Missouri Botanical Garden PETER H. RAVEN LIBRARY Pagination Note: Since many of the items lack a specific page number, the page number displayed online refers to the sequentially created number each item was given upon cataloging the materials. Missouri Botan ical copyright reserved Missouri Botanical €E>RJ 5E EUGEUiANfi jPMEBS cm SHUMARD — NEW PALAEOZOIC FOSSILS. 113 El^eacrinus Kirkwoodbnsis, n. sp. Body very small, subglobose, a little longer than wide, flat- tened above and below. Basal pieces very gently concave, with their edges on a level with the plane of the under side. Radial pieces (fork pieces) reaching to the base and occupy- ing more than four fifths the entire length of the body, narrow below and widest in the middle, sides gently arched. Interra- dial pieces subdeltoid, very prominent towards the apex, much longer than wide, obtusely angulated below, acutely angulated above, and notched on either side a short distance below the summit. Pseudo-ambul acral areas extending from base to summit, narrow, deeply impressed; sides nearly parallel ; pore pieces amounting to about fifty in each field. A longitudinal fissure or slit>extends from the central summit opening down- wards, separating the pore pieces of one side from their fel- lows of the opposite for the distance of about one fifth the length of the field, thence their inner edges are united in the median line to the base. Pseudo-ambulacral spaces lanceo- late, sloping gently from their edges to the sutures. Ovarial apertures eight, very minute, situated at the notches of the interradial plates. Anal opening large, circular or very slight- ly elliptical. The surface markings are not plainly exhibited in any of the specimens I have collected of this species. On several of them I observe, more or less distinctly, irregular to weath- ering. Dimensions. — Length, 0.20 of an inch ; width, 0.18. The Elmcrinus Kirkwoodensis is nearly allied ' to JE. ( Pentremites ) melo , from which it is distinguished by its much smaller size and less deeply excavated base. It also occupies a higher geological position. Occurs in the St. Louis Limestone (Carboniferous) on the Pacific railroad near Kirkwood, St. Louis county, Missouri. Jj^o shift 114 TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. Topaz in Utah. By Henry Engelmann. During my explorations in Utah as Geologist of the Expe- dition under Capt. J. H. Simpson, Top. Eng’rs. U. S. A., in 1858 and 1859,1 observed some . remarkably beautiful crys- tals of Topaz among some detritus of trachytic porphyry. They were perfectly colorless, transparent, sharply devel- oped, and of great lustre. They Were all short columnar. The largest of them measured scarcely one third of an inch in the direction of the basal cleavage, which was highly per- fect. I observed ten modifications : all crystals exhibited (according to Prof. Rose’s designation) oo c : b : a , oo c 4 c : b : go a , 2 c most of them also 2 c a few only 2 c As in none of the crystals were both ends developed, I could not ascertain whetheiHhey were hemihedral, as is most common with topaz. The hardness of the mineral is =8. It is infusible before the blowpipe; and when strongly heated is coated with small blisters, but does not show any change of color. It exhibits the reactions of fluorine, alumina, and silex. 3STo tests were made for other elements,* nor were the crystals examined in regard to pyro-electricity and polariza- tion of light. They exhibit double refraction quite plainly. The locality of the mineral is near lat. 39° 40', long. 113° 30 / west of Greenwich, west of south of Salt Lake, in Thom- as’ range of mountains, on Capt. Simpson’s return trail. Cir- cumstances prevented me from obtaining more than a few crystals, which are now deposited in the collection of the Smithsonian Institute ; a few others are also in the hands of members of the party. We were travelling at the time by forced night marches with nearly worn out animals, seeking to gain a spring of water in a distant range of mountains. This desert was then entirely unexplored. I have but little doubt that more interesting materials are to be found at the same point. . The mountains of the former Territory ot Utah promise a rich yield to the mineralogist. We know already of gold 'and silver ores in the east, west and south part of that district ; of copper and lead ores in the south, and I have discovered the latter also in the centre of it; of specular iron ores and native sulphur in the Rocky Mountains and near Little Salt Lake ; of rock salt in the mountains south-east of Utah Lake; of native alum near Salt Lake; of various other- salts in the deserts; and of silicates, composing the granites, porphyries, diorites, trachytes, and lavas, nearly Over the whole area. D.za, c ; oju . .wax, b : a ; b:coa, c:b:& ; oob : a , and 4 (?) c : b : a . 7 8 9 10 Missour Botan ICAl copyright reserved garden BOTAN ICAL copyright reserved Cor. 4- cll & Olive Sts.. St.Louis. Missouri Botanical EU6ELMANN SHUMARD— NEW PALAEOZOIC FOSSILS. 113 El^acrinus Kirkwoodensis, n. sp. . Body very small, subglobose, a little longer than wide, flat- tened above and below. Basal pieces very gently concave, with their edges on a level with the plane of the under side! Radial pieces (fork pieces) reaching to the base and occupy- ing more than four fifths the entire length of the body, narrow below, and widest in the middle, sides gently arched. Interra- dial pieces subdeltoid, very prominent towards the apex, much longer than wide, obtusely angulated below, acutely angulated above, and notched on either side a short distance below the summit. Pseudo-ambulacral areas extending from base to summit, narrow, deeply impressed; sides nearly parallel; pore pieces amounting to about fifty in each field. A longitudinal fissure or slit extends from the central summit opening down- wards, separating the pore pieces of one side from their fel- lows of the opposite for the distance of about one fifth the length ofdhe field, thence their inner edges are united in the median line to the base. Pseudo-ambulacral spaces lanceo- late, sloping gently from their edges to the sutures. Ovarial apertures eight, very minute, situated at the notches of the interradial plates. Anal opening large, circular or very slight- ly elliptical. The surface markings are not plainly exhibited in any of the specimens I have collected of this species. On I m OLS^gr §s _cl LLn c 1 1 y , irregular Course rugae or pittings, whicfi, howe^er^mayTe due to weath- ering. Dimensions.-- Length, 0.20 of an inch ; width, 0.18. The Klceacrinus Kirkwoodensis is nearly allied to K. (Pentremites) onelo, from which it is distinguished by its much smaller size and less deeply excavated base. It also occupies a higher geological position. Occurs. in the St. Louis Limestone (Carboniferous) on the Pacific railroad near Kirkwood, St. Louis county, Missouri. M >3 > i r\ w $ o 4’ x r *> x 7 8 9 10 Missouri . , Botanical copyright reserved garden 114 TRANS. OP THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. Topaz in Utah . By Henry Engelmann. During my explorations in Utah as Geologist of the Expe- dition under Capt. J. H. Simpson, Top. Eng’rs. U. S. A., in 1858 and 1859,1 observed some remarkably beautiful crys- tals of Topaz among some detritus of trachytic porphyry. They were perfectly colorless, transparent, sharply devel- oped, and of great lustre. They were all short columnar. The largest of them measured scarcely one third of an inch in the direction of the basal cleavage, which was highly per- fect. I observed ten modifications: all crystals exhibited (according to Prof. Rose’s designation) oo c : b : a , qo c 4 c : b : oo a , 2 c most of them also 2 c a few only 2 c As in none of the crystals were both ends developed, I could not ascertain whether they were hemihedral, as is most common with topaz. The hardness of the mineral is —8. It is infusible before the blowpipe; and when strongly heated is coated with small blisters, but does not show any change of color. It exhibits the reactions of fluorine, alumina, and gilex. No testa were made for other elements, nor were the crystals examined in regard to pyro-electricity and polariza- tion of light. They exhibit double refraction quite plainly. The locality of the mineral is near lat. 89° 40', long. 118° 80' west of Greenwich, west of south of Salt Lake, in Thom- as’ range of mountains, on Capt. Simpson’s return trail. Cir- cumstances prevented me from obtaining more than a few crystals, which are now deposited in* the collection of the Smithsonian Institute ; a few others are also in the hands of members of the party. We were travelling at the time by forced night marches With nearly worn out animals, seeking to gain a spring of water in a distant range of mountains. This desert was then entirely unexplored. I have but little doubt that more interesting materials are to be found at the same point. The mountains of the former Territory of Utah promise a rich yield to the mineralogist. We know already of gold and silver ores in the east, west and south part of that district; of copper and lead ores in the south, and I have discovered the latter also in the centre of it ; of specular iron ores and native sulphur in the Rocky Mountains and near Little Salt Lake ; of rock salt in the mountains south-east of Utah Lake; of native alum near Salt Lake; of various other salts in the deserts; and of silicates, composing the granites, porphyries, diorites, trachytes, and lavas, nearly over the whole area. Missouri Bot*^ u ; ^ a , u . ^ b : a ; b : oo a , c : b : oo b : a , and 4 (?) c : b 01 2 3 4 5 6789 10 Missouri BOTAN ICAL cm copyright reserved garden ✓7 /2 +v- 1 H fr'- J "-^ ' I JV2J ..- t.'b f f . 3 7 8 9 10 Missouri Botan ical copyright reserved garden JOURNAL 0 P PROCEEDINGS. 141 chiefly derived from the destruction of Cretaceous strata, and in places abound in fossil bones and plants, usually in a fine state of preservation. The bones have been usually found in excavations for wells, at depths varying from twenty to sixty feet below the surface, and consist of genera closely allied to, or identical with Titanotherium, Rhinoceros , Eqnus, and Crocodilus. Among the plants are several species of palms, a fine collec- tion of which has been made by Dr. Gideon Lincecum, of Long Point, Washington Co., and by him presented to the State cabinet. The Miocene beds are surmounted at some localities, as at Hidalgo Falls, with a pebbly deposit cemented with ferruginous matter into a coarse pudding-stone or conglomerate. This deposit has yielded in more or less abundance the bones of Mastodon, Elephas, Megalonyx, Eqnus ( E . fossilis), Crocodilus, and Testudo . The collections of the Texas Survey are rapidly increasing in all the departments. The series of Cretaceous and Tertiary fossils are already very extensive, and when properly studied will throw much light on some disputed points in the Geology of Texas and New Mexico. Donations to the library were received as follows : Bull. Amer. Ethnolog. Soc., and Report on the Huacas or Ancient Graveyards of Chiriqui, read before the Ethnolog. Soc. by J. King Mer- rit, M.D., N. York, i860,— from the Ethnolog. Soc.; Bull, de la Soc. Imp. zoolog. d J Acclimation, Paris, No. 9, Sept. 1860, from the Society; Sit— zungsberichte der K. K. Akad. der Wissensch, Wien, Nos. 3-5, 7-8 Band XXXIV.-XL., Jan^to Ap, der K. K. Geol. Reichs., Wien, 1859 0 ,from the Imperial Academy; Jahrb. HH JHi..., , , X. Jahrg., Nos. 3-4 ,from ihe Impe- rial Society"; Mem. Lit. & Philos. Soc. of Machester, Eng., 2d Ser., Vol. XV., Pt. 2, I860,— Proc. of same, 1858-9, Nos. 1-16, and 1859-60, Nos. 1 -14, from the Society; Geolog. Uebersicht der Bergbaue der Oestr. Monarchic von Franz Ritter von Hauer u. Franz Fcetterle mit einem Vorworte von Wilhelm Haidinger, Wien, 1855, — Bericht, fiber die erste Allgemeine Versammlung von Berg und Hfittenmannern zu Wien, der Oberhessischen Gesellsch ffir Natur. und Heilkunde, Giessen, 1859, from the Society ; Atti dell I. R. Istit. Veneto, Tomo V., Serie III., 1-7, 1859-60, from the Institute ; Verhand. K. K. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, 1859, IX. Band, from the Society; Archiv. der Ver. d. Freunde der Na- turgeschichte in Mecklenburg, 14 Jahrg., Neubrandenburg, I860, from the Society; Mittheil. aus dem Osterlande, XV. Band, Heft 1-2, 1860, Alten- burg, from the Society ; Ueber die Warme-Entwicklung in der Pflan- zen, deren Gefrieren und die Schutzmittel gegen dasselbe, von H. R. Goeppert, Breslau, 1830,— Uber die Flora der Silur. Devon, und unteren Kohlen Form, oder des sogenannten Uebergangs-Gebirges, von Goppert, Dec. 1859, from Prof, yon Goppert; Sitzungsb. der Dorpater Narurforsch. Gesel., 1853-6, Dorpat, from the Society ; Nachrichten von der George August. Univ. u. d. Konigl. Geaellsch. d. Wiss. zu Goettingen, 1859, No. 1-20, from the Royal Society; Verhand. u. Mittheil. des Sieben- bergischen Vereins ffir Nat. zu Hermanstadt, Jahrg. X., No. 7-12, 1859, from the Society ; Ueber die Wohnsitze der Brachiopoden, von Prof. Ed. Suess, Wien, 1860, from the Author; Annual Rep. of the Leeds Phil. & Lit. Soc. for 1859-60,— Proc. Geol. & Polytech. Soc. of the West Riding of Yorkshire for 1859, Leeds, I860,— The Physical Condition of the Peo- ple in its bearing upon their Social and Moral Welfare, by the Rt. Rev. R Bickersteth, Leeds, i860,— Sensorial Vision, by Sir J. F. W. Herschel, Bart., Leeds, 1858, from the Society; Archiv. ffir die Naturkunde, Ser. I. Bd. I., Lf. 1-3, Bd. II. Lf. 1-2, Ser. II. Bd. I. Lf. 1-5, 1854-59, Dorpat, from the Dorpater Naturforsch. Gesellsch. ; Jahresbericht der Naturf. Ge- sellsch. in Emden, 1859, Kleine Schriften VI.-VII., 1860, from the So- ciety; Mem. de PAcademie Imp. des Sciences de St. Petersbourg, 7e. Ser., T. II., No. 1-3, 1859, — Bulletin, T. I., Feuilles, 7-36 , from the Imperial Academy ; Proc. of the Histor. Soc. of New York, Oct. 1853,— Ruins of Terrampua, by E. G. Squier, — Memoir on the European Civilization of V 7 8 9 10 Missouri . . . Botanical copyright reserved garden TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. 142 America in Ante-historic Times, by Adolph Zestermann of Leipzic, with Critical Observations by E. G. Squier, 1851,— Volcanoes of Cent. Amer- ica, by E. G. Squier, 1850, from the Author ; Canad. Journal of Industry, Science and Art, Sept. 1860, from the Canadian Institute ; Notes d’un Voyage dans PAmerique Centrale,— Lettres a M. Alfred Maury, Bibliot. de Plnst. (Ext. des Nouvelles Annales des Voyages, Paris, Aout, 1855, — Lettre de M. E. G. Squier, k propos de la lettre de M. Brassenr de Bourbourg, a M. A If. Maury, Paris, 1855, from E. G. Squier, Esq. ; Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., Sept. 1860, from the Academy ; Observa- tions upon the Form of the Occiput in the Various Races of Men, by J. Aitken Meigs, Philad. 1860, from the Author ; Proc. Boston Society Nat. Hist., Sep. & Oct., 1860, /rom the Society ; Original Communications from the N. Orleans Med. & Surg. Journal, Nov. 1860, from Bennett Dowler , M.D.; Bull, de la Soc. Imp. zool. d’Acclim. Paris } from the Society. Mr. Holmes presented, in the name of A. F. Bandelier, a series of fossils from Illinois, and Mr. Reid specimens of as- phaltum, petroleum, and fossils, from Canada W est. The committee to whom was referred the paper of Prof. Swallow on New Fossils from the Carboniferous and Devo- nian Rocks of Missouri, reported the same for publication in the Transactions. November 19, 1860. The President, Dr. Prout, in the chair. Eleven members present. Letters were read from the Essex Institute. Salem, Mass., Nov. 6, 1860, acknowledging receipt of No. 4 of Transactions; Sec. of the Smithson. Inst. Wash., D. C., Nov. 1860, enclosing list of shells presented to the Academy by the Smithsonian Institution ; Soc. Roy. des Sciences, Up sal ; Societe Imperiale des Sciences Naturelles de Cherbourg, transmitting publications; Naturk. Verein in Augsburg, Aug. 27, i860, -Nat. Hist. Society of Northumberland, Durham and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Oct. 6, 1860, acknowledging receipt of Transactions; Lem. T. Wells, Cincin- nati, O., acknowledging notice of his election as a Corresponding Member of the Academy. The following donations to the library were received : The Rock and Coal Oils of Ohio, by J. S. Newberry, M.D., 1829, frcm the Author; Der Zool. Garten, Organ der Zool. Gesellsch. in Frankfurt a M. Herausg. von Dr. D. F. Weinland, No. 7-12, 1860, from the Editor ; N Orl. Med. & Surg. Jour., No. 6, Nov. 1860, from the Editors ; Journal Frank.* Inst., No. 5, Nov. 1860, from the Institute ; Nova Acta, Roy. Soc. Sci. Uspal Ser. III., Vol. I. & II.,— Arsskrift of same, 1, from the Royal Society ; Dritter Jahres-bericht des naturf. Vereins in Passau, for 1859, 1860, from the Society ; Mem. Soc. Imp. Sci. Nat. Cherbourg, T. VI. & VII., 1858-9, from the Society ; Tab. Method, et Descrip, des Mollusques terrestres et d’eau douce de l’Agenais, par M. J. B. Gassies, Paris, 1849,— Catalog, raisonne des Mollusques terrestres et d’eau douce de la Gironde, par M. J. B. Gassies, Paris, 1859, from the Author ; XIII. Jahresb. dea Naturhist. Vereins in Augsburg, 1860, from the Society ; Actes de la So- ciele Linn, de Bordeaux, Tome XXII., 3e. Ser., T. II., Paris, 1860, from the Society ; List of Shells collected in the Grand River Valley, Michigan, by A. O. Currier, 1860, from the Author; Amerika, Geograph. und Natur- Missouri Botanicm. George Engelmann Papers JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS. 143 gesch. von Bruckner, from C. Witter; Med. Statistics of U. S. Army during the years 1855-59, from Dr. Leigh. Dr. Engel mann laid on the table °a Latin translation of his monograph on Cuscuta (Trans. Acad. Sci. St Louis, Yol. I., p. 453,) presented by the translator, Dr. Acherson, of Berlin. Mr. Holmes presented, in the name of Mr. Bandelier, sev- eral slabs of coal shale with fossil plants from Illinois. Prof. Holtzman, of Heidelberg, Germ., was elected a Corres- ponding Member. December 3, 1860. The President, Dr. Prout, in the chair. Nine members present. Letters were read from Wm.W. Jeffries, dated West Ches- ter, Penn., proposing exchange of minerals, and from Prof. E. W. Hilgard, State Geologist, Oxford, Miss., acknowledging his election as a Corresponding Member. Additions to the library were received as follows : Observations upon the Geology and Palseontology of Burlington, Iowa, and its vicinity, by Chas. A. White, 1860, from the Author ; Report on the Economical Geology of the Route of the Ashtabula and New Lisbon Railroad, — Catalogue of Flowering Plants and Ferns of Ohio, by J. S. Newberry, M. D., from the Author ; Amer. Jour. Sci. & Arts, Nov. 1860, purchased. Dr. Pront presented, in the name of S. S. Lyon, Esq., a col- lection of Devonian and Upper Silurian fossils from the Falls of the Ohio and vicinity. The President, Dr. Prout, in the chair. Seven members present. Letters were read from L’Acad. Roy. des Sciences de Lisbonne, Mai, 1860, transmitting publications 5 and from Prof. Win. Haidinger, dated Vienna, Aug. 1, 1860. Donations to the library were received from the following Societies : Biill. Soc. Imp. zool. d’Acclim. Paris, Oct. 1860, — Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phil., Oct. 1860, — Mem. Acad. Real Sci. Lisboa, Classe Math. Phys. e N t., 2d Ser., T. L, Pt. 1, 1843,— Nov. Ser., T. I. p. 1-2, T. II. p. 1, 185 -7, from the Royal Academy ; Neuere Nachrichten iiber Meteoriten, namentlich die von Bokkeveld, New Concord, Trenzano; die Meteoreisen von Nebraska, Brazos, Oregon, von W. Haidinger, July, 1860, — Neuere Umersuch ungen liber die Bestandtheile des Meteorsteines von Copland, schre ben von R. Wohler an W. Haidinger, July, 1860, — Die Calcutta 01 23456789 10 Missouri . . , Botanical cm copyright reserved garden 144 * i i 144 TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. Meteoriten von Shalka, Futtehpore, Pegu, Assam, und Segowlee in dem K. K. Hof. Min.-Cab. von W. Haidinger, — Der Metcorit von Shalka in Bancoorah u. der Piddingtonit, von W. Haidinger, from the Author ; Jour. Frank. Inst., Dec. 1860, from the Institute ; Canadian Journal, Nov. 1860, from the Canadian Inst ; Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., Nov. 1860, from the Academy ; Jour, of Education, Nos. 10 & 11, Montreal, 1860, from Capt. Huguet-Latour. Dr. E. R. Morerod, of Silver Top, Term., was elected a Cor- responding Member. January 7, 1861. Vice-President Engelmann in the chair. Thirteen members present. Letters were read from I. A. Lapham, Milwaukie, Wis., Dec. 17, 1860, acknowledging receipt of Transactions; Smith- son. Inst. Washington, D. C., Dec. 8, 1860, transmitting pub- lications; E. R. Morerod, M.D., Silver Top, Tenn., acknowl- edging receipt of notice of his election as a Corresponding Member. The following letter was read from Lieut. G. K. Warren, dated West Point, Dec. 19, 1860 : Dear Sir: In looking carefully over the table given by Dr. Engelmann, p. 666, Vol. I., No. 4, calculated from Nicollet’s data, I see one rather important error, and that is in taking the low water elevation of the Mis- sissippi at New Orleans at 10 feet above the Gulf. This is the level of the pavement in front of the Cathedral. A note in Mr. Nicollet’s table, taken from Albert Stein, gives this low water elevation 5-10ths of a foot, and consequently a slope of only about 5-1000ths of a foot thence to the mouth ; and not 9-lOths, as in Dr. Engelmann’s table. This very slight fall in so long a distance could scarcely be credited were it not a well established fact. Respectfully, your ob’t serv’t, G. K. Warren, Lieut. Top. Eng’rs. The following publications were received : Beobacht. u. Betracht. iiber Scotophis Lindheimeri, S. Alleghaniensis und andere Schlangen von Dr. Benno Matthes, Dresden, from the Author ; Smithsonian Report for 1859, from the Smithson. Inst.; Catalogue of Le- - ^optera of North America, prepared for the Smithson. Instit. by John Morris, Washington, I860,— Catalogue of Diptera of North America, epared for Smithson. Inst, by R. Osten-Sacken, Washington, 1860, latalogue of Publications of Societies (Foreign Works) in the Library of the Smithson. Inst. Washington, 1859,— Instructions in reference to pidopte G. Mor 6 of Nests and Eggs of North American Birds, — Directions for Collecting and Preserving Specimens in Natural History, from t he Smithson, Inst.; Acad. Roy. Sci. a Amsterdam, Verlsagen en Med. Afd. Naturk. Dl. X. Letter k*. Dl. V., I860,— Catalogus Dl. I. St. 2,— Jaarboek, 1859, from the Royal Academy ; Erster Bericht des Offenbacher Vereins fur Naturk. 1860, from the Society ; Ergebnisse Meteorol. Beob. — Siernschuppen und Feuerkugeln von Dr. Rudolph Wolf — Jahresbericht iiber die Konigliche Blinden-An- stalt zu Dresden, 1859, — Nachrichten von dem Taubstummen-Inst. zu MISSOURI M C- - '■ . 7 8 9 10 Missouri BOTAN ICAL copyright reserved garden XSj tttrJ Cor .4* fc ^& Olive Sts , St. Louis. Missouri -.Botanic George Esgeemai 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Missouri BOTAN ICAL cm copyright reserved card e n © cm Missouri Botanical' (Sard's# $&crc£ Esgel'-t;, :.-;. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Missouri Botanical cm copyright reserved card e n mM&&mssam 9 r.4 fc ^& Olive Sts., St. Louis. Missouri Bon - George Engel:- cm ■ Xj.* > * ^ ii -^y ' ^ 30 01 23456789 1 ( cm copyright reserved | vgg/ -| Q MlSSOUR BOTAN ICAL Garden Cor .4 th & Olive Sts., St Louis. M'ss'iura E'O GEORGE Eh- . „ . Botanical cm copyright reserved garden Missour Botan ICA Card e r copyright reserved cm k ?.r*X«.r t - S/* /z. 01 23456789 10 Missouri Botanical cm copyright reserved garden AjporaiBSMEr & eitss Cor . 4** & Olive Sts., S( .Louis. Cor .4^ & Olive Sts., St. Louis. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Missouri BOTAN ICAL cm copyright reserved garden