184 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [June 



ticks of North America and Australia, figs, 108, March 16.— 

 F y les, T. W . The farmers' garden and its insect foes, figs., 

 75. — Hunter, S. J. Alfalfa, Grasshoppers. Bees: their rela- 

 tionship, figs,, Contributions from Entomological Laboratory, Uni- 

 versity of Kansas, No. 65. Lawrence, Jan '99.— H u 1 1 , H • L . A 

 few of the most troublesome insects of the past season (1898). figs., 

 75— Illidge, R. Life-history, etc, of timber moths, 109.— 

 L o u n 8 b u r y , C . P . Coddling moth again, 108, March 2 — 

 [Lugger O?] Butterflies and moths injurious to our fruit-pro- 

 ducing plauts, 237 figs. Bulletin 61, University of Minnesota Agri c. 

 Exper. Station, Division of Entomology. St. Anthony Park, 

 Minn , Dec. '98. — M a r c h a 1 , P. See the General Subject; also 

 numerous short note? in 88 b. — Mayer, C A new remedy 

 against phylloxei'a, 108, March 2. — Pound, C. J. Notes on the 

 cattle tick, 109.— R o b e r t s , L. Ticks and their destruction, 

 108, March 16.— S h i r 1 e y , J . Notes on bees and [as destroyers 

 ■of] wax-scales, 109.— S 1 i n g e r 1 a n d , M . V. Some new 

 notions about some old insects. Reprint from Transactions, Massa- 

 chusetts Horticultural Society, pt. 1, Boston, '99; Insect pests of 

 1898, Reprint from Proceedings, Forty-fourth Annual Meeting, 

 Western New York Horticultural Society, Jan. 25, 26, '99.— S p a 1 i - 

 ko'yski, E. New i-esearches on the accidents caused by the 

 stings of bees, 55.— W e b s t e r , F. M. Some economic features 

 of international entomology, figs , 75. — "VY e e d , C . M . The for- 

 est tent caterpillar, figs.. Bulletin 64; New Himpshire College 

 Agricultural Experiment Station, Durham. N H., April. '99 ; 

 [Report of] Department of Entomology, figs. Tenth Annual Report 

 of the same, Nov., '98. —Wells, H. H. and others. Locust 

 fungus operations, 108, March 2. 



Arachnida.— B i r o, L . Mimetic spiders, [in Magyar, brief sum- 

 mary in German], Rovartani Lapok, Budapest, April '99. — C a m - 

 bridge, F. O. P. On new species of spiders from Trinidad, 

 West Indies, 1 pi., 14.— C am b r i d g e, O. P. Arachnida- 

 Araneidea, pp. 289-296*, 15.— G i 1 1 et te, C. P. Life-history 

 of the sheep scab-mite, Psoroptes cominnnis.75.—y an Hasselt, 

 A . W . M . The venom of spiders, 46. — M oenkhaus, W.J. 

 Contribution to knowledge of the Arachnida of San Paulo, 1 pi., 

 107.— Pocock, R. I. A new stridulating Theraphosid spider 

 from South America, II.— T r o u e s s a r t, E Note on the organ 

 of fixation and of suction in the larva of Trombidion, figs., 86 b. 



Myriopoda. — H e n n i n g s . Tomosvary's organ of Glomeris, figs.« 

 59, '99, No. ^.—Y e r h o e f f , C . On the European cave fauna* 

 especially Diplopoda and Chilopoda, 22, April 17. 



Thysanura.- B o u V i e r , E. L. The genus J/amrfrow/a, new 

 type of the family Lepismidae, 86 b.— C a 1 a n d r u c c i o , S. On 

 the biology of Japyx solifugm Hal. and Camjjodea staphyhnus 

 Westw., preliminary note, Bulletino d- Societa Entomologica Ital- 

 iana, XXX, 1-2, Florence, Oct. 31, '98. 



