20 
BULLETIN 51, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 
R. 99. Chess and playing cards: catalogue of games and implements 
400: 
Re 100 
Ae £02: 
R. 103. 
R. 104. 
R. 105. 
Re-106: 
RHC 
R. 108. 
R. 109. 
R.1410. 
for divination exhibited by the United States National Museum 
in connection with the Department of Archzeology and Paleon- 
tology of the University of Pennsylvania at the Cetton States 
and International Exposition, Atlanta, Georgia, 1895. By 
Stewart Culin. 
pp. 665-942, 50 pls., 226 figs. 
Biblical antiquities: A description of the exhibit at the Cotton 
States International Exposition at Atlanta, 1895. By Cyrus 
Adler and I. M. Casanowiez. 
pp. 943-1023, 46 pls. 
The lamp of the Eskimo. By Walter Hough. 
pp. 1025-1057, 24 pls., 4 figs. 
a ean. 
Recent foraminifera: A descriptive catalogue of specimens 
dredged by the U.S. Fish Commission steamer <Adatross. 
By James M. Flint, U.S. N. 
pp. 249-349, 80 pls. 
Pipes and smoking customs of the American aborigines, based 
on material in the U.S. National Museum. By Joseph D. 
McGuire. 
pp. 351-645, 5 pls., 239 figs. 
Catalogue of the series illustrating the properties of minerals. 
By Wut Tassin. 
pp. 647-688. 
Te Pito Te Henua, known as ** Rapa Nui;” commonly called 
Easter Island, South Pacifie Ocean. By George H. Cooke, 
LEC ING 
pp. 689-723. 
5 
The man’s knife among the North American Indians: A study 
in the collections of the U.S. National Museum. By Otis 
Tufton Mason. 
pp. 725-745, 17 figs. 
Classification of the mineral collections in the U. 8. National 
Museum. By Wut Tassin. 
pp. 747-810. 
Arrowpoints, spearheads, and knives of prehistoric times. 
By Thomas Wilson. 
pp. 811-988, 65 pls., 201 figs. 
LSQS-e 
Future development of the National Museum. (Part of the 
Report of the Acting Assistant Secretary.) 
pp. 13-16. 
The crocodilians, lizards, and snakes of North America. By 
Edward Drinker Cope. 
pp. 153-1270, 36 pls., 347 figs. 
