On a trial to a jury, the defendant, Dwain R. Johnson, was found guilty on three counts of a substituted information which charged him with possession with intent to sell a narcotic drug, with possession of a narcotic drug and with conspiracy to violate §§ 19-480a and 19-452 of the 1969 Supplement to the General Statutes relating to dependency-producing drugs. On this appeal, he has pressed three assignments of error. Two of them relate to rulings of the court admitting in evidence two exhibits offered by the state, and the third is based on the court’s denial of his motion to set aside the verdict as contrary to law and to the evidence.
The correctness of the court’s ruling on the motion to set aside the verdict is tested by the evidence printed in the appendices to the briefs.
State
v.
Mullings,
On the basis of this evidence, which was submitted for their consideration, the jury could reasonably *442 and logically find that the defendant, Johnson, was guilty as charged. There was no error in the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence and contrary to law.
The defendant’s remaining claims are that the court committed error in admitting in evidence the plastic hag and its contents, marked as exhibit A, and the report and analysis from the state department of health laboratory, exhibit B.
Exhibit A was introduced in evidence through Miskin, who was called as a witness by the state. He testified to his agreement to sell a quantity of heroin to Wheeler for $1750, that he telephoned Johnson in New London and asked him to get the heroin, that Decider drove him to New London, where he completed arrangements to obtain the heroin from Johnson, that the two vehicles were driven to Hartford to the parking lot where the sale was to take place, that as the vehicles were stopped side by side Johnson threw a glassine bag of heroin from his automobile through the open window of the Deckler automobile, in which Miskin was riding, and that the bag landed on the floor of the automobile and Miskin picked it up. He testified that exhibit A looked like the same bag that Johnson tossed to him and “the only thing different is the elastic is around there different.” Another witness, Officer Francis Kelliher of the Hartford police department, testified that he arrested Miskin in the parking lot while Misldn was engaged in maldng the sale to the agent Wheeler. He identified exhibit A as the bag containing what appeared to be heroin which he uncovered in searching Miskin and testified that he turned the bag and its contents over to Detective Bernard Sullivan. Sullivan testified that he was *443 with Officer Kelliher, who took Miskin into custody at the parking lot and delivered to Sullivan the plastic hag containing a white powder. Sullivan identified exhibit A as that bag and said that he delivered it to the state toxicological laboratory for analysis.
In light of the foregoing testimony, we find no error in the ruling of the court admitting exhibit A for the consideration of the jury despite the claim of the defendant that there was insufficient proof of identification of the offered exhibit. The trial court must decide under the test of reasonable probability whether the identification and nature of contents are sufficient to warrant the reception in evidence of an offered exhibit, and this ruling of the trial judge may not be overturned except for a clear abuse of discretion.
State
v.
Brown,
To prove that the plastic bag, exhibit A, contained heroin, the state offered in evidence the report from the Connecticut health department laboratory signed by Abraham Stolman, the supervising state toxicologist, certifying that the powder contained in exhibit A was heroin. The offer was made pursuant to the long-established exception to the hearsay rule permitting the introduction of public records as exhibits.
Wong
v.
Liquor Control Commission,
The defendant on this appeal has, for the first time, claimed that the court erred in its ruling because the state had not complied with G-eneral Statutes § 19-483 (b) (Public Acts 1971, No. 164), which became effective one week prior to the commencement of the trial. Since, however, that claim was never made at the trial and the trial court .was never called upon to rule on the claim now advanced for thp-first time, we do not consider it but confine outselves to the objection raised in the trial court. “The defendant, as' an appellant, is confined in this court to the ground of objection put forward by . . . [him] in the trial court.”
Salvatore
v.
Hayden,
“This court is not bound to consider claims of law not made at the trial.
Harry
v.
Bidwell,
*446 In light of the holding of this court' in Wong v. Liquor Control Commission, supra, and State v. Torello, supra, and the limited objection to the offer made by the defendant, we find no error in the ruling of the court admitting the toxicologist’s report as an exhibit in this case.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
