8 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
smallest number accommodated for a period of years. There 
were registered for graduate work during the calendar year 
eleven students, as follows: W. W. Bonns, formerly Rufus J. 
Lackland research fellow; Anne W. Davis, formerly research 
assistant; C. W. Dodge, formerly Rufus J. Lackland re- 
search fellow; Lucy D. Foote, teacher, St. Louis Public 
Schools; Adele Lewis Grant, teaching fellow, Washington 
University; Joanne L. Karrer, teaching fellow, Washington 
University; Alexander Lurie, horticulturist, Missouri Botan- 
ical Garden; R. A. McGinty, Rufus J. Lackland research 
fellow; Takashi Matsumoto, laboratory assistant; E. B. Pay- 
son, formerly teaching fellow, Washington University; and 
R. W. Webb, Rufus J. Lackland research fellow. 7 ad- 
dition, there have been in residence, using the facilities of 
the laboratory in research: Dr. E. R. Allen, associate in 
biochemistry, Washington University School of Medicine; 
Dr. 8. M. Zeller, special research assistant, Yellow Pine Asso- 
ciation ; and Emily Schroeder, research assistant. 
For 1918-19 only two appointments were made to Rufus 
J. Lackland fellowships, and these were as follows: R. A. 
McGinty, B. S. Alabama Polytechnic Institute, assistant pro- 
fessor of horticulture, Colorado State College; and R. W. 
Webb, B. 8. Clemson College. 
Other appointments were as follows: Emily Schroeder, 
A. B. Washington University, 1918, research assistant; 
Joanne L. Karrer, B. S. University of Washington, 1915, 
M. S. University of Washington, 1916, teacher of biology and 
chemistry in Puyallup High School, 1918, teaching fellow, 
Washington University; Adele Lewis Grant, B. S. University 
of California, 1902, teacher at Fresno Normal Summer 
School at Huntington Lake, California, teaching fellow in 
Washington University; and Takashi Matsumoto, B. S. To- 
hoku Imperial University of Japan, instructor in natural 
sciences, Rikkyo High School, Japan, M. 8. University of 
California, 1918, laboratory assistant. 
During the year the graduate students who terminated 
their connection with the Garden after receiving degrees, 
or in order to enter civilian or federal service, are as follows: 
Dr. W. W. Bonns, to accept an appointment as research 
plant physi with the Eli Lilly Orie Co., Indianapolis, 
Indiana; Dr. C. W. Dodge, now sergeant, Sanitary Corps, U. 
8. A., Camp Devens, Massachusetts; Anne W. Davis, now 
with the Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York; 
and KE. B. Payson, now in Machine Gun Company, 89th 
Division, France. 
At the commencement of Washington University, June 
