31 
front cover. Briefer notes and non-technical papers will find a 
means of publication in Zorreya, and the Bulletin of the Club will 
be devoted to longer and more highly technical articles. 
The total amount of precipitation in the Garden for January, 
1901, was 2.76 inches. Maximum temperatures of 49 on the 
. hi 
The last observation showed the lowest temperature of the win- 
ter and lower than any observation of the previous season 
Mr. J. E. Kirkwood has been appointed Instructor in Botany 
in Syracuse University in place of Mr. J. G. Coulter, resigned. 
Mr. Kirkwood received the degree of A.B. fi ific Uni- 
versity in 1898 and spent the following year in graduate study at 
P s aie the first to register for a table in the 
laboratories of the Gar ief interest and work hav 
mbryology | ner physiolo: r, Kirkwood 
has apprentice, and as assistant in ne eon in the 
ean assistant in the summer school of Columbia University, 
and assistant in biology in Teachers’ oie Columbia. Uni- 
ver: 
ACCESSIONS. 
ADDITIONS TO THE BOTANICAL LIBRARY OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ON DEPOSIT 
AT THE LIBRARY OF THE N. Y. BOTANICAL erent Durinc 
Battey, L. H. Botany, an Elementary Text for Schools. New Yor! 
Cow ers, H.C. Eeological Relations of the Vegetation of the Sand ee of 
Lake eee Chicago, 1899. 
Dyer, H. G. On certain Bacteria from the Air of New York City. New York, 
1895. 
FALKENBERU, PauL. Der Garten und seine Entwickelung. Rostock, 1899. 
FECHNER, G. Munna: oder itber dat Seelenleben der Pflanzen. 2d edition. 
cH, R. Plantarum omnium quarum hodie apud pharmcopolas usus, etc. 
41. 
GREEN, Address on the Botany of the United States, delivered before the 
Jac 
Society for the pare of the 7 ful Arts, with Catalogue of Plants indigenous to 
the State of New York, Albany, 1814, 
