25. 



LIST OF PAPERS TO BE READ. 



ADDRESS BY THE RETIRING PRESIDENT, 



MR. A. W. BUTLER, 



At 7 o'clock Friday evening-. 

 Subject — " Indiana: A Century of Changes in the Aspects of Nature. 



AT THE SAME HOUR, BY REQUEST, 



MR. W. W. PFRIMMER 



Will read a new poem. Subject—" The Naturalist." 



The address has been placed at this early hour in order that other engagements for the 

 usual hours of evening entertainment may not keep the members of the Academy and 

 their friends from being present. 



The following papers will be read in the order in which they appear on the program, 

 except that certain portions of the program will be presented pari passu in sectional meet- 

 ings. When a paper is called and the reader is not present, it will be dropped to the end of 

 the list, unless by mutual agreement an exchange can be made with another whose time is 

 approximately the same. Where no statement of time was sent with the papers, they have 

 been uniformly assigned ten minutes. Opportunity will be given after the reading of each 

 paper for a brief discussion. 



N. B. — By order nf the Academy no paper can he read tmtil an abstract of its contents or the 

 written paper has heen placed in the hands of the Secretary. 



GENERAL SUBJECTS. 



1. Unconscious mental cerebration, 5 m ('. E. Newlin 



2. Human physiology in its relation to biology, 15 m Guido Bell 



3. A means of preventing hog cholera, 5 m D. W. Dennis 



4. The Hopkins Seaside Laboratory at Pacific Grove, Cal., 10 m. .B. M. Davis 



5. Infection by bread, 10 m Katherine E. Golden 



6. Simple apparatus for photo-micrography, 5 m M. J. Golden. 



7. Sanitary science in the modern college, 10 m Severance Bnrrage 



