X 
Ginger infested by Confused Flour- 
beetle, 67. 
Girault, A. A., 97, 132. 
paper by, on insects injurious to 
stored grains and their ground 
products, 56-82. 
glomeratus, Apanteles, 100. 
Gooseberry injured by Rose, or Ob¬ 
lique-banded, Leaf-roller, 93. 
gossypii, Aphis, 117. 
Grain as food of Indian Meal Moth, 
64. 
-beetle, Saw-toothed, 56, 68-69. See 
under Saw-toothed G’rain-beetle. 
treatment of infested, 73-78. 
Moth, Angoumois, 56, 57, 58-61. 
See under Angoumois Grain 
Moth. 
Grains and their products as food 
of Snout-moth, 66a. 
graminum, Pediculopsis, 139. 
granaria, Calandra, 69. 
Granary beetles and weevils, 66-72. 
insects, key for identification of, 
79-82. 
measures against, 72-73. 
moths, 58-66a. 
or Black Weevil, distinctive char¬ 
acters of, 81. See also Granary 
Weevil. 
or mill waste products as food of 
Meal Snout-moth, 66a. 
Weevil, 56, 69-70, 81. 
Grapefruit infested by Circular or 
Florida Red Scale, 128. 
Greedy Scale, 128. 
Green, or Green Chrysanthemum, 
Aphis, 116. 
Greenhouse Asparagus, injury to by 
cutworms, 84. See also Fern 
Asparagus and “Asparagus Fern.” 
Leaf-tier, 98-100. 
as enemy of chrysanthemums, 
98. 
breeding plants of, 100. 
description and life history of, 
98-99. 
distribution of, 100. 
natural enemies of, 100. 
remedies for, 100. 
plants in Illinois, report on insects 
injurious to flowering and orna¬ 
mental, 83-143. 
tropical trees liable to infestation 
by scale insects, 122. 
White Fly, 130-135. 
character of injury by, 131- 
132. 
description, life history, and 
habits of, 130-132. 
distribution of, 130. 
natural enemies of, 132. 
Greenhouse White Fly— Continued. 
plants especially susceptible to 
attack of, 130. 
remedies for, 132, 135. 
Guenee, A., 88, 104. 
G'uinea-pigs, inoculation experiment 
with, 47. 
II 
Halsted, Byron D., 141. 
Halticus bractatus, 113. 
citri, 113-116. See Garden Flea- 
hopper, 
uhleri, 113. 
Handpicking for Alternanthera Worm, 
106. 
for Diamond back Moth, 103. 
for Greenhouse Leaf-tier, 100. 
for Rose, o,r Oblique-banded, Leaf- 
roller, 97, 98. 
for Variegated Cutworm, 87. 
Hart, Charles A., 21, 32, 42, 49, 86, 
97, 100, 109. 
Hay as food of Meal Snout-moth, 
66a. 
Heald, F. D., 140. 
hederae, Aspidiotus, 128. 
Hemichionaspis aspidistrae, 126. 
hemisphaerica, Saissetia, 124. 
Hemispherical Scale, 124. 
hesperidum, Coccus, 123. 
Hibiscus attacked by Soft Scale, 123. 
hirtipes, Simulium, 23, 31. 
Hodgkiss, H. E., 5, 139. 
Hodgkiss, H. E., and Stewart. F. C., 
139. 
Hogs, black-flies as pest of, 26. 39. 
Honey r -bee, hives of, infested by la’wa 
of Mediterranean Flour-moth. 64. 
Horses, injuries to, by black-flies, 22. 
26. 
Houghton, C. O. (see Errata), and 
MacGillivray, Alex. D'., 31. 
Howard, L. O., 124. 
Hudson Bay Company, 27. 
Humming-birds as enemies of Dia¬ 
mond-back Moth, 102. 
Hunter, S. J., 47, 48. 
hybridum, Adiantum, 118. 
Hydrocyanic acid gas, limitations of, 
as a fumigant, 74. 
(See also under Fumigation 
and under Remedies.) 
hydropiperoides, Polygonum. 114. 
Hymenia perspectalis, 103-106. See 
Alternanthera Worm. 
Hymenopterous parasite of Green- 
Louse Leaf-tier, 100. 
of Greenhouse White Fly', 132. 
parasites of Rose, or Oblique- 
banded, Leaf-roller, 97. 
of Variegated Cutworm, 86. 
