IV 
JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS. 
in September last, measuring five inches across the wings.” By 
Miss M. Ball, of Youghall. 
“ On the Habits of the Turnip Fly, illustrated by Experiments.” 
By J. S. 
The President, in allusion to the Memoirs of Mr. Sells and J. S., 
stated that Sirex gigas had been very destructive to fir-trees at 
Ealing, Middlesex, and, with respect to the proposed use of sulphur 
against the Turnip Fly, that this material would not be serviceable, 
as he had noticed on the coast, that insects swarmed abundantly in 
places covered with Pyrites. 
March 7th, 1836. 
The Rev. F. W. Hope, President, in the Chair. 
Donations. 
Annales de la Societe Entomologique de France, 1835, part 3. 
Presented by that Society. 
Transactions of the Zoological Society of London, Vol. I. parts 
1 to 4. Presented by that Society. 
Magazine of Popular Science, No. 1. By the Society for the 
Diffusion of Practical Science. 
Proceedings of the Berwickshire Naturalists’ Club for 1835. By 
that Society. 
Journal of the Society of Natural History of Boston, Nos. 1 & 2. 
By that Society. 
Catalogue Raisonne des Objets de Zoologie recuillies enCaucase. 
Presented by M. Menetries, the Author thereof. 
Descriptions of three new Species of Cremastocheilus. By T. W. 
Harris, M. D., Librarian of Harvarden University. Presented by 
the Author thereof. 
Coleoptera Europoe Dupleta. Presented by Messrs. Villa, the 
Authors thereof. 
Twenty-one Numbers of the Magazine of Natural History. Pre- 
sented by the Rev. F. W. Hope. 
No. 59 of the same work. By the Editor. 
Nos. 17 and 18 of Burmeister’s Manual of Entomology, trans- 
lated by W. E. Shuckard. Presented by the latter. 
Ludolphi, De Locustis. Presented by W. Pamplin. 
