202 
Meterology for September —The total precipitation for the 
month was 0.20 inches. Maximum opera for each week 
were 95° on the 2d, 89° on the 7th, 91° on the 18th, and 96° on 
the 21st. The minimum temperatures were 5134° on the 5th, 
- on ane alae 4374" 0 on the 15th, and 34° 0 on the ao: The 
4 
the 29th, when ‘only such tender plants as Coleus and Epeopersium 
esculentum were affected. The month w a nusual i 
the high temperatures reached ‘and in the cena light vainfall 
ACCESSIONS 
MUSEUMS AND HERBARIUM 
II speci’ fF fi Kan (By exchange ie Mr. is Hy. aap : 
peci f from North cee (By Yor! 
State Museum.) 
peci fi North America. (Given es Mr. O. D. Allen.) 
8 i f f Cub (By ) rother Leon.) 
tral A - ds 
" y th America. (By exchange 
with Professor V. F. Bri Tus.) 
18 specimens of mosses from Antigua and St. Domingo, West Indies. (By 
exchange with the United States National Museum.) 
I specimen of moss from New Zealand. yy exchange with Mr. H. N. Dixon.) 
I specimen of Sphagnum lca Torreyanum from Martha's yeecal 
Massachusetts. ene by Mr. E. P. Bicknell. 
482 specimens of fungi from the Philippine Islands. (By exchange with the 
Bureau of Science, Manila. 
I fungus ae Staten Island, New York. (Collected by Dr. N. L. Britton and 
Dr. pee Hollick.) 
I specimen ee cup fungus from the Adirondack Mountains. (By exchange with 
Dr. L. H. Pennington. 
nor 
fleshy New York B ical 1 (Collected by Dr. W. A. 
Murrill.) i 
Kentucky. (By exchange with Dr. Florence A. 
McCormick.) 
2 specimens of woody fungi from Wisconsin. (By exchange with Dr. Lewis 
Sherman.) . 
5 specimens of woody fungi from Corvallis, Oregon. (By. exchange with Mr. 
Cc. EL 
I specimen of Craterellus ochrosporus Bart. (By exchange with the Missouri 
Botanical Garden.) 
specimens of fungi from Pennsylvania. (By exchange with Dr. F. ern). 
2 specimens of woody fungi from Milwaukee, ie, (By es with 
Dr. Lewis Sherman.) 
