78 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
William Woodward Ohlweiler, B.S., A.M., General Manager 
to the Garden. 
B.S., Connecticut Agricultural College; A.M., Washing- 
ton University; Missouri Botanical Garden, 1907-; 
Teaching Fellow, Washington University, 1912-13. 
John Noyes, 8.B., Landscape Designer to the Garden. 
S.B., Massachusetts Agricultural College; Instructor in 
Landscape Gardening, Massachusetts Agricultural Col- 
lege, 1909-11; with Warren H. Manning, Boston, 1911- 
14; Missouri Botanical Garden, 1914- 
Alexander Lurie, B.S., Horticulturist to the Garden. 
B.S., Cornell University. Charge of ornamentals and 
greenhouses, Greening Bros. Nurseries, Monroe, Mich., 
1913-14; Instructor in Floriculture, in charge of green- 
houses and grounds, University of Maine, 1914-16; Mis- 
souri Botanical Garden, 1916- 
George Harry Pring, Orchids and other Exotics. 
oyal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 1899-1906; Missouri 
Botanical Garden, 1906- 
Max Schiller, Palms, Ferns, and Floral Displays. ; 
Palmgarten, Frankfurt am Main, 1893-1903; Missouri 
Botanical Garden, 1903- 
Julius Erdman, Rose, Medicinal, and Economic Gardens. 
Hoehere Gartenbau Lehranstalt, Koestritz, Germany, 
1897; Department of Horticulture, Iowa State College, 
1903-08 ; Florist, Colorado State College, 1909-14; Mis- 
souri Botanical Garden, 1914- 
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION 
First Year 
1. GeneraL Botany. (At Washington University.) 
Laboratory course with lectures and quizzes dealing with the 
form and structure of plants, with special reference to their 
life processes. A brief study will be made of living plants 
in relation to their environment. October to July. 
(Jennison ) 
2. GENERAL Froricunrurs. The general principles of 
greenhouse management. Methods of propagation by seeds, 
cuttings, division, layering, grafting, ete., under glass and 
outdoors. Cultural methods for successful growing of out- 
door roses, bulbs, tubers, decorative and bedding plants, ete. 
October to April. (Lurie) 
_ 3. ComMeErcian Froricutrure. Culture of roses, carna- 
tions, chrysanthemums, violets, orchids, sweet peas, bulbs, 
