JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS. XXXlll 



A Treatise on the Nature, Economy, and Practical Manage- 

 ment of Bees. 1817. 



A Treatise on the Breeding and Management of Bees. By 

 John Keys, 1814. 



The Cottager's Manual for the Management of his Bees. By 

 Robert Huish, 1820. 



The General Apiarian. By J. Isaac. Exeter, 1799. 



The Management of Bees. By Samuel Bagster, 1834. 



The Natural History of Bees, translated from the French. 1744. 



A short and simple Letter to Cottagers, from a Conservative 

 Bee-keeper. Oxford. 



Hints for Promoting a Bee Society. London, 1796. 



Spectacle de la Nature^, translated from the French. 1783. 



Observations on the Genus Cassida. (From the Annals of 

 Natural History.) 



All the foregoing Works were presented by the Rev. F, 

 W. Hope, President of the Society. 



Essai sur les Genres de Lisectes appartenants a I'Ordre des 

 Hemipteres et a la Section des Heteropteres. Par M. le Mar- 

 quis Max. Spinola, the Author thereof. 



The Article " Lisecta" from the Cyclopaedia of Anatomy and 

 Physiology. By George Newport, Esq., the Author thereof. 



No. 35 of the Magazine of Natural History. New Series. By 

 the Editor. 



No. 7 of British Coleoptera delineated. By Messrs. Spry and 

 Shuckard. 



Richard William Lack, Esq., 41, Weymouth Street, Portland 

 Place, was ballotted for and elected a Member of the Society. 



Exhibitions, Memoirs, &c. 



Mr. Trenchard exhibited a drawing of a remarkable variety of 

 Vanessa iirticce, having the black costal spots confluent. 



Mr. Hope exhibited specimens of GoUathus torquatus j , Eudi- 

 cella Morgani, and other rare insects received by him from Mr. 

 Strachan at Sierra Leone. 



Mr. Newport exhibited a specimen of Scolopendra morsitans 1 

 in which one of the legs on one side of the body was not more 

 than half the size of the corresponding leg of the opposite side, 

 and which he considered had been reproduced, the former limb 

 having been lost previous to one of the moultings of the animal ; 

 the limb, although so much smaller, nevertheless exhibited all the 



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