362 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [Dec., 
Field Museum of Natural History. (By exchange). Thirty-four Atherine 
fishes. 
Museum of Comparative Zoology. (For determination). Ninety-two 
loaches and three hundred and ninety-two cyrinoid fishes. India. 
Philadelphia Commercial Museum. Large collection of fishes. Philip¬ 
pine Islands. Many interesting additions to the Academy’s collection. 
C. T. Ramsden. Jar of Domitalor maculatus (Bloch). Guantanamo, Cuba. 
Insects. 
S. F. Aaron. Two katydids, Berks County, Pennsylvania. 
W. L. Abbott. Three insects, North Carolina. 
C. P. Alexander. Twenty crane-fly larvae, United States. 
W. L. McAtee. Fifteen Psyllidse, United States. 
Annette F. Braun. Thirty-eight Microlepidoptera, Ohio. 
B. Preston Clark. Twenty-five Argynnis, Asia and Africa. 
T. D. A. Cockerell. Fifteen exotic bees. Six fossil insects, one Coccid. 
W. J. Coxey. Two moths, Assam. 
R. W. Dawson. Three Serira, United States. 
W. T. Davis. One Orthopteron, Florida. 
Emily Drown. Large collection of Lepidoptera. 
Exchange. Two Catocaln titonia, Missouri. 
Exchange. Two hundred Ephydridae. 
J. H. Ferriss. Five Acrididse, Arizona. 
H. Fox. Fifty-five Orthoptera, Tennessee. 
J. M. Geddes. One hundred and twelve insects, British Guiana. 
G. M. Green. Eight Meloids, Virginia; four Orthoptera, Maryland; two Dip- 
tera, United States. 
Wagner Green. Eight Coleoptera, United States. 
Morgan Hebard. Six Blattidse, Colombia; two Acrididae, California. 
Frank M. Jones. Forty-one Orthoptera, United States. 
H. II. Knight. Thirty-five Hemiptera, United States. 
Philip Laurent. Three Orthoptera, Florida. 
Charles Liebeck. One Earwig, Canada. 
Werner M.archard. Four Orthoptera and Hemiptera, United States. 
J. P. Moore. One Hymenopteron, Utah. 
Robert K. Nabours. Five Acrididae, Texas and Mexico. 
J. K. Primm. Two Coleoptera, New Jersey. 
Purchased. Five hundred and seventy-five Orthoptera, Madagascar. 
Henry Skinner. Three moths, Florida; thirty insects, New Hampshire. 
Recent Mollusca. 
Dr. W. L. Abbott. Forty trays of shells from Haiti and Tennessee. 
J. Aebly. Three lots of marine shells from Greece. 
Alabama Museum of Natural History. Two trays of Lepyriurn. 
C. C. Allen. Fifty-seven shells from Southeast United States. 
American Museum Expedition. Seventy African land shells. 
Charles II. Baker. Four lots of shells from Florida. 
F. C. Baker. Amnicola clarkei Pils. from Oneida Lake, New York. 
Dr. Fred Baker. Telhys californica Cooper from La Jolla, California. 
E. B. Bartram. Five trays of shells from Florida. 
