ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. Ill 



PROF. ANGELO HEILPRIN found two species of butterflies buried in the 

 snow on the glacier he discovered on the volcano of Ixtaccihuatl in Mexico. 

 There was a snow storm the previous night and the butterflies were evi- 

 dently blown up to this height (15,500 feet). The species were Colias 

 c&sonia and Terias sp. The specimen of Terias was in too bad a con- 

 dition to identify. 



MR. PHILIP LAURENT found Pamphila panoquin fresh and bright on June 

 29th, at Anglesea, N. J. He succeeded in getting the eggs, but the larvce 

 would not feed on ordinary grass. There is another brood on the Atlantic 

 coast which appears about August 22d, having been found at this time at 

 Cape May, N. J., by Dr. Skinner. The food-plant is supposed to be marsh 

 grass which grows in the salt meadows. 



THE FIELD MEETING AT JAMESBURG, N. J. A field meeting of the en- 

 tomological societies of Brooklyn, Newark and Philadelphia, was held on 

 July 4th at Jamesburg, N. J. The societies represented were the Feldman 

 Collecting Club, American Entomological Society and Entomological Sec- 

 tion of the Academy of Natural Sciences from Philadelphia, and the En- 

 tomological Societies of Brooklyn and Newark. Jamesburg is situated in 

 the Cranberry bog region of New Jersey, and is a very interesting locality 

 entomologically. The headquarters of the meet was a very pretty grove, 

 from which the members spread out in various directions in search of bugs. 

 The object of the meeting was the fostering of scientific and social inter- 

 course among the entomologists of the three cities. The Feldman Col- 

 lecting Club was represented by Messrs. J. H. B. Bland (President), 

 Wenzel, Dr. Castle, Laurent, E. Wenzel, Boerner, Hoyer, Schmitz and 

 Tresher, and the American Entomological Society and Entomological 

 Section of the Academy of Natural Sciences by Mr. 1. C. Martindale, Dr. 

 G. H. Horn and Dr. H. Skinner; Brooklyn, by Messrs. Meeske, Leng, 

 Davis, Dietz, Harbeck, Merkel, Beyer, Smith and Banks; Newark, by 

 Messrs. Machesney, Stortz, Angelman, LoefHer, Hess, Leib and Crane. 

 After collecting for a couple of hours a luncheon was served in the grove 

 and a photograph taken of the party. A meeting was then called to or- 

 ganize permanently. Dr. George H. Horn, President of the American 

 Entomological Society and Professor of Entomology in the University of 

 Pennsylvania, was chosen chairman. The chair nominated the following 

 committee to confer with their respective societies in regard to the advisa- 

 bility of holding an annual meet and to select the time and place. Mr. 

 H. W. Wenzel, of the Feldman Collecting Club; Professor J. B. Smith, 

 State Entomologist of New Jersey and Professor of Natural History in 

 Rutgers College, for the Brooklyn Society; Mr. Machesney, of Newark, 

 and Dr. Henry Skinner, Curator of the American Entomological Society 

 of Philadelphia. Altogether, a very pleasant day was spent and the first 

 meeting was a grand success. 



