OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY. 
595 
BENEVOLENT FUND ACCOUNT EOB THE YEAE 1865. 
Subscriptions 
Donations .. 
Dividends.. 
£. s. d. £. s. d. 
215 15 0 
135 1 0 
- 350 16 0 
. 189 9 11 
f 
/ 
/ 
/ 
/ 
' / 
/ 
/ 
/ 
/__—--—-£540 5 11 
£. s. d. 
Member and family, late at 
Southampton . 20 0 0 
An Orphan Daughter at 
Southampton . 10 0 0 
Widow of a Member at 
Sunderland. £25 0 
Do. second grant, to 
assist in getting her 
child into the Bri¬ 
tish Orphan Asy¬ 
lum.... 10 10 
- 35 10 0 
Purchase of one of the or¬ 
phans of the late William 
Bentley, London, into the 
British Orphan Asylum... 105 0 0 
on bis life. 
1 
11 
O 
Member at Brighton. 
25 
0 
0 
Widow of a late Member 
at Birmingham . 
5 
0 
0 
Two London Members £15 
each . 
30 
0 
0 
First Quarter’s Annuities 
to Mrs. Goldfinch and 
Mr. David Peart. 
15 
0 
0 
Printing and Stationery ... 
19 
15 
6 
Postage. 
11 
5 
6 
Advertisements . 
1 
13 
6 
Sundries . 
0 
10 
Q 
o 
Purchase of £290. 11s. 4 d. 
Consols. 
260 
0 
0 
£540 5 
11 
We, tlie undersigned Auditors, have examined the Accounts of tlie Pharmaceutical 
Society, and find them correct agreeably with the foregoing statement, and that, as 
shown by the Books of the Society, there was standing in the names of the Trustees 
of the Society, at the Bank of England, on the 31st of December, 1865 :— 
On Account of the General Fund, New 3 per Cents.£2702 4 9 
Life Members’ Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols. 2611 11 7 
Benevolent Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols. 6730 16 8 
Bell Memorial Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols. 2050 0 0 
Frederick Bale ox, 
William Edwaed Bucket, 
Eobert Westwood, 
Benjamin M. Tippett, 
March otli, 1866. 
1 
> Auditors. 
Figures speak for themselves, and there is therefore but little occasion for 
the Council to offer any remarks on the financial statement which has just 
been read ; it has been already published in the ‘Pharmaceutical Journal, 
and consequently long enough in the hands of all members of the Society to 
be analysed, and, as the Council hope, found satisfactory. The balance- 
sheet, perhaps, may be regarded as the pulse of the body corporate, and on 
this occasion resembles the pulse of a sound hearty man in robust health— 
the sort of man in whom insurance offices take especial delight. It adds to 
the evidence w r hieh has been growing up during the last two or three years, 
