Pag^e Seventeen 



regard to tliis point does not detract from the major fact established, 

 namely, that the Pueblo practitioner of the Stone Age had already 

 l(>arned to use splints in the treatment of fracture." 



Two mounted specimens of Pre-Ch(MUM)saurus have been placed on 

 exhil)ition in the Dinosaur Hall. 



Mr. Chauncey J. Hamlin, President of the Buffalo Society of 

 Natural Sciences, visited the Museum last week. Mr. Hamlin has done 

 valuable work in connection with the new museum which the Buffalo 

 Society is opening. 



Mr. Paul M. Rea, for seventeen years Director of the Charleston 

 Museum, lunched with President Osborn on November 23d. Mr. Rea 

 has now left the Charleston Museum, which w'as founded before 1777 

 and is the oldest museum in North America, to go to our youngest 

 Museum, in Cleveland. The Cleveland Museum has as yet no building. 

 Mr. Rea is to help in the organizing of the new museum. Miss Laura M. 

 Bragg, who for a number of years assisted him in Charleston, is now- in 

 charge at the Charleston Museum. 



Have you renewed your Red Cross membership? 



Tommy Hines will be married on December 5th. 



On November 13-15, Mr. Akeley, Mr. and Mrs. Andrews, Mr. 

 Lyman LTnderwood, Dr. Lumholtz, John Burroughs, Henry Ford, 

 Thomas Edison and Harvey Firestone were the invited guests of Mr. 

 Frank Seaman, at Yama Farms, no one else being present during their 

 stay. They spent a delightful time together. Mr. Burroughs, hale and 

 hearty at 84, had a tree-chopping contest with Mr. Ford, and came off 

 victor. 



The Museum will give a dinner on December 7th, at the LTniversity 

 Club, to the patrons of the Third Asiatic Expedition and others in- 

 terested in Asia. Mr. Andrews wall present a general outline of the work 

 planned for this expedition, and a detailed plan of the w-ork as laid out 

 for the first two rears. 



