SECOND WINTER MEETING. xiii. 



Surrey ; Sir John's eldest son, in the same church, date 1327 ; 

 Robert de Waldeby, Archbishop of York, 1397, in St. 

 Edmund's Chapel, Westminster Abbey ; Abbot Thomas de la 

 Mere, 1395, a Flemish brass, in St. Alban's Cathedral ; Sir 

 John Harpedon, in plate armour, 1457, in Westminster 

 Abbey ; and John Cherowin, an incised slab of Purbeck stone, 

 1441, in Brading Church, Isle of Wight. 



EXHIBITS. The PRESIDENT exhibited some flints from 

 the drift gravel on Bloxworth Heath, collected by 

 the Rev. O. Pickard-Cambridge. Mrs. THOMAS HARDY 

 exhibited a beautifully-finished coloured drawing, made by 

 herself, of a gold torque or collar. It was, she said, found 

 at Boscastle years ago by a diligent investigator, who called 

 it an Irish chieftain's collar. Captain ACLAND observed that 

 there were a great many of such collars to be seen in Ireland, 

 and it was interesting that this specimen had been found at 

 Boscastle, one of the nearest points to Ireland. 



Mr. HENRY SYMONDS read extracts from a long and 

 valuable paper on " The History of Bridport Harbour." 

 (p. 161.) 



Mr. J. G. NEILSON CLIFT read a paper by Mr. HERBERT S. 

 TOMS on " Piddletrenthide Valley Entrenchments." (p. 34.). 



Mr. ALFRED POPE read a paper on " Some Dew-ponds in 

 Dorset." (p. 22.) 



The PRESIDENT read the Rev. 0. PICKARD-CAMBRIDGE'S 

 paper on " New and Rare British Arachnids, noted in 1911." 

 (p. 70.) 



