ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT 19 
being received through exchange. The library has also 
received 260 pamphlets. The catalogue of the bureau now 
records 23,380 volumes; there are about 14,508 pamphlets 
and several thousand unbound periodicals. 
Successful effort has been made to complete the sets of 
certain publications of scientific societies and other learned 
institutions. For the use of the members of the staff there 
has been prepared and posted copies of a monthly bulletin 
of the principal accessions of the library; also information 
has been furnished and bibliographic notes compiled for 
the use of correspondents. 
During the year the work of cataloguing has been carried 
on as new accessions were acquired and good progress was 
made in cataloguing ethnologic and related articles in the 
earlier serials. 
Attention has been given to the preparation of volumes 
for binding, with the result that 502 books were sent to the 
bindery. The number of books borrowed from the Library 
of Congress for the use of the staff of the bureau in prose- 
cuting their researches was about 400. 
A pressing problem is the congestion of books on the 
shelves. For some time the library has been overcrowded 
and we are now taxed to find room for the current acces- 
sions. 
The library is constantly referred to by students not con- 
nected with the bureau, as well as by various officials of 
the Government service. 
COLLECTIONS 
The following collections acquired by members of the 
staff of the bureau, or by those detailed in connection with 
its researches, have been transferred to the United States 
National Meseum: 
Archeological objects collected in Cottonwood Canyon, 
Kane County, Utah, by Mr. Neil M. Judd, during the 
spring of 1919. Accession 63841, 257 specimens. 
Archeological objects (748) and skeletal remains (24) col- 
lected for the bureau by Mr. Gerard Fowke, from Miller’s 
