( XXXV ) 
of Sweden, Sydney, New South Wales; Mr. C. W. Mason, 
S.E.A.C., St. Denis, Shaftesbury, Dorset; Mr. Martin E. 
Mosely, 13, Addison Road, London, W.; Mr. Robert Tait, 
junior, Roseneatb, Harboro’ Road, Ashton-on-Mersey, Cheshire; 
Mr. Frank Wray Terry, The Planters’Association, Honolulu, 
Hawaiian Islands; Professor F. V. Theobald, M.A., South 
Eastern Agricultural College, Wye Court, near Ashfoi’d, Kent; 
Mr. Charles Henry Rudge, Assoc. M. Inst., C.E., 15, Newton 
Road, Bayswater, W.; and Miss Carlotta Rudge, 15, Newton 
Road, Bayswater, W., were elected Fellows of the Society. 
Postponement of the Conversazione. 
The President announced that the Conversazione, post¬ 
poned from Friday, May 27th last, by reason of the general 
mourning for his late Majesty King Edward VII., would be 
held during the forthcoming session on some date not earlier 
than the last week in November. 
International Congress of Entomology. 
Mr. F. Merrifield, and Mr. R. Trimen, M. A., F.R.S., F.L.S., 
were appointed to act as additional delegates to the Inter¬ 
national Congress of Entomology at Brussels. 
Exhibitions. 
Rare British Beetles. —Commander J. J. Walker ex¬ 
hibited examples of Ceuthorrhynchideiis mixtus, Muls., and 
Ceuthorrhynclms ]yiloselli(,s, Gyll., taken by him during May 
last at Tubney, Berkshire. 
Rare Hymenopteron. —The Rev. F. D. Morice showed a 
specimen of the Pompilid Clavelia pompiliformis, Luc. $ (prob¬ 
ably the only fossorial wasp with pectinated antennae), taken 
by him this spring, in the province of Oi’an, Algeria, from 
which it was originally described. 
Oviposition of Saw-fly. —The Rev. F. D. Morice also ex¬ 
hibited an example of the saw-fly Phymatocera aterrima, King., 
killed by ether in the act of ovipositing on a stem of Poly- 
gonatum officinale (“Solomon’s Seal”). He showed also a 
photograph of this curiosity, and others illustrating the same 
subject—the structure of the saws, the egg-pouch made by 
c 2 
