ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 



[The Conductors of ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS solicit and will thank- 

 fully 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 reception. ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS has reached 

 a circulation, both in numbers and circumference, as to make it neces- 

 sary to put "copy" into the hands of the printer, for each number, four 

 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 and without covers, will be given free, when they are 

 wanted; if more than twenty-five copies are desired, this should be stated 

 on the MS. The receipt of all papers will be acknowledged. Proof will 

 be sent to authors for correction only when specially requested. — Ed. 



Philadelphia, Pa., July, 1913. 



Entomology is a subject of vast and ever-increasing im- 

 portance as the discoveries, made every year, of the influence 

 of insects on human life, health, food, shelter and other pos- 

 sessions abundantly prove. Yet it is still unappreciated in 

 many quarters, where, to apply Huxley's quotation from 

 Dante, it is 



put on cross so much, 

 Even by those who ought to give her praise. 

 Giving her wrongly ill repute and blame. 



Those who still regard the study of insects as unworthy of 

 human endeavor, or as indicative of a low degree of intelli- 

 gence, we can triumphantly refer to the career of Sir John 

 Lubbock, Lord Avebury, briefly sketched on another page of 

 this issue. That many-sided man, "banker, humanitarian, 

 man of letters, legislator, pre-eminent natural historian, did 

 many things well," and could most fitly have borne the motto 

 which Thomas Say adopted from Harris: "As there is no 

 part of nature too mean for the Divine Presence, so there is 

 no kind of subject having its foundation in nature that is be- 

 low the dignity of a philosophical inquiry." If a Lubbock 

 could devote a large part of his "patience and spirits of wine" 

 to the investigation of a minute spring-tail, or concern him- 

 self with the behavior of an ant, no man with but a fraction 

 of his genius or of his achievements can be justified in regard- 

 ing an entomologist with contempt. 



N. B. — No numbers of the News are issued for August or 

 September. 



325 



