great beast, there were a number of other dinosaurs. In fact the skeletons of five or six large dinosaurs, one of them even more complete then the first large specimen, have been thus far uncovered. There are now awaiting shipment in Utah two carloads of bones of dinosaurs which presently will be brought in to the Carnegie Museum. A carload was brought in last fall. Today the collection of dinosaurs in the Carnegie Museum are greater than those in any other museum in the world, and far more complete. Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn of the American Museum of Natural History, who has written a great deal upon the dinosaurs, on the occasion of a recent visit to the Carnegie Museum, congratulated the Director, saying to him. "So far as Jurassic dinosaurs are concerned you have all the museums of the world skinned a mile." The work of course of getting these large skeletons out of the hard rock, restoring the broken fragments to the places from which they inevitabley drop in the process of quarrying, of studying these remains, and then setting them up in life like attitudes, calls for infinite patience, large knowledge, and a considerable expenditure of money. There are few men who have the necessary knowledge and skill to do this work. There are perhaps more of them assembled under the roof of the Carnegie Museum than in any other institution at the present time in America. The Director of the Museum when interviewed, said that he was publishing a work upon the big dinosaur form Utah as fast as possible, that he hoped within eighteen moths or two years to be able to see the beast standing erect alongside