JACKSON: UREDINALES OF OREGON 23iF 
All of the above specimens were secured from phanerogamic 
specimens, the first from the herbarium of the Oregon Agr. College, 
the others from the herbarium of the N. Y. Botanical Garden. The 
species is an opsis-form. 
77. PUCCINIA CAMPANULAE Carm. Smith’s English Flora 5: 365. 
1826. 
Puccinia Campanulae Fckl. Sym. Myc. 53. 1869. 
ON CAMPANULACEAE: 
Campanula Scoulert Hook.—Mary’s Peak, Benton Co., Aug. 15, 
1914, 2559; ‘Hood River, July 24, 1914, 3023. 
A comparison of the above collections with European material 
shows that the rust is identical and should be referred as above. This 
is a micro-form unrecorded in America so far as the writer is aware, 
and known otherwise from North America only from collections made 
by the writer and others, on C. rotundifolia at Fall Creek, Ithaca, New 
York. 
78. PUCCINIA CHELONIS Diet. & Holw. Hedwigia 36: 297. 1897. 
ON SCROPHULARIACEAE : 
Chelone nemorosa Doug|.—Mt. Hood, Sept. 1, 1901, E. W. D. 
Holway. 
A micro-form known otherwise only from Washington on the same 
host. 
79. PUCCINIA CHRYSANTHEMI Roze. Bull. Soc. Myc. Fr.1'7:92. 1900. 
ON CARDUACEAE: 
Chrysanthemum sinense Sabine—Portland, Nov. 1914, W. H. 
Dunham, 19806. 
The above collection from a greenhouse is the only collection we 
have seen from Oregon. It is doubtless not infrequent in greenhouses 
throughout the state. The life history is unknown. This rust is 
evidently a native of Japan, having been introduced into America 
and Europe where it has become widespread on cultivated chrys- 
anthemums. 
80. Puccinta CicHortit (DC.) Bell, in Kickx. Fl. Fland. 2:65. 1867. 
Uredo Cichoru DC. Fl. Fr. 6: 74. 1815. 
ON CICHORIACEAE: 
Cichorium tntybus L.—Corvallis, Sept. 21, 1914, G. B. Posey, 7931. 
81. PuccintA CIcuTAE Lasch, Klotsch. Herb. viv. myc. No. 787. 
1845. 
Puccinia Cicutae Thiim. Bull. Soc. Imp. des Nat. Moscow 52: 136. 
1877. 
