



ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS 



AND 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SECTION 



ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA. 



VOL. XXIV. 



JULY, 1913. 



No. 7. 



CONTENTS: 



Sir John Lubbock, Lord Avebury 289 



Johnson On the Criorhina intersist- 



ens Walker and an allied species 



(Dipt.) 293 



Cockerell The First Fossil Anthom- 



yid Fly from Florissant (Dipt.) 295 



Nakahara On three new species of 



Myrmeleonidae from Japan and 



Formosa ( Neur. Planip.) 297 



Holland A new Lycaenid from Kame- 



run, West Africa (Lep.) 301 



Skinner How does the House-fly pass 



the Winter ( Dipt. ) 303 



Charts of Food Plants of Lepidoptera 304 

 Reiff Some new forms of Lepidoptera 



from Massachusetts 305 



Calvert The Species of Nehalennia 



(Odonata) 310 



Mengel A new Erycinid from South 



America (Lepid.) 316 



Cresson Descriptions of two new spe- 



cies of the Dipterous Genera Chae- 

 topsis and Stenomyia, with notes 

 on other species 317 



Obituary Rev. Dr. Isaac F. Stidham. . 321 



Grasshopper Army Moving Eastward 



(Orthop.) 322 



Girault Fragments on North Ameri- 

 can Insects V (Orth., Lep.) 323 



Editorial 325 



Skinner Limenitis Ursula var. albofas- 

 ciata Newcomb (Lepid.) 326 



Girault A Specific Character in the 

 Genus Trichogramma (Hymen.)... 326 



Bethune-Baker Everes aymntula and 

 comyntas (Lepid.") 327 



Members of the International Commis- 

 sion of Zoological Nomenclature . . 328 



Entomological Literature 329 



Review of Jacobi's Mimikry und ver- 

 wandte Erscheinungen 334 



Feldman Collecting Social 336 



Sir John Lubbock, Lord Avebury. 



(Portrait, Plate IX.) 



In the death of Lord Avebury, on May 28, there passed 

 away the youngest, but not the last, of that group of famous 

 English naturalists intimately associated with Darwin and the 

 promulgation of his theories. For it was to Lubbock that 

 Darwin wrote on November 15, 1859, after the appearance of 

 the Origin of Species: "I care not for Reviews; but for the 

 opinion of men like you and Hooker and Huxley and Lyell, 

 etc." Lubbock too was present at the famous meeting of the 

 British Association for the Advancement of Science in the 

 University Museum, Oxford, June 30, 1860, at which the new 

 views were under discussion, and spoke in their support. 

 Huxley, months before, in a letter to Leuckart, January 30. 

 1859, had referred to him as "my friend, Mr. Lubbock (a 

 very competent worker, with whose paper on Daphnia you 

 are doubtless acquainted)." Still earlier, the entomological 

 intercourse of Darwin and Lubbock is attested by a letter 

 from the former to the latter, before 1857: 



289 



