122 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1897. 



Simpson, T. L., Montgomery, Texas: 

 Specimen of Tinea peUionella Linn. 

 32125. 



Sinclair, S. (See under Sydney, New 

 South Wales, Australian Museum.) 



Skow & Gkiffen, Omaha, Nebraska : Hy- 

 brid Teal from Nebraska. Exchange. 

 31401. 



Skrkhot, R. F,, Kiajina, Texas: Speci- 

 men of Canavalia. 31547. 



Slater, Miss S. R., Philadelphia, Penn- 

 sylvania: Specimens of Amherstia no- 

 bilis and other seeds, from Burmah. 

 32068. 



Small, J. K., New York City : Two speci- 

 mens of dried plants from South Caro- 

 lina and China (gift) (31421); 51 speci- 

 mens of mosses of the southern section 

 of the United States (purchase) (32036) ; 

 60 lichens (purchase) (32221). 



Smith, Mrs. A. M., Minneapolis, Minne- 

 sota: Twenty specimens of colonial and 

 continental paper money. Purchase. 

 31918. 



Smith, Eugene, Hoboken, New Jersey: 

 Specimen of Vavanua arenariuti from 

 North Africa. Exchange. 31462. 



Smith, Harlan I., New York City : Spec- 

 imen of Apus aequalis Packard, from 

 New Mexico. 31441. 



Smith, Dr. H. M. (See under J. S. Wil- 

 son.) 



Smith, Prof. J. B., Rutger's College, New 

 Brunswick, New Jersey : Fourteen spec- 

 imens of Lachnosterna. Lent. Re- 

 turned. (30908); 10 specimens, includ- 

 ing 7 type specimens of noctuid moths, 

 from Colorado and British America. 

 (32199). 



Smith, J. Shirley, Shelby, North Caro- 

 lina: Specimen of muscovite. 32024. 



Smith, L. H., Eastou, Maryland: Royal 

 Walnut moth, CUheronia regalis. 30905. 



Smith, Rev. Lucius C, Department of 

 Agriculture: Plants from Mexico, rep- 

 resenting fourteen species. 31053. 



Smithsonian Institution, Mr. S. P. 

 Langley, Secretary : 

 Emerald crystal in calcite from Muso 

 Mine, Colombia. Addition to the 

 "Lea Collection." 31225. 

 Bronze medal commemorative of the 

 sesqui-centennial of the College of 

 New Jersey and the inauguration of 



Smithsonian Institution— Continued. 

 Princeton University. Presented to 

 the Smithsonian Institution by the 

 Trustees of Princeton University and 

 deposited in the National Museum. 

 32030. 



Transmitted from the Bureau of Eth- 

 nology, Maj. J. W. Powell, Direc- 

 tor: 



Copper hawk-bell, taken from a mound 

 in Tonto Basin, Arizona (30857) ; uote 

 of Bank of Cincinnati, issue of 1818 

 (30961); 172 stone implements from 

 near Kutztown, Pennsylvania, and 

 a specimen of mineral from the 

 same locality, obtained by Mr. H. K. 

 Deisher (31133); natural history 

 specimens and ethnological objects 

 collected by Dr. Fewkes in Ari- 

 zona and New Mexico, 1896 (31151); 

 2 skins of Curlacns rirgitiianus from 

 Maine, with^kull (31437) ; plants and 

 a specimen of Bufo pnnctatns, col- 

 lected by Mrs. Matilda C. Stevenson 

 in Pueblo County (31599) ; specimen 

 of sandstone, with a cup-like depres- 

 sion, from Wmifrede, West Virginia 

 (31642); collection of archfcological 

 objects obtained by Prof. G. K. Gil- 

 bert in Colorado (31683) ; 13 photo- 

 graphs of Eskimos in costume (31737) ; 

 2 potsherds obtained by Dr. F. S. Bul- 

 mer from the adobe walls of an 

 early Spanish monastery near Casas 

 Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico, an<> a 

 fragment of obsidian from the neigh- 

 boring mountains (31803) ; the Hilder 

 collection of antiquities from mounds 

 in Missouri and Illinois (31883) ; col- 

 lection of ethnological objects from 

 Zufii, collected by Mrs. M. C. Steven- 

 son (31983); collection of mat-mak- 

 ers' app'iances and products obtained 

 from the Musquaki Indians, Iowa, 

 collected by W J McGee (32138) ; sling 

 or bo^AS used in taking water-fowl 

 by tb(i Eskimo of Arctic Alaska, col- 

 lected, by Marcus Baker near Icy 

 Cape (32250) ; objects used in connec- 

 nection with the Ghost Dance of 

 the Kiowa Indians (32272); shinney- 

 stick, a set of four gaming-tubes, and 

 a set of three gaming-sticks, collected 

 by S. T. Dozier, Espanola, New Mexi- 

 co (32288). (See under W. S. Blatch- 

 ley.) 



