FIFTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT 11 



No. 21. Some notes on a few sites in Beaufort County, South Carolina, by 

 Regina Flannery. 



No. 22. An analysis and interpretation of the ceramic remains from two 

 sites near Beaufort, South Carolina, by James B. GriflBn. 



No. 23. The eastern Cherokees, by William Harlen Gilbert, Jr. 



No. 24. Aconite poison whaling in Asia and America : An Aleutian transfer 

 to the New World, by Robert F. Heizer. 



No. 25. The Carrier Indians of the Buckley River : Their social and relig- 

 ious life, by Diamond Jenness. 



No. 26. The Quipu and Peruvian civilization, by John R. Swanton. 

 Bulletin 134. Native tribes of eastern Bolivia and western Matto Grosso, by 

 Alfred M^traux. 



Publications distributed totaled 11,882. 



LIBRARY 



There has been no change in the library staff during the fiscal year. 

 Accessions during the fiscal year totaled 378. 



The library staff has relabeled and reshelved 5,137 books. The sec- 

 tions of general ethnology and non-American material, and linguis- 

 tics have now been entirely reclassified and reshelved. Library of 

 Congress printed cards, so far as they are available, have been 

 ordered for practically all of this material, when not already in the 

 catalog. Part of the work of typing these cards and filing in the 

 catalog has been completed and will be finished in a month or two. 



The sorting of foreign periodicals and society transactions has 

 been completed and all material not in the library field has been 

 put aside for appropriate disposal. A temporary shelf list has been 

 made for this material and it is hoped that this section will be 

 reclassified and reshelved by the first of the year. The checking lists 

 for the second edition of the Union List of Serials were marked with 

 our holdings and returned. 



The sorting of the pamphlet collection has been completed and 

 more than half have been classified and shelved. Library of Con- 

 gress cards where available have been ordered. In the future the 

 library will have no separate pamphlet collection. All pamphlets 

 that are kept will be classified and shelved with the books. Work 

 has also been done on Congressional documents and some of this 

 material is now classified and reshelved. Government documents 

 from the War and Interior departments, publications of the Chero- 

 kee and Choctaw nations, and of various special boards and com- 

 missions have been sorted and classified and all Library of Congress 

 cards available ordered. 



