LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 781 



Fahkion, G. W. (Coluiubiis, Ohio). Ten nulc stone iiiipletiieuts from near Coliiui- 

 bus, 4 pieces of bone, piece of mica, and piece of flint from a mound near Upper 

 Sandusky, Ohio. 23831. Deposit. 



Falconer, J. M. (Brooklyn, N. Y.). Collection showing various ways of putting 

 up colors for the use of artists, and a Chinese artist's brush (24252) ; 5 kinds of 

 tools and materials of various kinds used by artists (24452). 



Fakkek, W. J. (See under H. Henry Heathcote.) 



Faurin<;ton, O. C. (Fair Haven, Conn.). Cordierite gneiss from Guilford, Conn. 

 2,S8i59. Exchange. 



Fauntleroy, W. H. (Bakerstield, Cal.). (rypsum, cement-rock, and clay. 24455. 



Fkrnow, Dr. H. ¥j. (F. S. Department of Agriculture). View of avenue of Japan- 

 ese cedar {Cryiitomcna Japoniea) (24335); model of tree-j)lanting machine in- 

 vented by Mr. Thomas L. Stratton. (2.5336.) Deposit. 



Ferkeira, a. (See under Department of Agriculture, through Dr. C. Hart Merriam. ) 



Ferry, Mrs. C. M. (Oneida, N. Y.). Plants from South Africa, 24307. Exchange. 



Fersinger, John (Washington, D. C). Yellow fantail pigeon for skeleton. 23563. 



Fesler, Bert. (See under U. S. Fish Commission.) 



FiCK, G. A. (Baltimore, Md.). Spangle- winged Swallow-pigeon. 24422. 



Finch, J. Milton (Dayton, Ohio). Segments of crinoid column. 23917. 



P'irst Japanese and Trading C'ompany (New York City). Collectit)n of Avood 

 and ivory carvings, hronzes, costumes, and other articles. 23887. Purchase. 



Fish, Charles F. (Fall River, Mass.). Photographs of the old stone mill at New- 

 port, R. I., and one of the windmill in Portsmouth. 23421. 



Fish Commission, U. S. 

 Through Col. Marshall McDonald, Commissioner: Small collection of brachyuran 

 crustaceans obtained by the schooner Grampus during the winter of 1888-'89, 

 off the coast of Florida (23487); alcoholic collection of type series of fresh- water 

 fishes collected during the summer of 1889 in Missouri, Arkansas, Colorado, 

 Utah, Georgia, and Alabama, by Prof. S. E. Meek, Dr. D. S. Jordan, C. H. Boll- 

 man, B. Fesler, and others (23493) ; 28 specimens of fishes collected by the steamer 

 AlhatrosH on the Pacific Coast of North America during 1889, being the types of 

 16 of the new species recently described by Prof. Charles H. Gilbert in the Pro- 

 ceedings of the National Museum (23787); fresh specimen of Rainbow Trout ar- 

 tificially colored at Bucksport. Me., and 2 fresh specimens of the Black-fin White- 

 fish collected in Miltona Lake, Minnesota, by Mr. James R. B. Van Cleane, 

 Txowt {Salmo trident) and Whitcfish (Coretjonux niffri2nnniii) (23811); collection 

 of 60 species of fishes from the vicinity of Charles City, Va., obtained by Mr. 

 William P. Seal, during September and October, 1890 (23900); 1,128 specimens 

 of brachyuraus and anomourau crustaceans, representing 38 species, collected 

 by the steamer Alhaiross, on the Pacific Coast of North America (23904);. 327 

 specimens, representing 15 species of duplicate echini, obtained from the collec- 

 tions of the steamer Albatross in the North Pacific Ocean in 1888 and 1889 (24036) ; 

 collection of fishes representing 90 specimens, made l)y the steamer Albatross 

 from the Galapagos Islands and Panama, during the spring of 1888 (24037)*; 163 

 specimens of mollusks, collected by the Fish Commission schooner Grampus, off 

 the west coast of Florida during the spring of 1889 (24038) ; a large collection of 

 fishes made by the steamer Albatross on the cruise from Norfolk to San Francisco 

 in 1877-'88, mainly from Brazil, but a few from Patagonia and the Straits of 

 Magellan (24039)t; fishes and reptiles from Alabama, obtained by Messrs. P. H. 

 Kirsch, andparty in May, 1889 (24047); collection of fishes made in Georgia in 



*For lists of specimens with descriptions of new species, see "Proceedings, U. S. 

 Nati(mal Museum," Vol. xii, pjt. 149-183, and Vol. xiii, pp. 449-4.55. 



+For list of species obtained and new forms described, see "Proceedings I". S. Na- 

 tional Museum." Vol. xiii, ])p. 31.3-336. 



