VI CONTEXTS. [Vol. 40 



Page. 



Insert posts of tea in Northeast India during the season 1916 259 



Forest insect conditions in India, Beeson 259 



Insects in relation to problems of storage of food in Hawaii, Bridwell 259 



Insects and disease, Winslow and Lutz 259 



Tenth report of Quebec Society for the Protection of Plants, 1917-18 259 



Annual report of the entomologist, Ritchie 259 



[Prevalence of insect pests in the West Indies during 1917], Hutson 260 



Injurious insects in Ireland during 1914 and 1915, Carpenter 200 



Economic zoology 200 



Notes on entomology in the Federated Malay States during 1917, Richards. 200 



[Economic insects in the Straits Settlements] 260 



Note on hibernation of Kinosterncm p< nnsyhanicum, Wetmore and Harper. 200 



Termite injury to sweet potatoes, Berger 2G0 



Zorotypus hubbardi, a new Bpecies of Zoraptera, Caudell 260 



Fauna or New England. — XIV, Hemiptera-Heteroptera, Parshley 260 



The rape bug (Meligethes aeneus [brcuricee] >, Kemner 260 



The meadow plant bug, Miris dolabratua, Osborn 200 



Cotton siainer control in St. Vincent, Ballon 201 



[Leptocorisa varicornis, a coreid Injurious to rice in Assam], McSwiney — 201 



The apple leaf jassid [Empoasca australis), Froggatt 26J 



Notes on Nova Scotian eupteryid leaf-hoppers, McAtee 201 



A note on the recent froghopper outbreak. Bodkin 201 



Notes on the entomology of Hawaiian Euphorbia, Bridwell 26J 



The pear psylla, Ross 201 



Jumping plant lice (family Psyllldte) of the Hawaiian Islands. Crawford- 202 



The California species of mealy bugs, Ferris 282 



Contributions to the knowledge of the family Chermesidee, I, Steven 262 



Phylloxera 262 



Some Japanese Aphididse, Essig and Kuwana 262 



Our birch Symydobius distincl from the European, Baker 262 



Transmission of Plasmodium falciparum by Egyptian Anopheles, Bahr 262 



Peculiar habit of Tabanus americanu* In Florida Everglades, Snyder 263 



A study of the nuche, Corradine 263 



The Australian sheep fly in Hawaii. Illingworth 263 



Key to separate Hawaiian Sarcophaga, Timberlake 263 



Two new Hydrotseas, Aldrlch 263 



Kelp flies of North America, Aldricb 263 



New ami little-known Canadian Oscinidae, Aldrlch 263 



Key to North American species of Agromyza related to Simplex, Malloch- 263 



Partial key to the genus Agromyza, IV, Malloch 263 



Color variation in pupae of T&riai nicippe, Ainslie 263 



The fall army worm. Sherman and Lei by 263 



The pink bollworm at Tokar, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. King 263 



Physiological and parasitological studies of Lepidoptera, Gautier 263 



The fruit-tree leaf roller (Tortrix argyrospila), Caesar 263 



Ecological notes on the spring cankerworm (Paleacrita vemuta). Young.- ~i<:i 



A note on the tortricid genitalia, Helnrich 264 



Bee culture in Maine. Griffin 264 



Reporl of Beekeepers' Association of Ontario, 1917 264 



The Nicolson observatory beehive and how to use it, Anderson 264 



Selection and management of hives. Lemaire 264 



The management of the apiary, Lemaire 2i">l 



Practical queen rearing, Pellett 264 



Pollination of alfalfa, by bees of the genus Megachile, Sladen 264 



A revision of the bembicine wasps of America, north of Mexico, Parker. 264 



Early establishment of Blastophaga In California. Rixford 264 



Perezia legeri n. sp., a new parasite of Pieria broaricce, Palllot 264 



Parasites of leaf-hoppers, with special reference to Anteonime, Fenton— 263 



Immigrant parasitic Hymenoptera of Hawaiian islands, Timberlake 263 



A new genus of pteroptriclne Aphelinina?, Fullaway 265 



Idiogastra, B new suborder of Hymenoptera. Rohwer and Cushman 2o.~> 



Feeding habits of the parasites of hardback grubs, Ballon 



Segregation of the germ cells in Triehogrannnu evanescent. Catenby 263 



I'olyembryony in parasitic Hymenoptera. — A review. Catenby 263 



The raspberry and loganberry beetle (Byturus tomtnto.ius) . 1/oes 265 



