116 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1903. 



Hkdlicka, Dr. A. — Continued. 



monly used in Mexico (40941); gun- 

 barrel flute from Pueblo de Taos, New 



Mexico (40970); Springfield 45 fixed 



ammunition; powder and projectile 



made by the Yaqui Indians (40975); 



unfinished basket made by the Apache 



Indians (41043). 

 Hubbard, H. G. (See under E. A. 



Schwarz. ) 

 Humphrey, Charles, New York City: 



Ninety-two butterflies, 12 dragon flies, 



and a fulgorid. 40513. 

 Humphreys, J. W., Colon, Colombia: 



Bat (Artibeus). 39893. 

 Hunter, Clay, Clifton, Ariz.: Four cases 



of a trichopterous insect. 40969. 

 Hunter, William, AVashington, D. C. : 



■plant from the District of Columbia. 



40479. 

 Huntington, J. H., Baker City, Oreg. : 



Rocks from Oregon. 39638. 

 Hurlock, Miss M. C, Church Hill, Md.: 



Four plants from Maryland. (39791; 



39847.) 

 HuRTER, Julius, St. Louis, Mo. : Reptiles 



and batrachians. Exchange. 40398. 

 Hutchinson, C. H, Los Angeles, Cal.: 



Two hundred and seven specimens of 



insects. 41041. 



Imperial Academy of Sciences. (See 

 under St. Petersburg, Russia. ) 



Indiana, University of, Zoological De- 

 partment, Bloomington, Ind. : Received 

 through Prof. C. H. Eigenmann. Para- 

 site from the side of a specimen of 

 Odontoatilbe from Arroyo, Trementina, 

 Paraguay. 40744. 



Interior Department, U. S. Patent Of- 

 fice: Copies of 84 patents of autoharps 

 and allied instruments. 40856. 

 United States Geological ,Surret/: Four 

 hundred specimens of Cambrian 

 brachiopods (39642); whale verte- 

 bra — Pleistocene of Fort Caswell, 

 N. C. ; whale vertebra — Eocene of 

 Castle Hayne, N. C. ; tooth of Deaden 

 nerralus from the Eocene of Castle 

 Hayne, and teeth of a Shark, Car- 

 charodon auriculatus, from the Eo- 

 cene of Castle Hayne (39648) ; eco- 



Interior Department — Continued. 



nomic material exhibited at the 

 Charleston Exposition (39908); spec- 

 imens of quicksilver ores from Texas, 

 collected by Dr. D. T. Day (39954); 

 sample of kaolin from Edgar, Putnam 

 County, Fla., collected by T. Way- 

 land Vaughan (39686); specimen of 

 selenite from Death Valley, Califor- 

 nia, and a specimen of tungsten ore 

 from the Snake i-ange, Nevada, col- 

 lected by F. B. Weeks (40058); 103 

 specimens of minerals from various 

 localities (40131); left humerus of a 

 fossil bison, probably representing 

 the species Binon crassicornis, ob- 

 tained by Arthur J. Collier at the 

 Palisades on the Yukon (40242); fos- 

 sil sponges collected by Hon. Charles 

 D. Walcott at Little Metis, New 

 Brunswick (40298); specimen of 

 Arfvedsonite from St. Peter's Dome, 

 east side of the gulch opposite Eureka 

 tunnel, El Paso County, Tex., col- 

 lected by Whitman Cross (40464); 

 87 thin sections of rocks from San 

 Luis quadrangle, California, collected 

 by Mr. Cross (40523); 62 specimens 

 of rocks from Silver City, Idaho, 

 quadrangle, collected by W. Lind- 

 gren (40546); reserve and duplicate 

 collections from the Telluride quad- 

 rangle, Colorado (40595); Triassic 

 fossils collected by Prof. S. Ward 

 Loper in 1890-91 (40450); rocks and 

 ores from Globe copper district, Ari- 

 zona (40494); specimen of sandstone 

 from Iron Mountain, Menominee 

 district, Michigan (40632); tooth of 

 Shark, Cladodus formosus (iype) , from 

 Lime Mesa, Needle Mountains, Colo- 

 rado (40662); 2 specimens of gypsum 

 from Oklahoma, collected by Bailey 

 Willis (40684 ) ; ores and rocks from 

 Silver City and De Lamar, Idaho, 

 collected by W. Lindgren (40719); 

 rocks from Roseburg, Coos Bay, and 

 Port Orford quadrangle, Oregon, col- 

 lected by Dr. J. S. Diller (40735) ; re- 

 serve and exchange collections of 

 rocks from Ellensburg quadrangle, 

 Washington, collected by George O. 

 Smith (40859); rocks from La Plata 

 quadrangle, Colorado, reserve and 



