320 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [xxxii, '21 



152-(>0; 171-71). Dyar, H. G. The genus Haemagogus (Culicidae). 

 Illustrations of certain mosquitoes. The mosquitoes of Argentina. 

 15, ix, 101-14; 114-18; 148-50. Felt, E. P. (See under \Yeiss, West 

 & Felt.) Garrett, C. B. D. Notes on Helomyzidae and descriptions 

 of new species. 15, ix, 139-32. Kieffer, J. J. Chironomides d'Ame- 

 rique. . . 109, xv (1917), 292-364. 



COLEOPTERA, Benderitter, E. Un Rutelide nouveau du 

 Perou. 20, 1921, 187-8. Bruch, C. Algunos interesantes ceramhi- 

 cidos. (Rev. Mus. La Plata, xxv, 345-5(i.) Lucas, R. Bericht u. 

 die wissenschaftlichen leistungcn im gebiete der entomologie. Co- 

 leoptera f. 1915. Ill, 191(5, B, heft .5, 317 pp. Mann, W. M. Three 

 new myrmecophilous beetles. 50, lix, 547-52. 



Fenyes, A. New genera and species of Aleocharinae with a poly- 

 tomic synopsis of the tribe. 79, Ixv, 1 7-3(5. Liljeblad, E. Notes on 

 the Mordellidac of the L T . S., with descriptions of new species. 4, 

 liii, 181-S(i. 



HYMENOPTERA. Cushman & Gahan The Thomas Say spe- 

 cies of Ichneumonidae. 10, xxiii, 153-71. 



Crawford, J. C. A new species of the chalcidid genus Zatropis. 

 10, xxiii, 171-2. 



AN ABSTRACT OF THE LEGISLATION IN FORCE IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE 

 PEALING WITH PLANT PESTS AND DISEASES up to the year 1920. Com- 

 piled by E. MARGUERITE RALFS, B. A., London. The Imperial Bureau 

 of Entomology, 41 Queen's Gate, S. W. 7, 1921. The contents of this 

 pamphlet of 65 octavo pages are well set forth in the title, especially 

 when one learns from page 3 that in this outline the word "pest" 

 or "disease" includes parasitic insects, fungi or plants. The orders, 

 proclamations and acts of the various parts of the Empire bearing on 

 the presence of diseased plants and on the importation of plants and 

 their possible pests are summarized for England and Wales ("it is 

 understood that similar Orders will be issued by the Scottish and 

 Irish Boards"), Australian Commonwealth and its several States, 

 Canada and its provinces, Newfoundland, Ceylon, Cyprus, Egypt. 

 Federated Malay States, Fiji, Gilbert and Ellice Islands, Gold Coast, 

 India, Malta, Mauritius, New Zealand, Southern Nigeria, Nigeria, Xyasa- 

 land, Papua. Southern Rhodesia, Northern Rhodesia, Samoa, Seychelles, 

 Sierra Leone, South Africa, Straits Settlements, Sudan, Tonga, Uganda, 

 Antigua, Bahama Islands, Barbados, Bermuda, British Guiana. British 

 Honduras, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lucia, 

 St. Vincent, Trinidad and Tobago and Zanzibar, truly a formidable list. 

 Some of the ordinances are very drastic, as in the case of British 

 Honduras : "Any plant imported is deemed to have come from a 

 prohibited country unless the importer satisfactorily proves otherwise." 

 We hone that where the B.-Hondurans dwell neither moth nor rust 

 corrupt under the protecting shield of Ordinance \ T o. 3 of 1012. This 

 Abstract is provided with an index of nine pages, (Advertisement), 

 P. P. CAI.YKRT, 



