1 62 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [December, 



four hours later, when the screams of the little girl called her mother to 

 the scene. The child had picked up the pretty abdomen of the wasp and 

 had received a severe sting to pay her for her curiosity. The abdomen 

 at this time seemed thoroughly alive. How much longer it would have 

 retained its power to sting, had it not been destroyed, I am unable to say. 



Stinging power of Ichneumon Suturalis. — While collecting n few 

 days since a female /. suturalis lit upon a bush just in reach of me. With 

 a quick sweep of the hand I caught it, and held it, wliile, with the other 

 hand, I got out my cyanide bottle. As I was about to bottle my capture 

 I received a thrust in the palm of my hand that led me to suspect that in 

 my haste I had mistaken a wasp for an Ichiieiimo7i, and I quickly dropped 

 it. The culprit was recaptured and proved to be, as stated above, /. 

 suturalis. The sting was like the thrust of a pin, there being no swelling 

 of the part and no pain after the first two or three seconds. 



I had, previous to this, watched Ichneumons in their attempts to sting 

 while holding them in my hand, but this is the first time that one has 

 really succeeded in producing anything like a sting. — C. P. Gillette. 



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 Entomologicai, News, 

 Academy Natural Sciences, Logan Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Eugene R. Fischer. — i, Episcopus ornatus; 2, Proconia sp. [con- 

 fluensf); 3, Proconia {confluensf); 4, Stenarops malinus; 5, Nysius 

 californicus. 



O. S. Westcott. — I, Cosnonympha ochracea; 2, Rheumaptera hastata; 

 3, Melipofis sp. ; 5, Megachile latitnanus; 6, Sparnopolius fulvus; 9, 

 SQatophaga stercoraria; 10, Scatophaga squalida; 11, Dendroctonus sp.; 

 12, Dendroc tonus sp. 



F. S. Daggett. — i, Chalcophora virginiensis; 2, Rhagium litteatum; 

 3, Cryptus nuncius; 4, Buprestis fasciata; 5, Harmonia 14-guttata; 6, 

 Coccinella nwnticola; 7, Coccinella transversoguttata; 8, Harmonia 12- 

 maculata; 9, Hippodatnia parenthesis; 10, Hartnonia picta; 11, Pogono- 

 cherus mixtus; 12, Hippodatnia 13-punctata. 



Entomological LiterattJ.re. 



Transactions Entomological Society London. Part 3. 1890. — 

 On the structure of the .terminal segment in some male Hemiptera, by 

 Dr. David .Sharp. On the classification of the Pyralidina of the European 

 fauna, by E. .Meyrick. Additions to the Cicindelidae fauna of Me.xico, 

 with remarks on some of the previously recorded species, by Henry 

 Walter Bates. A Catalogue of the Rhopalocerous-Lepidoptera collected 



