404 THE ZOOLOGIST. 
he communicated from time to time to ‘The Zoologist’ and 
‘The Entomologist,’ of which latter journal he was one of the 
Editors from 1877 until the time of his death. As regards 
‘The Zoologist,’ he was one of those who—with the brothers 
Doubleday, Thomas Bell, William Borrer, Bree, Couch, W. R. 
Fisher, J. H. Gurney, Hewitson, Waring Kidd, A. E. Knox, 
Rodd, Salmon, Frederick Smith, William Thompson, and Yarrell 
(of whom alas! only two are still living)—helped the late 
Edward Newman to found it: he wrote in the first volume (1848), 
and in the last, his latest communication (on the appearance of 
the Sand Grouse near Staines) having appeared in the number 
for June of the present year. 
Taking them in chronological order, the notes he contributed 
to this Journal were the following :— 
1843.—Birds shot at Southend, p. 89; Water-birds (57 species) 
occurring at Kingsbury Reservoir, 102; Occurrence of rare British 
Insects (including a Locust near Hampstead), 125 ; Occurrence of rare 
British Birds (including the Purple Martin, Buff-breasted Sandpiper, 
and Wilson’s Petrel), 148; Cure of grease in Insects, 175. 
1844.—Edible Frog in Cambridgeshire, p. 393; Colias edusa and 
hyale in Northamptonshire and Cambridgeshire, 397; Anthus petrosus 
at Kingsbury Reservoir, 447; Note on the Kestrel, 491; Summer 
Birds at Kingsbury, 650; Missel Thrushes, 656; Hen changing her 
colour, 667 ; Edible Frog, 677; Rare Waders at Kingsbury Reservoir, 
Greenshank and Curlew Sandpiper, 767. 
1845.—Polyommatus arion in Northamptonshire, p. 803; Food of 
the Pheasant, 873. 
1846.—F lowers attractive to Moths, p. 1841; Occurrence of Sphinx 
convoluuli near Kingsbury, 1510; Occurrence of the Locust near 
Kingsbury, 1518,—at Duxford and Fulbourne, 1521. 
1847.—Vanessa antiopa near Kingsbury, p. 1791; Lepidoptera 
near Yaxley, 1881; Locust near York, 1881. 
1848.—Young of the Little Bittern near Enfield, p. 1969; Capture 
of Buprestis mauritanica in Plaistow Marshes, 1999; Locust in Cam- 
bridgeshire, 2000. 
1849.—Colias edusa and C. hyale, p. 2612. 
1850.—Great Grey Shrike near London, p. 2698; Scolopax 
Brehmi (?) near London, 2703; Little Auk at Newmarket, 2706 ; 
Waxwing in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, 2767 ; The Exotic Grosbeak, 
2770; Black-throated Diver at Chesterfield, 2775; Kite at Kingsbury, 
