RECORDS OF MEETINGS OF 1907 



341 



Robert E. Jennings, 



Mary Sutton Macy, M. D., 



V. Everit jNIacy, 



C. S. Mellen, 



William T. Meredith, 



John G. Milburn, 



Henry Parish, 



Thomas W. PearsalJ, 



Robert Pearle, 



Philip Bernard Philipp, 



Edward Russ, 



Paul J. Sachs, 



Charles R. Saul, 



Fred Sauter, 



Jacob H. Schiff, 



George S. Scott, 



Mrs. John C. Shaw, 



Charles Size, Jr., 



Benson B. Sloan, 



Charles F. Smillie, 



Elbridge G. Snow, 



C. Amory Stevens, 



Elizabeth M. Sturgis, 



George Taylor, 



Nikola Tesla, 



Benjamin Thaw, 



Mrs. Frederick F. Thompson, 



Rev. C. C. T"ffany, D. D., 



Herbert L. Wheeler, 



Miss M. B. W'ilson, 



Isidor W^ormser, 



George H. Yeaman, 



Jersey City, N. J., 



101 West 80th Street, 



Scarborough, N. Y., 



389 W^hitney Ave., New Haven, Conn., 



38 W^est 50th Street, 



16 West 10th Street, 



52 Wall Street, 



Black Rock, Conn., 



160 West 59th Street, 



327 Central Park West, 



Hoboken, N. J., 



468 WVst 142nd Street, 



1 West 69th Street, 



42 Bleeker Street, 



52 William Street, 



28 West 57th Street, 

 317 Convent Avenue, 

 19 West 50th Street, 

 141 East 36th Street, 



29 East 38th Street, 

 155 W'est 58th Street, 

 50 Broad Street, 



131 Mikon St., Brookl}ii, N. Y., 



8 West 126th Street, 



W'aldorf Astoria Hotel, 



1046 Fifth Avenue, 



283 INIadison Avenue, 



301 West 106th Street, 



12 West 46th Street, 



72 East 77th Street, 



836 Fifth Avenue, 



44 Wall Street. 



The committee on a memorial to Professor Moissan presented through 

 its chairman. Professor James F. Kemp, a report which was accepted and 

 on motion ordered published in the annals. The report was as follows: 



The death of Professor Henri Moissan, of Paris, has removed from the 

 roll of Honorary ^Members of the New York Academy of Sciences, one of its 

 most distinguished names. The Academy desires to record its profound 

 appreciation of his life and works and its deep sense of the great loss which 

 Science has sustained in the termination of his labors. 



I 



