I/O REPORT OF THE SECRETARY GENERAL. 



6.20 p. m., the delegates will leave Hotel Copley Plaza in taxicabs for 

 the Boston City Club. The ladies will leave at the same hour for the 

 Women's City Club. 



6.30 p. m., dinner in honor of the delegates by the Boston Chamber 

 of Commerce at the Boston City Club, President Louis K. Liggett, pre- 

 siding. The mayor will welcome the delegates on behalf of the city 

 Dinner to the ladies of the party by the Women's City Club. 



8.50 p. m., the two sections will leave the Boston City Club and the 

 Women's City Club, meeting at the State House at 9 p. m. for reception 

 by his excellency the governor of Massachusetts and his staff. 



10 to 10.30 p. m., delegates will leave State House in taxicabs for the 

 Hotel Copley Plaza. 



SUNDAY, JANUARY 16. 



In the morning the delegates will pursue their own pleasure. Ar- 

 rangements have been made for a private opening of the Boston Museum 

 of Fine Arts from 11 to 12 o'clock, and also for a visit to the Forsyth 

 Dental Infirmary. 



12.30 p. m., luncheon to the delegates by his honor the mayor at the 

 Hotel Copley Plaza. 



2.45 p. m., departure for New York. 



The director general of the Pan American Union, Mr. John Barrett, 

 who had accompanied the party as far as New York in his official capacity 

 as secretary general of the congress, was compelled by illness, in the form 

 of a sudden attack of the grippe, to leave the party at that point. His 

 place as official representative of the executive committee of the congress 

 was taken by Mr. Phillips, Third Assistant Secretary of State and chair- 

 man ex officio of the executive committee. The delegates, on their 

 arrival at the Copley Plaza, were greeted by Secretary Phillips. 



SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 1916. 



After breakfast the delegates were formally welcomed by Mr. Wilcox, 

 representing Mayor Curley, and were then carried for a visit to the labo- 

 ratories of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the new Harvard 

 Medical School, for a tour along Charles River, over the Emerson Memo- 

 rial Bridge and around the stadium, through the freshman dormitories, 

 to the Harvard law school, law school library and the university museum, 

 and through Memorial Hall (students' dining hall) to the new Widener 

 Library where a photograph of the party was taken. Luncheon was 

 tendered the ladies of the party at i p. m. at the home of Mrs. President 



