1892.] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 235 



fly, and it is supposed that they were started by the storms in the East. 

 Such migrations, though not unusual in the South and West, are very 

 uncommon in this part of the country." 



This species has been exceedingly abundant in northern Ohio, and I 

 think in northern Indiana, this present season. At Wooster, Wayne Co., 

 fifty miles S. S. W. of Cleveland, they were not universally abundant on 

 the date indicated. The day was warm and pleasant, and, if I remember 

 correctly, with little wind. — F. M. Webster, Wooster, O. 



Transactions of the American Entomological Society, vol. xix (1892), 

 pp. 129-256 inclusive, have been printed since our June issue, and contain 

 the following papers: The N. American genera of Calyptrate Muscidae, 

 Paper II, by C. H. T. Townsend. The N. American genera of Nemoce- 

 rous Diptera, by C. H. T. Townsend. Preliminary Notes on some African 

 Odonata, by P. P. Calvert. On the Pselaphid genus Trimium, by E. 

 Brendel. Revision of the species of Anthrax from America North of 

 Mexico, by D. W. Coquillett. Descriptions of North American Harvest- 

 Spiders (Phalangiidae), by C. M. Weed, 7 plates. The Eumolpini of 

 Boreal America, by G. H. Horn. Monograph of the N. American species 

 of Tachytes, by W. J. Fox, i plate. A synopsis of the subfamilies and 

 genera of the Membracidae of N. America, by F. W. Coding. 



Identification of Insects ^Images) for Subscribers. 



Specimens will be named under the following conditions : 1st, The number of speci- 

 mens to be unlimited for each sending; 2d, The sender to pay all expenses of transporta- 

 tion 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 identification, read page 41, Vol. III. 

 Address all packages to Entomological News, Academy Natural Sciences, Logan 

 Square, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Insects have been named for F. D. Twogood, A. A. Wright, Frank H. 

 Johnson, A. G. Weeks, Jr., D. B. Young, Charles U. Clark, James S. 

 Hine, W. T. Davis, M. V. Slingerland, J. H. Bomberger, C. H. Tyler 

 Townsend, Henry Bird, C. M. Weed, George Miller, W. M. Hill, C. B. 

 Aaron. 



Kntomological Literature. 



Annual Report of the Maine State College Agricultural 

 Station, 1891.— Bangor, 1892. Pp. 187-207, Report of the Entomologist, 

 F. L. Harvey. 



The Entomologist's Record, London, Sept. 15, 1892.— The genus 

 Acronyda and its allies (cont.), Dr. T. A. Chapman. 



I 



