99 



May i. Emulating nature in gardens. Scout Mas- 

 ters' Club of Brooklyn, Boy Scout headquarters, 

 201 Montague St., Brooklyn 56 



June 26. Troop 36, Boy Scouts, P. S. 66, Sutter Ave. 



and Osborn St., Brooklyn 40 



July 13. -Aug. 10. About 100 talks. Kanohwahke 



Lakes Boy Scout camps, Palisades Park, N. Y.. . 3,500 



Aug. 12. Troop 68, Boy Scouts, in camp at Oakland, 



N. J 20 



Aug. 19-20. N. J. State Y. M. C. A., Andover, N. J. 



(3 talks x 165) 495 



Sept. 25. Perennials. Staten Island Garden Club, 



Dongan Hills 30 



Nov. 12. Life story of the honey bee. Inkowa Club 



of New York City 31 



4484 

 APPENDIX 4 



REPORT ON BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN PUBLI- 

 CATIONS, 1922 



American Journal of Botany. — The ten issues for 1922, monthly 

 except August and September, comprise Volume IX, with 45 arti- 

 cles. 581 pages, 35 plates, and 14 text figures. This journal, which 

 is the official organ of the Botanical Society of America, had a 

 circulation as of December 31. 1922, of 1,250, including nearly 

 every civilized country. The Editor-in-Chief is Prof. C. E. Allen, 

 University of Wisconsin, with the cooperation of an editorial board 

 of seven. 



■Ecology. — Official publication of the Ecological Society of 

 America. Quarterly. The four issues of Volume III (1922) 

 contain 31 contributions, besides Reviews, Proceedings of the 

 meetings of the Ecological Society of America at Toronto, Decem- 

 ber 28 and 29, 1 92 1, Zoological Abstracts, and Notes and Com- 

 ment, comprising a total of 351 pages with 63 text figures. The 

 circulation as of December 31, 1922, was 847. The Editor-in- 



