62 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1914, 
PUBLICATIONS. 
The editorial work of the bureau has been continued by Mr. J. G. 
Gurley, editor, who has been assisted from time to time by Mrs. 
Frances §. Nichols. The following publications were received from 
the press during the year: 
Bulletin 53, “ Chippewa Music—II,” by Frances Densmore. 
Bulletin 56, “‘ Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians,” by Junius Henderson and 
John P. Harrington. 
“Coos: An Illustrative Sketch,” by Leo J. Frachtenverg. Extract from 
Handbook of American Indian Languages (Bulletin 40), part 2. 
The status of other publications, now in press, is as follows: 
The proof reading of the Twenty-ninth Annual Report, the ac- 
companying paper of which, entitled “ Ethnogeography of the Tewa 
Indians,” by John P. Harrington, is an exhaustive memoir present- 
ing many technical difficulties, was nearly completed during the year. 
About two-thirds of the memoir is in page form. 
The Thirtieth Annual Report comprised originally, in addition to 
the administrative section, three memoirs: (1) “Tsimshian Myth- 
ology,” by Franz Boas; (2) “ Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians,” by 
Matilda Coxe Stevenson; (8) “An Inquiry into the Animism and 
Folk-lore of the Guiana Indians,” by Walter E. Roth. Extensive 
additions to the first-named memoir, received after the report had 
been put into type, necessitated the division of the contents, and 
accordingly this section was transferred to the Vhirty-jfirst Report. 
Approximately two-thirds of “Tsimshian Mythology” has been 
paged, and the Zui memoir also, now the first accompanying paper 
of the Thirtieth Annual, is in process of paging. 
To the Thirty-second Report will be assigned a memoir entitled 
“Seneca Myths and Fiction,” collected by Jeremiah Curtin and 
J. N. B. Hewitt and edited with an introduction by the latter, the 
manuscript of which is about ready for editorial revision. 
Bulletin 40 (pt. 2), “ Handbook of American Indian Languages.” 
The work on this bulletin has been carried along steadily under the 
immediate supervision of its editor, Dr. Boas. Two sections— 
Takelma and Coos—have been issued in separate form (aggregating 
429 pages), and two additional sections, dealing with the Chukchee 
and Siuslaw languages, respectively, are in type, the former being 
“made up ” to the extent of about 50 pages. 
Bulletin 46, “A Dictionary of the Choctaw Language,” by Cyrus 
Byington (edited by John R. Swanton and Henry S. Halbert). The 
first (Choctaw-English) section of this work was completed during 
the year and is practically ready for the press. The manuscript of 
the second section (English-Choctaw directory), comprising 36,008 
entries on cards, was sent to the Printing Office April 30 to June 13, 
but no proof had been received at the close of the year. 
