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 502 Providence Meetiiig of the at a later time the members will be notified that they can procure copies of tliis volume at cost from the Public Printer. It consists of Mr. A. P. C. Griffin's Bibliography of Auicrican Historical So- cieties. Provision has also been made for the separate printing of iIr. David S. Muzzey's monograph on " The Spiritual Franciscans ", which was awarded the Herbert Baxter Adams prize in December 1905, but which by reason of its ecclesiastical character was debarred by the Smithsonian Institution from publication. The Council also reported that it had found it necessary to re- organize the Committee on Publications so as to include the chair- men of the three committees which furnish the greater part of the material for the annual volume, and to instruct the committee to consider carefully the amount and distribution of space in the Annual Report, so as to bring the cost of the Report within the amount appropriated by Congress. On recommendation of the Council the Association voted to hold the meeting of 1907 in Madison, Wis- consin, and the meeting of 1908 in Richmond, Virginia, with one da}''s session in Washington, provided satisfactory arrangements can be made with the railroads for rates from Washington. Pro- fessor George B. Adams, it was announced, had been re-elected by the Council as a member of the Board of Editors of the American Historical Review, for the term ending January i, 1913. No action of the Association was taken with a more cordial unanimity and none has been received with more hearty commenda- tions by the public press than the election of ~klr. James Bryce, upon the proposal of the Council, to honorary membership in the Asso- ciation. The Association has in its whole history had but four honorary members : first Ranke, then Stubbs and Gardiner and Rlommsen. It was felt that the new British ambassador had claims of the highest kind to any honor which the Association could offer him. The treasurer's report showed net receipts of $8,490, net ex- penses of $7,534, an increase of about $950 in the funds of the Association, and total assets of $24,189. The secretary of the Pacific Coast Branch reported upon its work for the past year and particularly on the third annual meeting held at Portland, Oregon, on November 30 and December i. The chairman of the Historical Manuscripts Commission, Dr. J. F. Jameson, reported that the appropriation for the year 1906 had been consumed in the completion of the work on the diplomatic archives of the Republic of Texas, undertaken by the preceding commission, and that it had not been practicable to take up new enter-