Botany — Continued. 



Hitchcock, A. S., The opening of the buds of some woody plants 



(with 4 plates). 6:5 $0.50 

 Studies of subterranean organs. I. Compositae of the vicin- 

 ity of Manhattan, Kansas. PI. I. 9:1. .25 



Studies of subterranean organs. II. Some dicotyledonous 



herbaceous plants of Manhattan, Kansas. 10 : 4 " 



Letterman, G. W. (Loco weed). 4:4 2.00 



(Planera and Oleditschia) . 4:3 " 



(Woods from Arkansas). 4:3 " 



Mackenzie, K. K. and B. F. Bush. The Lespedezas of Missouri. 



Pis. I-IV. 12:2 .50 



New plants from Missouri. Pis. XII-XVII. 12:7 tl 



Mallinckrodt (Green-stained oak wood). 3:1 2.00 



Norton, J. B. S. (Effects on trees of tornado of May, 1896) 



7:20 .50 



(Flora of Southwestern United States). 10:11 " 



Notes on some plants of the Southwestern United States.* 



Pis. V-VIII. 12:4 



■ Sclerotinia fructigena. Pis. XVIII-XXf. 12:8 .45 



A study of the Kansas Ustilagineae, especially with regard 



to their germination. Pis. XXV-XXIX. 7 : 10 .50 



(Supposed Crataegus hybrids). 9:9 .25 



Pammel, L. H. Anatomical characters of the seeds of Legu- 



minosae, chiefly genera of Gray's Manual. Pis. VII- 

 XXXV. 9 : 6 1.25 



(Ecological notes on Colorado plants). 7 : 20 .50 



The histology of the caryposis and endosperm of some 



grasses. Pis. XVII-XIX. 8:11 " 

 On the pollination of Phlomis tuberosa, L., and the perfora- 

 tion of flowers. Pis. VI-VII. 5 : 1-2 4.00 



On the seed -coats of the genus Euphorbia. Pis. XII-XIV. 



5:3-4 " 



Sclerotinia Libertiana, Fuckel, with a bibliography of fungus 



root diseases. Pis. I-II. 6:9 .75 



Pope, C. A. (Aecidiura deformation of the elder). 1:4 2.00 



Riley, C. V. New use for the American Agave). 3:2 " 



(Peronospora viticola) . 3:4 " 



(Physianthus an inseect trap). 3:2 '« 



(Vilfa following locust devastation). 3:3 '• 



Roberts, H. F. (Structure and physiology of plant cell). 10:11 .50. 

 Robertson, C. Flowers and insects. Contributions to an ac- 

 count of the ecological relations of the entomophilous 



flora and the anthomophilous insect fauna of the neigh- 

 borhood of Carlinville, Illinois. 7 : 6 .25 

 Flowers and insects. — Asclepiadaceae to Scrophulari- 



aceae. 5 : 3-4 4.00 



Flowers and insects. — Labiatae. 6:4 .50 



Flowers and insects. — Rosaceae and Compositae. 6: 14 



Flowers and insects. — Umbilliferae. 5:3-t 4.00 



