THE AGASSIZ ASSOCIATION 



39i 



Helps over Hard Places. 



We gratefully acknowledge the fol- 

 lowing substantial aids and encourage- 

 ments in the work of The Agassiz As- 

 sociation : 



Honorable Zenas Crane $100.00 



Mr. Ellis 15. Noyes 2.00 



The Johnston Chapter i.oo 



A Friend 25.00 



Mr. Ellis B. Noyes 1.00 



A Friend 10.00 



Honorable Francis O. Winslow . . 10.00 

 Honorable George P. McLean . . . 5.00 



Miss Virginia liutler 5.00 



Mr. William F. Decker 5.00 



Miss Francis H. Errett 50.00 



Mr. Arthur A. Carey 100.00 



Mr. Arthur L. DeGroff 25.00 



Mrs. E. H. Hooker io.oo 



A Friend 20.00 



Mrs. Francis Jenkins Danforth . . 5.00 



Mr. Ellis B. Noyes 1.00 



Mr. Arthur F. Estabrook 25.00 



Contributed Specimens. 



Mr. Harry W. Strock, Dorset, Ohio: 

 potato balls. 



Miss Lenore Woodworth, Jefferson, 

 Ohio : potato ball. 



Mr. Oscar Hagen, Salt Lake City, 

 Utah : specimens petrified wood, grass 

 and worms, and Mormon nails. 



Miss Mary E. Loftus, Jefferson, Ohio : 

 potato balls. 



Miss Eleanor Gay. Tunkhannock. 

 Pennsylvania : potato balls. 



Mr. E. F. Hammond, Conneaut, Ohio: 

 potato balls. 



Mr. J. J. Bruehlman, Dorset, Ohio: 

 potato balls. 



Mrs. Chas. F. Jones, Springdale, Con- 

 necticut : old-time nature book. 



Foss' Market, Stamford, Connecticut : 

 curious banana growth and unusual 

 spider. 



Mr. William I \ Seal. Delair, New Jer- 

 sey : aquatic plants. 



Professor Edgar T. Wherry, Assistant 

 Curator of Mineralogy, United States 

 National Museum, Washington, D. C. : 

 two specimens petrified wood. 



Mr. George V. Nash, New York Bo- 

 tanical Garden, New York City : leaves 

 of Bryophyllum calicynum. 



Professor Alfred W. Pike, Stamford, 

 Connecticut : "New York Tribune'' sup- 

 plement of eight pages of lectures by 

 Louis Agassiz at Cambridge — not dated 

 but about 1872 or 1873. 



Charles H. Crandall, Stamford, Con- 

 necticut : large piece of pink quartz. 



Miss C. F. Curtiss, South Britain, 

 Connecticut : two specimens of petrified 

 wood. 



An Unusually Interesting Rock List. 



Ward's Natural Science Establish- 

 ment, Rochester, New York, has re- 

 cently issued an unusually interesting 

 price list of rocks. It is a check list as 

 well as a price list. It will be studied 

 with deep interest by many of our 

 lovers of minerals, since not only the 

 rock but the locality is given. Send 

 for a free copy and mention The Guide 

 to Nature. 



On the death of the oldest son of 

 Charles Darwin, the relics of the great 

 naturalist, the portraits, medals, note- 

 books, manuscripts, and family pa- 

 pers, have passed into the keeping of 

 another member of the family, C. Gal- 

 ton Darwin. 



Low and soft, or insistent, loud. 



Nature's voice may e'er be heard 

 By those who, lone, or in a crowd. 



Attune their ear to her spoken word. 



— Emma Peirce. 



Please remember this educational uplifting work in making your will. 



Form of Irqurat to tlir AHBonatton 



/ hereby give and bequeath to The Agassiz Association, an incor- 

 porated association, having its principal executive office at ArcAdiA, 

 in Sound Beacli, in the town of Greenwich, Connecticut, the sum of 

 dollars. 



