Laivs. 133 



XXIX. No stranger shall speak at a meeting of strangers. 

 the Society unless specially invited to do so by the 

 Chairman. 



XXX. At no meeting shall a paper be read, or what busi- 

 business entertained, which has not been previously JJansSd!^ 

 notified to the Council. 



XXXI. The Council may call additional meetings Additional 

 whenever it may be deemed necessary. ^^ ^"^" 



XXXII. Every Member may introduce two visitors visiters. 

 to the meetings of the Society by orders signed by 

 himself. 



XXXIII. Members shaU have the privilege of J^e^bers may 

 reading before the Society accounts of experiments, ^^^ p^p^'^^- 

 observations, and researches conducted by themselves, 



or original papers, on subjects within the scope of the 

 Society, or descriptions of recent discoveries, or inven- 

 tions of general scientific interest. No vote of thanks 

 to any Member for his paper shall be proposed. 



XXXIV. If a Member be unable to attend for the or depute other 

 purpose of reading his paper, he may delegate to any ^®°^^®"- 

 Member of the Society the reading thereof, and his 



right of reply. 



XXXV. Any Member desirous of reading a paper siembers must 

 shall give in writing to one of the Secretaries, ten thdr"p°apers' 

 days before the meeting at which he desires it to be 



read, its title and the time its reading will occupy. 



XXXVI. The Council may permit a paper such as Papers by 

 described in Law XXXIII., not written by a Member ^*^^°^®^^- 

 of the Society, to be read, if for any special reason it 



shall be deemed desirable. 



XXXVII. Every paper read before the Society shaU Papers belong to 

 be the property thereof, and immediately after it has ^ °^^^ ^' 

 been read shall be delivered to one of the Secretaries, 



and shall remain in his custody. 



XXXVIII. No paper shaU be read before the Society Papers must be 

 or pubhshed in the Transactions unless approved by ^"^°^ ' 



the Council, and unless it consist mainly of original 

 matter as regards the facts or the theories enunciated. 



XXXIX. Should the Council feel a difficulty iJi^g^J^^'^'^^^/t^ 

 deciding on the publication of a paper, the Council MembCTr*^^ 



