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JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY 
11. (a) Meaning of California records for buffalo, (b) The range of mountain 
sheep in northern California. C. Hart Merriam. Fifteen minutes. Illus- 
trated by lantern slides. 
12. Habits of the mammals of Celebes and Borneo. H. C. Raven. Thirty 
minutes. Illustrated by lantern slides. 
WEDNESUAY, MAY 4 . 
Morning Session, 10:00 A. M. 
13. Present status of some of the larger mammals of Canada. R. M. Anderson. 
Twenty minutes. Illustrated by lantern slides. 
14. Observations on certain specialized structures of the integument of primates. 
(a) Carpal sinus hairs, (b) A sternal gland in the orang-utan. Adolph 
H. Schultz. Twenty minutes. Illustrated by lantern slides. 
15. Improved methods of trapping small mammals alive. Vernon Bailey. (Pre- 
sented by E. A. Goldman.) Fifteen minutes. Illustrated by traps and 
specimens. 
16. Life-zones of southern Ecuador. H. E. Anthony. Thirty minutes. Illus- 
trated by lantern slides. 
17. Remarks on the distribution and relationships of the North American chip- 
munks. Arthur H. Howell. Twenty minutes. Illustrated by lantern 
slides. 
18. Some significant features of economic mammalogy. W. B. Bell. Twenty 
minutes. 
Afternoon Session 
At 1:00 P. M. members and their wives were entertained at luncheon at the 
National Zoological Park by the administration of the park and the Washington 
members. A short business session followed the luncheon, and a trip through 
the park under the direction of the Superintendent, Mr. N. Hollister, closed what 
had been, in spite of inclement weather, a most interesting and enjoyable meeting. 
Hartley H. T. Jackson. 
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