370 Notes and Comments. 
John Holland fussed garrulously as Montgomery’s Boswell. 
Still, even the insufferable Goss could not wholly eliminate 
some grains of corn from the bushels of chaff, and the best 
chapter is that in which Arthur Jewitt, Llewellynn’s father, 
is allowed to give his own recollections.’ 
LIVERPOOL BIOLOGISTS. 
Volume XXX. of the Proceedings and Tvansactions of 
the Liverpool Biological Society, for the season 1915-6, has 

Edward Forbes. 
been published. It is not so bulky as usual, but its contents 
are quite up to the familiar standard. Prof. Ernest Glynn, 
in his Presidential Address, deals with ‘ Bacteriology and the 
War, with Comments on the National Neglect of Science,’ the 
latter part dealing with a chronic complaint. Prof. W. A. 
Herdman gives the ‘ Twenty-ninth Annual Report of the 
Liverpool Marine Biology Committee and their Biological 
Station at Port Erin,’ including an address on the ‘Life and 
Work of Edward Forbes,’ a block illustrating which we are 
kindly permitted to reproduce. 

Naturalist, 
