MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 113 
Whitaker presided, and Mr. G. H. Pring, Horticulturist to 
the Garden, gave an illustrated talk on ‘‘Hunting Orchids 
in the Tropies.’’ The next day, October 11, the members of 
the Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association visited the 
Garden. As an expression of appreciation of the relation- 
ship between the florists and the Garden, and in memory of 
the founder of this institution, a wreath of magnolia leaves 
and dahlias was placed by the association at the tomb of 
Mr. Shaw. 
Students completing their work for the Doctorate of Philos- 
ophy in the Graduate Laboratory in June, 1923, have been 
appointed to positions as follows: Dr. H. C. Young, Chief 
in Botany at the Ohio Experiment Station, Wooster, Ohio; 
Dr. A. F. Camp, Plant Pathologist to the Florida State Board 
of Agriculture and assigned to the Agricultural Experiment 
Station at Gainesville, Fla.; Dr. L. J. Klotz, Assistant Pro- 
fessor in Botany with special reference to physiology at the 
New Hampshire State College, Durham, N. H.; and Dr. Grace 
K. Howard, Curator of the Botanical Museum and: Instructor 
in Botany, Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass. Dr. S. G. 
Lehman has returned to his position as Assistant Plant 
Pathologist at the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment 
Station, Raleigh, N. C.; Dr. F. 8. Wolpert continues his work 
as Instructor in Science, Principia Academy, St. Louis; and 
Dr. Adele Lewis Grant has resumed her work as Instructor 
in Botany at Cornell University. Dr. Young formerly held 
the National Research Council (Crop Protection Institute) 
Fellowship for the investigation of the toxicity of sulphur; 
Drs. Camp, Klotz, and Lehman were Rufus J. Lackland Re- 
search Fellows, and Miss Howard held a Jesse R. Barr Fel- 
lowship in Washington University. 
Upon the resignation of Dr. H. C. Young, Mr. L. E. Tis- 
dale was appointed to the unexpired term of the National 
Research Council Fellowship, under the auspices of the Crop 
Protection Institute, to pursue further investigations on the 
use of sulphur as a fungicide. 
Mr. Selden R. Warner, formerly Rufus J. Lackland Re- 
search Fellow in the Graduate Laboratory, is continuing his 
studies during the first semester, 1923-24, at the University 
of Chicago. Miss Mildred L. Johnson (Mrs. L. J. Klotz), 
former holder of a Jesse R. Barr Fellowship, is now resident 
at Durham, N. H. 
