MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 13 
from Missouri; Dulau & Co., 660 specimens of Gottsche and 
Rabenhorst’s ‘“Hepaticae Europaeae”’; Dr. W. G. Farlow, 
461 specimens of algae, lichens and fungi; Mrs. R. S. 
Ferris, 112 plants of California; Field Museum of Natural 
History, 731 plants of central and western United States; 
G. W. Freiberg, 573 plants of Washington; Gray Herba- 
rium of Harvard University, 915 plants, chiefly from New- 
foundland, eastern and southern United States, Dr. Homer 
D. House, 204 specimens of Thelephoraceae and other fungi 
of New York; E. L. Johnston, 105 plants of Colorado; P. 
Jérgensen, 342 plants of the Argentine Republic; Dr. W. 
H. Long, 94 timber-destroying fungi; Dr. C. F. Millspaugh, 
143 plants of Yucatan; Prof. Aven Nelson, 420 plants of 
Alaska and 907 plants of Idaho; New York Botanical Gar- 
den, 1,196 specimens from various parts of North America, 
Bermuda and the West Indies; Dr. L. O. Overholts, 107 
specimens of fungi of Colorado and Pennsylvania; Edwin 
B. Payson, 451 plants, mainly from Colorado and Wyoming; 
Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, 451 plants of 
Delaware; Dr. H. von Schrenk, 253 specimens, chiefly from 
the herbarium of Prof. Joseph Schrenk; P. C. Standley, 95 
plants of Florida; Dr. Forrest Shreve, Compositae es Eu- 
phorbiaceae from Arizona; J. A. Stevenson, 57 specimens 
of fungi from Porto Rico; H. Sudre, 50 specimens of 
Rubus and 50 specimens of Hieracium from France; 
United States National Museum, 469 plants from various 
arts of North America and 375 plants from the Canary 
slands; University of Texas, 126 plants of Texas; Charles 
T. Vorhies, 117 plants from northern Arizona; Dr. 8S. M. 
Zeller, 475 plants of Washington. A complete list of acces- 
sions received each month of the year has been recorded 
in the successive issues of the BULLETIN. 
Mounting and Distribution —The mounting of herba- 
rium specimens has continued throughout the greater part 
of the year, and a large part of the material received on new 
accessions has been mounted and inserted in the organized 
herbarium. Several thousand miscellaneous undetermined 
specimens, accumulated during previous years, have been 
‘dentified and distributed. In addition to this, nearly 1,500 
specimens from the private herbarium of Dr. A. W. Chap- 
man, which was purchased several years ago, have been 
mounted and incorporated in the general collection. 
Field Work.—The botanical survey of the southwest in 
codperation with the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard Uni- 
versity has been pursued throughout the entire season, eX- 
cept for the last two weeks in August; and the collector, Mr. 
Ernest J. Palmer, has visited numerous localities in Texas, 
