Anthropology 



215 



Mrs. E. H. Danforth, Cranford, N. J. 

 Ethnological collection: 4 Navajo 

 blankets, buffalo robe, 1 bundle 

 arrows, pair of long moccasins, 

 rawhide quirt, pipe and stem, pipe 

 bag, wooden dipper, beaded belt, 

 bearclaw headdress, bone skin 

 scraper, 2 blue bead bracelets, knife 

 sheath, and beaded ornament ; from 

 Navajo, Ute, and Sioux. 

 Miss Frances Densmore, Washington, 

 D. C. 

 10 Varieties of food from the Papago 

 Indians. 

 Capt. T. E. Donne, London, W. C. 2, 

 England. 

 14 Stereoscopic pictures of fractured 

 human bones, photographed in the 

 New Zealand Hospital, Walton-on- 

 Thames, during the War. 

 Dr. Jonathan Dwight, New York 

 City. 

 Basket, oblong in shape with decora- 

 tion in red, from Lillooet Indians. 

 Miss Isabel Rogers Edgar, New York 

 City. 

 Ethnological collection from Labra- 

 dor. 

 Fred H. Ellis, Marfa, Tex. 

 Arrowpoint, from aviation field near 

 Marfa. 

 Lieut. George T. Emmons, U. S. N., 

 Princeton, N. J. 

 Child's winter shoes made of skin, 

 from Chilkat Indians. 

 B. Erichson, New York City. 



2 Tally sticks, from Baltic States. 

 Jacques Estanove, Mas Grenier, Tarn 

 et Garonne, France. 

 Stone implements of Neolithic type, 

 from France. 

 Mrs. P. E. Farnum, New York City. 

 Beaded belt of the Zulu, South Af- 

 rica. 

 Dr. Samuel W. Fernberger, Philadel- 

 phia, Pa. 

 Archaeological collection : 2 gauges, 2 

 chisels, 2 parts of bayonet heads, 3 

 partly finished arrowheads, 1 small 

 spearhead, 1 broken spearhead, 1 

 Kineo flint matrix, 1 Kineo flint 

 chip, 1 knife (?), 1 bottle-shaped 

 stone, 1 drilled stone, 1 small scra- 

 per, 1 small clay pipe bowl, 1 

 scraper ; from Grand Lake, Me. 

 Alaquah Flood, New York City. 

 Bow-gun and oil painting from the 

 Eskimo. 



V. Forbin, Clamart, France. 



170 Chipped flint implements, France. 

 A. I. Frye, New Orleans, La. 



Skull, from clay deposit under city 

 of New Orleans, La. 

 Department of Geology (Transfer). 



1 Sacrum and 1 vertebra, from cave 

 in Arkansas. 



Dr. P. E. Goddard, New York City. 



2 Cloth belts, from Huancayo, Peru. 

 Dr. Godig, Cerra de Hojas, Ecuador. 



Stone head, from Manta, Ecuador. 

 Miss Sarah Goldberg, New York City. 

 Pcrttery vessel, from Southwestern 

 United States. 

 The Late Lawrence Preston Gold- 

 stone (through Mrs. Robert Hast- 

 ings, Kew Gardens, N. Y.). 

 Ethnological specimens : 1 bull-roarer, 



1 shield, 2 boomerangs, spear 

 thrower and club, from Australia; 



2 small crescent axes and 1 quirt, 

 from Mexico; 2 flintlock pistols, 1 

 dagger, 1 fly switch (horse-hair), 

 large sword and scabbard (gold in- 

 lay), set of 3 throwing darts in 

 case; from Australia, the Orient, 

 and Mexico. 



Mrs. J. T. Gorton, Yonkers, N. Y. 

 Adze for making canoes, knife for 

 dressing skins, knife for salmon, 

 spindle whorl, spearpoint, stone ob- 

 jects (some fragmentary), wooden 

 soup spoon, carved antler, from 

 Chinook Indians, Orcas Is., Wash- 

 ington; and arrowpoint, from Vin- 

 land, Wisconsin. 

 Frank C. Griffith, New York City. 

 Lithographic print of a Maya sculp- 

 ture. 

 Guggenheim Brothers, New York City. 

 Mummy of a prehistoric miner, from 

 Chuquicamata, Chile. 

 Clarence W. Hahn, New York City. 



7 Dozen lantern slide plates. 

 H. F. Harding, Wenatchee, Wash. 

 24 Pieces of flint and 5 pieces charred 

 cloth and basket weave, from 

 Washington. 

 Hon. Frits Holm, New York City. 

 Leather box made especially to hold 

 the official winter or summer head- 

 gear of a mandarin, from Sian-fu, 

 China. 

 Dr. George Horne, Melbourne, Australia. 

 Chipped implements of Azilian-Tar- 

 denaidian type, from Australia. 



