APPENDIX D. 261 
The work of Vines and that of Strasburger and others both contain 
outlines of systematic botany. 
‘Floras, Ete. 
Gray, Field, Forest, and Garden Botany. New edition by L. H. 
Bailey. American Book Co., 1894. 
Gray, Manual of Botany. Sixth edition, revised. American Book 
Co. 
Gray, Synoptical Flora of North America. American Book Co. 
Chapman, Flora of the Southern United States. American Book 
Co. 
Coulter, Manual of the Botany of the Rocky Mountain Region. 
American Book Co. 
Miller and Whiting, Wild Flowers of the Noriheastern States. G. P. 
Putnam’s Sons, 1895. (Fully illustrated.) 
Sargent, The Silva of North America** (in 12 vols., of which 8 
have appeared ; very fully illustrated). Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 
Boston. 
Cryptogamic Botany. 
Eaton, Ferns of North America.** Cassino, Boston, 1879. 
Underwood, Our Native Ferns and their Allies. Henry Holt & Co., 
New York. 
Macdonald, Microscopical Examination of Drinking Water. Lind- 
say and Blakiston, Philadelphia, 1875. 
De Bary, Comparative Morphology and Biology of the Fungi, Myce- 
tozoa, and Bacteria.** Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1887. 
Bennett and Murray, Handbook of Cryptogamic Botany. Longmans, 
Green & Co., London and New York, 1889. 
Goebel, Outlines of Classification, etc.** (See above.} 
Warming and Potter, Handbook, etc.** (See above.) 
The number of monographs on special topics in cryptogamic 
botany is too great to admit, in an elementary book, of even the 
mere mention of the most important titles. In the list above given, 
the works of Bennett and Murray and of Goebel are the only general 
ones, and in the former mention is made of a good many of the best 
special treatises on cryptogamic botany. 
