Februaiy, '15] 



ENTO^IOLOGISTS' PROCEEDINGS 



29 



the Association hold its next annual meeting in affiliation with the American Asso- 

 ciation for the advancement of science, and that all arrangements for this meeting 

 be referred to the Executive Committee with power to act. 



W. E. Britton, 



R. A. COOLEY, 



E. G. Titus, 



Committee. 



By a vote of the Association, the report was accepted and recom- 

 mendations adopted. 



Mr. E. G. Titus: Inasmuch as there will be a western meeting 

 next summer, I wish in behalf of the entomologists of Utah to invite 

 any members going west to stop at Salt Lake City. If you will advise 

 us when you are coming, we will endeavor to meet you. There are 

 a number of entomologists in that city and they will all be glad to 

 receive you. 



Mr. R. a. Cooley: I wish to say that in going to Calif ornia, 

 you can pass through Montana by travelling on the Northern Pacific 

 Railroad. We would certainly be delighted to receive you in Montana 

 and show you every courtesy. 



Mr. C. Gordon Hewitt: I should like to add to the remarks of 

 the last speakers that the Canadian Pacific also offers a delightful and 

 interesting route to the West. We would be pleased to entertain any 

 members who may be going that way. 



Mr. George A. Dean: Inasmuch as so many have given glowing 

 invitations, I would like to call attention to the fact that we in Kansas 

 are right in the center of the United States, and that it is a good 

 place to break the long journey. We can't give you anything to drink 

 out there except water, but we can assure you of a hearty welcome at 

 Manhattan, right on the main line of the Rock Island and the Union 

 Pacific. 



Mr. Wilmon Newell : In connection with the invitations already 

 presented, permit me to say that there are some people of good taste 

 and refinement that occasionally take the southern route to California, 

 and I would go farther and in the language of a New Qrleans restaurant, 

 would say that ''If you would see and be seen by people of prominence, 

 take the southern route, " and we would be more than glad to welcome 

 you and give you consideration for entomological and gastronomical 

 things. (Applause.) 



President H. T. Fernald : If there is no other business, I hereby 

 declare the twenty-seventh annual meeting of the Association ad- 

 journed. 



