100 MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATION 9, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTUEE 



06. Papers on insoi ts nlToctlnK stored producls : I. A list of insects affecting stored 

 cpredls Thi- Nfexiciin ;;raiii beetle. The Siuino-e j?ri',iu Ixetle. V. H. Chittenden. 



1911. II. Til'- 1)1 (>:i(I nosed praln weevil. The long headed flour beetle. F. H. 

 Cliittonden. 1011. III. The le.sser grain-borer. The larRer grain borer. F. 11. 

 Cliitteiideii. litll. l\ . t'lirbon t"tia>hloi id as a .sulistitule for earbou dlsulphid 

 in fiiuiigaiini against InKects. F. H. Chittenden and C. II. Popenoe. 1011. 



V. The broad-bean weevil. 1\ fl. Chittenden. 1912. VI. The cowpiu weevil. F. II. 

 Chittenden. 191 L'. 



97. I'apers on doelduoiis fnilt Insects and insecticides : I. Sprajing experiments against 



the ;;i;;|K- Iiafiiojtper In the 1.4ike Erie Valley. Fred Joiiiison. 1911. II. Life 

 hislory of the fi'dling moth and its control on pears In California. S. W. Foster. 

 1911." III. Vineyard spraying experiments against the rust'-chafer in the L:ilie 

 Eiie Valley. Fred .Tolui-son. 1911. IV. The I'alifcrnia peach horror. Dudley 

 Moulton. liUl. V. Notes on the peach and plum slug. R. A. Cushman. 1911. 



VI. Notes on Ihc peach bud inlte. A. L. Qualntance. 1912. VII. The grape 

 scale. James F. Zimmer. I'.illi. 



98. Historical notes on the causes of bee diseases. E. F. Phillips and G. F. White. 



19r_'. 



99. Papers ou insects injurious to citrus and other subtropical fruits. I. The orange 



thrips : .V report of progress for the vears 1909 and 1910. I'. R, .I<jnes and J. R. 

 ITorton. 1911. II. The red-banded thr!p.q. II. M. Riiss"Il. 1912. 



100. Tile iii.sect enemies of the cotton UoW weevil. W. D.vlgbl I'lerce. R. A. Cushman, 



C. TC. Hood, nnd W. T). Hunter. 1911i. 



101. Calosoma nycophanta : Its life history, behavior, and successful colonization In New 



Knsrland. .\. F. liurgess. 1911. 

 lOli. Nii:ural conirol of while flie-; in Florida. A. W. Morrill .nnd E. A. Back. 191:2. 

 lii;{. The iiluni curc'jlio. .\. L. Quaiutanco and E. U Jemie. 1912. 



104. The tig moth. F. II. Chittenden. Report on the fig moth in Smyrna. E. G. Smytli. 



1911. 



105. Tile Rocky Mountain spotted fever tick. With special reference to the problem of 



lis control in ilie Hitter Root Valley in Montana. W. D. Hunter and F. C. Bishopj). 

 1911. 



106. The life historv and l)ionomics of some North American ticks. W. A. Hooker, F. C. 



Bishopp, and H. P. Wood. 1912. 



107. Results of the artllicial u.se of the white-fungus disease in Kansas: With notes on 



api'roved methods of fighting chinch bugs. Frederick H. Pillings and Pi-essley A. 

 nicnn. IPll. 

 lOS. Le.nfhoppers affecting C(>real8, grasses, and forage crops. Herbert Osborn. 1912. 



109. I'apcrs ou inso<"ts affeciiug vegetai)lo;i : I. Tlie Havv:iiian ix et wcbworm.' II. O. 



Marsh. 1911. IT. The southern beet webworm. I'. H. Chittenden. 1011. III. 

 The imiiorted cibl>ag.' webwoim. F. H. Chittenden and H. O. Marsh. 1912. 

 IV. A little-known cutworm. F. II. Chittenden. 1912. V. Arsenite of zinc and 

 lend chromate as remedies against the Colorado potato beetle. Fred A. .Tohnston. 



1912. VI. The sugar-beet wcbworm. H. O. Marsh. 1912. VII. The horse-radish 

 webworm. H. 0. Mar.sh. 1913. 



110. The spring grsiii-aphis or "green bug." F. M. Web.ster and W. J. Phillips. 1912. 



111. The hop aphis in the P.uific region. Willhiia B. Parker. 1913. 



112. Preiimluiry rci>ort on the alfalfa weevil. F. .M. Webster. 1912. 



113. The principal cactus insects of the United States. W. D. Hunter, F. C. Pratt, and 



J. I>. Mitchell. 1912. 



114. Mexican cotton-boll weevil. (62d Cong., 2d sess.. Senate Document No. .305.) 1912. 



115. Papers on deciduous (fuit Insects and insecticides: I. Life-history studies on the 



codling moth in Michigj'n. A. (J. H.imniar. 1912. II. The one-spray method in 

 the control of the codling moth and the plum curculio. (Second reixirt.) A. L. 

 Qtmininnce and E. W. Scott. 1912. III. Life hist<irv of the co<lllng moth in the 

 Santa Clara Valley of Calll'oniia. P. R. .lones and W. M. Davidson. 1913. 



116. Paper.-; on deciduous fruit insects and Inseeticiiles : I. Spraying exi>eriments against 



the grape leafhopper in (he Lake lOrle Valley in 1911. Fred .Johnson. 1912. II. 

 The grape-lierry mo(h. l'"refl .lohiison and .\. <J. Hammar. 1912. III. The cherry 

 fruit sawliv. "S. W. Foster. 191. '{. IV. I.imesuljilmr as a stomach poison for 

 inseclH. K. W. Scott and K. H. Slegler. 191.3. V. The fruit-tree leaf-roller. .Tohn 

 B. Oill. 1913. 



117. The red spider on liop.s in the Sacramento Valley of Califorida. William B. Parker. 



19i::. 



118. The bean thrips. H. M. Russell. 1912. 



119. The disi>ersion of tlie gypsy moth. .\. F. Burgess. 1913. 



120. Report of a trip to India and the Orient in search of the natural enemies of the 



citrus «-hite flv. Russell S. W..L'liim. i;i13. 



121. Tlie behavior of the honev bee in pollen collecting. D. B. Casteel. 1912. 



122. The .Xru'entine ant. Wllmon Newell nnd T C Barber. 1913. 



12."!. .\ prelimlnMry n-port on the sugar beet wireworm. .Tohn E. Graf. 1914. 

 124. The rose-vliig caterplllnr. F. II. Chittenden 1913. 

 12.".. The Florld:i fern caterpillar. F. II. Chittenden. 1913. 

 12t!. The abutilon moth. F. H. Cbltt-nd- ii. 1913. 



127. Papers on in.srcts affecting veget.'tble and tru<-k crops. I. The spotted beet webworm. 

 F. H. Chittenden. 1913. 11. The Htrii^d l>eet caterpillar. H. O. Marsh. 1913. 



nUI.LBn"TNS — TECHXIC.VL SKRIKS 



9. Til ■ lifi- historv of two species of plant-lice Inhabiting both the witch-hazel and 

 birrh. Theo T»ergande. 1901. 



10. The social organization nnd breefling habits of the cotton-protecting kelep of Guate- 



mala. (). F. Cook. 190.^. 



11. A classlflr ation of the mosquitoes of North and Middle America. D. W. Coqulllett. 



190fi. 



