6138. 
6139. 
6140. 
6141. 
6142. 
6143. 
6144. 
6145. 
6146. 
6147. 
6148. 
6149. 
6150. 
6151. 
6152. 
6153. 
6154. 
6155. 
6156. 
6157. 
6158. 
6159. 
6160. 
6161. 
(280) 
Annatto seed. Arnotta seed. Orellana (See No. 1303). Acquired by 
L. M. Underwood in Porto Rico, in 1901. 
Jambul seed. Rose-apple seeds.—The seeds of Eugenia Jambolana Lam. 
(Myrtaceae—Myrtle Family.) Native of the East Indies and cultivated. 
Presented by H. H. Rusby. 
Ignatia seeds. St. Ignatius beans.—The seeds of Strychnos Ignatii Lindl. 
(Loganiaceae—Nux-vomica Family). Native of the Philippine Islands. 
Presented by Parke, Davis & Company. 
Nux vomica. Dog buttons (See No. 2795). Grown in Siam. 
Another sample of the same. Presented by Parke, Davis & Company. 
Pure powdered nux vomica.—The preceding seed in the powdered state. 
Presented by H. H. Rusby. 
Holarrhena seeds.—The seeds of Holarrhena antidysenterica Wall. Native 
of tropical Asia. Presented by the New York College of Pharmacy. 
Fawn-green Strophanthus seeds in the pod.—The seeds of Strophanthus 
Kombe Oliver (Apocynaceae—Dog-bane Family), in the pod. Native of 
tropical Africa. Presented by Parke, Davis & Company. 
Another sample of the same. Presented by C. F. Chandler. 
A commercial sample of the same, cleaned and deprived of their awns. 
Presented by the New York College of Pharmacy. 
Brown Strophanthus seed.—The seeds of S. hispidus DC., deprived of their 
awns. Same home as preceding. Same donor. 
Stramonium seed. Thorn-apple. Jamestown weed.—The seed of Datura 
Stramonium L. (See No. 2861). Collected by J. A. Shafer at Carnot, 
Pennsylvania, November, 1902. 
Pure powdered Stramonium seed.—The preceding seeds in the powdered 
state. Presented by H. H. Rusby. 
Henbane seed.—The seed of Hyoscyamus niger L. (See No. 2864). Pre- 
sented by Lehn & Fink. 
White benne seed. Sesamum seed (See No. 1700). Acquired by L. M. 
Underwood in Porto Rico, in 1gor. 
Another sample, grown in Guatemala. 
Another specimen of the same, grown in Korea. 
Black benne, or teel, seed.—A black-seeded variety of the same. Presented 
by Boustead & Company, of Singapore. 
Another sample of the same. Grown in Korea. 
Ispaghul seed. Flea-seed—The seed of Plantago Ispagula Roxb. (Plan- 
taginaceae—Plantain Family). A cultivated plant of India. 
Coffee (See No. 2213). Specimens grown in Bolivia, and obtained by 
H. H. Rusby in 1885. 
Lobelia, or Indian tobacco, seed—The seed of Lobelia inflata L. (See No. 
2918). Presented by the New York College of Pharmacy. 
Lobelia seed.—The seed of a species of Lobelia. 
Salted pumpkin seed.—The seed of a variety of Pepo Pepo (L.) (See No. 
4051). Acquired by H. H. Rusby in the streets of Mexico City, where it 
was sold as a food. It is also medicinal. 
