314 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [December, 



R. Hogg, i pi. Orthoptera, J. G. O. Tepper. Carabidse, T. G. Sloane. 

 Honey ants, W. VV. Froggatt, i pi. 



19. APPLETON'S POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. New York, November 

 1896. Evolution of insect instinct, C. Perton (translated from the Revue 

 Scientifique). 



20. SlTZUNGSBEKICHTE DER KAISERLICHEN AKADEMIE DER WlSSENS- 



CHAFTEN. MATHEMATISCH-NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHE CLASSE, civ, i 

 and 2. Vienna, 1895. The Myriapoda of Steiermark, Dr. C. Graf At- 

 tems, 7 pis. 5-7. Remarks on some new genera of the Muscaria; and 

 indication of some origmal examples, F. Brauer, i pi. S. Supplements 

 and conclusion to the monograph of the digging wasps allied to Nysson 

 and Bembex, A. Handlirsch, 2 pis. 



21. DENKSCHRIFTEN of the preceding, Ixii. Vienna, 1895. Contribu- 

 tions to the knowledge of the genera Phytoptus Duj. and IMonaulax Nal., 

 Dr. A. Nalepa, 4 pis. 



22. PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRISTOL NATURALISTS' SOCIETY (N. S.), 

 viii, i, 1896. Bookworms found in America, A. C. Fryer. 



23. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY AND NATURAL 

 SCIENCE (3), vi, 32. London, October, 1896. Predaceous and parasitic 

 enemies of Aphides, including a study of hyper-parasites (cont.), H. C. 

 A. Vine, 2 pis. 



24. LE NATURALISTS CANADIEN. Chicoutimi (Prov. of Quebec), Oc- 

 tober, 1896. Coleopterological fauna of Manitoba, G. Chagnon. 



25. CENTRALBLATT FUR PHYSIOLOGIE. Leipsic and Vienna, Oct. 17. 

 1896. The Rontgen rays visible to insects, Prof. D. Axenfeld. 



26. THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. London (Ont.), November, 1896^ 

 Butterflies taken at Orillia, Ont., C. E. Grant, fig. Notes on the pre- 

 paratory stages of Erebia epipsodea Butler, H. H. Lyman. Aellopos 

 titan Cram., A. F. Winn. The gypsy moth in Massachusetts, A. H. 

 Kirkland. New species of Nomada and Chyphotes, T. D. A. Cockerell. 

 A. A. A. S. Entomology in section " F," Buffalo meeting, D. S. Kellicott. 

 " Die Saturniiden," A. R. Grote. Rare butterflies, A. Gibson. Miss G. 

 E. Ormerod, C. J. S. Bethune. 



27. THE ENTOMOLOGIST. London, November, 1896. Vanessa antiopa, 

 W. F. Kirby. On the vertical distribution and derivation of the Rhopal- 

 ocera in the Pyrenees, W. H. Bath. On jumping cocoons from S. Africa, 

 1). Sharp. 



28. BULLETIN No. 4 (new series), U. S. Dept. of Agriculture Division 

 of Entomology. The principal household insects of the United States. 

 By L. O. Howard and C. L. Marlatt. With a chapter on insects affecting 

 dry vegetable foods by F. H. Chittenden. Washington, 1896. This bul- 

 letin of 130 pages and nominally (but in reality many more than) 63 fig- 



