4 PROCEEDINGS COTTESWOLD CLUB I9OI 
logical day, for which our thanks are due to the Rev. 
W. Bazeley. 
The fourth Meeting was very kindly arranged for us by 
Dr. C. Callaway, at Bristol, on September 18th, with Red- 
cliff Church and the Avon Gorge as the particular items 
of the programme. 
Besides these Meetings our Secretary also tried the 
experiment of some afternoon excursions, which were 
much appreciated by the members who joined them. One 
was a cycling excursion from Birdlip to Colesbourne, for 
the purpose of investigating old roads, river valleys, and 
so forth. It was held on June 16th and was quite suc- — 
cessful. There was a visit on July 7th to the Wild 
Flower Garden at Pittville, Cheltenham, under the able 
guidance of Mr W. L. Mellersh; and this proved a very 
enjoyable afternoon. 
At our Winter Meetings we have had a particularly good 
supply of communications—no less than seven different 
subjects having been dealt with. Among these commu- 
nications the Club is to be especially congratulated on the 
papers by Mr Mellard Reade, and by Messrs A. S. 
Kennard, B. B. Woodward, and others, upon the Peat 
Bed at Westbury-on-Severn. They will form valuable 
papers in our Proceedings. 
Outside of the Club our members have also not been 
idle. Major C. H. Fisher has published a work entitled 
“Reminiscences of a Falconer,” a subject with which we 
know his practical acquaintance, as he gave us a paper 
thereon at one of our Winter Meetings a few years ago. 
Dr. C. Callaway has published in the Quarterly Journal 
of the Geological Society (Vol. lvi., August, 1900), 
a paper on “Longmyndian Inliers at Old Radnor and 
Huntley.” This paper has a local interest. The same 
may be said for a paper published in the same Journal 
(Vol. lvii., Feb., 1901), by our Honorary Secretary, 
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