238 Fiftieth Report ox the State Museum 



Rogers: in Canad. Entomol., xii, 1880, pp. 149-151, fig. 21 (popular 

 account, as Clytiis) ; the same in Rept. Entomol og. Soc. Ont. 

 for ]88o, 1881, pp. 32-33. fig. 13. 



Zksch-Reinfxke : List Coleopt. Bui^alo and Vicinity, 1880, p. 9 (listed, 

 as Glycobius). 



Bell: in Canad. Entomol., xiii, 188 c, p. 236 (mention, as Clytus). 



Lintner: ist Rept. Ins. N. Y., 1882, p. 297 (refc;rence) ; in Country- 

 Gentleman, xlvii, 1882, p. 625 (very injurious to maples); 2d 

 Rept. Ins. N. Y., 1885, p. 227 (abstract); 3d do. for 1886, 

 1887. pp. 103-105 (notice of injuries, remedies) ; in Country 

 Gentleman, liv, 1889, p. 579 (characteristics, remedies) ; 6th 

 Rept. Ins. N. Y., 1890, p. i6g (abstract); in Country Gentle- 

 man, Ivii, 1892, p. 552 (attack identified) ; 8th Rept. Ins. N, Y., 

 1893, pp. 202-205, fig. 45 (ravages and remedies); 9th do., 

 1893, p. 442 (abstract); in Country Gentleman, Wiii, 1893, p. 

 557 (identified, remedies); in Gardening, iii, 1894, p. 56 (men- 

 .tion, figure) ; loth Rept. Ins. N. Y., 1895, p. 497 (reference, 

 in all preceding referred to Glycobius), p. 504 (abstract), p. 511 

 (reference); in Country Gentleman, Ix, 1895, p. 583 (remedies); 

 nth Rept. Ins. N. Y., 1896, p. 280 (abstract), p. 286 (mention). 



Dimmock: in Stand. Nat. Hist., ii, Crust. Ins., 1884, pp. 330-331, fig. 

 368 (brief mention). 



Fletcher: Rept. Entomol. for 1885, p. 31 (brief mention, as Glycobuis). 



Harrington: in 17th Ann. Rept. Entomolog., Soc. .Ont., 1887, pp. 

 29-30, fig. 3 (brief mention, as Glycobius). 



TowNSEND : in Psyche, v. 1889, p. it^-i^ (listed from Michigan). 



Smith: Cat. Ins. N. J., 1890, p. 203 (on oaks). 



Pickering: in Psyche, vi, 1892, p. 346 (mentioned, as Clytus). 



CoMSTOCKS : Manual Study Ins., 1895, p. 570, fig. 694 (mention). 



Fyles : in 26th Ann. Rept. Entomolog. Soc. Ont. for 1895, 1896, p. 24, 

 ■fig. 8 (mention, as Glycobius). 



Weed: Bull. 33 N. H. Agricul. Expt. Stat., 1895, pp. 7-9, figs. 3, 4 

 (general account, as Glycobius). 



Kirkland: in Bull. 2 Mass. Crop Rept., ser. of 1897, pp. 30-34, figs. 

 I, 2 (general account). 



This large and beautifully marked beetle in its bright golden-yellow 

 bands and bars and angulated lines on a background of black, is a 

 desirable and attractive addition to one's collection (PI. VII, fig. i). 

 Despite its beauty, it is a highly pernicious insect. Not content, as are 

 most of its associates, with burrowing in dead or sickly trees, its attack 

 is usually made on those perfectly healthy. 



A Long-horned Borer. 

 This insect belongs to the family Cerambycida, or long-horned wood- 

 borers, — so named on account of their long antennae and the habit their 

 larvfe have, of living and boring in wood. The antennae of some species 

 are of extraordinary length, as in the instance of Monohaminus confusor 



