NOTICES TO FELLOWS. cxiii 



6. FORM OF BEQUEST. 



I give and bequeath to the Treasurer for the time being of the Royal 

 Horticultural Society, London, the sum of £ , to be paid out of 



such part of my personal estate as I can lawfully charge with the payment 

 of such legacy, and to be paid free of legacy duty, within six months of 

 my decease ; the receipt of such Treasurer to be a sufficient discharge 

 for the same. And I declare that the said legacy shall be applied towards 

 [the general purposes of the Society].* 



7. PRIVILEGES OF CHEMICAL ANALYSIS. 



Instructions are contained in the " Book of Arrangements," 1908. 



8. LIST OF FELLOWS. 



A list of all the Fellows of the Society is sent out in January. 

 Fellows are requested to look at their own names in it, and if in any way 

 these are incorrect, or the addresses insufficient, they are requested to inform 

 the Secretary at once. Another use which all Fellows might make of this 

 list is to consult it with reference to their friends' names, and if any of 

 them are not found recorded therein they might endeavour to enlist their 

 sympathies with the Society, and obtain their consent to propose them as 

 Fellows forthwith. Forms of Nomination, and of the Privileges of 

 Fellows, are bound in with every number of the Jouenal and the 

 " Book of Arrangements." 



9. NEW FELLOWS. 



On March 6 next the Society completes its 104 fch year, and before 

 that day arrives, will all the Fellows do their best to extend the useful- 

 ness of the Society by enlisting the sympathy of all their friends and 

 persuading them to join the ranks of the Society ? A list of the 

 privileges of Fellows will be found at page 14 in the " Book of Arrange- 

 ments," and just a line addressed to the Secretary R.H.S., Vincent 

 Square, Westminster, containing the name and address of the proposed 

 new Fellow will suffice. Should it be preferred, the Secretary will, upon 

 receipt of a postcard or letter giving the name and address of any 

 persons likely to join the Society, write direct and invite them to allow 

 their names to be proposed for election. 



10. AN APPEAL. 



What has been accomplished for the Society since 1887 is largely due 

 to the unwearied assistance afforded by a small proportion of the Fellows ; 

 but as all belong to the same Society, so it behoves each one to do what 

 he or she can to further its interests, especially in : — 



* Any special directions or conditions which the testator may wish to be attached 

 to the bequest may be substituted for the words in brackets. 



G G 



