Eleventh Meeting, Friday Evening, 

 March 3rd, 1911 



Lyman Lee, B.A., President, in the chair. 



Present, the Executive Council and a large audience. 



Minutes of previous meeting read and confirmed. 



Three propositions for membership were presented and 

 pajssed on to next meeting for election. 



IMr. Lee reported that f^jvorable arrangements had been 

 made whereby the Council hoped to secure a large room 

 for lecture purposes and additional rooms for the museum, 

 and stated in, detail the tei-ms. 



It was duly moved and seconded that the action of the 

 Council be approved, and that they be empowered to com- 

 plete the transaction. 



The President then introduced the Piev. John Morton, 

 whose subject was^ 



SCIENCE IN RELATION TO THE HIGHER ISSUES 

 OF LIFE. 



The end of human endeavor is life : more life and fuller. 

 These boys at their marbles, knees and knuckles on the 

 ground, are dra-wn there, and held, by the life that is in 

 the game. The thirst for a draught of life takes the reader 

 to his book, the musician to his music, and the pious to his 

 meditation. E. J. Campbell, of the City Temple, London, 

 offended many good people by say'wg that the drunlvard 

 gc€s to his cups in quest of life; but, though they needed 

 qualification, there was insight in the vrords. For the in- 

 stant the drunkard is carried out of his misery by the thrill 

 of the coming moment M'hen, at tJie taste of the liquor, he 



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