00 
THE SUBSTITUTE. 
Acidalia Dej^eneraria, 
'J imaiidra Emutaria, 
Ania E margin aria, 
Siona Dealliaria, 
}^ichycneinia H ippocastanaria 
Aliiroa Euphorbiaria, 
H alias Quercaua, 
Alnectra Pilleraiia, 
Peronea Maccana, 
„ Umbrana, 
Spilonota Pauperaim, 
Sidcfia Acbatana, 
Sevic'Dris Liitorana, 
Alixodia Hawkerana, 
Pblbeocbroa Rugosana, 
I’boxopteryx Upupaiia, 
Epbippipbora Obscurana, 
Rftiuia Turionana, 
Carpocapsa, all of ibem, 
Opatlia Eiinebrana, 
Catoplria Piipillana, 
„ •Citrana, 
„ Westwoodiana, 
J.obesia Servillana, 
Eiipa'cilia Ambiguana, 
„ Siinplana, 
Cbrosis Andoiiinaiia, 
Argyrolepia Dubrisana, 
„ iEneana, 
Cocbylis Dipoltana. 
'J’bese are a few of my wants : 
there are of course a great many 
of ibe rarer species not noted, and 
I bare all, or nearly so, of ibe 
species enumerated as wanting. I 
bare some bundreds of species, 
besides those marked, for ex- 
changing with. — James B. Hodg- 
KINSON, 16, Bolton Street West, 
Preston. 
[N.B. Change of residence.] 
CAPTURES. 
Lcpidoptera, ^-c., near Wells . — 
On the 4lb of September I took a 
trip to the bills round Wells, and 
there succeeded in capturing a 
few of the local species, including 
the following ; 
Hipparcbia Semele, 
Polyommatus AEgon, 
„ Corydon, 
,. Agestis. 
I have also found the larvae of 
Sphmx Ligustri and Smcrinthus 
Popiili in great abundance this 
season, and several specimens of 
Gryllns viridhshmis have been 
fotind here. — J ohn Drakeford, 
Sidcot School, near Weston-super- 
Mare, Somersetshire ; November 
10, 1850. 
Lcpidoptera at Looe, ^c . — I 
send you a list of Lcpidoptera taken 
by me during a six weeks’ stay at 
Looe, a small fishing town on the 
south coast of Cornwall, about 
eighteen miles west of Plymouth. 
The whole coast of this tract of 
Cornwall, from Rame Head on 
the east to Headman Point on 
the west, is of the clay-slate for- 
mation, and rises into considerable 
cliffs, interrupted here and there 
by the mouths of small streams, 
or hollowed out into snug coves, 
in some of which the ceaseless 
action of the waves upon the rocks 
has elaborated a beach, of what 
appears to be sand, but is really 
comminuted slate. In such nooks 
as these, completely shut out from 
the world, the eager entomologist 
forgets his calling. He lays down 
his net and uncovers his head, and 
in Nature’s temple, with the rock 
behind and around and the sen in 
front, he lifts up his heart to The 
Lord of all Power and Might, the 
Author and Giver of nil Good, 
who made the Earth and the Sea 
and all things that are therein.” 
This done, if he be a swimmer, he 
