278 THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



and application of Economic Entomology twenty-five years ago with those 

 of the present time). 



127. Weiss, H. B. 



Insects and Pain. Can. Ent., vol. 46, pp. 269-271, August, 1914. (Dis- 

 cusses various theories on the subject and considers that the evidence for 

 assuming that insects do not suffer acute sensations of pain is not by any 

 means complete). 



128. Wheeler, W. M. 



The American species of Myrmica allied to M. rubida, Latr. Psyche, vol. 

 21, No. 4, pp. 118-122, fig., August, 1914. (Describes two new species, 

 making five in this group which the author forms into a sub-genus, Ore- 

 omyrma. A full description is given of M. mutica, Emery, recorded from 

 Alberta and British Columbia as well as from several western States). 



129. Willing, T. N. 



The Control of Injurious Insects. Agric. Gazette of Canada, vol. 1, No. 

 10, pp. 812-814, Oct., 1914. (Gives an account of recent insect injuries 

 in the Province of Saskatchewan and of what is being done there in Ecomo- 

 mic Entomology). 



130. Wilson, Tom. 



The Tent-caterpillar. Proc. B. C. Ent. Soc, No. 4, n.s., pp. 36-38, 1914. 

 (Gives an account of the abundance or scarcity during the last nineteen 

 years of the caterpillars of Malacosoma disstria, var. erosa). 



131. Winn, A. F. 



Notes on the eggs of Macronoctua onusta, Grote. Can. Ent., vol. 46, p. 

 296, August, 1914. (Describes the eggs of this moth and relates how and 

 where they are laid). 



132. Winslow, R. M. 



The Insect Pests of the Year. Agric. Gazette of Canada, vol. I, No. 10, 

 pp. 817,818, Oct., 1914. (A brief account of those unusually troublesome 

 in British Columbia). 



133. WoLLEV DoD, F. H. 



Further notes on Alberta Lepidoptera. Can. Ent., vol. 46, pp. 393-403, 

 November, 1914. (Continuation of a series of papers, the present notes 

 numbering from 531 to 602). 



Addendum. 



134. Morley, Claude. 



A revision of the Ichneumonidse based on the collection in the British 

 Museum, Part III, pp. 148, one coloured plate, 1914. (Records are given 

 of 15 species, two of them new, from Canada). Part I appeared in 1912 

 and Part II in 1913. 



