Ill 
Case 3. — Lances and fringed bark girdles from New Cale- 
donia. 
Case 4. — Models of houses, pottery, baskets, grass bags, grass 
cloth, fans, ornaments and engraved bamboo. 
Case 5. — Wooden cylinder for printing on bark, bark cloth, 
and grass skirts from Samoa. 
Case 6. — Grass cloth, grass skirts and mats from New He- 
brides. 
Case 7. — Carvings, lances, bows, arrows, clubs and paddles 
from various South Sea Islands. 
Case 8. — Idols from New Caledonia and New Hebrides. 
Funeral manikin from New Hebrides. 
Case 9. — Stone implements, fishing tackle, wood, gourd and 
clay vessels, bark and textile clothing and various personal orna- 
ments from New Guinea. 
Case 10. — Implements and weapons of wood, stone and shell; 
baskets, masks, figurines and various other ceremonial objects, 
musical instruments and personal ornaments. New Britain and 
New Ireland. 
Case 11.— Clubs, large jade axes, New Caledonia. 
Case 12, — Creeses — sword-like knives — with sheaths, a dis- 
tinctively Malay weapon, Malay Archipelago. 
Case 13. — Bark beating implements, clubs, grass cloth and 
mats, textile fibers, and various personal ornaments from Micro- 
nesia and Polynesia. 
Case 14. — Lances, Admiralty Islands. Clubs and stone im- 
plements from New Zealand. Lances, shields and boomerangs 
from Australia. 
In the middle of the hall are placed two wooden drums from 
Samoa. 
HALL 5. 
ASIA, 
This hall contains the Pogosky collection from numerous bar- 
barous tribes in Eastern Siberia, the Javanese theater set of masks, 
etc., exhibited at the World’s Fair, and parts of numerous collec" 
tions of lesser importance. 
