PBOCEEDINGS OF SOCIETIES. 251 



Donations to the Library and Cabinet — continued. 



From 

 Berichte des Naturwissenschaftlich - medizinischen 



Vereines in Innsbruck. 1870 and '71. ■" 



Journal of the Quekett Club The Club. 



Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, No. 107 . . Society. 



Report on Photographing the Soft Tissues by Sunlight,\ Sxirqeon-GcneraVs Office, 



&c j tf.S. 



Intellectual Observer, 47 numbers M. C. Hardy ^ Esq. 



Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, 28 numbers Ditto. 



Monthly Microscopical Journal, 24: numbers Ditto. 



Science Gossip, 67 numbers Ditto. 



Eecreative Science, 10 numbers Ditto. 



Set of Ten Original Drawings of Insect Scales. By Dr. 



Maddox Author. 



Three Photographs on Glass showing the strife on Am- 



phipleura pelhwidcx taken with a i objective of Tolles. 



By Col. J. J. Woodward, U.S. A Ditto. 



Fourteen Photographs of the Podura Scale. By Dr. 



Maddox Ditto. 



The Cruise of the ' Noma.' By Marshall Hall . . . . Ditto. 



Journal of the London Institution, No. 7 Institution. 



IMud from Narakol, near Cochin, West Coast of India . . Major-Gcn. Wbrster. 

 On the Structure and Development of the Skull of the 



Common Frog. By Wm. Kitchen Parker, F.R.S. Aiithor. 



Logan's Simple Microscope, with three Powers . . ..< '"jj-g ^ ' ^'"*' *^"' 



m i r en -J j? t j. j.- i Tir r ( Tlie Aqricultural Societu 



Twenty-four Slides of Intestinal Worms, &c | ^^ £^ ^^^^^j^ ^^^^^^ 



Four Slides of Fossil Sponge spicules W. Vicary, Esq. 



Four Slides of Diatoms from the Valencia Deijosit. 



Mounted for the Society by C. J. Fox, Esq. 



E, L, Maddox, Esq., M.D., was elected an Hon. Fellow of the 

 Society. 



Walter W. Eekves, 



Assist.-Secretary. 



Bkighton and Sussex Natural History Society. 



August 10th. — Ordinary Meeting. Mr. Hennah, Vice-President, 

 in the chair. 



Messrs. Boxall, A. H. Cox, W. H. Hallett, Hamblin, Walsh, and 

 Dr. Knightley were elected ordinary members. 



Mr. Wonfor read a paper entitled " Is Bomhyx callunce a distinct 

 species, or only a variety of Bomhyx quercus ? " 



After describing the differences between moths and butterflies, 

 pointing out the peculiarities of the Bombycidse, and minutely de- 

 scribing the life history of the two insects, B. callunce and B. quercus, 

 Mr. Wonfor classified the distinctions drawn by entomologists between 

 the two : as of size, the first named being considered larger ; of time 

 in coming to maturity, the one taking two years, the other only one ; 

 of the difference in the plants; of the difference in the markings of 

 the young larvae, the one having orange triangles, the other orange 

 and white lozenges ; and of the different coloration and markings of 

 the perfect insects. On the point of size, he had found an average of 



