232 



SCIENCE. 



[N. S. Vol. VIII. No. 190. 



Gushing, Bureau of American Ethnology, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. 



25. Examples of Primitive Fire-working from 

 Florida. By Frank H. Gushing. 



26. Art in Prehistoric Times. By Profes- 

 sor Thomas Wilson, Smithsonian Institution, 

 Washington, D. G. 



27. Prehistoric Musical Instruments. By 

 Professor Thomas Wilson. 



28. Arrow-points, Spear-heads and Knives. 

 By Professor Thomas Wilson. 



29. Problems of the Rechahecrian Indians of 

 Virginia. By William Wallace Tooker, Sag 

 Harbor, N. Y. 



30. The Swastica and other Marks among 

 the Eastern Algonquians, a preliminary study. 

 By William Wallace Tooker. 



31. The Water Burial Time. By Stansbury 

 Hagar, New York. 



32. Relation of the Moon to Time-reckoning 

 among the Early Races. By R. J. Floody, S. 

 Ashburnham, Mass. 



33. The Rite of Gircumcision among the 

 Early Races. By R. J. Floody. 



34. Anthropology, not Sociologj', as an Ade- 

 quate Philosophy. By Daniel Folkmar, Mil- 

 waukee, Wis. 



35. Science the Basis of Morals. By M. A. 

 Glancey, Clerk's Office, Supreme Gourt, Wash- 

 ington. D. G. 



36. Anthropological Differences between Typ- 

 ical White and Negro Girls of the same Age. 

 By Dr. A. Hrdlicka, State Pathological Insti- 

 tute, New York. 



37. Variations of the Normal Tibia. By Dr. 

 A. Hrdlicka. 



38. Resume of Recent Studies on the Origins of 

 European Races. By Dr. W. Z. Ripley, Massa- 

 chusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 



39. Presentation of a Bibliography of the An- 

 thropology and Ethnology of Europe. By Dr. 

 W. Z. Ripley. 



40. Typical American Students, illustrated 

 by Gharts and Statues. By Dr. D. A. Sargent, 

 Hemenway Gymnasium, Harvard University, 

 Cambridge, Mass. 



41. A New Kymographion ; a New Chrono- 

 scope. Professor G. W. Fitz, Harvard Univer- 

 sity, Cambridge Mass. 



42. Anthropometric Instruments. By Pro- 



fessor J. McKeen Cattell, Columbia University, 

 New York. 



43. Psychology and Art. By Professor Hugo- 

 Miinsterberg, Harvard University, Cambridge, 

 Mass. 



44. The New Theory of the Light Sense. 

 By Mrs. G. Ladd Franklin, Baltimore, Md. 



45. Discussion: In Man, what Factors are 

 due to Heredity and what to Environment? 

 Opened by Professor D. G. Brinton, Dr. W J 

 McGee and Dr. W. Z. Ripley. 



SECTION I. — SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SCIENCE. 



Address of the Vice-President : The Historic 

 Method in Economics. By Archibald Blue,. 

 Director, Bureau of Mines, Toronto, Ontario. 



1. The College of Forestry at Cornell Uni- 

 versity. By B. E. Feruow, Cornell University, 

 Ithaca, N. Y. 



2. High Wages in Money or what Money 

 will buy, the Consequent of Low Cost of Pro- 

 duction. By Edward Atkinson, Boston, Mass. 



S. Local Life by Local Times. By S. Edward 

 Warren, Newton, Mass. 



4. A Study of Competition and Suburban 

 Prices. By S. Edward W arren. 



5. Executive Discretion in the LTnited States. 

 By Cora A. Beuneson, Cambridge, Mass. 



6. The Short Duration of School Attendance, 

 Causes and Remedies. By Mr. and Mrs. Daniel 

 Folkmar, StateNormal School, Milwaukee, Wis. 



7. The Pi'ogress of the Maritime Commerce 

 of the World during the past Fifty Years. By 

 E. L. Corthell, New York, N. Y. 



8. Cuba, Past, Present and Future. ByWol- 

 ford Nelson. 



9. Examination of the Theory of Rent. By 

 Edward T. Peters, Washington, D. G. 



10. The Price of Wool. By Henry Farquhar, 

 Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. G. 



11. The Transportation Problem. By John 

 S. Willison. 



12. The Formative Period of a Great City : 

 A Study of Greater New York. By William 

 H. Hale, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



13. Deviations from the Normal in the An- 

 nual Rate of Agricultural Production. By John 

 Hyde, U. S. Department of Agriculture. 



14. Competition and Railway Rates. By H. 

 T. Newcomb, Department of Agriculture. 



