No. 383-] SCIENTIFIC NEWS. 889 
Benno Wandolleck, assistant in the zoological museum in Dresden. 
__pr. A. Zalewski,. privat-docent for botany in the University of 
Lemburg. 
We regret to announce the following deaths: August Assmann, 
student of Lepidoptera, at Breslau. — E. B. Aveling, assistant in 
physiology in the University of Cambridge, aged 47.— Dr. Victor 
Becker, anthropologist, at Oudenbosch, Holland, February ‘10. —- 
Dr. Eduard Albert Bielz, in Hermanstadt, Germany, May 26, aged 
2 years. — Dr. Paul Brocchi, zoologist, at Paris. — Dr. Ernest 
Candèze, student of the Coleoptera, in Glain, Belgium, June 30, — 
Ferdinand Julius Cohn, professor of botany in the University of 
Breslau since 1859, June 25, aged 70 years. — J. Gallois, entomolo- 
gist, at Déville les Rouen, France.— Dr. Carlo Giacomini, professor 
of anatomy in the University of Turin, July 5. — Samuel Gordon, 
zoologist at Dublin, April 29, aged 82. — Mariano de la Paz Graells, 
entomologist and professor of comparative anatomy in the University 
of Madrid, February 13, aged 80. — Rev. Walter Gregor, zoologist, 
near Aberdeen, Scotland. — Dr. Giimbel, geologist, at Munich, June 
18, aged 75. — James I’Anson, mineralogist, at Darlington, England, 
March 30, aged 53. — Joseph Jemiller, student of Hymenoptera, in 
Munich.— Anton Kerner, professor of botany in the University of 
Vienna. — Prof. Leopold Krug, botanist, near Berlin, April 5, aged 
63.— Dr. Johan Lange, botanist, and formerly director of the 
botanical gardens at Copenhagen, April 3, aged 8o. 
Doubtless some of our readers will be interested to learn from our 
advertising pages that extras of many of the papers of the late Pro- 
fessor Cope have been placed on sale. No one has done so much 
work and such good work upon the American vertebrates, living and 
fossil, as he; and his papers are absolutely necessary for the student 
of these forms. 
