90 
THE ENTOMOLOGIST’S WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER. 
The Entomologist’s Weekly In- 
telligencer may be obtained 
Wholesale of E. Newman, 9, De- 
vonshire Street, Bishopsgate, and of 
W. Kent & Co., 51 & 52, Paternos- 
ter Row ; 
Retail of J. Van Voorst, 1, Paternos- 
ter Row; James Gardner, 52, High 
Holborn ; H. J. Harding, 1, York 
Street, Church Street, Shoreditch ; 
A. W. Huckett, 3, East Road, City 
Road ; at Brighton of John Taylor, 
News-agent, Stationer, & c., 86, 
North Lane; at Leeds of J. Fox, 
Bookseller, &c., Boundary Terrace, 
Burley Road. 
N.B. Country Newsvenders who have 
this paper on sale are requested to send 
us their names and addresses to be added 
to the above list. 
Those who want it by post can have it 
direct from the office by transmitting 
4s. Gtl. to Mr. E. Newman, 9, Devonshire 
Street, Bishopsgate Street, London, N.E. 
All communications to be addressed to 
Mr. H. T. Stainton, Mountsfield, 
Lewisham , near London, S.F., in time to 
reach him by Wednesday in each week at 
the latest. No notice will be taken of 
anonymous communications. 
Mr. Stainton has returned from the 
Continent, and will be “ at home” on 
Wednesday, the 1st of July, at 6 p. m. 
TO CORRESPONDENTS. 
J. B., Leeds. — Have you read Shield’s 
‘ Practical Hints:” We think it is what 
you want. Silkworms will eat lettuce, 
but thrive better on mulberry. 
W. J., Reigate. — Your larva is pro- 
bably that of Gelcchia sequax. 
II. A. — White varieties may occur of 
the Ermines you mention: we never 
saw one quite spotless. 
T. D. C., Chatham. — Your larva must 
have been accidentally on the Euphro- 
syne’s antenna, which probably he mis- 
took for a twig, and was there to change 
his skin. He don’t appear to have eaten 
the antenna at all. 
T. L., Reigate. — Instructions for set- 
ting Micro-Lepidoptera will be found in 
the ‘ Entomologist’s Companion,’ p. 89. 
J. M., Banchory. — Alsus; the moth 
Fidonia atomaria. 
H. J. H., Rannoch. — We do not know 
your larva on Tormentilla. 
Udolpiio.— Possibly alive; 1 , Coteo- 
phora fuscedinella ; 2, C. nigncella ; 3, 
C. anatipenella, — none of them fed on 
bramble. 
Several communications are compelled 
to stand over, from press of matter. 
On Wednesday, June 24, Mr. Stainton 
will proceed on a collecting expedition up 
Burnt-Ash Lane ; he will be at the finger- 
post where the lane forks at 6.30 p.m. 
Entomologists from London, who may 
wish to join him there, should leave by 
the 5 30 train for Blackheath, proceed 
thence to the “ Tiger’s Head,” opposite 
to which runs the slill semi-rural lane of 
Burnt- Ash: the finger-post is about a 
quarter of a mile up the lane, a little 
beyond a brick-field. 
On Saturday, June 27, Mr. Stainton 
will be at Mickleham, and will proceed 
to Headley Lane at 10.30 a.m., and at 
6.30 p.m.: if any entomologist from 
Dorking or vicinity w ishes to meet him, 
Mr. S. will be glad to fall in with him in 
Headley Lane. Incipients who are 
afflicted with shyness may perhaps pluck 
up courage enough to meet one in a 
lane. 
