122 



REPOKT OF NATIONAL MUSI':UM, 1902. 



rxuERWooD, L. ]M. (See under Agrieul- 

 ture, Department of. ) 



Union Station RE^<TAL•RA^T, Jackson- 

 ville, Fla. Received through L. E. 

 Warren: Specimen of Bclostoina amrri- 

 amurii Leidy. 38832. 



United States National Museum : Ten 

 cystids, 3 crinoids, and 30 specimens of 

 ('iiiiiiirdcriiiiix from the Helderl)ergian 

 formation of West Virginia, ])urchase<l 

 from cdllectors and (inurrymcn liy 

 Charles Schuchert for the Musemii. 

 38701). The following models were 

 made in the Anthropological Labora- 

 tories: Two plaster casts of a coiled 

 baked clay figurine dredged off Sandy 

 Hook (38760); 2 banner-stones from 

 Polk County, ]Mo., and northeast Texas 

 (39024); 2 models of "whizzer" or 

 "bull roarers," used by the Navaho 

 Indians (39189); 2 "bull roarers" and 

 2 bone whistles (39280); 3 unuque or 

 "onion" flutes and 2 tambourines a 

 rorde (39552); 2 bone whistles (39574). 



University of Upsala. (See under T"p- 

 sala, Sweden.) 



Ui'HA.M, P". P., U. S. National Musevun: 

 Rudely chipped pieces of (puirtzite and 

 quartz arrow pointsfrom PineyBranch. 

 Exchange. 38604. 



Upsala, Sweden, University of Upsala. 

 Received through Dr. Einar Lr)nnberg: 

 Three species of Scandinavian and 

 North Atlantic hoiothurians. Ex- 

 change. 38777. 



Urbina, Dr. Manual. (See under Mex- 

 ico, Mexico, Museo Nacional.) 



Uricii, F. W., Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. 

 Received through Department of Agri- 

 culture: Thirteen specimens of Ramigia 

 latipes and 2 specimens of Bracliyomns 

 tuberculatum. 38796. 



Valentine, Frank B., Ridgeley, Va. : 

 Three chipped-stone implements. 

 39319. 



Vann, Livinoston, Washington, D. C : 

 Scales of a Ciar-pike, Lfj/nhtMeuii otiseus, 

 from Florida. 38241. 



Velie, Dr. J. W., St. Joseph, Mich.: 

 Skin of a Ijizard cuckoo, Saurolhera 

 )iieiiinl, from ("ul)a (38202); crabs, 

 ophiuran, and an eel { Mystriophis in- 

 trrti)irtttfi), from the western coast of 

 Florida (38(il9). 



Verrill, Prof. A. ¥.., New Haven, Conn.: 

 Two Isopods. 38705. 



Very, C. F., New Albany, Ind.: Thirty- 

 one arrow points. 38904. 



Vienna, Austria, K. K. Naturhistori- 

 scHEN Hofmuseum: Two hundred 

 plants fromEurope. Exchange. 38212. 



Wagner, Prof, (jeoroe. University of 

 Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.: Four 

 scorpions. 38703. 



Waite, M. P>. (See under :Nhixon, 

 W. R.) 



Walcott, Hon. C. D., Director, U. S. 

 Geological Survey: About 200 speci- 

 mens of Genesee fossils from Seneca 

 Lake, New York. 38532. 



Walker, Dr. F. V., Bluffton, S. C: Case 

 worm. 38980. 



Walker, Rear-Admiral J. J., U. S. N. 

 (See under Isthmian Canal Commis- 

 sion. ) 



Wallace, A. H., San Dimas, Durango, 

 Mexico, and Tucson, Ariz. : Specimen 

 of Pediijalpi, and Mexican pedipalj). 

 (38593, 39244.) 



Wallingsford, W. W., U. S. National 

 Museum: Red silk badge issued by the 

 World's Columbian Exposition, August 

 31, 1893, on Imperial Ottoman Day 

 (39185); Weather Bureau map with 

 black mourning border, the date of the 

 death of President McKinley (39199); 

 badge of the "Old Guard," a veteran 

 organization of Washington soldit'rs of 

 the civil war (39407). 



Walpole, F. a. (See under Agriculture, 

 Department of. ) 



War Department: Relics from the 

 Greely Arctic Expedition (38890); re- 

 ceived through Department of the 

 Interior, hat worn by Abraham Lin- 

 coln at the time of his assassination, 

 April 15, 1865, and the chair in which 

 he was seated at the time of his assas- 

 sination (38912). Deposit. 



Ward, H. A., Wyoming, N. Y.: Pieces 

 of 2 meteorites, Shalka ( Bengal, India ) ; 

 and Cereseto (Piedmont, Italy). Ex- 

 change. 38338. 



Ward, Prof. Lester F., U. S. Geological 

 Survey: Two hundred plants collected 

 in Arizona (38180) ; 30 plants from Cali- 

 fornia (39338). 



