SO a ee ——E— Eee 
, 7 
AUTHOR CATALOGUE 
Kurzer bericht von der chinesischen 
{Ekeberg, Carl Gustaf.| 
Reise nach Ostindien 
landwirthschaft. (Jn OssBeck, Peter. 
und China, 1765, pp. 515-552.) 
Eléments de botanique; classification et usages des plantes. 
Paris. 1868. sm. 8°. Illustr. 
Elenchus plantarum hor. botanici J. Dinegro. See [Vrvran1, 
Domenico]. 
Elenchus plantarum, quae in Horto amstelaedamensi colun- 
tur. See [VRoLiK, Gerard]. 
Elenchus plantarum, quae in Horto lugduno-batavo colun- 
tur. See [Bruemans, 8. J.]. 
Elenchus plantarum, quae in Horto regio botanico matritensi 
colebantur anno 1815. See [Lacasca, Mariano]. 
Elenco delle piante spontanee fino ad ora osservate nel terri- 
torio di Vicenza. See [Marzari Pencati, Giuseppe, Count]. 
Elenkin, Aleksandr Aleksandrovitch. O6s0pp GOoTanKo- 
reorpadiyueckoit umrepatypst m0 taoph Pocein 3a 1905 roy. 
See FeprcHEnko, B. A., and ELENKIN, A. A. 
Elfstrand, Marten. Salicologiska bidrag. [Stockholm. 1892.] 
8°. pp. [21]. 
“Ofversigt af Kongl. velenskaps—akademiens férhandlingar, 1892, n:0 8." 
Elfving, Fredrik. Anteckningar om vegetationen kring 
floden Svir. [Helsingfors. 1878.] 8°. 
Meddelanden af Socielas pro fauna et flora fennica, 1878, ii, 113-170. 
Elgenstierna, Nicol Willem. Genera plantarum guineen- 
sium revisa et aucta. See Arzetius, Adam, and HLGEn- 
sTreRNA, N. W 
Elgood, George S., and Jekyll, Gertrude. Some English 
gardens; after drawings by G. 8. Elgood, with notes by Ger- 
trude Jekyll. London, etc. 1904. f°. Colored plates. 
Elie, ——, and Léveque, Edouard. La flore du Touquet et 
de Paris-Plage. Paris-Plage. 1910. 16°. Colored plates, 
Elink Schuurman, Gerard A. De koffiecultuur in Brazilié; 
eenige aanteekeningen en beschouwingen. Amsterdam. 
1901. 8°. pp.67. Tables, map, and other illustr. 
“Bijvoegsel van de Indische mercuur, 1901, no. 8.” 
Ellacombe, Henry Nicholson. The common English names 
of plants. Bath. [1873.] 8°. pp. 27. 
Reprinted from Proceedings of the Natural hislory club of Bath, 1873, ii, 
13-37. 
The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare. Hxe- 
ter. [1878.] 8°. 
“The following notes were published in the Garden from March to 
Sept. 1877."’— Preface. 
2ded. London. 1884. 
The same. 
Thesame. Newed. London, etc. 
sm. 8°. 
{1896.] 8°. Il- 
lustr. 
Elliot, George Francis Scott. Chile; its history and develop- 
ment, natural features, products, commerce and present 
conditions. With an introduction by Martin Hume. Lon- 
don. 1907. 8°. Illustr. 
“Chilian timber,’ ‘pp. 343-344; “ Bibliography,’’ pp. 351-357. 
Flora of Dumfriesshire and Dumfries district. Pt. i. 
To the end of Crucifere. Assisted by J. McAndrew, J. T. 
Johnstone, and other botanists. London. [1891.] 8°. 
pp. 33. 
The flora of Dumfriesshire, including part of the 
stewartry of Kirkcudbright. Dumfries. 1896. 8°. Map 
in pocket. 
“List of authorities and abbreviations employed,” pp. xxxvii-xl. 
The life of Philibert Commerson. See Ortver, 8. P. 
and Fingland, Mrs. Note on raspberry roots. 
[Glasgow.] 1898. 8°. 
“From the Transaclions of the Natural history society of Glasgow,” 
1897-98, new ser., v, 205-207. 
and others, editors. Fauna, flora & geology of the 
Clyde area. Edited by G. F. S. Elliot, Malcolm Laurie and 
J.B. Murdoch. Glasgow. 1901. 8°. Map and other il- 
lustr. (British association for the advancement of science. 
Handbook on the natural history of Glasgow & the west of 
Scotland.) 
227 
Elliot, Robert Henry. Gold, sport, and coffee planting in 
Mysore; with chapters on coffee planting in Coorg, the My- 
sore representative assembly, the Indian congress, caste, and 
the Indian silver question. Being the 38 years’ experiences 
of a Mysore planter. Westminster. 1894. sm. 8°. Map. 
Elliot, Sir Walter. Floraandhrica. A vernacular and botani- 
cal list of plants commonly met with in the Telugu dis- 
tricts of the Northern Cirears. Pt. i. Madras. 1859. 8°. 
pp. 194. 
Elliot, William. The Washington guide. Washington. 
1837. sm. 12°. pp. xii, 310. Plates, plans and map. 
“Botany,” pp. 295-310. 
Elliott, F. W. The existing trees and shrubs of Epping 
forest. Abridged and revised. [Buckhurst Hill, Pssex. 
1899.] 8°. 
Esser naturalist, 1898, x, 377-387. 
Elliott, Franklin Reuben. Elliott’s fruit book; or, The 
American fruit-grower’s guide in orchard and garden, being 
a compend of the history, modes of propagation, culture, &c., 
of fruit trees and shrubs, with descriptions of nearly all the 
varieties of fruits cultivated in this country, etc. New York. 
1855. sm.12°. pp.503+. LIllustr. 
“Books quoted,” pp. 11-14. 
The western fruit book; or, American fruit-grower’s 
guide for the orchard and fruit-garden. 4th ed., revised, en- 
larged, and improved. New York. 1859. sm. 12°. pp. 
528. Illustr. 
“Books quoted,”’ pp. ix—xi. 
Popular deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs 
for planting in parks, gardens, cemeteries, ete. New York. 
1868. 12°. pp. 125. Illustr. 
Elliott, Stephen. A sketch of the botany of South-Carolina 
and Georgia. 2 vol. Charleston, 8.C. 1821-24 [cop. 
1816]. 8°. 12 plates. 
i. 1821. pp.[2],606. Pl.1-6.—ii. 1824. pp. viii,743. PI. 7-12. 
For review, see RAFINESQUE, C.S. Reviews. 
Ellis, Don Carlos. A working erosion model for schools. 
Washington. 1912. 8°. pp.11. Illustr. (United States— 
Department of agriculture — Office of experiment stations. 
Circular, 117.) 
Ellis, George Edward. Memoir of Jacob Bigelow. 
bridge, [Mass.]. 1880. 8°. Port. 
“Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Massachusells hislorical sociely."" 
Ellis, John. An account of the plants Halesia and Gardenia; 
in a letter to P.C. Webb. [London. 1760.] 4°. 2 plates. 
Philosophical transactions, 1760, li, 929-935. 
A catalogue of such foreign plants, as are worthy 
of being encouraged in our American colonies, for the pur- 
poses of medicine, agriculture, and commerce. [Phila- 
delphia. 1771.) 1.8°. 
Transactions of the American philosophical sociely, held at Philadelphia, 
for promoting useful knowledge, 1771, i, 255-266. 
A copy of a letter to Dr. Linnzeus with the characters 
of that American evergreen-tree, called by the gardiners the 
loblolly-bay, taken from blossoms blown near London, and 
shewing that it is not an Hibiscus, as Mr. Miller calls it 
nor an Hypericum, as Dr. Linnzeus supposes it, but an intire 
new genus, to which Mr. Ellis gives the name of Gordonia. 
{London. 1770.) 8°. Plate. 
Philosophical transactions, 1770, Ix, 518-528. 
The copy of a letter to William Aiton on a new species 
of Illicium Linnzi, or starry aniseed tree, lately discovered 
in west Florida. [{London. 1770.] 8°. Plate. 
Philosophical transactions, 1770, Ix, 524-531. 
A description of the mangostan and the bread-fruit; 
to which are added directions to voyagers for bringing over 
these and other vegetable productions which would be ex- 
tremely beneficial to the inhabitants of the West India 
islands. London. 1775. 4°. pp. 47. 4 plates. 
Directions for bringing over seeds and plants from 
{Philadelphia. 
Cam- 
distant countries, in a state of vegetation. 
(All| Absa . 
Transaclions of the American philosophical sociely, held al Philadelphia, 
for promoting useful knowledge, 1771, i, 266-271. 
