﻿THE 
  ARMY 
  WORM: 
  BIBLIOGRAPHY, 
  BY 
  AUTHORS. 
  151 
  

  

  Klippart 
  J. 
  H. 
  — 
  ''The 
  Locusts 
  which 
  ate 
  up 
  King 
  Pharaoh." 
  Ohio 
  Farmer, 
  January 
  

   3, 
  1863. 
  

  

  [In 
  tlie 
  course 
  of 
  this 
  article 
  he 
  replies 
  to 
  "Walsh's 
  cliallenge 
  to 
  produce 
  a 
  larva 
  whicli 
  

   could 
  bear 
  young 
  (referring 
  to 
  Klippart's 
  theory 
  that 
  the 
  Army 
  Worms 
  were 
  viviparous) 
  by 
  

   citing 
  Westwood 
  on 
  Stylopidas.J 
  

   Lintner, 
  J. 
  A. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Cultivator 
  and 
  Country 
  Gentleman, 
  July 
  3, 
  

   1879. 
  

  

  [Answer 
  to 
  letter 
  from 
  "A. 
  H. 
  L.," 
  Portsmouth, 
  Va., 
  giving 
  the 
  Lnown 
  history 
  of 
  the 
  

   "worm.] 
  

   Lintner, 
  J. 
  A. 
  — 
  "The 
  Insects 
  of 
  the 
  Clover 
  Plant." 
  Annual 
  Rept. 
  N. 
  Y. 
  State 
  Agr. 
  

   Soc.,1880. 
  

  

  [Mentions 
  Leucania 
  unipiincta 
  among 
  the 
  insects 
  injurious 
  to 
  the 
  clover 
  plant.] 
  

   Lintner, 
  J. 
  A. 
  — 
  "New 
  Insects 
  — 
  not 
  the 
  Northern 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Cultivator 
  and 
  

   Country 
  Gentleman, 
  June 
  9, 
  1881. 
  

  

  [Describes 
  work 
  of 
  iVcjp7ieZ(j(Zes 
  violans 
  Gruen., 
  which 
  had 
  been 
  mistaken 
  in 
  New 
  York 
  for 
  

   the 
  true 
  Army 
  Worm.] 
  

   "M." 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  American 
  Agriculturist, 
  Fehruary, 
  1847, 
  vol. 
  (>, 
  No. 
  2, 
  

   p. 
  50. 
  

  

  [Review. 
  American 
  Agricuturist, 
  July, 
  1847, 
  vol. 
  6, 
  No. 
  7, 
  p. 
  209.] 
  

  

  McBryde, 
  Jno. 
  M.— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Experimental 
  work 
  of 
  the 
  Agricultural 
  

   Department, 
  University 
  of 
  Tennessee, 
  1879-'80, 
  pp. 
  76-84. 
  

  

  [A 
  good 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  visitation 
  from 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm, 
  in 
  East 
  Tennessee, 
  in 
  May 
  and 
  

   June, 
  1880] 
  

   McBryde, 
  Jno. 
  M. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Exxjerimental 
  work 
  of 
  the 
  Agricultural 
  

   Department, 
  University 
  of 
  Tennessee, 
  1881, 
  pp. 
  200-203. 
  

  

  [An 
  account 
  of 
  a 
  second 
  invasion 
  the 
  ensuing 
  year 
  (1881) 
  of 
  the 
  same 
  localities 
  ravaged 
  

   in 
  1880.] 
  

  

  Mirror 
  and 
  Farmer.— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  July 
  3, 
  1880. 
  

  

  [A 
  lengthy 
  article, 
  quoting 
  from 
  different 
  I^ew 
  England 
  papers 
  to 
  show 
  the 
  progress 
  of 
  

   the 
  pest.] 
  

  

  Muse, 
  Joseph 
  B. 
  — 
  "Entomology." 
  American 
  Farmer, 
  July 
  16, 
  1819, 
  vol. 
  1, 
  no. 
  16, 
  

   ed. 
  3, 
  pp. 
  124-125. 
  

  

  [Desciibes 
  transformations 
  of 
  the 
  "grub 
  worm" 
  (Elater?), 
  -which 
  destroys 
  corn 
  plants 
  

   in 
  the 
  field, 
  of 
  the 
  fruit 
  curculio 
  (Co7iotrachelus) 
  , 
  and 
  of 
  army 
  w^orms 
  (Leucania); 
  means 
  

   against 
  these 
  insects.] 
  

  

  New 
  England 
  Farmer.— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  July 
  2, 
  1830, 
  p. 
  397. 
  (Quotes 
  from 
  

  

  Illinois 
  Gazette.) 
  

  

  [A 
  short 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  appearance 
  of 
  the 
  worms 
  in 
  Illinois 
  in 
  1830.] 
  

   Ne'w 
  England 
  Farmer. 
  — 
  Vol. 
  liv 
  (new 
  series, 
  vol. 
  xxx) 
  ; 
  Nos. 
  31 
  and 
  34, 
  Ravages 
  

  

  of 
  Leucania 
  unipuncta 
  in 
  R. 
  I. 
  and 
  IMass. 
  ; 
  No. 
  33, 
  in 
  Long 
  Island; 
  No. 
  35, 
  in 
  N. 
  

  

  H. 
  (1880). 
  

  

  New 
  Jersey 
  Farmer. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Ill 
  (1857), 
  p. 
  10. 
  

  

  [Describes 
  ravages 
  in 
  Maryland 
  in 
  1857, 
  and 
  describes 
  Microgaster 
  and 
  Tachina 
  pa-asites.] 
  

   New 
  Jersey 
  Farmer. 
  — 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  VI, 
  366 
  (1881) 
  (from 
  the 
  Maine 
  Farmer). 
  

  

  [A 
  most 
  astonishing 
  jumble. 
  Confounds 
  Leucania 
  wilh 
  Aletia 
  xylina.] 
  

   Ohio 
  Farmer. 
  — 
  July 
  1, 
  1876. 
  

  

  [An 
  editorial 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  discovery 
  of 
  the 
  eggs 
  of 
  the 
  Army 
  Worm 
  Moth 
  by 
  Professor 
  

   Eiley.] 
  

  

  "P., 
  X."— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Cultivator 
  and 
  Country 
  Gentleman, 
  June 
  9, 
  1881. 
  

  

  [A 
  compiled 
  account, 
  reproducing 
  Riley's 
  figures 
  of 
  larva, 
  pupa 
  and 
  moth.] 
  

   Pacific 
  Rural 
  Press.—" 
  The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  July 
  10, 
  1881. 
  

  

  [An 
  account 
  of 
  an 
  insect 
  damaging 
  vineyards, 
  fodder 
  fields, 
  and 
  gardens. 
  The 
  old 
  eastern 
  

   remedies 
  for 
  Army 
  Worm 
  are 
  given.] 
  

  

  Packard, 
  A. 
  S., 
  jr.— 
  "The 
  Army 
  Worm." 
  Sixth 
  Report 
  Secretary 
  IVIaine 
  Board 
  of 
  

   Agriculture, 
  1861, 
  pp. 
  130-142. 
  

  

  [An 
  extended 
  account, 
  quoting 
  freely 
  from 
  Walsh 
  and 
  adopting 
  his 
  views 
  ; 
  describing 
  larva, 
  

   pupa, 
  adult 
  and 
  all 
  of 
  Walsh's 
  parasites.] 
  

  

  