﻿842 
  REPORT 
  OF 
  NEW 
  JERSEY 
  vSTATE 
  MUSEUM. 
  

  

  Hardenberg, 
  C. 
  B., 
  Philadelphia. 
  An 
  amateur 
  whose 
  records 
  in 
  "Orthop- 
  

   tera" 
  are 
  cited 
  by 
  Mr. 
  Rehn. 
  

  

  Hayw. 
  Hayward, 
  Roland. 
  Entomologist 
  to 
  the 
  Alabama 
  Experiment 
  Sta- 
  

   tion. 
  Cited 
  from 
  published 
  records. 
  

  

  Hebard, 
  Morgan, 
  Philadelphia. 
  An 
  amateur 
  whose 
  records 
  in 
  "Orthoptera" 
  

   are 
  cited 
  by 
  Mr. 
  Rehn. 
  

  

  Heidemann, 
  Otto, 
  Washington, 
  D. 
  C, 
  collector 
  and 
  student 
  in 
  the 
  "Hemip- 
  

   tera-Heteroptera" 
  and 
  especially 
  "Capsidae." 
  Mr. 
  Heidemann 
  has 
  

   named 
  much 
  of 
  my 
  material 
  and 
  has 
  revised 
  the 
  list 
  in 
  the 
  family 
  

   "Capsidae, 
  " 
  adding 
  considerably 
  to 
  the 
  number 
  of 
  species 
  and 
  bring- 
  

   ing 
  the 
  arrangement 
  into 
  accord 
  with 
  the 
  present 
  knowledge 
  of 
  the 
  

   family. 
  

  

  Henshaw 
  or 
  Hw., 
  Samuel. 
  Curator 
  of 
  the 
  Agassiz 
  Museum 
  at 
  Cambridge, 
  

   Mass. 
  Is 
  a 
  Coleopterist 
  and 
  especially 
  interested 
  in 
  the 
  literature 
  of 
  

   the 
  order. 
  His 
  check-list 
  forms 
  the 
  basis 
  for 
  the 
  arrangement 
  used 
  

   in 
  this 
  work, 
  and 
  names 
  of 
  quite 
  a 
  number 
  of 
  species 
  recorded 
  from 
  

   New 
  Jersey 
  were 
  sent 
  me 
  by 
  Mr. 
  Henshaw. 
  

  

  Herring, 
  Mrs. 
  F. 
  M., 
  Plainfield. 
  Collector 
  of 
  "Lepidoptera" 
  and 
  chiefly 
  of 
  

   butterflies. 
  

  

  Hess, 
  J., 
  late 
  of 
  Newark. 
  A 
  Coleopterist 
  who 
  furnished 
  many 
  records 
  for 
  

   the 
  first 
  edition. 
  

  

  Hk. 
  Harbeck, 
  H. 
  S., 
  Philadelphia. 
  A 
  general 
  collector, 
  but 
  especially 
  in- 
  

   terested 
  in 
  the 
  "Hymenoptera" 
  and 
  "Diptera," 
  in 
  which 
  he 
  has 
  sup- 
  

   plied 
  many 
  records. 
  His 
  collections 
  at 
  Trenton 
  are 
  especially 
  im- 
  

   portant 
  because 
  so 
  little 
  work 
  has 
  been 
  done 
  there. 
  

  

  Hn. 
  Hamilton, 
  Dr. 
  John, 
  late 
  of 
  Pittsburg, 
  Pa. 
  Dr. 
  Hamilton 
  spent 
  a 
  

   short 
  period 
  in 
  September 
  for 
  several 
  years 
  at 
  Brigantine 
  Beach, 
  and 
  

   his 
  New 
  Jersey 
  collections 
  were 
  all 
  made 
  at 
  that 
  place 
  and 
  time. 
  Dr. 
  

   Hamilton 
  was 
  a 
  thorough 
  collector 
  and 
  a 
  good 
  student, 
  his 
  publica- 
  

   tions 
  on 
  "Coleopteva" 
  and 
  his 
  faunal 
  lists 
  marking 
  him 
  as 
  both 
  re- 
  

   liable 
  and 
  accurate. 
  

  

  Hnt. 
  See 
  Huntington. 
  

  

  Hopkins 
  (sometimes 
  Hpks.), 
  A. 
  D. 
  Assistant 
  in 
  the 
  Division 
  of 
  Ento- 
  

   mology, 
  U. 
  S. 
  Dept. 
  Agric. 
  Makes 
  a 
  specialty 
  of 
  the 
  "Scolytids," 
  and 
  

   has 
  sent 
  me 
  many 
  notes 
  on 
  food 
  habits, 
  etc. 
  Much 
  of 
  my 
  collection 
  

   has 
  been 
  looked 
  over 
  by 
  Dr. 
  Hopkins, 
  who 
  has 
  also 
  made 
  some 
  sug- 
  

   gestions 
  as 
  to 
  the 
  synonymy 
  or 
  general 
  relation 
  of 
  species 
  to 
  each 
  

   other. 
  

  

  Horn, 
  Dr. 
  George 
  H., 
  late 
  of 
  Philadelphia. 
  Dr. 
  Horn 
  was 
  the 
  leading 
  

   American 
  Coleopterist 
  at 
  the 
  time 
  of 
  his 
  death, 
  and 
  determined 
  a 
  

   great 
  many 
  species 
  for 
  me 
  in 
  the 
  more 
  obscure 
  families. 
  His 
  col- 
  

   lections 
  were 
  always 
  open 
  to 
  me, 
  and 
  practically 
  all 
  of 
  my 
  larger 
  

   material 
  has 
  been 
  directly 
  compared 
  with 
  his 
  specimens. 
  Dr. 
  Horn 
  

   also 
  named 
  much 
  of 
  the 
  material 
  taken 
  in 
  New 
  Jersey 
  by 
  the 
  Phila- 
  

   delphia 
  collectors, 
  and 
  in 
  his 
  material 
  were 
  a 
  number 
  of 
  rare 
  forms 
  

   from 
  our 
  State. 
  The 
  collection 
  is 
  now 
  in 
  the 
  possession 
  of 
  the 
  Ameri- 
  

   can 
  Entomological 
  Society. 
  

  

  Horv. 
  Horvath, 
  Dr. 
  G. 
  Cited 
  from 
  published 
  records. 
  

  

  