PROCEEDINGS OF THE COTTESWOLD CLUB 17 



The Arms of the Whittingtons are to be seen at the 

 East end of the Church. 



In the churchyard at Dymock is a very large handsome 

 yew tree, the branches not having been cut ; and at 

 Pauntley is one of larger girth, but it is too much trimmed 

 to be graceful. 



As Mr Waller has treated very ably of these Churches 

 in his paper at our Evening Meeting on the 20th Februarv, 

 no further remark is necessary here. 



A long, but pleasant, drive to Gloucester terminated our 

 last Field Meeting. 



THE FIRST EVENING MEETING 



Was on November 22nd, 1892, when Professor Allen 

 Marker read a paper on "The History of a great Physiolog- 

 ical Discovery, and its bearing on Agriculture and 

 Economics." 



The second Meeting took place on January 17th, 1893, 

 the paper, " On the Origin of the Names of Places," with 

 special reference to Gloucestershire, its Folk-lore and 

 Traditions ; and' a short account of thirteen parishes in 

 Gloucestershire, by way of illustration, by the Rev. A. R. 

 Winnington-Ingram. 



The third Meeting on February 20th, when a paper 

 was read by F. W. Waller, Esq., " Some Notes on Dymock 

 and Pauntley Churches, with illustrations of the buildings 

 as they now are, and a reference to certain structural alter- 

 ations which have been effected at different times." 



Mr H. G. Madan afterwards exhibited some specimens 

 of the curious volcanic product called " Pele s hair," from 

 the crater of Kilanea, on the side of the great volcano of 

 Mauna Loa, in Hawaii. This consists of a mass of fine 

 filaments of lava, bearing a very close resemblance to 

 brown hair, believed by the natives to belong to Pele, the 

 goddess presiding over the volcano. It is formed in the 



B 



