158 
VICTOBIA MEMORIAL MUSEUM. BULLETIN NO. I 
Of the 50 species reported, two are new, viz., Campanularia 
magnified and Cryptolaria triserialis. Three others, Campanu- 
laria grwnlandica , Lafosa symmetrica , and Halecium minuium 
have not previously been reported from the east coast of North 
America. 
My thanks are due to Professor Nutting for his assistance 
in this as well as other hydroid work I have done, and to my 
wife who has made the drawings. 
Systematic Discussion. 
No family or genus has been defined in this paper because, 
with the exception of the Genus Cryptolaria , they have been 
defined in my West Coast paper, and are here used with the 
same significance. With regard to the genus mentioned, there 
has been no disagreement among the authors who have used it. 
In the synonymy I have given the original reference for the 
species in each case, and besides this, when possible^ some 
references to papers dealing with localities not very far distant. 
It is for that reason that Prof. Nutting's paper on the Woods 
Hole region appears so often, and also that of J. F. Whiteaves, 
although the latter gives no definitions and little synonymy. 
Full descriptions of several of the species appear in two of 
my own papers that are ^tiil in manuscript, viz: “Some Beau- 
fort Hydroids,” being published by the U. S. Bureau of Fish- 
eries, and “Some notes on New England Hy droids” being 
published in a Bulletin from the Laboratories of Natural History 
of the State University of Iowa. 
