l6o WARM AN 



128. Certitudes and illusions. [Discussion and correspondence.] 



In Science for April 11, 1896, new series, vol. 3, pp. 595- 

 596, New York, 4°. 



129. Relation of primitive peoples to environment, illustrated by 



American examples. By J. W. Powell. 



In Smithsonian Report for 1895, pp. 625-637, Washing- 

 ton, 8°. 



Saturday lecture in Assembly Hall of the United States 

 National Museum, April 25, 1896. 



Issued in separate form, with cover and inner titles. Also 

 included in Smithsonian pamphlet No. 1064, entitled " Rela- 

 tions of human life to environment," which consists of pp. 

 625-711 from same report. 



130. The absolute and the relative. 



In Science for May 15, 1896, new series, vol. 3, pp. 743- 

 745, New York, 1896, 8°. 



131. The subject of consciousness. 



In Science for June 5, 1896, new series, vol. 3, pp. 845- 

 S47, New York, 4°. 



132. On primitive institutions. By Major J. W. Powell. Di- 



rector of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Smith- 

 sonian Institution. 



In American Bar Association, Report of the Nineteenth 

 Annual Meeting, held at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., August 

 19, 20 and 21, 1896, pp. 573-593, Philadelphia, 1896, 8°, 



Read on August 21 before the section on legal education. 



Issued separately: cover and 21 pp., 8°. 



133. [Classification of the native tribes on a demotic or human 



basis as distinguished from a biotic or somatologic 

 basis.] 



In Bureau of Ethnology, Fourteenth Annual Report, Part 

 I, pp. xxvii-xxx, Washington, 1896, royal S°. 



Included in paper-covered separates of Director's report. 



Restated in the Fifteenth Annual Report, pp. xvii-xix, 

 Washington, 1897, royal 8°. 



1897. 



134. [Demonomy, or the science of humanity.] 



In Bureau of Ethnology, Fifteenth Annual Report, pp. 

 xvii-xix, Washington, 1897, royal 8'. 



