6678. 
6679. 
6680. 
6681. 
6682. 
6683. 
6684. 
6685. 
6686. 
6687. 
6688. 
6689. 
6690. 
6691. 
6692. 
6693. 
6694. 
6695. 
6696. 
6697. 
6698. 
(302 ) 
One of the same in finished state. 
Fight sticks of the same character. 
“Congo” canes. ‘Two canes made of the same wood as the preceding. 
Kermes oak.—A trunk section of Quercus coccifera L. Native of southern 
Europe. From Palermo, Italy, through the Paris Exposition of 1900. 
Macedonian oak.—A trunk section of Q. macedonica A. DC. Native of 
southern Europe. From Potenza, Italy, through the Paris Exposition of 
1900. 
Shirakashii—A block of the wood of Quercus sp. Native of eastern Asia. 
From Japan. 
Red-oak barrel stave.—A barrel stave made of the wood of Q. rubra L. 
Native of eastern North America. Presented by C. Heidt & Son, of Jersey 
City, New Jersey. 
Bog-oak umbrella handle-—A carved umbrella handle made of the wood of 
Quercus sp. Presented by William F. Gaynor, October, 1904. 
Shira-no-ki—A block of the wood of Q. cuspidata Thunb. Native of 
eastern Asia. From Japan. 
Ake-gashi.—A block of the wood of Q. acuta Thunb. Native of eastern 
Asia. From Japan. 
Ichi-gashi—A block of the wood of Q. giloa Blume. Native of eastern 
Asia. From Japan. 
Rock-elm mouse trap.—A mouse trap of which the base is made of the 
wood of Ulmus Thomasi Sargent. Native of northern North America. 
Presented by the Animal Trap Company, of Abingdon, Illinois. 
A rat trap of the same. Same donor. 
American elm barrel stave.—A barrel stave made of the wood of U. americana 
L. Native of eastern and central North America. Presented by C. 
Heidt & Son, of Jersey City, New Jersey. 
American elm dressed barrel hoops.—A bundle of five dressed barrel hoops 
of the wood of the same tree. Same donor. 
THE MULBERRY FAMILY (Moraceae) 
Trophis wood.—A trunk section of Trophis americana L. Native of tropical 
America. Acquired by G. V. Nash in Haiti, in 1903. 
European sugar-berry.—A trunk section of Celtis australis L. Native of 
southern Europe. From Pisa, Italy, through the Paris Exposition of 1900. 
Trumpet-wood.—A trunk section of Cecropia peltata L. Native of tropical 
America. Same source as preceding. 
Chaplash.—A trunk section of Artocarpus Chaplasha Roxb. Native of the 
East Indies. From British India. 
Breadfruit.—A trunk section of 4. incisa L. Native of the Malay region 
and cultivated in tropical countries. Acquired by G. V. Nash in Haiti, 
in 1903. 
Wild fig.—A trunk section of Ficus mitrophora Warb. Native of the West 
Indies. Same source as preceding. 
