146 



LIST OF ACCESSIONS 



COMMERCE, DEPARTMENT OF— 



Continued. 

 Bureau of Fisheries — Con. 



Island Sound and Chincoteague 

 Bay, Va., collected by H. P. 

 Prytherch and B. H. Warren in 

 July and September, 1923, re- 

 spectively (70687) ; marine 

 mollusk from Marco, Pla. 

 (706S9) ; over 90 specimens (9 

 lots) of marine invertebrates, 

 2 starfishes, 1 lot of fishes, and 

 1 lot of mussels from Morzliovoi 

 Bay and Ikatan Bay, Alaska, 

 collected in July, 1923, by 

 Willis H. Rich (70966) ; 22' 

 copepods, consisting of 1 male 

 holotype, 1 female type, 10 

 male paratypes, and 10 female 

 paratypes, collected at Seneca 

 Lake, N. Y., by Messrs. Juday 

 and Birge, August 10, 1910 

 (71330) ; 2 fishes (71504) ; 100 

 marine invertebrates, 4 lots of 

 insects, 7 lots of mollusks, 4 

 lots of amphibians, collected in 

 El Salvador, Central America, 

 by Messrs. Hildebrand and 

 Foster during January and Feb- 

 ruary, 1924 (71512) ; crusta- 

 ceans, insects, and amphibians 

 collected from Rio Chirique, 

 at Volcan, Chirique, Panama, 

 on March 1, 1924, by Fred J. 

 Foster (71640) ; plant collected 

 in Lake Champico, El Salvador, 

 by Hildebrand and Foster 

 (71733) ; shrimp collected Au- 

 gust 3, 1921, in Thomas Bay, 

 Alaska, by E. M. Ball, with 

 beam trawl, in 20 fathoms of 

 water (71734) ; ( through Bureau 

 of Biological Survey, Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture) , 2,329 pin- 

 ned insects, 83 vials, and 83 

 microscopic slides of insects 

 from the Pribilof Islands, 

 Alaska, many of them being 

 types and uniques (70350) ; 

 (through L. F. Shackell) over 

 50 specimens of ostracods taken 

 from the reservoir of a flowing 

 well at Gallants Point, Beau- 

 fort, N. C. (7068S). 



COMMITTEE ON MARINE PILING 

 INVESTIGATIONS (through Col. 

 William G. Atwood, director), New 

 York City : 5 crabs taken from disin- 

 tegrated concrete, Pier 4, Puget 

 Sound Navy Yard (70873) ; 8 iso- 

 pods from St. Augustine, Fla., and 

 Port Eads, La. (70914) ; 2 pieces of 

 shipworm infested timber from Pier 

 No. 1, Northern Pacific Railway, 

 Seattle, Wash. (71580). 



CONZATTI, Prof. O, Oaxaca de 

 Juarez, Oaxaca, Mexico : 5 plants 

 from Mexico (71935). 



COOK, Prof. O. F. (See under Ag- 

 riculture, Department of, Bureau of 

 Plant Industry.) 



COOKE, Dr. C. W. (See under Earl 

 Sloan.) 



CORE, E. B., Yonkers, N. Y. : 2 framed 

 portraits of children (70555). 



CORLEY, W. A., Kelly ton, Ala. : 2 cot- 

 ton plants bearing open bolls of cot- 

 ton (71320). 



CORNING GLASS WORKS, Corning, 

 N. Y. (through Dr. Arthur L. Day) : 

 Model of a glass tank melting fur- 

 nace ; model of a glass pot melting 

 furnace ; also 168 objects illustrating 

 types of chemical, industrial, and 

 domestic oven glassware (71549) ; 

 an incandescent lamp bulb-blowing 

 unit comprising 4 individual ma- 

 chines, mounted on a three-wheeled 

 truck, illustrating the present meth- 

 od of manufacture (71641) ; 6 pieces 

 of art glass work consisting of 3 

 vases, 1 plate, 1 candlestick, and 1 

 cologne bottle (71695). 



CORONA CO., Bloemendal, Holland 

 (through Dr. T. Wayland Vaughan) : 

 9 specimens of echinoids, chiefly 

 types (71180). 



COULTER, Dr. John M., Chicago, 

 111.: Plant (70244). 



COVILLE, Dr. Frederick V. (See 

 under Agriculture, Department of, 

 Bureau of Plant Industry, and 

 under Forest Service.) 



COWDRY, N. H., New York City; 7 

 Chinese ferns (71203). 



