BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 
Reorganized 1906, uniting the Botanical Society of America (1893), the Society 
for Plant Morphology and Physiology (1896), and the American Mycological 
Society (1903). - 
OFFICERS FOR 1915 
President: John M. Coulter 
Chicago, III. 
Vice-President: R. A. Harper 
Nezv York,N. K 
Treasurers Arthur HoLLicK 
New Brighton, N. Y. 
Secretary: H. H., Bartlett 
Washington, D. C. 
Councilors: 
George F. Atkinson 
Ithaca, N. 7. 
David Fairchild 
Washington, D. C, 
W. F. Ganong 
Northampton, Mass. 
The Society consists of fellows and members, and any one actively in- 
terested in botanical work is eligible for membership. Candidates for member- 
ship are recommended by three members, not members of the Council, on 
blanks to be obtained from the Secretary. 
The annual dues are $5.00 ($1.00 remitted in 1915), including subscrip- 
tion to the American Journal of Botany. Candidates for membership, 
proposed and approved by the Council, may receive the Journal at $3.00 per 
year, pending their election at the winter meeting of the Society. 
