76 Ins. 
XIII. INSECTA. 
Economic Entomology. 
Historical notes, Kerremans (568). 
Introductory work, farm, and garden, Somerville (1046). 
Reports: Ormerod, Britain (803). — England, Hypoderma ; Lamellicorn 
larva), Trypcta , Sesia , Silpha , Warburton (1148). — Report on injurious 
Insects in Sweden in 1896, Lampa (649). Notes on Swedish injurious 
Insects, Anderson, pp. 71 & 72, Ent. Tidskr. 1897. — Paris, 1895 observa- 
tions, Brocchi (133). — Smith, New Jersey, many Insects (1037). — Forbes, 
Illinois (Aspidiotus, Chinch-bug, Chermes , etc.) (348). — Report on various 
injurious N. American Insects, Howard, Some miscellaneous results of 
the work of the division of Entomology, Bull. Dep. Agric. Ent. vii, 87 pp. — 
Injurious Insects; J. Board Agric. iii & iv (inch Phytocoris militaris 
injurious to Orchids). 
Numerous economic notes on Indian entomology, Barlow, Ind. Mus. 
Notes, iv, No. 2, pp. 41-46, & 56-78. 
Proceedings of the ninth annual meeting of the Association of economic 
Entomologists, Bull. Dep. Agric. Ent. ix, 87 pp. 
Introduction of beneficial Insects in Hawaii, Perkins (829). 
Insects as distributors of yeasts etc. Giglioli (410). 
Insects as disseminators of contagion, H^ricourt, Rev. Sci. 1897, i, 
pp. 110-113. — Experiments as to distribution of plague by Insects, Mettall 
(794). — Ants as disseminators of plague, Hankin (458). 
Mosquitoes as intermediate hosts for malaria, Calandruccio, Atti Acc. 
Gioen. (4) x, Mem. xiv, p. 8. 
The common crow of the United States as a destroyer of Insects, 
Barrow & Schwarz (55). 
Antagonism between poison of wasps and vipers, Phisalix (837-839). 
Relations between Insects and their parasites, Dolles (263), see also 
Physiology, p. 65. 
The food-plants of Coccidce , Cockerell (192). 
Bugs infesting poultry, Douglas, Saunders, Theobald, pp. 159, 185, 
208, Ent. Mag. xxxiii. 
Diptera in the alimentary canal of man, Lallier (647). 
Insects injurious to coffee, and their destroyers, Veen (1121). — Injury 
to coffee in Africa by Herpetophygas fasciatus and other beetles, Kolbe 
(601), pp. 32-37. 
■ Insects injurious to cinchona, Veen (1122). 
Larvae that attack the young fruit of the pear in Italy, Guercio (442). — 
Injury to pears by Nephopteryx in Japan, Matsumura (725). 
Injuries to blueberry in N. America by Diastictis inceptaria and Eu- 
phoria inda } Slingerland, pp. 49-52, Canad. Ent. xxix. 
Insects affecting the Cotton plant, Howard (515). 
Lepidoptera affecting hop-plants, Howard, Bull. Dep. Agric. Ent. vii, 
pp. 40-51. 
Insects injurious to growing tobacco, Deprez (237). 
Insects affecting stored vegetables, Chittenden (171, 173). 
Injury to gelatine of photographic plates by Pyrrhidium sanguineum , 
L£veill£, p. 122, Bull. Soc. ent. France, 1897. 
Carabidce attacking strawberries, Marchal, p. 217, Bull. Soc. ent. 
France, 1897. — Harpalus ricjicornis destroying ripe strawberries, Mac- 
Lachlan, Ent. Mag. xxxiii, p. 171. 
Melolontha in Sweden years 1885-1895, Lyttkens, pp. 97-107. — Ravages 
of Melolontha fidlo etc. in pine-forests, Blondel, p. xxix, C.R. Soc. Bor- 
deaux, 1896. — Otiorhynchus ligustici , injurious in vineyards, Gauckler, 
p. 524, Illustr. YVochenschr. ii; Hollrung, t. c. p. 549. — Injuries of 
Otiorhynchus , Fuchs, pp. 381-383, Forstl. Zeitschr. Munchen, vi. — Cur- 
