330 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY. 
229i. Riley, C. V.—Continued. 
Reports of agents —Continued. 
Report upon insects affecting tlae hop and the cranberry. By J. B. 
Smith. 393 
The hop Aphis, 393—Its first appearance, 393—The cranberry 
fruit-worm, 394—The fire-worm, 395—Cranberry leaf-folder, 
395— Its dimorphism, 396—A cecidomyid larva infesting pears 
at Meriden, Conn., 396—Description of larva and infested fruit, 
396— Pupation, 397—Distribution, 397—Varieties of pear in¬ 
fested, 397—Probably an imported pest, 398—Remedy, 398. 
Notes from Nebraska. By Lawrence Bruner. 398 
The Rocky Mountain locust in 1884, 398—Other species of locusts, 
399—The snowy tree-cricket, 399—The chinch-bug, 399—Cut¬ 
worms, 400—The imported cabbage-worm, 400—Its natural ene¬ 
mies, 400—Other cabbage-worms, 401—False caterpillars on 
grass and sedge, 401— Cimbex americanaon willow hedges, 401— 
injury to cottonwoods by the striped beetle, 402—The Colorado 
potato-beetle, 403. 
Notes of the year . 403 
Chinch-bug notes. 403 
The so-called "invasion” of St. Lawrence County, New York, 
in 1883, 403—Mr. Lintner’s prediction and his reasons therefor, 
403—Reasons for dissenting from this view, 404—The result in 
1884, 405. 
Notes on the grape Phylloxera...'. 405 
Regarding the grape Phylloxera in Russia, 405—In reference to 
the treaty ot Berne and the prohibition of the introduction of 
bulbs and cuttings from the United States into Germany, 407— 
The grape Phylloxera in graperies; legal questions arising, 408. 
Miscellaneous notes... 410 
The box Psylla found in the United States, 410—The dwarfing of 
oaks by Mallodon melanopus, 410—The clover-seed midge, 411— 
The potato-stalk weevil, 411—The red-humped prominent, 411— 
The varying anomala, 412—White-lined morning-sphinx, 412— 
The apple-tree tent caterpillar, 412—Cora bill-bugs, 413—A 
swarming mite, 413—A new enemy to white roses, 413—A bee¬ 
tle eating peach-leaf es, 413—Effect of cold on the eggs of bark- 
lice, 413—Ravages of grain-weevils in Florida, 414—Fuller’s 
rose-beetle, 414—The blood-sucking Conorhinus, 414—The ca- 
talpa sphinx, 415—Notes on cotton worms, 415—Pyrethrum, 
416. 
Notes from Missouri. By M. E. Murtfeldt. 416 
The striped flea-beetle, 416—The Colorado potato-beetle, 416— 
The imported cabbage-butterfly, 416—The cottony maple scale, 
417—The stalk-borer, 417— Grapholilha prunivora, 418—The 
grape saw-fly, 418—A saw-fly on i>lum, 418—A saw-fly on ash, 
418. 
2292. Riley, C. V. General truths in applied entomology. Essay. 
<Trans. Ga. State Agric. Soc., 1884, v. —, pp. 153-159. Sepa¬ 
rate: <Macon, Ga., 1884, t.-p. cover, pp. 153-159. Re¬ 
print : <Rept. [U. S.] Commissioner Agric. for 1884, pp. 323- 
330. <Gardener’§ Chronicle, 1S85, v. 23; 20 June, pp. 785-786; 
27 June, p. 818. S.-b. No. 61, p. 6; 10-11. See: <Ga. Crop 
