New Jersey, the last remnant of the once mighty t 
a tains of Sussex to the sea-beach of Cape May, are 
"stone weapons and implements, popularly considered 
144 THE STONE AGE IN NEW JERSEY. 
terized by magnifying ten diameters as used in the 
ten inches (254 siltlimbtres) to nine and five-sixths incl 
millimetres)? From what point in the objective shall 
tance to the scale be measured? At what point of s 
adjustment shall the objective be placed for rating its angul 
ture and amplifying power? Should the name ocular be 
tuted for “ eye-piece” in hgeneral use? 
THE STONE AGE IN NEW JERSEY. 
BY CHARLES C. ABBOTT, M.D. 
——tOe———— 
Fig. 9. 
1-2 natural size. 
Tuners are many people still living who remember t 
pe; and to-day seattered all over the state, fron 
_ property of these aborigines, and by them fashioned in 
shapes, sizes and of the various minerals that we no 
Liars uote javelins, harpoons, Ppor 
mers, | s, mortars and pestles, pipes, 4 
pe shapes of chipped jasper ; all these, in va 
* 
