LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



137 



Smithsonian Institution — contimied. 



L'ficoLE PoLYTECHNiQUE, Paris, 

 France. 28779. 



Lengsfieli), J. I., Greenville, Miss. 

 29010. 



London, Town Clkrk of. 28782. 



McCoRMiCK and Terry, Messrs., Co- 

 lumbus, Ohio. 29011. 



Onondaga, County of. New York. 

 28575. 



Eau'h, Dr. William L., Utica, N. Y. 

 28660, 29468, 29474. 



ViGNAUD, Henry (Paris, France) : 

 Model of the Behaim globe, the orig- 

 inal of which was made at Nurem- 

 burginl487. 28811.' 



VoGLEsoN, J. A., Los Angeles, Cal. 

 28980. 



Wilcox, Dr. Timothy E., U. S. Army, 

 Fort Huachuca, Ariz. 29393. 



Williamsrurgii Scientific Society, 

 through Mr. Louis Kirsch, president. 

 29122. 



WoLLAM, Harold, Rising Sun, Ohio. 

 28700. 



Transmitted from the Bureau of Ethnol- 

 oijij, Maj. J. W. Powell, Director: 



Small doll obtained by C. C. Wil- 

 longhby from the Abnaki Indians of 

 Maine (28325) ; 2 Navajo rings in pro- 

 cess of manufacture and a cup-and- 

 ball game made from deer Itones, col- 

 lected by James Mooney (28527); 

 tacuUi net made from willow bark, 

 collected by W J McGee (!>8528) ; 

 stone ornament, probably a pendant, 

 worn by tlie Indians as a charm, 

 found near an old camp at Witch 

 Creek, Cal., by H. W. Henshaw 

 (28603); 4 ethnographic objects ob- 

 tained from the Kiowa, Cherokee, and 

 Arapahoe Indians by James Mooney 

 (28789) ; mescal drum, pair of leg- 

 gings, headdress of a dog soldier, 

 model of a cradle, obtained from the 

 Kiowa Indians by James Mooney; 

 head ornament of a Cherokee ball 

 player, and head ornament of sacred 

 crow feathers belonging to an Arapa- 

 hoe Indian (28841); ethnological ob- 

 jects obtained from the Papago and 

 Seri Indians of southern Arizona and 



Smithsonian Institution— continued, 

 northeastern Mexico (29025) ; 260 

 specimens of Algie (29236) ; bow and 

 arrows, drum, maul, plow, and flutes 

 from Arizona (29280). 



Transmitted from the National Zoolof/ieal 

 Park, Dr. Frank Baker, Superin- 

 tendent : 



Fremont's Squirrel {Sciurus Frcmonti) 

 (28329) ; Weasel ( Putoriiis sp. ) (28350) ; 

 Monkey {Cercopithecns engythithea) 

 (28401); Banded Rattlesnake (Cro- 

 talus horridus) (28413) ; 2 specimens of 

 Virginia Deer (Cariacus rirginianus) 

 and a Muskrat (Fiber zihethicua) 

 (28497); Squirrel (Scinrus, sp.) and 

 Raccoon {Procyon lotor) (28542); 

 Opossum and 2 Foxes (28583) ; Fish 

 Hawk (Pandion haliwctus) and Red- 

 shouldered Hawk (Biieto lineatus) 

 (28680); Coypu {Myopotamus coypu) 

 (28681); Snake (Pituophis melanoleu- 

 cus) (28716); Muskrat (Fiber zibethi- 

 cus) (28725); specimen of Macropus 

 riifus (28736) ; Parrot {Amazona auro- 

 palliata) in the flesh (28743); Mar- 

 moset (Hapale jacchus) (28871); Cock- 

 atoo (Cacatua yahrita) (28872); 3 

 Nine-banded Armadillos ( Tat u si a 

 novemcincta), Marmoset (Hapale ccdi- 

 pus), and a Coyote (Cavis Jatrans) 

 (28873); Beaver (Castor canadensis), 

 Virginia Deer (Cariacus virginiavus), 

 and Bengal Monkey, Macacus rhesus 

 (28808) ; specimen of Hdoderma sus- 

 pectum from Old Gila Bend, Arizona, 

 and specimen of Tlialassochelys caouna 

 from Lynn Haven Bay, Virginia 

 (28812) ; Green Monkey, Cercojnthe- 

 cus sabwus and Agouti, Dasyprocta 

 aguti (28943); Virginia Deer (Cari- 

 acus virginianus) (28962) ; skeleton of 

 Crotalus horridus (28997) ; Gray Fox, 

 Urocyon virginianus, Squirrel (Sciurus 

 aureigaster) (28998) ; Gray Fox, Uro- 

 cyon virginianus aud Coati, Xasua 

 rufa (29065); Rattlesnake (Crotalus 

 confluentus) and Yellow Rattlesnake, 

 Crotalus horridus (29066) ; Copper- 

 head snake, Ancistrodon contortrix, 

 Blue Heron, Ardw hcrodias and Elk 

 (Cervus canadensis) in the llesh 



^This globe was acquired through the courtesy of Mr. Henry Vignaud, Pnris, 

 France, who, in behalf of the Smithsonian Institution, supervised its construction 

 and attended to the purchase of the model. 



