Ces) 
South of England and the larva might have been accidentally 
imported in market produce. 
Mr. Tutt also showed an exceptionally fine specimen of 
Teniocampa populeti ab. ocularis, Frr., bred by Mr. Young, 
from a larva taken in the neighbourhood of Rotherham. 
Paper. 
Mr. Jacoby and Mr. Champion communicated a “ List of 
the Phytophagous Coleoptera obtained by Mr. H. H. Smith 
in St. Vincent, Grenada and the Grenadines, with descrip- 
tions of new species,” the Crioceride and Galerucide being 
dealt with by Mr. Jacoby, the Hispidae and Cassidide by Mr. 
Champion. The paper was in continuation of those contri- 
buted by Messrs. Gahan and Champion and by Prof. Williston 
on the insects collected in these islands under the auspices of 
the West India Exploration Committee of the Royal Society 
and British Association. Forty-six species, of which twenty- 
one were new, were enumerated in the first two families, and 
seven species in the last two families. 
March 8rd, 1897. 
Mr. R. Tren, F.R.S., President, in the Chair. 
Election of Fellows. 
Mr. George W. Bird, of the Manor House, West Wickham, 
Kent; Mr. Alfred H. Martineau, of Solihull, Warwickshire ; 
Mr. Hubert C. Phillips, M.R.C.S., of 88, Shirland Gardens, 
W.; Mr. William A. Vice, M.B., of 5, Belvoir Street, 
Leicester; and Mr, Colbran J.Wainwright, of 147, Hall Road, 
Handsworth, Birmingham, were elected Fellows of the Society. 
Exhibitions, ete. 
The Secretary announced that the Committee appointed to 
consider the question of the protection of British insects in 
danger of extermination, had unanimously resolved that it 
was desirable to form an Association, the members of which 
should agree to discourage, by their own example and by 
their influence, the excessive collecting of all those species 
