BIBLIOGRAPHY. 339 



"♦R." — " Chrysalis — Paris Giocn — Professor Riley — Cavalry — Infantry." Selma (Ala. ) 

 Times, August 7, 1874. 



[Paris green, arsenious acid, patent pumpa, and hand-picking the pnpae discussed.] 

 Read, John E. — Farming for Profit. Philadelphia, 1880. 



[On p. 285 speaks of Cotton Caterpillar and advises the use of Paris green with precautions. J 

 Reese, W. P. — ''Paris Green and the Cotton Caterpillar." Rural Carolinian, De- 

 cember, 1873. 



[A short note, preliminary in its nature! 

 Reese, "W. P.—" The Cotton Caterpillar Again." Rural Carolinian, v, pp.565, 566, 

 1874. 



[The cotton worm said to hibernate in the chiysalie st;ite under leaves, &c. ; hence, a.4 a 

 remedy, burn leaves in fall. Also gives formula for use of Paris green in solution.] 



Riley, C. V. — "The Cotton Army Worm (Jnomis xi/lbia, Say)." Second Annual Re- 

 port on the Noxious, Beneficial, and other Insects of the State of Missouri, 1870, 

 pp. 37-41. 



[An account of the habits auvi natural history of the insect, with popular descriptions of 

 all stages and figures of eggs, larva, chrysalis, and adult.l 



Riley, C. V. — "Remedy for the Cotton Army Worm." Proceedings of the National 

 Agricultural Congress ; Indianai)olis meeting, 1873. 

 [Urgently advises the use of Paris green.] 



Riley, C. V. — "Remedy for Cotton Worm." Read at National Agricultural Con- 

 gress, Indianapolis, 1873. (First printed in Illustrated Journal of Agriculture, Saint 

 Louis, June, 1873 ; copied by Rural World, Rural Alahamian, Mobile Register, Farmern' 

 Advocate, and other Southern periodicals.) 

 [Recommends Paris green.] 

 Riley, C. V.—" A Remedy for the Cotton Worm." Violksburg Herald, May 1, 1874, 

 from the New York Tribune. 

 [Paris green.] 

 Riley, C. V. — "The Cotton Worm." Sixth Annual Report on the'Noxious, Benefi- 

 cial, and other Insects of the State of Missouri. 1874. pp. 17-24. 



[This article has the following heads : Paris green; Patents on the Paris green mixture ; 

 Hibernation of the insect ; Katural enemies ; Range of the insect ; Other questions.] 



Riley, C. V. — "Insects affecting the Cotton Plant." Report of the Commissioner of 

 Agriculture, 1878. 



[A short report ou the progress made in the Cotton Insect Investigation ; embodies a report 

 by A. R. Grote.] 



Riley, C. V.— "Cotton Worm." Atlanta Constitution, September 8, 1878. 



[Contains first published suggestion that the moths fe«d from the extra-floral nectar 

 glands.] 



Riley, C. V. — "The Migrations and Hibernation oi Aletia argillacea." 

 [Read before 1879 meeting of the K"ational Academy of Sciences.] 

 Notice of the same. — Washington World, May 10, 1879. 

 Notice of the same.— Science News^ June 1, 1870. 

 Notice of the same. — Scientific American, June 14, 1879. 



[Reviews the diiferent hibernation theories, and states his belief in the hibernation of the 

 moth in certain Sfuthern parts of the Cotton Belt.] 



Riley, C. V.— " The Cotton Worm." Mobile Register, July 9, 1879. 



[Report of a lecture before the Cotton Exchange, in which mention was first made of the 

 relation of the natural enemies to the wet-weather abundance and dry-weather scarcity of 

 the cotton worm.] 



Riley, C. V. — Reviewof National Academy paper. American Naturalist, xiii, p. 726, 

 1879. 



Riley, C. V. — " Parasites of the Cotton Worm." Canadian Entomologist, xi, p. 161. 

 September, 1879. 



[Describes Trichogrammapretiosa n. sp., Girroapilas efsurus a. sp. , and Tackinu aietice, a, up.] 



