Procee:lings. 33 
The attendance fell as low as 11 at the December meeting, 
when an exceptionally interesting paper on Dust was read by 
Mr. W. Carter, M.A., of Tunbridge Wells. A very able 
address on Variations in the Plumage of Birds was given to an 
audience of but 14 people by Mr. Arthur F. Griffith, of 
Brighton. It islong since the Club has had a greater treat than 
the lecture on the Theory of Evolution, by Mr. A. W. Brown, 
of Christchurch, Oxford. We have also been privileged again 
to welcome amongst us our honorary members, Mr. Sydney 
Webb, of Dover, and Mr. N. E. Brown, of Kew, and our 
friend, Mr. H. M. Wallis, of Reading. 
The following is the tabulated list of subjects and speakers :— 
1894. 
October. Our British Wild Flowers. Where did they come 
from? How did they get here? When did 
they come? By Mr. N. E. Brown. 
November. Natural History Observations in the Pyrenees, 
by Mr. H. M. Wallis. 
December. Dust, by Mr. W. Carter, M.A. 
= Report of Excursions for 1894, by Mr. B..B: 
Gough. 
1895. 
January. Dragons, by Mr. S. Webb. 
_ February. Variations in the Plumage of Birds, by Mr. A. F. 
Griffith. 
March. A Visit to the English Highlands, by Mr. W. H. 
Tyndall. 
$5 Botanical Rambles, by Mr. C. E. Salmon. 
April. An Account of the Theory of Evolution, by Mr. 
A. W. Brown. 
We are indebted to the following Societies for copies of their 
publications :— 
The Cardiff Naturalists’ Society. 
The British Association. 
