AMERICAN FERN SOcIETY ol 
should have if all the states and all foreign collections 
by our members could be represented that way! . 
Our new member, Bro. Marie-Victorin, is engaged 
in monographing the ferns of Quebec, and desires to 
correspond and exchange specimens with any one who 
has collected in Quebee or in regions adjacent to the 
boundaries of that province. Address: Bro. Marie- 
Victorin, Longueuil College, Longueuil, P. Q., Canada. 
Botanists interested in plant distiibution in eastern 
North America will welcome the promise of a better 
knowledge of this vast and largely unexplored region. 
Bro. Victorin has recently published a scholarly report 
n “The Flora of Temiscouata,” one of the eastern 
counties of Quebec, a 125-page pamphlet illustrated 
with maps, drawings and photographs. 
Mr. Robert A. Ware, 246 Devonshire Street, Boston, 
offers the following to members for postage: Pellaea 
Breweri, P. andromedaefolia, P. densa, and P. ornithopus, 
all from California. Mr. Ware also writes that he has 
a large number of duplicates, chiefly of New England 
species, which he would be willing to dispose of on the 
Same terms. Any member interested should write to 
Mr. Ware. 
Mr. E. W. Graves, Long Island, Ala., wants specimens 
of Ophioglossum vulgatum, Botrychium Lunaria, B. mat- 
ricariaefolium, B. simplex, Pellaea gracilis, Woodsia 
hyperborea, W. glabella, Aspidium fragrans, and Schizaea 
pusilla. He offers in exchange Trichomanes Petersii, 
T. radicans, Asplenium Bradleyi, A.. pinnatifidum, A. 
parvulum, A. montanum, Adiantum Capillus-Veneris, 
Cheilanthes alabamensis, Ch. tomentosa, Polypodium poly- 
podioides, Pellaea atropurpurea, Woodwardia areolata 
and Aspidium Filiz-mas. 
