64 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



in the minutes and corrected at a regular meeting of the So 

 ciety be considered as final. 



The resignations from corresponding membership of 

 Messrs. Clarence M. Weed and W. G. Johnson were presented 

 and accepted. 



The corresponding secretary, in presenting his customary 

 report, called for donations from members of the Society 

 of separates of their papers, published either in the PROCEED 

 INGS OF THE SOCIETY or elsewhere, the same to be incorporated 

 In the price list to be published of papers offered for sale for 

 the benefit of the Society. 



M. George W. Bock, 1315 Hickory street, St. Louis, Mo., 

 and Mr. C. F. Adams, Fayetteville, Ark., were elected to cor 

 responding membership. 



Doctor Stiles proposed the following resolution, which was 

 adopted by vote of the Society : 



Resolved, That the Society instruct its committee on publi 

 cation to insist that every new generic name submitted for 

 publication be accompanied by a definite designation of a 

 type species, and that new generic names not so accompanied 

 be excluded in the future from the publications of the Society. 



Mr. Burke exhibited specimens of larvae, pupae, and adults 

 of the cedemerid beetle Calopus angustus Lee., and presented 

 the following notes : 



NOTES ON THE LARVA OF CALOPUS ANGUSTUS LEG. 



By H. E. BURKE. 



Calopus angustus is an insect of wide range, both geo 

 graphically and according to food plant. One adult was 

 reared by the writer from a full-grown larva found in a 

 gallery in the sound heartwood of a living western cedar 

 {Thuja plicate). It had entered through the rotten wood of 

 a hollow butt. This tree was at Pialschie, State of Washing 

 ton, quite close to sea level. The larva was found July 3, 

 1905; it changed to pupa July 15, and issued an adult female 

 on August 10. 



On August 23 and 25 a number of small to large larvae, 

 pupae, and fragments of dead adults were found in galleries 

 m dead and living wood of Alpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa). 



