238 
BRITISH PHARMACEUTICAL CONFERRNCE. 
Proposed by Mr. Arnold (Norwich), seconded by Mr. King (Bath), and 
carried nem. con .:— 
“ That the meeting of the British Pharmaceutical Conference for 1869 be held at 
Exeter, concurrently with the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of 
Science.” 
The following were balloted for and unanimously elected officers of the Con¬ 
ference for the year 1868-9 :— 
President. 
D. Hanbury, F.R.S., F.L.S., etc., Plough Court, London, E.C. 
Vice-Presidents who have filled the office of President. 
PI. l)eane, F.L.S., Clapham Common, S. 
Prof. Bentley, F.L.S., M.R.C.S., 17, Bloomsbury Square, London, W.C. 
Vice-Presidents. 
W. W. Stoddart, F.G.S., Bristol. 
J. Ince, F.L.S., F.C.S., etc., London. 
G. Cooper, Exeter. 
PI. S. Evans, F.C.S., London. 
Treasurer. 
H. B. Brady, F.L.S., F.C.S., Mosley Street, Newcastle-on-Tyne. 
General Secretaries. 
Prof. Attfield, Ph.D., F.C.S., 17, Bloomsbury Square, London, W.C. 
R. Reynolds, F.C.S., Commercial Street, Leeds. 
Local Secretary. 
Matthew Husband, 95, Fore Street, Exeter. 
Committee. 
J.PI.Atherton, F.C.S., Nottingham, 
J. C. Brough, F.C.S , Kensingham. 
A. J. Caley, Norwich. 
M. Carteighe, F.C.S., London. 
T. B. Groves, F.C.S., Weymouth. 
J. Palk, Exeter. 
R. Parkinson, Ph.D., Bradford. 
G. F. Schacht, Clifton. 
F. Sutton, F.C.S., Norwich. 
Auditors. 
E. Arnold, F.C.S., Norwich. G. Cubitt, Norwich. 
Professor Attfield, on behalf of his brother officers, fellow-members from a 
distance, and himself, again thanked the Vice-President, Local Secretary, 
members of the Local Committee, and other Norwich members, for the cordi¬ 
ality and large-hearted hospitality with which they had been received. The 
meeting had been successful from all points of view : the papers had been good 
and numerous ; the discussion on the Pharmacy Act most useful ; the exhibi¬ 
tion of pharmaceutical novelties highly interesting. For the first time, in 
the history of the Conference, local members had invited to their homes, for 
the whole week, some one or more visitors, treating them with an amount of 
liberality and friendliness which was scarcely precedented. There "was not one 
of his brother members, from London and other towns, but had spoken in 
highly laudatory terms of the successful efforts of the Norwich members,— 
efforts which would render pleasantly memorable this 1868 meeting. 
