INDKX. 141 



Page 



Linden, food plant of Nt wroct ' ! 



Pu 1<>", 



Liquidambar, defoliatioo by Macrodacty 



L uperodt si 101 



odactylus svbs\ _■- . 



in < tonne 



- ■ y 



48 



rtion by ] 



Mantid. Chii ea 

 Maple bor< 



food plant of A 



Imi 



1*>5 



leaf stem-borer. 



red. food plant of gipsy moth 



- gar, food -plant of Put 



Maryland, miscellani - - - r 1906 



Massachusetts, new oriental ins 



I -- o fly . 



in Georgia 1 102 



Megalopyge opereida a 106 



Melanaaroia geo a sella in < ul>a 117 



Melanopl - lalis, destruction by Sarcophaga georgii a 98 



Membership, rep »rt of committee .' 127 28 



. wheat. 



Minnesota, insect nol - 13-1 7 



Mite, cotton-leaf blister. 

 gall, of black curranl 



infestation in I y 



pear blisfc See 



rust . 

 Mono - \nt. little i 



litoi s, destruction in dwelling? by chrysanthemum 123-124 



Mountam ash, European. 



Mouse, field, devouri a; egg - - 



Muhlenbei - 



National control of introduced inse< 



v - 



on linden in Georgia 



New Jers ;y, unusual bisect happenings in 1906 



New York State, insect notes of 1906 



A • 'estina in central Alberta 1: 



oclature, report of conmiittee 10-11 



Nominations, report of committee 127 



Nursery inspection, desirability of uniform Stat«- laws 2 22 



governmental, of imports and intersl - 3 19-22 



ipathi _ 



trees, notes on fumigation and dipping 



food plant of cutworms 



8 in vineyards in New York Stan- 



Oncornetopia lateralis in tobacco fields in Florida Ill 



< tnion, food plant of Noctua da 126 



112 



notus <>n tobacco in Florida 1 1 « » 



( Grange, food plant ol s 122 



in Connecticut v 



New Jersey and Pennsylvania 

 Pansies, food plants 



in central Alberta 12 



P sites in economic entomology, importance of study 



value in cereal and forag ion 



j, failure t<> i stablish it in Wv. 



P i 3g inst cutworms 110 



trvula 109 



a tobacco ... 109 



