332 REPOET 4, UNITED STATES ENTOMOLOGICAL COMMISSION. 



Connerly, D. C. B. — ''The figlit with the Vermins." Eutaw Whig aud Observer, 

 August 7, 1873. 



[On the use of Paris green for Aletia.] 



'•Cotton."— "The Cotton Caterpillar, No. 5. The Moth Fly, or Imago." Navasota 



(Tex.) Tabl-et, June 11, 1880. 



[Seems to he a compilation from Bulletin 3, United States Entomological Commission.] 

 "Cotton." — ''The Cotton Caterpillar, No. 7. How to destroy them." Navasota 



(Tex.) Tablet, June 25, 1880. 



D., J. R. — "The Cotton Caterpillar." American Cotton Planter, August, 1850. 

 [Advises poisoned sweets and striking down the moths -with paddles.] 

 Ueimpr. — Cotton Planter's Manual, by J. A. Turner. New York. p. 160, 1875. 



Dana, "W. B — Cotton from Seed to Loom. New York. 1878. 

 [On p. 117 gives a short account of the caterpillar.] 



De Bow's Industrial Resources of the Southern and "Western States. — " The Cot- 

 ton Caterpillar." p. 170, 1852. 



[Quotes extensively from Afacck.] 



De Bow's Industrial Resources of the Southern and Western States. — "Cotton 

 Worms." p. 171, 1852. 



[Advocates use of Plaster of Paris.] 

 De Bow's Review. — "The Cotton Worm, its Character, Habits," &c. Vol. xvii, 



pp. 451-459, 1854. 

 Department of Agriculture. — ''Birds and the Cotton Worm." Monthly Report of 

 Department of Agriculture, p. 273, 1870. 



[Advocates the solving of millet in the fields to attract hirds, and also the introdnction of 

 the English Sparrovr.] 



Department of Agriculture. — "Cotton Insects." Special Report No. 8, p. 8, Sep- 

 tember, 1878. 



[An account of the progress of the investigation up to September.] 

 Dickerman, C. W. — How to make a farm pay. Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Chicago, 

 and St. Louis. 1869(?). 



[On pages 222-223 speaks of the Cotton Moth ; quotes mostly from Lyman.] 



Dodge, C. R. — "A Word about Cotton Caterpillars." Rural Carolinian, iii, pp. 87- 



88, 1871. 

 Dodge, C. R. — " Cotton Caterpillars ; One Word More." Rural Carolinian, iii, pp. 263, 



264, 1871. 



[Corrects statements in the last-mentioned, paper.] 



Dodge, C. R. — "The Paris Green Remedy for the Cotton Caterpillar." Rural Caro- 

 linian, V, pp. 193-195, 1874. 



[Summarizes the replies to the Department of Agriculture circular of 1873.] 

 Dodge, C. R. — " Injury to Cotton by Insects." Rural Carolinian, v, pp. 417, 418, 

 1874. 



[Tabulates the first appearances of the worm, and states Professor Glover's theory of the 

 partial hibernation of the insect in all states, which the table upholds.] 



Dodge, Lewis A. — " The Cottou Caterpillar." American Naturalist, vii, p. 213, April, 

 1873. 



[Gives popular southern ideas and wrongly figures Heliothis phlogophaga Gr. for the Boli 

 Worm.] 



Doubleday, Edward. — Transactions of the London Entomological Society, 1848. 

 Proceedings, p. 33. 



[Mentions having received the American Cotton Moth from T. "W. Harris, and states that 

 it belongs to no European genus, coming nearest to Ophixisa.] 



Doubleday, Edward. — Entomological Correspondence of T. W. Harris. Boston, 1869. 

 p. 173. 



[In a letter to Harris, dated April 2, 1847, states that the Cotton Moth is near to Ophiusa 

 but is a new genus.] 



