DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. Wl 
Fig. 1 represents a large leaf, nearly entire; fig. 2, a specimen below 
the middle size; fig. 3, a portion of the base, to show the petiole and the 
blade decurrent on it. 
Locality: Woodbridge. 
Ficus myricowes Hollick n. sp. 
Pl. XXXII, fig. 18; Pl. XLI, figs. 8, 9. 
Leaves narrowly lanceolate in outline, apparently about 10° long by 
a little more than 2™ broad, blunt-tipped, entire; midrib straight, second- 
aries all of equal rank, straight, regular, parallel, and numerous, forming an 
angle of about 45° or greater with the midrib, connected by fine cross- 
veining near the margins, where they form polygonal areoles. 
I have decided with some hesitation to unite under this name the 
figures above indicated, although the imperfect base of fig. 9 and the absence 
of a tip in fig. 18 render accurate comparison impossible. 
No name or indication of locality accompanied either of the figures or 
jo) 
their corresponding specimens.—A. H. 
Order PROTEACE:., 
PersoontaA LesqueREUxIT Knowlton. 
Pl. XLII, fig. 16. 
Persoonia Lesquereuxii Kn., Fl. Dak. Gr., p. 89, Pl. XX, figs. 10-12. 
This is apparently a small leaf of the above species. Its identity with 
Persoonia is apparent, and it so closely resembles the species quoted that I 
have not thought it advisable to separate them. 
No memorandum of either name or locality accompanied the figure or 
the specimen.—A. H. 
Prersoonta spatuLtata Hollick n. sp. 
Pl. XLII, fig. 14. 
Leaf about 35™" long by 11™™ or 12™" wide at broadest part, obovate- 
spatulate in outline, rounded at the apex and tapering into a long, narrow 
