Miscellaneous Intelligence. 301 



B. P. Howlanu : Some new experiments in producing- anaesthesia with nitrous 

 oxide and air, and nitrous oxide and oxygen in condensed air chambers. 



W. J. Beal: Comparisons of the flora of Eastern and Western Michigan in the 

 latitude of 44° 40'. — Observations on the succession of forests in Northern 

 Michigan. 



D. H. Campbell : The systematic position of the Rhizocarpeas. 

 B. D. Halstead : Pollen germination and pollen measurements. 



A. W. Butler: Observations on the house- building habit of the muskrat. 

 Herbert Osborn : Metamorphosis in the pleurum of the Aleurodes. 



Section EL — Anthropology. 



P. B. Pulton : Note on certain prehisforic ornaments found in Mississippi. 



Pranz Boas: The development of the civilization 'of Northwest America. 



W. M. Beauchamp : The Onondagas of to-day. 



J. E. Todd : Some ancient diggings in Nebraska. 



H. T. Cresson: Remarks upon a chipped implement found in modified drift, 

 on the east fork of the White River, Jackson County, Indiana. — Remarks on 

 chipped implements from the Delaware gravel. 



Garrick Mallory : Recently discovered Algonkin Pictographs. 



P. W. Putnam : The serpent mound and its surroundings. 



Mrs. A. N. McG-ee : Notes on American communities. 



E. S. Morse : On ancient arrows and a new method of arrow release. 



G. F. Kunz : On some recently chipped arrow heads from North Carolina.— On 

 a remarkable jadeite tablet from Santa Lucia Cotzulmalguayra, Guatemala. — On 

 a remarkable gold ornament from the United States of Columbia. 



W. C. Wyman : Exhibition of copper implements from Wisconsin, and large 

 stone axes from Missouri River. 



A. Wanner : Unfinished banner stones from the Susquehanna River. 

 Horatio Hale : The Aryan race, its origin and character. — An international 



language. 



J. W. Smith : Iowa mound-builder relics. 



Wm. Libbey, Jr.: Sonde of the characteristics of the Yakutal Indians of Alaska, 



D. G. Brinton : Early man in Spain. — Traits of primitive speech. — A limonite 

 human vertebra from Florida. 



W. M. Beauchamp: The rarer Indian relics of Central New York. 



Joseph Jastrow : The Psychology of Deception. 



Thomas Wilson: Men during the Palaeolithic Period in America. ' 



Otis T. Mason: Woman's share in primitive industry. 



S. D. Peet : Some few groups of effigy mounds and their location and signifi- 

 cance. — The clan system among the Mound Builders identified by their works. — 

 Did the Cherokees build the so-called village enclosures of the Scioto valley? — The 

 mounds in the Mississippi Bottom Lands which are used as refuges from high 

 water. 



Section I. — Economic Science and Statistics. 



B. E. Fernow : Needs of a forest administration of the United States. 



Mrs. Laura 0. Talbot : Industrial farming. The vagrant, children and immi- 

 grants. 



E. H. Ammidown : Suggestions for legislation on the currency. 

 Edward Atkinson: The use and abuse of statistics. 



W. 0. Atwater : The food supply of the future and the doctrine of Malthus. — 

 An error in our national dietary. 



C.S.Hill: Ship-building and shipping as a national economic. — The science 

 of economic engineering. 



W. P. Switzler : The history of statistics and their value. 



H. C. Taylor: The Nicaragua Canal; its importance from an economic stand- 

 point. 



S. Dana Horton : The parity of moneys, as regarded by Adams, Smith, Ricardo 

 and Mills. 



Henry Farquhar: Economic value of binary arithmetic. 



Edward Daniels: Our monetary system. 



