ADDRESSES OF ENTOMOLOGISTS. 



A few gentlemen who have moved since our last list was pub- 

 lished, or who did not figure in that list, have requested 

 their present addresses to be given as under : — 



Argext, ^Y. I., Lower Clapton, N.E. 

 OwEX, Alfred, Ventnor, Isle of Wight. Lejridojrtcra. 

 Watkixs, William, 1, Ebor Terrace, Albion Koad, Stoke Newing- 

 ton, N. 



Hecently published, demy Vlmo. cloth, price Qs. 



A IIAMAL OE EUEOPSAI BUTTERFLIES ; 



On the Plan of Stainton's 



"MANUAL OF BRITISH BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS." 



By W. F. KiRBY. 



With Figures of Twelve Species, drawn by T. W. Wood. 



Also, price 4c?. 



A SYNONYMIO LIST OF EUROPEAN 

 BUTTERFLIES, 



Printed on one side only for labelling Cabinets. 

 By W. F. KiRBY. 



" Great care has e^ddentlj been bestowed upon tliis little work, the 

 result being, in the opinion of one of our best Lepidopterists, a work of 

 much promise, shomng that the author possesses a competent know- 

 sedge of his subject." — F. Smith, Preside /it's Address to Entomological 

 Society, Jan. 2Uk, 1863. 



" We recommend the work to every one who has a taste for Natural 

 History, and who pui-poses making a continental torn- during the ensuing 

 smnmer." — Athenamm. 



" Contains short, but apparently careful descriptions of all the species 

 of Ehopalocera knowTi to inhabit Em-ope. . . . This Manual will be 

 exceedingly useful to the traA'eller who may %vish to learn something of 

 the unfamiliar fomis of butterflies which meet his eye on the Conti- 

 nent." — Westminster. 



Williams & Norgate, 14, Henrietta Street, Covent 

 Garden, London ; and 20, South Frederick Street, 

 Edinburgh. 



