a8 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 
and a Chippewa Rhapsody. Mr. Charles Wakefield Cadman 
has composed, for the voice, two of the Chippewa songs, 
“From the Long Room of the Sea” and “Ho, Ye Warriors 
on the Warpath.” Mr. 8. N. Penfield has harmonized two 
vocal quartets, “Manitou Listens to Me” and “ Why Should 
I be Jealous?”” For the violin Mr. Alfred Manger has pre- 
pared a “Fantasie on Sioux Themes,” and Mr. Alberto Bim- 
boni has well advanced toward completion an opera bearing 
the title “The Maiden’s Leap.” Certain of the orchestral 
arrangements have been played by the Chicago Symphony 
Orchestra (formerly known as the Thomas Orchestra), as well 
as by the symphony orchestras of Washington, Minneapolis, 
and Kansas City. It is interesting to note the demand for 
Sioux themes in advance of their publication. These have 
been furnished in manuscript as far as possible to those de- 
siring them for specific and legitimate use. Two of the com- 
positions in the foregoing list are based on such themes. 
Work on the volume of Sioux music is approaching com- 
pletion. This will be larger than either of the bulletins on 
Chippewa music, and, while the same general plan has been 
followed, there will be much that is new, both in subject 
matter and in style of illustration. 
During the year work on the Handbook of Aboriginal 
Remains East of the Mississippi was continued by Mr. D. I. 
Bushnell, jr., under a small allotment from the bureau, and 
upproximately 90,300 words of manuscript were recorded 
on cards geographically arranged. The entire amount of 
manuscript now completed is about 321,000 words, and the 
bibliography thus far includes 306 titles. As a result of the 
notes received from the Wisconsin Archeological Society, 
through the courtesy of its secretary, Mr. Charles E. Brown, 
of Madison, every county of that State will be well repre- 
sented in the Handbook. It is to be regretted that more 
information regarding aboriginal remains is not forthcoming 
from certain other parts of the country east of the Mississippi, 
especially the New England States, which at this writing are 
not adequately represented. The bureau is indebted to 
Mr. Warren K. Moorehead, of the department of archeology 
of Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, for the gen- 
