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Eleven table cases contain interesting archeological material 
from Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, 
Indiana, Maine and Canada, and objects from the Cliff Dwel- 
lings of Utah. 
Nine table cases on the South side contain interesting and 
valuable collections from Yucatan, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Mexico 
and from Nicaragua, Bahama Islands, Santo Domingo and 
Caldera, Chile. 
At the east end of the court are models o^ the Pueblos of 
Hanoki, Arizona. Taos, New Mexico, Aconia, New Mexico, 
and Penasco Blanco, New Mexico. 
Swung at various points beneath the galleries are boats 
representing many primitive peoples, and along the sides and at 
me ends of the court are exhibited totem poles or healdic col- 
umns from British Columbia and Alaska. 
CASES 1 AND 2. — Manufacture of stone implements from 
Mill Creek, Illinois. 
case 6 . Manufacture of stone implements from Peoria, 
Indian Territory. 
CASE 4.*— Manufacture of stone implements from Flint 
R’dge, Ohio. 
CASE 5. Manufacture of stone implements from District 
of Columbia and Arkansas. 
CASE 6. Manufacture of stone implements from Eastern 
Wyoming. 
CASE 7.— Manufacture of gun flints from Brandon, En- 
gland. 
CASE 8. — Aboriginal copper mining implements from 
Michigan. Manufacture of soapstone vessels from the District 
of Columbia. Archeology of Kentucky. 
CASE 9. — Archeology of Ohio. 
CASE 10. Manufacture of stone implements from Illinois. 
CASE 11.— Archeology of the Valley of Mexico. 
CASE 12. — Archeology of Illinois and Missouri. 
CASE 13. — Archeology of Illinois and Missouri. 
CASE 14. — Archeology of the Valley of Mexico. 
CASE 15.— Antiquities from ruins of Chichen Itza, Yuca- 
tan. 
CASE 16. — Copper implements from Wisconsin. 
CASE 17. — Stone and copper implements from Wisconsin. 
