244 Cincinnati Society of Natural History. 
Vol. vii., 1875.—Tineina from Texas, pp. 7, 30) 51, fa) 92am 
Tineina from Canada, pp. 124, 144, 209. 
Vol. viii., 1876.—Micro-Lepidoptera, p. 18. Tineina, p. 30. Corres- 
pondence on the method of Denuding the Wings of Lepidoptera, Be: 39. 
Tineina, pp. 103, 135, 158, 171, 217. 
Vol. ix., 1877.—Tineina, p.13. Tineina from Texas, p. 22. Corres- 
-pondence on the method of preserving Tineina for examination, p. 38. 
Tineina from Texas, p. 71. Tineina, pp. 108, 123, 145; 194) 2063 ime 
sects feeding on Gleditschia, p. 231. 
Vol. x., 1878.—Tineina, p. 50. . Micro-Lepidoptera, pp. 74, 109, 238. 
Wola , 89, 118) 125) soalate ima, 
p. 148. eRe aan 
Vol. xii., 1880.—Some new species of Tineina from North America, 
p. 220. trl | 
Vol. xiii., 1881.—On the early stages of Gracilaria stigmatelia, 
Fabr., p. 25. On a Larva of Mordella, p. 173. “On some North 
Mcnean Tineide, by Thomas, Lord Walsingham, F.G.S.” o review), 
p. 191. 
Vol. xiv., 1882. —Notes on the Larva of Bucculatrix ambr osiafoliella, 
p- 153. 
He was honored by the Cincinnati Society of Natural History with 
the presidency, and also as Curatorship of Entomology. 
The types of his new species of Tineina are deposited in the 
Museum of Comparative Zoology, at Cambridge, Mass., where he placed 
them so as to have them accessible to students at all times. 
He was a thorough botanist and microscopist. His cabinet con- 
tains a very valuable collection of slides, illustrating the various 
departments of entomology and botany. His last work was .upon 
Microscopic Botany, and he remarked a. few days before his death, 
that he was doing the best and most valuable work of his life. 
J. We HALE IR: 
