VOL. XVI.(3) THE PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS 199 
ago, set about the preparation of a joint Flora of the 
counties of Hereford and Gloucester. Alas, that our 
Club has failed to show the energy of the sister Society ! 
Their Flora, an excellent one, was published some years 
since: ours—I am glad to say now—is being actively 
progressed with. Mr Moore had often helped our Club 
by personal guidance and the making of arrangements 
when we met in the County he knew so well, both as a 
geologist and a botanist; so I took it that you would 
wish our Club to be represented in Hereford Cemetery 
at his funeral, which was a public one and very largely 
attended. Accordingly I took my place in the funeral 
procession as a Member myself of the Woolhope Club 
and as your President, and was thanked by the Officials 
of that Club for our kind recognition of their loss. We 
also passed a vote of sympathy with the Woolhope Club 
at our Frome Meeting." 
During the past Session a number of our Members 
have aided science in one way or another. The Rev. 
H. H. Winwood has written on “ The New Branch Line 
of the Great Western Railway from Camerton to Limpley 
Stoke” (Proc. Bath and District Branch of the Somerset 
Arch. and Nat. Hist. Soc., 1908, pp. 195-197), and a 
“Well-Sinking in the Great Oolite of Lansdown, Bath” 
(Geol. Mag., 1909, pp. 119-120). Dr Callaway has con- 
tributed “ Notes on the History of the River Severn” 
to the Proceedings of the Cheltenham Natural Science 
Society for 1908 (pages 62-65). Our Hon. Treasurer, 
Mr T. S. Ellis, has written on “‘ Low Water Channels in 
Rivers and Estuaries” in the Geol. Mag. for 1908 (pp. 
445-454). Our Hon. Secretary’s contributions include 
the article on “Geology” to the Victoria History of 
the Counties of England—Herefordshire (pp. 1-33); an 
1 An obituary notice, contributed by our Hon. Secretary, appeared in the Geol. Mag. 
for 1908, pp. 383-384. 
