di\ision, the principle of arrangement of the material is 
strictly chronological, starting from the south and running 
to the north end of the hall. 
A remarkable collection of models of Chinese pagodas, 
made by Chinese orphans in the Jesuit Institution of Sicca- 
wei, is shown on the south gallery. 
Hall 32, West Gallery, second floor. — A third of this hall, 
beginning at the south end, is occupied by exhibits illustrat- 
ing the ethnology of Africa (Cases 1-22), in particular the 
art of ancient Benin. The center of the hall is occupied by 
the culture of Japan (model of a pagoda, musical instru- 
ments, costume, armor, and an interesting set of dolls), East 
Siberia, Korea with a notable display of ofiicial and court- 
costume, India, Formosa, and Java represented by good 
examples of batik cloth. The north section of the hall har- 
bors the collections from Tibet (Cases 50-85), likewise se- 
cured by the Blackstone Expedition (1908-10). Weaving and 
textiles, clothing in a series of costumed figures, and jewelry 
are fully represented. Images, paintings, musical instru- 
ments, and other objects used for worship in the Lama* 
temples, are displayed in twelve cases. 
Hall 23 (at north end of East Gallery, second floor) 
contains selected examples of Chinese painting, tapestry, 
and screens. 
Hall 33: Frank W. Gunsaulus Hall (at north end of 
West Gallery, second floor) is devoted to a display of Japa- 
nese art, pre-eminently a painted screen of the Tosa school 
and a selected exhibit of Japanese prints (Surimono, cards 
of greeting for special occasions), presented by Miss Helen 
C. Gunsaulus in memory of her father. 
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY 
Halls 25-29, Second Floor 
The installations in the halls of this department are 
designed to illustrate, as fully as possible, the forms of 
plant life and the products yielded by vegetation for the use 
of man. 
Hall 25: Plant Eiconomics. — The cases in this hall are a 
continuation of those in Hall 29, beyond. They show the 
principal plant products of the great families of the pines, 
the grasses and the palms. Here may be seen the products 
of the cereal grasses and the uses to which they may be 
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