SIXTY-NINTH ANNUAL REPORT 29 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publication No. 13. The Tajin Totonac : Part 1. 

 History, subsistence, shelter, and technology, by Isabel Kelly and Angel 

 Palerm. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publication No. 15. Indian tribes of Northern 

 Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg. With appendix by Marshall New- 

 man, entitled "Anthropometry of the Umotina, Nambicuara, and Iranxe, 

 with comparative data from other northern Mato Grosso tribes." 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publication No. 16. Penny capitalism : A Guate- 

 malan Indian economy, by Sol Tax. 



Publications distributed totaled 21,505, as compared with 22,377 

 for the fiscal year 1951. 



ARCHIVES 



Miss Mae W. Tucker, archivist for the Bureau of American Eth- 

 nology, retired at the end of February 1952 after nearly 27 years' 

 service with the Institution. 



Notable additions to the collections during the fiscal year were the 

 diaries of John K. Hillers, who accompanied Maj. J. W. Powell on 

 his famous voyage through the Grand Canyon of the Colorado in 

 1871 and 1872. Mr. Hillers, who became photographer for the ex- 

 pedition, kept a full daily record of the expedition, which constitutes 

 a most valuable addition to our knowledge of this famous adventure. 

 The diaries were presented to the Bureau by Mrs. J. K. Hillers of 

 Washington, D. C, daughter-in-law of the author. 



Mrs. Alice Norvell Hunt, of Washington, D. C., presented to the 

 Bureau an interesting collection of early photographs of western In- 

 dians collected by her father while an army officer in the West and 

 Southwest. Comprising photographs made by Baker and Johnston ; 

 Addison of Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory; O. S. Goff, Dickinson, 

 N. Dak.; A. S. Goff, Fort Custer, Mont.; Chr. Barthelmess, Fort 

 Keogh, Mont. ; and Chase Thome, El Paso, the 46 prints, including 

 a number of famous Indians, are all new to the collections. 



William H. Myer, of Washington, D. C, and Mrs. Annie Lee 

 Myer Turner, of Carthage, Tenn., presented a book containing 75 

 drawings by Indians of the Southern Plains. The book was acquired 

 about the year 1880 by Capt. David N. McDonald and was later 

 purchased by W. E. Myer, father of the donors. 



Mrs. J. C. Cardell, of Lenoir, N. C, presented a Mohawk dictionary 

 of 973 pages with French equivalents. It is in the dialect spoken at 

 Lake of Two Mountains, Caughnawaga and St. Regis in the Province 

 of Quebec, Canada, and is the work of Rev. J. A. Cuoc. It was 

 obtained later by Jeremiah Curtain, father of the donor. 



Henry Lookout, of Pawhuska, Okla., son of the late Fred Lookout, 

 last principal chief of the Osage Nation, sent to the Bureau on 

 indefinite loan a group of papers relating to the history of the Osage 

 Nation, passed down from father to son for generations. Among the 



