96 ■ KEPORT OP THE SECRETARY. 



AVashington: Government Printing Office, 1900. Large octavo. Pages i-xcii, 1-576*, 

 571-1160. 



This report contains the following papers: 



Part I. — lieport of the Director, pages v-xcii. Myths of the Cherokees. By James 

 Mooney, i)ages 3-548, plates i-xxviir. Index. Pages 549-576*. 



Part II. — Tusayan ^Migration Traditions. By Jesse AValter Fewkes, images 573-634. 



Localization of Tusayan clans.. By Cosmos Mindeleff. Pages 635-653. 



]M()un<ls in Northern Honduras. By Thomas Gann. Pages 655-692, plates xxix- 



XXXIX. 



Mayan Calendar Systems. By Cyrus Thomas. Pages 693-819, plates xi-xliv. 



Primitive Numbers. By W J McGee. Pages 821-851. 



Numerical Systems of Mexico and Central America. By Cyrus Thomas. Pages 

 85.3-955. 



Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies. By Jesse "Walter Fewkes. Pages 957-1011, 

 plates XLv-Lxv. 



The Wild Rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes. By Albert Ernest Jenks. Pages 

 1013-1137, plates lxvi-lxxix. 



Index. Pages 1139-1160. 



Bulletin 25. Natick Dictionary. By James Hammond Trumbull. Wa.shington: 

 Government Printing Office, 1903. Royal octavo, pages xxviii, 349. 



Bulletin 27. Tsimshian Toxts. By Franz Boas. Washington: Government Print- 

 ing Office, 1902. Royal octavo, pages 244. 



VII. TrBI.ICATIOXS OF A^IERICAX HISTORICAL AS.SOCIATION. 



The Annual Report of thfe American Llistorical Association for the year 1902 was 

 sent to the printer in April, but presswork was not completed before June 30. The 

 report is in two volumes, pages 648, 527, with the following contents: 



Volume I. 



(392) Report of Proceedings of Eighteenth Annual Meeting, at Philadelphia, l)eeenilHT 2()-30, 1902, 

 by Charles H. Haskins, corresponding secretary, pp. 17-4.5. 



(393) Subordination in historical treatment, by Alfred Thayer Mahan, pp. 47-(>3. 



(394) The Antecedents of the Declaration of Independence, by James Sullivan, with discussion by 

 William A. Dunning, pp. &5-<S5. 



(395) Studies in the History of tlie Federal Convention of 1787, by John Franklin Jameson, pp. 

 87-167. 



(396) A Keglected Point of View in American Colonial Hi-story: The Colonies as Dependencies of 

 Great Britain, by William MacDonald, pp. 169-178. 



(397) The French Parliaments, by James Breck Perkins, pp. 179-190. 



(398) The Art of Weaving: A Handmaid of Civilization, by William B-. Weeden, pp. 191-210. 



(399) Municipal Problems in Mediseval Switzerland, by John Martin Vincent, pp. 211-221. 



(400) Party Politics in Indiana during the Civil War, by James Albert Woodburn, pp. 223-251. 



(401) American Business Corporations before 1789, by Simeon E. Baldwin, pp. 253-274. 



(402) The National Canal Policy, by Lindley M. Keasbey, pp. 275-288. 



(403) The Xeutralization Features of the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, by John H. Latane, pp. 289-:303. 



(404) Suez and Panama, A Parallel, by Theodore S. Wool.'^ey, pp. 305-311. 



(405) Reasons for the Withdrawal of the French from Mexico, by Clyde Augustus Duniway, pp. 

 313-328. 



(406) Report of the Public Archives Commission, by William MacDonall, Herbert L. O.sgood, John 

 Martin Vincent, Charles M. Andrews, Edwin Erie Sparks, pp. 329-363, including apjicndixes (Nos. 

 407, 408 below). 



(407) The Archives of Oregon, by F. G. Young, pp. 337-355. 



(408) Report on the Bexar Archives, by Eugene C. Barker, pp. 357-363. 



(409) Tlie Anti-Masonic Party, by Charles McCarthy, pp. 331-574. 



(410) List of Publications of American Historical Association, with index of titles, by A. Howard 

 Clark, pp. 575-639. 



