5267. 
5268, 
5269. 
5270. 
5271. 
5272. 
5273- 
5274. 
5275. 
5276. 
5277- 
5278. 
5279. 
5280. 
5281. 
5282. 
5283. 
5284. 
5285. 
5286. 
(237) 
Para todo. For-everything bark.—The bark of Cinnamodendron axillare 
Endl. (Winteranaceae—Cinnamodendron Family). Native of tropical 
America. From Paraguay, through the Field Museum of Natural History. 
Canella alba.—The bark of Canella Winterana (L.) Gaertn. (Same family). 
Native of the West Indies. Presented by Lehn & Fink, of New York. 
Mezereum, or Mezereon.—The bark of one or more species of Daphne 
(Thymelaeaceae—Mezereum Family). Native of southern Europe. 
Presented by Parke, Davis & Company. 
Pomegranate bark. Granatum.—The bark of the root and stem of Punica 
Granatum L. (Punicaceae—Pomegranate Family). Native of southern 
Asia and Europe and cultivated for its fruit. Presented by Parke, Davis & 
Company. 
Nangapiry bark.—The bark of Eugenia uniflora L. (Myrtaceae—Myrtle 
Family). Native of tropical South America. From Paraguay, through 
the Field Museum of Natural History. 
Another sample of the same, from the same source and donor. 
Ybahoi.—The bark of £. edulis B. & H. Same nativity and source. 
Iba paroity.—The bark of £. uniflora L. Same nativity and source. 
Guaviyer.—The bark of E. pungens Berg. Same nativity and source. 
Jambul bark.—The bark of Syzygium Jambolanum (Lam.) DC. From the 
New York drug market. Presented by H. H. Rusby. 
Eucalyptus bark.—The bark of Eucalyptus Globulus Labill. Native of 
Australia. From the New York drug market. Presented by H. H. Rusby. 
Guava bark.—The bark of Psidium Guajava L. Native of tropical South 
America, and widely cultivated for its fruit. From Paraguay, through 
the Field Museum of Natural History. 
Hercules club bark. Angelica tree bark.—The bark of Aralia spinosa L. 
(Araliaceae—Ivy Family). Native of southeastern North America and 
cultivated for ornament. Collected by J. A. Shafter at Carnot, Pennsyl- 
vania, June, 1904. 
The same from Somerville, South Carolina. Collected by H. H. Rusby, 
March 21, 1909. 
Tassel-tree bark. Garrya bark.—The bark of Garrya elliptica Dougl. 
(Cornaceae—Dogwood Family). Native of the Pacific Coast region of 
North America. Presented by the New York College of Pharmacy. 
Dogwood bark. Flowering cornel bark.—The bark of the trunk of Cy- 
noxylon floridum (L.) Raf. (Same family). Native of the eastern United 
States. Collected by A. A. Tyler at Easton, Pennsylvania, August 17, 1898. 
Swamp dogwood. Kinnikinnick.—The bark of Cornus Amomum Michx. 
Native of North America. Collected by R. S. Williams in the New York 
Botanical Garden, July, 1919. 
The same, collected by A. A. Tyler at Easton, Pennsylvania, August 25, 
1898. 
Canelon blanco.—The bark of a species of Rapanea (Myrsinaceae—Myrsine 
Family). Native of tropical South America. From Paraguay, through 
the Field Museum of Natural History. 
Canelon morati—The bark of another species of Rapanea (Myrsinaceae— 
Myrsine Family). Native of tropical South America. From Paraguay, 
through the Field Museum of Natural History. 
