SULLIVANT MOSS SOCIETY 
EDWARD B. CHAMBERLAIN. Treasurer 
IB WEST 89th STREET 
NEW YORK CITY April 
Dear Colline:- 
Por the past ten days I have been absolutely in the thick 
of things. For two or three days after the close of school, I did all 
that I could to get the little bits of work clersed up so os to be free. 
Then on the evening of the B'M I went up to Boston, met the cousins 
that noon, and came directly back to New York. Its needless to say 
that I did no work that week. In spite of the hellish weather, and 
all the rumpus, we managed to see a lot of this burg. Both cousins 
were tired from the week before, for they are both church singers. 
Also, the younger cousin managed to catch cold, which made it imnos- 
sible for her to go around as much as we had planned. But, as they 
were fond of music, we took in opera four nights, a Sembrich recital, 
and the Philharmonic concert the last afternoon. They stayed until 
-londay night, the 31st, when 1 saw them safely on the train for Maine. 
That means, that every night save the first one, T did not get to bed 
until about 1. JO A.M. and the other nights at the moderete hour of If. 
Tuesday evening last, I had free, and did up the most urgent of the 
things. Since then I have been on the go every night:- alumni dinner, 
concert, business call in Jersey City, school debate. So, things 
have got all at sixes and sevens, with me. This next week looks 
a little less congested. But I hod as pleasant a. vacation as I hove 
had for a long time, and do not in the least regret the getting tired. 
Thank you for what you wrote about a possible article for 
the Bryologist. I heard from Mr Jennings the lest of the week, he s„«a 
that he had enough for all but about three pages. I shall help. 
