298 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Dec 



No. 38, second series, Apr. 22; The common squash bug (Anasa 

 tristis DeG.), figs, 7, circular No, 39, second series, May 5- — 

 Feruald, H. T. Supplementary report of the Zoologist: some 

 insects injurious in Pennsylvania, figs , Report of Department of 

 Agriculture of Pennsylvania for 1898, pp. 373-443. [Harrisburg 

 Pa.] Wm. Stanley Uay, State Printer of Pennsylvania, '99.— 

 Howard, L. O. Three insect enemies of shade ti'wes, figs, 7. 

 Farmers' Bulletion, No. 99, May 26: Spider bites and " kissinjS 

 bugs," figs., 26.— L e o n a r d i , G . Pulvinarin camelicolu. Sign, 

 and method of combatting it, figs., Annali,R. Scuola Superiore di 

 Agricoltura in Portici, (2), i, 2, Naples, '99.— L ounsbury, C. 

 P. Report of the Government Entomologist for the year 1898. 

 Cape of Good Hope. Dep't. of Agriculture, C«pe Town, W. A. 

 Richards & Sons, Government Printers, 1899, 9 pis. : Ibid. [Nu- 

 merous Notes on Economic Entomology from the Cape of Good 

 Hope Dep't of Agric, reprinted from the Agricultural Journal, 

 Cape Town, '98 and '99. Many of these have been previously re- 

 corded, but we add] 1899, No. 6. The Wattle bag-worm, figs.; No. 

 25, Bean Bruchus, figs: No. 26, Cabbage Aphis, figs. — Mac- 

 do n a 1 d , I, Mosquitoes in relation to Malaria, New York Med- 

 ical Journal, Oct. 14, '99— Mar I at t, C. L. The principal 

 insect enemies cf the gi'ape, figs., 7. Farmers' Bulletin, No. 70, '98 . 

 The peach twig- borer: an important enemy of stone fruits, figs-, 7 

 Farmers' Fulletiu. No. 80, '98.— R o s s, R. The mosquito theory 

 of malaria, 26.— S c h g , C . On the fisht against scale insects. 84, 

 Oct. 19. — S m i t h , J . B . Crude petroleum as an insecticide, 4 

 pis . Bulletin 1:38. New Jersey Agiic Exper. Stations, New Bruns- 

 wick, Sept. 5, '99. — W i 1 c o X , E . V . Abstracts of recent pub- 

 lications, 7, Experiment Station Record, xi, 2.— "W o o d s , A . F . , 

 and Dor sett, P. H. The use of hydrocyanic acid gas foi 

 fumigating greenhouses and cold frames, figs., 7, circular No. 37, 

 second series, Jan. 10. 



Arachnida.— Ca mb ridge , F. O. P. Arichnidi Arajieidei, vol 

 ii, pp. 41-50, pis. iii-iv,* 15.— C a m b r i d g e, O. P. Arachnida 

 Araneidea, vol. 1, pp. 207-304, pis. xxxi-xxxii,* 15. — N o r d e n s- 

 k i o 1 d , E . Contributions to knowledge of the morphology^and 

 c'.lassification of the Hydrachnidae, 2 pis., Acta Societatis Scieuti- 

 arum Fennicae. xxiv, 5, Helsingfors, Mar. 14. '98 : Rec'd. Nov. 7, '99. 

 — Osborn, H. Acarina,* figs, in: The Fur Seals and Fur Seal 

 IslanJ, etc , by David S. Jordan, pt. 3, Washington, Gov't. Print- 

 ing Office, '99. 



Peripatus and Myriopoda.— P oulton, E.B. Peripatus in the 

 Malay peninsula, 10. Oct. 19.— deZograf, N. On the lateral 

 cephalic organs of Glomeris, 12. 



Orthoptera —Burr, M . Notes on the Forficularia, Annals and 

 Magazine of Natural History, London, Oct., '99.— S c u d d e r , S . 

 — H . Two genera of North American Decticinae,* Proceedings,. 



