xvill Annual Report. [ February, 1908. 
Brought forward ey 2 34 40 
Shah Jahan one ra ove 1 
Murad Bakhsh 
d 
Shah ‘Rin I 
Miscellaneous — 
nd 
-6 
= 
° 
ry 
3 
= 
= 
— tt 
Sikh—Gobind Singh ze 6 
Modern Native States re 1 

2.40 43 
A few of the coins of Apollodotus II have, for that king, 
N 
important finds, a will be published in the Ran cnet Supple- 
ment to the Journal 
Bibliotheca Indica, 
- OF the 22 fasciculi of texts published in the Bibliotheca 
Indica Series during the year under review, 15 belong to Brah- 
manic Sanskrit literature, 3 to Jaina Sanskrit, 1 to Buddhist 
Sanskrit, 1 to Hindi, 1 to Persinn, and the remaining 1 to Tibetan, 
These fasciculi inelade Mr Beveridge’s translation of the Akbar- 
nama, Pandit Ganga Nath Jha’s translation of the Slokavartika, 
and Mahamahopadhyaya ete Kanta Tarkalankara’s second 
edition of the Grihya Sut f the new works taken in hand 
only two fasciculi hive bare pabGaheat this year, vz , one fasciculus 
of the Yoga-sastra and another of the Atma erm under 
Kalikala Sarvajfia, who flourished during ‘1088-1172 
The Atma tiuttva-viveka, otherwise known as Ba uddhadhikara, 
was composed by the famous Hindn logician ee ye = 
984 A.D., to refute the philosophical doctrives a e Buddhists ; 
is an abstruse work bearing testimony to the wordy war that 
exisied between the Bralimans and Buddhists during the last 
stave of tieir struggle with each other. There exists, too, a Tibe- 
tan version of this work ; but it is not more approachable than its 
Sanskrit original. Referring to the Tibetan version, His Serenity 
the Tashi Lama of Tibet, while visiting the Benares College in 
