igoo] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 44I 



"kissing bug" became applied during the summer of 1899, figs., 7. — 

 Kiiiitta, P. How flowers attract insects, 11S4:.— Laineere, A. Dis- 

 course on tiie reasons for the existence of metamorphoses in insects, 35, 

 xliii, 13, Jan. 23, 1900. — Pic, M. Some entomological accidents, Le Natur- 

 aliste, Paris, Feb. i. 1900— Rildow. On variations in size of insects, 

 84, Jan. 11. — Terre, L Metamorphosis and phagocytosis, 13, Feb. 

 17. — Vire A. La Faune Souterraine de France, Paris, J. B. Balli^re et 

 Fils., 1900, 8vo., pp. 148, 4 pis. 



ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY.— A uoii. Mosquitos and fever, 

 84, Jan, 18. — Anoii. Caterpillars and maple sugar, 37.— Bailey, L, 

 H. etal. Spraying notes, 99, No. 177, Jan., 1900. — B[anks], N. Cotton 

 insects in Egypt, 7. — Berjjiiiaii, A. On economic relations of Oestridae, 

 2 pis. [in Swedish], 67,1. — Id. Researches on the larva of Ocneria dispar 

 L., 67.4. — Brown, C. E. Depredations of the cottony maple scale; 

 Fruit feeding habit of the cotton worm moth, 123< — Busck, A. See 

 General Subject. — Cliapais, J. C The strawberry saw-fly, the goose- 

 berry fruit-worm, 37. — Chittenden, F. H. Food plants and injury of 

 North American species of Agrilus ; Notes on two species of " lightning 

 hoppers" [Fulgoridae] ; The recent spread of the Mediterranean flour 

 moth, 7. — Coquillett, D. W. Two new Cecidomyians destructive to 

 the buds of roses, figs.;* a new violet pest, fig.* 7. — Dalryniple, W. 

 H., Dodson, W. R., and Morgan, H. A. Immunization against 

 Texas fever by blood inoculation, figs.. Bulletin, Agric. Exper. Station of 

 the Louisiana State College, etc. Second series. No. 57, Baton Rouge, 

 La., 1899. — Fisher, A. K. A new clothes-moth remedy [carbon bisul- 

 phide], 7.— Hanley, A. H. Tumbe or Kroo fly. New York Medical 

 Journal, Mar. 3, 1900. — Havens, F. G. Insect control in Riverside, Cal- 

 ifornia, 7. — Henienway, H. D. Experiments with hydro-cyanic acid 

 gas, as a means of exterminating mealy bugs and other insect pests in 

 greenhouses, 7.— [Howard, L. O. et al.] Reported injury by giant 

 scarabasid beetles ; Locusts in Argentina and Lourenpo Marquez, South- 

 eastern Africa ; A cotton stainer \^Dysdercus\ in Peru ; The green June 

 beetle of the Southwest \^Allor}nna mutabilisl ; A Dipterous enemy of 

 cucurbits in the Hawaiian Islands {^Dacus cucurbitce] ; A troublesome 

 twig-girdlerof the Southwest [Oncideres putator'], 7. — Kornhuher, A. 

 A scale insect as a forest pest on Robinia Pseudacacia L., Verhandlun- 

 gen, Vereins fiir Natur- u. Heilkunde zu Presburg (n. F.), x,i899.— Krii- 

 g'er, L. Insektenwanderungen zwischen Deutschland und den Vereinig- 

 ten Staaten von Nordamerika und ihre wirtschaftliche Bedeutung, Her- 

 ausgegeben vom Entomologischen Vereine zu Stettin, 1899, 8vo., pp. 174, 

 viii. — Lagerheini, G. Contributors to knowledge of galls of /uniperus 

 communis, 67, 2-3. — Lainpa, S. Report of the State Entomological In- 

 stitute for 1898, figs, [in Swedish], 67, i. — Id., Meves, J. The "Nonne" 

 l^ymantria monacha L., i pi. [in Swedish, separate articles], 67, 2-3. — 

 Libbertz, A. On blood parasites and their transmission by blood- 

 sucking insects, 6 pis., Bericht der Senckenbergischen naturforschenden 



