1891.] MR. H. SAUNDERS ON CERTAIN BIRDS' EGGS. 373 



Plate XXXII. 



Fig. 1. Thysonotis cepTieis, c5',p. 364. 

 2. , $ , p. 364. 



3. chromia, p. 365. 



4. Jamides scemias, (^ , p. 367. 

 5. , $,jp. 367. 



6. Epimastidia arienis, p. 365. 



7. Lampides areas, S > P- 368. 

 8. , 2 , p. 368. 



9. Arhopala sophrosyne, p. 370. 



10. Nacaduba astarte, p. 359. 



11. Arhopala eiirisus, (^, p. 370. 

 12. , $,p. 370. 



13. Beudorix woodfordi, cJ, p. 371. 



14. , 5, p. 371. 



15. viridens, c?, p. 371. 



June 16, 1891. 



Dr. St. George Mivart, F.R.S., Vice-President, in the Chair. 



Mr. H. A. Bryden exhibited, and made remarks upon, a distorted 

 pair of Horns of a cow Eland (Oreas canna) shot hy him in 1890, 

 in the North Kalahari. Mr. Bryden also exhibited specimens of the 

 feet of the Lechee Antelope {Cobus lechee) and remarked upon 

 their peculiar conformation. 



Mr. Howard Saunders, F.Z.S., exhibited and made remarks on 

 a nearly white skin of a Tiger from Northern India. The animal 

 had been sent for preservation to Messrs. Keilich and Son by Major 

 D. Robinson, Lancashire FusiHers, Foona. From the skull and the 

 condition of the teeth it appeared to be an adult male in the prime 

 of life, the incisors being sharp and perfect. 



Col. H. H. Godwiu-Austen, F.Z.S., remarked that in his long 

 experience in India he had only met with one similar example. 



Mr. Howard Saunders also exhibited and made remarks on some 

 specimens of the eggs of tlie Spot-winged Gull(ZarM« maculipennis) 

 and Trudeau's Tern {Sterna trudeaui), from the province of Buenos 

 Ayres, obtained by Mr. Ernest Gibson, F.Z.S., and believed to be 

 exhibited for the first time. The eggs of the former bird were, as 

 might be expected, similar in character to those of other marsh- 

 breeding brown-capped Gulls. The eggs of Sterna trudeaui were 

 intermediate in their shape and pattern between those of the coast- 

 breeding Terns {Sterna) and those of the marsh Terns {Hydroche- 

 lidon). The nests of this Tern were stated to be placed in the 

 swamps, amongst those of the Gull above mentioned. 



