59 
Train leaves Grand Central Station, Harlem Division, N. Y. C. 
R. R., at 2:35 P. M., for Bronx Park. Returning train leaves 
Bronx Park at 5:32 P. M. Excursion fare twenty-five cents. 
Opportunity will be given for inspection of museums, labora- 
tories, library and herbarium, the public conservatories, the her- 
baceous collection, the hemlock forest, the fruticetum and parts 
of the arboretum site. The walk planned will be a little over 
one mi 
The spring course of lectures will be delivered in the lecture 
hall of the museum building on Saturday afternoons at 4:30 
*cloc 
April 29. ‘‘ The Indian and his Uses for Plants,” by Mr. Fred- 
erick V. Coville. 
May 2 ee Pines and their Life History,” by Professor 
‘anes E. Lloy 
May 13. ee Aspects of Deserts of Arizona, Califor- 
nia, Sonora and Baja California,” by Dr. D. T. MacDouga 
May 20. ‘The Coralline Seaweeds,” by Dr. Marshall A. 
we. 
May 27. ‘‘ Cuba,” by Dr. W. A. Murrill. 
June 3. ‘(Vegetable Poisons and their Strange Uses,”’ by Dr. 
H. H. Rusby. 
The lectures will be illustrated by lantern slides and otherwise. 
They will close in time for auditors to take the 5:32 train from 
the Bronx Park Railway Station, arriving at Grand Central Sta- 
tion at 6:02 
The Museum Buaine in reached by Harlem Division, New 
York Central and Hudson River Railroad to Bronx Park Sta- 
tion, by trolley cars to Bedford Park, or by Third Avenue Ele- 
vated Railway to Bronx Park 
SOME OF THE CORALLINE SEAWEEDS IN 
E MUSEUM 
In the Journat for March, 1904, there was published an 
illustrated account of the exhibit of seaweeds in the public museum 
the Garden and in the course of this a brief allusion was 
