LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 145 
AGRICULTURH, DEPARTMENT 
OF—Continued. 
Bureau of Entomology—Contd. 
AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT 
OF—Continued. 
Bureau of Plant Industry: 3,281 
specimens of cicadas collected by 
Mr. Dixon Merrill 6 miles south 
of Lebanon, Wilson County, Tenn. 
(66001) ; 380 specimens of Co- 
leoptera, 220 of Hemiptera, and 
383 of Lepidoptera (66010); 2 
mollusks, Megalomastoma_ cro- 
ceum and Veronicella occiden- 
talis, from San Juan, Porto 
Rico (66237); 6 amphipods, 
Orchestia grillus, collected by 
Mr. J. D. Mitchell, Victoria, 
Tex. (66399); 2,857 specimens 
of determined Hymenoptera 
(66750); 34 specimens of in- 
sects from Brazil (66752); 800 
beetles (66756). 
(See also under California Acad- 
emy of Sciences and Gerald F. 
Hill.) 
Federal Horticultural Board: 4 
specimens, 1 species, of mol- 
lusks, Neritina zebra, collected 
in soil about plants from Para, 
Brazil, at quarantine, Washing- 
ton (65203) ; 3 isopods, Philoscia 
species, on orchids from Manaos, 
Brazil (65549); 2 vials of en- 
chytraid worms from Holland 
(65638) ; 4 slugs collected in dirt 
around plants from Naples, Italy 
(66266) ; 5 specimens, 3 species, 
of mollusks taken from soil 
around shamrocks from Liver- 
pool, England (66279) ; 3 speci- 
mens, 1 species, of mollusks col- 
lected by Mr. Max Kisliuk, jr., 
at Philadelphia, Pa. (66461); 5 
specimens, 2 species, of mollusks, 
Opeas goodalli, and Subulina 
octona, from soil around a potted 
palm from Georgetown, British. 
Guiana (66663). 
Forest Service: Plant, Cheilanthes 
villosa, from New Mexico 
(66058) : 
Forest Service, Forest’ Products 
Laboratory, Madison, Wis.: 238 
specimens of airplane ribs, ten- 
pins, duck pins, and shoe lasts, 
showing laminated wood con- 
struction (66696). 
specimens of grasses (65186, 
65618); (through Prof. A. S. 
Hitcheock) ; 1,017 specinrens of 
grasses (65426, 66015); 95 
plants (65187, 65255, 65272, 
65310, 65414) ; 45 specimens of 
plants from St. Lucia (65193) ; 
19 plants from Georgia (65194) ; 
700 plants collected by Mr. W. 
W. Hegegleston (65195); plants 
from the District of Columbia 
(65196) ; 2 packets of seeds of 
African plants (65197); 662 
specimens of plants from Cen- 
tral America, collected by Dr. 
S. F. Blake (65226, 65951) ; 
(through Dr. Blake), 6 photo- 
graphs of type specimens of 
plants, and 11 specimens of 
mosses from Guatemala (65409, 
65895); 97 plants from India 
(65297, 66580, 65588); plant, 
Gaylussacia brachycera, from 
Pennsylvania (653856); 17 pho- 
tographs of botanical speci- 
mens; 20 plants, cacti, from 
Washington (65648); 2 plants, 
Rives, from Alaska (65693) ; 
9 plants from Mexico (65720) ; 
5 plants from Texas (65811); 
90 Guatemalan plants, 17 plants 
from Colombia and Costa Rica, 
46 plants from Colombia, all col- 
lected by Mr. Wilson Popenoe 
(66018, 65925, 660389) ; (through 
Prof. C. V. Piper) photograph of 
type specimen of plant, Phaseo- 
lus ricciardianus, 2 photographs 
of plants, 32 plants from Flor- 
ida, and 259 plants from North 
Dakota (65926, 66000, 66017, 
66163) ; fragmentary specimen 
and photograph of a plant, 
Rinorea gracilis, from Bolivia 
(66128); (through Dr. F. V. 
Coville) plant, and section of 
trunk of sage brush collected by 
R. L. Piemeisel, August 7, 1912, 
2 miles northwest of Tooele, 
Utah (66164, 66530); plant, 
Cassytha filiformis, from Flor- 
