196 



of the students and tlie people of the state. Professor Jones 

 will remain in Burlington until January, and enter on the work 

 of his new appointment at the beginning of the second semester. 



Lectures will be delivered in the lecture-hall of the Museum 

 Building of the Garden, Bronx Park, on Saturday afternoons, at 

 four o'clock, as follows : 



Sept. 25. " Native Trees of the Hudson River Valley,'' by 

 Dr. N. L. Britton. 



Oct. 2. " Some Floral and Scenic Features of Porto Rico," 

 by Dr. M. A. Howe. 



Oct. 9. " The Flora of the Upper Delaware Valley," by Mr. 

 George V. Nash. 



Oct. 16. " Collecting Fungi at Mountain Lake, Virginia," by 

 Dr. W. A. Murrill. 



Oct. 23. " Autumnal Wild Flowers," by Dr. N. L. Britton. 



Oct. 30. " Some Plant Diseases : Their Cause and Treat- 

 ment," by Mr. Fred J. Seaver. 



Nov. 6. " The Reclamation of the Desert in San Bernardino 

 Valley, California," by Dr. H. H. Rusby. 



Nov. 13. " The Hudson River Valley before the Advent of 

 Man," by Dr. Arthur Hollick. 



The lectures will be illustrated by lantern-slides and otherwise. 

 They will close in time for auditors to take the 5 : 34 train from 

 the Botanical Garden Station, arriving at Grand Central Station 

 at 6:03 P. M. 



The museum building is reached by the Harlem Division of 

 the New York Central and Hudson River Railway to Botanical 

 Garden Station, by trolley cars to Bedford Park, or by the Third 

 Avenue Elevated Railway to Botanical Garden, Bronx Park. 

 Visitors coming by the Subway change to the Elevated Railway 

 at 149th Street and Third Avenue. 



