Midges.
Midges are small or minute flies; swarms of them are commonly seen in damp localities in the summer.
Flies.
Horseflies are unusually abundant in the neighborhood of ponds and streams.
The Robber Flies, or bee-killers, are the hawks of the insect world, preying upon their victims on the wing. In flying an insect is likely to become the victim to their sharp little dagger, which they carry in their beak. It is said that they will frequent a favorite position near a beehive and make frequent trips back and forth, and hundreds of empty bodies of bees are found beneath this perch.
The Dancefly is so called because of the up-and-down movement which they make in their swarms.
The Housefly. These insects are highly injurious to human beings because of their agency in spreading germs of such diseases as typhoid fever and Asiatic cholera. It has been discovered recently that germs of infantile paralysis are conveyed by the housefly.
THYSANOPTERA.
To this order belong very small insects known as "thrips." They are found in large numbers in flowers and in the heads of grain, chrysanthemum, hydrangea, orange-blossom, cabbage leaf, cauliflower, squash, turnips and other plants.
HEMIPTERA
includes plant-lice, scale insects and bugs proper. One entomologist says: "If anything were to exterminate the destroyers of hemiptera, we, ourselves, would probably be starved in the course of a few months," so harmful are they to vegetation. One of the best-known insects of this order is the cicada or harvestfly, popularly but wrongly called the "locust," the term "locust" belonging rightfully to the long-horned grasshoppers. The body of the cicada is large with a blunt head. At the end of July and early in August its song may be heard in the treetops.
The queer-shaped treehoppers also belong to this order. When they are resting upon a twig, it is difficult, except upon close examination, to distinguish them from a thorn or a natural protuberance of the wood.
The Spittle Insects. After hatching from the egg the young insects live in little frothy masses like spittle on the stems of plants and grasses.
Scale Insects. Many of the members of this family are very injurious to fruit trees and other trees. They feed upon the sap.
The Oyster-shell Bark Louse is found particularly upon apple and pear trees.
Plant Lice. These insects prey upon cultivated plants. Huxley computed that the uninterrupted breeding of ten generations of plant lice from the single insect would produce a bulk equal to the population of the Chinese Empire, 500,000,000 of human beings. We have already spoken of the relations between ants and plant lice; they are often called "Ant Cows" because of the ant's habit of milking them for the juices which they exhume.
The True Bugs.
The "Water Boatmen" may be found swimming on the surface of water. They often go below the surface, carrying with them a bubble of air which is held by the hairs of their body. They hibernate in the mud at the bottom of the water. The eggs of these insects are made into cakes and are eaten by the Indians.
Another family of water bugs are properly called the "back swimmers" because of their habit of swimming on their backs. They prey upon other water insects and even fish. They can sting with their beak.
Toad Bugs.
They have a short, wide body, protruding eyes and toad-like color. They are found in damp places under the banks of ponds and streams.
The Water Striders are the long-legged insects which run over the surface of the water with such speed that it is difficult to catch them.
The Cannibal Bugs, the Pirate Bugs, are preying insects which feed upon other insects whose blood they suck. A species of this insect was especially abundant in the Eastern States in 1898. Their bites and blood-sucking habits gave cause to the "kissing-bug" scare to which the newspapers gave great publicity.
The Ambush Bugs
is the name which Professor Comstock has given to insects frequenting yellow flowers, with which its color agrees and hides it from other insects visiting the flowers.
The Squash Bug
is the enemy of vegetables of the pumpkin family and has a distinctly disagreeable odor.
The Stink Bugs
are small flat bugs which, like the Squash Bug, have a bad odor. One of this family is still called, in Georgia, "The Abe Lincoln" bug, and in Texas, "The Third Party" bug.
THE CINCH BUGS.
This is a bug that makes a specialty of corn and grasses as a diet.
INDEX
Abe Lincoln Bugs, 175
Ajax Butterflies, 168
Ambush Bugs, 175
Ants, 154, 160, 162
Ant Lion, 152
Aptera, 147
Back Swimmers, 174
Baltimore Butterfly, 166
Bee Killers, 171
Bees, 154-158
Bumble, 156
Carpenter, 156
Cuckoo, 156
Honey, 156
Mason, 156
Beetle, Black, 148
Blue Butterflies, 167
Buckeye, 167
Bugs, 174
Abe Lincoln, 175
Ambush, 175
Cannibal, 174
Cinch, 175
June, 164
Kissing, 175
Pirate, 174
Squash, 175
Stink, 175
Third Party, 175
Toad, 174
Bumblebees, 156
Butterflies, 164
Ajax, 168
Blue, 167
Cabbage, 168
California Long-winged, 166
Copper, 167
Hair-streaked, 164
Milkweed, 164
Orange-tipped, 168
Painted Purple, 167
Sulphur, 167
Swallow-tail, 168
Thistle, 167
White, 167
Cabbage Butterflies, 168
Caddis Flies, 150, 152
California Long-winged Butterflies, 166
Campodea, 147
Cannibal Bugs, 174
Carpenter Bees, 156
Cicada, 160, 172
Cinch Bugs, 175
Cliff Fritillary, 166
Cockchafers, 163
Cockroaches, 148
Coddling Moth, 150
Coleoptera, 147, 163
Conniption Bugs, 150
Copper Butterflies, 167
Corn Weevils, 164
Cotton-boll Weevils, 163
Crickets, 148, 149
Cricket Field, 149
Mole, 149
Croton Bugs, 148
Cuckoo Bees, 156
Currant Worms, 163
Dance Flies, 171
Death's Head Moths, 168
Devil's Darning-needles, 152
Diana, 166
Diptera, 147, 170
Dircenna, 166
Dobson, 150
Dragon Flies, 150, 152, 153
Egger Moths, 168
Ephemerida, 152
Field Cricket, 149
Fire-flies, 163
Flies, Caddis, 150, 152
Dance, 171
Dragon, 150, 152, 153
Fire, 163
Gall, 154, 162
Harvest, 172
Horse, 171
House, 171
Ichneumon, 162
May, 150, 152
Robber, 171
Saw, 163
Shad, 152
Snake, 150
Flip-flaps, 150
Fritillary, Cliff, 166
Regal, 166
Silver-bordered, 166
Gall Flies, 154, 162
Glow Worms, 163
Goggle-goy, 150
Grasshoppers, 148
Red-legged, 149
Hair-streaked Butterflies, 164
Harvest Flies, 172
Hawk Moth, 168
Hellgrammite, 150
Hemiptera, 147, 172
Ho-Jack, 150
Honey Bee, 156
Horn Tails, 162
Hornet, 158
Horse Flies, 171
Horse Stingers, 152
House Flies, 171
Hymenoptera, 147, 154
Ichneumon Flies, 162
June Bugs, 164
Katydids, 148
Kissing Bugs, 175
Lady Birds, 163
Leaf Insects, 148
Lepidoptera, 147, 164
Lice, Plant, 174
Locusts, 148
Louse, Oyster Shell Bark, 172
Luna Moth, 170
Mason Bees, 156
Wasps, 158
May Flies, 150, 152
Midges, 171
Milkweed Butterflies, 164
Mole Cricket, 149
Monarch Butterflies, 164
Mosquitoes, 170
Moths, 168-170
Coddling, 150
Death's Head, 168
Egger, 168
Hawk, 168
Luna, 170
Sphinx, 170
Neuroptera, 147, 150
Nut Weevils, 163
Orthoptera, 147, 148
Oyster Shell Bark Louse, 172
Painted Purple Butterflies, 167
Pear Slugs, 163
Pirate Bugs, 174
Plant Lice, 174
Praying Mantis, 148, 149, 150
Queen Butterflies, 164
Question Sign Butterflies, 167
Red Admiral Butterflies, 167
Red-legged Grasshoppers, 149
Regal Fritillary, 166
Rice Weevils, 164
Robber Flies, 171
Rose-slugs, 163
Saw Flies, 163
Scale Insects, 171, 173
Shad Flies, 152
Silver-bordered Fritillary, 166
Sulphur Butterflies, 167
Silverfish, 147
Slugs, Pear, 163
Slugs, Rose, 163
Snake-doctor, 150
Snake Flies, 150
Sphinx Moth, 170
Spittle Insects, 172
Squash Bugs, 175
Stink Bugs, 175
Swallow-tail Butterflies, 168
Tiger, 168
Third Party Bugs, 175
Thistle Butterflies, 167
Thysanoptera, 147, 171
Tiger Swallow-tail, 168
Toad Bugs, 174
Treehoppers, 172
Walking Sticks, 148, 150, 151
Wasps, 154, 158, 159
Mason, 158
Water Boatmen, 174
Striders, 174
Weevils, 163
Corn, 163
Cotton Boll, 163
Nut, 163
Rice, 164
White Butterflies, 167
| 1. In Camp on the Big Sunflower. |
| 2. The Rivals on the Trail. |
| 3. The Strange Cabin on Catamount Island. |
| 4. Lost in the Great Dismal Swamp. |
| 5. With Trapper Jim in the North Woods. |
| 6. Caught in a Forest Fire. |
| 7. Chums of the Campfire. |
| 8. Afloat on the Flood. |
By LAWRENCE J. LESLIE.
A series of wholesome stories for boys told in an interesting way and appealing to their love of the open.
Each, 12mo. Cloth. 40 cents per volume
201 EAST 12th STREET :: :: NEW YORK
A book which treats, in a most practical and fascinating manner all subjects pertaining to the "King of Trades"; showing the care and use of tools; drawing; designing, and the laying out of work; the principles involved in the building of various kinds of structures, and the rudiments of architecture. It contains over two hundred and fifty illustrations made especially for this work, and includes also a complete glossary of the technical terms used in the art. The most comprehensive volume on this subject ever published for boys.
The author has adopted the unique plan of setting forth the fundamental principles in each phase of the science, and practically applying the work in the successive stages. It shows how the knowledge has been developed, and the reasons for the various phenomena, without using technical words so as to bring it within the compass of every boy. It has a complete glossary of terms, and is illustrated with two hundred original drawings.
This book takes the beginner through a comprehensive series of practical shop work, in which the uses of tools, and the structure and handling of shop machinery are set forth; how they are utilized to perform the work, and the manner in which all dimensional work is carried out. Every subject is illustrated, and model building explained. It contains a glossary which comprises a new system of cross references, a feature that will prove a welcome departure in explaining subjects. Fully illustrated.
12mo, cloth. Price 60 cents per volume
————————
THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY
201 East 12th Street New York
A new series of books, each complete in itself, relating the remarkable experiences of two boys and a man, who are cast upon an island in the South Seas with absolutely nothing but the clothing they wore. By the exercise of their ingenuity they succeed in fashioning clothing, tools and weapons and not only do they train nature's forces to work for them but they subdue and finally civilize neighboring savage tribes. The books contain two thousand items of interest that every boy ought to know.
The Castaways
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
Exploring the Island
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
The Mysteries of the Caverns
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
The Tribesmen
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
The Capture and Pursuit
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
The Conquest of the Savages
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
Adventures on Strange Islands
THE WONDER ISLAND BOYS
Treasures of the Islands
————————
Large 12mo, cloth. Many illustrations.
60 cents per vol., postpaid.
PUBLISHED BY
THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY
201 East 12th Street New York
12mo, Cloth. Many Illustrations. 60c. per Volume
—————
This is a series of four books relating the adventures of two boys, who make a trip around the world, working their way as they go. They meet with various peoples having strange habits and customs, and their adventures form a medium for the introduction of much instructive matter relative to the character and industries of the cities and countries through which they pass. A description is given of the native sports of boys in each of the foreign countries through which they travel. The books are illustrated by decorative head and end pieces for each chapter, there being 36 original drawings in each book, all by the author, and four striking halftones.
1. From New York to the Golden Gate, takes in many of the principal points between New York and California, and contains a highly entertaining narrative of the boys' experiences overland and not a little useful information.
2. From San Francisco to Japan, relates the experiences of the two boys at the Panama Exposition, and subsequently their journeyings to Hawaii, Samoa and Japan. The greater portion of their time is spent at sea, and a large amount of interesting information appears throughout the text.
3. From Tokio to Bombay. This book covers their interesting experiences in Japan, followed by sea voyages to the Philippines, Hong-kong and finally to India. Their experiences with the natives cover a field seldom touched upon in juvenile publications, as it relates to the great Hyderabad region of South India.
4. From India to the War Zone, describes their trip toward the Persian Gulf. They go by way of the River Euphrates and pass the supposed site of the Garden of Eden, and manage to connect themselves with a caravan through the Great Syrian Desert. After traversing the Holy Land, where they visit the Dead Sea, they arrive at the Mediterranean port of Joppa, and their experiences thereafter within the war zone are fully described.
201 EAST 12th STREET NEW YORK
Primrose Edition
Printed on fine quality book paper. Separate cover designs in color.
| Daddy's Girl. |
| A Girl from America. |
| Sue, a Little Heroine. |
| The School Queens. |
| Wild Kitty. |
| A Sweet Girl Graduate. |
| A World of Girls. |
| Polly—A New-Fashioned Girl. |
———————————
Each, 12mo. Cloth. 40 cents per Volume
———————————
Mrs. Meade's girls' books never
lose their popularity.
———————————
THE NEW YORK BOOK COMPANY
201 EAST 12th STREET
NEW YORK