~ 
Forbes, S. A.—Continued. 
The Fruit Bark Beetle. (Bull. 4, Office State Entomologist 
Ill.; Bull. Univ. Ill. Agr. Exper. Station, No. 15, p. 469.) 
Zoology in the Public School: Choice and Arrangement of 
Material. (Public School Journ., xi, pp. 230, 375, 429.) 
The Head of the English Sparrow. (Prepared in accordance 
with a requirement of the law of the legislature, passed 
at its last session, offering a bounty for the destruction 
of sparrows. ) 
The Chinch Bug in Illinois, 1891-92. (Bull. Univ. Ill. Agr. Ex- 
per. Station, No. 19, p. 44.) 
An All-around Microscope. (Am. Monthly Micr. Journ., 1892, 
p. 91.) 
The Fruit-Destroying Insects of Southern Illinois. (Trans. 
Ill. Hort. Soc., 1891, p. 116.) 
The Importation of a Hessian Fly Parasite from Europe. (In- 
sect Life, iv, p. 179.) 
Seventeenth, Report of the State Entomologist on the Noxious 
and Beneficial Insects of the State of Illinois. Contents.— 
The Fruit Bark Beetle. Experiments with Arsenical Poisons 
for the Peach and Plum Curculio. The American Plum 
Borer. Onthe Common White Grubs. Additional Notes on 
the Hessian Fly. A Summary History of the Corn Root 
Aphis. On a Bacterial Disease of the Larger Corn Root 
Worm. Notes on the Diseases of the Chinch Bug. Ap- 
pendiz.—An Analytical List of the Entomological Writings 
of Wm. LeBaron, M. D., Second State Entomologist of 
Jlinois. 
Marten, John.—Various entomological articles, published as En- 
tomological Editor of the ‘‘Prairie Farmer,” Chicago, TI. 
Hart, Charles A.—The Life History of Wireworms. (Insect Life, 
iii, p. 246.) 
On the Species of Gicanthus. (Entomological News, iii, p. 33.) 
Additional papers, prepared but not yet printed, are 
a presidential address on ‘‘The Progress of Economic 
Entomology during the years 1891 and 1892,” deliv- 
ered by myself at the meeting of the American Associa- 
tion of Economic Entomologists at Rochester, N. Y.: 
my preliminary report to the United States Fish Com- 
missioner, on the ‘‘Aquatic Invertebrate Fauna of Yel- 
lowstone Park, Wyoming, and of the Flathead Region 
of Montana;” and two important papers, now in the 
hands of my assistants, well advanced towards comple- 
