(ema ~)) 
I know that he was a young and remarkably promising ento- 
mologist, in whom the late E. Saunders took considerable 
interest. In one of his visits to Woking he succeeded in add- 
ing a new Bee and a new Fossorial Wasp to the British 
List; and as these were found in a locality that had been 
frequently searched by Saunders, myself, and many others, he 
must have been either a very expert collector or exceptionally 
fortunate. He was formerly science-master in a Grammar 
School, and at one time competed for a vacant post in the 
Natural History Museum. Ultimately, he was employed by 
the British South African Company to investigate the “ Tsetse ” 
Fly and other noxious insects. His death was sudden and 
tragical. He was drowned in the Zambesi River, his boat 
having been capsized by a hippopotamus. 
The Rev. CHartes THomMAs CruttwEtL (Canon of Peter- 
borough and Vicar of Kwelme) became a Fellow in 1902, and 
died (xt. 63) on April 4th, 1911. 
His career at Oxford University was exceptionally brilliant, 
and he maintained his reputation as a Classical and Theological 
scholar by the publication of many well-known works on such 
subjects. He was also the occupant of distinguished posts in 
the scholastic profession, having been successively Headmaster 
of Bradfield and Malvern Colleges. 
For obvious reasons it was impossible for Mr. Cruttwell to 
make much more than a recreation of Entomology. But in 
such leisure as he had he was a zealous collector both of Macro- 
and Micro-Lepidoptera, and likewise of Coleoptera. He pub- 
lished (I believe) on such subjects nothing beyond occasional 
records of captures, and I do not remember to have met him 
at any of our Ordinary Meetings ; but he was undoubtedly 
one who must have attained considerable eminence in Natural 
History had it been possible for him seriously to aim at it. 
WitirAmM ALFRED Ro.Liason became a Fellow in 1909, and 
died at Truro, where he had been Art Master since 1899 in 
the Central Technical Schools, on April 23rd, 1911. He was 
a man of exceptional gifts and culture in many ways, an 
artist, a musician, etc., and also an ardent and laborious 
entomologist; and his sudden death, at the age of 48, 
came as a great shock to friends and admirers in many places. 
