February, 1911.] Annual Report. xi 
Indica 385 valued at Rs. 408-14. Of these copies to the value 
of £52-3-10 and Rs. 149-11 have been sold. 
1e number of the copies of the Journal and Proceed- 
ings and the Memoirs, sent to Mr. Harrossowitz during 1910, 
was 268 valued at £40-18-8, and of the Bibliotheca Indica 
368 valued at Rs. 332-4. The sale-proceeds have been 
£12-17-1 and Rs. 64-11, respectively. 
Library. 
The total number of volumes and parts of magazines 
added to the Library during the year was 6,237, of which 558 
were purchased and 5,679 were either presented or received 
in exchange. 
Parts III and 1V of the Library Catalogue from the letter 
photographs of the sculptures at Borobodoer 
i e increased number of Tibetan Manuscripts 
in the Society’s Library, a Lama has been engaged to look 
after the collection. 
The Council has not approved the Catalogue of the Tibetan 
Xylographs and Manuscripts prepared by Rai Sarat Chandra 
Das Bahadur, and the manuscript has been returned to the 
compiler. A new Catalogue has now been prepa ; 
Dr. E. Denison Ross with the assistance of a Lama, and the 
manuscript will be sent to press shortly. 
n order to give facilities for reading to members of the 
Society, the Library is now open on every Wednesday up to 
-30 P.M. ‘ 
Mr. J. H. Elliott has continued as Assistant Secretary 
throughout the year. oe 
he services of Pundit Kunja Bihari N yayabhusana, as 
Pandit of the Society, have been dispensed with, and andit 
Nava Kumar Lahiri has been appointed in his place. 
International Catalogue of Scientific Literature. 
i was represented by Lieut.-Colonel D. Prain, 
ERS ad ur LH. Burkill at a Convention called together 
in London in July by the Royal Society in order to discuss the 
future of the International Catalogue of Scientific Literature. 
‘At the Convention it was decided to continue the Catalogue for 
a further period of five years under the existing arrangements. 
The Society’s represen 
tatives gave their vote for this and con- 
