330 ENTOMOLOGICAI, NEWS. [July, 'l5 



appointed a temporary committee with power to solicit funds, to 

 choose works for publication, to determine the form of the publication, 

 and to print such volumes for. which the committee has funds and 

 which it considers worthy of publication. 



The committee on publication must have funds before the publica- 

 tion of such a series of volumes can be inaugurated. With the consent 

 of the Executive Committee of the Entomological Society of America, 

 the committee of the Thomas Say Foundation are sending the follow- 

 ing appeal and proposition to the members of the Society. 



It is agreed that those persons who will make a preliminary sub- 

 scription of ten dollars ($10.00) towards the Thomas Say Foundation 

 are to be considered charter subscribers and are to receive such vol- 

 umes as the Foundation may issue, equivalent to the amount of their 

 subscription. The Executive Committee of the Entomological Society 

 of America also authorizes the publication committee of the Thomas 

 Say P^oundation to guarantee to those persons making a subscription of 

 ten dollars, that in case no volumes of the Thomas Say Foundation are 

 issued, they shall be freed from the payment of all annual dues to 

 the Entomological Society of America for a period of five years or for 

 an amount equivalent to their subscription. 



It is hoped that all persons who are interested in the development of 

 such a series of monographs and catalogues of American insects as is 

 contemplated in the Thomas Say Foundation will aid the Committee. — 

 Morgan Hebard, Treasurer, Chestnut Hill, Phila., Pa.; Alex. D. Mac- 

 GiLUVRAY, Editor, 603 W. Michigan Avenue, Urbana, 111. 



Entomological Literatiare. 



COMPILED BY E. T. CRESSON, JR., AND J. A. G. REHN. 



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

 Academy of Natural Sciences, of Philadelphia, pertaining to the En- 

 tomology of the Americas (North and South), including Arachnida and 

 Myriopoda. Articles irrelevant to American entomology will not be noted; 

 but contributions to anatomy, physiology and embryology of insects, how- 

 ever, whether relating to American or exotic species, will be recorded. 

 The numbers in Heavy- Faced Type refer to the journals, as numbered in 

 the following list, in which the papers are published. 



All continued papers, with few exceptions, are recorded only at their 

 first installments. 



The records of systematic papers are all grouped at the end of each 

 Order of which they treat, and are separated from the rest by a dash. 



Unless mentioned in the title, the number of new species or forms are 

 given at end of title, within brackets. 



For records of Economic Literature, see the Experiment Station Record, 

 Office of Experiment Stations, Washington. Also Review of Applied En- 

 tomology, Series A, London. 



For records of papers on Medical Entomology, see Review of Applied 

 Entomology, Series B. 



1 — Proceedings, The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadel- 

 phia. 4 — The Canadian Entomologist. 5 — Psyche. 6 — Journal of 

 the New York Entomological Society. 9 — The Entomologist, 

 London. 10 — Nature, London. 11 — Annals and Magazine of Nat- 

 ural History, London. 21 — The Entomologist's Record, London. 

 36 — Transactions, Entomological Society of London. 40 — Societas 

 Entomologica, Zurich. 47 — The Zoologist, London. 50 — Proceed- 

 ings, U. S. National Museum. 68 — Science, New York. 75 — An- 

 nual Report, Entomological Society of Ontario, Toronto. 92 — 

 Zeitschrift fur wissenschaftliche Insektenbiologie. 104 — Mitthei- 



