1890.] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 147 



Identification of Insects (Imagos) for Subscribers. 



Specimens will be named under the following conditions: ist, The number of speci- 

 mens to be limited to twelve (12) for each sending ; 2d, The sender to pay all expenses of 

 transportation and the insects to become the property of the American Entomological 

 Society ; 3d, Each specimen must have a number attached so that the identification may 

 be announced accordingly. Such identifications as can be given will be published, accord- 

 ing to number, in the issues of the News. Address packages to Entomological News, 

 Academy Natural Sciences, Logan Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 



E^ntomological Literatuire. 



Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, vol. xix, part 2, 1890. 

 — Suppl. No. I, Catalogue of the Insecta of the Oriental Region. No. 2, 

 Family Carabidse, E. T. Atkinson. 



Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, vol. 

 iv, pt. 3d. — Rhopalocera from Mt. Kosciusko, New South Wales, by A. 

 Sidney OliflT. New species of Lampyridae, including a notice of the Mt. 

 Wilson Fire-fly, by A. Sidney Oliff. Further notes on Australian Cole- 

 OPTERA, with descriptions of new genera and species, pt. 4, by Rev. T. 

 Blackburn. Diptera, pt. 7, the Tipulidae brevipalpi, by Fred. A. A. 

 Skuse, vol. iv, pt. 4th. A revision of the Australian species of Euplcea, 

 with synonymic notes and descriptions of new species, by W. H. Meskin. 

 On Queensland and other Australian Macro-Lepidoptera, with localities 

 and descriptions of new species, by Thomas P. Lucas. Descriptions of 

 additional Australian Pyralidina, by E. Meyrick. Revision of Australian 

 Lepidoptera, pt. 3, by E. Meyrick. Revision of the genus Heteronyx, 

 with descriptions of new species, by Rev. T. Blackburn. Notes on Aus- 

 tralian Coleoptera, with descriptions of new species, pt. 4, by Rev. T. 

 Blackburn. Studies in Australian Entomology — No. 2, Six new species 

 of Carabidse, by Thomas G. Sloane. 



Annals and Magazine of Natural History, vol. vi. No. t^-^- — Notes 

 on Longicorn Coleoptera of the group Cerambycidse, with descriptions 

 of new genera and species, by Charles J. Gahan. Descriptions of new 

 species of African Lycaenidae, chiefly from the collections of Dr. Staud- 

 inger and Henley Grose Smith, by W. F. Kirby. 



The Apple Maggot, Trypeta pomonella. — A consideration of the lit- 

 erature, history, distribution, transformation, life-history and habits of this 

 insect; also remedies. The results of investigations made in 1888-89, by 

 F. L. Harvey, M. S. This interesting paper is fully illustrated by four 

 plates, with a number of figures. 



New Types of Cockroaches from the Carboniferous Deposits 

 OF THE U. S. — New carboniferous Myriapoda from Illinois. Illustrations 

 of the carboniferous Arachnida of North America, of the orders Anthra- 

 comarti and Pedipalpi. The insects of the Triassic beds at Fairplay, 



