24 INTRODUCTION 



The Hop Plant Louse, pp. 7, figs. 6. 



The Army Worm, pp. 5, figs. 3. 



The Carpet Beetle, or Buffalo Moth, pp. 4, fig. 1. 



Canker Worms, pp. 4, figs. 4. 



Mosquitoes and Fleas, pp. 6. 



The Strawberry Weevil, pp. 7, figs. 4. 



The Ox Warble, pp. 10, figs. 10. 



The Pear Slug, pp. 7, figs. 4. 



The Fruit-tree Bark-Beetle, pp. 8, figs. 4. 



The Striped Cucumber Beetle, pp. 7, figs. 2. 



The Larger Apple Tree Borers, pp. 12, figs. 3. 



House Ants, pp. 4, figs. 3. 



House Flies, pp. 8, figs. 8. 



The True Clothes Moth, pp. 8, figs. 3. 



The Common Squash Bug, pp. 5, figs. 3. 



How to Distinguish the Different Mosquitoes of America, pp. 8. 



The Bed-bug, pp. 8, figs. 3. 



The House Centipede, pp. 4, figs. 2. 



The Silver Fish, pp. 4, figs. 2. 



Cockroaches, pp. 15, figs. 5. 



The Peach Tree Borer, pp. 6, fig. 1. 



Four Common Birds of the Farm and Garden, pp. 14, figs. 4. 



The Meadow Lark and Baltimore Oriole, pp. 12, figs. 2. 



Asparagus Beetles, pp. 12, figs. 6. 



Insects Injurious to Beans and Peas, pp. 28, figs. 17. 



The Food of Nestling Birds, pp. 26, figs. 14. 



Smyrna Fig Culture in the United States, pp. 28, figs. 15. 



How Birds Affect the Orchard, pp. 14, figs. 5. 



Insects as Carriers and Spreaders of Disease, pp. 16, figs. 15. 



The San Jose Scale: Home and Natural Enemies, pp. 20, figs. 9. 



Insects Injurious to Hardwood Forests, pp. 16, figs. 17. 



Audubon Societies in Relation to the Farmer, pp. 14, figs. 4. 



Some New Facts about the Migration of Birds, pp. 16, figs. 2. 



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