122 
THB ENTOMOLOGIST’S WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER. 
We look upon it as the bounden duty 
of all who acquire information at once to 
render it available to others ; and we re- 
commend all writers of isolated papers to 
view the systematising of their re- 
searches as the greatest possible step to 
the onward progress of science. 
The Entomologists Weekly Intel- 
ligencer may be obtained 
Wholesale, of E. Newman, 9, Devon- 
shire Street, Bishopsgate; and of 
W. Kent & Co., 51 & 52, Pater- 
noster Row. 
Retail, of J. Van Voorst, 1, Paternoster 
Row ; James Gardner, 52, High 
Holborn ; H. J. Harding, 1, York 
Street, Church Street, Shoreditch. 
& c. &c. &c. 
Those who want to receive it early 
have it sent by post. All for this season, 
after this date, will be forwarded weekly 
on publication, on receipt of 2s. 6 cl. in 
postage stamps. 
All communications to be addressed to 
Mr. H. T. Stainton, Mountsfield , 
Lewisham, near London , in time to 
reach him by Wednesday in each week 
AT the latest. No notice will be 
taken of anonymous communications. 
Mr. Stainton will not be at home 
on Wednesday next. 
Mr. Stainton will not be at home 
on Wednesday, July 30ih. 
Mr. Stainton will be at Miekleham 
this evening, Saturday, July 19th, and 
will proceed up Headley Lane at 7 p. m.: 
if any entomologist from Dorking or 
vicinity wishes to meet him in Headley 
Lane he will be happy to meet him there. 
Mr. S. will turn down the same lane on 
Sunday afternoon at 3.15 p. m., and on 
Monday evening at 6.30 p. m. 
Sat verbum sapienti. 
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. 
Subscribers who do not receive the 
‘Intelligencer’ in due course, are 
requested to forward their complaints to 
E. Newman, 9, Devonshire Street, 
Bisliopsyate Street. 
Several interesting communications 
which reached us on Wednesday are held 
over till next week. 
Back Numbers of the ‘Intelli- 
gencer.’ — The price of No. 1 is now 
twopence : all the other numbers may 
still be had at one penny each. 
R. G., Cheltenham. — Your larva is 
probably the Tiger ( Arctia caja). 
C. R. L., Ellastone. — Leaf-mining 
larvse should be kept in air-tight vessels; 
glass tubes corked at each end, jam-pots 
ground and covered with plate-glass, or 
tight-fitting tins. A muslin bag may be 
tied on the branch on which they are 
feeding, but this would not do if it 
rained, as the bag would get soppy, stick 
to the mined leaves, and drown the 
tenants. 
F. M., Birmingham. — Dispar is re- 
puted only a local variety of Hippotho'c. 
If you read Wollaston ‘On the Varia- 
tion of Species’ you will probably come 
to the same conclusion. Bodies 
only. 
S. H. — Name shall appear in ‘ Annual 
for 1857.’ 
G. C., Gloucester. — We cannot re- 
cognise your moth from your description. 
W. B., Cross Inn. — The insect sent 
was Camonympha Pamphilus. Look out 
for Davus on the hill tops. 
