=» 
NOTES AND NEWS. 
We have a reprint om our old friend Mr. sie i strom F.R.M.S., 
principal siesta t in the Royal Gardens at Kew, a ‘ pe te the Disease of 
Cabbages and allied Plants known as ‘‘ Finger and Toe, ‘as 
Poe 
Applied Mabe takes on many for It is announced that a society com- 
eggs ss ota a be Bie erican Beowing Academy of Chicago numbers 
mber: The the unique name Saccharomyces cerevisia@, as 
we rego fone the Batanical sGaectl vol. xx. p. 87 
The oe a Journal of rape Science for Marc h vo contains 
a ee at the Mouth-parts of the Cypris-stage of Balanus,’ by Mr. Theo, T. 
Groom, F.Z.S., ae of the Yorkshire College at Leeds, which is illustrated by 
a lithographic pl ate 
oe 
. Alfred Crawhall Chapman, of Sunderland, has an ae paper in the 
‘Ibis’ for last on (1894), pr 339-351, entitled, ‘A Contribution tow ards the 
Ornithology of West Jutlan g Danish province hicks pe and his brother, 
Mr. Abel Chapman, also an M.B.O. ie visited in May 1893. 
An officer in the Bs regi s Bays, eathacnds in India, Lieutenant Bice Wilfrid 
Cordeaux, M.B.O.U. (a son of the well-known naturalist of Great Cotes) gives 
in the ‘Ibis’ for last July (1894) a Mist of the birds he atts ved in Dasa nd Suru 
during a journey through the Scinde keaton in Hd 
al 
fe hagas will share—that Spu m Po _ asa a br sin ans for wild birds is 
6 Be dtaty protected for five yea come, and also that an addition 
fortnight te been added to the close Hohe: in ibe East Riding of Yorkshire. 
The Road gana Field caartie Society, which is one of the most useful 
and practical working bodies of its kind ip ae north, not long ago issued its 
printed report hy 1804, detailing ‘ti uch systematic work done, nearly all 
branches of natural history being represented by records of local work, The 
reports form a ia booklet of eight pages. 
SUR EER 
e have again the pleasure of noting a count of fe by our old. wy 
cae poesia Mr. Edgar R. Waite, F.L.S., now of Syd One of thes 
a ‘Re-Description of 45/2 e ramsayi, ye ay, a soe "ake fon New 
S — belegr api <0 rash oy nome Lah ety ion ap Dendrolagus benne 
tt- 
tag and. Both papers are 
Tiintteiod by lene es ‘ie skilled poe mg ihe author. 
Pot 
A catalogue of Bo macro- Ss sting of Derbyshire, which has been put 
together by Mr. Fred. W. ayne, from wre —o ed by numerous 
Derbyshire lepidopterists, has " been published in nt numbers of ‘The 
Entomologist,’ the first instalment, including brief topographical introduction 
and list of authorities quoted, a RrUretiog in the February nu 
—— POE 
In this warrant it will be hie interest to gi ge in the same journal for 
August last yea e was an article by Mr. upon ‘ The Lepidoptera 
of paieemt soi in which were enumerated Kee ueticn cihteges: ——— €S, 
cuspidates, and noctuz. The title was, however, something of a misnomer, 
inasmuch as for ‘Lincolnshire’ we should read ‘ Lincoln,’ as th "g pre but 
few and a referenc a — in the county lying beyond eight 
of its capital city. Nev e list is an interesting and valuab 
miles 
contribution to a knowledge of ne pe Pei fauna of the district to which 
it refer 
nc 
Naturalist, 
