150 



Blephariglottis ciliaris, 1 19 



Blodgett, F. H., The Lygoclium at Home, 

 19 ; Transpiration of rust-infested Ru- 

 bus, 34 ; A Tulip with a Runner, 78 ; 

 personal, 71, 136 



Bolelia, 70 



Boleti of West Virginia, Notes on the, 37 



Boletus affinis, 39 ; alutarius, 38 ; auri- 

 flammeus, 37 ; bicolor, 39 ; chromapes, 

 39 ; cyanescens, 38 ; edulis, 39 ; ex- 

 imius, 38 ; gracilis, 38 ; nigrellus, 38 ; 

 Ravenelii, 38 ; separans, 38 



Botanical Garden, An alpine, 81 ; New 

 York, 24, 36, 60, 72, 124, 148 



Botanical Society of America, 112 



Botany at Cold Spring Harbor in 1901, 

 Cryptogamic and physiological, 127 



Botrychium, 128 



Bower, F. O., personal, 112 



Bradburya Virginiana, 116 



Brainerd, Jones, and Eggleston's " Flora 

 of Vermont," 10 



Britton, E. G., The rare Mosses of Bash- 

 bish Falls, 9 ; Mosses of the Catskill 

 Mountains, N. Y., 84; Vanishing 

 Wild Flowers, 85 ; The Storing of 

 Seeds by Squirrels, 108 ; Spring Foli- 

 age in October, 119 



Britton, N. L., Notes on Rudbeckia 

 hirta, I ; A new Senecio from Penn- 

 sylvania, 21 ; A new Hawkweed from 

 Florida, 41 ; A new Crataegus from 

 Washington, 55 ; Nocca and Cracca, 

 83 ; Cupania on Pine Key, Florida, 

 132; personal, Iio, 112, 124 



Britton' s "Manual of the Flora of the 

 Northern States and Canada," 133 



Bromeliaceae in Costa Rica, 146 



Bryopsis, 128 



Bryum capillare, 84 ; proliferum, 9 ; 

 proligerum, 84 



Buda, 69 



Burgin, see Dallas 



Bulbochaete, 128 



Burglehaus, F. H., Circaea Fruit de- 

 void of hooked Bristles, 56 



Burmannia and Gyrotheca, Synonymy of, 

 S3 ; capitata, 33, 34 



Burnham, S. H., Heterophylly in He- 

 patica acuta, 65 ; Field Days of the 

 Torrey Botanical Club, 119, 132, 147 



Bush Clovers (Lespedeza), Two new, 

 102 



Buxbaumia aphylla, 84 



Cakile edentula, 147 

 Campanula Cenisia, 81 

 Campbell, D. H , personal, 112 

 Campbell's "University Text-Book of 

 Botany," no 



Camptosorus, 89 



Campulosus aromaticus, 1 15 



Cannon, W. A., Note on the Bladder 

 Kelp, Nereocystis Liitkeana, 49 ; On 

 the Relation of Redwoods and Fog to 

 the general Precipitation in the Red- 

 wood Belt of California, 137 ; personal, 



59. 

 Capriola Dactylon, 32 

 Capsella, 70 



Card, F. W. , personal, 72 

 Carss, E., The Value of Forestry in a 



Course of Nature Study, 13 

 Cassia occidentalis, 1 16 ; Tora, 1 16 

 Castanea dentata, 7 

 Castilleia alpina, 83; luteovirens, 84; 



pallida, 83 

 Cephalanthus occidentalis, 117 

 Cephalozia, 1 28 

 Ceratiola ericoides, 116 

 Chaetochloa glauca, 147 

 Chamaelirium, Two Species of, 107 ; 



luteum, 107, 108 ; obovale, 107, 108 

 Chamberlain, see Coulter 

 Cherry, A Texan, 146 

 Chimaphila maculata, 1 17 

 Chrysanthemum Leucanthemum, 75 

 China arundinacea, 147 

 Circaea Fruit devoid of hooked Bristles, 



55 ; intermedia, 55 ; Lutetiana, 55, 



.5 6 



Citrus trifoliata, 141 



Cladophora, 128 



Clethra alnifolia, 132 



Cliftonia monophylla, 1 16 



Closterium, 128 



Clute's " Our Ferns in their Haunts," 134 



Cobaea, 144 



Cockerell, T. D. A., Varietal and specific 

 Names, 79 ; Nomenclatural Note, 83 ; 

 Hesperaster, Genus of Loasaceae, 142 



Cold Spring Harbor, Cryptogamic and 

 physiological Botany at, in 1901, 127 



Common Name, A new, 147 



Conocephalum, 128 



Conopholis Americana, 91 



Conostachys, 146 



Copeland, E. B., Cryptogamic and phys- 

 iological Botany at Cold Spring Har- 

 bor in 1901, 127 



Coprinus, 128 



Corallorhiza, 81 



Cordyceps, 128 ■ 



Corema Conradii, 92 



Corn, Diembryony in, 68 



Cornel, A Kentucky, 54 



Cornus asperifolia, 54 ; microcarpa, 54, 

 55 ; Priceae, 54 



Cracca, Nocca and, 83 ; Virginiana, 83, 

 116 



