400 ANNUAL AUTUMN MEETING. 



Christmas number of the Western Mail, Perth, W. 1 The Agent-General for 

 Australia ) Western Australia. 



mi TT -i. • AT- 1 • t K 7 Messrs. Hutchinson 



The Humanitarian, Vol. xi, part 5 .. ( & Co 



The Official Guide to the Isle of Man Mr. Walter King. 



Bibliotheque, De r Hebraisme, No. 1 Mr. Elie Benamozegh. 



Colorado Section of the Climate and Crop Service of the f Butte Montana, ' 

 Weather Bureau ... \ U.S.A. 



Neolithic Life in Devon and Cornwall Mr. A. Lewis, F.C.A. 



Royal Societies Club, Foundation and Objects The Secretary. 



13 Numbers Royal Geographical Society Journal ... Rev. Canon Moor. 



Principles of Wealth Distribution ... Mr. C.Y. C. Dawbarn. 



Ludgate Hill, Past and Present | Trebar, London. 



12 Numbers Royal Institution of Cornwall Journal ... Mr. W. L. Fox. 



Netherton & Worth. 

 Report on Mines and Quarries Dr. C.Le Neve Foster. 



On the motion of Canon Donaldson, seconded by Mr. G. 

 Dixon, it was resolved that the Report, as presented, be received, 

 adopted, and printed. 



The Chairman gave a description of the Cinerary Urns 

 presented by Captain Rogers, R.A., and explained the circum- 

 stances in which they were discovered in an old round on 

 the edge of the cliff at Winnington Point, north-west of Castle 

 Point, Gunwalloe, in August last. One was perfect, and the 

 other two were in fragments. At the place of discovery there 

 were remains, evidently of a tumulus, that had been denuded 

 almost to the level of the surrounding ground. The urns are of 

 fine workmanship and of well-baked pottery, and the bones are 

 calcined. The Rev. S Baring-Oould is of opinion that the urns 

 belong to the bronze period. 



Rev. A. H. Malan, of Altarnon, contributed a paper on "St. 

 Clether Chapel and Holy Wells," giving an account of the 

 circumstances which led to the reconstruction of the chapel and 

 the preservation of its unique arrangement of holy wells. 



Mr. F. H. Davey, of Ponsanooth, read a paper on "Notes 

 of the Past Spring," embodying a number of facts, showing the 

 exceptional mildness of the preceding winter. He also drew 

 attention to the important discovery of the Nitella hyalina in 



