62 
REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1906. 
CoMMERCE AND LaBor, DEPARTMENT OF— | COMMERCE AND LazBor, DEPARTMENT OF— 
Continued. Continued. 
. | * 
River, collected by S. P. Bartlett | for taking blubber from a whale 
(45811); 87 plants from the vicinity of 
Yes Bay, Alaska (44815); 63 plants col- 
lected near Yes Bay, Alaska (44886) ; 
fishes (44928); 
marine invertebrates, — 
mollusks, insects, and reptiles (44954); 
3 plants from Yes Bay, Alaska, collected | 
by F. M. Chamberlain (45086); sponges 
collected in the Pacific Ocean by the 
Albatross-Agassiz Expedition of 1891 
(45174); series of fresh-water fishes from 
Maine (45175); snake and frogs from 
Maine, collected by W. C. Kendall in 
Aroostook County (45180); mammals, 
birds, mollusks,and other invertebrates, 
fossils, fish, and fiber-producing plants 
collected by the Albatross and Fish | 
Hawk in Japan, Alaska, the South Sea 
Islands, and Porto Rico (45248); fish- 
ing apparatus and gear, fossil material, 
and 2 valves of a giant clam (45276; 
fishes, mollusks, and other inyerte- 
brates from the German educational 
exhibit at the Louisiana Purchase Ex- 
position (45340); fishes, mollusks, and 
other invertebrates, also ethnological 
objects forming part of the Japanese 
fisheries exhibit at the Louisiana Pur- | 
chase Exposition (45348); sponges 
from the Pacific Ocean (45351); 22 
types of fishes collected by the Albatross 
among the Hawaiian Islands in 1902 
(45353); insects, crustaceans, and shells 
collected by J. W. Titcomb in Argen- 
tina (45361); Hawaiian fishes collected | 
by the Albatross in 1902 (45365); iso- 
pods, including types of new spe- 
cies, collected at Porto Rico in 1899 
by the Fish Hawk (45399); reptiles, 
fishes, insects, mollusks, and other 
invertebrates, plants, and skull of a 
mammal (45403), fishes, chiefly from 
Alaska (45404); fishes from various 
localities (45407); compound ascidian 
from Ellice Island, obtained by the | 
Albatross - Agassiz Expedition to the | 
South Pacific in 1899 (45410); about 
2,981 fishes collected by the Fish Hawk, 
Albatross, and Grampus, and also by 
Cloudesley Rutter and W. C. Kendall 
(45430, 45431, 45432);  hammerless 
darting-gun No. 583, and implements 
(45474); stony corals obtained during 
the Albatross-Agassiz Expedition to 
the South Pacific in 1904-5 (45482); 
fishes from the Hawaiian Islands, 
collected by D. 8. Jordan and B. W. 
Evermann, the Albatross, the Fur Seal 
Commission, and O. P. Jenkins (45495); 
fishes chiefly from the coast of Califor- 
nia obtained by the Albatross in 1894 
(45498); sponges collected by the Alba- 
tross off the coast of California in 1904 
(45516); dried crustaceans (45517); 103 
fishes from the Pacific Ocean principally 
obtained by the Albatross (45558); 3809 
fishes collected in Hawaiian waters by 
the Albatross in 1902 (45564); 101 fishes 
from Samoa, collected by D. 8. Jordan 
in 1902 (45565); 60 fishes from the 
western section of Cuba, collected in — 
March of 1902 by C. H. Eigenmann 
and O. Riddle (45583); 95 fishes col- 
lected in Hawaiian waters in 1902 by 
E. L. Berndt and others (45584) ; 5,772 
fishes from the fresh waters of the 
northern part of California and the 
southern section of Oregon (45604) ; iso- 
pod, Meinertia, sp. from Kochi, Japan, 
collected by H. M. Smith (45620); 529 
fishes collected in Massachusetts waters 
chiefly about Woods Hole (45639); 511 
fishes, chiefly from the New England 
coast (45664); Hawaiian fishes (45679) ; 
type specimens of worms, Limnodrilus 
gracilis and  Actinobdella —annectans 
(45751); barnacles, chiefly from the 
Hawaiian Islands and the Alaska- 
California coast (45770); mammals, 
birds, reptiles, fish eggs, insects, mol- 
lusks, and other invertebrates (45772); 
reptiles, plants, mollusks, and other 
invertebrates obtained by the Albatross 
during the Albatross-Agassiz Expedition 
tothe South Pacific in 1899-1900 (45736) ; 
fishes from Argentina, South America 
(45791); 78 Unionidee from Connecti- 
cut lakes, New Hampshire, coilected 
by W. C. Kendall and E. L. Goldsbo- 
rough in 1904 (45800) ; fishes, including 
several types from Japan, Hawaiian 
Islands, and the Galapagos Islands (re- 
ceived from Leland Stanford Junior 
