March, 191S.] Miscellaneous Notes. 71 



over dclazvarc. Most of the writer's local specimens were taken at 

 Jamesburg, N. J. 



The remaining North American species of Anatrytone (Dyar) are, 

 A. arogos, Bd. and Lee. (sometimes confused with vitcllius, Fabr.) 

 and A. lagiis, W. H. Edw. A. arogos, also occurs locally. 



Monoleuca semifascia, Walk. Dr. H. G. Dyar, in Journal N. Y. 

 Ent. Soc, XXII, 223, describes the larva of this species, and lists it 

 as a New York insect, basing this conclusion on the Morris Plains, 

 N. J. (Neumoegen) record,^ and on the occurrence, at different times, 

 of other southern species of this group, in New York State. 



To the above evidence, we would like to add the following. On 

 July II, 1902, four specimens were taken at South Lakewood, N. J., by 

 the writer.' They were taken at night upon a screen door and were 

 attracted by the lights of the dwelling. Two of these specimens are 

 now in the Staten Island Museum and one in the American Museum 

 Local Collection. We also have, in this museum, a Henry Edwards 

 specimen, with a New York label. 



For convenience we repeat the additional records in the 1909 New 

 Jersey State List. Palisades (Joutel) : Lakehurst, July 12 (Buch- 

 holz) ; Larva in New Jersey (Joutel).— Frank E. Watson, 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE NEW YORK ENTOMO- 

 LOGICAL SOCIETY. 



Meetixg of Novemueu 3, 1914. 



A regular meeting of the New York Entomological Society was held 

 November 3, 1914, at 8:15 P. M., in the American Museum of Natural His- 

 tory, Pres. Dr. Raymond C. Osburn in the chair, with 14 members and one 

 visitor, Mr. M. S. Crosby, of the Linnean Society, present. 



Mr. Davis spoke of his visit, October 8, with Mr. Shoemaker, to Lake- 

 hurst, N. J., and of the enthusiasm of the latter on this first visit to that 

 locality. Notwithstanding the dry weather, the collecting was good; eight 

 species of tiger beetles were caught, tranquebarica, rugifrons, modesta and 

 piinctulata in numbers, and one each of generosa, consentanea, repanda and 

 i2-giittata. Sandalus niger, differing by its conical thorax from S'. petrophya, 

 reported previously by Mr. Schaeffer, was taken, and constitutes, in conjunc- 

 tion with the specimens heretofore reported from the Palisades, an addition 



1 See Smith's Insects of New Jersey, 1899. 



