Notes and Comments. 371 
WINE, LOVE, LEARNING. 
Forbes founded a ‘ select 
students’ club,’ known as the 
~Oineromatinc |, Chibs. )the 
symbol of which was a silver 
triangle on which was engraved 
OINO> EPQS MAOH2I2; 
the order of the words being 
suggestive ; though on the 
triangle itself we find ‘ love’ 
comes first, presumably in 
its natural order. Miss May 
Allen figures a copy of the 
prospectus of this Club which 
she found in an old book. 
The other items in the report 
are ‘Report on the Lanca- 
shire Sea Fisheries’ Labora- 
tory,’ etc., during 1915, by 
Prof. Herdman, Mr A. Scott 
and Dr. J. Johnstone; anda 
nore on the type, oi a rare 
Polychete worm dredged west 
of the Isle of Man, by Mr. 
ie ts Watsons) oP lis” My. 
Watson considers to be Tere- 
bella (Lanice) seticornis, an 
apparently new British re- 
cord. We are able to reproduce Mr. Watson’s drawing. 

Terebella (Lanice) seticornis. 
LIVERPOOL GEOLOGISTS. 
Mr. E. Montag is to be congratulated upon the prompt 
appearance of Part 3, of Volume XII. of the Proceedings of the 
Lwerpool Geological Society. With the exception of one short 
note on the Longmyndian Succession, by Mr. W. T. Walker, 
all the papers are on the Trias, in its various aspects. Mr. 
W. A. Whitaker’s Presidential Address deals with Sand-banks 
and Sand-dunes; Mr. H. W. Greenwood writes on the Origin 
of the Trias; Mr. A. W. Harris on ‘ An exposure of Lower 
Pebble-beds at Mossley Hill’; Mr. D. A. Wray ‘ A Description 
of the Strata exposed during the construction of the new 
Main Outfall Sewer in Liverpool, in 1915,’ which is accompanied 
by a valuable section, and Mr. T. A. Jones contributes ‘ Notes 
on some Ferruginous Nodules in the Permo-Triassic Sandstones 
of South-west Lancashire. 
UOT6 Decl. 

