ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT LXXIxX 
Contributions to North American Ethnology, volume rx, 
comprising “ Dakota Grammar, Texts, and Ethnography,” by 
5. R. Riggs, edited by J. Owen Dorsey; xxxu, 239 pages. 
Bulletin T=20, “Chinook Texts,” by Franz Boas; 278 pages, 
1 plate. 
Bulletin U=21, “An Ancient Quarry in Indian Territory,” 
by W. H. Holmes; 19 pages, 12 plates, 7 figures. : 
Bulletin V=22, “Siouan Tribes of the East,” by James 
Mooney; 100 pages, map. 
Bulletin W=23, ‘“‘Archeologic Investigations in James and 
Potomac Valleys,” by Gerard Fowke; 80 pages, 17 figures. 
Bulletin X=24, ‘List of the Publications of the Bureau of 
Ethnology,” by F. W. Hodge; 25 pages. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
Library—TVhe growth of the library, mainly through 
exchange with scientific institutions and individuals through- 
out the world, has been steady. The number of volumes in 
possession of the Bureau is 5,029, an increase of 679 volumes 
since the last fiscal year. The accession of pamphlets and 
periodicals during the same period has been proportionately 
large. 
Illustrations—The preparation of illustrations for the publica- 
tions of the Bureau has been continued under the direct super- 
vision of Mr DeLancey W. Gill, to whose artistic skill and 
intelligent interest in anthropologic subjects the high standard 
of the pictorial part of the Bureau’s published works is largely 
due. : 
Photographs—In addition to the excellent series of photo- 
graphs made by Mr William Dinwiddie, under the direction of 
Mr McGee, during the season of exploration among the Seri 
and Papago, and those made by Mr Mindeleff in Canyon de 
Chelly, individual and group photographs were made of an 
Osage and an Oto delegation who visited Washington in Feb- 
ruary and March, respectively. : 
Exposition—During the closing months of the fiscal year a 
collection was prepared for exhibition at the International 
and Cotton States Exposition, held in Atlanta during the 
