ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. [Nov. , '04 



Professor Smith made the speech of the evening on " Our 

 Twentieth Birthday," in which he gave the history of the 

 Society in every particular, referring to Messrs. Simon Seib, 

 the Society's first President and Julius Bunsow, its first Secre- 

 tary, both of them members to this day ; he also spoke of the 

 Society's ups and downs and the good standing of it at the 

 present time with thirty and some odd members, most of them 

 active, enthusiastic collectors, and new ones added at nearly 

 every meeting. 



Mr. Engelhard gave a very interesting account of his and 

 Mr. Doll's collecting trips to Utah last summer. 



Other speeches, recitals and songs were brought up and an 

 all around good humor prevailed until the termination at 

 ii P. M. 



OTTO BUCHHOLZ, Secretary. 



A meeting of the Entomological Section of the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia was held September 22d. 

 Mr. Philip Laurent, Director, presided. Nineteen persons 

 were present. Mr. Laurent presented a blown larva of Eades 

 iniperialis and Mr. H. W. Wenzel two specimens of Hydrobius 

 tessellatus. The latter were taken at Atco, N. J. IX. 11.04. 



Mr. J. Chester Bradley spoke on the position in the classifi- 

 cation of the Hymeroptera of certain anomalous genera. The 

 position of the genus Ropronia was set forth in detail, and its 

 comparative anatomy explained by blackboard diagrams. 



Dr. Calvert exhibited a number of wheat grains numerously 

 infested with Calandra oryzcr ; also specimens of Cordulegaster 

 )nacitlatus, C. diastatops and Libellula qiiadriitiaculata, from 

 Poyntelle, Wayne County, Penna., June, 1904, being the first 

 records of those species in Eastern Pennsylvania. The two 

 cordulegasters were taken along the same brook, C. dias- 

 tatops in the open meadow, C. maculatus in the woods ; a cor- 

 relation between the different amounts of light in the two 

 localities and the size of the eyes (larger in inaculatns^ was 

 suggested. The 9 C. Jiastatops was observed to make the 

 same motions of oviposition as seen in the Libellulime and 

 Gomphinse, by striking the water of the brook repeatedly with 



