JOURNAL OF CONCHOLOGY. II9 



(i) With the I)and on the lowest whorl. The white ribs 

 are broader than the intervening semi-translucent 

 dark streaks. 

 (2) Bandless. The white ribs are narrower, so that the 

 greater part of the surface is brown and semi-trans- 

 lucent. 

 Pupa anglica Fer. Under stones near wall of small planta- 

 tion above Nead-na-Feannaig ; among stones and grass at 

 south end, near the sea ; among stones of ruined sheilin 

 beyond Grulin. Lives with P. cyHndracea, but is much less 

 common. Some were whitish from having lost the epi- 

 dermis. 

 Pupa cylindracea DaCosta. Under stones ; generally distri- 

 buted. A whitish specimen among those sent seems 

 merely to have lost its epidermis. 

 Pupa cylindracea var. edentula Moq. With the type 

 occasionally ; but some trace of the columellar tooth is 

 usually discernible. 

 Clausilia perversa Pult. .South end, near the sea, under 

 stones. Half-grown specimens, of which two are sent, 

 resemble, as usual, Balea perversa L. 

 Cochlicopa lubrica Miill. and var. lubricoides. South 

 end, near the sea, under stones. 



The Examples of Zonites cellarius in the Mon- 

 tagu Collection at Exeter. — Being in Exeter last August, 

 I could not do less than examine the Montagu Collection in 

 the Museum. In addition to the errors mentioned by the late 

 Dr. Jeffreys in vol. ii, p. 2, of the 'Journal of Conchology,' I 

 noticed that certainly two shells named Z. cellarius are the 

 draparnaldi which is found in the neighbourhood. It will be 

 remembered that Dr. Jeffreys was himself mistaken in referring 

 our British draparnaldi to cellarius, and figured the former as 

 the latter in his 'Brit. Conch.' — Lionel E. Adajvls, Sept. jofh, 

 iSgz. (Read before the Conchological Society, Nov. 4, 1892). 



