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TRANSACTIONS FOR THE YEARS 1895, 1896, 1897.

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The Honorary Treasurer's Accounts for 1895, 1896, 1897

xvii., xviii., xix.

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The Keltic Lanes of South Herefordshire, by Rev. M. G. Watkins

A new form of Pyrus, by Rev. A. Ley

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The Battle of Mortimer's Cross, by Rev. Joseph Barker

Battlefield Oak, or Gospel Oak, and the Blue Mantle Cottages, by

H. Cecil Moore

The Gospel Yew.-Note by George H. Piper

The Battle of Mortimer's Cross, by Flavell Edmunds
Curious experiences in Birds' Nesting, by Dr. R. Williams...

PAGE.

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Second Field Meeting. Tuesday, June 23rd.-The Works of the proposed Birmingham Water Supply from The Elan Valley in Wales ...

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A visit to the Works of the proposed Birmingham Water Supply from The Elan Valley in Wales, by H. Cecil Moore

The Physiography of the District, by H. Cecil Moore

150

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Pot-holes, and the erosion of Rock-basins, by Tom. D. La Touche
The Wire-Swing Bridge, Rare Birds, and Flora, by H. Cecil Moore
The remarkable deficiency of Rainfall in Herefordshire for nearly ten years,
ending Midsummer, 1896, by H. Southall

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The late extraordinary season 1894-5, including frosts, winds, and effects on vegetation, by H. Southall...

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Notes on Earth-temperatures and burst water pipes, by H. Cecil Moore
Third Field Meeting, Thursday, July 30th, Ladies' day.-The gorge of the
Teme at Downton ...

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Downton Castle and the Valley of the Teme, by Rev. Joseph Barker
Mollusca in the Teme Valley at Downton...

Fourth Field Meeting, Friday, August 28th, Droitwich

Analysis of the principal European mineral springs

by John Humphreys, F.L.S.

Notes on the Geology and Botany of the neighbourhood of Droitwich,

Droitwich and its salt springs, by Dr. Crespi

The Geology of Colwall district, with notes on the discovery of
Brine, by Edward Conder

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General remarks. Origin of salt, by H. Cecil Moore

Mollusca of Herefordshire. Notes respecting, by Arthur E. Boycott and Ernest W. W. Bowell

Annual Autumn Meeting, Thursday, November 19th, 1896
The Survival of Roman Place-names, by F. Haverfield
Watling Street in Shropshire, by Wm. Phillips

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Abundance of larvæ of Acherontia atropos, the Death's head moth..
A few notes on Fungi in the Alps, by T. Howse
The British Mycological Society

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The Earthquake of December 17th, 1896, by H. Cecil Moore, Robert Clarke, and Alfred Watkins

Dr. Davison's list of Questions on the occurrence of an Earthquake
Damage to Buildings in parishes of Herefordshire...

1897.

Annual Spring Meeting, Friday, April 23rd

236

Proposed alteration of Rule IX.

236

Archæological Survey of Herefordshire, Part 2, and of other Counties

237

First Field Meeting, Friday, May 27th. Wormesley and the Butt House, King's Pyon

238

Comments on Rev. W. E. T. Morgan's Notes

Botanical Notes on Olchon Dingle, the Black Mountains, and Cusop Dingle,
by Rev. A. Ley

Natural History Notes on the district, by W. E. de Winton
Heights in Herefordshire, by H. Cecil Moore

PAGE. 242

Notes on Wormesley Church, by Rev. A. Relton

Notes on Wormesley Priory, by Rev. R. Hyett Warner

2441

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Second Field Meeting, Thursday, June 17th. Olchon Valley and the Black
Mountains

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257

Notes on Olchon, by Rev. W. E. T. Morgan

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Some few principal heights in the adjacent counties, by H. Cecil Moore
The Diamond Jubilee Beacon-fires on Jnne 22nd, 1897

Slight Earthquake on July 19th, 1897

Notes on Entomology

Third Field Meeting, Thursday, July 29th, 1897. Dudley.

Notes on Dudley Castle, by Wm. Madeley

Dudley, Geology of the district, the caverns, &c., by H. Cecil Moore
Fourth Field Meeting, Friday, August 27th, 1897. Wyre Forest, Bewdley,
Ribbesford Church, and the " Hermitage" at Blackstone
Archæological Survey of Herefordshire. Part II., Mediæval
Evening Meeting, Thursday, October 28th, 1897

The preparation of Marine animals and plants as transparent lantern slides,
by Dr. H. C. Sorby

Annual Autumnal Meeting, Tuesday, December 7th, 1897 ...

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Rare and Interesting Mosses in the neighbourhood of Kington, by Rev.
C. H. Binstead

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Note on a Contribution to the Fauna of Herefordshire-Mollusca
Rainfall at the Brecon Beacons

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The Passage Beds at Ledbury, by George H. Piper, F.G.S.
INDEX OF VOLUME OF TRANSACTIONS, 1893 and 1894
INDEX OF VOLUME OF TRANSACTIONS, 1895, 1896, and 1897
EIGHT EXTRA PAPERS AT THE END OF THE VOLume.
1 Address of the President, H. Cecil Moore, April 22nd, 1897
2 Roman Coins found in Herefordshire. By H. Cecil Moore

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3 Great hoard of Roman Coins found at Bishop's Wood. By Mary E. Bagnall-Oakeley

4 Pyrus minima, with a plate, by Rev. Augustin Ley

5 Second Report of Parish Registers, with Calendar of Registers...

222

6 Photographic Survey of England and Wales

6

7 Ethnographic Survey of the United Kingdom. Form of Schedule

18

8 The Collection, preservation, and Systematic Registration of Photographs of Geological interest in the United Kingdom

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Transactions of the Woolhope Club

FOR 1893-94.

The following review of the Volume 1893-1894 appeared in The Hereford Journal of October 10th, 1896.

Two years ago we had the pleasure of putting together a lengthy review of the Transactions of the Woolhope Club for 1890, 91-92. We now have equal pleasure in reviewing the volume for 1893-4. This volume is particularly worthy of notice, as it is the sixth edited by Mr. Henry Cecil Moore, the President of the Club for this year (1896). These six volumes cover no fewer than 18 years. Not many editors have such a record, and we venture to hope that Mr. Moore will live to edit many other volumes, and that his connection with the Club, to which he has generously devoted so many thousand valuable and laborious hours, will end only with his life, and that we trust will not be for many long years.

The present volume is large, and full of valuable matter. It contains 260 closely printed pages of reports and articles, besides 89 pages of "Additions to the Flora of Herefordshire" from the pen of that distinguished and accurate observer, the Rev. Augustin Ley, of Sellack. There are also two long but invaluable indexes of the archæological papers published in England in 1893 and 1894.

We should be doing scant justice to the editor were we not to congratulate him on the careful editing of this large and well-printed volume. The labour he has faced so cheerfully is enormous, while the correspondence it has entailed is very trying; a single article may mean the thought and research of many months. Careful editing is not the least claim the present volume has on the reader's attention. Reading proofs, though mere child's play to the practised writer, especially should he, like the author of this review, have contributed hundreds of long articles to quarterlies and magazines, is not easy to the beginner. The literary tyro may have a dozen flagrant misprints staring him full in the face, but he passes them over unheeded, whereas the practised proof reader pounces upon them like the hawk on her quarry. We took up the Transactions of a far larger and more aristocratic club than the Woolhope; the editor is a barrister, a Master of Arts, and heir to an earldom; the president is even more aristocratic, while the treasurer is an M.A. and F. R.S. Well, we turned to a paper on Art by a Master of Arts of eminence, and we found Zurburan instead of Zurbaran; Velaspez in the next line for Velasquez; Georgione for Giorgione; Rafael for Raphael or Raffaelle; Duke Arbino for, we presume, the Duke d'Urbino; Georgione again lower down, and Sansorine for Sansovino, while, quite as horrible, there stared at us Annibal

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