Correspond- 
ing Members. 
Annual Sub- 
scriptions, 
The Annual 
lieport. 
AFFILIATED 
SOCIETIES. 
ASSOCIATED 
SOCIETIES. 
XV RULES OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION. 
Associates shall not receive the Annual Report 
gratuitously. They shall not be eligible to serve on 
any Committee, nor be qualified to hold any office in 
the Association. 
(iv) Ladies may become Members or Associates on the 
same terms as gentlemen, or can obtain a Lady’s 
Ticket (transferable to ladies only) on the payment 
of One Pound. 
3. Corresponding Members may be appointed by the 
General Committee, on the nomination of the Council. They 
shall be entitled to all the privileges of Membership. 
4, Subscriptions are payable at or before the Annual 
Meeting. Annual Members not attending the meeting may 
make payment at any time before the close of the financial 
year on June 30 of the following year. 3 
5. The Annual Report of the Association shall be forwarded 
gratis to individuals and institutions entitled to receive it. 
Annual Members whose subscriptions have been inter- 
mitted shall be entitled to purchase the Annual Report 
at two-thirds of the publication price ; and Associates for a 
year shall be entitled to purchhetas at the same price, the 
volume for that year. 
Volumes not claimed within two years of the date of 
publication can only be issued by direction of the Council. 
Cuaprer XI. 
Corresponding Societies: Conference of Delegates. 
Corresponding Societies are constituted as follows : 
1. (i) Any Society which undertakes local scientific inves- _ 
tigation and publishes the results may become a 
Society affiliated to the British Association. 
Each Afhliated Society may appoint a Delegate, 
who must be or become a Member of the Associa- 
tion and must attend the meetings of the Conference 
of Delegates. He shall be ea officio a Member of 
the General Committee, 
(ii) Any Society formed for the purpose of encouraging 
the study of Science, which has existed for three 
years and numbers not fewer than fifty members, 
may become a Society associated with the British 
Association. 
