OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY 
693 
BENEVOLENT FUND ACCOUNT FOR THE YEAR 1866. 
£. 8. d. £. s. d. 
Subscriptions .;. 391 6 0 
Donations. 90 16 6 
- 482 2 6 
Dividends. 202 10 8 
£. 5. d. 
One Year’s Annuities to 
Mrs. Goldfinch and David 
Peart. 60 0 0 
One Quarter’s Annuities to 
Wm. Jacobs Froom and 
Thomas Novis. 16 0 0 
Widow (with one child, a 
cripple) of a late Member 
at Ramsgate; husband 
was drowned . 20 0 0 
Member, late at Pontefract, 
with wife and three chil¬ 
dren . 25 0 0 
Widow of a late Member at 
Sunderland towards ex¬ 
penses in getting her 
child in an Orphan Asy¬ 
lum. 10 0 0 
Member, late at Bury St. 
Edmunds . 10 0 0 
Widow of a Member late at 
Dover. 21 0 0 
Member, late at Twicken¬ 
ham, with wife and two 
children (wife in a con¬ 
sumption, sou suffering 
from an affection of the 
heart) . 
15 
0 
0 
Widow of a Member, late 
at Poplar . 
15 
0 
0 
Premium on the orphan 
Bentley’s Policy of As- 
surance . 
1 
11 
2 
Advertisements . 
3 
1 
0 
Postage. 
10 
0 
0 
Printing and Stationery ... 
13 
17 
6 
Purchase of Consols— 
£519. 3s. U . 
458 
6 
11 
Balance in Treasurer’s 
hands. 
6 
16 
7 
£684 
Invested in Consols, 81st December, 1865 . 6,730 16 8 
Purchase of Consols, as above . 519 3 4 
£7,250 0 0 
We, the undersigned Auditors, have examined the Accounts of the Pharmaceutical 
Society, and find them correct agreeably with the foregoing statement, and that, as 
shown by the boohs 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, 1866 :— 
On account of the General Fund, New 3 per Cents. £4000 
Life Members’ Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols . 2650 
Benevolent Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols . 7250 
Bell Memorial Fund, 3 per Cent. Consols . 2050 
14 ^^ MarcTi^ 1867 . 
Feederick Bareon, 
"Walter Breton, 
John B. Mackey, 
William McCulloch,[ 
Bobeet Westwood, 
Auditors. 
It must always be a matter of satisfaction to the Council to commence the 
annual report with a good balance sheet, but in a time like the present, of 
agitation, expectation, and hope, it is especially so, as it gives evidence of the 
confidence reposed in this Society,—a confidence that whatever future regu- 
