Vill CONTENTS. 
Means of destroying it, 306.—The Cheese-Maggots, 306.—Eaten 
by some People as a Delicacy, 306.—Description of them, 307.— 
The Flea, 308.—Argument that the Flea is a Dipterous Insect, 
308.—Its Abode, and how to get clear of it, 308.—How Fleas orig- 
inate, 808.—Process of their Development, 309.—Description of 
the Flea, 309.—Its astonishing muscular Power, 310.—Its native 
Country, 310 —Dissatisfaction of a Prussian Emigrant, 310.—Of 
the Sand-Flea, 311.—Description of it, 311.—Size of the Female, 
312.—Her Injuries, 312.—A Capuchin Monk’s unfortunate Ex- 
periment, 313.—Of Mosquitoes, 3138.—Sufferings from Mosquitoes 
on the Bank of the Kuban, 314.--The Czernomorzi, or Cossacks 
of the Black Sea, 314.—-Telegraphs on the Frontier of Circassia, 
315.—-Hospitality of Captain Wasil Iwanovich, 316.—Mosquitoes 
killing Horses, Oxen, Sheep, and Hogs, 317.—Mosquitoes of the 
Tropics of America, 317.—The Mosquito of North America, 318. 
-~Their Venom, and Remedies against it, 318.—Development of 
their Eggs, 318.—Their Metamorphosis, 319. = 
