6 
of the Society are concerned, on the second Wednesday in June. 
At the commencement of the opening Meeting of the Session, the 
retiring President shall take the chair, and shall at once proceed 
to introduce the newly-elected President to the Meeting, who, 
after the usual formalities have been observed, shall deliver his 
inaugural address. 
46. The Ordinary Meetings shall take place on the second 
Wednesday in the Month and shall be held in Brighton, but, in 
addition thereto, the Council are authorised to arrange from time 
to time for such extra Meetings, either Occasional or Kegular, as 
they may think desirable, and to hold such extra Meetings, or 
any or either of them, at Hove or Brighton, as they may deem 
most advisable in the interests of the Society. 
47. A Special General Meeting may be called at any time by 
the Council, and shall be called by the Honorary Secretaries on 
the requisition in writing of Five Members of the Society, given 
to one of the Secretaries at least 14 days before such intended 
Meeting, stating the object of such Meeting, and notice thereof 
shall be given to every ordinary Member at least one week 
previously. 
48. A discretionary power shall be vested in the Council to 
alter the place and time of all Meetings of the Society. 
49. Each Member may introduce a Visitor to the Society’s 
Meetings, and the name of every person so introduced shall be 
communicated to the President for the evening and announced 
by him from the Chair. 
Order of Business at Ordinary Meetings. 
50. The order of business at the Ordinary Meetings of the 
Society shall be as follows :— 
The Minutes of the previous Meeting shall be read, amended 
if required, and approved of. 
Members proposed shall be voted for. 
New Members shall be introduced to the President. 
Applications for Membership shall be announced. 
Names of Visitors to be announced by the President. 
Papers and communications shall be read and discussed. 
Specimens may be exhibited and described. 
Papers and Discussions. 
51. In all papers read before the Society, and in all discus- © 
sions at its Meetings, party politics and controversial theology 
are excluded. 
52. The decision with regard to the fitness of any Paper to be 
read before the Society rests with the Council. 
53. Any Paper read before the Society 7/se facto becomes in 
so far the property of the Society that it may be published whole 
or in part, as the Council may determine, in the Society’s pro- 
ceedings. 
