9 
pletion. Various other activities at the office also required time and 
attention, particularly the preparation of several articles on Canadian 
Indians, on North West Coast Indian art, and on Folk Songs of Canada; 
the selection of West Coast Indian specimens from various Canadian 
museums and the preparation of an exhibition of West Coast and modern 
art at the National Gallery, and the Art Galleries of Toronto and Montreal; 
the organization and direction, jointly with Mr. J. M. Gibbon, of the 
Canadian Pacific Railway Company, of the first Folk Song and Handi- 
crafts Festival, given at Quebec in May, 1927, sponsored by the Canadian 
Pacific railway, and under the auspices of the National Museum; the 
preparation cf the folk song materials and other accessories for the second 
festival, which is to take place in May, 1928. A second series of five 
lectures on the ethnology of British Columbia was given in September, 
1927, at the University of British Columbia. Ten lectures and addresses 
were given elsewhere, either on ethnology or folk-lore; and it was found 
impossible to accept several other requests for lectures out of town. 
Assistance was also invited and given in the preparation of three Indian 
and French folk song recital programs given at the Art Gallery of 
Toronto, the Little Theatre of Ottawa, and the Association of Canadian 
Clubs, under the auspices of the National Museum. 
Mr. Smith, during the winter months, arranged and titled two motion 
pictures from negatives he had taken between 1923 and 1927; one illus- 
trates the Bella Coola Indians, the other the Carrier Indians, of British 
Columbia. He prepared a list of the archaeological sites in the general 
vicinity of Prince Rupert, and continued to secure and incorporate in the 
files a large body of information concerning archseological remains in other 
parts of Canada. 
Mr. Wintemberg completed before Christmas a manuscript on the 
“Archaeology of the Uren Site in Southeastern Ontario,” which has now gone 
to press. He drew up a list of the archseological sites in eastern Ontario, 
particularly around Ottawa, for the Dominion Archives, and is now pre- 
paring a very extensive report on the “Roebuck Village Site” which he 
excavated in 1915. 
Publications 
The following articles and books w r ere published by the staff of the Division during 
the fiscal year. 
By D. Jenness: 
Ethnological Problems in Arctic America. Problems of Polar Research, American 
Geographical Society, Special Publication No. 7, New York, 1928. 
The People of the Twilight. The MacMillan Co., New York, 1928. 
Notes on the Phonology of the Eskimo Dialect of Cape Prince of Wales. Inter- 
national Journal of American Linguistics, vol. 4, Nos. 2-4, Jan., 1927. 
By C. M. Barbeau: 
Les Arts d6coratifs des tribus indiffenes de la C6te Nord-ouest de l’Am&ique du Nord. 
Exposition d’art canadien, Mus6e du Jeu de Paume, Paris, Avril-mai, 1927. 
Twelve French-Canadian Folk Songs (in collaboration with Sir Harold Boulton). 
Boosey and Co., London, 1927. 
Annotated Program, Canadian Folk-Song and Handicraft Festival, Quebec, May, 
1927. 
The Native Races of Canada. London Times, Jubilee number, July, 1927, and 
Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada, 1927. 
Folk Songs of Canada. Jubilee numbers of several Canadian papers. 
