CONTENTS. 



Page. 

 The Sugar-cane Beetle {Licpjrus rugiceps Lee), with Notes on Asso- 

 ciated Species (illustrated) E. S. G. Titus. _ 7 



Report on a Mexican Cotton Pest, the " Conchuela " {Pentatoma 



UgataQay) (illiistrated) A. W. MorrilL. 18 



The Sugar-beet Crown-borer {Huhtea undulatella Clemens) (illus- 

 trated) E.S.G. Titus.. 34 



The Dock False-worm (Taxonus nigrisoma Nort.), F. H. Chittenden and 



E. S. G. Titus.. 40 

 The Pepper Weevil (Anthonomus ceneotinctiis Cliamp.) (illustrated). 



C. M. Walker. . 43 



Cold Storage for Cowpeas (illustrated) J. W. T. Dtwel . . 49 



The Larger Canna Leaf-roller (Calpodes ethlius Cram.) (illustrated). 



F. H. Chittenden.. 54 

 The Pond-lily Leap-beetle (Galerucella ni/mptuece Linn.) (illustrated). 



F. H. Chittenden.. 58 

 Grasshopper Conditions in Nebraska, Northeastern Colorado, Wyo- 

 ming, Montana, and Western Kansas during the Summer of 1904. 



Lairrence Brunei' . . 60 

 Collective Notes on the Behavior of the Colorado Potato Beetle 



in Great Britain. Fred. V. Tlteobald.. 65 



An Experiment with Hydrocyanic-acid Gas as a Remedy for the 

 Cigarette Beetle in Dwellings. -i^. H. Cliittenden and F. C. Pratt.. 68 



Notes on Fuller's Rose Beetle in 1904 Fdk. 3Iaskew. . 70 



The Giant Sugar-Cane Borer {Castnia liens Fab.) (illustrated). 



C. L. Marlatt.. 71 



General Notes 



Reported Success of an Introduced Ladybird Scale Enemy in California 

 (p. 75); Locusts, Malaria, and Mosquitoes in tlie Transvaal (p. 76); 

 The Caterpillar of Antiearsia geminatilis Won.. Injuring Velvet 

 Bean (p. 77); An Instance of Complete Parasitism of the Imported 

 Cabbage Butterfly (p. 79); Spread of the Mediterranean Flour Moth 

 in Pennsylvania (p. 80); Tussock Caterpillars in Florida (p. 80); 

 A Squeaking Sphinx Caterpillar (p. 80); A Jumping Gall (p. 84); 

 The Great Elm Leaf-beetle {Monocesta coryli Say) (p. 81); The 

 Malodorus Carabid, No)nius pijgmceus Dej., in Oregon (p. 83); Re- 

 ported Occurrence of the Asparagus Beetle in California (p. 83) ; The 

 Scientific name of the Plum Gouger— a Correction (p. 83); Unusual 

 Food-plants for the Squash Ladybird {Epilaclina borealis Fah.) (p. 

 84) ; Notes on Orthoptera Collected on Sugar Beets in 1904 (p. 85); A 

 Mexican Kissing Bug (p. 86) ; Hydrocyanic-acid Gas Against the Bed- 

 bug (p. 86); Singular Increase of " Lerp "" on Trees of the " Yellow 

 Box" {Eucalyptns melliodora) (p. 87); A Red Spider on Cotton (p. 

 87); Some Sugar-cane Insects (p. 88); Some Observations on Kansas 

 Insects (p, 88); Some Local Names for Common Insects (p. 89). 



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