12
INTRODUCTION.
payable for registry of rules of a branch or
amendment of rules was reduced to 2.9. 6d. The
privileges of investing money with the Commis
sioners for the Reduction of the National Debt,
and of payment of sums up to £50 without letters
of administration, were to be granted to certified
societies only. An elaborate form of annual
return was provided. This Act was to be a tem
porary Act, if not renewed after one year.
17. In 1852, Industrial and Provident (or Co
operative) Societies were taken out of the control
of this Act, and a special Act passed in respect to
them (15 & 16 Yict. c. 31). In the same session
the Friendly Societies Act was continued and
slightly amended, and it was again continued in
1854. In 1853 (by 16 & 17 Yict. c. 123) the
societies which granted assurances exceeding
£200, &c., having been certified under old Acts,
were restricted from investing their funds with the
National Debt Commissioners, but received in
exchange fuller powers of general investment. In
1854 all societies which granted large assurances
were discharged from the Friendly Societies Acts
(17 & 18 Viet. c. 56J.
18. In 1855 the law of Friendly Societies was
again consolidated, with material amendments,
by the 18 & 19 Viet. c. 63, which continued to
be the principal statute to the commencement of
the Act of 1875, on 1st January, 1876. By that
Act the purposes for which a Friendly Society
might be established, Avcre restricted to life assur
ance, relief in old age, sickness and widowhood,
endowments, and such purposes (ejusdem generis)