1899] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 211 



'Quillota [Chile- in Spanish], 58.-Ris, F. Obituary of Prof. 

 Gustav Schoch, 56. -Roy, E. Vitality of insects, 37. June. — 

 She r born, C. D. An index to the generic and trivial names 

 of animals, described by Linnaeus, in the 10th and 12th editions of 

 his " Systema Naturae," publication 25, Museum Handbooks, the 

 Manchester Museum, Owens College, '99.— S p e i s e r , P. On 

 reduction of the wings in ectoparasitic insects, 84, May 18, 25. — 

 Trotter, A. Did Redi indeed believe that galls and their 

 makers were generated by a " anima vegetativa" of plants ? Bul- 

 letino, Societa Veneto-Trentina di Scienze Natural!, vi, 4, Padua, 

 '99.— T u 1 1 , J. W . The scientific aspects of entomology, [and] 

 Presidential address [on study of natural history as a science]. Pro- 

 ceedings, South London Entomological and Natural History Soci- 

 ety, '98, pt. ii, '99.— W a s m a n n , E- Gr. D. Haviland s observa- 

 tions on the termitophily of ^Ao/>«Zome^ws angusticollis Boh., 44, 

 4, May 9.— W heeler, W . M . Anemotropism and other trop- 

 isms in insects, Archiv fiir Eutwicklungsmechanik, viii, 3, Leipsic, 

 June 27, '99. 



Economic Entomology.- A n o n . Abstracts of recent literature^ 

 Experiment Station Record, x, 9, U- S- Dep't of Agriculture, Wash- 

 ing-ton, '99.— A n o n . American literature on the Sin Jose scaler 

 24 —A n o n. The San Jose scale, 87, May 27— A u s t e n , W • 

 Bookworms in fact and fancy, Appleton's Popular Science Monthly, 

 New York, June. '99,— B e r 1 e s e, A., and Leonardi, G. 

 American Coccidae which threaten European fruit-culture, figs , 

 114, vi, vii.— C o c k e r e 1 1, T. D. A. Notes on Australian 

 Coccidae, Victorian Naturalist, Melbourne May, '99— C rump, 

 W . The pear midge, Gai-dener's Chronicle, London, May 27, '99 — 

 Felt, E . P . Shade tree pests in New York State, figs , 5 pis., 

 112, 27, May.— F inlay, C • J . Mosquitoes considered as trans- 

 mitters of yellow fever and malaria, 5, July.— F u 1 1 e r . C . A 

 new poultry pest {6'fmulmm, ep ), figs., Agricultural Journal, Cape 

 Town, Jan. 5, '99 — G r a s s i . B . Relations between malaria and 

 certain special insects, 113 ; Malaria propagated by the means of cer- 

 tainspecial insects, 113.— Heric ou rt , J. Contagion thi'ough the 

 medium of insects [in Spanish, translated from Revue des Revues 

 Paris, April 1, '99]. Anales Sociedad Cientifioa Argentina, Buenos 

 Aires, May, '99. -H o p k i n s , A. D. Report on investigations 

 to determine the cause of unhealthy conditions of the spruce and 

 pine from 1880-1893. figs.. Bulletin 56, West Virginia Agr. Exper. 

 Station. Morgantown, W- Va., April, '99.— Howard, L. O* 

 The principal insects affecting the tobacco plant, figs., Yearbook» 

 U. S. Dep't of Agriculture, Washington, 1898; Pests of the hop 

 crop, figs., advance sheets (pp 113-158) of a work on the Hop Indus, 

 try. Orange Judd Co — H u n t e r , S . J. The commotion in Kan- 

 sas and Missouri upon the appearance of Dissostefra in Colorado, 5, 

 July. — Johnson, W. G. The Mediterranean flour moth 

 again, 4, June; Isaac P. Trimble, economic entomologist, 102,— 



