[22 INJURIOUS INSECTS OF I909 AND I9QIO. 
‘““‘MINNESOTA INSECT LIFE.’’ 
This publication, edited by the State Entomologist, is issued 
upon the first of April, May, June, July and August of each year. 
Its object is to place before farmers, nurserymen, fruit-growers, 
gardeners and housekeepers, timely items, which will be of value 
in suggesting methods of preserving their property from the at- 
tacks of insects. The first issue was June Ist, 1910, and hence there 
were but three numbers in that year. Next year (1911) there will 
be five numbers, beginning April rst. 
The name and address of any citizen of Minnesota, wishing 
copies of Minnesota Insect Life, will, upon request made to the 
State Entomologist, be placed upon our mailing-list, and copies will 
be mailed free of charge as soon as published. The contents of the 
1910. issues, listed below, will give an idea of the nature and scope 
of the publication; which, by the way, is in no sense a bulletin, but 
merely intended to get certain facts before the public quickly, when 
most needed. 
JUNE: Cutworms, Striped Cucumber Beetle and True Squash 
Bug; Oyster-shell Scale and Scurfy and Scale; House Fly; Straw- 
berry Weevil; Spraying Compounds and Spraying; Green Cab- 
bage Worm; Grasshoppers; Bee Pasturage; Stalk Borers in Flower- 
Gardens; Plant-Lice or Aphids; Item of Interest. 
Juty: More about Grasshoppers; On the Successful Raising 
of Asters; The White Grub in Lawns; Mites and Lice of Chickens; 
Tent and Forest Caterpillars; The Cabbage Maggot; Jiggers; Items 
of Interest. 
Aucust: The Grasshopper Situation; The Army Worm; 
Black Flies and Mosquitoes; Ants in House and Garden; Spraying 
and Spraying Machinery; Cockroaches; The House or Typhoid 
Fly. 
