90 
Free, Montague > 
—— Why not have a greater Maa: of hardy plants? Florists’ 
Exchange 41:750-751. Mar. 2 
—— Principles of plant culture. Ga Torreya 16: 186. 
Aug. 
Alpine plants. Florists’ Exchange 42: 445, 473. Aug. 
20th 42-527. sept. 2d; 42-630; 640. Sept, moth; 
—— TheAlpine house. Florists’s Exchange. 42:1021. Nov. 
4th. 
Gager, C. Stuart 
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Jour. Nat. Inst. Social 
Sciences 1: 99-100. January. 
Colonel Woodward and the Garden. Bot. Gard. Record 
5: 12-15. January. 
— Fifth Annual Report of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 
1915. Bot. Gard. Record 5: 21-51. April. 
The Japanese Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaflets 
TII>. May 3. 
Remarks (at the laying of the cornerstone of the labora- 
tory building). Bot. Gard. Record 5: 114-116. July. 
Present status of the problem of the effect of radium rays 
on plant life. Mem. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 6: 153-160. Aug. 31. 
Fundamentals of Botany pp. 1—xix-+ 640, figs. 435. 
Philadelphia, P. Blakiston’s Son & Co. September. 
—— A laboratory guide for general botany pp. 1 — viii + 191. 
Philadelphia, P. Blakiston’s Son & Co. Nov. 17. - 
Gundersen, Alfred 
—— Ten common trees of Brooklyn. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. 
Leaflets TV®. April 19. 
The wild flower garden in May. Jbid. IV*. April 26. 
— Some early botanists. I/bid. IV**. October 18. 
Olive, Edgar W 
Doctorates in botany conferred by America universities in 
1915. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Record 5: 15-19. January. 
: Report of the curator of public instruction. Brooklyn 
Bot. Gard. Record. 5: 57-68. April. 
Report of a trip to study and collect rusts and other para- 
sitic fungi of Porto Rico. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Record 5: 
117-122. July. 
