190 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [June, 



Notes and News. 



ENTOMOLOGICAL GLEANINGS FROM ALL QUARTERS 

 OF THE GLOBE. 

 [The Conductors of Entomological News solicit, and will thankfully receive items 

 of news, likely to interest its readers, from any source. The author's name will be given 

 in each case for the information of cataloguers and bibliographers.] 



To Contributor*.— All contributions will be considered and passed upon at our 

 earliest convenience, and as far as may be, will be published according to date of recep- 

 tion. Entomological News has reached a circulation, both in numbers and circumfei- 

 ence, as to make it necessary to put " copy'" into the hands of the printer, for each number, 

 three weeks before date of issue. This should be remembered in sending special or im- 

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The News will not be published during July and August. This num- 

 ber contains 36 pages. 



A Curious Picture Discovered at Hamilton College. — A curious 

 specimen of slow photography, says the New York Sun, came to light 

 recently in the renovation of the collection of insects in the natural science 

 hall at Hamilton College. It was years since the cabinets had been opened 

 or the specimens moved or rearranged. In a corner of a cabinet that 

 stood facing a window was a very large specimen of the common blue 

 swallow-tail butterfly {Papilio asierias), which had been all but destroyed 

 by butterfly lice, diminutive insects that work havoc among mounted 

 specimens unless liheir inroads are guarded against by chemicals. 



Inspector William P. Shepard, who was renovating the collection, re- 

 moved the butterfly and was surprised to find beneath it, on the white 

 paper with which the cabinet was lined, an exact reproduction of the in- 

 sect, even to the most minute curves and points in the outline of the wings. 

 The paper was carefully removed, and now forms an exhibit by itself in 

 another part of the hall. The process of photography had perhaps con- 

 sumed eight years, as the butterfly had remained in the cabinet undis- 

 turbed for at least that period. — Philadelphia Record. 



Professor — "How many legs have insects?" Candidate — "Five per 

 cent, of insects have no legs at all, 11 per cent, have one, 14 per cent, two or 

 three, 10 per cent, four and five, but none six." Professor — "How in the 

 world did you get this answer? " Candidate — " By carefully examining 

 the collection belonging to the Hamilton College." 



A New Food Plant for Hvpatus (Libvthea) Bachmani. — This 

 butterfly has been taken a number of times west of Lincoln, hovering 

 around over the large tracts of wolf-berry {Symphoricarpus occidentalis), 

 which covers the low ground near the creek. The eggs and larvae have 

 a'so been found on this shrub, and Mr. Roscoe Pound, a former student 

 interested in the study of Lepidoptera, has collected and reared the larvae 

 to maturity on this wolf-berry. No hack-berry trees are to be found any- 



