(23) 
pairs to complicated machinery done outside, in places with 
special facilities for such work. A new forge and anvil were 
added to the equipment in November. 
Publications 
The JouRNAL has been published monthly during the year. 
The completed volume contains viii + 242'pages with 5 plates 
and 41 figures. The publication is devoted to a current 
account of the various activities of the Garden, including 
non-technical descriptions of scientific results obtained, or- 
ganization, and additions to the collections and exhibits, 
progress of construction within the grounds, accessions of 
all kinds and accounts of the explorations which are now 
being prosecuted so vigorously. 
Buuuetin No. 10, comprising pp. 175-2847 of Vol. III, 
was issued March 22, 1904. It is devoted wholly to the 
reports of officers and committees for the year 1903. 
BuLvetin No. 11, completing Vol. III, consists entirely of 
scientific papers. Three of these papers have been pub- 
lished separately in advance. The first, Mycological Studies, 
II, by Prof. F. S. Earle, was issued June 30, 1904; the 
second, The Comparative Embryology of the Cucurbitaceae, 
by Dr. J. E. Kirkwood, was issued October 7, 1904; the 
third, Additions to the Palaeobotany of the Cretaceous Forma- 
tion of Long Island, No. I, by Dr. Arthur Hollick, was 
issued December 10, 1904. The completed BuLLETIN will 
be published early in 1905. 
ContTrRiguTions as follows have been reprinted from vari- 
ous periodicals during the year: 
No. 51. Notes on Bahaman Algae, by Marshall A. Howe. 
No. 52. The Polyporaceae of North America—VII. The 
Genera Hexagona, Grifola, Romellia, Coltricia and Coltri- 
cella, by William Alphonso Murrill. 
No. 53. Delta and Desert Vegetation, by Daniel Trembly 
MacDougal. 
No. 54. Chemical Notes on ‘ Bastard” Logwood, by 
Benjamin C. Gruenberg and William J. Gies. 
