\'ol. xxix] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 1 8/ 



spicuous ; apical terguni armed with a tooth on each side below; 

 oedeagus long, narrow, brown, very slightlj- swollen at tip, styles nar- 

 row and pointed. 



Last ventral segment of female sharply notched in middle, rounded 

 on either side of notch; tip of abdomen green, lightly pubescent; ovi- 

 positor brown. 



Length to tip of tegmen 6.7 mm. Width between humeral angles 

 2.4 mm. 



Type — Male. Type locality: Bogalousa, Louisiana. Female 

 does not difl'er in size or markings. 



Type, allotype and twenty-one paratypes in author's collec- 

 tion ; ten paratypes in Mr. Knight's collection ; four paratypes 

 in Cornell University collection. 



The wing venation in this species shows considerable varia- 

 tion as represented in Plate XI, Figs. i. 6, 7 and 8. In the 

 fore wing M3 and M4 are often separated, making six instead 

 of the normal five apical cells (Fig. 8) and changing the shape 

 of the cells in the apical end of the wing. In the hind wing 

 R4+5 is usually coalesced with Mi +2 (Fig. 6) to form a 

 truncate terminal cell, but occasionally they are separated, 

 leaving the terminal cell petiolate (Fig. y). The fore wing in 

 no case shows the three discoidal cells as found in the wing of 

 Stictolohus siibulafiis Say. 



Explanation of Plate XI. 

 Stictolohus trilincatus sp. nov. 



A Review of Reviews (Lep.). 



By I. McDuNNOUGH. Ph.D.. Decatur, Illinois. 



My paoer in Entomologic.vl I^ews, xxvii. 393. has been 



the partial subject recently of three articles by well-known 



lepidopterists ; two of the authors, H. G. Dvar ( Ins. Insc. 



Mensti.. V. 42) and (1. Bethune-Baker (Ent. Rec. xxix. 219) 



