WEST COAST NEWS NOTES 239 



and practitioners of medicine, under the direction of Dr. Creighton W'ellman. 



Mr. Grinnell will be glad to get any number of specimens of Limcnitis 

 lorqiiinii and Limcnitis ( Hctcrocliroa) californica from an\' part of the 

 Pacific Coast, for the study of the mimetic relations of these two species. 

 Exact date and locality should be on each specimen. 



'Sir. \'. L. Clemence and Mr. Karl R. Coolidge have canceled their pro- 

 posed trip to Mexico this year, and instead have gone to Southern Arizona 

 to collect for about three months ; most of the time will be spent in the 

 Huachuca Mountains. 



Mr. W. H. Stultz of ^linneapolis has been in Pasadena for the winter and 

 s])ring. Mr. Stultz collected many Lepidoptera for the work of Packard 

 and Grote. 



The Open Court Publishing Co., Chicago, has reprinted the classic, 

 "Experiments on the Generation of Insects," by Francesco Redi, of Are2zo, 

 translated from the Italian edition of 1688 by Mab Bigelow. Illustrated 

 with 44 full page, 16th century drawings. Cloth, $2.00. Edition of 1000 

 copies. 



The \'itascope is a new instrument for observing living insects, etc., 

 without disturbing them, at a distance, under high magnification, which can 

 be varied from 10-60 diameters. It is being put on the market by Newton 

 & Co.j London. 



Messrs. James A. G. Rehn and Morgan Hebard are authors of An 

 Orthopterological Reconnaissance of the Southwestern United States. Part 

 III. California and Nevada. From the Proceedings of the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, pp. 409-483. Oct. 1909. It is a very fully 

 annotated list, with descriptions of several new species, principally Californian, 

 and descriptions of localities visited. During 1909 Messrs. Rehn and Hebard 

 collected an additional lot of 10,000 Orthoptera, including more new and inter- 

 esting species. 



Dr. William Morton Wheeler's "Ants, Their Structure, Development 

 and Behavior,"' has just been published by the MacMillan Company, N. Y., 

 and forms a part of the Columbia University Biological Series. The price 

 is $5.00. 



The department of tropical medicine in the State Journal of Medicine, 

 conducted by Dr. Creighton Wellman, is interesting and suggestive. In a 

 recent number are sections on Zoology and Medicine, Leprosy in California, 

 Our Small Rodents, Hookworm Among L's, and a Suggestion. And in an 

 editorial on Scientific Work on Plague, there is reviewed the most important 

 recent publications of the U. S. Public Health and Marine Hospital Service. 

 A resume of the more important of these are given. A good numlicr 

 are in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, the Public Health Reports, Para- 

 sitology, Journal of INIedical Research, etc. 



"Medical Zoology is rapidly coming to its own. Since the recognition 

 of specific causes of disease, bacteriology was the fir.=t to ally itself with 

 clinical medicine and for a tiiue threatened to divide the field with the patholo- 

 gist. But there has been and still is an increasingly significant tendency to 



