65 



75. BuKNs, E.- Am. Miller, Dec, 1895, v. 23, p. 910. 



A communication from a Pennsylvania miller, giving an account 

 of his three years' experience in fighting the flour moth, 



1896. 



76. Johnson, W. G.— Am. Miller, Jan., 1896, v. 24, p. 32. 



A few notes on the flour moth with reference to the new out- 

 break in Pennsylvania. Illustrated. 



7 7. Can. Ent. Jan., 1896, v. 28, p. 13. 



Note on the new outbreak of the flour moth in Canada. 



78. Am. Miller, Feb.. 1896, v. 24, p. 114. 



Answer to a query from a milling firm in Melbourne, Australia. 



7 9. Trelease, William.— Science, Feb. 14, 1896, v. 3 (n. s.), p. 

 252; Can. Ent., March, 1896, v. 28, p. 61; Am. Nat. v. 30, 

 p. 258. 



Reports that he exhibited at a meeting of the St. Louis Academy 

 of Science, a silk fabric from Mexico, supposed to be the work of 

 the Mediterranean flour moth. 



Note. — I am in receipt (March 5, 1896) of a package of infested flonr from a mill in Saltillo, 

 Mexico, which has been forwarded to me by the editor of the ''American Miller." The flour is one 

 mas^ of web, and contains hundreds of larvae, pupse, and dead moths of the Mediterranean flour 

 moth Eiihestia kuehniella. The material was taken from a flouring-mill, where the moth is doing 

 much mischief. 



