LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



77 



Cockebell, Prof. T. D. A. — Continued, 

 other specimens (52052) ; 7 plants 

 from New Mexico (52193) ; about 50 

 insects mostly from the United 

 States; also including 2 from the 

 British Tibet Expedition, and the 

 type slide of a coccid (52231) ; types 

 of 2 species of bees, Osmki titusi 

 and 0. daridsonclla (52289) : 12 

 bees (including cotypes of 6 species) 

 aud 36 miscellaneous insects 

 (52368) : type of chalcid, Syntomas- 

 pis warrem (52381) ; 4 fossil ani- 

 mals and a fossil plant (52644) ; 8 

 insects, including 7 species of named 

 bees (52655) ; 43 plants from New 

 Mexico (52692; 52S06) ; insects and 

 a lizard (52S26) : male and female 

 specimens of Psenuliis (Neofoxia) 

 townsendi (52S51) ; 14 wasps, in- 

 cluding type of 1 species, and a para- 

 type of a bee (52S96) ; fish. Notrvpis 

 sp. nov.?, collected by Horace Smith 

 at Julesburg, Colo. (52939). 



Codwise, Miss Louise Salter, Kings- 

 ton, N. Y. : " The Louise Salter Cod- 

 wise Collection," consisting of relics 

 of the Salter and Codwise families 

 of New Jersey and New York, botb 

 of Colonial and Revolutionary his- 

 tory, and comprising jewelry, mini- 

 atures, embroideries and laces, etc. 

 (51998: loan). 



Coe, Henry C, Newport, Oreg. : 3 

 specimens of rock oyster, Pholadi- 

 dea, from Yaquina Bay, Oreg. 

 (52756). 



Cohen. Miss Mary M. (See under 

 Mikve Israel Association, Philadel- 

 phia.) 



Collins, .F. S., Maiden, Mass.: 150 

 specimens of North American algae, 

 Phycotheca Boreali- Americana, fas- 

 cicles 33, 34, aud 35 (51758; 52271; 

 52901) ; and 25 specimens of North 

 American characeae and algse, Phy- 

 cotheca Boreali-Americana, fascicle 

 "E" (52374). Purchase. 



Colman, H. F., Washington, D. C. : 12 

 postage stamps and 5 proofs (52197). 



Colorado Yule Marble Company, 

 Marble, Colo. : Slab of marble 

 (5271S). 



Commerce and Labor, Department of : 

 Bureau of Fisheries: 2 crabs and 

 5 insects from the Philippine Is- 

 lands, received through Lieut. Wm. 

 E. Moore (51738) ; about 190 speci- 

 mens of isopods, collected by the 

 Albatross Philippine Expedition 

 (51771) ; 64 fishes, chiefly lake her- 

 rings, among which are types of 

 several new species from the Great 

 Lakes, collected by the Interna- 

 tional Fisheries Commission (51871) ; 

 1,225 fishes, chiefly from Indiana, 

 Maryland, Nebraska, Ohio. Woods 

 Hole, Mass., and Maine (51872) ; 

 specimens of Spongilla philvppinen- 

 sis (51922) ; 1,391 fishes collected 

 on the western coast of the United 

 States, chiefly by Messrs. Putter and 

 Brady, and Scofield in 1897 (5195!)) ; 

 3 boxes of hydroids collected by the 

 Albatross during the Northwest Pa- 

 ■ cific cruise of 1906, and identified 

 by Prof. C. C. Nutting (51993) ; 

 fishes, batrachians, invertebrates, 

 insects, etc., collected for the Bu- 

 reau in Grand River, Mich., in the 

 summer of 1909 by Dr. R. E. Coker 

 (52014) ; reptiles and batrachians 

 from Indiana (52053) ; 2 mink 

 skulls collected at Teu Mile Lake, 

 Oreg.. by Dr. S. E. Meek (52063); 

 2,911 fishes from North Carolina, 

 Virginia, the Lower Potomac River, 

 and Indiana ; also 55 specimens of 

 reptiles and batrachians from In- 

 diana (52175) ; bat from Palawan, 

 P. I. (52251) ; 6 fruit bats from 

 Celebes (52252) ; (ill fishes collected 

 chiefly by the U. S. S. Fish Hawk 

 and the Grampus; 37 fishes from 

 Biscayne Bay, Fla., and Crittenden, 

 Vt; 127 fishes from White River, 

 Ind., and off Lower California aud 

 Mexico; 16 batrachians and rep- 

 tiles from West Virginia ; and 100 

 crustaceans, leeches, and mollusks 

 from Maryland and West Virginia 

 (52276) ; specimen of the rare flat- 

 fish, Gymnachirus nudus from Tis- 

 bury Great Pond, Marthas Vineyard, 

 Mass., collected in 1906, by Vinal 

 N. Edwards (52279) ; 1,100 speci- 

 mens, chiefly ferns, collected princi- 



