Vol. xxii] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 85 
lication as it is planned, is to be devoted to its improvement and en- 
largement. Reviews of especially important contributions within its 
field will be published as they are prepared, and, in addition, a number 
especially devoted to reviews, digests, and a bibliography of the con- 
tributions to animal behavior and animal psychology for the year will 
be published annually. This review number is to be in charge of an 
Editor of Reviews It is hoped that this special number may prove 
of value to those readers whose library facilities are meager. The 
Animal Behavior Monograph Series will be published in connection 
with the Journal as a provision for papers which are too lengthy, or, 
for other reasons, too costly to be accepted by the Journal. The mono- 
graphs of this series will appear at irregular intervals, and they will 
be grouped in volumes of approximately 450 pages. The separate 
monographs will be sold at prices determined by the cost of manufac- 
ture, and the volume will be sent to regular subscribers for the price of 
$3.00 (foreign, $3.50). Subscribers to the Journal are urged to sub- 
scribe also to the Monograph Series. The Journal of Animal Behavior 
and the Animal Behavior Monograph Series will be published for the 
Editorial Board by Henry Holt and Company, New York. Manu- 
scripts for the Journal may be sent to the managing editor, Professor 
Robert M. Yerkes, Emerson Hall, Cambridge, Massachusetts, or to any 
other member of the Editorial Board. Manuscripts for the Monograph 
Series should be sent to the editor, Professor John B. Watson, the 
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, from whom informa- 
tion may be obtained concerning terms of publication. Books and other 
matter for review in the Journal should be sent to the editor of re- 
views, Professor Margaret F. Washburn, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, 
New York. All business communications should be addressed to the 
Journal of Animal Behavior, Cambridge, Mass. 
Notes on Limnopira ParieTINA QO. S.—The splendid crane-fly, 
Limnobia parietina O. S., has always been regarded as some- 
what of a rarity. It was described by Baron Osten Sacken in 
1861, from specimens taken at Trenton Falls, N. Y., “on 
fences, in September, numerous ¢ and @ specimens.” It has since 
been recorded from the White Mountains, New Hampshire, and more 
recently (1909), Prof. C. W. Johnson has added a few more records: 
Prout’s Neck, Me.; Intervale and Hampton, N. H., and Lake Ganoga, 
North Mountain, Pa. I have mentioned the occurrence of the species 
in Fulton County, N. Y., in Ent. News for June, 1910. I have the 
following notes to add: 
In early September, 1910, a friend and I were on a long fishing 
tramp up into Hamilton Co., N. Y. On the morning of the 2d, while 
passing from Silver Lake, near Arietta, to the White House on the 
