768 KEPOET OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1888. 



Museum of Comparative Zoology (Cambridge, Massachusetts), lent bird skins for 

 compar:sou and study at the request of the Curator of Birds. 19731, 20074, 

 20172. 



Museum of Fine Arts, School of Drawing and Painting (Boston, Massachusetts), 

 presented twelve drawings by the pupils. 20298. 



Myers, John (Bracken, Texas), sent a tooth of fossil Meadow-Mouse, Arvicola, also 

 tooth of a rodent, for examination and report. 19445. 



Myers, W. H. (Washington, District of Columbia), presented two razors manufact- 

 ured by the donor. 19635. 



Nachman, L. (Washington, District of Columbia), presented a medal of the Seymour 

 and Blair Presidential campaign, 1P68. 19379. 



Nagle, Harry (York Haven, Pennsylvania), presented a specimen of petrified wood. 

 19822. 



National Academy of Sciences (through Prof. A. Hall, Naval Observatory, 

 Washington, District of Columbia), presented a bronze medal struck by the So- 

 ciety of Astronomers, Vienna, in honor of Sir Theodor Oppolgel. 19831. 



National Museum of Brazil, Kio de .laneiro, Brazil (through Orville A. Derby), 

 sent in exchange meteorites, three of which contain iron. 20192. 



Nehrkorn, a. (Braunschweig, Germany), sent bird skins in exchange. 19980. 



Nelson, Christian (Virginia City, Montana), sent ore for examination and report. 

 20505. 



Nelson, S. J., and Joseph Sewallen (Flippin, Marion County, Arkansas;, sent 

 limestone in caicite, for examination and report. 19442. 



Netherlands Government (through Maj. J. W. Powell) presented a section of a 

 meteoric stone containing iron. 19913. 



New England Mining Company (through J. F. Barse, New York City) presented 

 four fragments of transparant beryl, and five cut beryl stones, from Berkshire 

 Mines, Litchfield County, Connecticut. 19786. 



New Jersey Sugar of Milk Company (Hamburgh, New Jersey) presented two 

 specimens of sugar of milk. 19626. 



Newlon, Dr. W. S. (Oswego, Kansas), presented four specimens of fossil Nautilus 

 (19896); flint chips and fragments of implements (20181); two flint cores, sixteen 

 fragments, and a box of chips and flakes (20460) ; eleven Unio shells, thirteen 

 arrowheads or knives, sixty flakes and three fragments of paint stone, from the 

 site of an old Indian village, (20.581). 



Newman, G. E. J. (Washington, District of Columbia), sent micaceous hematite 

 (19912) and a water- worn pebble (20351) for examination and report. 



Newman, James. (See under Frank Burns, 20690.) 



Nicholson, L. A. (Hillhurst, Washington), presented a chaetopod annelid belonging 

 to the genus Nephthys, or an allied genus, from Puget Sound. 20785. 



NICOLL, J. C. (New York City), presented five etchings by the donor. 20283. 



Niemeyer, Prof. John H. (Yale College, New Haven, Connecticut), presented a 

 water-color landscape. 20475. 



Niessley, J. E. (Ada, Ohio), presented prehistoric stone implements, some of them 

 paleolithic, from Highland County, Ohio ; Todd County, Kentucky, and Mont- 

 gomery County, Tennessee. 20345. 



Noah, John M. (U. S. Natioual Museum), presented Coleoptera: two specimens of 

 the pupa of Cyllene incUis (19684) ; and a lithograph of the St. Paul Ice Palace, 

 1888 (20147). 



NowELL, Frederick D. (North Platte, Nebraska), presented a living specimen of 

 the Coyote. 20597. 



Null, James M^ (McKeuzie, Tennessee), j>resented a collection of two hundred and 

 .seventy-one prehistoric stone implements from Carroll Couuty, Tennessee; thirty 

 Of these are paleolithic. 20545. 



Nutting, C. C. (State University of Iowa>, sent fossil coal in exchange. 20528. 



