334 REPORT 4, UNITED STATES ENTOMOLOGICAL COMMISSION. 
Glover, Townend. — Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1867, pp. 58-61. 
[Describes the Cotton "Worm in all states, with good figures. Speaks of the northward 
migration ot the moths, and of the great good done by the ants in destroying both the eggs 
and the larvae. Gives a popular description also of what is evidently Pimpla conquiaitor.] 
Glover, Townend. — Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1871, pp. 83,84. 
[Gives an account of the occurrences of the worm in 1871, and speaks without specifi* 
reference of a recently invented machine for sprinkling poisons. Advises strenuous efforts 
to destroy the first crop of worms.] 
Glover, Townend. — Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1872, pp. 118-120. 
[An account of the ravages of the Cotton Worm in 1872.1 
Glover, Townend.— Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1873, pp. 163-169. 
[Injuries in 1873; summary of experience in favor of the green.] 
Glover, Townend. — Monthly Reports of the Department of Agriculture, 1874, p. 125. 
[His belief quoted that the insect hibernates in all states in the more southern portions 
of the cotton belt, and as the season advances migrates northward.] 
Glover, Townend. — Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1874, pp. 128, 129. 
[A review of Mr. Grote's paper on the migration of the Cotton Moth.] 
Glover, Townend. — Manuscript Notes from my Journal — Cotton, and the principal 
Insects, &c, frequenting or injuring the Plant in the United States. Washing- 
ton, 187H. (A few copies printed from stone for private distribution. ) 
[On plate x figures the Cotton "Worm in all stages.] 
Gorham, D. B. — " The Cotton Worm, its History, Character, Visitations, &c." De 
Bow's Commercial Review, iii, p. 535, 1847. 
Beimpr. — Southern Cultivator, 1847, p. 114. 
Beimpr. — De Bow's Industrial Resources of the Southern and Western States, 1852, 
p. 158. 
[Contains an account of previous visitations of the Cotton Worm, and extended remarks 
upon its natural history. Proclaims the migration theory in full, and gives arguments for it. 
Draws up a description of what is evidently Pimpla conquisitor (the first mention of a para- 
site on the cotton worm).] 
Grote, A. R. — Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Philadelphia, iii, p. 541, 
1864. 
[Announces the identity of Noctua xylina Say, and Anomis bipunctina Guenee, and pro- 
poses the name Anomis xylina Say. | 
Grote, A. R. — 11 Anomis xylina. A Review." Rural Carolinian, iii, pp. 88-92, 1871. 
[An extended criticism of a paper hy Dr. Anderson's in vol. ii, p. 695. Gives a hint at 
the migration theory which he elaborates in 1874.] 
Grote, A. R. — "Dr. E. H.Anderson and Cotton Caterpillars." Rural Carolinian, iii, 
pp. 30c, 309, 1871. 
[A review of Dr. Anderson's paper on pp. 204-207.] 
Grote, A. R. — 11 Anomis xylina (Say)." Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural 
Sciences, i, p. 170, 1874. 
[First suggestion with a reservation that Hiibner's Aletia argillacea is the same as Say's 
Noctua xylina.] 
Grote, A. R.— "The Cotton Worm." American Naturalist, viii, p. 562, 1S74. 
Grote, A. R. — "On the Cotton Worm of the Southern States {Aletia argillacea Hub- 
ner)." Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 
xxiii, part ii, pp. 13-18, 1874. 
Adv. pr. — Hartford Courant, xxxviii, No. 195. 
Adv. pr. — New York Tribune Extra No. 21, pp. 61-62. 
Adv. pr. — American Naturalist, viii, pp. 722-727. 
[Habits and synonymy of the Cotton Worm. Proposes the migration theory. The final 
print, as published in the American Naturalist and the A. A. A. S. Proceedings, is altered 
and differs from the first print in essential particulars.] 
Grote, A. R. — "The Cotton Worm; its Habitat. Means against it." Scientific 
American, v xxi, p. 168, 1874. 
Grote, A. R.— " List of the NoctuirlsB of North America." Bulletin of the Buffalo 
Society of Natural Sciences, ii, 1874-'75. 
[On page 24, the Cotton Moth is entered under Hiibner's name of Aletia argillacea, and iti 
synonymy is iriven] 
