SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 95 



vol. 2, no. 596, 1884 (listed). — French, Butterflies of the eastern United 

 States, pp. 371-372, no. 194, 1886 (description ; W. Va. to the Gulf of Mexico ; 

 Tex.; Ariz.).— W. H. Edwards, Butterflies of North America, 3d sen, 

 pt. 5, Debts I, Sth page of text, 1888 (occurrence near Coalburgh, W. Va.).— 

 Henry Edwards, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 35, p. 37, 1889 (early stages ; from 

 Boisduval and LeConte). — Smith, Catalogue of insects found in New 

 Jersey, in Cook, Final Rep. State Geologist, Geol. Surv. New Jersey, vol. 2, 

 pt. 2, p. 279, 1890 (taken rarely by the Newark collectors). — Skinner, 

 Ent. News, vol. 2, no. i, suppl. p. iv, January 1891 (listed in exchange list 

 of butterflies of America north of Mexico).- — Skinner, in Smith, List of 

 Lepidoptera of Boreal America, p. 17, no. 624, Philadelphia, 1891 (listed).— 

 Maynard, Manual of North American Butterflies, p. 209, no. 596, Boston, 

 1891 ("yellow-banded brown-wing"; description; W. Va. to the Gulf of 

 Mexico; Tex.; Ariz.). — Beutenmuller, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 vol. 5, p. 304, 1893 (description; description of larva and pupa, abridged 

 from Scudder, after Abbot's figures ; food plants Convolvulaceae ; vicinity 

 of Newark, N. J., after Smith) ; pi. 5, fig. 18. — White, Ent. News, vol. 5, 

 no. 6, p. 17s, June 1894 (Prospect Park, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; 1893).' — 

 Smyth, Ent. News, vol. 6, no. 8, p. 244, October 1895 (Montgomery Co., 

 Va.). — Osburn, Ent. News, vol. 6, no. 9, p. 283, November 1895 (Nashville, 

 Tenn. ; rare; one specimen, August; food plant unknown). — French, But- 

 terflies of the eastern United States, p. 371, no. 194, 1896 (from 1886 edi- 

 tion). — Skixxer, a synonymic catalogue of the North American Rho- 

 palocera, p. 97, no. 629, Philadelphia, Dec. 15, 1898 (W. Va. to Gulf of 

 Mexico; Tex.; Ariz.; Mexico). — Smith, Insects of New Jersey; suppl. 

 27th Ann. Rep. State Board of Agriculture, 1899, p. 383, 1900 (taken rarely 

 near Newark; larvae on Convolvulaceae). — Barnes, Ent. News, vol. 11, 

 no. I, p. 332, 1900 (very common in the Huachuca Mountains, Ariz.) ; the 

 same paper reset and repaged, entitled Notes on North American diurnals 

 with some additions and corrections to Dr. Skinner's catalogue, p. 5, 1900 

 (very common in the Huachuca Mountains, Ariz.). — Beutenmuller, The 

 butterflies of the vicinity of New York City; Guide Leaflet No. 7, Suppl. 

 Amer. Mus. Journ., vol. 2, no. 5, p. 50, no. 91, May 1902 (gold-banded 

 hesperid; exceedingly rare in this neighborhood, but more common in the 

 Southern States and Mexico) ; figure, p. 50. — Smith, Check list of the 

 Lepidoptera of Boreal America, p. 13, no. 672, June 1903 (listed). — Kunze, 

 Ent. News, vol. 15, p. 240, 1904 (Huachuca Mountains; on flowers of 

 Rudbeckia). — Skinner, Synonymic catalogue of the North American 

 Rhopalocera, suppl. no. i, p. 2,2, 1905 (listed).— Wright, Butterflies of the 

 West Coast of the United States, p. 68, San Francisco, 1905 (South Atlantic 

 States). — Beutenmuller, A manual of American and European butterflies 

 and moths, reproduced in natural colors, with their common and scientific 

 names, pi. 7, nos. 47, 47a, New York and London, 1906.— Brimley and Sher- 

 man, Ent. News, vol. 18, no. 3, p. 100, March 1907 (Tryon, N. C, May, June, 

 July). — LiNDSEY, Ann. Ent. Soc. Amer., vol. 18, no. i, p. 100, March 1925 

 (haplotype of Rhabdoides) . — Smith, Report on the insects of New Jersey, 

 Ann. Rep. New Jersey State Mus., p. 424, Trenton, 1910 (taken rarely at 

 Newark; larva on Convolvulus) .-— French, Butterflies of the eastern United 

 States, 4th ed., p. 371, no. 194, 1914 (from previous editions). 



