Jan., 1909. Annual Rbpori 01 un- Director. 221 



March 1 4- " Mt. IVle and the 1 >< struction of St. Pierre, Martinique." 

 Dr. Edmund Otis Hovey, American Museum of 

 Natural History. 



March ai. "Mosquito* I 1 and Vicinity." 



Mr. Win. J. ( rerhard, Assistant Curator ol Entomoloj 



March a8, "Holland's War with the Sea." 



Prof. James II. Gore, The G Washington Uni- 



versity. 



April 4- "Treasures of the Mexican Mountains." 



Prof. Rufus M. Bagg, Jr., University of Illinois. 



April 11. 'The Dominanl Geographic Features of Wisconsin." 



Dr. S. Weidman, Geological and Natural History 

 Survey, Madison, Wisconsin. 



April iv 'The Pacific Salmons' Struggle for Existence." 

 Dr. S. E. Meek, Assistant Curator of Zoology. 



April 25.- -"Archaeological Studies on the Coast of Ecuador." 



Prof. Marshall H. Saville, American Museum of 

 Natural History. 



The following is the Twenty-ninth Lecture Course, delivered 

 during the months of October and November, 1908: 



3— "Through the Cataracts of the Nile." 



Prof. James H. Breasted, The University of Chicago. 



10.— "A Naturalist in Venezuela." 



Dr. N. Dearborn, Assistant Curator of Ornithology. 

 Oct. 17. 'The Great American Deserts as Seen in New Mexico 



and Sonora." 

 Prof. Thomas H. Macbride, The State University 

 of 1 

 Oct. 'The Geology and Scenery of the Pipestone Region." 



Prof. Samuel Calvin, The State University of Iowa. 

 Oct. 31. "Among the Bird- in Costa Rica and Panama." 



Mr. J. P. Ferry, Assistant, Division of Ornithology. 



Nov. 7. "Life of a Lake in Summer." 



\)v. Edward A. Birge, University of Wisconsin. 

 Nov. 14. — "The Heraldry of the Indians." 



Mr. James Mooney, United States Bureau of Eth- 

 nology. 



