230 
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. 
1643. Biley, C. Y.—Continued. 
Appendix XXV: 
Data from Dakota, Montana, Utah, and New Mexico. [243] 
From Dakota, [243]-[247]—From Montana, 248—From Utah, 
[253]—From New Mexico, [259]. 
Appendix XXYI: 
List of correspondents. [261] 
In Arkansas, British America, and California, [261]—In Colorado 
and Dakota, [262]—In Idaho and Iowa, [263]—In Kansas, [264]— 
In Minnesota, [265]—In Missouri, [267]—In Montana, [269]— 
In Nebraska, Nevada, and New Mexico, [270]—In Texas, Utah, 
and Washington Territory, [271]—In Wyoming, [272]. . 
Appendix XXVII: 
Bibliography on the locusts of America. By B. P. Mann..[273] 
Index. [281]' 
Errata... [295] 
1644. Biley, C. Y. Attractive but untrue. <N. Y. Tribune, 31 July, 
1878. S.-b. No. 19, p. 198. 
Absurdity of statement that “ a parasite of the strawberry plant has been 
found to wage a war of extermination against the Phylloxera.” 
1645. Biley, C. Y. Locusts eat the castor bean. <N. Y. Tribune, 14 
August, 1878. S.-b. No. 19, pp. 198, 227-228. 
Acrididce relish Fagopyrum and Linum but eat Bicinus communis with reluct¬ 
ance, though with impunity. 
1646. [Biley, C. Y.] The stalk-borer. <N. Y. Weekly Tribune, 21 
August, 1878, v. 37. S.-b. &o. 19, pp. 227; 242-243 j 244. 
Description, food-plants, and habits of larva and description of imago of 
Gortyna nitela ; G. nebris a variety of G. nitela. 
1647. Biley, C. Y. That hundred and fifty million dollars. <Sci. 
Ainer., 24 August, 1878 [v. 53], n. s., v. 39, p. 117. S.-b. No. 
19, p. 245. 
Critical review of sensational reports in current agricultural papers; an ap¬ 
propriation of $5,000 made to the U". S. Department of Agriculture for cot¬ 
ton insect investigation. 
1648. Biley, C. Y. Silk-worm breeding. <Sci. Amer., 24 August, 1878 
[v. 53], n. s., v. 39, p. 119. S.-b. No. 19, p. 244. 
Number of annual generations of Sericaria mori ; inferiority of races breeding 
more than once annually. 
1649. Biley, C. Y. Cotton-worm. <Daily Constitution [Atlanta, Ga.], 
8 September, 1878, v. 11, No. 73, p. 1. 
Aletia argillacea [=a cylina'] feeds from the extra-floral nectar-glands of the 
cotton-plant. 
1650. Biley, C. Y. That 11 fatherless and motherless race.” The bas¬ 
ket-worm, alias drop-worm, alias bag-worm, Thyridopteryx 
ephemerceformis. <Sci. Amer. Suppl., 28 September, 1878, 
fig. S.-b. No. 19, pp. 245-246. 
Critical review of W. H. Gibson’s article extracts from author’s “The bag. 
worm,” with additions; degradation and breeding habits of female Psy- 
chidce-, method of imagination, fecundation, and oviposition of Thyridop- 
