VI 



tr; ; tinted, bromide enlargement. 



rk and tl < 11- 



woraa moth After this case was finished, work « 

 begun with iheO exhibit by the 



duplicates, i - tfros far in 



ibk without of effct t In the 



I >i illation, then 



mending and of 



th« of the whales, elephants, and other 



e mamm 'Hum- weft then installed in or* in the 



ha! : t<> tl -tain number, for lack of space, w 



". Similar work proceeded with small and medium- 

 installed es. 

 In the latter part of th- -eleton of a large adult Chim- 

 remounted to replace an immature example, about 150 

 .leaned, and a beginning was made in the work of un- 

 king, classifying, and lal>eling the small unmounted ligament. 

 skeletons of the reference collection in comparative o s teology The 

 nee collection of fishes and reptiles w^ pl.t nd 

 a beginning made toward getting the material into well classified and 



E'Uoitions — Under the patronage of Mr. William J. Wrigley, Jr. 

 the Curator of the ment of Botany I the Gray Herbarium. 



Harvard, tl nscal Garden, and the United 



National Herbarium at Washington, for the purpose of studying the 

 older Santa Catalina Island. California. He V 



accorded the privilege of examining the material in each institution 

 and amassed data that will materially aid in the preparation of a 

 Flora of the island. The Curator RSSO made two tr neseo, 



111: luring which he j the complete Harper Herbarium 



for shipment to the Museum; and a trip to Pharr, Louisiana, where he 

 secured a complete serie .mens for installation, representing 



the production r through a in its extraction ftl 



Si llization. 



The N W Hahbis Puslic School Eitension or Fielo Museum of Natuhal Histo»» 



red during the past ted with th< 



ah vailable for loat the public schools. With the addit. 



of the The resignation of 



the chief taxidermist created that were, for the greater 



irt of tl roduc* Thooj 



