-ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 241 
fa Bie histories and the great variation of this group and 
ed variety and also explaining the habits. Dis- 
eg mcmnctticn from C. T. 
on Platypesa ornatipes “Townsend. Mr. Aldrich de- 
Te Be oka! ececies from Champaign, 
nm 1894. It has since been taken in Ithaca, N. Y., and 
s, S. D. Mr. Greene took a & specimen of this spe- 
at Lehi th Gap, September 25, 1906, sitting on leaf of wild 
Silas the fourth séeord of its capture and the first in 
It has remarkable hind tarsi, a drawing of 
was shown from Aldrich’s paper in EnTomoLocicaL 
ee b tad. NS 
Viereck mentioned larvae taken from decomposed ma- 
pl i exhibited photo of same which is most likely a Mallota. 
fe also showed photo of larvae taken from stomach of horse 
Kaeber said he had found larvae in hickory shoots 
had been injured by fire) at Clementon, N. J., in the 
ring of 1906. Judging from the amount of work done in 
ee ey ne tere in the euamer of 
5. ‘The imagoes were cut from the same wood March 15, 
Jaa turned out to be the Longicorn Stenosphenus nota- 
eel r, Wenzel had on exhibition the Coleoptera collected in 
_ Arizona last summer by his son Mr. H. A. Wenzel while in 
Se red with Mr. Kaeber. These filled twenty-one boxes and 
12,000 specimens. He made remarks on same, 
rarities and new species. 
‘Dr. Skinner congratulated them on the fine collection and 
spoke of his trip to the same locality. 
| —" explained the new Lumiere color photogra- 
: ’ process. 
Smith said his photographer had experimented with 
these plates and had succeeded in making beautiful lantern 
Geo. M. Greene, Ass’t. Secretary. 
