130 
PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY. 
Twelve other Members of the Council — Lionel S. Beale, Esq., M.B., 
F.B.C.P., F.B.S. ; Alfred W. Bennett, Esq., M.A., B.Sc., V.P.L.S. ; 
Eev. Edmund Carr, M. A., F.B.Met.S. ; Edward Uadswell, Esq. ; Charles 
Haughton Gill, Esq., F.C.S. ; Bichard G. Hebb, Esq., M.A., M.D., 
F.K.O.P. ; George C. Karop, Esq., M.B.C.S. ; Edward Milles Nelson, 
Esq. ; Thomas H. Powell, Esq. ; Prof. Urban Pritchard, M.D. ; Frederic 
H. Ward, Esq., M.B.C.S. ; Thomas Charters White, Esq., M.B.C.S., 
L.U.S. 
The President said that two Auditors of the accounts would have to 
be appointed that evening, and on behalf of the Council he nominated 
Mr. W. T. Suffolk to that office. 
Mr. J. M. Allen was then duly appointed Auditor on behalf of the 
Fellows of the Society, upon the nomination of the Bev. Canon Carr, 
seconded by Mr. J. J. Yesey. 
The meeting was then adjourned. 
New Fellows : — Ur. Algernon S. Barnes, Jr., Messrs. Joseph Blun- 
dell and James William Gifford, and Prof. Frank S. Johnson. 
Annual Meeting, held 18th January, 1893, at 20, Hanover Square, 
the President (Ur. B. Braithwaite, F.L.S.) in the Chair. 
The Minutes of the Meeting of 21st Uecember last were read and 
confirmed, and were signed by the President. 
The List of Donations (exclusive of exchanges and reprints) 
received since the last meeting was submitted, and the thanks of the 
Society were given to the Uonors. 
From 
Reports of the Birmingham Natural History and Microscopical 
Society. (8vo, Birmingham, 1866-91) The Society. 
The Aquarian Naturalist. By T. Rymer Jones, xx. and 
480 pp., 8 pis. (8vo, London, 1858) Mr. W. T. Suffolk. 
Prof. F. Jeffrey Bell read to the meeting a letter which the 
Council had received from the Bev. Bichard Owen, acknowledging 
the receipt of the vote of condolence passed at the last meeting of the 
Society with reference to the death of the late Sir Bichard Owen, their 
first President. 
Prof. Bell also read a letter addressed to the Council by Sir Henry 
Trueman Wood, Secretary of the Boyal Commission for the Chicago 
Exhibition, asking if the Society would be inclined to lend a collection 
of photomicrographs for the forthcoming Exhibition at Chicago. As it 
was stated that they must be sent in before the end of the present 
month, the Council felt it would be impossible for them to deal with 
the matter properly in the time at disposal, but if any of the Fellows 
