Davis—Journey Through the Pacific Northwest. 777 
hadrotrichum globiferum (E. & E.) n. comb., Tuberculina 
lupini receiving no description. On the leaves of the third 
species of Lupinus was a Ramularia from which the following 
notes were made: Spots pallid with a brown border, roundish, 
4-7 mm. in diameter; hypfhes amphigenous, tufted, straight or 
slightly flexuose, hyaline, 20-40 x 3%-5 microns; conidia 
hyaline, cylindrical, obtuse, becoming 1-3 septate, 25-55 x 4-6 
microns. I have placed this in my herbarium as ramularia 
LUPINI 11. sp. 
In the afternoon I inquired for a suitable collecting ground 
and was referred to a park. Getting off the street car, I 
looked at the park on one side and a steep hillside on the 
other and chose the latter. Here I found, on July 6th, on a 
narrow-leaved species of Agropyrum, what I had often searched 
for in vain, the perithecia of Erysiphe graminis DC. The 
asci were fully formed, but not, of course, the ascospores. I 
found also Erysiphe cicjioracearum DC. (?) on Galium apa- 
rine, much infested with Ampelomyces quisqualis Ces.; Plirag- 
midium subcorticium (Schrank) Wint. in its different stages 
on Rosa fendleriana; Puccinia crepidis acuminatae Syd. on 
Crepis acuminata; and Uromyces eriogoni Ell. &; Hark. II 
on Eriogonum heracleoides. On the latter host was also a Ram- 
ulariu(?) forming minute white tufts from tubercular bases 
on reddish-brown spots 5-8 mm. in diameter. The hyphse are 
30-40 x 3 microns, but the material is too scanty and imma¬ 
ture to warrant a description. Here also were found on Smi- 
lacina rac&mosa specimens from which the following notes were 
made: Spots pale yellow or whitish with a narrow reddish- 
brown border, round to oblong, mostly 5-10 mm. in diameter; 
hyphae forming white tufts on the lower surface of the spots, 
10-16 x 3 microns; conidia hyaline, cylindrical, continuous, 
catenulate, 18-30 x 3 microns. An immature Phyllosticta ( ?) 
is sometimes found on the upper surface of the spots. I have 
placed this in the herbarium as Bamularia smilacinae n. sp. 
Because of the aseptate conidia this would be placed by some 
authors in Ovularia. Here also Puccinia balsamorrhizae Pk. 
Ill occurred in abundance on Balsamorrhiza deltoideu. 
The next stop was made at Horth Yakima, Washington, 
