( xviii ) 



pairing produced no effect; but this interpretation seemed 

 rather strained. Mr. Piatt's Euralia family was, so far as 

 Prof. Poulton was iaware, the only one in which both parents 

 were knowil. In all other examples the form of the male 

 was an inference. Prof. Poulton hoped to show the parents 

 and the whole family as soon as the specimens were set up and 

 labelled. 



Pa'per. 



The following paper was read : — 



" A Revision of the Central American ChauUognatJiinae 

 (Fam. Telejjhoridae), based on the Genital Armature of the 

 Males," by G. C. Champion, A.L.S., F.Z.S., F.E.S. 



Wednesday, March 18th, 1914. 



The Rev. George Wheeler, M.A., F.Z.S., Vice-President, 

 in the chair. 



Election of Fellows. 



The following gentlemen were elected Fellows of the 

 Society : — Messrs. P. R. Aw ATI, Imperial College of Science, 

 South Kensington; Rosse Butterfield, Curator of the 

 Corporation Museum, Keighley, Yorks. ; Robert Neill 

 Chrystal, B.Sc, 9 Braid Avenue, Edinburgh ; E. J. Godfrey, 

 The Education DejDt., Bangkok, Siam; H. Baldwin Hudson, 

 The Ferns, Upper. Highway, King's Langley, Herts. ; John 

 Russell Mallock, Office of the State Entomologist, Urbana, 

 Illinois, U.S.A. ; J. R. de la Torre Bueno, 14 Dasenbury 

 Place, White Plains, New York, U.S.A.; Morris N. Watt, 

 St. John's Hill, Wanganui, New Zealand. 



Exhibitions. 

 Nest op Lasius puliginosus. — Mr. Donisthorpe ex- 

 hibited a large nest of Lasius fuliginosus, Latr., dug up at 

 Oxshott on September 9th, 1913, which was situated under 

 the roots of a large Scots Fir. It was made of carton con- 

 structed of bits of chewed wood and bark mixed with earth, 



