an al 
161 
_ Cereus giganteus. J.D. Hooker. (Curtis’ Bot. Mag. xlviii. t. 
7222). 
Catalogue of the Flowering Plants and Ferns growing sponta- 
neously in the City of San Francisco. Katharine Brandegee. 
(Zoé, ii. 334-383). 
A list of 485 species, with citations of localities, and other 
notes. A list of 42 species of mosses, collected mainly by Mr. 
H. W. Bolander, is appended. 
Cleistogamy in the Genus Polygonum. Stanley Coulter. (Bot. 
Gaz. xvii. 91). 
Climbing Prairie Rose—The. (Am. Gardening, xiii. 197). 
With illustrations of Rosa setigera. 
Contribution to the Knowledge of Nuclear Mechanics in the Sex- 
ual and Other Reproductive Cells of Plants—A. Conway 
MacMillan. (Bot. Gaz. xvii. 87). 
Cryptomitrium tenerum (Hooker). F. Stephani. (Bot. Gaz. 
Xvii. 58). 
Cultivating the Ascosporous Forms of Yeast. J.C. Arthur. (Bot. 
Gaz. xvii. 92). 
Evolution in Methods of Pollination. Alice Carter. (Bot. Gaz. 
Xvii. 72, concluded from p- 46). 
Erste Amerikanische Botaniker—Der. (Pharm. Rundsch. x. 94). 
With illustration of John Bartram’s honse in Philadelphia. 
Euphorbia heterophylla. (Meehan’s Month. ii. 53). 
Flora of Thunderhead—Notes on the. T. H. Kearney, Jr. 
(Agric. Sci, vi. 71). 
‘The record of several days’ collecting in the Great Smoky 
Range, Tennessee. : 
Flowers and Insects. VII. Charles Robertson. (Bot. Gaz. xvii. 
65). 
Fortuitous and Definite Variation. Th. Meehan. (German- 
town Guide, xxi. No. 14). 
Freak of a New England Orchid—The. J. T. (Gard. & For. 
Vv. 142). 
Note on a white form of Hadenaria psychodes. 
