12 
REPORT OF THE 
income, the Council earnestly solicit contributions from those 
who have not already subscribed to the Museum Enlargement 
Fund. 
It will he in the recollection of the members that, at the last 
annual meeting of the Society, a subscription was proposed for 
the purpose of erecting some permanent memorial of the esteem 
and respect entertained for the late Rev. Charles AYellbeloved. 
A considerable sum having been collected for this purpose, 
from members of the Society and other friends, the Committee 
appointed to carry out the wishes of the subscribers obtained 
a copy of the only existing portrait of Mr. Wellbeloved, and 
presented this, with a marble commemorative tablet, to the 
Society, recommending that the former should be suspended in 
the Yestihule of the Museum, and the latter fixed in a promin¬ 
ent position in the Hospitium. Both these recommendations 
have been carried out. 
The principal additions to the Library dm-ing the past year, 
have consisted of Me. Lauchlan’s great work on the Roman 
Remains in the North of England, presented by His Grace the 
Duke of Northumberland, and Facsimiles of Select Egyptian 
Papyri, in the Collection of the British Museum,” presented 
hv the Trustees of that Institution. The Committee of the 
^^Wellbeloved Memorial Fund” have also presented to the 
Library two important works purchased by them at the sale of 
the late Mr. M^ellbeloved’s Library, with the surplus of the fund 
at their disposal. These are Mr. Wellbeloved’s copies of Drake’s 
Eboracum,” and Horsley’s Britannia Romana,” both en¬ 
riched with MS. notes and additional plates by their late owner. 
This circumstance, and the fact of their having belonged to 
one who for so many years took the most active interest in this 
Society, must render these volumes very interesting additions 
to its Librarv. Two other volumes from the same source have 
also been presented, namely, Eckhel’s Numi Anecdoti,” and 
Yulpes’ Strumenti Chirurgici,” the latter especially valuable 
as serving to elucidate the examples of Roman surgical instru¬ 
ments, contained in the Museum. For these books the Society 
is indebted to Mr. Wellbeloved’s successor as Curator of Anti¬ 
quities, the Rev. John Kenrick. 
