o02 THE BOTANISTS OF PHILADELPHIA. 



22. ''March in the Pines." VII : 142. 



23. "A New Jersey Garden in Spring." VII : 212. 



24. " Early June in the Pines," VII : 243. 



2."). " Wayside Plants in the Pines," VII : 302. 



26. " November in a New Jersey Garden," VII : 458. 



27. " Late Autumn in the Pines." VII : 4^2. 



28. ''Christmas in the Pines." VIII : 3. 



29. ' Troublesome Grasses in Southern New Jersey," VIII : 103. 



30. li In the Pines," VIII : 203. 



31. "Early Summer in the Pines," VIII : 262. 



32. " The Pines in a Dry Summer." VIII : 362. 



33. " Autumn Color in the Pines," VIII : 4.32. 



34. "The Heaths among the Pines in Early Winter," VIII : 492. 



35. "The Pines in August," IX : 332. 



36. "Early Autumn in the Pines," IX : 412. 



37. " Weeds in Southern New Jersey," X : 313. 

 '38. "Cruelty of Asclepias," X : 341. 



39. " Autumn Flowers in the Pines," X: 411. 



40. "Autumn Fruits in the Pines," X : 471. 



ABRAHAM PASCAL GARBER. 



Abraham Pascal Garber * was born at Columbia, Penn- 

 sylvania, in 18SS. He took the degree of A. B. at Lafayette 

 ('Urge where he acquired a taste for botany, and later 

 graduated from the Medical School of the University of 

 Pennsylvania, Dr. Garber practiced medicine for a short 

 time in Pittsburg, but was obliged to seek a milder climate 

 on account of ill-health. He passed several winters in 

 Southern Florida, where he found many new species of 

 plants, as Eugenia Garberi, Liatris Garberi, Habenaria Garberi, 

 which perpetuate his memory. He also discovered that 

 a number of West Indian trees were present in Florida. 

 One- plant especially, Xanthoxylum emarginatum, was dis- 



* SAUUKNT. Silva of 3>'<>rth America, I : M. 



