es THE ENYOMOLOGIST’S RECORD. 
N. Frencu Leprpoprera.—Capt. Crocker, a collection of Lepidoptera 
representative of what he had met with in the battlefields of N.W. 
France, chiefly in 1919, mcluding Issoria lathonia, Melitaea cinwia 
from a very wet marsh, Nordmannia ilicis, Colias hyale, ete. Among 
the moths were Aglia tau, Lymantria dispar, Notodonta tritophus, 
Sciopteron tabaniformis, bred from poplar stumps, Senta maritima in 
great variety, ete. 
THE Season.—Various notes on the season were communicated. 
May 138th, 1920.—Exurerrion oF OrDERS OTHER THAN LEPIDOPTERA. 
—Mr. Stanley Edwards exhibited a collection of Exotic Coleoptera 
and Orthoptera. 
Mr. 8. R. Ashby, British ground beetles, Lamellicorns, Buprestids, 
Hlaterids and many Weevils from his collection. 
Mr. Barnett, part of a gate-post excavated by a leaf-cutter bee, one 
cavity containine fifteen cells; an exceptionally brilliantly marked 
young viper; and the body of a large lizard taken from the stomach 
of another viper. 
Mr. Cocks, Coleoptera characteristic of the Wellington College area 
including the fire-beetle Melanophila acuminata which was quite 
abundant there. 
Mr. Step, for Mr. Carr, the local Crucifer Dentaria bulbifera from 
near Chalfont. 
Mr. H. Moore, many species of Orthoptera collected by Mr. 
Grosvenor near Bangalore, India, and read notes on the exhibit. 
Mr. West, four drawers of his collection of British Hemiptera. 
Mr. Step, the weevil, Balininus nucum, from Wimbledon. 
Mr. H. W. Andrews, many species of British Diptera showing 
wing-pattern and coloration, and read notes on the exhibit. 
Mr. Coppeard, the Palmated Newt (Molge palmata) and its ova. 
Mr. Priske, the shells of Helix virgata, including white aberrations 
from Tenby, and the red form of the slug Arion ater. 
Mr. Withycomb, a cultivated plant of the Butterwort, Pinguicula 
yrandiflora and described its capture of insects. 
Mr. Main, examples of various species of Mosquito and a series of 
preserved larvee of the same, with a cage which he had made for 
breeding mosquitoes. 
Mr. T. H. Grosvenor, the eggs of various species of Indian Birds 
from the N. Punjab, including six clutches of the Common Kite 
showing great variation. 
Mr. Dennis, on behalf of Mr. R. 8. Bagnall, species of Protura and 
Symphyla shown under the microscope. 
LANCASHIRE AND CHESHIRE HNTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 
April 19th, 1920.—New Memsper.—Prof. Leonard Doneaster, 
D.Sc., F.R.S., was elected a member. 
Visiz to tHe ScHoot or Tropican Mrpicinse.—Robert Newstead, 
Ksq., M.Sc., F.R.S., Professor of Entomology in the Liverpool 
University, welcomed the members to the School of Tropical Medicine 
and gave a short account of its history and objects; the new buildings 
have only recently been entered, during the war they were used as a 
military hospital. Full suites of rooms and laboratories are arranged 
for the requirements of each subject :—Tropical Medicine, Entomology 
