372 Till CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



Genus Scolopocerus, Uhler. 

 Hitherto this genus has been placed in the Coreince, near Dasycoris. 

 It properly belongs to the Ceniroscelince, near the genera Althos and 

 Catorhintha, between which it should be located in our lists. 



Subgenus Xerocoris, Van Duzee. 

 This subgenus of Narnia was established by me in 1906 for Narnia 

 Snowi and Wilsoni. {Yaw.. News, XVI, p. 385.) Narnia Snowi is the 

 type of this subgenus. 



Family BERYTID 1 

 I can see no valid reason why tin's group should be assigned family 

 rank. I would place it in the Lygceidctzs a subfamily, immediately follow- 

 ing the subfamily Cymina, as has been done by Stal in the Enumeratio. 



Neidcs muticus, Say. 

 This species has the coriaceous punctured elytra of JVeides, and 

 certainly belongs there, and not in Jalysus, where it is located in the 

 Lethierry and Severin Catalogue. 



Cymodema exiguum, Horvath. 

 I can discover no character by which to distinguish this species from 

 Cymus breviceps, Stal. The two descriptions seem to refer to one and 

 the same insect, which inhabits the Atlantic region from New Jersey to 

 Southern Florida. I would place it in Cymus, although the second 

 antennal joint is scarcely, if at all, longer than the basal. The sternal 

 sulcation is scarcely indicated. 



Belonochilus Koreshanus, Van Duzee. 

 Dr. Distant has compared examples of this species with the types of 

 his B. Mexicanus, and pronounces them sufficiently distinct. 



Perigenes fallax, Heidemann. 

 In the Harris collection is an example of this species under the name 

 Pamera constricta, Say. This specimen, which, I understand, was 

 determined by Say himself, wants the head, but I felt no doubt of the 

 identification. Later I sent specimens of fallax to Mr. C W. Johnson 

 for his independent judgment, and he agrees with me in the determination. 

 This is the species formerly determined by me as const rictus, Say, and it 

 is so listed in my catalogue of the Hemiptera of Buffalo, but since the 

 publication of Mr. Heidemann's paper I have used Say's name for an 

 allied species, which I now describe as : 



