163 



In the Entomological department, I hope my successors may have more to 

 say than I have. We have now on our list more than one good observer. I 

 trust we shall not look to them in vain. 



I know not that I can add anything to what I have said. Permit me then 

 to repeat my thanks to those who have done the work of the Club cordially with 

 me in the field, and in an especial manner to those who have given me their 

 assistance in this my account of myself and them. I hope before long that we 

 shall have an answer to those who look with wondering eyes on our baskets, 

 bags, vascula, and nets, in a museum which shall be worthy of the county ; and 

 to the conceited " cui bono " enquirer, be able to say " Circumspice." 



DRIFTS OF HEREFORDSHIRE. 



At the Annual Meeting on Tuesday, January 22nd, the following objects of 

 interest were laid upon the table for examination :— Finely stuffed specimens of 

 the Red-throated Grebe, exhibited by Mr. Lee Warner, junior ; a collection of 

 deers' horns and bones found in the sewerage excavations, Hereford, by the 

 Honorary Secretary ; some specimens of the Hereford Drifts, consisting of Ludlow 

 rock, Lydian stone, felspathic and Cambrian rocks, &c., by Mr. FlaveU Edmunds. 

 — From The Hereford Times, February 2nd, 1856. 



