XLII REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF ETHNOLOGY. 



The total number of illustrations prepared during the year 

 was 980. These drawings may be classified as follows: 



Landscapes 6 



Maps 6 



Objects 300 



Diagrams 31 



Miscellaneous.--.' 637 



The number of illustration proofs handled during the }ear 

 was as follows: Eighth Annual Report, 308; Ninth Annual 

 Report, 459. In addition, 678 illustrations for the Tenth 

 Annual Report were transmitted to the Public Printer. 



The jDliotographic laboratory remains under the able manage- 

 ment of Mr J. K. Hillers. A small l>ut valuable collection of 

 portraits of North American Indians was secured l)y him dur- 

 ing the year from sittings ; twenty-six negatives were obtained. 

 The following table shows the size and number of photographic 

 prints made: 



20 by 24 .' 45 



11 by 14 274 



8 by 10 546 



5by 8 - 875 



4by 5 1.187 



PUBLICATIONS 



The publications issued during the year are as follows : 



(1) " Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to 

 the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1885-86, by J. W. 

 Powell, Director." This report contains an introductory report 

 by the Director, 27 pages, with accompanying papers, as fol- 

 lows: "Indian Linguistic Families of America north of Mex- 

 ico," by J. W. Powell; "The Midewiwin or 'Grand Medicine 

 Society' of the Ojibwa," by W. J. Hoffman; "The Sacred For- 

 mulas of the Cherokees," by James Mooney. The report forms 

 a royal octavo volume of lxi-|-409 pages, illustrated with 39 fig- 

 ures and 27 plates, one of which is a folding plate in a pocket 

 at the end of the volume. 



(2) "Contributions to North American Ethnolog}', vol. ii, part 

 II." This part contains the Klamath-English and English-Kla- 

 matli Dictionary, by Albert Samuel Gatschet, and concludes 

 his work relating to "The Klamath Indians of Southwestern 

 Oregon." The volume is a quarto of 711 pages. 



