146 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1922. 



COMMERCE, DEPARTMENT OF— 

 Continued. 

 Bureau of Fisheries — Continued, 

 fisties from various localities 

 (67694, 68013) ; 13 plants from 

 South Carolina, collected by 

 S. P. Hildebrand (67697) ; type 

 specimen of Ophidium welshi, 2 

 specimens of 0. holbrooki, and 

 2 of 0. brevibarbe (67752) ; a 

 large collection of miscella- 

 neous invertebrates from Chesa- 

 peake Bay, collected by the Fish 

 Haick (Dr, R. P. Covples in 

 charge) in connection with the 

 Hydrographic and Biological 

 Survey of Chesapeake Bay, com- 

 prising 168 lots of crustaceans, 

 2 lots of pycnogonids, 44 lots 

 of mollusks, and 1 coral 

 (68131) ; 2 microscopic slides, 

 one of a tube-dwelling amphi- 

 pod and the other supposed cir- 

 rus of a barnacle, taken from 

 the stomachs of fishes (68277) ; 

 15 isopods and 20 amphipods 

 collected by Dr. R. E. Coker 

 at Beaufort, N. C, on piles at 

 the west end of the town, April 

 25, 1922 (68302) ; 200 specimens 

 of amphipods and 60 specimens 

 of isopods collected May 23, 

 1922, at Beaufort, N. C, by 

 Charles Hatsel (68378) ; water 

 terrapins and musk turtles 

 from Bullockville, Ga. (68391) ; 

 (through Dr. R. P. Cowles, 

 Johns Hopkins University Sta- 

 tion) 41 mollusks from Severn 

 River, Md. (68463) ; 171 vials 

 and 62 prepared slides of 

 f Oram inif era collected by the 

 U. S. Bureau of Fisheries 

 steamer Fish Hawk in the shal- 

 low waters off the coasts of 

 North and South Carolina and 

 identified by Dr. C. H. Edmond- 

 son of the College of Hawaii 

 (68412). 



(See also under Dr. J. Mor- 

 gan Clements, Prof. F. Payne, 

 and Sarasota County Chamber 

 of Commerce. ) 



COMMERCE, DEPARTMENT OF— 



Continued. 

 Bureau of Foreign and Domestic 

 Commerce: Foreign trade samples 

 of fibers, gums, seeds, woods, and 

 miscellaneous raw materials sent 

 by American consuls and special 

 agents of the department (67246, 

 loan). 



(See also under Shakespeare 

 Co.) 



COMPTON, Alonzo E., U. S. General 

 Land Ofiice, Santa Fe, N. Mex. : 

 Earthenware jar found in Chaco 

 Canyon (67331). 



CONDIT, D. Dale, New York City: 

 Collection of fossils, mostly foram- 

 inifera, from 125 localities repre- 

 senting a section of the Tertiary 

 formations in northwest India 

 (68431). 



CONTINENTAL INSURANCE CO., 

 THE, NeAV York City (through 

 Joseph E. Lopez, President) : 3 

 framed oil paintings entitled " The 

 First Automobile," "The First 

 Street Railway," and "The First 

 Steamboat" (67131, loan). 



CONZATTI, Prof. C, Oaxaca, Mexico :, 

 41 plants; also 135 plants from 

 Mexico (67153, 67527). 



COOK, Harold J., Agate, Nebr. 

 (through Dr. T. W. Stanton) : 2 

 Upper Cretaceous fossil shells from 

 South Dakota (67066). 



COOK, Dr. O. F., Bureau of Plant 

 Industry, U. S. Department of 

 Agriculture, Washington, D. C. : 2 

 specimens, 2 species, of land shells 

 from Peten, Guatemala, collected by 

 H. F. Loom is (68223). 



COOKE, Dr. C. Wythe, U. S. Geolog- 

 ical Survey, Washington, D. C. : 

 Cretaceous and later fossil material 

 collected by O. B. Hopkins and C. W. 

 Cooke in 1920 at 10 localities in the 

 Republic of Colombia (60868). 



(See also under Dr. Julia A. 

 Gardner.) 



COOLIDGE, Kabl R., Los Angeles, 

 Calif.: 47 moths (67018, 67211). 



COOPER, A. T., Webster, S. D. 

 (through Mr. Francis J. Dyer) : 4 



