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PRESIDENT S ADDRESS. 
feel grateful to him for reserving these important papers for our 
Society. 
Mr. A. W. Preston sent his Meteorological Notes for 1895, and 
Mr. A. Mayfield a list of Norfolk Mollusca, with several additions 
to the list already published. 
On March 17th, the Yarmouth Section of the Society held their 
Second Annual Meeting, under the presidency of the Rev. C. J. 
Lucas, at which several good papers were read. Many objects of 
interest were exhibited, and judging by the numerous attendance, 
this section seems in prosperous condition. 
You will observe that the past year has witnessed two new 
departures from the usual order of our proceedings : the visit and 
reception of a kindred Society, the North Staffordshire from the 
Midland Counties ; and the presence, by invitation, at one of our 
meetings, of another scientific club belonging to our own city. 
Tt is much to be hoped that these will not be isolated instances of 
intercourse between ourselves and other societies with similar 
objects to our own. 
We lose by death this year,— 
Frederic Kitton, Hon. F.R.M.S., one of our oldest members, who 
died on the 22nd of July, and of whom we print a short memoir, 
written by Mr. James Mottram. 
Henry Seebohm, F.L.S., F.Z.S., who died on the 26th of 
November. He was President of this Society for the session of 
1890 — 91, and Mr. Howard Saunders has kindly contributed the 
following notice of him. 
“ Henry Seebohm, who died at his residence in South Kensington, 
on the 26th November, 1895, was the son of a well-known member 
of the Society of Friends, and was descended from a family which, 
though associated with Germany for about two centuries, was of 
Swedish origin. His elder brother is Mr. Frederick Seebohm, 
of Hitchin, author of ‘ Lives of the Oxford Reformers,’ ‘ Village 
Communities,’ &c. Henry Seebohm, who was born at Bradford, 
in 1832, displayed from his boyhood a strong taste for natural 
history, and to this he devoted all the time that he could spare 
from business; but it was not until about 1872 that he was able 
