330 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. 



2291. KILEY, C. V. Continued. 



REPORTS OF AGENTS ^Continued. 



Report upon insects affecting the hop and the cranberry. By J. B. 

 Smith 393 



The hop Aphis, 393 Its first appearance, 393 The cranberry 

 fruit-worm, 394 The fire-worm, 395 Cranberry leaf-folder, 

 395 Its dimorphism, 396 A cecidoinyid larva infesting pears 

 atMeriden, Conn., 396 Description of larva and infested fruit, 

 396 Pupation, 397 Distribution, 397 Varieties of pear in- 

 fested, 397 Probably an imported pest, 398 Remedy, 398. 

 Notes from Nebraska. By Lawrence Brnner 398 



The Rocky Mountain locust in 1884, 398 Other species of locusts, 

 399 The snowy tree- cricket, 399 The chinch-bug, 399 Cut- 

 worms, 400 The imported cabbage-worm, 400 Its natural ene- 

 mies, 400 Other cabbage-worms, 401 False caterpillars on 

 grass and sedge, 401 Cimbex americanaon willow hedges, 401 

 Injury to cottonwoods by the striped beetle, 402 The Colorado 

 potato-beetle, 403. 



NOTES OF THE YEAR - 403 



Chinch-bug notes 403 



The so-called "invasion" of St. Lawrence County, New York, 

 in 1883, 403 Mr. Lintner'sprediction-and his reasons therefor, 

 403 Reasons for dissenting from this view, 404 The result in 

 1884, 405. 

 Notes on the grape Phylloxera : 405 



Regarding the grape Phylloxera in Russia, 405 In reference to 



the treaty ot Berne and the prohibition of the introduction of 



bnlbs and cuttings from the United States into Germany, 407 



The grape Phylloxera in graperies ; legal questions arising, 408. 



Miscellaneous notes 410 



The box Psylla found in the United States, 410 The dwarfing of 

 oaks by Mallodon melanopus, 410 The clover-seed midge, 411 

 The potato-stalk weevil, 411 The red-humped prominent, 411 

 The varying anomala, 412 White-lined morning-sphinx, 412 

 The apple-tree tent caterpillar, 412 Corn bill-bugs, 413 A 

 swarming mite, 413 A new enemy to white roses, 413 A bee- 

 tle eating peach-leaves, 413 Effect of cold on the eggs of b/irk- 

 lice, 413 Ravages of grain-weevils in Florida, 414 Fuller's 

 rose-beetle, 414 The blood-sucking Conorhinus, 414 The ca- 

 talpa sphinx, 415 Notes on cotton worms, 415 Pyrethrum, 

 416. 

 Notes from Missouri. By M. E. Murtfeldt 416 



The striped flea-beetle, 416 The Colorado potato-beetle. 416 

 The imported cabbage-butterfly, 416 The cottony maple scale, 

 417 The stalk-borer, 417Grapholilha prunivora, 418 The 

 grape saw-fly, 418 A saw-fly on plum, 418 A saw-fly on ash, 

 418. 



2292. EILEY, C. V. General truths in applied entomology. Essay. 



<Trans. Ga, State Agric. Soc., 1884, v. , pp. 153-159. Sepa- 

 rate: <Macon, Ga., 1884, t.-p. cover, pp. 153-159. Re- 

 print : <Rept, [U. S.] Commissioner Agric. for 1884, pp. 323- 

 330. <Gardener's Chronicle, 1S85, v. 23 ; 20 June, pp. 785-786 ; 

 27 June, p. 818. S.-b. No. 61, p. 6 ; 10-11. See : <Ga. Crop 



