AMERICAN INDIAN EXHIBITS-—EWERS 525 
hibits for the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, still provides 
the best guide to arranging exhibits on the American Indians that has 
ever been devised. 
Our heritage is rich indeed. 
REFERENCES 
AccEssion Boox, John Varden’s Washington Museum. (Original in Smithso- 
nian Archives. ) 
ANNUAL Reports of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, 1858— 
1957. 
ANNUAL Report of the United States National Museum for 1893. 1895. 
EWERS, JOHN O. 
1955. Problems and procedures in modernizing ethnological exhibits. Amer. 
Anthrop., n.s., vol 57, No. 1. 
GIBBS, GEORGE. 
1863. Instructions for research relative to the ethnology and philology of 
America. Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 7, art. 11. 
HOLMES, WILLIAM H. 
1903. Classification and arrangement of the exhibits of an anthropological 
museum. Ann. Rep. U.S. Nat. Mus. for 1901. 
Mason, OTs T. 
1896. Influence of environment upon human industries or arts. Ann. Rep. 
Smithsonian Inst. for 1895. 
PRAT, 0. Re. 
Collections of the United States South Seas Surveying and Exploring 
Expedition, 1838-42. (MS. in Div. Ethnology, U.S. Nationai 
Museum.) 
RHEES, WILLIAM J. 
1859. An account of the Smithsonian Institution, its founder, building, 
operations, ete. Spec. Publ., Smithsonian Inst. 
WISSLER, CLARK. 
1914. Material cultures of the North American Indians. Amer. Anthrop., 
n.s., vol. 16. 
1917. The American Indian. i1sted. New York. 
