224 
Mexico. By Dr. Carl Lumholz, Amer. Mus. 
Nat. History, New York. 
11. Notched Human Bones from a Prehistoric 
Tarascan Tomb in Michoaean. By Dr. Carl 
Lumholz and Dr. A. Hrdlicka, New York. 
12. A Cranium and Skeleton from an Ancient 
Burial Place in the Valley of Mexico. By Dr. 
A. Hrdlicka, New York. 
13. An Archeologic Map of Ohio. By War- 
ren K. Moorehead, Ohio State University, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
14. Early Man of the Delaware Valley. By 
Professor F. W. Putnam, Peabody Museum, 
Cambridge, Mass. 
15. Archzologic Researches in the Trenton 
Gravels. By Professor W. H. Holmes, Field 
Columbian Museum, Chicago. 
16. Geologic Age of the Relic-bearing De- 
posits at Trenton, By Professor R. D. Salis- 
bury, Chicago University, Chicago. 
“ 17. Prehistoric Implements from Charlevoix, 
Michigan. By H. P. Parmalee, Charlevoix, 
Mich. 
18. Decoration of the Teeth in Ancient 
America. By M. H. Sayville, American Museum 
Natural History, New York. 
19. The Origin of Art as manifested in the 
Work of Prehistoric Man. By Dr. Thomas 
Wilson. 
20. The Import of the Totem—A Study of 
the Omaha Tribe. By Alice C. Fletcher, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 
21. The Jessup Expedition and the Asiatic- 
American Problem. By Professor F. W. Put- 
nam, Americam Museum Nat. Hist., New York. 
22. Evidence of contact with Polynesia and 
the Asiatic Coast. By Rey. Stephen D. Peet, 
Good Hope, Ill. 
23. The Ethnologic Arrangement of Archzeo- 
logic Material. 
Museum Nat. Hist., New York. 
24, The Tagbanna of the Philippines. By 
Dean C. Worcester, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
25. The Mangyane of the Philippines. By 
Dean C. Worcester, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
26. The Artificialization of Animals and 
Plants. By Professor O. T. Mason, National 
Museum, Washington, D. C. 
27. Report of Committee on Anthropologie 
Teaching. 
SCIENCE. 
By Harlan I. Smith, American 
[N.S Vou. VI. No. 136. 
28. A Statistical Study of Eminent Men. By 
Professor J. McKeen Cattell, Columbia Uni- 
versity, New York. 
29. Mental Conditions determining the Rate 
of Movement. By Professor Lightner Witmer, 
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. 
30. Genesis of Implement-making. By Frank 
Hamilton Cushing, Bureau of American Ethnol- 
ogy, Washington, D. C. 
SECTION I.—SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SCIENCE. 
Address of the Vice-President: Improvident 
Civilization. By Mr. R. T. Colburn, Elizabeth, 
N. J. 
Beginning on Tuesday, August 10th, the fol- 
lowing papers will be read ; 
1. The Civil Service Reform. By Dr. Wm. 
H. Hale, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
2. Civic Ownership of Public Works. 
Dr. Wm. H. Hale, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
3. Racial Deterioration : the Increase of Sui- 
cide. By Lawrence Irwell, Buffalo, N. Y. 
4. Wheat Consumption in the United States. 
By Henry Farquhar, Dep’t of Agriculture, 
Washington, D. C. 
5. The Municipal System of Ontario. 
C. James, M.A., Toronto. 
6. The New Canadian Tariff. By Professor 
James Mavor, Toronto. 
7. Suggestions for an International Confer- 
ence on Diversity of Languages. By R. T. 
Colburn, Elizabeth, N. J. 
8. The ‘Social Mind,’ or ‘Social Conscience ;’ 
its origin and persistence. By ————————_—. 
9. Tariffs and Trade. By Archibald Blue, 
Bureau of Mines, Toronto. : 
10. The Course of Ontario Agriculture dur- 
the past ten years. By C. C. James, M.A., 
Toronto. 
11. The U.S. idea in laying out the Public 
Lands and the Evils resulting therefrom. By 
B. W. DeCourey, Tacoma, Wash. 
12. Labor Restrictions as Potent Factors in 
Social Evolution. By Dr. Charles Porter Hart, 
Wyoming, Obio. 
18. International currency. By H. P. VY. 
Bogne, Avon, N. Y. 
By 
By C. 
ARCHIBALD BLUE, 
Secretary of the Section. 
BUREAU OF MINES, TORONTO. 
