BOTANICAL GAZETTE. 221 
ally look to South Africa for fungous forms corresponding to 
_ those of New England, although a few fungi first described from 
the Cape have since been discovered in this country, of which an 
example is Entyloma (Protomyces) Physalidis, Cke. & Kaleh., 
which, on the authority of Winter, who has examined the type of 
the species from the Cape of Good Hope, is the same as the form 
subsequently described as Ent. Besseyi in the Gazerre of August, 
1883, where the possible connection with Protomyces Physalidis 
inted., 
‘was hinte 
Salix macrocarpa, Nutt., not of Andersson. 
BY M. S. BEBB, 
eo Maltously transferredthe name toa single specimen from “ Hud- 
n Bay, Burke,” which Nuttall never saw, and described a new 
