BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. 105 



928. EILEY, C. V. Elm- aiid pear-tree borer. <Prairie Farmer, 10 No- 



vember, 1866, [v. 34], n. s., v. 18, p. 301. S.-b. No. 2, p. 42. 

 Answer to inquiry of James Matteson ; description aiid habits of Tremex 

 columba. 



929. EILEY, C. V. Grasshoppers and locusts. <Prairie Farmer, 24 



November, 1866, [v. 34], u. s., v. 18, p. 333. S.-b. No. 2, pp. 43- 

 44. 



Answer to inquiry of J. N. ; distinguishes grasshoppers from locusts; char- 

 acterizes Achetadw [= Gryllidce~], Gryllidce [= Locustidce], and LocustidcB 

 [= Acrididce] ; oviposition, transformations, ravages, and migrations of 

 Aorididai ; recognition of Caloptenus spre.tus. 



930. RILEY, C. V. Black-knot once more. <Gardeners' Mo. and 



Hortic., November, 1866, v. 8, pp. 331-332. S.-b. No. 2, p. 31. 

 Fungoid origin of black-knot [Splueriamorbosa] ; larvae of Conotrachelus nenu- 

 phar present in the swellings. 



931. R[ILEY], C. V. Brimstone for borers. <Prairie Farmer, 8 De- 



cember, 1866, [v. 34], n. s., v. 18, p. 365. S.-b. No. 2, p. 44. 

 Criticism of a communication by W. ; sulphur inserted in trunks of trees in- 

 effectual as a means against insects. 



932. EILEY, C. V. The wire- worm. <Cultivator and Country Gentle- 



man, 27 December, 1866, v. 28, p. 414. S.-b. No. 2, p. 34.- 



Critical review of J. D. Gros' "The wire-worm;" myriapods and the larvae 

 of Elateridce are called wire-worms ; separable by the number of their legs ; 

 means against them. 



933. [EILEY, C. V.] Tilden tomato and the tobacco-worm. <Prairie 



Farmer, 5 January, 1867, [v. 35], n. s., v. 19, p. 5. 

 Remarks on communication of T. B. ; tomato plants eaten by tobacco-worms 

 [Protoparce Carolina] in preference to tobacco plants; possibly the worms 

 observed w.ere tomato-worms [P. celeus~\. 



934. [EiLEY, C.-V.] Remarks on Saperda, Chrysobothris, Carpocapsa, 



and Conotrachelus. <Prairie Farmer, 12 January, 1867, f v. 35], 

 n. s., v. 19, p. 23. 



Report of remarks made at the annual meeting of Southern Illinois Fruit 

 Growers' Association. 



935. [EiLEY, C. V.] Bark-lice. <Prairie Farmer, 12 January, 1867, 



[v. 35], n. s., v. 19, p. 24. 

 Washing apple-trees with lye effective against bark-lice. 



936. EILEY, C. V. Insects in the flower garden. A troublous time. 



< Prairie Farmer, 19 January, 1867, [v. 35], n. s., v. 19, p. 37. 

 S.-b. No. 2, p. 45. 



Answer to communication by Kate Sherman; describes larva of [Heliothis 

 phlogophagus] injuring Phlox. 



937. [EiLEY, C. V.] Salt and vinegar for insects. <Prairie Farmer, 



19 January, 1867, [v. 35], n. s., v. 19, p. 37. S.-b. No. 2, p. 45. 



Review of T. Glover's Report of the U. S. Entomologist for 1865, T. Glover's 

 Entomological exhibition in Paris, and W. C. Lodge's Fruits and fruit 

 trees of the Middle States; use of salt and vinegar as means against in- 

 sects; criticism of errors. See Nos. 222, 939, 942. 



