12 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 
and ornaments, subsistence, travel and transportation, war- 
fare, games, and pastimes, social organization and festivals, 
social customs, religion, medicines, charms and current be- 
liefs, and art, and the recorded results consist of 577 manu- 
script pages. In addition, Dr. Frachtenberg recorded 156 
native songs, including words and translations; he also ob- 
tained several hundred native drawings illustrating the 
material culture of the Quileute, and photographed a like 
number of ethnologic specimens. Furthermore, he mate- 
rially added to his linguistic and ethnologic studies of this 
people, commenced during the preceding year, by collecting 
several thousand additional grammatical forms and phrases, 
and by recording 22 new native traditions with interlinear 
translations, and three stories in English. These texts, in 
the form of field notes, comprise 176 pages. While engaged 
in this field work Dr. Frachtenberg was instrumental in in- 
ducing Mrs. Martha Washburn of Neah Bay, Mr. and Mrs. 
Theo. R. Rixon of Clallam Bay, and Mrs. Fannie Taylor of 
Mora, to give to the National Museum a part of their collec- 
tions of Makah and Quileute specimens, including two old 
totem poles, approximately 100 baskets, and more than 30 
other ethnologic specimens. In addition to the Quileute 
studies mentioned, Dr. Frachtenberg collected 88 pages of 
Makah (Nootka) linguistic data, 57 pages of Quinault (Salish), 
and 18 pages of Clallam (Lkungen). While in Portland, 
Oreg., he obtained through the courtesy of the municipal 
authorities a fine collection of photographs representing sev- 
eral hundred archeological objects owned by the city. 
Dr. Frachtenberg returned to Washington early in Feb- 
ruary. Subsequently, after conference with Dr. Franz Boas, 
honorary philologist of the bureau, it was arranged that Dr. 
Frachtenberg prepare for the Handbook of American Indian 
Languages comparative sketches of the Kalapuya, Molala, 
Klamath, and Quileute, and possibly one of the Salish lan- 
guages. He also engaged in the final preparation of his 
paper Alsea Texts and Myths, which is now in process of 
printing as Bulletin 67. He next proceeded to prepare for 
publication the results of his earlier investigations of the 
language, ethnology, and mythology of the Kalapuya 
