USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Brookline > Proceedings of the Brookline Historical Society at the annual meeting > Part 32
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The editor of the Philadelphia Chronicle wrote concerning her :- "The announcement of Mrs. Edmond's death will cause a pang of anguish in many hearts. Those who have read her sweet poems, and the children who have been entertained and instructed by her stories of "Willie Grant," "Over the Sea," "The Vase of Flowers," "Early Days," "Philip Gar- land," "The Forget-me-not," etc., will all be mourners. There was an ease and grace in Mrs. Edmond's compositions which made them agreeable and impressive. Their style was nothing careless, dashing or overwrought, which kept the reader disputing every moment with his reason and better judg- ment, but every scene and illustration harmonized with and deepened his conviction of right. And best of all, her private
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character was in harmony with the spirit her pen inculcated. The social and domestic pathway of her life was kept con- stantly cheerful and happy. Mrs. Edmond still lives in the hearts of her friends, and lives in her works."
Miss Harriet Woods, her life-long friend, author of "His- torical Sketches of Brookline," and an acceptable writer of prose and poetry, wrote of her :-
"This lovely first Sabbath in June has brought sorrow to many hearts, for today our dear friend, Mrs. Edmond, has been borne away to her long home. She made an effort to live for the sake of her family, and until a week ago had hoped to live till autumn, if no longer, but when the conviction fastened upon her that her days were numbered, she cheerfully resigned herself, made all her arrangements, gave her parting messages, tookleave of allher dear ones, and waited with long- ing hope the hour of her release. . . . Thus her lovely last hours left precious memories. She never seemed to dwell upon herself, or her sickness to those who came in, but always thought of others. Her death has left a void that no other life can fill. Since I was six years old I had known her in school and at home, and I never saw her temper ruffled. She has been the first to die of a class of six of us Sunday school scholars, who were baptized together, upwards of twenty years ago."
"Long ago she wrote thus of Christian hope :-
"Thanks be to God, though sin and strife Oppress us till our latest breath,
Life here is not our only life, And death is not forever death.
O joyful season ! welcome day !
That sees our earthly fetters riven; Speed, tardy hours, your dull delay,- Your faster flight, my sooner heaven."
And in that heaven she worships today, while we wait sorrow- ing a little longer."
Miss Woods wrote the following lines in memoriam :-
"Spring comes! The forms of life she loved Begin to stir, And not a butterfly or bud but brings Memories of her. All bright-hued flowers that bloom, the pink, The tulip and the rose,
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The sweet, wild berries of the wood, beside The brook that flows Through violet-scented meadows, and the breath Of south winds o'er the hill,- All earth awakening from its winter death Recalls her still. Whitsunday cometh silent, in the garb Of fragrant May And incense-breathing orchards stand again In white array. Sacred its memory ever; since her eyes Looked forth in calm delight On her last earthly Sabbath,-on the trees Arrayed in white; And ere June dawned upon the waiting earth, The summons given Called her from their fresh beauties, to the flowers Fadeless in heaven."
From the pen of her pastor, Rev. William Lamson, D. D., came the following just and beautiful tribute to the life and character of Mrs. Edmond :-
"Amanda M. Edmond is the name of one, who, not quite a year since, left us for her home above. She lives in the memory of friends, enshrined in the affections of many loving hearts, and needs for them, no record of her virtues. But it is never amiss to stop a moment beside the grave of de- parted worth and recall the excellence of one whom we have loved. It was on the first Sabbath of last June that we bore her sleeping body to the sanctuary in which she had delighted to worship, and thence to its last silent home.
"It seemed fitting that she, who so loved nature, to whom every bud and blossom and spire of grass had a charm, should see it for the last time in its dress of beauty, and feel that it smiled lovingly on her as she closed her eyes upon it. There is no gloom in such a burial.
"When quite young she developed an ability, uncommon for her years, and that ability grew till she became an accom- plished writer, widely known by the productions of her pen. Thousands who never saw her have been consoled and cheered by her sweet hymns, or instructed and guided by her stories for the young. Beside the many fugitive pieces scattered through papers and monthlies, she added ten choice volumes to our Sunday school literature, a volume to our religious
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biography, the memoir of the missionary, Mrs. Comstock, her early friend, and published a volume of poems, entitled, from the principal piece in it "The Broken Vow." She also edited for a series of years, the beautiful little annual, The Ladies' Almanac.
"It is with no little surprise that we look at the amount of her productions, remembering that they were written in the midst of domestic cares never neglected, and many of them during years of failing health. But she had a rare facility of uniting literary labor with the daily duties of life,-of drop- ping her pen for the toil of the kitchen, and returning to it at the first leisure, as though there had been no interruption.
"Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth. Our friend did . not escape the discipline of sorrow. Within a few weeks her Father saw fit to take to himself two precious jewels, whom for a season he had loaned her, and on whom her heart had become too strongly fixed. Little Amy and Jenny were get- · ting between her and her God, and he loved her too well to permit it. It was a crushing blow. For a season she re- fused to be consoled,-could not see the wisdom or goodness of providence. All was fearfully dark, and her spirit rose and murmured against God. Faith gained the ascendancy, and she bowed her whole heart lovingly, submissively, to the Divine chastening. She painted the struggle as no other could in the exquisite lines on Little Amy :-
Of all the prayers that test my faith, This is the hardest one, To gaze on that dear face in death, And say, 'Thy will be done.'
O thou who hast, with hand unseen, Removed the loved to Thee, Come now, with helping grace, between The little child and me!
"The helping grace came. God himself filled the place made sorrowfully vacant by that which he had taken away. She lived to say from a full heart, as did David, 'It is good for me that I have been afflicted.'
' Some four years since, her watchful friends began to fear the approaches of that insidious and fatal disease that every year desolates so many of our New England homes. She, too,
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saw it, and set herself resolutely to contend against it. She clung to life. It had been a joy to her and was a joy still. The future was full of promise.
" 'Why,' said she, 'should I not try to live as long as I can, when I have everything to live for?' And right earnestly did she struggle, at times seeming almost to have gained the victory. But in the autumn of 1861, indications of the approaching end became more and more decisive. Yet during the winter months which followed, chiefly for the sake of those she loved, we now think, did she talk cheerfully and hopefully of her case. But when the Father's will was too plain to be mistaken, she resigned herself at once and wholly to his disposal. Every mortal wish was hushed, and every fear banished. With thoughtful solicitude for others, grateful for every human attention, and overflowing with thankfulness to God, she lingered for a few days at Heaven's portals, waiting the summons to enter.
"It was during these days, in the intervals of her suffering, that the moral and spiritual beauties of her character shone most brightly. Her farewells to husband, children and friends, and her messages to the church and Sabbath school, are legacies more prized than gold. As the final hour drew near, she turned her eyes to her physician, who stood by her bedside, thanked him for his kind attentions, and then, with a clear, full voice, as in health, repeated these lines :-
"Sweet land of rest, for thee I sigh; When will the moment come When I shall lay my armor by, And dwell with Christ at home?"
One does not fail to notice in the writings of Mrs. Edmond her love of her native town, family, friends and children; her love of purity and of her Divine Master. Her own mind and thought were as pure as newly fallen snow, and sparkle in her writings as snow sparkles in the sunlight.
Forty-six years have rolled by since she wrote the farewell lines to husband and kindred, laid down her pen, and her spirit took its flight from earthly scenes. Her husband, sisters, brothers and children, except two unmarried daughters in another state, and two grandchildren, and all her early friends, have followed her.
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In life she loved by many, and known by thousands through her writings, which had consoled and cheered them. And yet, so evanescent are the lives and doings of mortals, that probably not one hundred of Brookline's present inhabitants have personal recollections of her, and to the masses even her name is unknown.
It is the province of this society to gather from the dust of forgetfulness the history of the families and individuals of our town for preservation, and to publish the same when deemed expedient. In fulfilment of that purpose, this sketch of the life of Mrs. Edmond has been prepared, that it may be preserved in the archives of the Society, as a memorial of a native resident who by common consent was entitled to be called A Brookline Poetess.
No. 9016.
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
3Be it known That whereas RUFUS GEORGE FREDERICK CANDAGE, EDWARD WILD BAKER, JULIA GODDARD, JOHN EMORY HOAR, HARRIET ALMA CUMMINGS, CHARLES HENRY STEARNS, JAMES MACMASTER CODMAN, JR., CHARLES FRENCH READ, EDWIN BIRCHARD COX, WILLARD Y. GROSS, CHARLES KNOWLES BOLTON, TAPPAN EUSTIS FRANCIS, DESMOND FITZGERALD, D. S. SANFORD, and MARTHA A. KITTREDGE have associated themselves with the inten- tion of forming a corporation under the name of the
Brookline Historical Society,
for the purpose of the study of the history of the town of Brookline, Massachusetts, its societies, organizations, families, individuals, and events, the collection and preservation of its antiquities, the establish- ment and maintenance of an historical library, and the publication from time to time of such information relating to the same as shall be deemed expedient, and have complied with the provisions of the statutes of this Commonwealth in such case made and provided, as appears from the certificate of the President, Treasurer, and Directors of said.corporation, duly approved by the Commissioner of Corporations and recorded in this office ;
Low, therefore, E, William M. Olin, Secretary of the Commonweath of Massachusetts, do hereby certify, that said RUFUS GEORGE FREDERICK CANDAGE, EDWARD WILD BAKER, JULIA GODDARD, JOHN EMORY HOAR, HARRIET ALMA CUMMINGS, CHARLES HENRY STEARNS, JAMES MACMASTER CODMAN, JR., CHARLES FRENCH READ, EDWIN BIRCHARD COX, WILLARD Y. GROSS, CHARLES KNOWLES BOLTON, TAPPAN EUSTIS FRANCIS, DESMOND FITZGERALD, D. S. SANFORD, and MARTHA A. KITTREDGE, their associates and successors, are legally organized and established as and are hereby made an existing corpora- tion under the name of the
Brookline historical Society,
with the powers, rights and privileges, and subject to the limitations, duties and restrictions, which by law appertain thereto.
¿Witness my official signature hereunto sub- scribed, and the seal of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts hereunto affixed, this twenty-ninth day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and one.
WM. M. OLIN, Secretary of the Commonwealth.
السودان
BROOKLINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES. 1909. President Emeritus. RUFUS G. F. CANDAGE. President. CHARLES H. STEARNS.
Vice-President. WILLIAM O. COMSTOCK. Treasurer. EDWARD W. BAKER.
Clerk. CHARLES F. WHITE.
CHARLES H. STEARNS. EDWARD W. BAKER. MISS JULIA GODDARD.
Trustees.
MRS. MARTHA KITTREDGE.
CHARLES F. WHITE.
WILLIAM O. COMSTOCK.
JOSEPH MCKEY.
Committee on Finance.
JAMES M. CODMAN, JR.
ERNEST B. DANE.
CHARLES H. STEARNS, ex-officio.
Committee on the Rooms.
MISS JULIA GODDARD.
MRS. SUSAN VINING GRIGGS.
HENRY W. LAMB.
CHARLES H. STEARNS, President. Lex-officiis.
CHARLES F. WHITE, Clerk.
Committee on Library.
FREDERICK H. HEDGE.
LUTHER M. MERRILL.
HENRY D. EUSTIS.
JOHN H. SHERBURNE, JR.
Committee on Papers.
WILLIAM O. COMSTOCK.
JOSEPH MCKEY.
MRS. LOUIE D. WHITE.
Committee on Membership.
GEORGE S. MANN.
JAMES ' ADAMS.
WILLARD Y. GROSS.
MISS LOUISE HOWE.
Committee on Publications.
CHARLES F. READ.
EDWARD W. BAKER.
CHARLES F. WHITE.
MEMBERS
#Benefactors
Adams, Benjamin F. Adams, Frank Sydney Adams, James Addison, Daniel Dulany (D. D.) Arnold, Mrs. Tirzah S. Aspinwall, Thomas *Atkinson, Mrs. Mary Caroline
Bailey, Arthur H. Baker, Charles M. Baker, Mrs. Edith C. Baker, Edward Wild Bates, Jacob P.
Beck, Frederick Bickford, Scott F. Blanchard, Benj. Seaver (M. D.) Boit, Mrs. Robert A. Bowker, Edwin P. Burdett, Frank W.
Cabot, Elizabeth Rogers tCandage, Rufus Geo. Frederick tCandage, Mrs. Ella Marie Candage, Robert Brooks Carroll, B. Frank
Chandler, Alfred Dupont Channing, Walter (M. D.) *Chase, Caleb Chase, Miss Ellen Clapp, Miss Mary C. Clement, Thomas W. Codman, James Macmaster Codman, James Macmaster, Jr. Cole, Samuel W. Comstock, William Ogilvie tConant, Lewis S. Conant, Nathaniel Coolidge, Miss Ellen G. Cox, Edwin Birchard Craig, William tCummings, Prentiss
t Life Members
#Dane, Ernest B. Davenport, Francis H. Davis, George Peabody Dearborn, George F. Doliber, Thomas +Doliber, Mrs. Ada Ripley Dolliver, Mrs. Ella Augusta Driscoll, Michael Duncklee, Charles B.
Estabrook, Willard W.
t Eustis, Miss Elizabeth M. tEustis, Henry Dutton Eustis, Joseph Tracy tEustis, Miss Mary St. Barbe
Fay, James H. tFish, Mrs. Clara P. Fish, Frederick Perry FitzGerald, Desmond +Fitzpatrick, Thomas B. Fleming, John F.
*Folsom, Albert Alonzo Folsom, Mrs. Julia Elizabeth Francis, Carleton S. (M. D.) Francis, George H. (M. D.)
*Francis, Tappan Eustis (M. D.) French, Alexis H.
Gaither, Charles Perry tGay, Frederick Lewis Gibbs, Emery B. #Goddard, Miss Julia
#Goddard, Mary Louisa Gray, William H. Griggs, Mrs. Susan Vining Guild, Mrs. Sarah E. M.
Hedge, Frederick H. tHill, William Henry Hoar, David Blakely
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*Deceased.
HATITIRNE
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Hobbs, Franklin W. Hopkins, Charles A.
Hook, Miss Maria C.
Hough, Benjamin Kent Howe, Miss Harriet Augusta
Howe, Miss Louise Hunt, William D. Hunt, Mrs. William D.
Jones, Mrs. Sarah Gavett t Jones, Jerome
Kenrick, Alfred Eugene tKimball, Miss Helen Frances tKimball, Lulu Stacy tKittredge, Mrs. Martha A.
Lamb, Henry Whitney Lamb, Miss Augusta T. Lauriat, Charles E.
*LeMoyne, Macpherson Lincoln, Albert Lamb Lincoln, William E. Lincoln, Mrs. William Edwards Lincoln, William Henry Little, James Lovell Longyear, John M. Luke, Otis H. Lyon, William Henry (D. D.)
Mann, George Sumner Mason, Frank H.
Maxwell, George Frederic Merrill, Frank A.
tMerrill, Luther M. Mortimer, Sara White Lee Mowry, Oscar B. McKey, Joseph McKey, Mrs. W. R. Murphy, James S.
Norton, Fred L.
OBrion, Thomas Leland Otis, Herbert Foster
Palmer, Mrs. Emma L. Parsons, William E. Pattee, Mrs. Eleanor T.
Pearson, Charles Henry #Perry, Arthur
Poor, Miss Agnes Blake
Poor, Mrs. Lillie Oliver
Poor, Mrs. Mary W.
Poor, James Ridgway
Pope, Arthur Wallace
Porter, Georgia M. Whidden
Read, Charles French tRichardson, Frederic Leopold William Richardson, Henry Hobson Ritchie, Andrew Montgomery Rooney, James C.
Sabine, George K. (M. D.) Salisbury, Wm. Cabot Gorham 1Sargent, Charles Sprague Saunders, Joseph H. (M. D.) Saxe, John W. Seaver, William James
Sedgwick, William T. Shaw, James F. Sherburne, John H., Jr. Snow, Franklin Augustus
Spencer, Charles A. W. Stearns, Charles Henry Stearns, James Pierce Stearns, William Bramhall
*Stevens, Mrs. Mary Louise Stone, Galen L. Storrow, Charles Swan, Reuben S. *Swan, Robert Thaxter Swan, Mrs. Robert T.
Talbot, Fritz B. (M. D.) Thayer, Frank Bartlett
Utley, Charles H.
Walker, Nathaniel U. Ware, Henry Warren, Edward R. Watson, Mrs. Eliza Tilden God- dard Wead, Leslie C. Whitcomb, Lawrence
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White, Charles F.
White, Mrs. Louie D.
White, Francis A.
White, William H.
White, William Howard
White, William Orne (D. D.)
· Whiting, John K. Whitman, William Whitney, Henry H. Wight, Lewis t Wightman, George H.
Wilcutt, Levi Lincoln
Williams, Charles A.
Williams, Mrs. Elizabeth Whitney
Williams, Moses
Woods, J. Henry (M. D.)
Wright, Mrs. Mary Watson
Young, William Hill
.
CORRESPONDING MEMBER. Ricker, Mrs. Emeline Carr
BROOKLINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
BY-LAWS.
ARTICLE I.
NAME.
The name of this corporation shall be Brookline Historical Society.
ARTICLE II. OBJECTS.
The objects of this Society shall be the study of the history of the town of Brookline, Massachusetts, its societies, organizations, families, individuals, events; the collection and preservation of its antiquities, the establishment and maintenance of an historical library, and the publication from time to time of such information relating to the same as shall be deemed expedient.
ARTICLE III. MEMBERSHIP.
Any person of moral character who shall be nominated and approved by the Board of Trustees may be elected to membership by ballot of two-thirds of the members present and voting thereon at any regular meeting of the Society. Each person so elected shall pay an admission fee of three dollars, and an annual assess- ment of two dollars; and any member who shall fail for two con- secutive years to pay the annual assessment shall cease to be a member of this Society; provided, however, that any member who shall pay twenty-five dollars in any one year may thereby become a Life member ; and any member who shall pay fifty dollars in any one year may thereby become a Benefactor of the Society, and thereafter shall be free from all dues and assessments. The money received from Life members and Benefactors shall constitute a fund, of which not more than twenty per cent, together with the annual income therefrom, shall be spent in any one year.
The Society may elect Honorary and Corresponding members in the manner in which annual members are elected, but they shall have no voice in the management of the Society, and shall not be subject to fee or assessment.
ARTICLE IV. CERTIFICATES.
Certificates signed by the President and the Clerk may be issued to all persons who become Life members, and to Benefactors.
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ARTICLE V. OFFICERS.
The officers of this Society shall be seven Trustees, a President, a Vice-President, a Secretary (who shall be Clerk of the Society and may also be elected to fill the office of Treasurer), and a Treasurer, who, together, shall constitute the Board of Trustees. The Trustees, Clerk, and Treasurer shall be chosen by ballot at the annual meeting in January, and shall hold office for one year, and until others are chosen and qualified in their stead. The President and Vice-President shall be chosen by the Board of Trustees from their number at their first meeting after their election, or at an adjournment thereof. The officers of the Society shall also include a President Emeritus when the Society shall so vote.
ARTICLE VI. MEETINGS.
The annual meeting of this Society shall be held on the third Wednesday of January. Regular stated meetings shall be held on the third Wednesday of February, March, April, May, October, November, and December.
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Special meetings may be called by order of the Board of Trus- tees.' The Clerk shall notify each member by a written or printed notice sent through the mail postpaid at least three days before the time of meeting, or by publishing such notice in one or more newspapers published in Brookline.
At all meetings of the Society ten (10) members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.
The meetings of the Board of Trustees shall be called by the Clerk at the request of the President, by giving each member personal or written notice, or by sending such notice by mail, post- paid, at least twenty-four hours before the time of such meeting ; but meetings where all the Trustees are present may be held with- out such notice. The President shall call meetings of the Board of Trustees at the request of any three members thereof. A majority of its members shall constitute a quorum for the transac- tion of business.
ARTICLE VII. VACANCIES.
Vacancies in the offices of Trustees, Clerk, or Treasurer may be filled for the remainder of the term at any regular meeting of the Society by the vote of two-thirds of the members present and voting. In the absence of the Clerk at a meeting of the Society, a Clerk pro tempore shall be chosen.
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ARTICLE VIII. NOMINATING COMMITTEE.
At the monthly meeting in December, a Nominating Committee of three members shall be appointed by the presiding officer, who shall report at the annual nieeting a list of candidates for the places to be filled.
ARTICLE IX. PRESIDING OFFICER.
The President, or in his absence the Vice-President, shall pre- side at all meetings of the Society. In the absence of those officers a President pro tempore shall be chosen.
ARTICLE X. DUTIES OF THE CLERK.
The Clerk shall be sworn to the faithful discharge of his duties. He shall notify members of all meetings of the Society, and shall keep an exact record of all the proceedings of the Society at its meetings.
He shall conduct the general correspondence of the Society and place on file all letters received.
He shall enter the names of members in order in books or cards kept for that purpose, and issue certificates to Life members and to Benefactors.
He shall have charge of such property in possession of the Society as may from time to time be delegated to him by the Board of Trustees.
He shall acknowledge all loans or gifts made to the Society.
ARTICLE XI. DUTIES OF THE TREASURER.
The Treasurer shall collect all moneys due the Society, and pay all bills against the Society when approved by the Board of Trustees. He shall keep a full account of receipts and expendi- tures in a book belonging to the Society, which shall always be open to the inspection of the Trustees; and at the annual meeting in January he shall make a written report of all his doings for the year preceding. The Treasurer shall give bonds in such sum, with surety, as the Trustees may fix, for the faithful discharge of his duties.
ARTICLE XII. DUTIES AND POWERS OF TRUSTEES.
The Board of Trustees shall superintend the prudential and executive business of the Society, authorize all expenditures of
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money, fix all salaries, provide a common seal, receive and act upon all resignations and forfeitures of membership, and see that the by-laws are duly complied with. The Board of Trustees shall have full powers to hire, lease, or arrange for a suitable home for the Society, and to make all necessary rules and regulations required in the premises.
They shall make a report of their doings at the annual meeting of the Society.
They may from time to time appoint such sub-committees from their own number as they deem expedient.
In case of a vacancy in the office of Clerk or Treasurer they shall have power to choose the same pro tempore till the next meeting of the Society.
ARTICLE XIII. STANDING COMMITTEES.
The President shall annually, in the month of January, appoint four standing committees, as follows :-
Committee on Rooms.
A committee of three members, to be styled the " Committee on Rooms," to which shall be added the President and Clerk of the Society ex-officio, who shall have charge of all arrangements of the rooms (except books, manuscripts, and other objects appro- priate to the library offered as gifts or loans), the hanging of pictures, and the general arrangements of the Society's collection in their department.
Committee on Papers.
A committee of three members, to be styled the " Committee on Papers," who shall have charge of the subjects of papers to be read, or other exercises of a profitable nature, at the monthly meetings of the Society.
Committee on Membership.
A committee of three or more members, to be styled the "Com- mittee on Membership," whose duty it shall be to give information in regard to the purposes of the Society, and increase its mem- bership.
Committee on Library.
A committee of three or more members, to be styled the " Com- mittee on Library," who shall have charge of the arrangements of the library, including acceptance and rejection of books, manu- scripts, and other objects tendered to the library, and the general arrangement of the Society's collections in that department.
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These four committees shall perform their duties as above set forth under the general direction and supervision of the Board of Trustees.
Vacancies that occur in any of these committees during their term of service shall be filled by the President.
ARTICLE XIV. FINANCE COMMITTEE.
The President shall annually, in the month of January, appoint two members, who, with the President, shall constitute the Com- mittee on Finance, to examine from time to time the books and accounts of the Treasurer, to audit his accounts at the close of the year, and to report upon the expediency of proposed expenditures of money.
ARTICLE XV. AMENDMENTS.
These by-laws may be altered or amended at any regular meeting by a two-thirds vote of the members present, notice of the subject- matter of the proposed alterations or amendments having been given at a previous meeting.
FAN413.35
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