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An egg-shaped specimen from Caldwell County. [[underline]]Accession 17307.[[/underline]] [[underline]]Dr. O. B. Reese, U. S. Geological Survey._ [[/underline]] Eleven arrow-heads from Grainger County, Tennessee. [[underline]]Accession 17329.[[underlined]] [[underline]]G. E. Sellers, Bowlesville, Gallatin Countu, Illinois- [[/underline]] Five arrow-heads made by himself [[underline]]Accession 17350.[[/underline]] [[underline]]Charles Aldrich, Webster City, Hamilton County, Iowa._[[/underline]] A stone pestle from Grant's Pass, Josephine County, Oregon. [[underline]]Accession 17355.[[/underline]] [[underline]]A.F. Wooster, Norfolk, Connecticut._[[/underline]] An unfinished grooved double axe from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. [[underline]]Accession 15413.[[/underline]] [[underline]]W.R. Chapman, Okolona, Clark County, Arkansas._[[/underline]] Twenty-seven arrow-heads from Clark and Polk Counties, 2 hammer-stones from ancient oxide of iron and manganese mines in Polk County, and a celt and 2 natural formations resembling worked stone objects, from Clark County. [[underline]]Accession 16598.[[/underline]] [[underline]]E. W. Nelson, Springerville, Apache County, Arizona._[[/underline]] Collections from ruins on the head-waters of the San Francisco River, New Mexico: Stone perforators, grooved axes, mortars, a pestle, a grinding-stone, rubbing-stones, arrow-shaft-straighteners, perforated cylindrical paint-stones, rock crystals show-