MARINE BIOLOGICAL STATION AT PORT ERIN. 45 
Museum adjoining the Station. Occasional public lectures 
are given in the Institution by members of the Committee. 
V.—Those who are entitled to work in the Station, 
when there is room, and after formal application to the 
Director, are: —(1) Annual Subscribers of one guinea or 
upwards to the funds (each guinea subscribed entitling to 
the use of a work place for three weeks), and (2) others 
who are not annual subscribers, but who pay the Treasurer 
10s. per week for the accommodation and privileges. 
Institutions, such as Universities and Museums, may 
become subscribers in order that a work place may be at 
the disposal of their students or staff for a certain period 
annually ; a subscription of two guineas will secure a work 
place for six weeks in the year, a subscription of five 
guineas for four months, and a subscription of £10 for the 
whole year. 
VI.—KEach worker is entitled to a work place opposite 
a window in the Laboratory, and may make use of 
the microscopes and other apparatus, and of the boats, 
dredges, tow-nets, &c., so far as is compatible with 
the claims of other workers, and with the routine work of 
the Station. 
VII.—Each worker will be allowed to use one pint of 
methylated spirit per week free. Any further amount 
required must be paid for. All dishes, jars, bottles, tubes, 
and other glass may be used freely, but must not be 
taken away from the Laboratory. Workers desirous of 
making, preserving, or taking away collections of marine 
animals and plants, can make special arrangements 
with the Director or Treasurer in regard to bottles and 
preservatives. Although workers in the Station are free 
te make their own collections at Port Erin, it must be 
clearly understood that (as in other Biological Stations) 
no specimens must be taken for such purposes from the 
