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Case 2. — Large Porcelain Center-piece for dining table, one 
of the largest pieces of hard French porcelain ever made; tints 
produced at high temperature with oxide colors; gift of E. Ger- 
ard Dufraisseix & Co., Limoges, France, through Haviland & Ab- 
bott, New York. 
Case 3.— Mexican pottery; bowls, pitchers, vases, etc. 
Case 4.-- -Samples of pottery made by the Indians in Central 
America. Pottery from Jerusalem, Jamaica and Venezuela. 
Case 5. — Earthenware from Sweden and Guatemala. 
Case 6. -Glassware, manufactured by the Venice & Murano 
Manufacturii g Co., at their exhibit, Midway Plaisance, Chicago 
Day, October 9, 1893; gift of the manufacturers. 
Vases, manufactured by the Worcester Royal Porcelain Go., 
England. Large Japanese plate, ornamented with gold, by Kaki- 
yemon Lakar. Porcelain Plates, large and small, with gold decor- 
ations from Japan; gift of the Japanese government. Tea set of 
porcelain, covered with gold by Chryso-Ceramic” process; gift of 
the Misses Healy, Washington, D. C. Vase, exact copy of the 
Royal Meissen (a German vase), with landscape in Jemtland, by 
Thorne. Porcelain Vase of Greek design, ornamented with gold, 
a copy of Maricbey similar to the Limoges ware. Porcelain plate 
with landscape. Gold and blue decorated plate. Porcelain dish 
(“China style”), and a vase similar to that manufactured by 
Winston {pate sur pdte\ from the potteries at Rorstrand, Stock- 
holm, Sweden. 
Case 7. — Glassware, manufactured in Ehrenfeld, Prussia. 
Case 8.— Ornamented and Plain Bricks, made by Tiffany & 
Co., Chicago; gift of the manufacturers. 
Case 9. — Clay statuettes (busts), made in Mexico by Panta- 
leon Panduro, San Pedro, Jalisco, Mexico; gift of the Mexican 
Commissioner to the World’s Columbian Exposition. Pottery 
made in Guatemala. 
Case 10.— Large ornamented Porcelain Vases from Japan; 
gift of the Japanese government. “Temptation” and “Victory 
from Japan, made by Fugita Bunzo, Professor of Imperial Fine 
Art, Academy of Tokio. Porcelain statuettes of Gustave III and 
Bellman. Glassware, made by Venice & Murano Manufacturing 
Co. Large Clay Vases, from Sweden. Vases from Jamaica. 
Satsuma Vase, deposited by F. J. V. Skiff. 
