308 KANSA,^ ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



No. SS. Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Convention of the Association of 

 Official Agricultural Chemists held at Chicago, Illinois, August 24-26, 1893. 

 Edited by H. W. Wiley, Secretary of the Association; 232 pp. 



No. 40. Record of Experiments with Sorghum in 1893, by Harvey W. Wiley; 

 38 pp. 

 United States Department of Agriculture— Division of Entomology, C. V. Riley, 

 Entomologist. 

 Bulletins: No. 27. Reports on the damage by destructive locuts 1891; 64 pp. 



No. 28. The more destructive locusts of North America and Mexico, by 

 Lawrence Bruner, 1892; 40 pp. 



No. 29. Report on the boll worm of cotton (Heliothis armiger Hubn.), by 

 F. W. Mally; 74 pp.; 2 pll. 



No. 30. Reports of Observations and experiments in the practical worlc of 

 the division; 68 pp. 



No. 31. Catalogue of the exhibit of economic entomology at the World's 

 Fair Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; 122 pp. 



No. 32. Reports of observations and experiments in the practical work of 

 the division; 60 pp. 



Circular No. 2. June, 1891. The Hop Plant-louse and the Remedies to be 

 used against it; 8 pp.; 1 photographic plate; 5 figs. No. 3. An important en- 

 emy to fruit trees; 10 pp.; 5 figs. 



Insect Life: A periodical bulletin, devoted to the economy and habits of in- 

 sects, especially in their relations to agriculture. Edited by C. V. Riley, 

 Entomologist, and L. O. Howard, First Assistant, with the assistance of other 

 members of the divisional force. Vol. "V, September, 1892, to July, 1893, 

 410 pp. Contains, among other articles, the following: The possible and 

 actual influence of irrigation on insect injury in New Mexico, by C. H. 

 Tyler-Townsend, pp. 78-81. Notes on the Aegeriidae of central Ohio, II, 

 by D. S. Kellicott, pp. 81-86. The Pear-tree Psylla (Psylla pyricola), by M. 

 V. Slingerland, pp. 100-104, 226-230. Kansas Notes, by V. L. Kellogg, pp. 114-117. 

 Notes on plant faunae, by T. D. A. Cockerell, pp. 117-121. The glassy-winged 

 sharp-shooter, (Homalodisca coagulata Say), illustrated, pp. 150-154. The Osage 

 orange pyralid (Loxostege maclurae Riley), illustrated, by Mary E. Murt- 

 feldt, pp. 155-158. Food plants of some Jamaican Coccidae, by T. D. A. Cock- 

 erell, pp. 1.58-160, 245-247. "Maxillary Tentacles" of Pronuba, illustrated, by 

 John B. Smith, pp. 161-163. The potato-tuber moth (Lita solanella Boisd.), 

 by R. Allan Wight, pp. 163, 164. The strawberry weevil (Anthonomus signatus 

 Say), illustrated, by F. H. Chittenden, pp. 167-186; figs. 13-17. Belvosia— a study, 

 illustrated, by S. W. Williston, M. D., pp. 238-240. Observations on some hy- 

 menopterous parasites of Coleoptera, by F. H. Chittenden, pp. 247-251. The 

 present year's appearances of the Periodical Cicada, pp. 298-300. Furtlier notes 

 on yucca insects and yucca pollination, illustrated, by C. V. Riley, pp. 

 300-310. On the pollination of Yucca whipplei in California, by D. W. Coquil- 

 lett, pp. 311-314. Further notes on the cottontail bot, with the breeding and 

 identification of the fly, by C. H. Tyler-Townsend, pp. 317-320. The sugar- 

 beet web-worm (Loxostege sticticalis L.), pp. 320-322. Report on a trip to 

 northwest Missouri to investigate grasshopper injuries, by Herbert Osborn, 

 pp. 323-325. The angoumois grain moth or "fly weevil" (Gelechia cerealella), 

 by L. O. Howard, pp. 325-32S. Descriptions of Noctuidae from the Death Val- 

 ley, illustrated, by J. B. Smith, pp. 328-334. 



Vol. VI, November, 1893, to September, 1894. 410 pp. Contains, among 

 other articles, the following: Experiments with the hop-louse in Oregon and 

 Washington, by Albert KoelDcle, pp. 12-17. Reports on outbreaks of the western 

 cricket and of certain locusts in Idaho, by Robert Milliken, pp. 17-24. The pres- 

 ent status of the recent Australian importations, by D. W. Coquillett and A. 

 Koebele, pp. 24-29. Injurious and other locusts of New Mexico and Arizona, 

 by C. H. Tyler-Townsend, pp. 29-32. Fifth annual meeting of the Association 

 of Economic Entomologists — presidential address, by S. A. Forbes, pp. 61-71. 

 The distribution of Coccidae, by T. D. A. Cockerell, pp. 99-103. The economic 

 value of parasites and predacious insects, by J. B. Smith, pp. 142-146. The 

 cheese or meat skipper, by Mary B. Murtfeldt, pp. 170-176. Dipterous para- 

 sites in their relation to economic entomology, by C. H. Tyler-Townsend, 

 pp. 201-206. Hymenopterous parasites of the California red scale, illustrated, 

 by L. O. Howard, pp. 227-236. Entomological memoranda for 1893, by Mary E. 

 Murtfeldt, pp. 257-259. A new and destructive peach-tree scale, (Diaspis la- 



