ACCESSIONS TO THE LIBRARY. 15g 
clature, by Samuel H. Scudder, pp. 201-218. Thomas Tracy Bouve. Memorial meeting of 
the Boston Society of Natural History, December 2, 1896, pp. 219-241. 
Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture: 
Bulletin, Vol. —, No. 4, March, 1896. 1. Tubereulin— what itis; how itis used; what it 
does, by Prof. James B. Paige, pp. 341-346. 2. Birds as protectors of orchards, by E. H. 
Forbush, pp. 347-362. Insecticides, by A. H. Kirkland, pp. 363-371; 2 figs. 4. Hints on land 
drainage, by Wm. Wheeler, pp. 372-384. The San Jose scale, by Prof. C. H. Fernald, pp: 
385-394 ; 5 figs. 
Report on the Gypsy Moth, Porthetria dispar (Linn.), 1896, by Edward H. Forbush and 
Charles H. Fernald, pp. xii + 496; 66 pll. (4 colored) ; 5 maps; 37 figs. Appendices, pp. i-c. 
Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Robert Manning, Secretary: 
Transactions of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society for the year 1894, Part II, pp. 
205-444, Reports. 
For the year 1895, Parts I and II, 350 pp.; 4 illustrations; 7 figs. Days with our birds, by 
Mrs. Kate Tryon, pp. 9-13. Flower-pots and their manufacture, by A. H. Hews, pp. 14-22. 
Fungous diseases of ornamental plants, by Byron D. Halsted, pp. 22-37; figs.1-5. Hardy 
plants and shrubs and their arrangement, by J. Wilkinson Elliott, pp. 36-54. Glass houses, 
their construction and heating, by Henry W. Gibbons, pp. 55-75; figs. 1 and 2. Economic 
entomology in relation to trees, shrubs, and plants, in parks and private grounds, by Ed- 
mund B. Southwick, pp. 76-85. Experimental evolution amongst plants, by Prof. L. H. 
Bailey, pp. 86-100. A talk on gardens, by David Hill Coolidge, jr., pp. 101-115. Budding 
and grafting, by Jackson Dawson, pp. 115-136. Some notes on tomatoes, by W. M. Munson, 
pp. 136-148. Edible native fungi, by Hon. John M. Kinney, pp. 149-158. Commercial fertil- 
izers in horticulture, by Prof. W. H. Jordan, pp. 158-175. Part II, pp. 177-850, Reports. 
Schedule of prizes for 1896, 48 pp. 
For the year 1896, Part I, 187 pp.; 8 figs. Some scale insects, by L. O. Howard, pp. 94-98; 
illustrations. Some tendencies and problems in the evolution of species among parasitic 
fungi, by George F. Atkinson, pp. 98-118. 
Zstes & Lauriat: 
Catalogues. 
CAMBRIDGE.—Cambridge Entomological Club: 
Pysche, a Journal of Entomology, Vol. VII, Nos. 224-248, pp. 169-468; 45 figs. Converg- 
ence and peecilogony among insects, by Alfred Giard, Paris, France, pp. 171-175. Prepara- 
tory stages of Sphinx vashti Strecker, by Harrison G. Dyar, p. 177. Check-list of African 
Coccide, by T. D. A. Cockerell, p. 178. On the Rhopalomeride, by S. W. Williston, pp. 
183-187. Life-history of Clisiocampa fragilis Stretch, by H. G. Dyar, pp. 189-191. Two 
new species of Eniomobrya, by F. L. Harvey, pp. 196-199; figs. 1-3. The Tipulid genera 
Bittacomorpha and Pedicia, by J. M. Aldrich, pp. 200-202; 1 fig. New North American 
Odonata, by Albert P. Morse, pp. 207-211, 274, 275. Description of some of the larval stages 
of Amphion nessus, by Caroline G. Soule, pp. 212-213. A comparison of Colias hecla with 
Colias meadii and Colias elis, by Thomas E. Bean, pp. 219-229. Ona rational nomencla- 
ture of the veins of insects, especially those of Lepidoptera, by A. S. Packard, pp. 235-241; 
8 figs. Notes on the winter insect fauna of Vigo county, Indiana, by W. S. Blatchley, pp. 
247-250, 267-270, 279-281, 336-340, 379-381, 399-401, 434-437, 455-458. Eggs of the ox-louse, 
Hematopinus vitula L., by F. L. Harvey, pp. 250 and 251; 1 fig. Life-history of Clisio- 
campa pluvialis Dyar, by H. G. Dyar, pp. 259-260; 2 figs. Woolly leaf-gall made by a 
species of Callirhytis on scrub oak, by C. H. Tyler Townsend, pp. 262 and 263. New North 
American Odonata, by Albert P. Morse. Some habits of Formica obscuripes Forel, by 
George B. King, pp. 281-283. Revision of the species of Spharagemon, by Albert P. Morse, 
pp. 287-299; 14 figs. Noteson the habits of Trypoxrylon rubrocinctum and T, albopilosum, 
by George W. Peckham and Elizabeth G. Peckham, Milwaukee, Wis., pp. 303-306. The 
Ephemeride and venation nomenclature, by Vernon L. Kellogg, pp. 311-315; figs. 1-4. 
Notes on the Acridideze of New England, by Albert P. Morse, pp. 323-327, 342-344, 382-384, 402- 
403, 407-411, 419-422, 443-445; pl. viz. Species of Hxorista of temperate North America, by 
C. H. Tyler Townsend, pp. 329-331. New species of Papirius, by Justus Watson Folsom, 
pp. 344-345. The hibernation of aphides, by Clarence M. Weed, pp. 351-362; 1 fig. Coleop- 
tera found with ants, by H. F. Wickham. Third paper, pp. 370-372. The Mallophaga, by 
Vernon L. Kellogg, pp. 375-379. Neelus murinus, representing a new Thysanuran family, 
by Justus Watson Folsom, pp. 391-392; pl. vii. A new structural character in insects, by 
R. A. Cooley, pp. 395-398; pl. rx. The condition of Apatela, by A. Radcliffe Grote, pp. 411- 
414, Preparatory stages of Cosmosoma auge Linn., by H. G. Dyar, pp, 414-416. A Thysan- 
uran of the genus Anoura, by F. L. Harvey, pp. 422-423; 3 figs. Life-history of Ichthyura 
strigosa Grote, by Harrison G. Dyar, pp. 424-425. The species of Nemobius found in North 
America, by Samuel H. Scudder, pp. 431-434. Some additional species of Prosapis, by T. 
