CONTENTS V 



Page 



P. J. Parrott and B. B. Fultox. Notes on Tree Crickets 177 



E. M. Patch. A Note on Two Elm Leaf Apliids 316 



H. J. Ql'AYLE. Some Natural Enemies of Spiders and Mites 85 



W. A. Riley. Some Recent Manuals of Parasitology 416 



A. H. RosExrELD. Peculiar Effects of the Sting of a Wasp 22.5 



W. J. ScHOENE. Notes on Comparative Tests -nitli Zinc Arsenite 



and Arsenate of Lead 157 



H. H. P. Severix. Precautions Taken and the Dangers of Introduc- 

 ing the Mediterranean Fruit Fly, Ccratitis cnpitata Wied., 



into the United States 68 



The Life History of the Mediterranean Fruit Fly, Ceratitis 

 capitata, with a list of Fruits Attacked in the Hawaiian 



Islands 399 



H. H. P. Severix and H. C. Severix. Historical Account of the Use 

 of Kerosene to Trap the Mediterranean Fruit-fly, Ceratitis 



capitata 347 



G. D. Shafer. How Contact Insecticides Kill* 160 



H. A. Surface. What Besides Inspection? 265 



J. G. O. Tepper. Note on the Flowering and Fruitbearing of 



Yucca aloifolia in South Australia 359 



P. H. Timberlake. Preliminary Repoi't on the Parasites of Coccus 



hesperidnm in California 293 



C. H. T. TowxsEXD. A Brief Report on the Piojo Blanco of Cotton 318 



The 1912 Outbreak of Alabama argiUacea in Peru 244 



The Peruvian Fruit-fly, Anastrepha peruviana n. sp. 345 



The Possible and Probable Etiology and Transmission of Ver- 

 ruga Fever 211 



Preliminary Report on the Picudo of Cotton in Peru 303 



F. W. Urich. Notes on Some Mexican Sugar-cane Insects from 



Santa Lucrecia 247 



D. L. Van Pixe. The Insects Afl'ecting Sugar-cane in Porto Rico 251 

 F. L. Washburn. A Successful Traj) for Cockroaches 327 



Notes on Inspection 259 



J. R. Watson. An Unusual Type of Injury Due to a Thrips 413 



R. L. Webster. The Arrangement of Material in an Entomological 



Bulletin 180 



'^Withdrawn for publication elsewhere. 



