151 \ 6 y I CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists Washington. October 5-10, 1914 Patron THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES President THE HONORABLE JOHN W. FOSTER Bx-Secretary of State; former Minister to Mexico and Russia; special plenipotentiary to Brasil, Spain, Germany; ambassador on special mission to Great Britain and Russia; member Hague Peace Conference; ex-President, Washington Society of the Archaeo- logical Institute, etc., etc. Honorary Presidents Dr. Charles D. WAtcorr, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. PHOPfiSSOR Frederic W. Putman, Honorary Director in Charge,: Pea- body Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University; Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus, University of California; Chairman Local Committee of Americanists, Cam- bridge. Mr. Clarence B. Mooke, Archaeologist, Philadelphia. Professor William H. Holmes, Head Curator, Department of An- thropology, United States National Museum. Honorary Vice-Presidents Mr. F. W. Hodge, Ethnologist in Charge, Bureau of American Eth- nology. Dr. F. W. Shipley, President of the Archaeological Institute of America. (Foreign vice-presidents to be appointed.) s TREASURER SECRETARY Mr. Clarence F. Norment, Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, Curator, President of The Na- Division of Physical An- tional Bank of thropology, United Washington. States National Museum. GENERAL (HONORARY) COMMITTEE (Subject to revUion) The Honorable Thomas R. Marshall, Vice-President of the United States and President of the Senate. The Honorable William J. Bryan, Secretary of State. The Honorable Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior. The Honorable Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representa- tives. The Honorable Atlee Pomerene, Senator from Ohio. I The Honorable Thomas F. Konop, Member of the House of Repre- sentatives. Dr. Richard Rathbun, Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institu- tion, in Charge of the United States National Museum. Admiral Charles H. Stockton, President of George Washington Uni- versity. Very Rev. A. J. Donlon, S. J., President of Georgetown University. Right Rev. T. J. Shahan, D. D., President of The Catholic University of America. The Honorable John Barrett, Director of the Pan-American Union. Mr. Henry Gannett, President of the National Geographic Society. The Honorable Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress. Mr. James Mooney, President of the Anthropological Society of Washington. Dr. Robert S. Woodward, President of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, President of The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Dr. G. B- Gordon, Director of the University Museum, Philadelphia; Chairman of the Local Committee of the Americanists for Phila- delphia. Professor Henry F. Osborn, President of the American Museum of Natural History, New York; Chairman of the Honorary Com- mittee of the Americanists for New York and Brooklyn. Mr. Archer M. Huntington, President of the American Geographical Society, New York. Professor Franklin W. Hoopef, Director of the Museum of the Brook- lyn Institute of Arts arid Sciences. Mr. W. C. Mills, Curator and Librarian of the Archaeological Museum of the Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Chairman of the Local Committee of Americanists for Columbus. Dr. George A. Dorsey, Cura;tor of the Department of Anthropology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago; Chairman of the Local Committee of Americanists for Chicago. Mr. Edward K. Putnam, Acting Director of the Davenport Academy of Sciences, Davenport, Iowa ;; Representative of the Local Com- mittee of Americanists for Davenport. Dr. Edgar L. Hewett, Director of the School of American Archaeology, Santa Fe, New Mexico; Chairman of the Local Committee of Americanists for the Southwest. Dr. William J. Holland, Director of the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh. Mr. Edward E. Ayer, Trustee Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago. Dr. Franz Boas, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University; President of the American Ethnological Society; Chairman of the Local Committee of Americanists for New York. Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, member Board of Regents, Smithsonian Institution. Mr. Charles P. Bowditch, member of Faculty of the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge. Dr. Roland B. Dixon, Professor of Anthropology, Harvard Univer- sity; Curator of Ethnology, Peabody Museum; President of the American Anthropological Association. Dr. Charles T. Currelly, Director of the Royal Ontario Museum, To- ronto, Canada. Mr. George G. Heye, Heye Museum, New York City. Dr. Albert E. Jenks, Professor of Anthropology, University of Minne- sota, Minneapolis. Dr. A. L. Kroeber, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Anthropological Museum, University of California. Dr. D. S. Lamb, Army Medical Museum, Washington. Dr. George Grant MacCurdy, Professor of Archeology, Yale Univer- sity. Mr. Warren K. Moorehead, Curator, Department of Archeology, Phil- lips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Dr. Roland B. Orr, Director Provincial Museum, Toronto, Canada. Dr. Charles Peabody, Curator of European Archeology, Peabody Mu- seum, Harvard University; President of the American Folk-Lore Society. Marshall H. Saville, Professor of American Archeology, Columbia University. Dr. Frederick Starr, Professor of Anthropology, University of Chi- cago. Dr. Clark Wissler, Curator of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York. ASSOCIATE FOREIGN SECRETARIES (Subject to revision) Miss A. C. Breton, England. Professor J. Matiegka, Bohemia Professor L. Capitan, France. and Poland. Rt. Rev. Charles W. Currier, , Spain and Portugal (va- Bishop of Matanzas, Cuba. cated by the death of Sr. Dr. Georg Friederici, Germany. Moguel). Dr. A. Gagnon, Canada. Prince D. Oukhtomsky, Russia. Professor V. Giuflfrida-Ruggeri, Jonkheer L. C. van Panhuys, Italy. Holland. Professor C. V. Hartman, Sweden, Dr. S. A. Lafone Quevedo, Argen- Norway, and Denmark. tina. Professor F. Heger, Austria. Dr. A. C. Simoens da Silva, Brazil. Professor Nicolas Leon, Mexico. Dr. J. C. Tello, Peru. Dr. Max Uhle, Chile. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE W. H. HOLMES, Chairman. Dr. Charles D. Walcott, Chairman of the Executive Board. Professor George M. Kober, Chairman, Subcommittee on Finances. Professor Mitchell Carroll, Chairman, Subcommittee on Arrangements and Entertainment. Mr. F. W. Hodge, Chairman, Subcommittee on Communications, Print- ing, and Publication. Dr. Walter Hough, Chairman, Committee on Exhibits. Mr. C. F. Norment, Treasurer. Dr. A. Hrdlicka, Secretary. Mr. Franklin Adams. Dr. Frank Baker. Dr. Marcus Benjamin. Mgr. Charles W. Currier. Dr. J. Walter Fewkes. Miss Alice C. Fletcher. Mr. G. H. Grosvenor. Professor H. L. Hodgkins. Mrs. R. R. Hoes. Mrs. Julian James. Professor J. F. Jameson Professor Charles H. McCarthy. Mr. James Mooney. Mr. Clarence B. Moore. Dr. J. Dudley Morgan. Sr. A. F. Pezet, Minister of Peru. Mr. George R. Stetson. Dr. J. R. Swanton. Mr. M. I. Weller. NINETEENTH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF AMERICANISTS WASHINGTON, D. C. October 5-10, 1914 United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution, May 2, 1914. Sir: The Organizing Committee of the Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists, in sending you these more definite announcements of the approaching Session, wishes again to extend to you (provided its previous call has not already been accepted) a cordial invitation to affiliate as a member; to favor the Congress, if possible, with a communication dealing with research in some branch of American Anthropology (including Physical Anthropology, Archaeology, Ethnology, Philology, Mythology, Folklore, etc.), or Geography, Cartog- raphy, or History, bearing relation to the American people; and to participate personally, if possible, in the meeting, which promises to be of considerable importance. If you are already a member of the Congress, we respect- fully ask that you convey information of the meeting to thos> of your friends who may be interested in the subjects to be treated, as well as to any institutions, scientific organizations, and libraries in which you may be interested and which may possibly become members. In this connection it may be well to bear in mind that the Proceedings of the Congress, which will probably be published in two volumes, will be printed for Members only, no copies being reserved for sale. As hitherto announced, the meetings will be held in the United States National Museum, which will also be the headquarters of the Congress. Sectional subdivisions of the Session, with the rooms assigned to their use, will be announced in the final programs early in September. Ample facilities will be afforded for the display of special exhibits and for the illustration of papers with stereopticon views; also for the study of the great National Museum collections, before, during, and after the Congress. At the conclusion of the Session in Washington a highly instructive excursion will be conducted for the purpose of enabling participants to visit the museums of special interest to Americanists, as well as the mound, ancient Pueblo, and Cliff-dwelling regions, and some of the living Indians. The object of the Organizing Committee of this Session is to make the meeting, with the subsequent excursion, of the greatest possible scientific interest and instructiveness to the participants ; and the Committee respectfully requests all who are engaged in or affiliated with the many important lines of research represented by the Congress of Americanists to aid in this endeavor. Yours respectfully, Wii,LiAM H. Holmes, Chairman of the Organising Committee. Ales Hrdlicka, Charles D. Walcott, Secretary. Chairman of the Executive Board, Organizing Committee. ANNOUNCEMENTS The Washington Session of the Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists will be the Executive (Business) Session of the Congress. This provision was made at the closing meeting of the Eighteenth Congress in London, June 1, 1912, and has since received the unanimous sanction of the Permanent Council. The articles relating to this subject, recorded in the Proceedings of the London Congress (vol. i, p. lix), are as follows: "An invitation to hold the meeting of the Nineteenth Congress at Washington was moved by Dr. A. Hrdlicka in the name of the Smithsonian Institution, and seconded by Professor H. Cordier. "Letters of invitation from the Smithsonian Institution, the George Washington University, the Catholic University of America, the Archaeological Institute of America, the Anthropological Society of Washington, and the Georgetown University were read, and a list of Members of the proposed Organizing Committee was presented. "Invitation accepted by acclamation. Dr. W. H. Holmes, Dr. A. Hrdlicka, and Mr. F. W. Hodge were named as Organizers. "An amendment by Mr. A. Posnansky, as bearer of an invitation from the Government of Bolivia to hold the Nineteenth Congress in La Paz, proposed the acceptance of this as an addition to the Session in Washington. "Accepted unanimously.* " * Important NoTice. — Since the above went to print, the Secretary has been officially notified by Sr. Y. Calderon, the Minister of Bolivia to the United States, that owing to various unforeseen circumstances the La Paz session must be postponed until a more propitious time. The Washington session will therefore be the only session of the Nine- teenth Congress. Subjects i'or Discussion : Pursuant to the statutes of the International Congress of Americanists, adopted at the Paris meeting in 1900, and in accordance with precedents established at former Sessions, the Organizing Committee announces that the Washington Session will be devoted to the following branches of science : I. American Anthropology (of all peoples of the continent). II. American Archeology. III. American Ethnology, including Folklore, Linguistics, and com- parative Psychology (of all ethnic groups). IV. American History and Geography (so far as they relate to the preceding). Special Exhibits: Members who may wish to exhibit publications, maps, manuscripts, or specimens relating to their researches, can do so subject to the following regulations: * a. All exhibits should be in the United States National Museum at least four weeks before the opening of the Congress to insure proper installation. Descriptive labels, plainly written, should accompany all exhibits. The exhibits will be housed and properly cared for in the United States National Museum without expense to the exhibitor. b. Neither the Museum nor the representatives of the Congress will be responsible for damage to or loss of exhibits. c. All exhibits should be addressed to Dr. Walter Hough, United States National Museum, Washington, D. C, and marked "For the International Congress of Americanists," together with the name of the sender. The cost of transportation to and from the Museum must be defrayed by the exhibitor. * A special effort will be made by the Organizing Committee to secure a representative exhibit of American publications relating to the above- mentioned subjects issued by American institutions and the book trade. PRELIMINARY PROGRAM OF THE SESSION. Monday, October 5 Preliminary (Constituent) Meeting 10.00 a. m. Opening Meeting 4.00 p. m. Address (speaker and subject to be announced later), to be followed by a reception in the United States National Museum 8.00 to 10.00 p. m. Tuesday, October 6 Meeting of the Council , . . . . 9.00 a. m. Regular session 9.30 to 13.00 a. m. Recess for lunch Regular session 2.00 to 5.00 p. m. Evening (probably) : Reception at the Pan- American Union 8.30 to 10.00 p. m. Wednesday, October 7 Meeting of the Council 9.00 a. m. Regular session 9.30 to 12.00 a. ra. Recess for lunch Special session, followed by demonstration of rare Americana and other exhibits, and a reception, at Georgetown University . . . 2.00 to 5.00 p. m. Evening: Special Illustrated address on "Ancient Man and his Relation to the American Aborigines," by Dr. R. R. Marett, of Oxford University, England, at the United States National Museum 8.30 p. m. Thursday, October 8 Meeting of the Council 9.00 a. m. Regular session 9.30 to 12.00 a. m. Recess for lunch The remainder of the afternoon will be devoted to an archeological excursion to the aborig- inal quarries and workshops at Piney Branch. Dinner. Priday, October p Meeting of the Council 9.00 a. m. Regular' session 9.30 to 12.00 a. m. Recess for lunch Visits to the Corcoran Gallery of Art, to the building and museum of the Daughters of American Revolution, and to the building of the Pan-American Union 1.30 to 3.30 p. m. Addresses and reception under the auspices of the Archaeological Institute of America . . 4.00 to 6.00 p. m. Evening: Meeting of the Committee on the International Congress of Anthropology. Saturday, October 10 Meeting of the Council 9.30 a. m. Closing Meeting 10.30 a. m. Excursion to Mount Vernon, the home of Washington 12.30 p. m. Departure for Philadelphia of the Delegates who will participate in the post-session trip . . . 4.00 p. m. Excursions EXCURSION TO PINEY BRANCH QUARRIES On Thursday afternoon, October 8th, an excursion will be conducted to the aboriginal quarries and workshops of Piney Branch of Rock Creek, where, within the suburbs of the city and only three miles from the present Executive Mansion, the ancient tribes obtained the material for vast numbers of stone implements. Here the refuse of the shaping work, consisting of fragments, chips, and partially shaped and broken imple- ments, hammer-stones and anvils, covers an extensive area along the wooded bluffs, in places to the depth of 10 feet. The material utilized was in the form of quartzite and quartz bowlders, which had been deposited in heavy layers along the Tertiary ocean beach at these points. The ancient excavations are now filled up by loose materials cascaded from the low bluffs above and are exposed to view only by trenching, but ample exposures will be made for the benefit of the visiting party, and Professor W. H. Holmes, who has thoroughly ex- plored the quarries in past years (see Fifteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology), will be present to explain the various interesting features of the site. THE POST-SESSION EXCURSION For the benefit of the foreign delegates to the Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists, and in accordance with the expressed wishes of a number of prominent foreign as well as American members, the Organizing Committee, in cooperation with a number of important institutions, have arranged for an excursion to extend over a period of a little more than two weeks following the close of the Session. It is planned. that this excursion shall prove highly instructive as well as enjoyable. It will include visits to the museums whose collections are of particular interest to Americanists, to the classical mound regions of Ohio, Illinois, and Missouri, and finally to historic Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the adjacent pueblo ruins and cliff-dwellings, as well as the living Indians, of that region. A partial program of the trip is given below. As the number of participants must necessarily be somewhat limited, delegates as well as local members are urged to send their applications to the Secretary at their earliest convenience. The railway fare from Washington to Santa Fe by way of the eastern cities will approximate $65, but in the case of foreign delegates the Committee hopes to be of material assistance in defraying a part of this expense. At Santa Fe, after exhausting the program, the party will disband, and those who wish will have the opportunity of devoting further time to the study of the archeological riches of the Southwest and the numerous native tribes of that general region. Visits may also conveniently be made to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, to the great Sequoya forests and other natural wonders of California, and to the two expositions at San Francisco and San Diego, which by that time will be far advanced toward completion. Finally, those who return to the East will find unequaled opportunities to study at leisure the collections of the great museums. PROGRAM OF THE EXCURSION ITINfiRARY Saturday, October 10th, 4 p. m., leave Washington for Philadelphia; Sunday, October 11th, the University Museum and the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia; evening, departure for New York; Monday, 12th, the museums of New York and Brooklyn; night, departure for Boston; Tuesday, 13th, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Peabody Museum of Harvard University; 4.30 p. m., train for Colum- bus, Ohio; Wednesday and Thursday, 14th-15th, Columbus Museum and aboriginal mounds in Ohio; night of 15th, departure for Chicago; Friday, 16th, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago ; evening, departure for Davenport, Iowa ; Saturday, 17th, Museum of the Academy of Sciences at Davenport, and the Albany mounds; departure from Daven- port night of the 17th for St. Louis; Sunday and Monday at St. Louis, with a visit to the great Cahokia mounds ; Monday evening, departure for Santa Fe; arrive Santa Fe Thursday, October 33, in the morning. BRIEF DETAII,S Philadelphia. — Chairman of the Local Committee, Dr. G. B. Gordon, Director of the University Museum. Saturday, the 10th, 7.00 p. m. : The party will be met at the station on arrival and conducted to the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel.* Dinner at 8 p. m., at the hotel, given by the Local Committee ; Sunday, the 11th, 9 a. m., visit to the Academy of Natural Sciences; 11 a. m., visit to the University Msueum; 1 p. m., automobile ride to the Country Club for luncheon ; 3.30 p. m., automobile ride through Fairmount Park; 6 p. m., return to hotel to prepare for departure for New York. New York and Brooklyn. — Chairman of Honorary Com- mittee, Professor Henry Fairfield Osborn, President of the ♦ Hotel charges, sleeping accommodations on the railways, and such meals as it will not be possible to arrange for, will be at the expense of the Excursionists. American Museum of Natural History; chairman of Local Committee, Dr. F. Boas, Professor of Anthropology, Colum- bia University. The delegates will be met at the station, Sun- day evening, and be escorted to the Park Avenue Hotel. They will leave the hotel at 9.30, Monday morning, by the subway for Brooklyn, where they will be met with automobiles and conducted to the Museum of Arts and Sciences. They will leave Brooklyn at 11.30 for the American Museum, where they will be given lunch at 13.30. They will leave the latter Museum at 3 p. m., passing Columbia University on the way to the His- panic Society, where a reception will be held from 4 to 5.30. They will then return by subway to the Heye Museum, where they will remain from 6 until 7. Evening program and exact hour of departure to be fixed later. Cambridge, Massachusetts. — Chairman of Local Com- mittee, Professor F. W. Putnam, Honorary Director in Charge, Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University. On the arrival of the party on Tuesday morning, October 13th, it will be met at the station in Boston and taken to the Harvard Club for breakfast. The party will then be taken in automobiles to Cambridge and after a ride through the University grounds will go to the Peabody Museum, where the morning will be passed in examination of the collec- tions. Should any members wish to visit the other museums of the University they can readily do so. At 1.30 o'clock the party will be entertained at luncheon, after which automobiles will take the members to Boston to get the 4.30 train for Columbus. Owing to the short stay in Cambridge there will be no formal meeting, simply a brief address of welcome at the Museum by the Honorary Director in charge, and a word of welcome at the luncheon by the President of the University. Columbus, Ohio. — Chairman of the Local Committee, Mr. William C. Mills, Curator and Librarian of the Archaeological Museum, The Ohio State University. The delegates will be met at the train at 3 p. m. and escorted to the Museum. After an inspection of the Museum a dinner will be given at The Ohio Union. After the dinner the delegates will return to the Museum for a short session in the auditorium. The following day the delegates will visit mounds that have been selected for the purpose of examination. One of these will be shown in the process of exploration. The plan is to show the characteris- tics of a typical Ohio mound. The delegates will then return to Columbus in time for the train to Chicago. Chicago. — Chairman of the Local Committee, Dr. George A. Dorsey, Curator of the Department of Anthropology, Field Museum of Natural History. Details (subject to revision) : The party will be met at the station, taken to breakfast, and then conveyed in automobiles to the Field Museum of Natural History, where the rest of the forenoon will be spent in examining the collections. Then will follow a luncheon, per- haps at the Southshore Country Club, and later in the after- noon the delegates will be taken in automobiles around the city, returning to the station in time for the train to Madison. Davbnport, Iowa. — Chairman of the Local Committee, the Honorable C. A. Ficke. Details (subject to revision) : Friday, October 16 : The party will be met at the Station and conducted to the hotel (Hotel Davenport, Fourth and Main streets, one block from station). Saturday, October 17: In the forenoon the delegates will visit the Museum of the Davenport Academy of Sciences and opportunity will be given for an examination of the archeological collections, chiefly from the upper Mississippi Valley. At the Museum there will be an address of welcome and probably a brief session devoted to the ex- ploration, archeology, and native tribes of the upper Missis- sippi Valley. In the afternoon the delegates will be taken in automobiles to visit the important group of mounds at Albany, Illinois, from which many interesting specimens in the Daven- port Museum have come. These mounds are picturesquely situated on the bluffs of the Mississippi River, about 25 miles from Davenport, and the trip thither along the river valley at that time of the year promises to be delightful. In the evening a dinner will be given the visitors by the Academy of Sciences. St. Louis. — The program in St. Louis will be carried out under the auspices of the Archaeological Institute of America, with Professor F. W. Shipley, the President of the Institute, as Chairman of the local Committee. Details of the program were not fully elaborated when this announcement went to print, but the stay will extend over two days, Sunday and Monday, and visits will be made to the great Cahokia mounds, the chief one of which is the largest earthwork on the continent. Santa Fe, New Mexico. — Chairman of the Local Commit- tee, Dr. Edgar L. Hewett, Director of the School of American Archaeology. The party will be met at the station and con- ducted to hotels. The details of entertainment have not yet been completed, but present arrangements include a brief ses- sion at the Museum; two excursions, each of two days dura- tion, with camping facilities and sustenance provided, to the most important archeological remains in the vicinity; and finally a trip in automobiles to the Indian pueblos of Taos and other native villages along the Rio Grande. Some of the more important ruins will be shown in process of exploration; and at Taos or some of the other pueblos the party will have the opportunity of witnessing highly interesting ceremonies of the Indians. LIST OF MEMBERS TO APRIL 38, 1914 Ailes, Mr. M. E., 1630 I Street JST. W., Washington, D. C. Altamira, Professor Dr. Rafael, Professor of Diplomatic Institute (on "Colonisation"), Lagasca, 99, Madrid, Spain. Alvarez, Dr. Juan, Juez Federal, Laprida 1266, Rosario, Argentina. Sociedad Cientifica "Antonio Alzate," Ex-Volador, Mexico, D. R, Mexico. Anthropologicky Ustav pri Ceske Universite, Prague, Bohemia. Archaeological Institute of America, St. Louis, Missouri. Archive Nacional (de Brazil), 36 Praca da Republica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Arnold, Mr. Benjamin Walworth, Albany, New York. Ayer, Mr. Edward E., Railway Exchange Building, Chicago. Babcock, Mr. William H., 808 F Street, Washington, D. C. Ballivian, Sr. M. V., Director General of Statistics, etc., La Paz, Bolivia. Barnura, The Rev. Francis, S. .T., Georgetown University. Becker, Mr. C, The Wyoming Apartment House, Washington, D. C. Beer, Mr. William, Librarian, Howard Memorial Library, New Orleans, Louisiana. Bell, Mr. C. J., President American Security and Trust Co., Washing- ton, D. C. Benjamin, Dr. Marcus, Editor, U. S. National Museum. Berry, Chas. E., Eleventh and F Streets N. W., Washington, D. C. Bibliotheca Nacional, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Bingham, Hiram, Assistant Professor of Latin- American History, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut. Blount, Col. H. F., Thirty-first and R Streets N. W., Washington, D. C. Hon. Boucher de La Bruere, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Quebec, Canada. Bowditch, Mr. Charles P., Ill Devonshire Street, Boston, Massa- criu setts Breton, Miss Adela C, F. R. A. I., care of Wilts & Dorset Bank, Bath, England. The Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, Brooklyn, New York. Brown, Dr. J. Macmillan, Christchurch, New Zealand. Brown University, Library of. East Side Station, Providence, Rhode Island. Broz, Rev. Jan Stepan, Dodge, Nebraska. Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Bushnell, D. I., Jr., University, Virginia. Butler, Mr. Amos W., Secretary Indiana Board of State Charities, Room 93, State House, Indianapolis, Indiana. Butler, Mr. Charles Henry, 1535 I Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Calderon, Sr. Ygnacio, Minister of Bolivia, 1633 Avenue of Presidents, Washington, D. C. Carnegie Library, Schenley Park, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Carroll, Professor Mitchell, General Secretary of the Archaeological Institute of America, Professor in George Washington University ; The Octagon, Washington, D. C. Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C. M. Le Cte de Charencey. 72 Rue de I'Universit^ Paris, France. College of the City of New York, St. Nicholas Terrace and 139th Street, New York, N. Y. Cooper, Rev. John M., Instructor in Religion, Catholic University, 1725 Rhode Island Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C. Corby, Mr. Chas. I., 2301 Georgia Avenue, Washington, D. C. Cornell University Library, Ithaca, New York. Courty, Professor George, Professeur a TEcole Speciale des Travaux Publiques, a Chauffour-les Etrechy, par Etrechy, France. Davenport, Dr. Charles B., Director Station for Experimental Evolu- tion of Carnegie Institution, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, New York. Deglatigny, M. Louis, 11 rue Blaise Pascal, Rouen, France. Densmore, Miss Frances, Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution. Dixon, Dr. Roland B., Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Donlon, Rev. A. J., S. J., Georgetown University, Washington, D. C. Douglas, James, LL. D., 99 John Street, New York. Eaton, Mr. George F., Curator of Osteology, Yale University Museum, 80 Sachem Street, New Haven, Connecticut. Echeverria y Reyes, Anibal, Abogado, Casilla 160, Antofagasta, Chile. Faculdad de Filosofia y Letras, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Fewkes, J. Walter, Ph. D., Ethnologist, Bureau of American Ethnology, Forest Glen, Maryland. Flather, Mr. W. J., 2023 R Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Fleischmann, Charles L., F. R. A. I., 2 Maresfield Gardens, Hampstead, London N. W., England. Fletcher, Miss Alice C, Holder of Thaw Fellowship, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, 214 First Street S. E., Washington D. C. Flint, Dr. James M., Medical Director, U. S. Navy, Stoneleigh Court, Washington, D. C. Folkmar, Dr. Daniel, Specialist, United States Census, 1818 N Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Folkmar, Dr. Elnora C., Superintendent Women's Clinic Auxiliary, 1818 N Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Foote, James S., Professor of Pathology, Creighton Medical College, Omaha, Nebraska. Eraser, Mr. Daniel., 1626 P Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Free Public Library, Newark, New Jersey. Frederjci, Georg, Ph. D., retired Captain German Army, Dorlisheim, Alsatia, Germany. Furtado, Dr. Alcibiades, Director of Archive Nacional, 26 Praca da Republica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Gagnon, Mr. Alph., Secretary Department of Public Works and Labor, Quebec, Canada. Gans, Mr. Isaac, Seventh and Pennsylvania Avenue (Care Saks & Co.), Washington, D. C. Garfinkle, Mr. J., The Burlington, 1130 Vermont Avenue, Washington, D. C. Gasch, Mr. Herman E., 1326 New York Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. Geographical Society of Lisbon, Rua Eugenic Santos, Lisboa, Portugal. Geographische Gesellschaft, Rathaus-Horn, Monckeberg Str. 221, Ham- burg, Germany. Georgetown University, Washington, D. C. Giuffrida-Ruggeri, Prof. V., Institute Antropologico d. R. Universita di Napoli, Naples, Italy. Goldenberg, Mr. M., 912 Seventh Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Gosselin, Mgr. A. E., Rector, Laval University, Quebec, Canada, de Graffenried, Miss Mary Clare, 1935 Seventeenth Street, Washington, D. C, Green, Mr. James M., 1737 Massachusetts Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. Grinnell, Dr. George Bird, 238 East Fifteenth Street, New York, N. Y. Grosvenor, Mr. Gilbert H., Director and Editor of the National Geo- graphic Society, Hubbard Memorial Hall, Washington, D. C. Grubb, Mr. W. Barbrooke, Missionary, Care Messrs. Leach Hnos., San Pedro, Jujuy, Argentina. Hafkemeyer, Joh. Baptista, S. J., Professor of History, Gymnasio Gonzaga, Pelotas (Rio Grande do Sul), Brazil. Hagadorn, Mr. Francis T., 1909 Wallace Avenue (Van Nest), New York City. Hagar, Mr. Stansbury, Secretary Department of Ethnology, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences ; 48 Wall Street, New York City. Hahn, Mr. William, 930 Seventh Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Hartman, Professor C. V., Head Curator, Etnografiska Museet, Stock- holm, Sweden. Haupt, Paul, Ph. D., LL. D., Professor Johns Hopkins University, 215 Longwood Road, Roland Park, Baltimore, Maryland. Hendrick, Mr. J. T., Manager Manhattan Life Insurance Co., 734 Fifteenth Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Herrmann, Mr. J. P., Seventh and I Streets N. W., Washington, D. C. Heye, Mr. George G., 10 East Thirty-third Street, New York City. Hibbs, Mr. W. B., The Connecticut, Connecticut Avenue and M Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Hiersemann, Mr. Karl W., Publisher, Konigstr. 29, Leipzig, Germany. The Hispanic Society of America, 156th Street, West of Broadway, New York City. Hodge, Mr. F. W., Ethnologist-in-Charge, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C. Holmes, Professor W. H., Head Curator, Department of Anthropology and Curator National Gallery of Art, U. S. National Museum. Hood, Mr. James F., 1017 O Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Hough, Dr. Walter, Curator Ethnology, U. S. National Museum. Howe^ Chas. E., 1532 K Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Hrdlicka, Dr. Ales, Curator, Physical Anthropology, U. S. National Museum. , Hull, Frank R., M. Inst. C. E., F. R. G. S., General Manager, Brazil N. E. Railways, Caixa 55, Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil. Hunt, Mr. R. T., Missionary, Care of Messrs. Leach Hnos., San Pedro, Jujuy, Argentina. Institut de Sociologie Solvay, Pare Leopold, Brussels, Belgium. Instituto Historico e Geographico Brasileiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Jahn, Alfredo, Dr. Phil., Civil Engineer, Caracas, Sur 3 N° 145, Venezuela. Jenks, Dr. Albert Ernest, Professor of Anthropology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Jennings, Mr. Hennen, 2221 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. Johnson, Dr. Amandus, Instructor, University of Pennsylvania; College Hall, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Kann, Mr. Simon, Eighth Street and Market Place, Washington, D. C. Keefe, Mr. Harry L., LL. B., Walthill, Nebraska. Kehoe, Mr. W. J., 2200 Q Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Kidder, Dr. Alfred V., Associate Curator of Archaeology, Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts. King, Clarence P., Fourteenth and East Capitol Streets, Washington, D. C. Kober, George M., M. D., LL. D., Professor of Hygiene and Dean School of Medicine, Georgetown University; 920 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Koch-Grunberg, Prof. Dr., Kapellenweg, Freiburg i. B., Germany. Konigliche Offentliche Bibliothek, Dresden, Germany. Konninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague, Netherlands. Kunz, Dr. George Frederick, Honorary Curator Precious Stones, American Museum of Natural History; 409 Fifth Avenue, New York. La Flesche, Mr. Francis, Ethnologist, Smithsonian Institution. Lamb, Daniel Smith, A. M., M. D., LL. D., Pathologist and Professor of Anatomy, Howard University; 2114 Eighteenth Street N. W., Washingfton, D. C. Langhans, Professor Paul, Editor of Petermann's Mitteilungen (Globus), Gotha, Germany. Lansburgh, Mr. James, 420 Seventh Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Lehmann, Walter, Dr. Med. et Phil., Kustos am Kgl. Ethnographi- schen Museum Munchen, Bayern, Dillisstrasse 1. Lehmann-Nitsche, Robert, Dr. Ph. et Med., Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina. Lindsey, Mr. Edward, Warren National Bank Building, Warren, Penn- sylvania. Loubat, Due de, LL. D., Member Institute of France, Academy of Inscriptions and Belles Lettres; 53 Rue d'Urville, Paris. Lowie, Dr. Robert H., Associate Curator, Department of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York City. Marcou (Philippe), Pr. D., 28 Quai d'O'rleans, Paris, France. Matiegka, Dr. J., Professor of Anthropology, Ceska Universita, Praha, Bohemia. Majrntzhusen, Mr. F. C, Director de Colonia Mayntzhusen, Alto Parana, via Posadas, Misiones, Paraguay. Means, Mr. Philip Ainsworth, 39 Hampden Hall, Cambridge, Massa- chusetts. Michelson, Dr. Truman, Ethnologist, Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D. C. Micka, Mr. Frank, U. S. National Museum. Miller, Dr. Milo G., 4018 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Montane, Dr. Louis, Professor d'Anthropologie a I'Unicersite, Direc- teur de Laboratoire et Musee 1' Anthropologic Habana; Officios 33, Habana, Cuba. Mooney, Mr. James, Ethnologist, Bureau American Ethnology, Smith- sonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Moore, Mr. Clarence B., 1321 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. Moorehead, Mr. Warren K, Curator, Department of Archeology, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Morin, Victor, Esq., LL. D., 97 St. James Street, Montreal, Canada. Moses, Mr. W. B., Eleventh and F Streets N. W., Washington, D. C. Munn, Dr. Aristine Pinley, Clinical Assistant New York University, Bellevue Medical College, 18 West 58th Street, New York City. Murdoch, Mr. John, First Assistant, Catalogue Department, Boston Public Library, 16 High Rock Way, Allston, Massachusetts. Museo de Historia Natural, Montevideo, Uruguay. Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina. Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Nairn, Mr. W. Wallace, National Bank of Washington, Washington, Naprstkovo Museum, Prague, Bohemia. National Museum, Kjobenhavn, Danemark. Nelson, Mr. N. C., Assistant Curator, American Museum of Natural History, New York City, N. Y. New York Academy of Sciences, 77th Street and Central Park West, New York City. Nulla, Mr. J. M., San Pedro Sula, Honduras, Central America, van Panhuys, Jonkheer L. C, Chief Clerk Colonial Department, 7 Weverslaan, Hague, Netherlands. Peabody, Dr. Charles, Curator Europeon Archaeology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University; 197 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Pelleschi, Giovanni, Civil Engineer, Calle Alsina, N°.319, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Pena, Sr. Enrique, 138 Esmeralda, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Pendola, Agustin J., Secretario y Bibliotecario de la Republica Argen- tina, Museo Nacional, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Plancarte y Navarrete, Francisco, Mgr., Arzobispo de Linares, Apar- tado 7, Monterey, N. L,., Mexico. Plant, Mr. A. G., 1834 Calvert Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Posada, Dr. Eduardo, Apartado 43, Bogota, Colombia, South America. Prince, John Dyneley, Ph. D., Professor in Columbia University, Sterlington, Rockland County, New York. Prince, L. Bradford, LL. D., Santa Fe, New Mexico. Putnam, Mr. Edward K., Acting Director, Davenport Academy of Sciences, Davenport, Iowa. Putnam, Professor F. W., Honorary Director of the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. La Bibliotheque de la Legislature de la Province de Quebec, Quebec, Canada. Lafone Quevedo, Prof. Dr. S. A., Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina. Radosavljevich, Dr. Paul R., Assistant Professor of Experimental Pedagogy, New York University, Washington Square, New York City. Reeder, Mr. John T., 318 College Avenue, Houghton, Michigan. Renehan, Mr. A. B., Santa Fe, New Mexico. Rickards, Constantine G., Licenciado, British Vice-Consul, Apartado 21, Oaxaca^ Mexico. Sapper, Karl, Ph. D., Professor of Geography, Strassburg University; Herderstrasse 28, Strassburg i. E., Germany. Sarauw, Georg F. L., Nordenskioldsgatan 21 A, Goteborg, Sweden. Schwerz, Dr. Franz, Privatdozent a. d. Universitat, Bern, Switzerland. Seler, Dr. Eduard, Professor Universitat Berlin, Abtheilungsdirektor k. Museum f. Volkerkunde, Kaiser Wilhelmstrasse 3, Berlin- Steglitz, Germany, de Senna, Nelson C, Professor of History at the Gymnasio Mineiro, Bello Horizonte, Brazil; Rua S. Rita Durao 906, Bello Horizonte, Brazil (Minas). Shandelle, Rev. H. J., Dean Emeritus of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Georgetown University. Shigetaka (Juke) Shiga, Professor Political Geography, Waseda Uni- versity, Tokyo; 34-35, Reinanzaka, Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan. Shipley, Professor F. W., President Archselogical Institute of America ; Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri. da Silva, Dr. Antonio Carlos Simoens; Rua Visconde de Silva 111, Botafogos, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Steinen, Professor Dr. Karl von den, Berlin-Steglitz, Friedrichstr. 1, Germany. Steiner, Bernard D., Ph. D., Librarian, Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore, Md. Stellwagen, Mr. E. J., 1803 Biltmore Street, Washington, D. C. Stetson, Mr. George R., 1441 Massachusetts Avenue, Washington, D. C. Stetson, Mr. John B., Jr., Fifth Street and Montgomery Avenue, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania. Stevenson, Miss Beatrice L., 14 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Stevenson, Mrs. Matilda Coxe, Bureau of American Ethnology, Smith- sonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Stockton, Charles H., Rear Admiral United States Navy, President George Washington University, 2019 O Street N. W., Washington, D.C. Strasburger, Mr. Joseph, The' Kenesaw, Sixteenth and Irving Streets N. W., Washington, D. C. Swartzell, Rheem & Hensey Co., 725 Fifteenth Street N. W., Washing- ton, D. C. H. R. H. Princess Theresa of Bavaria, Ph. D., Honorary Member of the Academy of Sciences, Konigl. Residenz, Munich, Germany. Thilenius, Professor Dr. Georg, Director am Museum fur Volkerkunde, Hamburg 15, Binderstr. 14, Germany. Thorn, Mr. Corcoran, 1314 Nineteenth Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Torres, Dr. Luis M., Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina. Tozzer, Dr. Alfred M., Associate Professor Anthropology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Twitchell, Mr. Ralph Emerson, Santa Fe, New Mexico. United States National Museum, Washington, D. C. University Museum, Thirty-third and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. University of Toronto Library, Toronto, Canada. Upham, Mr. E. P., Assistant in Archaeology, Smithsonian Institution. Vignaud, Henry, LL. D., President Societe des Americanists de Paris, 2 rue de la Mairie, Bagneun (Seine), France. Walker, Mr. Allen E., 1338 G Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Wardman, Mr. Harry, 1430 K Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Washington, Dr. H. S., Geophysical Laboratory, Washington, D. C. Weber, Friedrich, Ph. D., Royal Ethnographic Museum, 5 Habsburgustr, Munich, Germany. Weller, Mr. M. I., 312 Pennsylvania Avenue S. E., Washington, D. C. White, Mr. Charles E., the National Bank of Washington, Washing- ton, D. C. Williams, Rev. James, Assistant Priest, S. Margaret's; 96, Kingston Road, Oxford, England. Wissler, Clark, Ph. D., Curator of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York City. Woodbury, Levi, President Washington and Norfolk Steamboat Co., 11 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C. Wulfing, Mr. John M., 3448 Longfellow Boulevard, St. Louis, Missouri. Wiirttemberg Verein fur Handelsgeographie E. V., Konigstr. 15, Stutt- gart, Germany. LIST OF DELEGATES TO APRIL 10, 1914 Accademia Gioenia di Scienze Naturali, Catania, Sicily : Professor W. H. Holmes. American Anthropological Association: Professor Franz Boas, Dr. George Grant MacCurdy. American Ethnological Society: Dr. Pliny E. Goddard, Dr. Alexander A. Goldenweiser. American Folk-Lore Society: Dr. Herbert J. Spinden. American Museum of Natural History: Dr. Clark Wissler, Dr. R. H. lyOwie. The American Society of Naturalists: Professor F. W. Putnam. Archaeological Institute of America : Professor W. H. Holmes, Mr. F. W. Hodge. Bohemian Academy of Sciences (Ceska Akademie Cisare Frantiska Josefa) : Dr. A. Hrdlicka. Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences : Mr. Stansbury Hagar. Bureau of American Ethnology: Mr. F. W. Hodge, Dr. J. Walter Fewkes. Catholic University of America: Very Rev. Dr. Patrick J. Healy, Professor Charles H. McCarthy. College of the City of New York: Professor Henry Phelps Johnston. Columbia University: Professor Franz Boas, Professor Marshall H. Saville. ficole d'Anthropologie, Paris: Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, Dr. George Grant MacCurdy. Georgetown University: Rev. A. J. Donlon, Rev. H. J. Shandelle. The Johns Hopkins University : Paul Haupt, Ph. D., lyL. D. United States National Museum: Dr. Richard Rathbun, Dr. W. H. Dall. New York Academy of Sciences : Dr. Clark Wissler, Dr. R. H. Lowie. Peabody Museum, Cambridge Mass. : Professor R. B. Dixon, Profes- sor A. M. Tozzer. Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. : Mr. Warren K. Moorehead. Regia Societas Scientiarum Bohemiae: Dr. A. Hrdlicka. The Royal Bavarian Government: Dr. Walter Lehmann. Smithsonian Institution: Dr. Charles D. Walcott, Dr. Frederick W. True. Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie: Professor K. Stolyhwo. University of Minnesota : Professor A. E. Jenks. The University Museum, Philadelphia : Eckley B. Coxe, Jr., Esq., F. R. A. I. ; Dr. G. B. Gordon. Yale University: Dr. George Grant MacCurdy. TITLES OF PAPERS RECEIVED TO APRIL 20, 1914 Altamira, Professor Dr. Rafael : "Notes sur I'histoire de la recopila- cion de las leyes de Indias." Babcock, Mr. William H. : "The Crescent-Form North Atlantic Island of Medieval Maps as possible indication of early North America." Benjamin, Marcus, Dr.: "How many old Americans (three generations or more on each side) are there in the United States?" Bingham, Professor Hiram : "Archaeological Explorations in the Peru- vian Highlands." Breton, Miss A. C. : "Preliminan'' Study of the Reliefs in the North- ern Building of the| Ball Court, Chichen Itza." Illustrated with slides. Brockett, Mr. Paul : "Precolumbian Americana.'' Bushnell, David I., Jr.: "The Origin and Various Types of Mounds in Eastern United States." Calderon, Sr. Ygnacio : 1. "Statistical Data on the Indians of Bolivia" ; 2. "The Actual Condition of the Descendants of the Incas in Bolivia." Cooper, Rev. John M. : "Critical Examination of possible Cultural Connection between Oceania and Tierra del Fuego." Densmore, Miss Frances: "Recent Developments in the Study of In- dian Music." With demonstration. Fewkes, Dr. J. Walter: "New Designs on Southwestern Pottery." Illustrated with slides. Fletcher, Miss Alice C. : "Aboriginal Concepts of Nature with Special Reference to the American Natives." Folkmar, Dr. D. : "The Unwritten Law of the American Tribes.'' Frachtenberg, Dr. Leo J. : "Ethnology of the Tribes of Oregon and Washington." Friederici, Dr. Georg: "Nacht Angriffe der Indianer.'' Gagnon, Mr. Alph. : "Le Vinland — sa localisation probable." Goddard, Dr. P. E. : "The Relationship of the Sarsi and Beaver In- dians." Gordon, Dr. G. B. : "A Study of Maya Pottery." Grosvenor, Gilbert H. : "Contributions of the National Geographic Society to American Anthropology." Hagar, St.ansbury: 1. "The Zodiac of the Mitla Mural Paintings." Illustrated with lantern slides. 2. "The Maya Day Sign Manik." Hartman, Professor C. V.: "Physical Anthropology of the Aztec In- dians of Salvador, Central America." Hewett, Dr. Edgar L. : "Recent Excavations at Quirigua, Guatemala, by the School of American Archseology." Hewitt, Mr. J. N. B. : "The League of the Iroquois.'' Hodge, Mr. F. W. : 1. "What the United States Government has done for Anthropology." 2. "A National Indian Gallery." Holmes, Professor W. H. : "The Place of Archaeology in Human His- tory." Hough, Dr. Walter: "Ceremonial and other Mutilations among the American Indians." Hrdlicka, Dr. A. : "Anthropological Study of Old Americans (Ameri- can whites of three or more srenerations on each side)." Hunt, R. T., and S. A. Laf one Quevedo : "Late Discoveries Among a Number of Little Known Chaco Tribes." Jenks, Professor Albert Ernest: "Some Aspects of Racial Amalgama- tion in America." Johnson, Amandus : "The Indians and their Culture as Described in the Swedish and Dutch Records of 1614 to 1664." La Flesche, Francis : "Tribal Organization : A Siouan Group." Lamb, Dr. D. S. : "The Army Medical Museum in American Anthro- pology." Lange, Algot: "A Series of Excavations on the Lower Amazon." Lehmann, Dr. Walter: "Central American Archaeology." Lowie, Robert H. : "The Relationship Terms of the Crow and Hidatsa Indians." MacCurdy, George Grant: 1. "The Wesleyan University Collection of Antiquities from Tennessee." 3. "Rock Shelters of Connecticut." Marrett, R. R. : Special Lecture, Wednesday, October j. — "Ancient Man and his Relation to the American Aborigines." Mead, Mr. Charles Williams : "Conventionalized Figures in the Deco- rative Art of Ancient Petu." Michelson, Dr. Truman: "Problems in Algonquian Ethnology." Moorehead, Mr. Warren K. : "Prehistoric Cultures in the State of Maine, U. S. A." Illustrated with lantern slides and original specimens. Munn, Dr. A. P. : "Anthropometrical Study of Very Bright and Very Feeble-minded School Children in New York City." van Panhuys, L. C. : "The Bird in the Life of the Bush Negro in Surinam." Pezet, Sr. Federico Alfonso. : "Notes on the Earliest Relations between the White and Indian Races in Peru.'' Prince, Gov. L. Bradford: "The Ancient Idols and Fetiches of New Mexico." Lafone Quevedo, Dr. Samuel A. : 1. "Linguistic Correlation of the Great Ethnic Groups of South America." 2. "Ethnography in the South American Continent." Radosavljevich, Professor Paul R. : 1. "Pedagogical Anthropology: History, Scope, and Prohlems." 2. "American and European Child (compared anthropometrically)." Rickards, Constantine G. : "The Ruins of Yucu-Tichiyo, Oaxaca." Sapir, E. : 1. "Inherited Privileges among the Nootka Indians.'' 2. "Haida, Tlingit, and Athabascan; a Study in Comparative Lin- guistics." Sapper, Karl: "Eine verzierte Baumcalebasse aus dem Sumo-Gebiet (Nicaragua)." Saville, Professor Marshall H. : "Account of Explorations of the Heye Expedition in Esmeraldas, Ecuador." Shigetaka (Juko) Shiga: "Historical Relations Between America and Japan." Stevenson, Mrs. Matilda Coxe: "Pueblo Rituals." Illustrated with lantern slides. Swanton, Dr. J. R. : "The Creek Confederacy." Washington, H. S. : "The Petrography of American Stone Implements.'' Weller, M. I. : "Earliest European Settlements on the Potomac River." Wissler, Dr. Clark : "The Pattern Theory as Applied to the Sun Dance of the Plains Indians." REGULATIONS CONCERNING COMMUNICATIONS TO BE PRESENTED, AND THEIR PUBLICATION. 1. The Organizing Committee has requested a number of prominent Americanists to serve as a Committee on Communi- cations and Publication. This Committee will pass on the admissibility of all papers and addresses offered to the Congress, and on their subsequent publication. 2. In accordance with the usages and regulations of preced- ing Congresses, each member is entitled to present not more than two communications. 3. Titles of papers cannot be included in the final programs until synopses of the same have been furnished to the Secre- tary. These synopses should be submitted not later than September 1st, in order that they may be printed in time for distribution to the delegates before the meeting. 4. 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