356 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Oct., '13 



cephala bicolor and bisect a at Creve-Coeur Lake. The genus 

 Schinia yielded trifascia, jaguarina, arcifera, chrysellus, lynx 

 and nundina a new record. 



Two beautiful Erebus odora were observed by Mr. E. 

 Schwarz resting on tree trunks at Meramec in August. His 

 observations on the genus Catocala show that the collecting 

 was very favorable up to the first of August, then nil until 

 after the sixteenth, then normal to the end. 



C. lacrymosa was particularly abundant with many beautiful 

 variations. M. Schwarz took two specimens of v. zelica, one 

 pair of v. ulalume and twelve v. paulina; v. cvelina constituted 

 about one-third of the whole booty of lacrymosa. C. neo- 

 gawia, obscura and residua were all very scarce; C. epione, 

 ultronia and arnica never so abundant. C. innubcns v. scintil- 

 lans represented about 25 per cent, of the innubens caught, 

 against a proportion of 33 per cent, in 1911. C. parta, consors 

 and marmorata give one specimen each. 



As a new record we may mention C. Mania, captured by Mr. 

 McElhose some years ago and but lately identified in the col- 

 lection of Mr. E. Schwarz. 



Amongst other additions to the local list of nocturnals we 

 find : Apantesis figurata, Orthosia auriantiago, Mclipotis ver- 

 sabilis, Melalopha apicalis, Schizura ipoinoeae and Givira 

 anna (Dyar) six specimens, by the writer; Hutrapela al- 

 ciphcaria, by Mr. E. Schwarz and Ufeus satyricus. 



Notes on some North American Noctuidae (Lepid.). 

 By F. H. WOLLEY DOD, Midnapore, Alta., Canada. 



Hadena albiserrata Smith. (Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc. XI, p. 8, 1903) 

 : H. loda Streck. 



Smith's description was made from a pair from Pullman, 

 Washington, in the Rutger's College collection. Strecker's 

 was a male from Seattle, and his name has preference by 

 five years. T once thought the species was a strongly marked 

 gray race of versnta, wherein T was wrong. It lacks all the 

 bronzy tint possessed by even the grayest versuta. The orbicu- 



