LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



147 



AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM, THE (See 

 under Sydney, New South Wales, 

 Australia). 



axsox, Stockton. (See under Amer- 

 ican National Bed Cross.) 



BAER, Johx L. (See under T. Dale 

 Stewart). 



BAGG, Prof. Urns M., Appleton, 

 Wis. : A collection comprising 20 lots 

 of miscellaneous geological material 

 (64544, exchange). 



BAIN, Mrs. II. Fostek, U. S. Postal 

 Agency, Shanghai, China: Collection 

 of Oriental Ethno-art objeets (64999, 

 loan). 



BAKER, A. P., National Zoological 

 Parle, Washington, 1>. C. : Garter 

 snake, Thamnophis sirtftlis sirtalis, 

 from the Park (64684). 



BAKER, Prof. C. P.. College of Agri- 

 culture, Los Banos, P. I.: 33 Philip- 

 pine wasps of the subfamily Pseni- 

 nae, determined by S. A. Kohwer 

 (64625). 



BAKER, Dr. Frank C, University of 

 Illinois. 1'rl. ana. III.: 4 recent uiol- 

 lusks, Planorbis pseudotrivolvis, and 

 65 specimens, - species of Pleis- 

 tocene fossil mollusks, Planorbis at- 

 tissimus and Amnicola winkleyi 

 leightoni, topotypes of species re- 

 cently described by the donor, from 

 Illinois and Ohio (64980). 



RAKER, Dr. F. II., Richmond, Vic- 

 toria, Australia : 20 marine mol- 

 lusks representing 5 species and 2 

 echinoderms from Australia ; also 

 insects (64656, exchange). 



BAKER, T. EL, Baltimore, Md. : Eth- 

 nological and archeological Objects 

 from the United States and Mexico 

 (7 specimens! (64857, exciiange). 



BAKER, Dr. W. Franklin, Philadel- 

 phia, Pa. (through Dr. W. A. Dewey, 

 Ann Arbor, Mich.) : 4 photographs 

 of pathological specimens sltowing 

 the action of small doses of homeo- 

 pathic dilutions given to healthy 

 animals ( 64855 1 . 



BALL, 0. P., Department of Agricul- 

 ture, Washington, D. C. : 39 willows 

 from Indiana i 64669), 



BARBER, Ajkherst W., Washington, 

 D. C. : Head skin, antlers and lower 

 jaws of a deer, Odocoilcus, collected 

 on October IT L899, at Rio Blanc.. 

 County, Colorado, by V. S. Barber 

 (63997); (through Mr. H. S. Bar- 

 ber) 2 carnelian beads found on the 

 north shore of Lake Okeechobee, 

 near the mouth of the Kissimmee 

 River, Florida (6429S). 



BARBER, H. S., Department of Agri- 

 culture. Washington, D. C. : 6 Dip- 

 tera (63909) ; 25 isopods and a small 

 lish from Florida (64315). 



(See also under Amherst W. Bar- 

 ber. ) 



BARBER, M a.m.y I >.. Knoxville, Tenn. : 

 si mollusks, 12 species, from Ten- 

 nessee and Illinois (64319). 



BARLOW, Miss Catherine Brittin 

 i See under Daughters of the Ameri- 

 can Revolution, National Society of). 



BARNES, Dr. Wiixiam, Decatur, 111.: 

 2000 determined North American 

 Microlepidoptera including 200 co- 

 types and many species hitherto not, 

 or insufficiently, represented in the 



. Museum collections (G4446) ; 150 

 North American butterflies (05090). 



BARRETT, C. H. M., Bureau of Bi- 

 ological Survey, l'. S. Department 

 of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. : 

 io mollusks representing 5 species 

 from St. Marks. Florida (64637). 



BARRETT, II., Launceston, Tasmania : 

 85 prehistoric stone implements 

 from southern Tasmania (05068, ex- 

 change) . 



BARRINGER, D. M., Philadelphia, 

 Pa. : Samples of tin ore from Bolivia 

 (63847). 



BARTLETT, Prof. II. EL, Department 

 of Botany, University of Michigan, 

 Ann Arbor, .Mich.: 240 plants from 

 Sumatra, received through the Bu- 

 reau of Science, Manila, P. I. 

 (041. 'UP 



BARTSCH, Dr. 1'aci., P. S. National 

 Museum : Salamander, Desmoffna- 

 thus fuscus, from the east side of 

 lloosac Mountains. Massachusetts 

 (64063). 



BASTIX. Mrs. E. S., Washington, 

 D. C. : 40 plants from Chile (64378). 



