REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 21 
No. 76. Merchantville clay (brick). 
No. 77. Columbus sand. 
No. 78. Greensand marl. 
No. 79. Redbank sand. 
No. 80. Vincentown limesand. 
No. 81. Vincentown limesand. 
No. 82. Belemnitella. 
No. 83. Exogyra costata. 
No. 84. Gryphza vesicularis. 
No. 85. Other Upper Cretaceous fossils. 
No. 86. Vivianite. 
No. 87. Terebratula Harlani. 
No. 88. Terebratella plicata. 
No. 89. Ostrea larva. 
No. 90. Dinosaur bone (fragments). 
Cenozoic. 
No. 91. Shark River marl—Eocene. 
No. 92. Fossil shell—genus Venus. 
No. 93. Miocene fossils. 
No. 94. Miocene sand. 
No. 95. Cohansey sand—Pliocene (?). 
No. 96. Cohansey sandstone—Pliocene (?). 
Pleistocene. 
No. 97. Pensauken gravel. 
No. 98. Fossil shells—Genus, Unio. 
No. gg. Striated glacial pebble. 
No. 100. Conglomerate (late Pleistocene). 
No. tor. Glacial clay. 
No. 102. Clay stones. 
No. 103. Waterworn pebbles. 
No. 104. Infusorial earth. 
No. 105. Calcareous marl. 
No. 106. Peat. 
No. 107. Fresh-water mollusks. 
No. ro8. Sea sand. 
No. tog. Marine mollusks. 
No. 110. Sea weed. 
Nos. 111 to 170. In part duplicates of the above or other material, no two 
collections being alike. 

THE EXHIBIT “HOW TO EXTERMINATE THE MOSQUITO.” 
This exhibit, since its return from the Louisiana Purchase E;x- 
hibition at St. Louis in 1903, has been re-arranged and installed 
in the large exhibit hall of the New Jersey State Museum. 
