2 . 
to whom he sends his later paper. If the University Press al- 
lows us 300, are you and Johnston willing, therefore , to let 
Louderback have 100 copies and each of the rest of us have 
6? copie s ( in addition to those mailed by the University) ? 
I should .myself , be quite conte nt with that arrangement. 
Also will you and J. pie ase send me at once a list of the 
persons (non- scientific friends excluded ) to whom you wish to 
send the paper? I can then check off those that are on the Uni- 
versity^mailing list ,as well as those on my own , and return it 
to you. The paper ought "to be out in a couple of weeks. 
Mrs. Sumner was much pleased to have seen Miss Stumm and 
yourself. Do it again when you come back. 
I am awfully sorry that I did not have a chance to see 
the boat before she went north . I haven't seen her since she 
looked like a scrap-heap. 
Remember me cordially to Johnston; also to Porterfield 
and whoever of the I a vy people survive and remember me. Probably, 
by the time this reaches you, you will all have been sent to Mex- 
ican waters to shoot up a lot of pasteboard forts and mo?; down 
a few hundred Indians all for the glory of the flag] 
Sincerely yours , 
