iQOl] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 323 



on the butterflies of Sioux County, Nebraska,* 4.— Chapmau, T. A. 

 The cocoon-cutter of Actios luna, 21 ; The lid of the cocoon of Lachneis 

 lanestris, 21.— Dodge, G. M., and E. A. Notes on the early stages 

 of Catocalae, 4,— Dognin, P. New Heterocera from South America, 

 35. — Dyar, H. G. Life-histories of North American Geometridae, 

 xxvii, 5. — Fischer, E., Giard, A. See the General Subject. — God- 

 man, F. D. Lepidoptera Rhopalocera, vol. ii, pp. 693-700, pis. cviii, 

 cix. 15. — Grose-Smith, H. Rhopalocera exotica, being illustrations 

 of new, rare, or unfigured species of butterflies. Pt. 57. London, Gur- 

 ney & Jackson, Rec'd. Oct., '01 — Moore, F. Lepidoptera Indica, pt. 

 li. London, Lovell Reeve & Co., ltd., '01. Rec'd. Nov. 4. (Pp. 49-72, 

 Libytheinae, Nemeobiinae, pis. 391-397).— Norris, A. E. Life-history 

 of the Camberwell Beauty Butterfly ( Vanessa antiopa), Canadian Record 

 of Science, viii, 6, Montreal, '01.— Sch , S. See the General Subject — 

 Schreiber, C. Larva-Calendar for the central European faunal region 

 arranged according to the food plants, 45.— Semper, G. Die Nacht- 

 falter, Heterocera. Reisen im Archipel der Philippinen von Dr. C. Sem- 

 per. 2ter Theil. Wissenschaftliche Resultate, 6ter Bd., ster Lieferung ; 

 Wiesbaden, C. W. Kriedel's Verlag, '01. 4 pis.— Stevenson, C. Not 

 surprised [ Telea polyphenms double-brooded ?], 4.— Tannreiither, G. 

 W. A case of supernumerary wings in Pieris rapes L., figs., 22, Oct. 

 14.— Tiltt, J. W. Habits of certain butterflies when disturbed during 

 copulation, 21.— Weeks, A. G., Jr. Descriptions of three new butter- 

 flies ; Descriptions of new butterflies of the genera Paviphila, Epinephele 

 and Gorgythion, Proceedings, New England Zoological Club, ii, Oct. 18, 

 Nov. 9, '01 ; New diurnal Lepidoptera from Bolivia, 4. 



HYMENOPTERA Ashmead, W. H. New species of Evan- 



iidae,* 4.— Biisse, W. See Economic Entomology.— Cockerell, T. 

 I>. A. New bees of the subfamily Anthophorinae from Southern Califor- 

 nia,* 4. — Fielde, A. M. A stiidy of an ant, Proceedings, Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, liii, 2, '01.— King, G. B. Some new 

 records of the New England Formicidae, 5.— Viereck, H. Li. See the 

 General Subject.— Wheeler, W. M. The compound and mixed nests 

 of American ants, pt. iii (concl.), American Naturalist, Boston, Oct., '01. 



The first installment of the long-expected catalogue of the Odonata of 

 Illinois has at length appeared under the title "The Dragonflies (Odonata) 

 of Illinois, with Descriptions of the Immature Stages. Part I. Petalu- 

 ridae. .^schnidae and Gomphidae." By James G. Needham and Charles 

 A. Hart (Bull. 111. State Lab. Nat. Hist., vi, art. i, Sept. 1901, 94 pp., i pi.) 

 It comprises a general account of the order, of its American literature, the 

 topographic and food relations of the nymphs and the characters of 

 nymphs and of imagos employed in classification, as preliminary to de- 

 scriptions of the three groups named in the title. For each group keys 

 are given, both to imagos and nymphs. "Of the twenty-eight recognized 



