Cyily' 4) 
as those whom we lost in 1892, and the obituary notices on 
some of them, so ably written by our valued Treasurer in the 
‘Entomologist’s Monthly Magazine,’ absolve me from the 
necessity of saying very much about them. Among our 
Fellows we have lost :— 
Dr. Hermann Avueusr Hacen, M.D., Professor of Entomo- 
logy in Harvard University, U.S.A., died at Cambridge, 
Mass., on Nov. 9th, in the seventy-seventh year of his age. 
He had been a Honorary Fellow of our Society since 1863, and 
for nearly twenty years had had charge of the entomological 
collection at Harvard. He was a good general entomologist, 
best known to the scientific world as the author of the 
‘ Bibliotheca Entomologica.’ He was a native of Germany, 
but had become naturalised in America. His papers on 
Parnassius and Colias, published in ‘ Papilio’ a few years 
ago, showed that his views on classification were broader 
than those of many American lepidopterologists, and it is 
a subject for regret that he had not been able to continue 
them. 
The Rev. Leonarp Buomurietp, M.A. (better known under 
his former name of Jenyns), died at Bath on Sept. 1st, in his 
ninety-fourth year. He was called the ‘father’ of the 
Linnean Society, which he joined in 1822, and was an 
original member both of the Zoological and Entomological 
Societies. He was essentially a field naturalist, and was 
best known as the author of ‘ British Vertebrate Animals,’ 
published in 1836. He had also written some papers on 
insects, but hardly enough to be reckoned as an entomo- 
logist, though one of the best all-round naturalists of a 
bygone time. 
Mr. Francis P. Pascor, F.L.S., died at Brighton on June 
20th, at the age of eighty years. He joined our Society in 
1854, and was President in 1864-65, and for many years was 
one of the most regular attendants of our meetings. He was 
at one time a surgeon in the navy, and had travelled much 
in many countries, including a journey to the Amazons for the 
special purpose of collecting Coleoptera, in which order he was 
mostly interested. He had written largely on Longicornia, 
Colydide, Curculionidae, and other families, and had accumu- 
