E© may show the products of the people®s labors where 
such exist." 
* * * * 
"After exhaustive investigations the museum 
finally made two groups of the Indians of the Atlantic 
seaboard. The first of these represents Capt. John 
Smith trading with the Indians of Virginia. The details 
that go into the group are very largely from the John 
Whit© drawings. It was the trading of John Smith that en¬ 
abled the settlements to survive famine and retain the 
first of the British colonies. The historical event and 
the ethnological correctness of the p*roup make it about 
the best thing there is in the way of a record of the 
Virginia Indians. 
"There is one other group of eastern Indians which 
is but recently completed. It is known as the arrow head 
makers and is illustrative of the manner in which this 
important aboriginal industry was carried on. On the 
outskirts of the city of Washington is a quarry that was 
used by the Indians of the oast for centuries in the get¬ 
ting out of arrow heads. The material used is a very hard 
and flinty boulder and the rrade of these found in this 
particular quarry was better than that to be found else¬ 
where. It is a well established fact that the Indians 
for hundreds of miles in all directions came here for 
their arrow heads. The deposits of the Shippings of 
