92 Fortieth Annual Meeting 



peachable loyalty to his loyal friends, and more than all 

 else, the wealth of affection he lavished in unstinted meas- 

 ure on his family and those near and dear, were the domi- 

 nating influences of his life and the keynote to his charac- 

 ter, the character of a strong, honest, moral, clean, and 

 manly man. 



If I have failed adequately to express or convey to you 

 my conception and estimate of the character of our late 

 member, if I have failed faithfully to portray his life and 

 personality as they appealed to me and as I knew them to 

 be, I at least have tried not to exaggerate in any way. It 

 has been necessary only to speak the simple truth. 



Well may we all hope and pray that when our final ac- 

 counts are cast up, when the searchlight is thrown on our 

 lives and we are being reviewed and weighed and measured 

 and analyzed, it may be said of us truthfully that we ac- 

 complished as much for mankind as he accomplished, that 

 we did as much good in the world at large as he did, and 

 finally, that as many good things may be said of us as may 

 be said truthfully of our late beloved friend and associate 

 Frank Nelson Clark. 



Seymour Bower. 



