114 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
GIBSON, ARTHUR. 
Insects of the year 1908 at Ottawa. (Describes the occurrence and work 
of a number of insects of economic interest, some of them being recently 
observed for the first time). 39th Annual Report, Ent. Soc. Ont., 1908, 
pp. 116-120. 
GIBSON, ARTHUR. 
The Clover-seed Midge. (A popular account of this very injurious insect). 
Montreal Weekly Star, January 8, 1909; Toronto Weekly Mail and Empire, 
January 7, 1909. 
Gipson, ARTHUR, and Macoux, W. T. 
Calendar Guides to Spraying—Farmers’ Advocate, London, Ontario, xliv, 
p. 527, 1909. 
GIRAULT, A. ARSENE. 
A Monographie Catalogue of the Mymarid genus Camptoptera, Foerster, 
with description of one new North American form. (Includes a brief des- 
cription of C. clavata, Provancher, from Quebec). Annals Ent. Soc. 
America, ii, 22-29, March 1909. 
Gopsout, J. B. 
La Vrillette. (An interesting account of an Anobium beetle, commonly 
called “The Death Watch,” and often regarded with superstitious dread. 
The Editor adds a further description of the insect and its habits). Le 
Naturaliste Canadien, xxxvi, 81-85, Juin 1909. 
Grou, Hersert, and GIBSON, ARTHUR. 
The Published Writings of Dr. Fletcher. Ottawa Naturalist, xxii, 227-233, 
January 1909. 
Hampson, Sir GEORGE F. 
Catalogue of the Noctuidæ in the collection of the British Museum. (This 
volume begins the sub-family Acronyctinæ, which contains some 3,000 
species included in over 300 genera, and will require two more volumes 
for its completion. A large number of Canadian species are described.) 
Vol. vii, pp. 709; plates 108-122. 
Harrineton, W. Hacue. 
Reminiscences of Dr. Fletcher. (The tribute of an intimate and life-long 
friend to the memory of one so deeply beloved by all who knew him). 
Ottawa Naturalist, xxii, 196-207, January 1909 (portrait). 
Hewitt, C. GORDON. 
Tent-building habits of Ants. (Observations on the structures made by 
Lasius niger for the protection of its Aphid colonies). Ottawa Naturalist, 
xxiii, 168-170, December 1909. 
Hewitt, C. GORDON. 
The Structure, Development and Bionomics of the House-fly, Musca 
domestica, Linn. Part iii, The Bionomics, Allies, Parasites, and the rela- 
tion of M. domestica to Human Disease. (The completion of a series of 
papers on this subject; many details are given respecting the fly as the 
carrier of the bacilli of some infectious diseases.) Quarterly Journal of 
Microscopic Science, liv, Part 3, pp. 347-414, one plate, December 1909. 
