1894.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 489 



Johu Ritchie, Jr. Specimens of Gibbula richardi, Monodonta lugu- 



bris, aud Philomycus carolinensis. 

 E. W. Roper. Tj-pes of Bulla roperiana and tray of B. sfriala from 



the Balearic Isles. Type of Patella kermadecensis from Kerma- 



dec Isls. 

 H. E. Sargent. Seventeen trays of mollusks from Alabama. 

 M. Schick, One tray and one bottle of Helix alauda from Cuba. 

 Ida M. Shepard. Collection of Californian shells in exchange. 

 Dr. H. Skinner. LiUorina ii-rorata ; one tray from Anglesea, N. J. 

 Dr. H. A. Slocum. Collection of mollusks from raised beach in 



Sweden. 

 Fr. Stearns. Thirty-five trays of mollusks from Japan ; one bottle 



of Bulla goiddiana from Coronado, Cal. 

 L. H. Strang. Nassa exilis from Panama ; Goniobasis alabamensis 



from Ala. 

 S. Stupakoff. Six trar^'s mollusks from Pa. and 111. 

 H. Suter. One tray Gundlachia woodsi from. River Avon, and one 



bottle of Plaxiphora terminalis from N. Zealand ; nine trays land 



shells from N. Zealand. 

 E. G. Vanatta. Twenty-two traj's of mollusks. 

 H. A. Van Nostrand. Five trays of mollusks from Japan, presented 



through S. R. Roberts. 

 Geo. W. Webster. Strobilops hubbardi from Lake Helen, Fla. 

 A. G. Wetherbj'. Numerous shells from North Carolina, Kentucky 



and Tennessee, including one of the original lot of Polygyra 



icetherbyi Bid. 

 Louis Woolman. One traj' Unio complanatus from Harrisonville, 



N. J; Chyrsodomus stimpsoni from Nantucket. 

 G. W. Wright. Odosfomia lactea from Auckland, New Zealand. 



Vertebrate Fossils. 



E. D. Cope. Eleven species fossil vertebrata (7 types), Kansas, Okla- 

 homa, and Dakota, Cope Expedition, 1893. 

 H. C. Mercer. Earth and fossil bones from Hartman's Cave, Pa. 



Invertebrate Fossils. 



H. C. Borden. Fossils from Leuola, N. J. 



Dr. H. C.^ McCook. Three ammonites. 



Dr. H. A.' Slocum. Three trays Orthoceras, Sweden. 



Lewis Woolman. Cretaceous fossils from Lenola, N. J. 



Plants. 



Prof. Benjamin Sharp. Sixty-nine species of Hawaiian plants; also 

 five photographic views of the same. 



