76 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1921. 
History, Chicago, Ill.; Mr. C. J. Pennock, Kennett Square, Pa.; Dr. 
J.C. Phillips, Wenham, Mass.; Mr. H. C. Raven, Bayshore, N. Y.; Mrs. 
E. M. B. Reichenberger, American Museum of Natural History, New 
York; Mr. James Henry Rice, jr., Wiggins, S. C.; Mr. Charles H. 
Rogers, Princeton, N. J.; Mr. Ralph H. Rose, South Kortright, N. Y.; 
Dr. L. C. Sanford, New Haven, Conn.; Mr. P. A. Taverner, Ottawa, 
Canada; Mr. W. E. Clyde Todd, Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, Pa. ; 
Prof. M. Oshima, of Japan. The above list covers those who ex- 
amined the skin collection, and includes a goodly number of members 
of the American Ornithologists’ Union, who spent considerable time 
during the period of the meeting (Nov. 8-11, 1920) in investigating 
various questions in connection with their work in other museums or 
in relation to their own private collections. In the office of the divi- 
sion of birds there is a case reserved for common birds of the Eastern 
States, and certain birds about which inquiry is most frequent (the 
nightingale, the robin redbreast of Europe, the starling, etc.), as well 
as examples of a few birds noted for their bright colors or strange 
features of bill, plumage, etc. The inquiries of many amateurs and 
nature-study students are satisfied by reference to this case of birds, 
but no list of these visitors or statistics as to their numbers has been 
attempted. The following students have examined the series of 
North American eggs or parts of it; Prof. W. B. Barrows, Agricul- 
tural College, Mich.; Mr. H. W. Brandt, Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. EK. J. 
Court, Washington, D. C.; Mr. A. F. Ganier, Nashville, Tenn.; Mr. 
A. H. Hardisty, Washington, D. C.; Mr. R. G. Pape, Texarkana, 
Ark.; Dr. A. G. Ruthven, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. ; 
Mr. W. E. Saunders, London, Ontario, Canada; Mr. J Fletcher 
Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. George H. Stuart, 3d, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Reptiles and amphibians were examined by Dr. Thomas Barbour, 
Museum of Comparative Zoology; and Dr. E. R. Dunn, of the same 
museum; and Dr. Sidney F. Blake, of the Department of Agricul- 
ture. An unusual number of outside entomologists made prolonged 
stays of from several weeks to several months studying our ma- 
terials; thus Mr. Ray T. Webber, Melrose Highlands, Mass.; Mr. 
John Tothill, of the Canadian entomological staff; Mr. C. F. W. 
Musebeck, Dr. W. T. M. Forbes, and Mr. R. T. Shannon, all of 
Cornell University. Many other entomologists have visited the divi- 
sion of insects for a few days or a single day at a time, such as Mr. 
S. W. Frost, of the entomological staff of the Pennsylvania State 
College; Dr. W. J. Holland, director of the Carnegie Museum, Pitts- 
burgh, Pa.; Dr. William Barnes, Decatur, Ill.; and Dr. C. T. Ramsden, 
Guantanamo, Cuba. While no outsiders pursued any studies in the 
laboratories of the division of marine invertebrates during the pres- 
ent year, personal inquiries by members of the scientific staffs of the 
