A FINE, seated statue of Lord Lister, in academic robes, the work of Mr. G. H. Paulin, was unveiled in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow, adjoining the University, on September 17, by Sir Hector C. Cameron, Dean of Faculties. The Lord Provost presided, and speeches setting forth Lord Lister's unique service to humanity in the domain of scientific surgery were made by Sir Hector, Sir Donald MacAlister, Bt., principal of the University and president of the General Medical Council, and Prof. J. H. Teacher, of the Royal Infirmary Department of Pathology, who is the custodian of the Lister relics there preserved. It was in the Kelvingrove Park, near his house, that Lister meditated the principles of his antiseptic method of wound treatment, during his tenure of the University chair of surgery from 1860 until 1869. It was in the Royal Infirmary, near the old College, that he applied these principles to practice, and thereby demonstrated their efficacy in the prevention of suppuration and of septic poisoning in operative wounds. The ceremony was preceded by a luncheon in the Civic Chambers, attended by a large number of distinguished surgeons and citizens of Glasgo\v, and by Mr. J. J. Lister, fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, and nephew of Lord Lister. The latter spoke of his uncle's early researches, and of his private life, in response to the toast of the Lister family, proposed by Sir Donald MacAlister, who narrated some picturesque incidents of his friendship with Lord Lister during thirty years. The statue completes the effort begun by the Glasgow Lister Memorial Committee in 1912, but interrupted by the War. Generous contributions have been made by it, not only to the Glasgow monument, but also to the international fund for establishing a Lister Oration and Prize for research in surgery, to the memorial in Westminster Abbey, and to the Lister collections displayed in the Glasgow Royal Infirmary in commemoration of the great surgeon's association with the institution.