August 19, 1898.] 



SCIENCE. 



231 



29. Development of the Pollen Grain in 

 Symplocarpiis and Peltandra. By B. M. Dug- 

 gar, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. 



30. Fermentation without Live Yeast Cells. 

 By Katherine E. Golden, Lafayette, Ind., and 

 Carletou G. Ferris. 



31. Deterrent Action of Salt in Yeast Fer- 

 mentation. By Katherine E. Golden. 



32. Fungous Gardening as practiced by the 

 Termites in West Africa and Java. By O. F. 

 Cook, U. S. National Museum, and D. G. Fair- 

 child, Department of Agriculture, Washington, 

 D. C. 



33. The Embryology of Taxus. By E. J. 

 Durand, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. 



34. A Bacteriological Study of Pear Blight. 

 By Lillian Snyder, Lafayette, Ind. 



35. Life History and Characteristics of the 

 Pear Blight Bacillus. By Merton B. Waite, 

 U. S. Department of Agriculture. 



36. Notes on Some Diseases of Southern 

 Pines. By Hermann von Schrenk, Missouri 

 Botanic Garden, St. Louis, Mo. 



37. The Ecological Distribution of Colorado 

 and Wyoming Plants. By L. H. Pammel, 

 Ames, la. 



38. Notes on Some Monocotyledonous Em- 

 bryo-sacs. By K. M. Wiegand, Cornell Uni- 

 versity, Ithaca, N. Y. 



39. General Characteristics of the Dune 

 Flora of Southeastern Virginia. By Thos. H. 

 Kearney, Jr., U. S. Department of Agriculture, 

 Washington, D. C. 



40. Vegetation of the Wooded Fresh-water 

 Swamps of Southeastern Virginia. By Thos. 

 H. Kearney, Jr. 



SECTION H. — ANTHROPOLOGY. 



Address of the Vice-President : The Ad- 

 vance of Psychology. By Professor J. McKeen 

 Cattell, Columbia University, New York. 



1. Typological Analysis. By Professor D. G. 

 Brinton, University of Pennsylvania. 



2. Anthropological Terminology. By Pro- 

 fessor D. G. Brinton. 



3. Sophiology, or the Science of the Evolu- 

 tion of Opinion. By Major J. W. Powell, 

 Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, 

 D. C. 



4. Papago Medicine. By Dr. W J McGee, 



Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, 

 D. C. 



5. Some Definitions in Anthropology. By 

 Dr. W J BIcGee. 



6. Anthropological Problems of the Pacific 

 Slope. By Dr. W. H. Holmes, U. S. National 

 Museum. 



7. Museum Presentation of Anthropology. 

 By Dr. W. H. Holmes. 



8. The Significance of the Garment, a Study 

 of the Omaha Tribe. (Lantern illustrations.) 

 By Miss Alice C. Fletcher, Washington, D. C. 



9. The Earth Lodge. By Miss Alice C. 

 Fletcher and Dr. W. Matthews, Washington, D.C. 



10. The Harmonic Structure of Indian Songs. 

 By Professor J. C. Fillmore, Pomona College, 

 Claremont, California. 



11. Ritual of the Sacred Pole of the Omahas. 

 (Phonograph records.) By Francis La Flesche, 

 Washington, D. C. 



12. The Survival of African Music in America. 

 By Mrs. Jeanette Robinson Murphy, New York, 

 N. Y. 



13. Some of the Evidences that Northmen 

 were in Massachusetts in pre-Columbian Times. 

 By Miss Cornelia Hereford, Cambridge, Mass. 



14. 15. Subjects relating to the Physical An- 

 thropology of North American Indians. By 

 Dr. G. A. Dorsey, Field Columbian Museum, 

 Chicago, 111. 



16. The Smith Sound Eskimo. By A. L. 

 Kroeber, Columbia University. 



17. The Maori of New Zealand ; his history 

 and country. By Hon. Hugh H. Lusk, England. 



18. ' Moros,' or Malay Pirates of the Southern 

 Philippines. By Professor Dean C. Worcester, 

 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 



19. The Philippine Islands and their People. 

 By Professor Dean C. Worcester. 



20. The Tools of the American Pioneer. 

 (Lantern illustrations.) By H. C. Mercer, Uni- 

 versity of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. 



21. The Origin of Domesticated Animals. 

 By H. C. Mercer. 



22. Burial Customs of the Ancient Zapotecans 

 of Southern Mexico. By M. H. Saville, Ameri- 

 can Museum of Natural History, New York. 



23. Notes on the Lacandon Indians of Mex- 

 ico. By M. H. Saville. 



24. Tomahawk and Shield. By Frank H. 



