Annuul Report. . [Febrnary, 1905, 
headed “ A For, eg City ” deals with Nagar chain, the halting-sta- 
tion or villa o e Emperor Akbar, a few miles fro gra, which 
mom 
sf ao Mints of the Mughal Emperors,” by Mr. Burn, gives a 
list of the mint towns of the Mughal Emperors arranged 
in alphabetical order and divide ane chronological sections. 
Mirza Mehdy Khan criticised the translation of the Qu atrains net 
_ Provinces of Lower Bengal for 30 years or more from the 
te of the Diwani. When writing in ant Proceedings for 1888 
initials undeciphered, The late Dr. C. R. avi studied Dutch 
heraldry and identified these names. His paper is to be found in 
vol. LXXIIT, No. 3. 
— the linguistic papers the most important is that by Major 
P. R. T. Gurdon on the Mor ans, a tribe inhabiting: the hills i in the 
with those of Kacharis, Bodos and Dimasas, Major Gurdon says 
that they are allied to the Paceans Babu Gerindranath Dutt’s 
paper on the Bhojpuri dialects spoken in Saran is a revised edition 
of the aoe supplied by him to the Linguistic Survey. 
e Tibetan papers, those by Mr. E. H. Walsh have already 
been noticed | in the last Report. The only interesting additi bane 
paper received during the year under review is by Rev. 
Francke entitled “A Language Map of West Tibet with notes ” 
prepared for the benefit of the shadeaie of his Ladaki -Grammiar. 
Th : 
of - Society's eae Part I, and it has now been eci 
Journal Part II. 
The past year has been one of great activity in the Natural 
History section of the Society, no less than six numbers of Part rai 
of the Journal having been issued with 358 pages SB nine illustra- 
tive plates, this quantity being more than three tres as much pete 
in the preceding year. This is due partly to the fact that some 
papers read during 1903 were published during the past ag 
=. ah greater efforts that have been made to publish papers — 
