Books about North American Moths 
Walsingham, Lord North American Coleophoras. (Transactions Ent. 
Soc., London, 1882, pp. 429-442, PI. XVII.) 
A Revision of the Genera Acrolophus Poey and 
Anaphora Clemens. (Transactions Ent. Soc., Lon¬ 
don, 1887, pp. 137-173, Plates VII, VIII.) 
Steps Toward a Revision of Chambers’s Index with 
Notes and Descriptions of New Species. (Insect 
Life, Vol. I, pp. 81-84, 113-117, 145-150, 254- 
258, 287-291; Vol. II, pp. 23-26, 51-54, 77-81, 
116—120,150—155,284—286, 322—326; Vol. Ill, pp. 
325-329, 386-389; Vol. IV, pp. 385-389.) 
Dyar, H. G. Notes on Some North American Yponomeutidae, 
(Canadian Entomologist, 1900, pp. 37-41,84-86.) 
Busck, A. New Species of Moths of the Superfamily Tineina 
from Florida. (Proc. U, S. Nat. Mus., Vol. XXIII, 
pp. 225-254.) 
New American Tineina. (Journal New York Ent. 
Soc., Vol. VIII, pp. 234-248, Plate IX.) 
A Revision of the American Moths of the Family 
Gelechiidas with Descriptions of New Species. 
(Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., Vol. XXV, pp. 767-938.) 
“ When simple curiosity passes into the love of knowledge as such, 
and the gratification of the aesthetic sense of the beauty of complete¬ 
ness and accuracy seems more desirable than the easy indolence of 
ignorance ; when the finding out of the causes of things becomes a 
source of joy, and he is counted happy w T ho is successful in the search, 
common knowledge of Nature passes into what our forefathers called 
Natural Plistory, from whence there is but a step to that which used to 
be termed Natural Philosophy, and now passes by the name of Physical 
Science.”— Thomas Henry Huxley, in The Crayfish. 
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