~ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 
[The Conductors of ENTOMOLOGICAL News solicit and will thankfully receive items 
of news likely to interest its readers from any source. The author’s name will be given 
in each case, for the information of cataloguers and bibliographers.] 
To Contributors.—All contributions will be considered and passed upon at our 
earliest convenience, and, as far as may be, will be published according to date of recep- 
tion. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEws has reached a circulation, both in numbers and circumfer- 
ence, as to make it necessary to put “‘ copy ’’ into the hands of the printer, for each num- 
ber, three weeks before date of issue. This should be remembered in sending special or 
important matter for a certain issue. Twenty-five ‘‘ extras,” without change in form, 
will be given free, when they are wanted ; and this should be so stated on the MS., along 
with the number desired. The receipt of all papers will be acknowledged.—Ep, 
PHILADELPHIA, PA., DECEMBER, 1908. 
We not infrequently receive lists of species of insects for 
insertion in this journal that are hardly worth publishing and 
we also publish some that are hardly worth the room they take 
up. Our object in doing this is to encourage the writers and 
also in the hope that the lists may contain the names of some 
insects that will be of use in showing distribution later on 
when such matter is collated. The people who send these lists 
go out and turn over a few logs and pick up the conspicuous, 
common and widely-distributed forms and generally overlook 
the species. peculiar to the district. In other words, they are too 
superficial in their work and do not wait until they can send in 
a list that is complete enough to be of value. Some time ago 
we received a sending of Diurnal Lepidoptera from Arizona 
and strange to say the box did not contain a single species that 
is not found in Pennsylvania. We recognize the great value 
of faunal lists when they really represent the locality or dis- 
trict where they are taken and we are glad to publish them as 
space permits. On the other hand a list that is only a surface 
skimming and contains the names of species that get in the way 
of the collector and are found from Winnipeg to Tampa and 
from Cape Cod to the Golden Gate is scarcely worth while. 
THE entomological societies of New York, Brooklyn and Newark gave 
a dinner at the Imperial Hotel, Brooklyn, on November 21st in honor 
of Professor John B. Smith, State Entomologist of New Jersey, who 
on this date celebrated his fiftieth anniversary. 
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