﻿54 
  ANNUAL 
  EEPORT 
  SMITHSONIAN 
  INSTITUTION, 
  1943 
  

  

  No. 
  20. 
  Archeological 
  survey 
  on 
  the 
  northern 
  Northwest 
  Coast, 
  by 
  Philip 
  

   Drucker. 
  With 
  appendix, 
  Early 
  vertebrate 
  fauna 
  of 
  the 
  British 
  

   Columbia 
  Coast, 
  by 
  Edna 
  M. 
  Fisher. 
  

   No. 
  21. 
  Some 
  notes 
  on 
  a 
  few 
  sites 
  in 
  Beaufort 
  County, 
  South 
  Carolina, 
  by 
  

  

  Regina 
  Flannery. 
  

   No. 
  22. 
  An 
  analysis 
  and 
  interpretation 
  of 
  the 
  ceramic 
  remains 
  from 
  two 
  sites 
  

  

  near 
  Beaufort, 
  South 
  Carolina, 
  by 
  James 
  B. 
  Griffin. 
  

   No. 
  23. 
  The 
  eastern 
  Cherokees, 
  by 
  William 
  Harlen 
  Gilbert, 
  Jr. 
  

   No. 
  24. 
  Aconite 
  poison 
  whaling 
  in 
  Asia 
  and 
  America 
  : 
  An 
  Aleutian 
  transfer 
  

  

  to 
  the 
  New 
  World, 
  by 
  Robert 
  F. 
  Heizer. 
  

   No. 
  25. 
  The 
  Carrier 
  Indians 
  of 
  the 
  Bulkley 
  River 
  : 
  Their 
  social 
  and 
  religious 
  

  

  life, 
  by 
  Diamond 
  Jenness. 
  

   No. 
  26. 
  The 
  quipu 
  and 
  Peruvian 
  civilization, 
  by 
  John 
  R. 
  Swanton. 
  

   Bulletin 
  136. 
  Anthropological 
  papers, 
  numbers 
  27-32 
  : 
  

  

  No. 
  27. 
  Music 
  of 
  the 
  Indians 
  of 
  British 
  Columbia, 
  by 
  Frances 
  Densmore. 
  

  

  No. 
  28. 
  Choctaw 
  music, 
  by 
  Frances 
  Densmore. 
  

  

  No. 
  29. 
  Some 
  ethnological 
  data 
  concerning 
  one 
  hundred 
  Yucatan 
  plants, 
  by 
  

  

  Morris 
  Steggerda. 
  

   No. 
  30. 
  A 
  description 
  of 
  thirty 
  towns 
  in 
  Yucatan, 
  Mexico, 
  by 
  Morris 
  Steggerda. 
  

   No. 
  31. 
  Some 
  western 
  Shoshoni 
  myths, 
  by 
  Julian 
  H. 
  Steward. 
  

   No. 
  32. 
  New 
  material 
  from 
  Acoma, 
  by 
  Leslie 
  A. 
  White. 
  

   Bulletin 
  137. 
  The 
  Indians 
  of 
  the 
  southeastern 
  United 
  States, 
  by 
  John 
  R. 
  

   Swanton. 
  

  

  Bulletin 
  138. 
  Stone 
  monuments 
  of 
  southern 
  Mexico, 
  by 
  Matthew 
  W. 
  Stirling. 
  

   Bulletin 
  139. 
  An 
  introduction 
  to 
  the 
  ceramics 
  of 
  Tres 
  Zapotes, 
  Veracruz, 
  

   Mexico, 
  by 
  C. 
  W. 
  Weiant. 
  

  

  Bulletin 
  140. 
  Ceramic 
  sequences 
  at 
  Tres 
  Zapotes, 
  Veracruz, 
  Mexico, 
  by 
  Philip 
  

   Drucker. 
  

  

  Bulletin 
  141. 
  Ceramic 
  stratigraphy 
  at 
  Cerro 
  de 
  las 
  Mesas, 
  by 
  Philip 
  Drucker. 
  

   Bulletin 
  142. 
  The 
  contemporary 
  culture 
  of 
  the 
  Cahita 
  Indians, 
  by 
  Ralph 
  L. 
  

   Beals. 
  

  

  Publications 
  distributed 
  totaled 
  10,793. 
  

  

  LIBRARY 
  

  

  Accessions 
  during 
  the 
  fiscal 
  year 
  totaled 
  321. 
  There 
  has 
  been 
  a 
  

   sharp 
  decrease 
  in 
  all 
  classes 
  of 
  accessions, 
  owing 
  to 
  reduced 
  funds 
  in 
  

   the 
  case 
  of 
  purchases 
  and 
  to 
  war 
  conditions 
  in 
  the 
  case 
  of 
  gifts 
  and 
  

   exchanges. 
  

  

  The 
  Library 
  of 
  Congress 
  cards 
  for 
  nonserial 
  matter 
  on 
  hand 
  at 
  the 
  

   beginning 
  of 
  the 
  fiscal 
  year, 
  amounting 
  to 
  several 
  thousand, 
  have 
  

   been 
  prepared 
  and 
  filed. 
  Cards 
  for 
  foreign 
  periodicals 
  and 
  society 
  

   transactions 
  have 
  been 
  prepared 
  and 
  filed, 
  including 
  shelf-list 
  cards. 
  

   A 
  record 
  of 
  holdings 
  appears 
  on 
  each 
  of 
  these 
  shelf-list 
  entries 
  and 
  

   some 
  are 
  now 
  in 
  their 
  permanent 
  form. 
  

  

  Several 
  thousand 
  pamphlets, 
  including 
  a 
  number 
  of 
  valuable 
  ones 
  

   pertaining 
  to 
  the 
  Indian 
  Territory 
  and 
  the 
  Five 
  Civilized 
  Tribes, 
  

   were 
  reclassified 
  and 
  reshelved. 
  

  

  The 
  library 
  has 
  been 
  much 
  in 
  use 
  as 
  a 
  source 
  of 
  material 
  for 
  the 
  

   Ethnogeographic 
  Board 
  and 
  the 
  war 
  agencies. 
  

  

  