6 
Psyche 
[ March 
New England spiders of the family Lycosidse. Trans. Con- 
necticut Acad. Sci., VI, 481-505, 1885. 
New England spiders of the family Ciniflonidse. Trans. 
Connecticut Acad. Sci., VII, 448-458, 1888. 
Habit of Vespa. Psyche, V, 54, 1888. 
Habits of Mygale in confinement. Psyche, V, 54, 1888. 
Walckenaer’s names of American spiders. Psyche, V, 
113-114, 1888. 
Pairing of Xysticus triguttatus. Psyche, V, 169, 1889. 
New England spiders of the families Drassidae, Agelenidse 
and Dysderidse. Trans. Connecticut Acad. Sci., VIII, 
166-206, 1890. 
New England spiders of the family Attidae. Trans. Con- 
necticut Acad. Sci., VIII, 220-252, 1891. 
New England spiders of the family Thomisidse. Trans. 
Connecticut Acad. Sci., VIII, 359-381, 1892. 
Canadian spiders. Trans. Connecticut Acad. Sci., IX, 400- 
429, 1894. 
Common spiders of the United States. 243 pp., Ginn and 
Company, 1902. 
Cocoons and young of Coniopteryx. Psyche, XIII, 74-75, 
1906. 
A female spider with one male palpus. Psyche, XIV, 40, 
1907. 
Supplement to New England spiders. Trans. Connecticut 
Acad. Sci., XIV, 171-236, 1909. 
New spiders from New England. Trans. Connecticut Acad. 
Sci., XVI, 383-407, 1911. 
Four burrowing Lycosa (Geolycosa Montg. Scaptocosa 
Banks) including one new species. Psyche, XIX, 25- 
36, 1912. 
(Comstock’s Spider Book). Review. Ent. News, 1913, 
35-37. 
New and rare spiders from within fifty miles of New York 
City. Bull. American Mus. Nat. Hist., XXXII, 255- 
260, 1913. 
The spiders of three mile island. Appalachia, XII, 154-156, 
1913. 
