70 GEOLOGY OF OHIO. 



A general account of the family and gives four species growing wild 

 in Ohio; Vitis Labrusca, V. aestivalis, V. riparia, and V. cordifolia. 



Notes on some Introduced Plants chiefly in Summit county, Ohio, 

 by E. W. Claypole, in Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, Vol. XIII, 

 p. 187, Oct., 1886. 



A record of some introduced plants; ten species of which are well 

 established and six represented by a single specimen of each. 



1887. 



Report on Weeds (by W. S. Devol) in the Fifth Annual Report of the 

 Ohio Agr. Experiment Station for 1886, Columbus, 1887, p. 230. 



Sixteen species are named which "have been discovered in the State 

 since the publication of Dr. Beardslee's Catalogue of Plants of Ohio," 

 (pp. 230) (The same list is printed in the Journal of the Columbus Horti- 

 cultural Society, Vol. Ill, No. 1, Jan., 1888, p. 47). This list is followed 

 by a "list of plants identified" (pp. 231-3). 



Botanical Notes (by W. R. Lazenby) in the Fifth Annual Report of 

 the Ohio Agr. Experiment Station for 1886, Columbus, 1887, pp. 304. 



A few short notes are given (p. 304) followed by a list (pp. 305-7) 

 of seventy-four species with their dates of blooming in the years 1882-7. 



Notes on Sanguinaria Canadensis by Aug. F. Fcerste, in the Bulletin 

 of the Torrey Botanical Club, Vol. XIX, p. 74, April, 1887. 



An article two pages in length and one plate giving the morphology 

 of the plant; locality, Dayton. 



List of Algae, b};- H. L. Jones, in Bulletin of the Scientific Labora- 

 tories of Dennison University, May, 1887, Vol. II, pp, 115-6. 



A list of thirty-four species, mostly Desmids, found in the Licking 

 Reservoir and the ponds about Granville, Ohio. 



Botanical Notes (Liquidambar in Ohio) by Jos. F. James. Bulletin 

 Torrey Botanical Club, Vol. XIV, p. 223, Oct. 4, 1887. 



Notes occurrence of Liquidambar near Oxford and the vicinity of 

 Cincinnati. 



Plants in bloom in September, October and November, (observed by 

 Moses Craig and reported by W. S. Devol) Journal of the Columbus 

 Horticultural Society, Vol. II, Nos. 10, 11, 12, Oct., Nov., Dec, 1887, pp. 

 166, 189, 207. 



The lists number eighty-eight, fifty-eight and six species respectively. 



Note on the color of Caulophyllum thalictroides, by K. B. Claypole. 

 Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, Vol. XIV, p. 258, Dec. 3, 1887. 

 Notices the less dark color of this species in Ohio than in Canada. 



