Johnson, §S. 
Jordan, D. S. 
Kenyon, A. M. 
Kern, F. D. 
King, R. M. 
McBeth, W. A. 
McBride, R. W. 
Mees, C. L. 
Millis, W. A. 
Moenkhaus, W. J. 
Montgomery, H. T. 
Moore, G. T. 
Moore, R. B. 
Morrison, EH. 
Mowrer, F. K. 
Noe, Fletcher M. 
Noyes, W. A. 
ay) 
Springer, Dr. A. 
Stoddard, Dr. S. P. 
Stoltz, Charles. 
Stoltz, Charles, Jr. 
Stone, W. E. 
Stuart, M. H. 
Swift, L. B. 
Taylor, F. B. 
Thomas, M. B. 
Thompson, Willis 8. 
Transeau, EH. N. 
Turner, W. P. 
Van Gorder, W. B. 
Waterman, Dr. L. D. 
Weems, M. L. 
Williamson, E. B. 
Woodhams, John W. 
Pohlman, A. G. Woollen, W. W. 
Potter, Dr. Theodore. Wright, John S., and wife. 
Ransom, J. H. Vounr, J.k. 
Rettger, L. J. Zimmer, H. P. 
Smith, E. R. 
Dr. A. L. Forey: It seems to me the Program Committee has shown 
particularly good judgment in the program it has provided, and in no way 
has that good judgment been better shown than in the selection of the 
Toastmaster for this evening. 
There is no man in Indiana who has had more influence upon the 
teachers of the State, upon the schools of the State; there is no man who 
has been closer to the hearts of his pupils. There is no man who has had 
more to do with the development of science in Indiana than has Professor 
David W. Dennis, of Earlham College, who will preside. (Applause. ) 
Pror. Daviy W. DenNIS: I am sure, ladies and gentlemen, that I 
wish more than any of you possibly can that all of that was true. 
In science we have many of us been very lately instructed by an em- 
inent Hoosier that nothing at all is settled, and I came to the conclusion 
this morning when recapitulation went overboard that perhaps it is so. 
But the records of the Indiana Academy of Science would furnish many 
exceptions to this rule. During these twenty-five years we have been 
settling a considerable number of questions; some of these have been 
settled so effectually that they have never come up again. For instance, 
