THE CRAWLERY 5 



^ Scudder's '' Every-day Butterflies," 



Smith's " List of Lepidoptera of Boreal America," 



Smith's " Sphingid^," 



Beutenmiillei-'s " Descriptive Catalogue of Sphingidae 

 Found within Fifty Miles of New York," 



Beutenmiiller's " Descriptive Catalogue of BombycidaB 

 Found within Fifty Miles of New York," 



Edwards' " Bibliographical Catalogue of the Described 

 Transformations of Lepidopterous Insects," 

 ^ Comstock's '^ Manual for the Study of Insects," 



Fernald's " Sphingidae," 

 "- Harris' ''Insects Injurious to Vegetation," 

 '^ Saunders' " Insects Injurious to Fruits," 



Grote's " Sphingidae," 



French's '' Butterflies of the Eastern United States," 



Dyar's " Classification of Lepidopterous Larv»," 



Fernald's " Orthoptera of New England," 

 ^ Emerton's " Spiders," 



Hentz's " Spiders," 



The various Reports and Bulletins of the United States 

 Department of Agriculture, of the Agricultural De- 

 partments of several of the States, and of Experiment 

 Stations; the Proceedings, Transactions, and other 

 publications of various Entomological Societies ; " Au- 

 thor's Extras," bound volumes of '' Psyche," " The 

 Canadian Entomologist," " Entomological News," and 

 other magazines. 



Oil the lowest shelf are our note-books and the larger 

 books containing the daily records of the lives of lepi- 

 dopterous insects which we have reared from egg to 

 imago. 



In the closet there are boxes of photographic nega- 

 tives of our caterpillars and moths ; writing-materials ; 



