(179) 
3937. Blue tangleberry or dangleberry.—Flowering specimens of Gaylussacia 
frondosa (L.) T. & G. Native of the eastern United States. Collected 
by H. H. Rusby near Hammonton, New Jersey, 1920. 
3937-1. Fruiting specimens of the same. White’s Bog, New Jersey, August 9, 
1920. Collected by H. H. Rusby. 
3938. High bush huckleberry or crackleberry.—Flowering branches of Gaylussacia 
baccata (Wang.) K. Koch. Native of eastern North America. Collected 
by H. H. Rusby at Little Falls, New Jersey, May, 1920. 
3938.1. Fruiting specimen of the same. Collected by Mrs. M. C. Hoegen near 
Tuckerton, New Jersey, July 23, 1920. 
3938.2. Another specimen in fruit, with blue berries. Collected by H. H. Rusby 
under pine trees at Upper Montclair, New Jersey, August I, 1920. 
3938.3. Gaylussacia glaucocarpa (Robinson) Rusby, in fruit. Collected by H. H. 
Rusby beside No. 3938.2 and clearly a distinct species. 
3938-4. Fruiting branches of G. dumosa (Andr.) H. G. Collected by H. H. Rusby 
at White’s Bog, New Jersey, August 9, 1920. 
3939. Gaylussacia brachycera (Michx.) A. Gray. Collected by J. K. Small near 
New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania, August 19, I919. 
3940. Uva Anis. Anise grape.—The fruit of Psammuisia sclerophylla Pl. & Lindl. 
Native of the same region as the following and similarly used. Same 
source. 
3941. Uva Camarona de Bogota. Camaron grape of Bogota.—The fruit of 
Psammisia macrophylla Klotsch. Native of the Colombian Andes and an 
important commercial fruit there. Acquired by H. H. Rusby in the market 
of Bogota, Colombia, August, 1917. 
3942. Large cranberry.—The fruit of Oxycoccus macrocarpus (Ait.) Pers. Native of 
northern North America. Collected by H. H. Rusby at Sea Girt, New 
Jersey, July 27, 1920. 
3943. The commercial cultivated fruit of the preceding. From the New York 
market. 
3944. Howe cranberry.—A superior cultivated variety of the same. Grown at 
Barnstable, Massachusetts, and presented by Z. Perry. 
3945. Small, or European, cranberry. Moorberry. Bogberry. Marshberry. Moss- 
berry.—The fruit of Oxycoccus Oxycoccus (L.) MacM. Native of the 
north temperate zone. The specimen shows it as it is grown in the moss. 
Collected by H. H. Rusby at Oscoda, Michigan. 
3946. The same, collected by H. H. Rusby at Little Moose Lake, New York. 
THE SAPOTA FAMILY (Sapotaceae) 
3947. Sapodilla. Naseberry. Nispero.—The fruit of Sapota Achras Mill. Native 
of tropical America and cultivated. Purchased by H. H. Rusby in the 
market of Port of Spain, Trinidad, August, 1896. 
3948. Bull-fruit.—An edible sapotaceous fruit.—Probably a species of Mimusops. 
Collected by H. H. Rusby in the valley of the Magdalena River, Colombia, 
1917. 
3949. Star-apple. Cainito.—The fruit of Chrysophyllum Cainito L. Native of 
the West Indies and cultivated in tropical countries. Acquired by A. A. 
Heller in Porto Rico, March, 1900. 
