BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
343 
Stelle, J. P.— ''The Cotton Worm Investigation." Mobile (weekly) Register, Janu- 
ary 15, 1881. 
Beimpr. — .Southern Farmers' Monthly, April, 1881. 
Beimpr.— Galveston News, August 4, 1881. 
[Summary of results of Commission work.] 
Stelle, J. P.— " Killing Cotton Worms." From Mobile Register. Selma Times, July 
1-. 1 — 1. 
[A long article with tin- following subheads: Our native plants,- Pyrethrum ; London 
Purple; Paris Green ; Arsenic.] 
Stelle, J. P. — "To save tin- Cotton Crop." Galveston News, August 10, 1681. 
[London purple.] 
Taylor, F. G. H. — "A Remedy fox ihe Caterpillar." Southern Cultivator, 1&71, p. 
[Advises tin- use >.l .it nic in snlnt . « > i i ] 
Texas Journal cf Commerce — " More about the Cotton Won:;." July 31, 1880. 
[Editorial mention of lettets from Professor Riley, and quotes in (kill Circular U' United 
States Entomological Comm issiou . ] 
Thaxter, R.— Psyche, ii, p. :rr. May-Jans ['.'.July], 1-77. 
[Says that Aletia OOCS f l fehotll N« m ton. Mas.-.., rarely at li^ht in September.] 
Trelease, Wm. — " Report of Wm. Trelease, of Brooklyn, N. V." Report upon Cot- 
ton inlets. Department of Agrienltore, 1879, pp. 361-379. 
[An extended discussion of the natural history of Aletia and Heliothis, embodying all of 
his olis. i \ at i«»i,s made in Alabama in the Hummer of lsT'J.l 
Trelease, Wm.— Psyche, iii, p. 186, March [ 25 July ]. 1880. 
[Bsporl of meeting of Cambridge Entomological Club, in which Mr. Trelease stated that 
the moths i .1 b tin > si elv the . \t i a tloi al -lands on the pedum le of the sw eet potato plant for 
food ] 
Trowbridge, S. T., and Enriquez, R. de Z. — " Interesting Cotton Worm Notes from 
Yen Cm/." Ameriean Entomologist, iii, p. 179, 1880. 
Turner, J. A. — 'I he Cotton Planter*' Manual. New Fork, 1857. 
[Muotc* Dr. Gorham s aiticle j 
Upton, Wheelcck S. — •'The Cotton Caterpillar." De How s Review, ii, p. :i7A, 
1846, 
; Advises soaking seeds of cotton in a solution of Milestone as a preventive.) 
Ure. Andrew. — History of the Manufacture of Cotton. I.onilon. 1896. 
[On pages l">fi and 174 of vol. i. STC firm accounts of the chenille in Hritish Guiana, and on 
the Sea Islands of Georgia (short and of little value). | 
V/ailes, B. C. L.— " The Cotton Plant : its < trigin and Variel ies, and its Enemies and 
Diseases." In Wailes' Agriculture and Geology of Mississippi, first report, 1854, 
pp. 146-148, 
[A short sketch of the Cotton "Worm, which he calls Depressaria ynasi/pioides. Advises, as 
a remedy, attracting the moth by tires.] 
Waldo, J. Curtis.— The Cotton Worm. A Treatise on the Enemy of the Great Sta- 
ple, with the Practical Experience of many of the most intelligent Planters of the 
South as to the means of destroying the worm. New Orleans, 1878. 
[History of the Cotton Wnnn ; Hon- they look ; Prevent i res ; Jute as a preventive ; Destroyers 
of the Cotton 'Worm.) 
Walsh, B. D., and Riley, C. V.—" Entomological Ignorance in the South." American 
Entomologist, i, pp. 14-16, 1868. 
[A severe criticism of an aiticle then going the rounds of the Southern press, headed, " How 
to destroy tho Cotton Worm— a Suggestion."] 
Walsh, B. D., and Riley, C. V.—-' Cotton Insects. The Cotton Army Worm (Ifbctua 
[ Anamis"] xylina, Bay)." American Entomologist, i, pp. 209-212, 1869. 
[An account of the transformations of the Cotton Worm, with figures and descriptions of 
each stage. Hand-picking, destroying the moths by fire, and sprinkling the plants with 
cresylic soap solution, are advised as remedies.] 
