54 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Feb., '22 



General Entomology 8 Relations to Plants (noneconom- 



Methods 5 ic) 2 



Cytology 4 Parasites (of animal hosts) 9 



Anatomy 8 Relations to Man 5 



Physiology 15 General Economic Entomology 19 



Ontogeny 4 Insects Injurious to Plants 24 



Genetics 8 Insecticides and Fumigants 18 



Taxonomy 6 Apiculture 8 



Ecology 9 Other Special Insects 10 



Araneina 1 Hemiptera 16 



Acarina 6 Coleoptera 15 



Myriopoda 1 Hymenoptera (exclusive of Apis) 



Orthoptera 3 8 



Isoptera 1 Apis 8 



Ephemerida 3 Lepidoptera 25 



Odonata 2 Diptera (exclusive of Drosophila) 



Xeuroptera 1 19 



Mallophaga 1 Drosophila 6 



Anoplura 1 Siphonaptera 1 



Many of the figures in this second list are duplicated ; thus 

 a paper on the Genetics of Drosophila appears under both of 

 these headings. 



The paper credited to the general sessions of the A. A. A. S. 

 was the address of the retiring President, Dr. L. O. Howard, 

 entitled, "On Some Presidential Addresses : The War on the 

 Insects," which has been published in Science for December 

 30, 1921. 



The symposium of the Economic Entomologists and the 

 American Phytopathological Society was on "Insects as Dis- 

 seminators of Plant Diseases," in which Dr. E. D. Ball, of 

 Washington, D. C, and Prof. L. Caesar, of Canada, represented 

 the Entomologists. 



Included in the above lists are also the Annual Address of 

 the Entomological Society by Dr. Seymour Hadwen, of the 

 United States Biological Survey, on "Northern Oestridae" ; the 

 Presidential Address before the Economic Entomologists by 

 Prof. George A. Dean, of Manhattan, Kansas, on "How We 

 May Increase the Effectiveness of Economic Entomology," and 

 a paper read by Dr. L. O. Howard on "The Organization Meet- 

 ing of the Association of Economic Entomologists, at Toronto. 

 August, 1899." This was "saved" for the very enjoyable 



