128 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM ' 



Billbtigs in Corn. Country Gentleman, June 22, 191 1, 76:586^"' 

 A brief economic account of the work of Sphenophorus species in corn. 



Salt and Cutworms. Country Gentleman, June 22, 191 1, 76:586^'^ 



Salt is considered to be of little service in controlling cutworms, pests 

 most injurious when prolonged dry weather prevents normal plant growth. 



Cicadas in New York. Country Gentleman, June 22, 191 1, 

 76:590-42 



General observations on the abundance and distribution of the 191 1 brood. 



Rhopalomyia grossjilariae n. sp. Economic Entomology Jour- 

 nal, 1911, 4:347 

 Description of a species destroying gooseberry buds in Ohio. 



Rose Beetles. Country Gentleman, June 29, 191 1, 76:607,-'^ 

 Arsenate of lead advised or the use of netting. 



Silver-spotted Skipper. Country Gentleman, June 29, 191 1, 

 76 :6072s 

 An outline is given of the life history of this butterfly. 



Four New Gall Midges. Entomological News, July 1911, 22: 



301-5 



The new genus Toxomyia is erected. Asphondylia pattersoni 

 reared from flowers of Citharexylum quadrangulare; 

 Toxomyia fungicola reared from teleutospores of Puccinia on 

 Emilia sonchifolia; Contarinia lycopersici from 

 flowers of Lyco'persicum esculentum and Hyperdiplosis 

 c o f f e a e from fruits of Coffea liberica are described. 



Rose Leaf Hopper, Typhlocyba rosae Linn. Economic Ento- 

 mology Journal, 191 1, 4:413-14 

 Method of oviposition described. 



Miastor. Economic Entomology Journal, 191 1, 4:414 

 Observations on the food habits and biology. 



Three New Gall Midges (Dipt.). New York Entomological 

 Society Journal, 19:190-92 



Holoneurus occidentalis, Lasiopteryx schwarzi and 

 Hyperdiplosis americana are described, all reared from a decay- 

 ing branch of wild fig. 



Hosts and Galls of American Gall Midges. Economic Ento- 

 mology Journal, 191 1, 4:451-75 

 A tabulation of the galls and food habits of American Itonidae. 



