12 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1906. 
Hupparp, H. G. 
Schwarz. ) 
Houser, Simon G., Mays Landing, N. J.: | 
2 mollusks, Spherimus, from New Jer- | 
sey (45165). 
Hunter, Byron. 
of Agriculture. ) 
(See under Department | 
Hunter, Tuomas L., King George Court 
House, Va.: Larvaof moth, Megalopyge | 
opercularis (44909). | 
Horter, Juutus, Sr., St. Louis, Mo.: Rep- 
tiles and batrachians (45724). 
Tacks, Mrs. Amauiz, Panzés-Senahu, Alta | 
Vera Paz, Guatemala, Central America: | 
54 Lepidopterafrom Guatemala (44795). 
Iparra, Sefor FEpErIco VipELA, Esta- 
cion de Maipu, Chile, South America: 
Birds, insects, and mammals (45309); 
miscellaneous collection of insects | 
(45867). Exchange. 
Isma, 1. (See under Science College, | 
Imperial University, Tokyo, Japan.) 
INGERSOLL, C. M., Bayou Labatre, Ala.: | 
Electric - light bug, 
(44703). 
Benacus griseus 
Instituto Fistco-GEOGRAFICO NACIONAL. | 
(See under San José, Costa Rica.) 
InTERIoR, Department or, Hon: FE. A. 
Hitchcock, Secretary. 
Ores from the Alaskan exhibit at the 
Lewis and Clark Exposition (45466). 
Office of Indian Affairs: F. E. Leupp, 
Commissioner; remains of fossil verte- | 
brates from the dam on the Zuni Reser- 
vation, forwarded by J. B. Harper, | 
superintendent of irrigation, Zuni Res- 
ervation, Zuni, N. Mex. (45173). 
U. S. Geological Survey: Charles D. | 
Walcott, Director; fossil bones collected 
by Willis T. Lee in the Red Lands of 
the Staked Plains, eastern part of New | 
Mexico (44836); vertebrate fossils from | 
the Triassic Dockum beds, obtained by 
C. N. Gould, 18 miles southeast of | 
Canyon City, Tex. (44901); 2 verte- | 
brate fossils from Fairbanks and Upper | 
Cleary creeks, Alaska (45088); rocks 
from Tacoma, Washington quadrangle, 
obtained by Bailey Willis and G. O. | 
Smith (45149); rocks from Needle | 
Mountain quadrangle, Colorado | 
(45179); hubnerite from the hubnerite 
(See under E. A. | InTERIOR, DEPARTMENT or—Continued. 
mine near Osceola, Ney. (45201); basalt 
and hornblende-andesite from Califor- 
nia (45214); fossil teeth from Teruary 
deposits 3 miles south of Iron Moun- 
tain Station, Wyo., collected by N. H. 
Darton (45243); fossil turtle from 
the Bad Lands of South Dakota, col- 
lected by N. H. Darton (45251); Cre- 
taceous and Tertiary fossils collected by 
L. W. Stephenson from and near Cape 
Fear River, North Carolina (45267); 
Tertiary fossils from near Minidoka, 
Idaho, collected by F. C. Horn (45279); 
shell limestone collected in Florida by 
the late G. H. Eldridge (45295); rocks 
from Marysville district, Montana, col- 
lected by W. H. Weed (45296); fish 
remains from the Tertiary of Sanpete, 
Utah, collected by G. B. Richardson 
(45379); Mesozoic fossil plants de- 
scribed by Lester F. Ward in Mono- 
graph XLVIII of the Survey (45415); 
fuller’s earth from Attapulgus, Ga. 
(45455); Miocene foraminifera from the 
Monterey shale of California, described 
and figured by Rufus M. Bagg, jr., for 
Bulletin 268 of the Survey (45501); 
rocks from the Kenova quadrangle, 
Kentucky, collected by W. C. Phalen 
(45560); 4 minerals from Colorado, 
namely, native tellurium, zunyite, and 
chalcedony (45569); nevadite from 
Chalk Mountain, Colorado, collected by 
Whitman Cross (45576); 2 specimens 
of brecciated chlorite schist from Ani- 
mas Canyon, collected by Ernest Howe 
(45592); Upper Cretaceous fossils ( ver- 
tebrates, invertebrates, and _ plants) 
from Judith River beds (45730) ; Pleis- 
tocene fishes from Truckee Canal, near 
Hazen, Nev. (45787); rock containing 
the rare mineral ‘‘emmonsite’’ from 
Cripple Creek district, Colorado 
(45807); 24 species of mollusks col- 
lected by T. Wayland Vaughan from a 
shell mound at Osprey, Fla. (45859); 
315 rocks and ores from Cripple Creek 
district, Colorado, collected by Walde- 
mar Lindgren and F. L. Ransome; also 
duplicate material (45885); sample of 
lead ore in limestone from Missouri 
(45911); 2coralsfrom Florida, obtained 
by T. Wayland Vaughan (45965); 76 
