BIBLIOGRAPHICAL LIST 
Ainsworth, R. B. (1909). The house fly as a disease 
carrier. Journal of the Royal Medical Corps, xii, 
No. 5, May, 1909, 485-491. 
Aldrich, J. M. (1905). A Catalogue of North Ameri¬ 
can Diptera. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., XLVII, pp. 
680. 
Aldridge, A. R. (1907). House flies as carriers of en¬ 
teric infection. Journ. Royal Army Medical Corps, 
ix, 558 . 
Austen, E. E. (1904). The house fly and certain allied 
species as disseminators of enteric fever amongst 
troops in the field. Journ. Royal Army Med. Corps, 
ii, 651-668, 2 plates. 
Austen, E. E. (1906). Illustrations of British biting 
flies, with notes. British Museum of Natural His¬ 
tory, pp. 74, plates 34. 
Austen, E. E. (1909). Notes on the examination of 
batches of flies received from various centers in Lon¬ 
don during the summer and autumn of 1908. Repts. 
to the Local Govt. B’d on Public Health and Medical 
Subjects. London. N. S., No. 5, 4 tables, 1 pi. 
Austen, E. E. (1909). Illustrations of African blood¬ 
sucking flies other than mosquitoes and tsetse-flies. 
London. British Museum of Natural History, pp. 
221, 13 plates. (Account of Stomoxys calcitrans, 
pp. 142-153-) 
Bernstein, J. (1910). Summary of the literature relat¬ 
ing to the bionomics of the parasitic fungus of flies. 
Repts. to the Local Govt. B’d on Public Health and 
Medical Subjects. London. N. S., No. 40, 41-45. 
261 
