222 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS, [Sept., '05 



Page 106, line 2, Inlro. to Entotn., IV., pp. 25-] -354, read Intro. Ent., 

 London, IV, pp. 257-354. 



" 106, line 17, Fundamenta Entomologue, read Fundamenta Ento- 

 mologise, Upsalice, ji pp. 



" 106, line 24, Hamburg, 1778, read Hamburgi et Kilonii, MDCC- 

 LXXVIII. 178 pp. 



" 106, lines 27, 28, 7788, read 7789. 



" 106, lines 38-40, /<?.?9. Anon. Description and History of some 

 of the Principal British Insects. Terminology. Mag. Nat. 

 Hist., 1829, t. I, pp. 421-424, fig. read 1829. Anon. (A. J. N.) 

 Description and History of some of the Principle British In- 

 sects : Terminology. Mag. Nat. Hist., and Jour. Zool., Bat., 

 Mineralogy, etc., London, I, pp. 421, \2^,figs. 180-181. 

 Brief on a few general anatomical terms. 



" 106, line 41, Terminologie read Termiftologia. 



" 107, line I, 1867. Anon. Glossary. Amer. Naturalist, I, pp. 

 681-868, read j%6'j-j868. Anon. Glossary. Amer. Naturalist, 

 Salem, Mass., I, pp. 6^1-688. 



" 107, line 6, Read 1880. Brooklyn Entomological Society. Ex- 

 planation of Terms used in Entomology. Bull. Brook. Ent. 

 Soc, //, 26 pp. Repr., Brooklyn, N. Y., 1883, 38 pp. 



" 107, line 17, in Trans. Dept. Agr. III., 188 1, read in Trans. Dept 

 Agric. Illinois f. 1880, xviii. 



" 107, lines 32-33, pp. 397-380 read Pp. 397 398. 



The writer's attention has been called to the Century Dic- 

 tionary, The Century Company, New York, 1889, 6 vols. The 

 general biological terms were defined by Dr. Elliot Coues, 

 assisted in entomology by Dr. Howard, and Mr. Herbert H. 

 Smith, and by the late Dr. Charles V. Riley, who also con- 

 tributed figures. The work is a most important one. 



A very important article on general anatomical nomencla- 

 ture was published in Science, N. Y., 1881, II, pp. 122-126, 

 133-138, by Dr. Burt G. Wilder, entitled A Partial Revisio?i 

 of Anatomical Nomenclature , with Especial Reference to that of 

 the Brain. This deals, in part, with the old ambiguous or 

 equivocal terms of direction, such as front, behind, before, 

 below, and so forth. For these, suitable scientific terms are 

 proposed.* Comstock, in some of his writings (Guide to 

 Practical Work in Elementary Entomology, An Outline for 

 the use of Students in the Entomological Laboratory of Cor- 



* And compare Wilder and Gage, as cited by Comstock in the work 

 next mentioned. 



