Feb., '09] ENTOMOLOGICAL XF\VS. 85 



Proceeding's of the Washing-ton Academy of Sciences. A 

 Contribution to the Study of the Insect Fauna of Human 

 Excrement. By L. O. Flovvard, Ph. D., Washington. 

 Published by the Academy. 1900. 



United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Ento- 

 mology. Circular No. 71, revised Edition. House Flies. 

 By L. O. Howard. No date. 



The House Fly as a carrier of Disease. By Wm. Lyman 

 Underwood. June 1903. 



United States Department of Agriculture, Farmers' Bulletin 

 No. 155, "How Insects affect the Health in Rural Dis- 

 tricts." 



Pollution of New York Harbor as a Menace to Health by 

 the dissemination of intestinal diseases through the agency 

 of the common house fly. A report by Daniel D. Jack- 

 son, S. B. to the Committee on pollution of the Merchants' 

 Association of New York. July, 1908. 



Typhoid Fever, the Story of the Fly that doesn't wipe its 

 Feet. Reprinted by permission from the Saturday Eve- 

 ning Post by the Merchants' Association of New York. 

 Woods Hutchinson, M. D., March 1908. 



An Advance Agent of Death. By Mary B. and Lewis E. 

 Theiss. Good Housekeeping, May 1908. 



The Dangerous House Fly. Fighting the House Fly. By 

 W. Frost and C. T. Vorhees. Reprinted from "Country 

 Life in America." Bulletin of the North Carolina State 

 Board of Health. May 1908. 



Monthly Bulletin Indiana State Board of Health. May 1908. 



The House Fly. 



Typhoid Fever. The Story of the fly that does not wipe its 

 feet. By Woods Hutchinson, M. D. Saturday Evening 

 Post, March 7, 1908. 



The Dangerous House Fly. The appalling prolificacy and 

 disease-spreading habits of a filthy pest. The best meth- 

 ods for fighting them. I. The house-fly nuisance. By W. 

 Frost and C. T. Vorhees. II. Fighting the house-fly. 

 By E. V. Wilcox. Country Life in America. May 1908. 



