20 [January, 



Agriades corydon from Dover this year ; (5) a light Melitsea cinxia ; and 

 (6) a very pale Pararge egeria. Mr, West, Greenwich, cabinet drawers containing 

 his collection of Uriixslx Chry so inelidK, Endomychidx, CoccineUid3e,kc. Mr. G-adge, 

 a wire arrangement to affix to flower-pots for breeding purposes, which could bo 

 folded up when not in use. Mr. West, of Ashtead, under tlie microscope, the 

 curious Y-shaped scales of Pseudoponti i paradoxa, received from Mr. Moore. — 

 Ht. J. TuENKR., Hon. Sec. 



Entomological Societt of London: Wednesday, November 21v/, 1906. — 

 Ml'. F. Meeeifield, President, in the Chair. 



The Secretary read a list of the Fellows nominated to serve as Officers and 

 other Members of the Council for the session of 1907-8. 



Mr. Walter E. Collinge, 55, Newhall Street, Birmingham, and .Mr. H. S. A. 

 Guinness, of Balliol College, Oxford, were elected Fellows of the Society. 



Mr. H. W. Andrews exhibited specimens of Odontomyia angulata, Pz., from 

 the Norfolk Broads, a species of which few captures have been recorded of recent 

 years, and Icterica westermanni, Mg., a rare Trypetid, taken by him in the New 

 Forest. Dr. F. A. Dixey, specimens of South African Pieritur. demonstrating that 

 the wet-season form of Teracolus regina. Trim., was in mimetic association with an 

 undescribed species of Belenois, intermediate between B. calypso and B. thysa. 

 Mr. William John Lucas, on behalf of Messrs. 11. and F. Campion, a male specimen 

 of Sympetrum vulgatum taken in Epping Forest on Sept. 4th last, of which species 

 only three other authentic British specimens are known. Mr. R. Ad kin, a short 

 series of Tortrix pronubana,\\h.,i\\c\\.i(\inghot\\ sexes, which he had reared from 

 larvtE and pupa; collected from Euonymus at Eastbourne in September last. The 

 only previous records for the species in Britain are single male examples captured 

 at Eastbourne and at Bognor respectively in the autumn of 1905. Dr. T. A. 

 Chapman, a long series of Ccenonympha mathewi, Tutt, from an examination of 

 which he concluded that it must be regarded as a geographical or subspecific variety 

 of C. dorus and not as a fully established species. I'rofessor E. B. Poulton, F.R.S., 

 communicated " A Permanent Record of British Moths in their Natural Attitudes 

 of Rest," and " Further Notes on the Choice of a Resting Site by Pieris rapx," by 

 Mr. A. H. Hamm ; Mr. R. Shelford, M.A., F.L.S., " Studies of the Blattidce"; the 

 Hon. N.Charles Rothschild, " Notes on the Life-History of Sesia andrxniformis, 

 Lasp. ;" and Mr. Hubert W. Simmonds, " Notes on an Unusual Emergence of 

 Chrysophanus salustiv.s in New Zealand." 



Wednesday, December 5th. — The President in the Chair. 



The Hon. Secretary announced that the Entomological correspondence of the 

 late Mr. A. H. Haliday had been presented to the Society by Dr. E. Percival 

 Wright, of Trinity College, Dublin. 



Mr. H. C. Pratt, Government Entomologist, Federated Malay States, Kuala 

 Lumpur; Capt. H. J. Walton, M.B., F.R.C.S., Indian Medical Service ; Mr. Arthur 

 Ernest Gibbs, F.L.S., Kitchener's Meads, St. Albans ; Capt. James Bruce Gregorie- 

 Tulloch, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry ; Mr. John Ashburner Nix, Tilgate, 

 Sussex ; Mr. Herbert W. Southcombe, J.P., 16, Stanford Avenue, Brighton ; and 

 Mr. Roland E. Turner, 21, Emperor's Gate, N.W. ; were elected Fellows of the 

 Society. 



