PAGE. 



Notes 17, 45. 73, 102 



Notes on Some South Florida Ferns— Charles Louis Pollard 88 



Noteworthy American Mosses . . .- 80 



Our Miscellany 15, 42, 99 



Preparation of Mosses for Examination with the Compound 



Microscope— A. J. Grout 49 



Sensitiveness of Ferns to Environment— G. A. Woolson 13 



Some Additional Notes on the Methods of Microscopical Ex- 

 amination of Mosses— John M. Holzinger 107 



Some Rare Vermont Ferns — Willard W. Eggleston 4 



Some Variations in the Adder's -tongue — William R. Maxon. 90 



The Bryologist 21, 49, 77, 105 



The Birth of a Fern— Chas. T. Druery ... 39 



The Boulder Fern, or Fine-Haired Mountain Fern — William 



R. Maxon 94 



The Cord-moss and Its Allies — A. J. Grout 52 



The Dicranums— II — A. J. Grout 23 



The Field Horse-tail — C. F Saunders 31 



The Genus Equisetum with Reference to the North American 



Species—^. A. Eaton 57, 85 



The Linnsean Fern Chapter 19, 48, 76, 104 



The Mniums— A. J. Grout 78 



The Ostrich Fern in Virginia — Charles Louis Pollard 71 



The Pteridophytes of Georgia — Roland M. Harper 65 



The Sequence of the Cinnamon Fern's Fronds — W. N. Clute. 97 

 The Spore-bearing Area of Fertile Fronds — B. D. Halsted. . 69 



The Sullivant Moss Chapter 28, 56, 112 



The Tennessee Locality for the Hart's- tongue Fern— James 



H. Ferriss 98 



The Turkey -foot Fern 11 



The Turkey-foot ^Fern Again— Junes A. Graves, Mrs. 



Stephen Know I ton 39 



Trichomanes peltatum in Japan — A'. Miyake 59 



Tubers of Nephrolepis—/ Birkenhead 35 



Tubers of Nephrolepis — Mrs. J. M. Milligan 12 



Variation in Poly podium vulgare — Mrs. E. G. Br it ton 34 



Veining in the Marsh Shield-fern and Others— W. N. Clute. 67 



What are Mosses -A. J Grout and Marie L. Sanial 51 



Wyoming Pteridophytes — Elias Nelson 29 



Young Hart's- tongues at Green Lake— Will. R. Maxon 1 



