88 
—— Trevena’s Adventures among wild flowers (Review). 
Ibid. 15: 55. March. 
—— Kraemer’s Applied and Economic Botany (Review). 
Ibid. 15: 80-82. April. 
Report of the curator of plants. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. 
Record 4: 47-51. April. 
—— A walk through the Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaf- 
lens arn) “Spit; 
A hundred native perennials for the wild garden. Garden 
Magazine 21: 214-215. May. 
and) Caparn, H. A. Planting a botanic garden. Land- 
scape Architecture. 5: 157-163. July. 
White, Orland E. 
—— The origin and history of some of our more common gar- 
den vegetables. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaflets 3°. pp. 12. 
Figs. 1-5. June 30th. 
= “The crossing of flowers. Ibid. 3%". pp. 12. Figs. 1-8. 
October 13th. 
( 
APPENDIX 2 
PUBLIC: LECTURES, ADDRESSES, 2AND PAPERS 
GIVEN BY MEMBERS OF STAFF DURING 1915 
By the director of the Garden: : 
March 4. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Colonia Club. 
September 8. Present status of the problem of the effects 
of radium rays on plant life. N. Y. Botanical Garden. 
Twentieth Anniversary Exercises, 
October 31. Colonel Woodward and the Brooklyn Garden. 
Memorial meeting, Academy of Music. 
December 7. What the Brooklyn Botanic Gar den is doing for 
children. New York Federation of Women’s Clubs. 
December 15. Effects of electricity and radium rays on plants. 
Rhode Island Horticultural Society, Providence. 
By the curator of plants: 
September 8. A white cedar swamp on Long Island and its 
significance. Twentieth Anniversary Exercises. New 
York Botanical Garden. 
