8 INTRODUCTION • fits proposed to be used miglit be adopted with safety to all parties concerned. 11. This statute re-enacted the more important of the privileges conferred by that of 1793 on Friendly Societies, and in some particulars ex tended them. On the other hand, it required them to pay one guinea fee to the barrister for his certificate. It specified a list of securities upon which the funds might be invested ; it made provision against the incapacity or refusal to act of trustees; it authorized societies to pay small sums without the expense of adminis tration ; it substituted a summary remedy before justices for that in Chancery in the case of defaulting officers; it omitted the provision for the appointment of responsible householders as trustees, and for requiring tlicir consent to a dis solution of the society; and substituted for the certificate of experts, in cases of dissolution, the agreement of five-sixths of the members and of all those entitled to relief. It also provided that minors might be members, and that an annual audited statement of the funds should be prepared, of which each member should be entitled to a copy on payment of a sum not exceeding sixpence. 12. The Act of 1829 after reciting that it is “ desirable, for the better security of such societies, that correct calculations of tables of payment and allowances, dependent on the duration of sickness and the probabilities of human life, may be con structed for their assistance, and the present existing data on these subjects have been found