bo 
(9 0) 
LIST OF PAPERS TO BE READ. 
ADDRESS BY THE RETIRING PRESIDENT, 
PROFESSOR C. A. WALDO, 
At7o’clock Thursday evening. 
Subject: ‘‘The Services of Mathematies.’’ 
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 papers will be presented “pari passu’’ in sectional meetings. When a 
paper is called and the reader is not present, it will be dronped 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 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 the order of the Academy, no paper can he read until an abstract of its contents 
or the written paper has been placed in the hands of the Secretary. 
On 
GENERAL SUBJECTS. 
Woollen’s Garden of Birds and Botany, 10m........ W. W. Woollen. 
Plans for the New Buildings of the Biological Station, 10 m. 
C. H. Eigenmann and A. C. Yoder. 
Explorations in the Caves of Missouri and Kentucky, 15 m. 
C. H. Higenmann. 
Notes on Indigestible Structures in Articles of a Vegetable 
DIOR COE. coAihs it arate ecoregion aioe a eas ale ae eee John S. Wright. 
The Action of Mercury and Amalgams on Aluminum, 10 m. 
G. W. Benton. 
Field Experiments with Formalin, 8 m............ M. B. Thomas. 
Resistance of Cereal Smuts to Formalin and Hot Water, 15 m. 
Wm. Stuart. 
The Cell Lineage of Podarke, with considerations on Cleavage 
dmpwemerals VO. Wy... esis avtyesey ate abe spas a se, o05) a teens eis eee OO OS Ce De 
wake. Maxinicuckee): LO camisn sere yd: inn sete ete: rari eye te J. T. Seovell. 
