518 The Fifty -Ninth General Meeting. 



is very shortly to meet at Stoiieheiige to go into the matter on 

 the spot.^ 



''Publications. — During 1911 Nos. 115 and 116 of Vol. xxxvii. 

 of the Magazine were issued to Members, the latter number con- 

 taining a complete descriptive Catalogue of the printed maps of 

 "Wiltshire from 1576 to 1885. The usual instalment of the 

 Wiltshire Inquisitiones Post Mortem, Part III., accompanied the 

 Magazine, and in addition, Part II. of the Catalogue of Antigiuities- 

 in the Museum at Devizes, very fully illustrated with sixty-nine 

 plates, was issued gratis to Members. This completes the work 

 begun in 1896 by the publication of Part I., containing the account 

 of the Stourhead Collection. It is hoped that the two parts taken 

 together may be considered a not unworthy account of the Society's 

 very valuable arch^ological collections. The cost of printing this 

 catalogue, amounting to £91, was borne partly by the General 

 Fund and partly by the Museum Maintenance Fund. The Society 

 has to thank Mr. G. LI. Palmer for a contribution of £5 towards 

 the cost of the ilhistrations of the paper on Bewley Court, in the 

 June number of the Magazine, whilst a part of the expense of the ■ 

 illustrations of Clyffe Pypard and Winterbourne Bassett Churches 

 has been borne by the Pev, E. H. Goddard and the Eev. H. G. 0. 

 Kendall. 



" The Annual Meeting at Malmesbury last year was very suc- 

 cessful, thanks to the efforts of the Eev. F. H. Manley, Mr. C. Moir^ 

 and the Kev.W. Symonds,and the considerable balance of £14 Os.Gf^. 

 was, after paying all expenses, handed over by the Local Committee 

 to the General Fund of the Society. We meet this year at Devizes, 

 witli the certainty that the arrangements in the hands of Mr. 

 B. H. Cunnington, in his triple capacity as Mayor of Devizes, as 

 an officer of the Society, and as Local Secretary for the Meeting, 

 will be all that could be wished. 



"Ed. H. Goddard, Hon. Secretary.'' 



^ This Committee, consisting of eight members, representing the Society 

 of Antiquaries, the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, and 

 the Wiltshire Archaeological Society, subsequently met at Stonehenge on 

 July 23rd, 1912, and recommended that the stones of the outer circle now 

 leaning outwards should be secured by concreting their bases, and where 

 it seemed necessary for safety should be restored to the perpendicular. 



