( prey’) 
Author, the black-and-white drawings by which it was illus- 
trated being thrown on the screen. 
Dr. CHAPMAN, having been asked by the Chairman whether 
he would comment on the paper, said :— 
“The Chairman having called on me, I can only say that 
I have no remarks to make on the paper except to express my 
admiration of the careful work that has produced such beautiful 
results. I have lately been examining the scent-apparatus of 
male Lycaenids, and having worked with ordinary dry material 
and by somewhat crude methods, I have met with no elaborate 
structures such as have rewarded Mr. Eltringham’s researches. 
I may mention that in Curetis I have met with a scent- 
apparatus previously unnoticed, that is possibly new in 
Rhopalocera, I think certainly amongst European and Asiatic 
Lycaenids, but it is easier to examine one’s specimens than to 
discover all the literature about them. In Curetis the arrange- 
ment is very similar to that in many Sphinges and Noctuae, 
a brush arising from the 2nd abdominal segment, and accom- 
modated in a pocket in the following segments. It arises, 
however, from the dorsal plate instead of the ventral. The 
hair (or scale) bases in the pocket are modified (as scent- 
glands ?). I may give a fuller account of this later, if no one 
else will in the meantime elucidate it more satisfactorily in the 
field and in properly fresh material.” 
Wednesday, April 2nd, 1913. 
Mr. G. T. Beroune-Baxker, F.L.S., F.Z.S., President, in the 
Chair. 
Election of Fellows. 
Messrs. ANDRE Avinorr, Liteyny, 12, St. Petersburg; W. 
Bowater, Russell Road, Moseley, Birmingham; J. 8S. Carrer, 
Warren Hill Cottage, Eastbourne; James Davipson, M.Sc., 
Imperial College of Science and Technology, South Kensington 
S.W.; ArtrHur H. Foster, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. (Eng.), 
M.B.O.U., Sussex House, Hitchin; J. A. DE Gaye, King’s 
College, Lagos, South Nigeria; OLiver Hawxsuaw, 3, Hill 
Street, Mayfair, W., and Millard, Liphook; and Ernesr 
