Sa 1 1 -III — Ch f'aro-o . 6 1 



Many good kapas. Large idol of ohia wood from Hawaii*. 

 PI. XIX. Cups and drinking vessels of Alaskan basket work, 

 said to have belonged to Kamehameha III. 



24 Clubs, throwing; 10 clubs, pineapple; 13 musket; 2 lotus; 10 

 knobbed. 5 War paddles aiid several fine spears. 2 Temple 

 models . 



A^ezi' Zealand. 

 Carved sword with shark teeth. 3 Mere of whale rib. 7 Mere 

 of greenstone. 4 Patu of can-ed wood. 3 Tewhatewha. 3 Carved 

 fifes. I Trumpet. Bailer. Door cap. 



Mai'qtiesas Islands. 



6 Clubs. II Paddles. Stilt-rest. 3 Gorgets covered with .4 ^rwj- 

 beans. 



Hervey Islands. 

 Carved food scoop. 3 Paddles, usual form. 



Samoan Islands. Human figure of carved wood. 



In Chicago the Field Columbian Museum w^as visited. While 

 the colle(5tion is rich in many departments, it has little of import- 

 ance to illustrate the Pacific Region. 

 New Caledo)iia . 

 2 Death masks. Club of greenstone. 5 Bird-bill clubs. 2 Adzes. 

 A Samoan Upete of wood cylindrical surface, 40 inches long, was 

 interesting. A Fijian Yaqona bowl; New Guinea clubs of usual 

 form, a few Australian implements are about all. 



Mr. W. H. Holmes, the Curator and Mr. G. A. Dorsey his 

 Assistant were both ver}- courteous in showing the museum. The 

 Anthropological arrangements in charge of the latter, were well 

 planned and thoroughh* carried out. It is to be hoped that such 

 valuable collecftions may soon have a building more substantial 

 than the one left b}^ the late Columbian Exhibition. 



In the Mormon Mu.seum in Salt Lake City are two small 

 Hawaiian idols given by Kalakaua, and of which the Bishop 

 Museum has photographs. Fig. 71. 



*Only three of these images are known to exist, the one in the British Museum 

 (PI. XIV): this at Salem, and one in the Bishop Museum (7654). 



