88 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [March, 



slaves are generally employed to extract these pests, which they do with 

 uncommon dexterity, Old Ligon tells us he had ten Chigoes taken out 

 of his feet in a morning " by the most unfortunate Yarico," whose tragical 

 story is now so celebrated in prose and verse. Mr. Southey says that 

 many of the first settlers of Brazil, before they knew the remedy to ex- 

 tract the Chigoes, lost their feet in tlie most dreadful manner. Walton, 

 in his " Present State of the Spanish Colonies," tells us of a Capuchin 

 friar, who carried away with him a colony of Chigoes in his foot as a 

 present to. the scientific colleges in Europe; but, unfortunately for himself 

 and for science, tiie length of the voyage produced mortification in his 

 leg, that became necessary to cut it off to save the zealous missionary's 

 life, and the leg, with its inhabitants, were tumbled together into the sea. 

 Humboldt observes "that the whites born in the torrid zone walk bare- 

 foot with impunity in the same apartment where a European, recently 

 landed, is exposed to the attack of this animal. The Nigua, therefore, 

 distinguishes what the most delicate chemical analysis could not distin- 

 guish, the cellular membrane and blood of our European from those of 

 a Creole white." — Cozuati's Curious Facts. 



Identification of Insects (Imagos) for Sabscribers. 



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

 to be llmitod to twenty-five for each sending; 2d, The sender to pay all expenses of trans- 

 portation 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 an- 

 nounced accordingly. Exotic species named only by special arrangement with the Editor, 

 who should be consulted before specimens are sent. Send a 2 cent stamp with all insects 

 for return of names. Before sending insects for identificaiicn, read page 41, Vol. IIL 

 Add'-ess all packages to Entomological Nuws, Academy Natural Sciences, Logan 

 Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Entomological Literature. 



Under the above head it is intended to note such papers received at the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia pertaining to the Entomology of the Americas (North 

 and South). Articles irrelevant to American entomology, unless monographs, or con- 

 taining descriptions of new genera, will not be noted. Contributions to the anatomy of 

 insects, however, whether relating to American or exotic species wili be recorded. 



I. Old Farm Fairies. A Summer Campaign in Brownieland against 

 King Cobwaaver's Pixies, A story for young people, by Henry Chris- 

 topher McCook, 8vo. Philadelphia, George W. Jacobs & Co., 1895. — 

 This is a novel book with a novel title. As the latter indicates, it is in- 

 tended for the little ones, and will go far toward planting the seeds of 

 interest for entomology in the minds of those whose inexperience pre- 

 cludes an interpretation of guides and introductions. The story deals 

 almost entirely with spiders, who, under the guise of Pixies, wage an un- 

 successful war against the Brownies. Numerous battles and duels occur, 



