1892. ] Evolution in Methods of Pollination. 77 
Japanese honeysuckle captured a supposed humming bird 
moth which proved to be only a June bug. The beautiful 
clear-winged moth (Sesia), whose first visit to the Azalea of 
the botanic garden was so sudden and brief that after long 
ey for his return I almost concluded that he had 
en the delusion of an excited imagination, afterwards 
proved himself a capturable reality and we enjoyed the 
further acquaintance with his family through their visits to 
Lunaria, Hydrophyllum, Dictamnus, Syringa, and Vinca. 
he memory of the gorgeous red butterfly which twice 
visited the smooth sumach (Rhus glabra L.), eluding our nets 
both times never again to appear notwithstanding our patient 
waiting and the reward offered for his arrest, will haunt 
me through the winter months and until the shade of one of 
his descendants joins the full ranks of those who met death 
on the sumach field. 
Botany and zodlogy at the start are one, but when the 
debatable ground occupied by organisms neither animal nor 
vegetable is passed, each has a clear country until paths 
be 
tionship which all acknowledge will be clearly shown. The 
the development of the order itself, the means of fertiliza- 
ion 
impossible indeed, to say to which they are most closely re- 
Our classification will follow the teachings of geology, 
y, embryology, and common sense, and, standing on 
vantage ground of a manual founded on the brotherhood 
histolog 
the 
