126 



Eggs, Larva, Larva Case, Pupa, Pupa Case, 



and Imago of Laverna sarcitella 

 Impression in wax of the Chambers and Passages 



excavated by Parasites in the substance of 



an Oyster Shell 



Series of Whole Insects 



Cyclosis in Anacharis alsinastrum 



Qemmnles of S'po7ig ilia fluviatilis 



Under Surface of Leaf of Laurustinus 



Scales of Papilio Paris 



Stephanoceros Eicliornii 



Demonstration of Injection by New Injecting \ 



Bottle J 



Ruling on Glass by means of a Vibrating Rod ... 



Mr. Jas. Russell. 



Mr. Hawkins Johnso 



Mr. Geo. Daintrey. 

 Mr. Martinelli. 

 Mr. Moginie. 

 Mr. Curties. 

 Mr. J. A. Smith. 

 Mr. Geo. Williams. 



Mr. English. 



Mr. Burch. 



Present— Members, 53 j Visitors, 8. Total, 61. 



November 22nd, 1872. — Cliairman—J)^. R. Braithwaite, F.L.S. 

 &c., President. 



The following Donations to the Club ^vere announced : — 



" The Monthly Microscopical Journal" from the Publisher. 



" Science Gossip " ,, 



*' The ^ixth, Eighth, and Ninth Annual Re--\ 

 ports of the Belfast Naturalists' Field >■ 



Club'" J 



" The Journal of the London Institution" 

 Nine Photographs of Nobert's Test PlateBands>^ 

 Two ,, Amphipleura Pellucida / 



One ,, Frustulia Saxonica C 



with reports thereon -^ 



A paper on the Glacial Drift of North London,' 



by Mr. Henry Walker 



A paper on a New Form of Pocket Microscope,') 



by Professor G. T. Brown \ 



Ten Slides for the Cabinet 



The thanks of the Club were unanimously voted to the donors. 

 The following gentlemen were balloted for, and duly elected members of the 

 Club:— Mr. A. C. Goodchild and Mr. Thomas Spencer, F.R.M.S., F.C.S. 



Mr. B. D. Jackson read the translation of a Belgian paper " On some 

 Histo-Chemical Researches upon the Fall of the Leaf in Autumn," which he 

 illustrated by sketches upon the black board and by coloured drawings. 



The President felt sure that all the members present would join in a cordial 

 vote of thanks to Mr. Jackson for the spirit which he had shown in making this 

 translation, and bringing it before their notice. It should, however, be men- 

 tioned that the views expressed by the Author were not new, for the same ex- 

 planations of the phenomena had been made by Dr. Inman, of Liverpool, as far 

 back, he believed, as 1848. He named this because he thought they ought not 

 to allow tlicse Germans to annex everything in that manner. Dr. Inman, at 

 the time to which he referred, showed clearly that the fall of the leaf was pro- 



the Society. 



the Librarian. 



Dr. J. J. Woodward, 

 U.S.A. Army Me- 

 dical Department. 



the Author. 



the Author. 

 Mr. Hain worth. 



