LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



179 



NEW YORK WORLD, THE, New 

 York City (through Mr. Arthur 

 Bennington) : Original photogi-aph 

 of an Indian sent by wire ; bromide 

 general view of sending apparatus; 

 bromide of Mr. Edward Belin, the 

 inventor, and assistant, and a bro- 

 mide of Mr. Belin at the sending in- 

 strument (660S0). 

 NORTH CAROLINA, STATE DE- 

 PARTxMENT OF AGRICULTURE, 

 Agricultural Experiment Station, 

 Raleigh, N. C. (through C. S. Brim- 

 ley) : 1 tachinid fly (exchange), 1 

 ortalid fly (gift), 2 tachinid flies 

 (loan) (65714) ; 3 flies, 2 presum- 

 ably new, collected at Raleigh, North 

 'Carolina (65757). 

 NORTON, J. B., HartsviUe, S. C: 53 

 plants from South Carolina (66019, 

 exchange). 

 NOYES, L G., SomerviUe, Mass.: 2 

 plants, Mammillaria and Cereus 

 (G6617, 66699). 

 NUTTING, Prof. C. C. (See under 



Iowa, State University of.) 

 NYLANDER, Olat O., Caribou, Me.: 

 50 Devonian fossils from Maine 

 (66012). 

 O'DONIGHUE, Prof. Charles H., Uni- 

 versity of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Mani- 

 toba, Canada: 3 specimens of Dip- 

 tera, 4 of Hymenoptera, 5 of Cole- 

 op tera, and a leech (66184). 

 O'KEEFE, Mrs. Mills, Hyattsville, 

 Md. : Photo-engravings and souvenir 

 post cards relating to the Pilgrim 

 Tercentenary, 1920 (13 specimens) 

 (66116). 

 OLDROYD, Mrs. Ida S., Stanford Uni- 

 versity, Calif.: 12 specimens repre- 

 senting 8 species of mollusks, and 13 

 specimens, 4 species, of land and ma- 

 rine mollusks, all from California 

 (65704, 65996). 

 OLIVA, Senora Ignacia G., Guadala- 

 jara, Mexico: 122 Mexican grasses 

 (65336). 

 OPPERMANN FUR CO., THE, Sagi- 

 naw, Mich. : The skin of a melanistic 

 wildcat (lynx) (66131). 

 ORCUTT, C. R., San Diego, Calif.: 3 

 specimens of barnacles, Balanus or- 

 cutti, B. amphitrite inexpectatus, 



ORCUTT, C. R.— Continued, 

 first United States record, and. Tet- 

 raclita squamosa rv.bcscens form 

 elegans, from La Jolla, (65718) ; 8 

 specimens of cacti from California 

 (66262) ; (through Dr. W. H. Dall) 

 15 species of fossils from San Quen- 

 tin Bay, Lower California, probably 

 Pliocene or early Pleistocene (66620), 



OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL- 

 LEGE, Corvallis, Oreg. : 11 plants 

 (65424) ; 6 plants from Oregon 

 (65621) : (through Miss Helen M. 

 Gilkey, curator) plant, Centaurea, 

 from Oregon (66016). 



ORSER-KRAFT FELDSPAR (LTD.), 

 Perth, Ontario, Canada (through Mr. 

 F. L. Hess) : Samples of euxenite 

 ore (65480). 



ORTEGA, Senor Don Jesus G., Mazat- 

 lan, Sinaloa, Mexico: 111 plants 

 from Mexico (65923) ; 7 plants 

 (66274). 

 OSHIMA Dr. M. (See under Insti- 

 tute of Science, Taihoku, Formosa, 

 Japan.) 

 OSTERHOUT, Geobge E., Windsor, 



Colo.: 9 plants (66565, exchange). 

 OTIS, Ika C, Seattle, Wash.: 106 

 plants from western United States 

 (65912). 

 OTTAWA, CANADA. (See under 



Canadian Government.) 

 OTTOLENGUI, Dr. R., New York 

 City: 10 noctuid moths, including 2 

 cotypes and 2 others new to the 

 collection (65560). 

 OWEN, Virgil W., Los Angeles, Calif. : 



12 beetles (66491). 

 PACIFIC MINERALS & CHEMICAL 

 CO., Glendale, Calif.: Specimen of 

 crude talc from Acme, Death Valley, 

 Calif. (65518). 

 PALMER, Dr. E. C, Philadelphia, 

 Pa.: Stone club of the Maori, New 

 Zealand (65304). 

 PALftlER, WnxiAM, U. S. National 

 Museum: Black snake, and 7 crabs, 

 Rliithropanopeus Jierrisii, all from 

 South Chesapeake Beach, Md., the 

 latter collected by the donor (65370, 

 65517) ; 3 birds from the vicinity of 

 Washington, D. C, including a 



