35G 
Report of the Council, 
1840), Mr. Thomas Brown, of Uckfield (a member since 1841), 
Colonel F. Fane, of Fulbeck Hall, Grantham, Mr. R. G. F. Howard, 
of Temple Bruer, Lincoln, and Mr. Wm. Wakefield, of Kendal. 
4 . These and other changes bring the total number of Governors 
and Members now on the Register to 11,126, divided as follows : 
25 Foundation Life Governors (Members elected before the 
granting of the Charter on March 26, 1840) ; 
7 4 Governors paying an annual subscription of 51. ; 
82 Life Governors ; 
7,138 Members paying an annual subscription of 11. ) 
3,706 Life Members ; 
80 Life Members by Examination ; 
21 Honorary Members. 
11,126 Total number of Governors and Members ; 
or a net increase of 76 Members during the year. 
5 . A List of Governors and Members of the Society on the 
Register at December 31, 1892, arranged according to the counties 
in which they reside, has recently been issued, and a copy will be 
sent to any member on application. Members are particularly 
invited to interest themselves in obtaining new subscribers to the 
Society, and in this connection the new County list will doubtless 
be found of service. 
6. The two vacancies upon the Council caused by the deaths of 
the Duke of Bedford and of Mr. Faunce De Laune have been tilled 
up by the election of the Duke of Devonshire, K.G., and of Mr. 
F. S. W. Cornwallis, M.P., of Linton Park, Maidstone. 
7 . The Council have unanimously elected the Hon. Cecil T. 
Parker as Honorary Director of the Society’s Country Meetings for 
three years, in succession to Sir Jacob Wilson, who has retired from 
that position ; and they have every reason to believe that under 
Mr. Parker’s management the efficiency of the Society’s Meetings 
will be fully maintained. 
8. The accounts for the year 1892 have been examined and 
certified by the Auditors and Accountants of the Society, and are 
published in the current number of the J ournal. The final results 
of the working of the year are, that after writing off the customary 
percentages for depreciation, the Society’s assets amounted at 
December 31, 1892, to 36,858^. 18s. 3 d., as against 34,934^. 11s. 6d. 
at the end of 1891. 
9 . Three volumes of the new series of the Society’s Journal have 
now been issued, and the Council have reason to know that its issue 
in a quarterly form has been much appreciated by the members. 
The free receipt of the Journal has always been regarded as one of 
the most valuable privileges which members receive in return for 
their annual subscriptions, and though the quarterly Journal must 
