Report of National Museum, 1893. 



Plate 16. 



pox TRAP (MoDEL).--Wood, with 

 cord of \ egetable fiber or sinew. 



Length, i i ins. Breadth, 4 ins. Height, ^]A ins. 



BRISTOL BAY, ALASKA. 1882. 55.879. 



Collected by Chas. L. McKay. 



Used by Tinneh Indians. Consists of a stake-pen closed at 

 one end by a net, in which the fo.x, becoming entangled and 

 caught, is killed by the hunter who watches from "blind" 



YOBACCO POUCH.— Made of 



small, various colored glass beads 

 closely woven in a regular geometric 

 pattern, fringe of similar beads strung 

 on variegated worsteds. Suspended from 

 neck by a cord. 



Length, including fringe, 5'/j ins. Width, 5 ins. 



KHL'ILCHAN INDIANS, ALASKA, 1881. 72,841. 



(iift of Ivan Petroff. 



This pouch came from the Khuilchan (Athabaskan) tribe of 

 the interior of Alaska; this tribe has no connection with the sea 

 save through the Atwah, or Copper River, natives, from one 

 of whom it was 'procured in 188 1, at Huchek. Prince William 

 -Sound 



Specimen forms of labels. 



