KEPOKT OF THE SECEETARY 75 



way. The Ozark region in Missouri is yielding many surprises to 

 the archeologist and it is believed that there still remains much 

 field work to be done here and in the neighborhood before the char- 

 acter and antiquity of the ftidians of that region are definitely 

 determined. 



With a small appropriation Mr. John L. Baer carried on instruc- 

 tive field studies on the banner stones in the Susquehanna River 

 region, and was able to make a good series reaching from the imper- 

 fect form into the more symmetrical objects. He also investigated 

 the pictographs found near Delta, Pa. 



EDITORIAL WORK AND PUBLICATIONS 



The editing of the publications of the bureau was continued 

 through the year by Mr. Stanley Searles, editor, assisted by Mrs. 

 Frances S. Nichols, editorial assistant. The status of the publica- 

 tions is presented in the following summary : 



PUBLICATIONS ISSUED 



Thirty-fourth Annual Report. Accompanying paper: A Prehistoric Island Cul- 

 ture Area of America (Fewkes). 281 pp., 120 pis., 69 figs. 



Thirty-seventh Annual Report. Accompanying paper: The Winnebago Tribe 

 (Radin). 560 pp., 58 pis., 38 figs. 



Bulletin 76. Archeological Investigations (Fowke). 204 pp., 45 pis., 37 figs. 



Bulletin 77. Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes west of 

 the Mississippi (Bushnell). 211 pp., 55 pis., 12 figs. 



PUBLICATIONS IN PBESS OB IN PEEPABATION 



Thirty-eighth Annual Report. Accompanying paper : An Introductory Study of 

 the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians (Roth). 



Thirty-ninth Annual Report. Accompanying paper: The Osage Tribe: The Rite 

 of Vigil (La Flesche). 



Fortieth Annual Report. Accompanying papers: The Mythical Origin of the 

 White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians ; The Autobiography of a Fox 

 Indian Woman ; Notes on Fox Mortuary Customs and Beliefs ; Notes on the 

 Fox Society known as " Those Who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo " ; 

 The Traditional Origin of the Fox Society known as " The Singing-Around 

 Rite" (Michelson). 



Forty-first Annual Report. Accompanying paper: Social Organization and 

 Social Usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton). 



Bulletin 78. Handbook of the Indians of California (Kroeber). 



Bulletin 79. Blood Revenge, War, and Victory Feasts among the Jibaro In- 

 dians of Eastern Ecuador (Karsten). 



Bulletin 80. Mandan and Hidatsa Music (Densmore). 



Bulletin 81. Excavations in the Chama Valley, New Mexico (Jeancon). 



Bulletin 82. Fewkes and Gordon Groups of Mounds in Middle Tennessee 

 (Myer). 



