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The Navajo's that you speak of, do not wear feathers in their hair as a rule, but if you will come again we will look at some pictures and see how the feather is now worn with the hat the white man has given to the Indian. 
My dear Miss Marjorie Lammond:-
I was pleased to find that you had remembered so many of the objects that were shown to you last Tuesday, and I am sorry that we did not have more time to study the blankets and horse-bit, and thereby realize how they were made.
If you will come again, either with your teacher or with the class, I will tell you how these things are made, and how the Indians received us when we first went among them.
My dear Miss Philadelphia Beard:-
I am glad to learn that you took such an interest in the Indians, and that you read so much so much about them. I want to thank you for your little letter and I hope that I may have the pleasure of telling you a great deal more about my old friends. 
Now, to the class as a whole, I would extend a cordial invitation to come to the Museum again as soon as your teachers can find it convenient to bring you. There is so much to tell you, and so many things to show you, that I know we can have another very pleasant afternoon together.
Your little letters were so pleasing, and I hope that these may not be the last, but that you will continue to write and ask questions until the time of your next visit. 
Thanking you one and all my dear little friends for your letters, and the pleasure that your bright smiling faces gave me last Tuesday, and hoping that I may be able to associate names with faces when