300 THE ENTOMOLOGIST. 
Lepidoptera near Folkestone.—C. Hyale, tolerably plen- 
tiful. CC. Edusa, rather scarce. E. russula, eleven females 
and seven males, bred from the eggs laid in July, and many 
captured. A. gilvaria, plentiful. L.albipuncta, four. A. saucia, 
seven. N. glareosa, three in the Warren. N. Dablii, six. 
X. cerago and X. silago, plentiful on flowers of Scabious. 
X. flavescens, var., one. X. gilvago, var., two, the bar being 
broken into dots. Is it not strange that the original type has 
not been taken? ‘T. retusa, one, worn. P. flavocincta, two. 
E. lichenea, two. CC. vetusta, seven. C. exoleta, five. 
X. semibrunnea, three. H. armiger, one, very fine. S. ano- 
mala, one. Pyralides.—S. palealis, six. M. polygonalis, one. 
—G. Haggar ; 71, Granville Terrace, Folkestone, Nov.13, 1875. 
Colias Hyale abundant, and C. Edusa, near Maldon.— 
During September I succeeded in taking as many as seventy 
specimens of Colias Hyale, the greater part in a large clover- 
field, in Woodham Mortimer parish, but something like a 
score ina lucerne-field, on the glebe-land belonging to Haze- 
leigh Rectory. One of the females deposited eight eggs 
—seven in the bottom of a pocket-box, and’one on a clover- 
head: these unfortunately proved to be infertile, shrivelling 
up in a few days. Colias Edusa was not abundant: I only 
secured twelve good specimens, three of which were females. 
—Gilbert H. Raynor; St. John’s College, Cambridge, 
November 10, 1875. 
Colias Edusa at York.—On Thursday, September 9th, I 
captured a fine specimen of Colias Edusa; on the 11th two 
more; and on the 25th a Sphinx Convolvuli.—J. Hawkins ; 
Holgate, York, October 23, 1875. 
Sphinx Convolvuli at Newport, Isle of Wight.—It may 
interest entomologists to hear that I have taken two speci- 
mens of the Convolvuli hawk-moth. I caught them both 
soon after sunset, hovering over a bed of geraniums, on the 
22nd and 26th of September.—Frank Morey; Newport, 
Isle of Wight. [From ‘Science Gossip.’ } 
Deiopeia pulchella at Hastings.—\ am pleased to be able 
to record the occurrence at Hastings of a specimen of Deio- 
peia pulchella on the 17th of October, in a field near here.— 
E. A. Butler. 
Deiopeia pulchella in India.—One of your correspondents 
in the November number (Entom. viii. 280) alludes to having 
