76 
material is adequate but unfortunately many of the specimens 
are so fragmentary that it has been necessary to accept the host 
determinations made by the collector. The entire work consists 
of 84 pages of text and was issued early in April. 
Perfect fruiting specimens of Buxbaumia aphylia L., a rather 
md very 
Cats kills, on Ma y% oie in sandy soil beside a path ona 
t 
some time was devoted to a study of the collections in the 
economic museum 
The Burroughs Nature Club of Newark, New Jersey, visited 
the Garden on the afternoon of May 20 to see the temperate 
S 
Ts 
at conservatory range 2; with brief stops in the iris garden, 
hemlock grove, mansion, and deciduous arboretum. 
Mr. Oakes Ames published on April 5th, 1922, the seventh 
the seventh contains eleven papers, covering a wide range of 
