Miss Norah Ward has continued her work upon the 

 reserve insect collections, which number many thousands 

 of specimens, and has brought the whole series into classified 

 order. The Orthoptera have been fully arranged in two 

 cabinets. Work is now proceeding upon the general collectior 

 of Coleoptera, the family Cicindelida? being completed ar 

 arranged in the Greville Smyth room. 



Two special cases illustrating the chief species of ' 

 producing moths and their cocoons, have been pre' 

 by Mr. Griffiths. 



Allusion has been made to a special exhibit rela 

 the House-fly. This consisted of enlarged model* of t 

 larva, pupa, and adult house-fly, illustrations of the ob 



Vertebrate Zoology. 



The registration of the exhibition series has 1 

 abeyance during the year, owing to Mr. H. W. Clark 

 the 3rd Devon Regiment immediately upon the outb 

 war. 



The Natural History collections conveyed in the bee 

 of the late Lt. -Colonel F. D. Raikes included 114 exam, 

 of British birds, mostly from Netheravon in Wiltshire, a 

 about 100 Indian and Burmese birds, from the Pegu distric 

 Lower Burma. All these are mounted in glazed cases. / 



