﻿— 217 — 



After Fourth Moult. — No difference, except that the body 

 is somewhat deeper in color. Length 38 mm. (twenty days old); 

 twenty-one days old, 40 mm. ; twenty-two days old, 43 mm. ; 

 twenty-three days old, 46 mm.; twenty-four days old, 48 mm.; 

 getting ready to moult. 



After Fifth, the Last Moult. — Body pale green, with the 

 extremities of all the tubercles bright blue and the bases yellowish 

 green. The row of tubercles along the sides black. Head and 

 cervical shield same as in previous moult, also the anal plates. 

 Thoracic feet yellowish green; abdominal legs with a bright blue 

 patch at the base of the outerside of each. Length 50 mm. (twenty- 

 five days old); twenty-six days old, 52 mm.; twenty-seven days 

 old, 54 mm. ; twenty-eight days old, 56 mm. ; twenty-nine days 

 old, 58 mm. ; thirty days old, 60 mm. ; thirty-one days old, 62 mm. ; 

 full grown. 



Food-Plants. — Ailanthus (Hop-tree), Tulip-tree, Barberry, 

 Linden, Maple, Wild Cherry, Plum, Spirese, Sweet Gum, Dog- 

 wood, Sassafras, Spicebush, Nannyberry, Holly and Caster-oil plant; 

 also said to feed on Sumac, Pimpernel, Honey-suckle, Spindletree, 

 Bitter-sweet, Laburnum, Willow and Celery. 



Note on the genus Protenor StaL 

 By E. Bergroth, Forssa, Finland. 



In his " Check List" Mr. Uhler has quoted the genus Tetrar- 

 rhinus Prov. as a synonym of Protenor Stal. In his faunistic work 

 on the Hemiptera of Canada, p. 335, Mr. Provancher protests 

 against this synonymy in saying: " M. Ashmead a confondu ce genre 

 avec le Protenor de Stal, mais ce dernier dit du Protenor: articulo 

 primo antennarum capitis apicem haud attingente. ' ' 



This is a falsification of Stal's description. Stal says (Ofv. Vet. 

 Akad. forh. xxiv, 1867, p. 543): " antennis - - articulo primo capite 

 paullo breviore." There is, of course, quite another meaning in 

 these words than in the ones substituted by the learned abbot, and 

 there can be no doubt that Mr. Uhler was right in uniting Tetrar- 

 rhinus quebecensis Prov. with Protenor Belfragei Hagl. 



o 



" Among the Moths and Butterflies," is the title of a new book 

 for young folks, by Julia P. Ballard, author of " Insect Lives." To 

 quote a newspaper book review: "it is so fascinating that every 

 child who reads it will at once begin to make a collection of cater- 

 pillars and cocoons." F. H. C. 



