We wer e glad to have with us Dr. R. 
Pulleine, president of the Royal Society 
of South Australia, who, together w i 
his two daughters, came across espe¬ 
cially for the camp. The interest a id 
support of such leading natural history 
workers as Dr. Pulleine goes far to 
show that the work the club is doing 
is appreciated even beyond the limits 
of our own state, and gives encour.v e 
incut to those who have been entrusted 
with the control of the club’s affair* 
to carry on. The general management 
as regards meetings, etc., together with 
the special work entailed in organising 
the camps, necessitates considerable ef¬ 
fort by the executive; but when the re¬ 
sults are examined, and the club's past, 
history and present position reviewed, 
it gives encouragement to continue in 
the at tempt to make the future history 
of the club even better than the past. 
All being well next Raster we will cele¬ 
brate our t enty-lirst annual camp, and 
although the Raster camps constitute 
blit one item of the club's annual pro¬ 
gramme. they are by no means the least. 
It is hoped, therefore, that next .Ras¬ 
ter many familiar faces will he grouped 
around the campfire which may >e built 
in one or other of the coastal bays of 
Freycinet Peninsula. 
T.T 
