86 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Feb., '(X) 



House Flies. Article in Florida Health Notes, May 1908. 

 The House-Fly as an Agent in the Dissemination of Infectious 



Diseases. By Theobald Smith, M. D. Amer. Journal of 



Public Hygiene, Aug. 1908. 



B. MOSQUITOES. 



United States Department of Agriculture. Division of Ento- 

 mology. Notes on the Mosquitoes of the United States. 

 By L. O. Howard, Ph. D. Washington, Government Print- 

 ing Office. 1900. 



American Public Health Association. The Etiology of Yel- 

 low Fever. A preliminary note. By Walter Reed, James 

 Carroll, A. Agramonte, Jesse W. Lazear, Surgeons U. S. 

 Army. Columbus, O. 1903. 



The propagation of Yellow Fever; Observations based on re- 

 cent researches. By Walter Reed, M. D. 



The Prevention of Yellow Fever. By Walter Reed, M. D. 

 and James Carroll, M. D. Both papers reprinted from the 

 Medical Record, Oct. 26, 1901. 



Experimental Yellow Fever. By Walter Reed, James Carroll, 

 A. Agramonte. July 6, 1901. 



Mosquitoes : How they live ; how they carry disease ; how 

 they are classified ; how they may be destroyed. By L. O. 

 Howard. New York, McClure, Phillips and Co., 1901. 



Scientific American Supplement No. 1305. The Extermina- 

 tion of Malaria-Breeding Mosquitoes by Petroleum and 

 Drainage. By Henry Clay Weeks. January 5, 1901. 



New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station. Special Bul- 

 letin. The Salt-marsh Mosquito. By John Smith, Sc. D. 

 July 8, 1902. 



United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Ento- 

 mology. Key to the known Larvae of the Mosquitoes 

 of the United States. By L. O. Howard. No date. 



United States Department of Agriculture, Division of Ento- 

 mology. Circular No. 13, second series. Mosquitoes and 

 Fleas. No date. 



