ie gh as < EE aE RE ed OP nn mee se | 
MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 19 
John H. Kellogg, 717 plants, mostly cultivated in the Mis- 
souri Botanical Garden; C. H. Knowlton, 160 plants from 
eastern Quebee and 165 plants of New England; Professor 
Frank T. McFarland, 362 plants of Kentucky ; Dr. W. Migula, 
150 eryptogams of Germany, Austria, and Switzerland; P. C. 
Standley, 220 plants of Salvador; Professor F. L. Stevens, 
323 fungi of the West Indies, British Guiana, and Hawaii; 
United States National Museum, 1100 miscellaneous dupli- 
eates, mainly from North America and Europe, and 638 
plants from Mexico and Central America; University of Mon- 
tana, by Dr. J. E. Kirkwood, 300 plants of Montana; Uni- 
versity of Nanking, 275 plants of China; University of Wyo- 
ming, by Professor E. B. Payson, 453 plants of Wyoming; 
S. R. Warner, 287 plants of Texas; Th. Oswald Weigel, 66 
plants of Bolivia. A large number of smaller collections have 
been received from cor. espondence and friends of the Garden, 
which have been duly recorded in current numbers of the 
BULLETIN. 
Mounting and Distribution.—Over 12,000 specimens have 
been mounted and distributed in the herbarium during the 
fiscal year. The specimens mounted represent mainly the 
plants received on current accessions, thus rendering avail- 
able for immediate use the newly acquired material. 
Field Work.—Noteworthy field work has been done during 
the year. Mr. G. H. Pring, while on his expedition to Colom- 
bia, South America, for living orchids, made a collection of 
ferns and flowering plants which constitute an important ad- 
dition to the herbarium. Dr. J. M. Greenman, Curator of the 
Herbarium, in early October made a brief expedition to 
Arkansas collecting in Saline and Hemstead Counties, par- 
ticularly in the Valley of the Red River. In addition thereto 
a limited amount of field work has been continued within a 
radius of 30 miles of St. Louis. Several local botanists and 
friends of the Garden have generously contributed to the her- 
barium local plants of special interest. 
Exchanges——An unusually large number of important se- 
ries of plants has been obtained by exchange with scientific 
institutions with which the Garden maintains exchange rela- 
tions and from individual correspondents. During the year 
