A botanical survey of Vermont has been undertaken by the members of 

 the Vermont liotanical Club. The greater emphasis in the work is naturally 

 and rightly placed upon the study of the occurrence and distribution of the 

 higher plants, looking as an immediate result toward the publication of a 

 revised list of these plants as they occur in Vermont. The more lowly 

 groups deserve recognition, however, and there is evidence that they are to 

 receive it. The list of Vermont Mosses recently prepared by Dr. Grout is 

 the first of what it is hoped will be a series of contributions to our knowledge 

 of the cryptogamic plants of the state. The present publication forms a 

 second contribution. A third list, including the liverworts, is nearly ready. 

 The list of Vermont Mosses is included in the Eighteenth Report of the 

 Vermont Board of Agriculture (1898), and this list of Fungi forms a part of 

 the Report of the Botanists in the Eleventh Report of the Vermont 

 Experiment Station (1897-98). In order to make these lists more readily 

 accessible to botanists outside of our state the Botanical Department of 

 the University of Vermont has reprinted a limited number of each as sepa- 

 rates. These will be supplied at the prices given below, which are about the 

 cost of publication and mailing. Address, Botanical Department, University 

 of Vermont, Burlington. L. R. Jones. 



Mosses of Vermont, with Analytical Keys to the Genera and Species, by 

 A. J. Grout, Ph. D. 38 pages. 15 cents. 



A Partial List of the Parasitic Fungi of Vermont, by W. A. 

 Orton, M. S. 24 pages. 10 cents. 



A List of the Vermont Hepatic^, by Clifton D. Howe, A. B. 



(In preparation.) 



