131 



AMERICAN MEMBERS— Continued. 



Mary E. Murtfeldt, Kirkwood, Mo. 



F. J. Niswauder, Laramie, Wyo. 



Herbert Osboru, Ames, Iowa. 



A. S. Packard, Provideuee, R. I. 



Theo. Pergande, Department Agriculture, 



Washington, D. C. 

 C. H. Perkins, Burlington, Vt. 

 E. A. Popeuoe, Manhattan, Kans. 



E. Bayues Reed, Esqnimault, B. C. 



C. V. Riley, Department Agriculture, 



Washington, D. C. 

 P. H. Rolfs, Lake City, Fla. 

 M. Y. Sliugerland, Ithaca, N. Y. 

 John B. Smith, Ne^y Brunswick, N. J. 



F. H. Snow, Lawrence, Kans. 



E. B. South wick. Central Park, New York 

 City. 



J. M. Stedman, Durham, N. C. 

 James Stimson, Watsonville, Cal. 

 H. E. Summers, Champaign, 111. 

 Roland Thaxter, Cambridge, Mass. 

 J. \Y. Toumey, Tucson, Ariz. 

 C. H. Tyler Townsend, Las Cruces, N. 

 Mex. 



F. L. Washburn, Corvallis, Oregon. 

 F. M. Webster, Wooster, Ohio. 

 Clarence M. Weed, Hanover, N. H. 



H. E. Weed, Agricultural College, Miss. 

 E. Y. Wilcox, Cambridge, Mass. 

 C. W. Woodworth, Berkeley, Cal. 



FOREIGN MEMBERS. 



T. D. A. Cockerell, Kingston, Jamaica 



W. I. 

 E. C. Cotes, Indian Museum, Calcutta 



British India. 

 Charles French, Government Building 



Melbourne, Australia. 



Eleanor A. Ormerod, Torringtou House, St. Albans, England 



A. Sidney Olliff, Australian Museum, 



Sydney, N. S. W. 

 Arthur E. Shipley, Cambridge, England. 

 W. M. Schoyen, Christiania, Norway. 

 H. Tryon, Brisbane, Queensland. 



A CURIOUS CHRYSALIS. 



We have not previously noticed the remarkable Bombycid chrysalis 

 figured by Dr. W. J. Holland (in Psyche, vol. vi, iSTo. 190, at plate 5). 

 Dr. Holland states in the accompanying text, which occurs in one of his 

 articles entitled "Notes upon the Transformations of some Afi'ican Lep- 

 idoptera," that this is the only instance with which he is familiar where 

 the pui)a of a Bombycid moth is suspended fi'om the cremaster, as are 

 many butterfly chrysalids. The species is Saturnia aniohia Westw., and 

 the specimens were found by Mr. Good in West Africa near the town 

 of Kaugwe. Mr. Good at first thought that he had the chrysalis of 

 Papilio antimachus or P. zalmoxis, although the general facies was Bom- 

 bycid. There were several rows of spines upon the abdominal segments 

 and at least four large spines on the dorsum of the thorax. The color 

 of the chrysalis was dark green, changing to pale green just before 

 disclosing the moth. Each one hung suspended by its anal end from 

 the twig and was partly inclosed by a few silken threads spun from one 

 neighboring leaf or twig to another. 



