142 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
H. armoricanus.—Hyeéres, May 18th, 1905. 
H. carline.—Abries (Hautes Alpes), July 20th to 22nd, 1904. 
Berisal, July 22nd and 28rd, 1903. 
H. cirsit.—Albarracin, July 27th to August 2nd, 1905. 
H. bellieri.i—Beauvezer (Basses Alpes), August lst and 2nd, 
1906. 
Mr. Rayward also made preparations of all my Hesperia 
malvae and H. malvoides, and these come out as follows :— 
Hesperia malvae. —Aigle, June 26th, 1902. Buda Pest, 
May 30th, 1909, and May 11th, 1910. Saeterstoen, Norway, 
June 4th, 1912. 
Hesperia malvoides. — Riffelalp, Zermatt, July 4th, 1902. 
Martigny, June 27th to 29th, 1902. Aigle, July 12th, 1902. 
Albarracin, June 6th to 19th, 1913. Guethary, near Biarritz, 
May 23rd, 1908, and June 23rd to 26th, 1918. Hyeres, April 
13th, 1904, and May 138th to 18th, 1905. 
It will be noted that I have specimens of both these species 
from Aigle. The examples of H. malvae were taken in the fields 
at the back of the Grand Hotel, and those of H. malvoides 
somewhere along the Sepey Road. I cannot at this length of 
time remember the exact spot where they occurred, but on the 
day on which they were taken I walked up as far as Vuargny. 
Youlgreave, South Croydon: March 21st, 1914. 
A BEE RESEMBLING A _ WASP. 
By T. D. A. CockERELL. 
AustraLia has long been known as the home of the curious 
genus Hyleoides, bees presenting the most extraordinary resem- 
blance to Eumenid wasps. I have now to record a bee, just 
received from the Queensland Museum, which looks at first sight 
like some Crabronid wasp; so much so that I could hardly 
believe, until I had examined it with a lens, that it was really 
a bee. 
Euryglossa crabronica, sp. n. 
?. Length, 11 mm.; expanse, 144, the wings unusually short ; 
robust, black, marked with yellow, with very scanty greyish-white 
pubescence ; head broad, face and front shining ; palpi short; blade 
of maxilla rounded, about as long as wide; mandibles bidentate, dull 
yellowish basally, ferruginous apically ; labrum black; clypeus bright 
lemon-yellow, the lower border narrowly black, the yellow area 
depressed in middle above (following clypeal margin) and constricted 
at sides, the whole having the outline of a low-crowned soft hat with 
the brim turned down; supraclypeal area shining, with very sparse 
strong punctures; flagellum bright ferruginous beneath; thorax 
wholly black except the tubercles, which are partly yellow; meso- 
thorax and scutellum shining, well punctured; area of metathorax 
