6 ANNUAL MERTING. 
Conclusion. 
16. All must feel thankful for the Institute’s progress 
hitherto. Its high objects and the manner in which these 
are sought to be carried out, have earned it the support of 
numbers in every part of the world, and, in the United States, 
have resulted in an offshoot being founded. But it has 
become necessary that such a Society, with so widely-spread 
a constituency, should be stronger in numbers, both at home 
and abroad. Were each Member and Associate to seek to 
add to the number of its adherents in his own locality, not 
only would the Institute’s power for usefulness be increased, 
but the extent of that usefulness would be more widely felt. 
No higher incentive could be found to impel to so needed a 
work, than that expressed in the words of its Motto. 
SPECIAL FUND IN 1885, 
For the People’s Hdition, dc., see Sec. 15. 
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Lil 40 
The following Balance-Sheet was then read ;— 
