LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



75 



Exposition): Samples of chemicals, etc. 

 (44553). 



' M.vxuLER. H. P. (See under Department 

 'if -Vgriculture.) 



iiAPMAN, E. M., Washington, D. C: Skele- 

 ton excavated near Tottenville, Staten 

 Island, X. Y. (43952). 

 iiickAHOMiNT Tribe (received through 

 ( 'hief William H. Adkins, Bradley's Store, 

 Va.): Piece of old Indian pottery (43038). 



CHoi'TEAr, Pierre, St. Louis, Mo.: Silver 

 medal struck in commemoration of the 

 battle of Islinga (43617). 

 iiRisT, H., Basel, Switzerland: Fern {Po- 

 hj]miinm) from Brazil (43527). 



Christiani, Fritz, Washington, D. C. : Para- 

 sitic wasp (Dasymuiilla orientalis Linn.) 

 (44025). 



I iiRisTiE, Mrs. Cora A., Washington, D. C: 

 Mexican and Norwegian ethnological ob- 

 jects (43849). 



( iLLEY, Henry, U. S. Pension Office, Wash- 

 ington , D. C. : Sword and scabbard of Jona- 

 than Cilley, first lieutenant and adjutant. 

 First Battalion, Forty-third U. S. Volun- 

 teer Infantry (44007). 



Clapp, G. H., Pittsburg, Pa.: 3 cotypes of 

 Oinphalina pUsbryiClapp from Wetumpka, 

 Ala. (43251); cotypes of 2 species of 

 mollusks (43652). ' 



Clare, B. W., Lordsburg, N. Mex. (received 

 through Walter Hough): Samples of gold- 

 copper ore from the Empire State Mining 

 Company's mines, Cochise County, Ariz. 

 (44567). 



Cl.\rk, H. W. (See under F. L. Ransome.) 



Clark, H. W. (See under Department of 

 Commerce and Labor, Bureau of Fish- 

 eries.) 



Clarke, F. AV. (See under Isador Wise.) 



Clarke, John M. (See under Geological 

 Surs'cy of New York.) 



Clements, J. Morgan, New York City (re- 

 ceived through H. T. Bain): 17 specimens 

 of Jurassic( ?) invertebrates from Cerro del 

 Paso, Peru (43451). 



Clements, Percy. (See under Verde An- 

 tico Marble Company.) 



Clowry-, R. C. (See under Western Union 

 Telegraph Company.) 



Cockerell, Prof. T. D. A., Boulder, Colo.: 

 Type specimen of hymenopterous insect 

 (MutiUa cockerelli Melander) ; type speci- 

 men of dipterous insect (Diplosis colora- 

 nat mus 1905 6 



deJlaCkW.) and 30 other insects (43770); 

 land, fresh-water, and marine shells from 

 various localities (43875) ; 27 insects, in- 

 cluding 3 types (44252). 



Cockle, J. W., Kaslo, British Columbia: 10 

 moths and a moth larva (43958). 



CoLLADAY', W. E., Treasury Department, 

 Washington, D. C: Larva of butterfly 

 {Papilio troilus Linn.) (43268). 



Collier, A. J.. Washington, D. C. (received 

 through Department of Agriculture): 12 

 crj^togams from St. Matthews Island, 

 Alaska (43442). 



Collins, F. S., Maiden, Mass.: 50 algse 

 (43250): 50 plants (43903: purchase). 



Colonial Museum. (See under Welling- 

 ton, New Zealand.) 



Commerce and Labor, Department of, 

 Hon. Victor H. Metcalf, Secretarj'. 

 Transferred from Bureau of Fisheries: 

 Collection of fishes made by the steamer 

 Albatross in the Straits of Magellan and 

 northward (42990): crustaceans and mol- 

 lusks collected by the Albatross in 1902 at 

 the Hawaiian Islands, and in Alaska in 

 1903 (43016) ; invertebrates and mollusks 

 from the coast of California, collected !>}• 

 the Albatross and transmitted by C. H. 

 Gilbert (43026) ; types and cotypes of 

 Hawaiian fishes collected by the Albatross 

 (43076); 164 plants from Indiana col- 

 lected b}^ J. T. Scovell (43123); specimen 

 of angler {Lophius piscatorius) from near 

 St. Johns, Newfoundland, and specimens 

 of foraminifera from the Hawaiian Islands 

 collected by the Albatross (43265); 82 

 plants from Indiana (43331): alcoholic 

 specimen of a three-legged frog (43363); 

 type specimen of shark {C'atulus brunneus) 

 taken in the Pacific Ocean, south of San 

 Clemente Island, by the Albatross (43364) ; 

 invertebrates transmitted from Woods 

 Hole by Vinal N. Edwards (43397); rep- 

 tiles and batrachians collected by B. W. 

 Evermann in California (43439) ; 3 lizards 

 and a frog, collected by J. W. Titcomb in 

 South America (43486); 60 turtles from 

 Lake Maxinkuckee, Indiana (43511); 4 

 negatives of the monument erected to 

 Captain Cook, the Hawaiian explorer 

 (43512) ; received through B.W. Evermann 

 33 turtles, 6 snakes, 18 frogs, 7 toads, a 

 salamander, 28 crawfishes, and 131 mol- 

 lusks, principally from the vicinity of 



