VOL. XV. (1) THE PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS 5 
attention was drawn to the large granite boulders discovered 
near Worcester, and to the evidence they furnished of the 
southward movement of the glacial ice. At the luncheon, 
attention was called by the Rev. Walter Butt to the desira- 
bility of enclosing the long barrow at Belas Knap, and 
a committee, consisting of the President, Mr Butt and 
Mr Richardson was appointed to confer with the owner, 
Mr Rhodes. In the afternoon, visits were paid to the 
Cathedral and the Royal Porcelain Works. 
The fourth Field Meeting was held at Painswick on 
Tuesday, September 22nd. The members first visited the 
gravels at Cainscross, under the guidance of Mr C. 
Upton, and then Mr A.J. Morton Ball was kind enough to 
invite them to inspect his fine collection of mammalian 
remains. At Painswick, the Club was met by Mr W. 
St Clair Baddeley, who guided them over the old Court 
House and the Church, giving them a most interesting 
history of the former. At the luncheon, the Rev. W. Butt 
reported that Mr Rhodes, the proprietor of Belas Knap, 
had most courteously entertained their suggestion, and 
had promised to construct a wire-fencing round the 
tumulus. In the afternoon, the members visited the 
lowermost beds of the Inferior Oolite, and passed over 
the succeeding formations to Kimsbury Camp, where the 
ancient earthworks were examined. Here Mr Baddeley 
delivered an admirable address, in which he argued with 
much cogency that the camp, commonly supposed to be 
Roman, was of British origin. The day closed most 
pleasantly with afternoon-tea on the lawn of Castle Hale, 
by the kind hospitality of Mr and Mrs Baddeley. The 
Club had reason to congratulate itself on the guidance of 
so skilled an antiquarian as Mr St Clair Baddeley. 
The first half-day Excursion was made to Robins’ Wood 
Hill on Saturday, June 6th. Previous to the ascent of the 
