Vile SYNOPSIS OF MUSEUM. 
2. VEGETABLE Propucts, from the raw material through the 
various stages of manufacture to the finished fabric or other 
article. This section includes gums, resins, oils, woods, 
fibres, tans, dyes, drugs, perfumes. Forestry and forest 
products. 
3. Waste Propucts, whether of animal, vegetable, or of inorganic 
origin, with illustrations of their utilization. 
4. Foops, animal and vegetable, their constituents, and illustrations 
of their adulterations. Dietary tables and information con- 
cerning the chemical composition and other important par- 
ticulars regarding the human foods of the world. 
5. Economic GroLtocy.—Metallic ores. Building and ornamental 
stones. Mineralcombustibles. Lime; cement and hydraulic 
cement, raw and burned. Artificial stone. Clays, kaolin, 
silica, and other materials for manufacture of pottery, glass, &c. 
Refractory materials. Substances used for grinding and 
polishing ; pigments of inorganic origin. Collections of 
minerals, rocks, and fossils, to illustrate well-known text- 
books. Collections of minerals to illustrate physical proper- 
ties, e.g., colour, lustre, diaphaneity. Woven fabrics of 
mineral origin (e.g., wire-cloth, asbestos-cloth). 
5A. Ceramics, Pottery, Porcetarin.—Bricks, drain-tiles, terra 
cotta, architectural pottery; fire-clay goods, crucibles, pots, 
furnaces, chemical stoneware ; tiles for ornament, pavements, 
roofing, &c. ; earthenware, stoneware, art pottery and porcelain. 
58. Grass.—Glass used for construction and for mirrors, window- 
glass, plate-glass—rough ground and polished, toughened 
glass, chemical and pharmaceutical glassware, decorative 
glassware. 
6. OrtcinaL SprecimENS oF Artistic WorKMANSHIP in wood,- 
metal, and other substances. Coins and medals. 
7. PHorocrapus, ELEectrotyPr, Praster, and other reproductions 
of examples of art workmanship where originals are not to 
be obtained. 
8. ErunotocicaL Specimens.-—Musical instruments, national cos- 
tumes, historical costumes, lace and embroidery. 
