(exit?) 
being the valuable ‘‘ Proposed Classification of the Hesperiide, 
with a revision of the Genera” (P. Z. §., 1893). While 
serving with the Tirah Expedition, he fell a victim, on 
November 8th, to a stray shot fired into camp, being shot 
through the head while strolling outside his tent. His con- 
nexion with the Society began in 1891. 
Morris Youne, F.E.S., late Curator of the Paisley Museum, 
was an accomplished naturalist and coleopterist, who added 
several species of beetles to the British list. He devoted him- 
self to the care of the Museum under his charge, presenting 
his collections to it, and helping it generously with books and 
money, as his means allowed. He joined the Society in 
1886, 
Among the distinguished entomologists, not Fellows of the 
Society, whose deaths have been recorded during the present 
year are the following :— 
The Rey. Peter Betuincer Bropm, M.A., F.G.S., although 
strictly a geologist, devoted much attention to British fossil 
insects, on which he wrote numerous papers. He is best 
known by his ‘ History of the Fossil Insects of the Second- 
ary Rocks of Britain,’’ published in 1845. 
FRANCISQUE GUILLEBEAU, one of the last collaborators of 
Mulsant, and a member of the Entomological Society of 
France, was a coleopterist who did valuable work on certain 
obscure families, particularly the Phalacride, the European 
species of which he monographed. 
Dr. Joun Haminron, of Allegheny, Pa., U.S.A., published 
numerous papers on North-American Coleoptera, particularly 
on the distribution of species common to the Palearctic and 
Nearctic Regions. 
Dr. Greorce H. Horn, President of the American Entomo- 
logical Society, and since LeConte’s death, the leading 
authority on North-American Coleoptera, was born April 7th, 
1840. His life was almost entirely passed at Philadelphia, 
where he was in good practice as a physician. During the 
Civil War he was stationed in Arizona, where he collected 
insects for almost the only period in his life, for he had little 
aptitude for field-work. He was a great admirer of LeConte, 
with whom he became associated, and whom he assisted to 
