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the types of bows and arrows are of a decidedly mixed character^[[,]]as are also the peoples.

[[strikethrough]]Mason (O.T.)[[/strikethrough]] Comparison of the Zuñi with the Finnish [[strikethrough]]A[[/strikethrough]]pparatus, [[underline]]Globus[[/underline]], Braunschweig, 1896, [[strikethrough]]Vol.[[/strikethrough]], LXIX, pp. 12 – 14, 2 [[strikethrough]]I[[/strikethrough]]^[[i]]ll [[strikethrough]]s.[[/strikethrough]]^[[us.]]

This paper calls attention to the identity of the harness used by the Zuñi Indians in weaving their garters and belts, and the apparatus used by the Finns in [[strikethrough]]N[[/strikethrough]]orthwestern Russia for the very same purposes^[[,]]and maintains that this similarity is not due to the similar causes operating and under similar circumstances, but that in it we have a good example of acculturation.

[[margin]] [[underline]]Omit in Bibliog.[[/underline]] [[/margin]]
The Curator of the Department of Ethnology delivered six lectures in the Columbian University upon the subject of " Primitive Arts in their relations to Sociology" as illustrated in the collections of the United States National Museum.
[[margin]] used in Review [[/margin]]

Hough^[[,]] [[strikethrough]]([[/strikethrough]] Walter [[strikethrough]])[[/strikethrough]] Primitive American Armor, Rep. ^[[Smithsonian Inst.^ (]]U. S. Nat. Mus.^[[(,]]1893,^[[(1895),]] pp. 625 – 651.

The object of this paper is first, to present the different types of armor worn by the American Indians^[[,]]to wit: plate armor, slat[[strikethrough]]e[[/strikethrough]] armor, stick armor and skin armor; second, to show the distribution of these different types both ethnically and geographically.