94 CINCHONA BARKS. 
(to be had in London at Lovell, Reeves & Co., Henrietta street, 
Covent Garden). 
10. Howard (J. E.) Qutnology of the East Indian Plantations. 
London, one part, 1869; folio; X and 43 pages, with three 
plates, representing the microscopical structure of cultivated 
Cinchona barks. 
Parts Il and III, 1876; folio; XIV and 74 pages, with two (not 
very successful) views of Indian Cinchona plantations, and beau- 
tiful figures of Calisaya Ledgeriana, Cinchona officinalis, C. 
pitayensis Wedd. (C. Triane Karst.), and others. Price of the 
three parts 84 marks (about 21 dollars). Compare furthermore 
page 63, note 1, and page 87, note 1. 
11. Karsten (Hermann). Die medicinischen Chinarinden New 
Granadas. Berlin, 1858, 62 pages, 8vo, and two plates, repre- 
senting the microscopic structure of transverse sections of Cin- 
chona Calisaya, C. lancifolia, C. Uritusinga, Cascarilla (Laden- 
bergia) oblongifolia, Cascarilla macrocarpa and others, An 
English translation, prepared under the supervision of Mr. 
Markham, has been published by the India Office, under the 
title of Motes on the Medicinal Cinchona Barks of New Granada, 
by H. Karsten, 1861. The plates have not been reproduced, 
12. Karsten (Hermann), ore Columbie terrarumgque adjacen- 
tium specimina selecta, Berlin, 1858; large folio. The first four 
parts of this magnificent work give colored figures of the follow- 
ing Cinchonas and allied species, which are likewise designated 
by the author as Cinchonas: Cinchona barbacoénsis, C. bogo- 
tensis, C. cordifolia, C., corymbosa, C. Henleana, C. lancifolia, 
C. macrocarpa, C. macrophylla, C. Moritziana, C. pedunculata, 
C. prismatostylis, C. Trianz, C. tucujensis, C. undata, 
13. King (George). 4 Manual of Cinchona cultivation in India. 
Calcutta, 1876, 80 pages; small folio. Second edition, 1880, 
105 pages (out of print). 
14. Kuntze (Otto). Gixchona. Arten, Lybriden und Cultur der 
Chininbadume. A monographic study based upon personal ob- 
servations in the plantations of Java and the Himalaya. Leipsic, 
1878, 124 pages, with 3 plates. Compare the review in the 
Archiv. der Pharm. 213 (1878) pp. 473-480. 
15. Lambert (Aylmer Bourke). 4 description of the genus Cin- 
chona, comprehending the various species of vegetables from which 
Peruvian and other barks of a similar quality are taken. London, 
1797, 4to, 54 pages and 13 plates, in which are figured a speci- 
men of Cinchona officinalis sent by Condamine, in 1 740, to Lon- 
don, C. pubescens, derived from a plant of Jussieu (see pages 
