I2O ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [April, *2O 



data given above. Through Prof. Needham also, years 

 ago, Dr. Westcott placed the Odonata which he collected on 

 a trip to Tabasco and Chiapas, Mexico, at the service of the 

 Editor for incorporation of the data accompanying them in 

 the Biologia Centrali- Americana. 



While Dr. Westcott apparently published no extensive 

 papers on entomology, he contributed the following notes to 

 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS : 



Venturesome Insects [Butterflies], iv, 90-91, March, 1893. 



[Erebus odora at Racine, Wisconsin], v, 71. March, 1894. 



The Assembling of the Cecropia Moth, vi, 136-137, May, 1895. 



The Distribution of some N. American Syrphidae, viii, 190-191, Oct., 

 1897. 



Collecting Dragonflies by a Decoy, xvi, 209, Sept., 1905. 



Note on Anatis i$-piinctata and A. caseyi n. sp. [Coleop.], xxiii, 422, 

 Nov. 1912. 



Scarcity of Early Insects, xxiii, 328-329, July, 1912. 



The 1912 swarming of Aletia argillacea, xxiv, 84-85, Feb., 1913. 



Rarities (Hym., Neur., Odon.), xxvii, 85-86, Feb., 1916. 



Misapplied Effort (Odonata), xxvii, 467, Dec., 1916. 



Sex Attraction Overcome by Light Stimulation (Lepid., Col.), xxviii, 

 374-5, Oct., 1917. 



Dr. C. G. HEWITT. 



The daily papers announced the death of Dr. Charles 

 Gordon Hewitt, dominion entomologist and consulting zoolo- 

 gist, at Ottawa, on March I, 1920. He was born in Scotland 

 thirty-five years ago and came to Canada in 1909. Previous 

 to and after his settlement on this side of the Atlantic, he 

 published several notable works on the house-fly. In 1913 

 he was elected a fellow of. the Entomological Society of Amer- 

 ica, in whose meetings he took an interested part. As ento- 

 mologist and zoologist he was very active in Canada and he 

 will be greatly missed there, as well as on this side of the inter- 

 national line, where we deplore his early death. Detailed 

 biographical notices will doubtless appear in the Canadian 

 journals. 



