[BETHUNE] BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGY 177 
68. Gibson, Arthur. 
69. 
70. 
(fat 
12. 
73: 
74. 
75: 
76. 
ike 
78. 
79. 
Cutworms and their Control. Dominion of Canada, Dept. of Agriculture, 
Ent. Branch Bull. No. 10, pp. 1-31, twenty illustrations, mostly original. 
(The 15 most destructive Canadian species are described and their habits, 
and life-histories discussed). 
Gibson, Arthur. 
The Control of Cutworms. Agricultural Gazette, vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 330- 
332, April, 1915, three original illustrations. 
Gibson, Arthur. 
Investigations in Vegetable Insects. Agricultural Gazette, vol. 2, No. 7, 
pp. 637-638, July, 1915. 
Gibson, Arthur. 
Locust Control Work in Eastern Canada in 1915. Agricultural Gazette, 
vol. 2, No. 10, pp. 937-940, October, 1915, two illustrations. 
Gibson, Arthur. 
Common Vegetable Crop Insects and their Control. Canadian Horti- 
culturist, vol. xxViii., pp. 271-272, Dec., 1915. 
Grant, C. E. 
Insects of the year in the Orillia District. 45th Ann. Report Ent. Soc. 
Ont., p. 16, 1914. (Records the first appearance of the Asparagus beetles, 
Crioceris asparagi, and 12-punctatus). 
Hebard, Morgan. 
Records of Orthoptera from Newfoundland. Ent. News, vol. 26, p. 306. 
July, 1915. 
Herrick, G. W., and Leiby, R. W. 
The pupal instar of the Fruit-tree Leaf-roller, Archips argyrospila. Can. 
Ent., vol. 47, pp. 185-187, June, 1915. 
Herrick, Glen W. 
Inseets injurious to the Household and annoying to Man. The Macmillan 
Company, 470 pages, eight plates, 152 figures, 1914. (A large proportion 
of the insects described are found in Canada). 
Hewitt, C. Gordon. 
Notes on the Pupation of the House-fly (Musca domestica) and its mode of 
overwintering. Can. Ent., vol. 47, pp. 73-78, one figure, 1915. 
Hewitt, C. Gordon. 
Applied Entomology in Canada: Its Rise and Progress. 45th Ann. Rept. 
Ent. Soc. Ont., 1914, pp. 28-41. 
Hewitt, C. Gordon. 
House-fly Control. Agric. Gazette of Canada, vol. 2, No. 5, pp. 418-421, 
1915. (This paper is written for the benefit of those desiring to undertake 
an organized campaign for the suppression of the House-fly.) 
