100 
Donnell- Smithit vars. hirtella and rotundifolia, Angu- 
via oblongifolia, A. diversifolia, Gurania Donnell-Smithii, 
Sicyos longisepalus, Cephaelis glomerulata, (Pl. i.) Lobelia 
laxiflora, H.B.K., var. insignis, Macleania cordata, Lem., 
var. linearifolia, Arctostaphylos pungens, H.B.K., var. crateri- 
cola, Daphnopsis Tuerckheimiana, Myriocarpa longipes, Liebm., 
var. YVzabalensis and Triuris brevistylis. Solanum olive- 
forme, previously described, is figured on PI. ii. There is 
also a note to the effect that the plant described as Nephrodium 
duale. (Bot. Gaz. xv. 29) should be referred to Aspidium 
ascendens, or better designated as NMephrodium ascendens. 
Viburnum molle. C.S.S. (Gard. and For. iv, 29, p. 8.) 
Viola hastata. (Gard. and For. iv. 76, p. 16). 
Viola ocellata. (Gard. and For. iv. 51, p. 13). 
Woodwardia radicans. W. H. Gower. (Gard. xxxix. 127, 
illustrated). 
Proceedings of the Club. 
WEDNESDAY EVENING, JAN. 28. 
Dr. Thos. Morong in the Chair and 28 persons present. 
Mrs. E. Dwight Kendall, Miss Sabin G. Ayres and Mr. J. K. 
Haywood were elected active members. 
Dr. Northrop read the announced paper of the evening, 
‘Notes on the Flora of the Bahamas,” illustrated by specimens 
and lantern views. 
TUESDAY EVENING, FEB. II. 
The President in the Chair and 13 persons present. 
Miss Helen Lauterbach was elected an active member. 
Prof. Byron D. Halsted read the announced paper on “ Root 
Decays of the Sweet Potato,” illustrated by diagrams. He de- 
scribed the several fungi which attack the roots, causing the sev- 
eral kinds of decay. (See Bulletin New Jersey Agric. Exper. 
Station No., 76). 
Dr. Britton exhibited a bramble collected by Dr. C. F. Mills- 
paugh on the mountains of West Virginia, peculiar in its entirely 
unarmed stem and glabrous, acuminate leaflets, for which he pro- 
posed the name Rubus Milispaughit. 
