35 



1898 — Davcni)or(, C. B. Ilic I'lora al)oul Cold Spriii^^ IlarlKir. Si iciu c II- 



VIII, 607-688. 

 1923 — Evans, A. W. Sccxjnd Revised List of New I'Liigland Hepaticai Kho- 



dora 25. 

 1882 — Farlow, W. G. The Marine Algae of New England. Ai)pendix A. 



Report U. S. Commissioner of F"ish and Fisheries for 1879, p. 



I-210. Washington. 

 1893 — Ibid. Notes on the Algae of Long Island. Bull. Torrey B<it. Club. 



Vol. 20. 

 1902 — (irout, A. J. Additions to the Recorded Flora of Long Island, Torreya 2. 

 1914 — Howe, M. A. Some Mid-winter Algae of Long Island Soimrl. Torreya 



14- 

 1893 — Jelliffe, S. E. A preliminary list of the plants found in the Ridgewood 



water supply of the city of Brooklyn. King's County, N. Y. Bull. 



Torrey Bot. Club. 20. 

 1893 — Jelliffe, S. E. Notes on the Flora of Long Island. Science 22. 

 1894 — Jelliffe, S. E. Cryptogamic notes from Long Island. Bull. Torrey 



Bot. Club. 21, 22. 

 1899 — Jelliffe, S. E. Flora of Long Island. Published by the author, N. V. 



City. 

 1904 — Jellifife, S. E. Additions to the Recorded Flora of Long Island. 



Torreya 2. 

 1886 — Pike, Nicholas. Check list of Marine Algae, based on specimens col- 

 lected on the shores of Long Island, from 1839-1885. Bull. Torrey 



Bot. Club. 1886. 

 1905 — Reichling, G. A. Contribution to Recorded Fungus and Slime Mold 



Flora of Long Island. Torrej'a 5. 

 1913 — Sumner, F. B., Osburn, A. C, Cole, L. J., Davis, B. M. A Biologi- 

 cal Survey of the waters of Woods Hole and vicinity. Bull. U. S. 



Bureau of Fisheries for 191 1, Vol. 31, 2 parts, Washington. 

 1905 — Wood, G. C. Additions to Lichen Flora of Long Island. Bryolo- 



gist 8. 

 1914 — Wood, G. C. A preliminary list of the Lichens found within a radius 



of 100 miles of N. Y. City. Torreya 4. 



Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H. 



THE LILIES OF THE FIELD 



(Extract from the lecture by Dr. Ephraim Ha Reubeni on "New Light 

 on the Flora of the Old and New Testaments," given before the Club De- 

 cember 9, 1924. Translated from the Hebrew by David de Sola Pool.) 



It may be interesting to ttirn our attention for a moment to 

 the most famous of the plants of the New Testament, the lilies 

 of the field, Krinon Agrion, mentioned in Matthew VI. 2S. and 

 Luke XII, 27. In the parable, Jesus says that "'Even Solomon 

 in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But if God 

 doth so clothe the grass in the field, which today is, and tomorrow 

 is cast into the oven " 



