12 MONTANA AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE SCIENCE STUDIES. 



8: 73-79, 176-182. 1891). Collection here apparently unimportant. 



Peter Koch, a banker of Bozerr-an made extoir-ix c collections in- 

 Gailatin county (1888-1894 > an:\ at out Cooke City and the Granite 

 Range (1897 and 1899). He donated his entire collection to the Mon- 

 tana Agricultural College. 



M. A. Carleton, now connected with the Department of Agricul- 

 ture at Washington, took part in the Garfield University (now 

 Friend's University at Wichita, Kansas) Expedition, which was in 

 Montana in August, 1889, collecting along the Oregon Short Line, at 

 Helena and the Gate of the Mountains, -the chief set of plants remain- 

 ing at that institution, but duplicates are in his private herbarium at 

 Washington and at the University of Chicago. The plants were 

 named by Prof. J. M. Coulter and the results published by Carleton 

 (Kans. Acad. Sci. 13: 50-57. Topeka, 1893). Relatively few species 

 are from Montana. 



Mrs. Irene M. Kennedy of Columbia Falls made collections about 

 Belt and Great Falls (1884-89), in the Flathead region (1892-1900), 

 and at Midvale and Columbia Falls (1890-1898) and has donated 

 them to the Agricultural College, Bozeman. 



J. W. Blankinship, Professor of Botany in Montana Agricultural 

 College, collected on the Big Horn river near Custer Station in 

 1890 and later over nearly every part of the state (1898-1904), 

 flowering plants mainly, but also largely of parasitic fungi and other 

 Cryptogams. The collections are in the Agricultural College, Boze- 

 man and a number of papers chiefly of an economic nature, have 

 been published. Various sets of this collection have been distri- 

 buted to the principal herbaria. 



F. N. Notestein, who succeeded Dr. Traphagen at the College of 

 Montana, did more or less collecting in the vicinity of Deer Lodge 

 (1890-1895) and his specimens are with that institution. 



Mrs. Mary L. Alderson, collected about Bozeman (1889-92) and 

 later about Bald Butte, where she now resides. A part of her 

 collection is in the herbarium Montana Agricultural College. 



E. N. Brandegee, now President of the State Board of Horticul- 

 ture, has a large private herbarium, mainly from Lewis and Clark 

 county (1892-1900) with duplicates in the herb. Mont. Agr. Coll. 



