143 



The foUowin.u plants seen or collected: Daedalca confragosa 

 (Bolt.) Pers., two forms on canoe birch, one with a thickened 

 roughened pileus; Diplocladium peniciUoides Sacc. on old Poly- 

 poriis resiuosns, deposited in the State Herbarium as new to the 

 state; Fomes pinicola (Sw.) Cke. on hemlock stump; Massaria 

 vomitoria B. & C. on limbs of Acer rubrum, part in the State 

 Herbarium; Poly poms betulinns (Bull.) Fr., a plant bearing 

 three separate fruiting pilei at angles to each other, due to the 

 falling of a canoe birch trunk; Sarcoscypha coccinea (Scop.) 

 Sacc. on old sticks. 



Cladonia furcata (Huds.) Schrad.; Cladonia fiircata racemosa 

 (Hoffm.) Flk. ; Cladonia pyxidata neglecta (Flk.) Mass.; Lobaria 

 pulmonaria (L.) HofTm. {Sticta pulmonaria (L.) Ach.); Parmelia 

 perlata (L.) Ach. on fallen hemlock; Pertusaria leioplaca (Ach.) 

 Schaer., on trunk of Ostrya, determined by Dr. L. W. Riddle, 

 deposited in the State Herbarium as new to the state; and 

 Physcia adglutinata (Flk.) Nyl. on the trunk of Ostrya. 



Bazzania trilobata (L.) S. F. Gray; Lophozia barbata (Schreb.) 

 Dum. ; Ptilidium ciliare (L.) Nees on the ground and Ptilidiiim 

 pulcherrimum (Web.) Hampe on coniferous logs. 



Plagiothecium denticulatum (L.) B. & S., base of a tree. 

 Poly podium vulgare L., fruiting specimens on logs. 

 Dentaria diphylla L.; Chrysosplenium americanum Schwein.; 

 Viola pallens (Banks) Brainerd; Epigaea repens L., a little left 

 in the woods about the swamp in the valley. Skunk cabbage in 

 swamps; tamaracs, poplars and willows becoming green; and 

 shad bushes whitening the uplands. 



May i6, 1909. We left the city on the morning train, last 

 night's heavy shower filling the waterfalls and beating down the 

 clay road like a floor. During the first shower, w^e were under 

 the cliff at Little Fall, listening to the thundering of the falling 

 water; during the second shower, we were in a large empty 

 barn a short distance back of Mine Lot Fall, where we were 

 entertained by a chorus of hens. On returning to Table Rock we 

 found a dense fog had rolled in and filled the vast amphitheater, 

 and this did not disperse until a slight breeze sprang up a little 

 after noon, when we had reached the summer house on East 



