The Codling Moth. 



155 



tions on oviposition and the habits of the young larvas, resulting i:i 

 the discovery of some new and important economic facts. (The paper 

 also appears in Rept. Mich, Hort. Soc. for 1896, and that portion of 

 it relating to the codling-moth in the Rural New Yorker for Jan. 30, 

 1897, p. 67; and in the Proc. West. N. Y. Hort. Soc. for 1897, 

 pp. 28-30.) 

 1896. Lodcman. The Spraying of Plants, pp. 252-255. Good general 

 account. 



1896. Smith. EconomicEntomology, pp. 322-323. Goo J general account. 



1897. Card. Garden and Forest, Vol. X., pp. 302-303. Detailed account 

 of original observations on egg-laying and the habits of the young 

 larvae in Nebraska. Eggs laid mostly on the leaves, and two broods, 

 at least, indicated. 



1897. Smith. Garden and Forest, Vol. X., p. 334. Notes peculiar dif- 

 ferences in habits of the insect in N. J. and especially at New Bruns- 

 wick, N. J. 



1897. Del Guercio. Bulletino della Soc Ent. Italiana, pp. 12-17. Very 

 good general account. 



1897. Card. Bull. 51, Nebraska Experiment Station, 39 pages. Interest- 

 ing, original observations on the eggs and habits of the young larvae 

 with record of experiments against all stages of the insect. 



