VI CONTENTS. [Vol.35 



Page. 



Behavior of Anopheles albimanus and A. tarsimaculata, Zetek 258 



The mosquito and its relation to public health work, Cooling 258 



The Simulidse of northern Chile, Knab 258 



Role played by the Phoridae in bacterial infections, Roberg 258 



Notee and descriptions of Pipunculidse, Banks 259 



Some parasitic and predacious Diptera from northeastern New Mexico, Walton . 259 



Nonintentional dispersal of miscoid species by man, Townsend 259 



New species of Tachinidse from New England, Smith 259 



[Control of the house fly], Hulbert 259 



Does the house fly liibernate as a pupa? Lyon 259 



Will Ceratitis capitata develop in Italian lemons? Martelli 259 



The Mediterranean fruit fly in the environs of Paris, Lesne 259 



Preliminary note on a dipterous enemy of the peach, Legendre 259 



On the Ethiopian friut flies of the genus Dacus, Bezzi 259 



New American species of Asteia and Sigalsoesa, Aldrich 259 



The host of Zelia vertebrata, Hyslop 259 



Notes on the cat flea (Ctenocephalusfelis), Lyon 260 



The rose chafer: A destructive pest, Chittenden and Quaintance 260 



The cherry leaf beetle, Cushman and Isely 260 



Eyperaspis binotata, a predatory enemy of the terrapin scale, Simanton 261 



Wire worms destructive to cereal and forage crops, Hyslop 261 



Prothetely in the elaterid genus Melanotus, Hyslop 261 



Elateridse and Throscidae of Brazil, Hyslop 261 



Observations on the life history of Meracantha contractu, Hyslop 261 



Notes on the habits of weevils, Pierce 261 



The buff -colored tomato weevil {Desiantha nociva), Froggatt 261 



Beekeeping in Wisconsin, France 261 



Texas beekeeping, Scholl 262 



Annual reports on the Bee Keepers' Association of Ontario, 1913 and 1914 262 



Horismology of the hymenopterous wing, Roliwer and Gahan 262 



British ants, their life history and classification, Donisthorpe 262 



Two new species of Cerceris, Banks 262 



A revision of the Ichneumonidse in the British Museum, Morley 262 



Descriptions of six new species of ichneumon flies, Cushman 262 



Some new chalcidoid Hymenoptera from North and South America, Girault . . . 262 



New genera and species, with notes on parasitic Hymenoptera, Gahan 262 



New chalcidoid Hymenoptera, Girault 263 



Chalcidoidea bred from Glossina morsitans in northern Rhodesia, Waterston 263 



Two new Mymaridae from the eastern United States, Girault 263 



Some sawfly larvse belonging to the genus Dimorphopteryx, Middleton 263 



Bibliography of the Ixodoidea, II, Nuttall and Robinson 263 



A monograph of the Ixodoidea, III, HeemaphysaUs, Nuttall and Warburton 263 



The cassava mite, Leefmans 263 



The leaf blister mite of pear and apple, Quaintance 263 



Leiognathus morsitans n. sp., parasitic on the domestic fowl, Hirst 263 



On some new acarine parasites of rats. Hirst 264 



Two Mexican myrmecophilous mites. Banks 264 



FOODS — HUMAN NUTRITION. 



The infection of foods by bacteria, Bornand 264 



Feeding experiments with B. pullorum. — Toxicity of eggs, Rettger et al 264 



TiUTiing green of oysters and their content of heavy metals, Liebert 265 



[Milling and baking tests of wheat] 265 



The activity of the proteolyticenzyms in wheat flour, Swanson and Tague 265 



The nature of the dietary deficiencies of the wheat embryo, McCollum et al 265 



The use of the butia palm as a food, Puig y Nattino 266 



The preparation and utilization of yeast as food, Voltz 266 



Honey in antidiabetic diet, Davidoff 366 



The content of stems in Java tea and the testing of tea, Deuss 266 



The composition of Hungarian wines, Vuk 266 



p'ood and drug analyses], Ladd and Johnson 267 



The economics of electric cooking, Gumaer 267 



Nutritional physiology. Stiles 268 



Hunger and food, Pierce 268 



The amino-acid minimiim for maintenance and growth, Osborne, Mendel, et al. . 268 



The energy content of the diet 269 



