6 
Psyche 
[F ebruary 
Building, and in emergencies at H. H. Newcomb’s office, 35 
Court Street, with attendance of 12 to 13. December 6, 1904 
a meeting was held at Wm. Denton’s in Wellesley to see his 
butterflies, with attendance of 12 members and 5 guests. 
In 1904 to 1908 exhibitions of insects, open to the public, 
were held at the rooms of the Appalachian Club. The exhibition 
of November, 1908, included the following: 
H. H. Newcomb, Papilia turnus and glaucus with intermediate 
forms. 
A. P. Morse, Grasshoppers, showing methods of egg-laying. 
W. L. W. Field, North American Sphingidse. 
F. B. Low, Gipsy moth, Browntail, etc. 
W. M. Wheeler, 85 species of Ants of New England. 
J. H. Emerton, Collection of 200 New England Spiders. 
Emerton & Swett, Collection of Lepidoptera. 
January 19, 1909, the amended by-laws, which had been 
in preparation for a long time, were adopted. 
March, 1909, the last of the books from the Club’s library 
were sold, and the old record books deposited with the Boston 
Society of Natural History. 
December, 1909, the Club entertained the entomologists 
attending the meeting of the American Association for the Ad- 
vancement of Science at a smoker at the Grundmann Studios, 
Clarendon Street. 
At the annual meeting, January, 1910, the retiring president, 
P. G. Bolster, read a paper on the history of the Club. 
C. T. Brues was elected a member of the Club October 19, 
1909, and editor of ^Tsyche” at the annual meeting, January, 
1910. At the same meeting W. M. Wheeler was elected president, 
and at the meeting of February, 1910, the Club voted to hold 
its meetings at the Bussey Institution. This brings us to another 
period in the Club’s life familiar enough to the present members, 
and so my story ends. 
