( viii) 
that these structures would prove of great importance in system- 
atic lepidopterology. 
Mr. Krrey mentioned with respect to the supposed occurrence 
of £. ligea in Great Britain, that the two reputed British 
specimens had been carefully examined by Dr. Butler, who 
referred one to Z. ligea and the other to Z. euryale. 
March 2nd, 1898. 
Mr. G. H. Verrate, Vice-President, in the Chair. 
Election of Fellows. 
The following were elected Fellows of the Society: Miss 
Marcaret Fountaine, 7, Lansdowne Place, Bath; Mr. J. H. 
CARPENTER, Shirley, St. James’s Road, Sutton, Surrey ; Mr. 
G. O. Day, Parr’s Bank House, Knutsford ; Mr. F. E. Frurr, 
58, Southwark Bridge Road, 8.E.; Mr. R. Hamiyn-Harris, 
The Conifers, Hambrook, Bristol; Mr. E. J. Lewis, 4, Elwick 
Road, Ashford; Mr. T. Mapprtson, South Bailey, Durham ; 
Mr. W. H. Movustey, Orchard House, Mundesley ; and Prof. 
Enzio Reuter, Helsingfors, Finland. 
Exhibitions, ete. 
Lord Wa.sineuam exhibited a series of the larger and 
more striking species of Xyloryctine, a subfamily of the 
Gelechiade, especially characteristic of the Australian fauna. 
The series illustrated the life-histories and the great disparity 
in colour and form between the sexes of many species, and 
included the following specimens: Uzucha humeralis, Walk., 
3, @, larva, pupe and mantle; Pilostibes enchidias, Meyr., 
2 ; Cryptophaga russata, Butl., ¢, 2 ; C. rubescens, Lew., 
3, 9, larva, pupe; C. wrrorata, Lew., 36, 2, pupe; C. 
albicosta, Lew., 9; C. nubila, Lucas, 9; Zitua balteata, 
Walk., 6, 2, pupe, burrow; Z. nigricincta, Turner, ¢, @, 
pupe ; Z.tepadelpha, Meyr., d, 2, larva, pupx, mantle; Z. % 
intermedia, Lucas, ¢, 2, pupe; Z.? sacerdos, MS., 6, 92, 
pupa, burrow ; Maroga unipunctana, Don., 3, 2, pupe; I. 
mythica, Meyr.’, 6, 9; M. undosa, Lucas, 3, 2, pupe; 
Compsotorna oligarchica, Meyr., 3, 92; Lllidgea epigramma, 
