THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 95 



petraria ; Habits and Description of the Larva of Acidalia im- 

 mutata ; Note on Acidalia promutata, by the Rev. J, Hellins." 

 " Captures on the Cotswolds, by W. Farren White." " Cap- 

 tures in the Neighbourhood of Wandsworth, by G. B. Long- 

 staff." " Stauropus Fagi near Aylesbury, by W. E. Parsons." 

 " Chaerocampa Porcellus in Gloucestershire, by the Rev. E. 

 Hallett Todd." " Eupithecia tripunctata, by H. D'Orville." 

 " Habits of Madopa salicalis, Eupoeciha arabiguana, &c., by 

 C. G. Barrett." " On the re-appearance of some Lepidoptera 

 unnoticed since the year J 860, by George Gascoyne." " Co- 

 leoptera near Lowestoft, by E. Saunders." " Nemosoma 

 elongata, by V. C. de Rivaz." " Occurrence of Cordulia 

 arctica in Ireland, by R. M'Lachlan." And " Proceedings 

 of the Entomological Society of London:" continued iu 

 No. 4. 



No. 4 contains : — "Descriptions of two New Species of 

 Gelechia, and a new Coleophora, &c., by G. G. Miihlig; 

 translated from the ' Stettiner Eutomologische Zeitung,' Nos. 

 1 and 3, 1864, pp. 101—3, by Alice A. Douglas." " Re- 

 miniscences of an Excursion up the Demarara River, by B. 

 Piffard." " Coremia ferrugata and unidentaria, by H. D'Or- 

 ville :" (see Entom. 88). "Thatch, by C. G. Barrett." "Eu- 

 pithecia lariciata, by Henry Doubleday :" (see Zool. 9254). 

 " Larva, Pupa and Food of Eupithecia pulchellata, by the 

 Rev. H. H. Crewe:" (see Zool. 9253). "Notes on the 

 Habits of Toxocampa Craccse, by the Rev. E. Horton." 

 " Acidalia rubricala near Brandon, by Frederick Bond:" (see 

 Entom. 70.) " Description of the Larva of Zeuzera JEsculi, 

 by Dr. Hearder." 



It will be observed that many of the facts noticed are pub- 

 lished simultaneously in this Journal and in the ' Zoologist :' 

 this is the case with those communications which have more 

 immediate interest for British Entomologists, — a result that 

 cannot be avoided : other papers, on the other hand, will 

 never appear in duplicate, such for instance as the nine pages, 

 in No. 4, devoted to exotic Entomology, and the seven pages, 

 in the same number, occupied by descriptions of Steni. Few 

 remarks are required from my pen, each subject commending 

 itself to notice : with regard to exotic Entomology, so ably 

 handled by my friend Mr, Bates, 1 sincerely hope he will 

 continue, and increase the extent of, his communications ; it 



