1896. OBITUARY. 399 



and scientific writer, at Cologne, on September 3rd ; at Bonn, 

 on August 13th, Professor J. L. Delbceuf, professor of psychology 

 at Liege, aged 65 ; Professor Richard Avenarius, a psychologist 

 of Zurich ; Professor Schnetzler, formerly in the Chair of 

 Science at Lausanne University, aged 72 ; in Alen9on, on September 

 ist, C. G. GiLLET, the well-known mycologist, aged 91 ; R. v. 

 DoMBROwsKi, author of many monographs on game animals, in 

 Vienna, on September 3rd ; in September, at Saint-GiUes, Belgium, 

 F. MiJLLER, Honorary President of the Brussels Linnaean Society, 

 aged 77 ; T. Margo, Professor of Zoology and Anatomy in Budapest 

 University, on September 6th, aged 80 ; on September loth, H. v. 

 FouLLON, the geologist accompanying the Austrian •' Albatros " 

 scientific expedition, murdered in the Solomon Islands by the natives; 

 Emile Renbaugh, a German naturalist, by an accidental fall on the 

 Sierra Madra Mountains, Mexico ; H. D. van Nostrand, a conchologist, 

 who possessed a very valuable collection of shells, at New York, on 

 October 9th ; the American botanist, W. H. Gibson, in July; Dr. C. 

 E. Brown-Sequard, a scientific worker, at Atlanta, Ga., aged 30 ; 

 J. B. Lembert, entomologist, murdered at the Merced River, 

 California ; Dr. Callender, Professor of Neurology at the 

 Vanderbilt University, Nashville, U.S.A. ; on February 18, 

 E. Giovanardi, Professor of Descriptive Anatomy at Modena 

 University ; on July 5, Maurice Chafer, a student of MoUusca, at 

 Paris; on October 19, Dr. R. Kerry, director of the bacteriological 

 laboratory at the Veterinary Institute of Vienna; on November 16, 

 aged 76, Admiral Sir George H. Richards, F.R.S., who between 1864 

 and 1874 was Hydrographer to the Navy ; J. E. Gray, Harkness 

 Scholar of Cambridge University, who died at Naples on November 8, 

 the day after his arrival to occupy the University's table at the 

 Zoological Station. 



