¦ I 324 BIBLIOGRAPHY [Vol.* A valuable monograph on that tribe, written by a careful and trained ethnologist; he treats, with much detail, their history, government, cult societies, myths, and-folk-tales, games and dances, dwellings and furniture, industries and occupations, food, etc An extensive vocabulary of their language is added at the close. In the fourteenth Report of Bureau of Amer. Ethnology. Hoffman, Walter J. The Mide'wiwin or "grand medicine society" of the Ojibwa (Washington, 1891). In Report of Bureau of Amer. Ethnology, 1885-1886, pp. 149-300. This paper is of special interest as describing the proceedings and ceremonies of an Indian secret society. Holmes, W. H. Aboriginal pottery of the eastern United States (Washington, 1903). In Report of Bureau of Amer. Ethnology, 1898-1899. Other archzologi-cal papers by Holmes concerning the field of this work are published in the second, third, fourth, sixth, and thirteenth of the Bureau's Reports. ------ Sacred pipestone quarries of Minnesota, and ancient copper mines of Lake Superior. • In Proceedings of Amer. Assoc, for Advancement of Science, 1892, pp. ------, and others. Arrows and arrow-makers: a symposium. In Amer. Anthropologist, vol. iv, 45-74. Hornaday, William F. The extermination of the American bison, with a sketch of its discovery and life history. In Report of Smithsonian Institution, 1887, part ii, pp. 367-548. Hough, Franklin B., editor. Proceedings of the commissioners of Indian affairs, appointed by law for the extinguishment of Indian titles in the state of New York (Albany, 1861). "Published from the original manuscript in the library of the Albany Institute." Hough, Walter. Fire-making apparatus in the United States National Museum (Washington, 1890). In Report U.S. National Museum, 1888. Hoy, P. R. How and by whom were the copper implements made? (Racine, 1886). Hulbert, Archer B. The historic highways of America (Cleveland, 1902-1903). 16 vols. Illustrated. This series undertakes to show the intimate connection of America's history and development with the highways and waterways which connected the seaboard with the vast interior of this continent — traced successively by iherds of -buffalo, by Indian trade and migration, and by white pioneers,