50 THE FLORIDA ENTOMOLOGIST 
base and towards the apex and one row along the middle (greater portion). 
Other characters very much like those in illinoiensis. 
General color above yellowish brown. Body beneath and legs dark red- 
dish .brown. Antennae reddish brown, the fourth and almost distal half 
of the third segment blackish. 
Two specimens. Type (female) from Colorado in my collec- 
tion. Paratype (female) labeled “‘N. W., Uhler Coll.” in the 
National Museum. The latter specimen has the right antenna 
broken. The number of rows of areolae in the costal area will 
at once distinguish H. occidentalis from H. infuscata Parshley 
from Colorado, also from H. antennata Parshley or H. illinoiensis 
Drake. More specimens may make occidentalis a variety of illi- 
noiensis, but on account of the slightly more elevated carinae 
and the marked difference in costal area it seems best to consider 
them as distinct species. 
Teleonemia (Cantacader) chiliensis Reed 
I have examined specimens of this insect determined by the 
late Dr. Carlos E. Reed of Chile and the species belongs to the 
group of Teleonemia having the broad costal area. I also have a 
specimen from Ocampa, near Santa Fe, Argentine. 
Coleopterodes liliputianum Signoret. 
The genus Solenostoma of Signoret, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. Ser. 
“4, 111, 1868, p. 575, erected for S. liputianiwm Sign.” (1. ¢. pa 
575, pl. XIII, fig. 27), is preoccupied by a genus of fishes—Ra- 
finesque, Analyse de la Nature ou Tableau de l’Universe et des 
Corps Organises, 1815, p. 90. Hence, the genus Coleopterodes 
of Philippi, Stetten. Ent. Zeit., XXV, 1864, p. 306, founded for 
C. fuscenscens Phil. (S. liliputianum Sign.) becomes the valid 
name for the genus. It is also interesting to note that Latreille, 
1802, used Solenostoma for an order of Acarina and then many 
years later Brady and Robertson, 1873, for a genus of Copepoda. 
Brady, 1880, substituted Acontiophorus for Solenostoma in the 
copepods. As the genus Fistularia of Linnaeus, 1758, has pri- 
ority over Solenostoma in the Fishes, the latter has lost out en- 
tirely and cannot be made a valid generic name. 
Fig. 1. Galeatus schwarzi n. sp.; a, dorsal aspect; b, lateral aspect of 
hood and pronotum. Drawn by Mr. W. P. Osborn. 
AN APPRECIATIVE NURSERYMAN 
On July 20th the Nursery Inspector sent a circular letter to 
all the nurserymen in the state, from which we quote the fol- 
lowing: 
“Nurserymen in one or two sections of the State have been 
