LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 739 



Howard, L. O. (Department of Agriculture). Specimen of Tusser silkworm hatched 



from cocoon sent from India to the U. S. National Museum by Mrs. Scott. 22236. 



Howard, K. S. (Coronada, Kansas). Specimens of Swifts or Kit-foxes ( Vulpes velox). 



22988. 

 Hoxie, Walter. (See under Dr. Allen Stuart.) 

 Hoxton, A. E. (Episcopal High School, Alexandria, Virginia). Living specimen of 



Red-tailed Hawk. 22642. 

 Huddleson, N. (Crainesville, Tennessee). Fragments of pottery, stone implement, 

 fossil shells, fossil bone, flint chips, and mammal teeth from near Bolivar (col- 

 lected by Mr. L. C. Johnson). 22184. 

 Huggins, Judge (Gillsborough, Ohio), (through Mr. D. L. James). Specimen of 



Cyrtoceras sp., from the Niagara group of Highland County. 23121. 

 Hunt, A. E. (See under Pittsburg Reduction Company.) 

 Hunt, Masters Dick and Harry Drum (Bethesda, Maryland). Two living specimens 



of Sulphur-crested Cockatoos (Cacatua ^alerita.) 23106. 

 Hunter, W. M. (Accotink, Virginia). Spear-head found near Woodlawn, Fairfax 



County. 22310. 

 Huntington, Prof. J. H. (Silver City, Arizona). Specimen of infusorial earth from 



Gila River (22893); gold-bearing rock from Santa F<5 County (23035). 

 Hurter, Julius (St. Louis, Missouri). Specimens of Tropidonotus rhombifer, Tropi- 

 doclonium lineatum, Eutcenia faireye, Diemyctylus miniatus viridetscens, Bufo lentigi- 

 nosii8 americanus (23126, 23335). 

 Hutchinson, K. M. (Oshkosh, Wisconsin), (through Prof. J. F. James). Specimen of 

 Pentamerus oblongus Sow., from the Niagara formation of the Upper Silurian, at 

 Clifton Heights, Lake Winnebago (22482); specimen of silver ore from Lake Su- 

 perior Silver Mine (23115). 

 Hyvernat, Prof. H. (Catholic University, Washington, District of Columbia). 

 Eighteen oriental seals; (23332) ; Assyrian and Babylonian seal cylinders, gems, 

 and Egyptian scarbsei (22717). 

 Ingersoll, A. M. (San Diego, California). Nest and eggs of Ammodramus beldingi, 



new to the collection. 22768. 

 Insetsu Kioku, The Finance Department (Tokio, Japan), (through T. Tokuno, chief 

 of the lusetsu-Kioku). Samples of Japanese woodcuts, printing, engraving, and 

 engraving tools (exchange). 22582. 

 Interior Department (through Hon, John W. Noble, Secretary). 



Ethnological specimens and objects of handiwork, from the Snohomish, Swi- 

 nomish, Lummi, Muckleshoot, and Etakmnr Indians on the Tulalip Reserva- 

 tion, Washington (collected by Mr. E. C. Chirouse, United States agent in 

 charge of the reservation) (22496). 

 U. S. Geological Survey (through Maj. J. W. Powell, Director). 

 Living snakes (collected by Mr. George W. Sbutt). 22186. 

 Type specimen of Conocoryphe reticulata, Walcott from the Lower Cambrian, 



New York. 22446. 

 Thirty specimens of minerals comprising miloschite, rhodochrosite, bournonite, 

 barite, siderite, adularia, pyrargyrite, amethyst, chabazite, sodalite, nagya- 

 gite, alunite. 22487. 

 Specimen of thinolite, from Lake Lahontan, Nevada. 22547. 

 Specimens of fresh-water fossils, from the post pliocene deposits from Bonneville 



and Lahontan beds, and specimens of fossils from Nevada. 22564. 

 Miscellaneous collection of geological materials from Madison county, Mon- 

 tana. 22868. 

 Twenty-one transparencies. 22891. 



Copies of two models of Mount Shasta, California. 23160. 

 Collections of the quicksilver investigations of the Pacific slope, made by Dr. 

 G. F. Becker. 22978. 



