1913.] 
NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 
717 
Dr. Henry Tucker. Lirnax maximus L. from Morton, Pa. 
University of Wisconsin. Three trays of Hawaiian land shells. 
E. G. Vanatta. Polygyra appressa Say from the banks of the Chester River, 
Queen Anne County, Maryland. 
T. Van Hyning. Eleven trays of land and fresh-water shells from Georgia 
and Iowa. 
Gilbert Van Ingen. Helix hortensis Mull, from Conception Bay, New¬ 
foundland. 
Bryant Walker. Sixteen trays of land and fresh-water shells. 
W. F. Webb. Drymceus inusitatus Fult., Chiriqui Lagoon, Panama. 
W. D. Wilder. Six trays of Hawaiian land shells. 
Helen Winchester. Polygyra albolabris Say from Canadensis, Pa. 
Unknown. Twelve trays of Scaphopoda from Australia. 
Purchased. Two hundred and thirty-six lots of land and marine shells. 
Insects. 
J. Aebly. Five insects, Philadelphia. 
B. Albertson. Fly, Massachusetts. 
C. R. Alexander. Forty-one Tipulidse, United States. 
W. Beutenmuller. Seven insects, United States. 
Annette F. Braun. Fourteen butterflies, United States. 
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. Three Orthoptera. 
Stewardson Brown. Two Coleoptera, Philadelphia; Orthopteron, Bermuda. 
P. P. Calvert. Nine insects, Scotland and Pennsylvania. 
E. R. Casey. Three insects, Philadelphia. 
T. D. A. Cockerell. Twenty-two bees, two Phenacolestes (fossil). 
W. P. Comstock. Two Thecla immaculosis. Utah (paratypes). 
C. W. Cole, Jr. Five hundred and sixty-six insects, Alberta and British 
Columbia, Canada. 
E. T. Cresson, Jr. Thirty-six insects, Pennsylvania. 
Delos E. Culver. Odonate, Philadelphia. 
J. H. Ferris. Beetle, Arizona. 
Henry Fox. Three thousand five hundred Orthoptera, Pennsylvania, New 
Jersey, and Massachusetts. 
W. J. Fox. Beetle, Philadelphia. 
H. W. Fowler. Six Coleoptera, Pennsylvania. 
C. W. Frost. Five insects, Pennsylvania. 
• G. M. Greene. Twenty-five insects, United States; four Coleoptera, exotic. 
J. P. C. Griffith. Phyllium, Pharnacia, Ceylon. 
H. S. Harbeck. One Blattid. 
Dr. J. W. Harshberger. Moth, Florida. 
Morgan Hebard. Sixty-four Insara, United States, Mexico, Central America; 
one hundred and seven Dichopetala, Mexico and Texas; one hundred and forty- 
one Orthoptera, United States and Mexico; sixty-nine Orthoptera, Arizona; 
Texas, Florida; forty-seven insects, United States; one hundred and fourteen 
Coleoptera, Georgia; eighty-five Odonata, Michigan; two hundred and sixty-four 
Lepidoptera, Florida; one hundred and thirty-six insects, United States; one 
thousand six hundred and thirteen Lepidoptera, American and exotic. 
