30 ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS [Jan., ’20 
delphia, of which his father was secretary, and later with 
the People’s National Fire Insurance Company. He served 
on the School and Public Health Boards of Swarthmore. 
He was a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences and 
of the American Entomological Society from 1879 to 1883, 
when he resigned, but was subsequently reélected to both 
of them in 1887, retaining his membership until his death. 
He was librarian of the Society 1892-96. 
Pamie PP Carvers 
HEREWARD CLUNE DOLLMAN, who was Entomologist to the 
Sleeping Sickness Survey of the British South Africa Com- 
pany in 1913 and subsequently, died in London, January 3, 
1919, from that disease whose ravages he had sought te 
combat. While in Africa he made ewxcellent collections ot 
Coleoptera, Lepidoptera and other insects which, with his 
drawings of larvae, notes on life histories, etc., have been 
presented by his father to the Natural History Museum at 
South Kensington. He was born March 10, 1888, and was 
educated at St. Paul’s School and St. John’s College, Cam- 
bridge. (Ent. Mo. Mag., London, June, 1919.) 
The same Museum has also received collections from New 
Zealand, Africa and Samoa, made by HAROLD SWALE, M.D., 
born at La Verie, near Dinant, Brittany, of English parents, 
died in England, May 3, 1919. He occupied various medical 
posts in the tropical regions named above. (nt. Mo. Mag., 
June, 1919.) 
The death of FREDERIC HovA WoLLEY Don, of Midnapore, 
Alberta, Canada, on July 24, 1919, in a hospital at Chanak, 
|[Macedonia?], is announced in The Canadian Entomologisi 
for October last. His articles on the Noctuidae in that 
journal and in the News are well-known and well apprect- 
ated. At the time of his death he was Second Lieutenant in 
the Yorkshire Light Infantry, attached Macedonian Labor 
Corps. 
The News for December, 1919, was mailed at the Philadelphia, Pa. 
Post Office on December 20, 1919. 
