MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 11 
wealth of material may be more serviceable for comparison 
and study. 
New Accessions.—The larger additions to the herbarium 
during the past year have been through field work and through 
the purchase of important sets of plants. Among the more 
noteworthy collections acquired are the following: E. Bar- 
tholomew, ‘‘North American Uredinales’’ 200; Dr. P. A. Van 
der Bijl, 26 fungi from South Africa; T. S. Brandegee, 143 
plants of Mexico, collected by C. A. Purpus; B. F. Bush, 380 
plants of Missouri and Oklahoma; Hon. Joseph R. Churchill 
and Walter Deane, 164 plants of New England; Ira W. 
Clokey, 208 plants of Colorado; Rev. John Davis, 2216 plants, 
mostly from Missouri and South Carolina; Dr. C. W. Dodge, 
26 specimens of fungi from Massachusetts and British Colum- 
bia; J. A. Drushel, 162 plants of North America; D. Lewis 
Dutton, 226 plants of Vermont; Farlow Herbarium of Har- 
vard University, 600 non-vascular plants; Mrs. Roxana 
Stinchfield Ferris, 918 plants of Texas; H. A. Gleason, 147 
plants of Colombia, South America; Gray Herbarium of Har- 
vard University, 134 plants of Nova Scotia and New England ; 
J. M. and M. T. Greenman, 3000 plants of Central America; 
Mrs. Adele Lewis Grant, 67 specimens of Mimulus ; Herbert 
C. Hanson, 312 plants of Colorado; Miss Caroline C. Haynes, 
90 specimens of North American hepaties; J. M. Holzinger, 
90 specimens of North American mosses ; Max Koch, 155 plants 
of Australia; W. R. Lowater, 72 fungi of Ohio; New York 
Botanical Garden, 366 non-vascular plants of North America; 
M. Nijhoff, 850 cryptogams of Germany, Austria, and Switz- 
erland, and 450 fungi of Germany ; Prof. Adolf Carl Noe, 52 
plants of Albania and Montenegro; Prof. Morton E. Peck; 538 
plants of Oregon; Dr. P. O. Schallert, 96 mosses, hepaties and 
lichens of North Carolina; Dr. H. von Schrenk, 126 plants of 
Santo Domingo, and 167 plants from various parts of North 
America; United States Department of Agriculture, 186 
grasses of the Hawaiian Islands and British Guiana, collected 
by Professor A. S. Hitchcock; University of Wisconsin, 30 
specimens of fungi of Wisconsin; Theo. Oswald Weigel, 405 
plants of the Nyassa Mountains in Africa, and 40 specimens of 
European Centaurea; Dr. J. R. Weir, 34 fungi of New Zea- 
land; Dr. A. Yasuda, 25 fungi of Japan; Dr. 8. M. Zeller, 30 
specimens of fungi from Oregon. Numerous smaller collec- 
tions have been received from correspondents and friends of 
