65 
75. Burns, E—Am. Miller, Dec., 1895, v. 23, p. 910. 
A communication from a Pennsylvania miller, giving an account 
of his three years’ experience in lighting the flour moth. 
1896. 
76. Johnson, TV. G. — Am. Miller, Jan., 1896, v. 24, p. 32. 
A few notes on the flour moth with reference to the new out¬ 
break in Pennsylvania. Illustrated. 
7 7. - Can. Ent. Jan., 1896, v. 28, p. 13. 
Note on the new outbreak of the flour moth in Canada. 
78. - Am. Miller, Feb., 1896, v. 24, p. 114. 
Answer to a query from a milling firm in Melbourne, Australia. 
7 9. Trelease, William. —Science, Feb. 14, 1896, v. 3 (n. s.), p. 
252; Can. Ent., March, 1896, v. 28, p. 61; Am. Nat. v. 30, 
p. 258. 
Deports that he exhibited at a meeting of the St. Louis Academy 
of Science, a silk fabric from Mexico, supposed to be the work of 
the Mediterranean flour moth. 
Note. —I am in receipt (March 5,1896) of a package of infested flour from a mill in Saltillo, 
Mexico, which has been forwarded to me by the editor of the “American Miller.” The flour is one 
mass of web, and contains hundreds of larvae, pupae, and dead moths of the Mediterranean flour 
moth Ephestia kuehniella. The material was taken from a fl luring-mill, where the moth is doing 
much mischief. 
A. - 5. 
