114 



EEPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1909. 



Mason, Otis Tufton — Continued. 



good quality and in profusion, tlae 

 sliapi's, structural parts and 

 lechnic and particular weaves are 

 described, and terms suggested for 

 ttiose features in wliicli ttie May- 

 laysian art differs from ttiat of 

 America. 



ItOPER, Daniel C. Supply and distri- 

 l)ution of cotton for the year ending 

 August 31, 1908. 



Bull 97, Bureau of the 

 Census, Department of 

 Commerce and Labor, 

 Washington, 1908. 

 Under tlie historical and de- 

 scriptive section of the report 

 use is made of the synoptic history 

 of devices and inventions employed 

 in the manufacture of cotton 



KoPER, Daniel C. — Continued. 



which forms an exhibit in the 

 National Museum, and this publi- 

 cation of the illustration and 

 labels is the first publication oC 

 any portion of the series in the 

 synoptic exhibit tliat has appeared. 



Smillie, T. W. Recent progress in 



color photography. 



Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 

 1907, pp. 231-2.37, pi. I. 

 Reviews the efforts to produce 

 color photographs during the past 

 hundred years by the ablest photo- 

 graphic chemists and gives details 

 of the modern processes by which 

 success lias been attained. The 

 illustration is a photochrome from 

 a specimen in the Museum. 



MAMMALS. 



Anderson. Knud. Twenty new forms 

 of Pteropus. 



Ann. Mag. Xat. Hist., 8th 

 ser., II, Oct., 1909, pp. 

 361-370. 

 Based partly on material in the 

 U. S. National Museum. 



A monograph of the Chiropteran 



genera Uroderma, Enchisthe- 



nes and Artibeus. 



Proc. Zonl. .S'oc. London, 



Sept., 1908, pp. 204-319, 



figs. 40-59. 



An elaborate review of the 



genera in question, based on 213 



specimens from the U. S. National 



Museum and 272 specimens from 



the British Museum. 



Dixon, Joseph. A new Harvest Mouse 

 from the salt marshes of Sau Fran- 

 cisco Bay, California. 



Proc. Biol. 8oc. Washing- 

 ton, XXI, Oct. 20, 1908, 

 pp. 197, 198. 

 Describes Reithrodontomys raii- 

 ventris, a new species. The com- 

 parisons made are based on ma- 

 terial in the Biological Survey col- 

 lection. 



Goldman, E. A. Five new woodrats 



of the genus Neotoma from Mexico. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wa.^hing- 

 ton, XXII, .June 25, 1909, 

 pp. 139-141. 



Based on material in the Bio- 

 logical Survey collection. New 

 subspecies : Neotojna mtermedia 



(ioLDMAN, E. A. — Continued. 



pretiosa, N. intermedia pcrpallida, 

 p. 139 ; A', intermedia rieina, A\ 

 ahtt rev lata, p. 140 ; T<1. ferruginea 

 chamula, p. 131. 



PIaiin. Walter L. Notes on the mam- 

 mals and cold-blooded vertebrates of 

 the Indiana I^uiversity Farm, Mitch- 

 ell, Indiana. 



Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., 

 XXXV, No. 1655, Dec. 7, 



1908, pp. 545-581. 

 Annotated list of 14 fishes, 17 



amphibians, 18 reptiles, and 27 

 mammals known to occur on the 

 University Farm, near Mitchell, 

 Lawrence Co., Indiana. A series 

 from tlie specimens collected was 

 presented to the U. S. National 

 Museum. 



HoLLisTER, N. Two uew bats from the 

 southwestern United States. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Washing- 

 ton, XXII, March 10, 



1909, pp. 43, 44. 



Two new species : Myotis oc- 

 cultus. p. 43 and M. haileyi, p. 44, 

 are described, chiefiy from mate- 

 rial in the Biological Survey col- 

 lection. 



Howell, Arthur H. Description of a 

 new bat from Nickajack Cave, Ten- 

 nessee. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Washing- 

 ton, XXII, March 10, 

 1909, pp. 4.5-47. 

 A new species Myotis grisescens, 

 is described, chiefiy frctm material 

 in the Biological Survey collection. 



