LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



United States Exploring Expedition. — Continued. 



ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD. 

 VOLlJiraE III.— Cotitiuucd. 



Thokanauto. Henrietta's House. 



Wailevu, or Peale's Ri- Front of House. 



ver. 

 Drinking Vessels. 

 Head-dress of Chiefs. 

 Feejee Clown. 

 Music. 



Waicama, Feejee. 

 Feejee Baskets, &c. 

 Feejee Woman. 

 Muthuata, Feejee. 



Stone Quoits, &c. 

 Poe-Eating. 

 Cook's Monuraent. 

 Calabashes. 

 Pendulum Peak. 

 Keaweehu. 

 Lava Jet. 

 Lava Flow. 

 Sand-Hills. 

 PandanuB Tree. 



Union Island Canoe. 



Bowditch Islander. 



Drill. 



Trading Scene, Apia. 



Matetau. 



Bowditch Islanders. 



ElJice's Islander. 



Dillon's Rock. 



Music. 



Asaua Woman. 



Feejee Arms. 



Henry's Island. 



Diagram, Malolo. 



Wild Feejee Man. 



Feejee Drum. 



Upper Town, Somu- 



Somu. 



Cliiel'^s House. 



Monument. 



Feejee Drummer. 



Woman Braiding. 



Maloana. 



Airou. 



Toka. 



Ula. 



Mode oi Building Hou- 

 ses. 



yOLUME IF. 



Blowing Cone. Indian Dice. 



Mission House. 

 Fishing Huts. 

 Dalles. 



Child's Heads. 

 Fort Wallawalla. 



Cattle-Pen 



Wailuku Falls. 



Edible Fern. 



Native House. 



Fish-Hooks. 



Chikeeles Fishery 



Fort Vancouver. 



Rocking Cradle. 



Falls of the Willamette. Music. 



VOLUME V. 



Feejee Canoe. 

 Feejee Pottery. 

 Cooking-.Iars. 

 Mode of Drinking., 

 Mode of Sitting. 

 Mode of Sitting. 

 Likiis. 



Feejee Wigs, &c. 

 Mode of Carrying Bur- 

 dens. 

 Street, Honolulu. 



Indian Lodge. 

 Mounds. 

 Fish-Hooks. 

 Mount Rainier. 

 Mount Rainier. 

 Indian Baskets. 



Indian Costume, (Male). Mat Hut. 

 Indian Costume, (Fe- Tatouche Chief. 



male). 



Makin Islander. 

 Kingsmill Arms. 

 Inhabitant of Makin. 

 Kingsmill Idol. 

 Ramsey. 

 George. 

 Carved Planks. 

 Costume, Ellice's (Jroup. Masks, Northwest 



Drummond's Islander. 

 Drummond's Island 



Warriors. 

 Kingsmill Canoe 

 Woman, 



Island. 

 Girl, Peru Island 



dians. 

 Pipes, Northwest 



dians. 

 Hats, Northwest Coast. 

 Drummond's Fish-weir. 



Pounding Acorns. 

 Indians Gambling. 



Pack-saddles, &c. 



Indian Burial Place. 



Callapuya Indian. 



Umpqua Indian Girl. 



Sacramento Indian. 



Shaste Hut. 



Vincennes on Bar, 

 In- Japanese. 



Banca, Manilla. 

 In- Rice Stacks, Luzon. 



Native of Luzon. 



Manilla Costume. 



Manilla Banca. 



Negrito Boy. 



De Fuca's Pillar. 



Sword, Manilla. 

 Hatchet, Manilla. 

 Environs, Manilla. 

 Saraboa, Manilla. 

 Caldera Fort. 

 Sooloo Canoe. 

 Houses, Soung. 

 Riding, Sooloo. 

 Sooloo Arms. 

 Gentoo Monument. 

 Hottentots. 

 Pvcfraction. 



Longvvood, St. Helena. 

 Cape of Good Hope. 



This valuable work has been received with the utmost favour by the press, both 

 in this country and in England, From amon^ numerous testimonials, the pub- 

 lishers take pleasure in submitting the following: 



private, throughout the country." — N. Y. Spirit 

 of the Times. 



" We have no hesitation in saying that it is 

 destined to stand among the most enduring mo- 

 numents of our national literature. Its contribu- 

 tions not only to every department of science, 

 but every department of history, are immense ; 

 and there is not an intelligent man in the com- 

 munity — no matter what may be his taste or his 

 occupation, but will find something here to en- 

 lighten, to gratify, and to profit him." — Albany 

 Religitms Spectator. 



" Aware that the results of this movement on 

 the part of the government, given in the language 

 of the master spirit of the whole expedition, must 

 be a subject of general interest to the community, 

 the publishers, rejecting the prior edition as too 



" No library can possibly be complete without a 

 copy of it. The octavo edition is extremely rea- 

 sonable, considering the value of the work, and 

 the elegant style in which it is got up." — N. Y. 

 Herald. 



" The work, while its details may be relied 

 upon as every way faithful, possesses all the 

 charms of a romance. It is written in an agree- 

 able, captivating, yet unpretending style — and the 

 illusVrations are admirably adapted to impart ad- 

 ditional attraction." — Pennsylvania Inquirer. 

 " But the intrinsic value of the work is derived 

 costly for the great mass of readers throughout [ from its contents, the incidents of the voyage and 

 the country, have concluded to re-issue the entire I the reflections made upon them. The topics 

 work in a more reduced, but still neat typogra- | embraced in the narrative are multifarious and 

 phical form. To heighten the value of the nar- 1 of permanent importance; — commercial, geo- 

 rative it is plenteously interspersed with wood I graphical, physical, hydrographical, medical, sta- 

 cuts, of no mean style of art, delineating the I tistical, physical and ethnographical. The natu- 

 most striking physical and artificial objects. — ral sciences will be indebted to these volumes 

 These illustrations (amounting to over three hun- 1 for many new and valuable facts, and the obser- 

 dred) evince skill and tact with the pencil, while vations upon the various mission establishments 

 the engravers have faithfully executed their visited by the expedition will prove of vast im- 

 portion of the pictorial embellishments. The portance, not only to all who take an interest in 

 entire work thus completed must be hailed as such enterprizes, but to the world at large." — 

 a valuable addition to every library, public and N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. 



