Bibliography of Writings of Professor M. V. Slingerland 633 



1896 (continued) 

 A new destructive insect on pecans. Rural New-Yorker 55:401, fig. 133. 

 Fighting insect foes. Sulphur as an insecticide. How to kill " June 



bugs." Lye in place of lime for bordeaux mixture. The troublesome 



umbrella ant. Rural New-Yorker 55:416. 

 The white grub question. Rural New-Yorker 55:418. 



Grape-vine tomato-gall; poison ivy. Rural New-Yorker 55:433. 



Lasioptera vitis. 

 Insects found on grapes. Rural New-Yorker 55:448. 



Katydid and praying mantis. 



Insects that work on strawberries. Rural New-Yorker 55:448. 

 Phoxopteris com plana. 



Insect and fungous foes of fruit. Rose beetles; a new apple pest. [Green 

 fruit worms(r).] More about dung worms. " Plum rot." What is 

 it? How cure it? Seventeen-year locusts not poisonous. Twig blight 

 and apple rust. Rural New-Yorker 55 : 464. 



A lecture on cutworms. Rural New-Yorker 55:480, fig. 156. 



A swarm of business bees. Rural New-Yorker 55:481. 



The army worm does battle. Rural New-Yorker 55:495, fig. 158. 



The oyster-shell bark-louse. Rural New-Yorker 55:496, fig. 159. 



A worm that picks blueberries. Rural New-Yorker 55:497, fig. 160. 



Diastictus inceptarla. 

 The harlequin bug, or calico-back. Rural New-Yorker 55:513. 

 Anthracnose of the raspberry. Rural New-Yorker 55:513. 

 The " old fashioned " potato beetle. Rural New-Yorker 55:529. 

 Dendrolene for borers. Rural New-Yorker 55:529. 

 A number of insects and diseases. Rural New-Yorker 55:545. 

 Borers in fruit and shade trees. " Raupenleim " and " dendrolene." 

 Rural New-Yorker 55:556. 



The " white blast " in onions. Rural New-Yorker 55: 561. 

 Thrips tabaci. 



Potato beetles on tomato vines. Rural New-Yorker 55:576. 



The carpet beetle. Rural New-Yorker 55:582, figs. 180, 181. 



Life history of the apple rust. Rural New-Yorker 55:609. 



The harlequin cabbage bug. Rural New-Yorker 55:609, fig. 192. 



Some insects and fungous depredators. Swelling at the end of twigs. 

 Spotted plums; cultivating orchards. [Plum curculio (?).] The fiery 

 hunter and its work. White grubs in strawberries. Pear blight and 

 plum rots. Rural New-Yorker 55:672-673. 



Insects that bother the fruit grower. Habits of the strawberry root- 

 worm. The grape vine leaf-hopper. An attack of canker worms. 

 Rural New-Yorker 55:689. 



A grasshopper's snake story. Rural New-Yorker 55:697, fig. 220. 



