Case 5.— Basketry, sandals, horse trappings, head rests, 
spoons, musical instruments and personal ornaments, Nubia. 
Case 6 . — Spears, arrows, quivers, knives, swords, war clubs, 
shields, basketry, personal ornaments, etc., Somaliland, East 
Africa. 
Case 7, — Various utensils, implements, weapons, musical 
instruments and personal ornaments from the Congo Basin and 
West Coast. 
Case 8.— Walking sticks, clubs, powder horns, arrows, axes 
and whips of the Zulu, 
Case 9,— Zulu necklaces, armlets, anklets and belts. 
Case 10. — Shields, spears, arrows, knives, hatchets, horns, etc. , 
Congo Basin. 
Case 11. — Shields, spears, cross bows, knives, blacksmiths’ 
bellows. West Coast. 
HALL 10. 
ESKIMO. 
The Eskimo tribes are separated into two great groups, a 
western occupying the shores of Alaska and the British possessions, 
and the eastern occupying Labrador, Greenland and the adjacent 
regions; both are closely allied in blood, habit i, customs and arts. 
They subsist largely by hunting and fishing, and evince much in- 
genuity in the pursuit of these callings. 
Case 1. — Models of types of houses. 
Case 2.— Textile fabrics, mats, baskets, etc. 
Case 3. — Clothing of the Greenland Eskimo. 
Case 4. — Clothing of the Hudson Bay Eskimo. 
Cases 5 and 6 . — Clothing of the Alaskan Eskimo. 
Csae 7. — Clothing of the Siberian Eskimo. 
Case 8. — Eskimo man using bow drill, woman scraping a 
skin. 
Cases 9 and 10. — Masks, pipes, implements, 'etc. 
HALL I I . 
ESKIMO. 
Case 1, — Group of Eskimo family, with dogs and sleds. 
Case 2.— Eskimo hunter in Kyak with throwing stick and 
spear. 
