323 
Shark River Diatoms. Albert Mann, Jr. (Sea Side Torch, iv. 
143). : 
Smilax glauca. (Gard. and For. v, 424, with illustration), 
Some Attractive Native Plants. 1.H. Bailey. Am. Gard. xiii. 
513). | 
Illustrations are given of Cypripedium pubescens, C. acaule, 
C. parviflorum and Habenaria fimbriata. 
Some Results of a Year's Worh, Arthur C. Waghorne. (Even- 
ing Herald, St. John’s, New Foundland, June 15, 1892.) 
Mr. Waghorne gives an interesting summary of the number 
of species of plants collected by him in Labrador and New Found- 
land, and makes especial reference to Capsella divaricata, found 
on the beach at Couche, stating that it has hitherto been found at 
but one place in North America, namely, the interior of British 
Columbia. But in this he is in error, for it was collected by Mr. 
J. A. Allen in 1882, on the seashore of the Dead Islands, Labra- 
dor, and is of very wide distribution on the Pacific Coast (see 
BULLETIN xvii. 311). Nw ia B. 
Strawberry Leaf —Jnteresting Variations of the. Mrs. W. A. 
Kellerman. (Bot. Gaz. xvii. 257. 258, illustrated). 
Sugar Maple in Ohio.—A. (Gard. and For. v. 380, a full page 
illustration. ) 
Lendrils of Passifiora carulea, D. T. MacDougal. 
XVii. 205-212, one plate. 
The Plea of Expediency. N. L. Britton. (Bot. Gaz. xvii. 252- 
254). 
Variations and Intermediate Forms of Certain Asters. W. C. | 
Warner. (Journ. Cincin. Soc. Nat. Hist. xv. 5 at oa 
A discussion of the Aséers of the group Heterophylli, as they 
occur in Ohio. 
Western Shad-Bush—The. (Gard. and eae — chier 
Notes on the geographical distribution aa ae ee it 
Jolia, with the reproduction of a photograph © 
appears in Washington. | 
(Bot. Gaz. 
alni- 
