MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 11 i 



tures of the 1921 display will be an exhibit of Japanese 

 oddities, the pink "Turner," which is one of the latest novel- 

 ties, and the grafted varieties showing different-colored 

 flowers on the same plant. 



Recent visitors to the Garden include Professor N. I. 

 Vavilov, of the Bureau of Applied Botany and Plant Breed- 

 ing, Petrograd, Russia, and Professor A. Jaczewski, Director 

 of the Institute of Mycology and Phytopathology, Petro- 

 grad, who are visiting America at the invitation of the 

 American Phytopathological Society; and Dr. R. W. Webb, 

 formerly Rufus J. Lackland fellow at the Garden, now scien- 

 tific assistant, Department of Plant Pathology, United States 

 Department of Agriculture, Madison, Wisconsin. 



STATISTICAL INFORMATION FOR SEPTEMBER, 1921 



Garden Attendance: 



Total number of visitors 21,900 



Plant Accessions: 



Total number of plants received in exchange 3 



Total number of plants and seeds received as gifts. ... 7 



LnsHARY Accessions: 



Total number of books and pamphlets bought 53 



Total number of books and pamphlets donated 444 



HK.mrARiuM Accessions: 

 By Gift— 



Bisby, Prof. G. R. — Fungi of Manitoba 26 



Blackford, Mrs. E. B. — Tremellodendron candidum from 



New Hampshire 1 



Drushel, J. A. — Plants of Vermont, New York, Ohio, 



.Missouri, Texas, and Colorado 32 



Hartley, Dr. Carl — Timber-destroying fungi of Java 18 



Lloyd, C. G. — Fungi of the Philippine Islands and 

 Japan 2 



Miyabe, Prof. K. — Valsa Mali Miyabe & Yamada of 



Japan 2 



Murrill, Dr. W. A. — Stereum petalodes from Cuba 1 



Overholts, Dr. L. O. — Cyphella conglobata Burt 1 



Povah, Prof. A. H. W — Fungi of Alabama 4 



Rosen, H. R. — Ccrcospora Setariae Atk 1 



Wakefield, E. M — Fungi 2 



By Purchase — 



Dusen, P. — Plants of Brazil 457 



By Exchange — 



New York Botanical Garden — Isoetes sp. from British 



Guiana 1 



Total 548 



