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THE AMERICAN NATURALIST. [Vol. XXXVIII. 



Compound Names ; Ellis and Everhart, New Species of Fungi from 

 Various Localities ; Kellerman, Minor Mycological Notes — I ; Ohio 

 Fungi, Fascicle VIII [descriptions and annotations] ; Index to 

 North American Mycology (continued) ; and Notes from Mycological 

 Literature — VI. 



TYv^ Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society, for October, con- 

 tains a number of botanically interesting articles. 



The fourteenth Report of the Missouri Botattical Garden, in addi- 

 tion to the customary administrative reports, contains a Supple- 

 mentary Catalogue of the prelinnean library of the Garden, and a 

 revision of the genus Lonicera, by Rehder. 



Rhodora, for November, contains the following : — Ames, Hybrids 

 in Spiranthes and Habenaria ; Leavitt, Reversionary Stages in 

 Drosera intermedia; W dittrs, Asplenium ebenium proliferum; Eaton, 

 Notes on Botrychium tenebrosum Deane, Gaylussacia in New 

 Hampshire — a Correction ; and Eaton, New Varieties of Isoetes. 



Torreya, for October, contains the following : — Underwood, The 

 Early Writers on Ferns and their Collections — i, Linnaeus; Howe, 

 Note on the "Flowering" of the Lakes in the Adirondacks ; and 

 MacKenzie, A New Genus of North American Umbelliferae 

 [Pseudotffinidia]. 



Torreya, iox November, contains the following articles: Wooton, 

 Ferns of the Organ Mountains ; House, Notes on the Flora of 

 Oneida Lake and Vicinity; Earle, Key to the North American 

 Species of Inocybe— i; Berry, A Question for Morphologists ; 

 Stone, Arisczma pusillum in Pennsylvania and New Jersey; and 

 Nash, A New Bamboo from Cuba. 



