1900] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 477 



the newest etiological standpoint, 82, Mar. 10. Chitteiideii, F. H. 

 Insects injurious to beans and peas, 7. Dearness, J., et al., Confer- 

 ence on the San Jose scale, 7*5. Del Guercio, D. G. Some Tortrices 

 of the Italian fauna specially injurious to cultivated plants, figs ; Contri- 

 butions to the study of the forms and of the biology of Trama radicis 

 Kaltenbach with a note on the position of the genus in the family Aphid;u. 

 figs.; Contributions to the study of the forms and of the biology of the 

 Phlceothrips of the olive (P. olete (Costa) Targioni) and on some soap- 

 mixtures of carbon bisulphide and nicotine as insecticides, figs., 1!2<>. 

 Ewert. Destructive effects of some species of Tipula on meadows. 

 Zeitschrift fiir Pflanzen-Krankheiten, ix, 6, Stuttgart, Feb. 4, 1900. 

 Fletcher, T. Injurious insects in Ontario during 1899, 75.--Hananer, 

 S. W. San Jose" scale in Germany, 12O, No. 235, April. Howard, L. 

 O. The principal insects affecting the tobacco plant, 7. Hutt, \V. N. 

 Asparagus beetles, figs., 75. Larbaletrier, A. Chimney soot used as 

 a fertilzer and as an insecticide, 7O, Mar. 10. Loch head, W. Notes 

 on some insects of coniferous shade trees, figs.; injurious insects of the 

 orchard, garden and farm for the season of 1899, figs., 75. Lugger, O. 

 Fifth annual report of the Entomologist of the State Experiment Station 

 of the University of Minnesota, to the Governor, for the year 1899. St. 

 Paul, 1899 248 pp., 249 text figs., 6 pis. "Contains an account of all 

 beetles found in Minnesota, which, in their larval and adult stages, are 

 destructive to our fruit-bearing trees, shrubs and canes, and which fre- 

 quently cause considerable losses to our fruit growers." Marlatt, C. 

 L. The struggle against injurious insects [translation into French], 

 Revue Scientifique, Paris, Mar. 3, 1900 Kidgely, B. H. Phylloxera 

 in Switzerland, 12O, No. 234, March. Smith, J. B. Report of the 

 Entomological Department of the New Jersey Agricultural College Ex- 

 periment Station for the year 1899. Camden, N. J., 1900. [Pp. 421-512 

 of the Annual Report of the Station ; figs.]. Id. The apple-plant louse, 

 .Ipliis mali Koch., figs., 2 pis. Bulletin 143, New Jersey Agric. Exper. 

 Stations, New Brunswick, N. ]., Mar. 8, 1900. Targioni Tozzetti, A. 

 History of the Royal Station of Agrarian Entomology and Chronicle of 

 its operations from 1886 to 1896, 12<>. Webster, F. M. The native 

 home of the San Jose scale, 75. Weed, C. M. The spiny elm cater- 

 pillar [Vanessa an/io/>a], figs.,- Bulletin 67, New Hampshire College' 

 Agric. Exper. Station, Durham, N. H., Oct , '99. Wiloox, E. V. 

 Abstracts of recent literature, Experiment Station Record, xi, 6, 7, 

 Washington, 1900. 



AKACHN"IDA. Banks, N. Some new North American spiders, 

 4. Cambridge, F. O. P. Arachnida Araneidea, vol. ii, pp. 89-104, 

 pi. vii,* 15. E<cher-Kiindig, I. Impressions of an entomological 

 collector in Malta [Parasitism of mites on Diptera], 2 pis., Yierteljahrs- 

 S''hrift der naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Zurich, 1899, 3 and 4, Jan. 15, 

 1900. Fyles, T. W. Spiders, figs., 75. van Hasselt, A. W. M. 

 A Lathrodectus nest [in Dutch], i pi., 4(>. Loinan, J. C. C. On the 



