44 THE EEPORT OF THE No. 36 



Notes on the Lepidoptera of Kaslo, B.C., with Descriptions of Seven New Species. 

 By George W. Taylor, Wellington. B.C. 



New Species of Colorado Aphididee, with Notes upon their Life-Habits. By C. P. 

 Gillette, Fort Collins, Colo. 



Notes on NoctuidiB. By Sir G. F. Hampson, British Museum, London. 



List of Hemiptera taken by W. J. Palmer, about Quinze Lake, Que., in 1907. By E. P. 

 Van Duzee, Buffalo, N.Y. 



New Species of Dolerinse. By Alex. D. MacGillivray, Itbaca, N.Y. 



Type and Typical. By Henry H. Lyman, Montreal. 



Further Notes on Alberta Lepidoptera. By F. H. Wolley-Dod, Millarville, Alta. 



Notes on Tenthredinoidea, with Descriptions of New Species. By S. A. Rohwer 

 Boulder, Colo. 



New Species of Therididae. By Nathan Banks, East Falls Church, Va. 



Notes on the Species of Rhynchagrotis Sm., with Descriptions of New Species. By 

 John B. Smith, New Brunswick, N.J. 



Recent Work among the Borers. By Henry H. Lyman, Montreal. 



Remarks on Some New Pselaphidse. By Thos. L. Casey, Washington, D.C. 



Blennocampinse — Descriptions of New Genera and Species — Synonymical Notes. By 

 Alex. D. Macgillivray, Ithaca, N.Y. 



Notes on the Pterophoridse or Plume-Moths of Southern California, with Descriptions 

 of New Species By Pordyce Grinnell, Jr., Pasadena, Oal. 



Some Remarks on the Phylogeny of the Hemiptera-Heteroptera. By G. W. Kirkaldy, 

 Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. 



A Key to the North American Species of Aeshna found North of Mexico. By E. M. 

 Walker, Toronto. 



Notes on the Coccinellidae. By Thos. L. Casey, Washington, D.C. 



" Some Beetle Haunts, by an Amateur Botanist. By F. J. A. Morris, Trinity College 

 School, Port Hope, Ont. 



ADDEESS OF THE PRESIDENT. 

 By Tennyson D. Jarvis, Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. 



It is my happy privilege to preside over the present meeting and very thank- 

 fully do I accept the position which you have so kindly imposed upon me. I have 

 the peculiar privilege of succeeding the late lamented Dr. Fletcher, -whose labours 

 and abilities need no words of praise or encomium from me, as they are so well 

 known and so thoroughly familiar to you all. 



Besides the late Dr. Fletcher, who so eminently strove to advance the interests 

 and welfare of this Society, we also most sincerely deplore the loss of the activities 

 in our behalf of the late Dr. Brodie, of Toronto. In the neighbouring States 

 William Ashmead, Prof. Slingerland and W. H. Edwards have departed since our 

 last meeting, and the entomological world suffers an immeasurable loss. The 

 results of their untiring zeal and labours to discover what we might know, and 

 what we should know, of the science of entomology have impressed their effects 

 deeply and indelibly upon the minds and in the hearts of all students of this exten- 

 sive and intricate science. 



In the interests of entomology I must congratulate this Society and the 

 country at large on the arrival of Dr. C. Gordon Hewitt, of England, now active 

 at the Central Experimental Farm at Ottawa, and one whose reputation for good 

 work in scientific and economic Entomology had preceded him to this country. 

 Since the decease of the late Dr. Fletcher the department over which he presided 

 has been divided, the Entomological division being taken charge of by Dr. Hewitt, 

 ably assisted by Mr. Gibson, and the Botanical division by Mr. H. T. Gussow,. 

 assisted by Mr. Groh. 



I regard with pleasure the many new and effective methods which have arisen 

 and have been adopted during the past few years for the diffusion of the know- 



