to Plautus began to appear in parts.
LODGE, Henry Cabot (1850—). An American politician, orator, and man of letters, born in Boston, May 12, 1850. He was graduated from Harvard College in 1871 and from the Law School of Harvard University in 1875. From 1873 to 1876 he edited the North American Review and the following three years was lecturer on American history at Harvard. He then (1879) became editor of the International Reineu-, which post he held till 188L About this time he entered political life: besides serving in the JIassachusetts Legislature, 1880-81, he was a delegate to the Republican National Conventions of 1880 and 1884. In 1886 he was
elected to the National House of Representatives.