48 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 



10. Synoptic List of Paraguayan AcridldcB, with descriptions of Neiv 



Forms. By L. Bruner. 82 pages, 3 plates. Washington. 1906. 



W. J. L. 



Butterflies of Hongkong and South-East China. By J. C. Kershaw, 

 F.E.S., P.Z.S. Hongkong: Kelly & Walsh, Ltd. Loudon 

 Agent, E. H. Porter. 1906. 



Of this work, which it is understood will be completed in about 

 six parts, we have received the first three instalments. Part I., 

 fourteen pages and two plates, deals with the Danainae. Part IL, 

 eighteen pages and three plates, treats of the SatyrinaB, Morphinae, 

 and a portion of Nymphalinte. In Part IIL the remainder of the 

 Nymphalinae and the Erycinidte are considered ; there are twenty- 

 eight pages and four plates in this section. 



The plates, i.-vii., reproduced from coloured drawings in "colour- 

 type," are well covered with figures. All the plates are on paper less 

 in size than that upon which the text is printed ; the latter is a folio, 

 10 X 15 inches, whereas the plate-paper is a quarto, 11| x 9^ inches. 

 Two of the plates, each with a single figure, are not numbered, and 

 appear to be " extras." Altiiongh the leaves bearing the plate ex- 

 planations are not numbered, they seem to have been included in the 

 enumeration of the pages. 



A List of the Lepidoptera of Shepton Maliet and District, with Remarks as 

 to Localities, dc. By W. A. Bogue, F.E.S. 

 The two hundred and forty-five species, chiefly collected by the 

 author, mentioned in this list comprise thirty-two Ehopalocera, eighty- 

 six Geometridas, and eighty-three Noctuidae. 



We have also received, the following publications of the U.S. 

 Department of Agriculture (Bureau of Entomology) : — 



Bulletin No. 59. Proliferation as a Factor in the National Control of 



the Mexican Cotton Boll Weevil. By W. E. Hinds, Ph.D. 



Pp. 45, plates i.-vi. 

 Bulletin No. 60. Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the 



Associatim of Economic Entomologists. Pp. 1-206, plates i.-iii., 



and several illustrations in text. 

 Bulletin No. 62. The San Jose or Chinese Scale. By C. L. Mablatt. 



Pp. 1-89, plates i.-ix., and 12 text figures. 

 Technical Series, No. 12, Part I. Catalogue of recently described 



Coccida. By J. G. Sandkrs, M.A. Pp. 1-18. 

 Technical Series, No. 13. A Revision of the Tyroglyphidcs of the United 



States. By Nathaji Bankes. Pp. 1-34, plates i.-vi. 

 Farmers' Bulletin, No. 264. The Brown-tail Moth, and How to Control it. 



By L. 0. Howard. Pp. 1-22, and 10 text illustrations. 

 The moth referred to is the European species Enproctis (Porthesia) 

 chrysorrhoea, L., which was accidentally introduced into New England 

 some fifteen years ago. (See also Dr. Smith's remarks on this species 

 and other Liparid moths, Report of the Entomological Department of the 

 Neiv Jersey Agricultural College Experiment Station for 1905.) 



