1888-89.] IQI 



have chosen different routes. The photographers, who are in 

 force to-day, congratulate each other. Bonamargy, Dunanynie, 

 and Kinbane have successively occupied their attention, not to 

 mention pretty pieces of landscape and cliff scenery ; and one 

 energetic photographer, backed by a small contingent, has pene- 

 trated westward as far as Carrick-a-Rede, and " done " the cele- 

 brated swinging bridge there. After a formal business meeting, 

 at which some new members are elected, the party make for 

 the railway station, and as at nine o'clock the train rolls under 

 the lofty arch of York Street Terminus, the members feel that 

 a delightful day's outing has come to a close. 



On 8th September, to 



BELVOIR PARK. 



A beautifully fine afternoon, and the prospect of a pleasant 

 ramble through the well-timbered grounds of Belvoir Park, 

 conduced to a very large muster of members and their friends 

 — the largest, indeed, in the records of the club. But the well- 

 kept grounds of Lord Deramore's demesne, with its trim walks 

 and shrubberies, are not the kind of place best adapted for 

 Field Club work, so although an enjoyable hour or two was 

 spent, little of a scientific nature could be effected. A visit was 

 made to the site of the old Bredagh Church, of which no 

 trace now remains, although the graveyard which surrounded 

 it is still in use. The old oak, over thirty feet in girth, from 

 which Lord Deramore derives his title, was also visited, and 

 after a short formal meeting the party retraced their steps, and 

 broke up. 



