at AYashington, D. C, as Noto(jramma stigma Fab. and Acrito- 

 chaeta pulvinata Grims. The latter had been going nnder the 

 name CJiarcuh-clla sp. among the local entomologists. 



FEBRUAPtY Gtji, 191?,. 



The ninety-first regnlar meeting of the Society was held 

 in the nsnal place, President Mnir in the chair. Other mem- 

 bers present: Messrs. Bryan, Ehrhorn, Fnllaway, Swezey and 

 Warren, and Mr. J. F. Illingworth, visitor. 



Minntes of previons meeting read and approved. 



The Committee on Common Xames for Hawaiian Insects, 

 after considerable discnssion, was finally instrncted to present 

 a final report at the next meeting, 



XOTKS AXD EXHIBITIONS. 



Ylr. Ehrhorn exhibited six nymphs of C^icadidac which he 

 had recently found in soil amongst roots of plants (Azalea, 

 etc.) imported from Japan. 



Mr. Mnir exhibited three male specimens of AdoretiLs: 

 one the Japanese rose beetle of the Hawaiian Islands, one from 

 Hongkong, and one from Malay Peninsula. In external char- 

 acters they could not be separated, but their genitalia, which 

 had been dissected out, showed distinct differences, thns indi- 

 cating them to be three different species, and illustrating the 

 difficulty often met with in distinguishing species unless the 

 genital characters are examined. 



Ylr. Yluir also exhibited specimens of two species of Tricho- 

 grammids recently bred from the eggs of Draeciilacephala mol- 

 lipes. The parasites had been found so abundant that of a few 

 dozen egg-batches of this Jassid found in sedges in the swamps 

 where it lives, no Jassids hatched, all of the eggs being parasit- 

 ized. Mr. Fnllaway had examined these Trichogrammids and 

 pronounced them as belonging to the genera Jassidophthora and 

 ^yest woodella respectively. 



Mr. Fnllaway exhibited a collection of insects made on Lay- 

 san Island and French Frigate Shoals, Dec. 20-30, 1912. There 

 were about sixty species in all, twelve of them being moths. 

 Mr. Swezey had determined the latter and found two new spe- 

 cies among them: a Nesaniiptis and an Omiodes. 



