20 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
New Accessions. — Nearly 200 accessions have been re- 
ceived during the year. Some of the larger and more note- 
worthy of these are as follows: from Oakes Ames, 186 
orchids of the Philippine Islands; Arnold Arboretum, 1,808 
plants of Alaska, China, and Japan; E. Bartholomew, 
200 “Fungi Columbiani” and 200 “North American Ure- 
dinales” ; Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, 812 plants of the 
Hawaiian Islands; Dr. R. P. Burke, 186 fungi of Alabama; 
B. F. Bush, 3,593 plants, including his oe moss herba- 
rium; Carnegie Museum of Pittsburgh, 84 mosses of Penn- 
sylvania and Ontario; F. C. Clements, 350 plants of Califor- 
nia; F. 8. Collins, 100 “Phycotheca Boreali-Americana” ; 
D. L. Crawford, 214 plants of California; Rev. John Davis, 
720 plants of Missouri; Th. Oswald Weigel, 200 plants of 
Hungary; C. W. Dodge, ferns of Vermont; J. A. Drushel, 
335 plants of the United States; B. M. Duggar, fungi mainly 
from Colorado; W. H. Emig, 727 plants of Oklahoma 
and Missouri; W. G. Farlow, fungi from New England and 
Venezuela; G. W. Freiberg, 675 plants of Washington; J. W. 
Grant, 200 plants of Washington; Miss Caroline Haynes, 
Hepaticae mainly from New York; A. A. Heller, 400 plants 
of California; H. D. House, fungi of New York; E. L. John- 
ston, 181 plants of Colorado; Pedro Jérgensen, 429 plants 
of Argentina; Prof. C. H. Kauffmann, fungi from various 
localities; J. Macoun, 99 fungi from Canada; Miss Marion 
E. Moodie, 146 plants of Alberta; New York Botanical Gar- 
den, 1,358 pees from the West Indies; W. W. Ohlweiler, 
private herbarium of about 600 plants, largely from Con- 
necticut; Dr. L. O. Overholts, fungi from various localities ; 
E. J. Palmer, upwards of 8,000 plants from Arkansas, Louisi- 
ana, Oklahoma, and Texas; 8. B. Parish, 87 plants of Cali- 
fornia; F. C. Seymour, 179 plants of Massachusetts; P. C. 
Standley, 315 plants of Florida; G. W. Stevens, 340 plants 
of Oklahoma; Dr. J. A. Stevens, fungi from Porto Rico; 
H. Sudre, 100 European plants; United States Department 
of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant Industry, 222 plants of the 
United States and China; United States National Museum, 
186 plants from various localities; University of California, 
451 plants of California; University of Texas, 353 plants of 
Texas; John Weldon & Co., 420 fungi; C. A. Wenzel, 1,375 
plants of the Sper Islands. A complete list of the 
accessions received during 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 been vigorously pushed forward through- 
out the year; and the greater part of the material received 
on new accessions has been mounted and inserted in the 
