> wy (Pee eae ae 
AUTHOR CATALOGUE 
orders. With an appendix, containing an enumeration of the 
genera according to the Linnzean system, and an essay on the 
geographical distribution of the species. Vol. i; ii, pp. 1-216 
(in 1 vol.). London, etc. 1837-[50]. 8°. 
i. Ranunculacee-Leguminose. 1837. pp. [2], x, [4], 351.— ii. 
ceee-Araliacee. [1850.] pp. 1-216. 
Vol. ii has no title-page. 
No more published. 
Some remarks on the species of the genus Citrus, 
which are cultivated in Jamaica. [London. 1830.] 1. 8°. 
Botanical miscellany, 1830, i, 295-304. 
McFarland, John Horace. The beauty of trees in winter. 
[New York. 1903.] 8°. Plates. 
Booklovers’ magazine, 1903, i, 243-257. 
Rosa- 
Getting acquainted with the trees. New York. 
1904. 8°. pp. xii, 241. Illustr. 
How to form a Beautiful America club. [Philadel- 
phia. 1904.) sm.8°. pp.8. (Beautiful America leaflet, 1.) 
[ ] How to plant the home grounds. [Philadelphia. 
1904.) 8°. pp.15. Illustr. (Beautiful America leaflet, 2.) 
Macfarlane, John Muirhead. Charles Darwin, three appre- 
ciations. Philadelphia. 1909. 8°. pp. 64. 
Contents:— Darwin in relation to his own and the pre-Darwinian 
period. — Lessons from the life and writings of Charles Darwin.— The 
legacy left us by Darwin and his collaborators. 
McGill, Anthony. Notes on the analysis of coffee. 
and communicated by Dr. Macfarlane. [Montreal. 
ARSe. 
Read 
1887.] 
Proceedings and transactions of the Royal society of Canada, 1887, sect. 
iii, pp. 23-31. 
Macgillivray, John. Narrative of the voyage of H. M. 8. 
Rattlesnake, commanded by Owen Stanley, 1846-1850, in- 
cluding discoveries and surveys in New Guinea, the Louisiade 
Archipelago, ete. To which is added the account of E. B. 
Kennedy’s expedition for the exploration of the Cape York 
peninsula. 2 vol. London. 1852. 8°.  Illustr. 
i. pp. x, [2], 402.— ii. pp. iv, [2], 395. 
Macgillivray, William. A systematic arrangement of Brit- 
ish plants. See WiTHERING, William (1741-1799). 
(McGowan, A. T.] Tea planting in the outer Himalayah. 
London. 1861. 8°. pp. [2], 73. Front. 
An illustrated title-page reads: ‘* 1860." 
Macgowan, Daniel J. Uses of the Stillingia sebifera or 
tallow tree, with a notice of the pe-la or insect-wax of China. 
{Caleutta. 1849-50.) 8°. 
Journal of the Agricullural and horticultural society of India, 1849-50, 
vii, 164-172. 
MacGregor, J. L. L. The organization and valuation of 
forests, on the continental system, in theory and practice. 
London, efc. 1883. 8°. 2 tables, and other illustr. 
“Errata,"’ after p. vi. 
McGrew, James. Cultivation of the osage orange for hedges. 
(Washington. 1855.] 8°. 
Report of the Commissioner of patents. Agriculture, 1854, pp. 418-420. 
Machado, Carlos Maria Gomes. Catalogo methodico das 
plantas observadas em Portugal. [Lisboa. 1870.] 8°. 
Jornal de sciencias mathematicas, physicas e naturaes, 1870, ii, 19-37, 
101-119. 
A part of the work only. 
Machowski, Jézef. Przystosowanie sie zwierzat i roslin do 
warunkéw bytu. Szkic popularny. [Adaptation of animals 
and plants to conditions of existence. W Rzeszowie. 1905.] 
1. 8°. pp. 27. (Sprawozdanie dyrekeyi C. K. I. Wyzszego 
gimn., pp. 1-27.) 
(McIntire, A. L.} Manual of forestry prepared for use in the 
Simla district. Lahore. 1895. f°. pp. [6], 26. 
M’Intosh, Charles. The book of the garden. 2 vol. Edin- 
burgh, etc. 1853-55. 8°. 34 [83] plates and plans, and 
other illustr. 
i. Structural. 
iv, 867. 
1853. pp. x, 776.—ii. Cultural. 1855. pp. viii, 
The larch disease and the present condition of the 
larch plantations in Great Britain. Edinburgh, etc. 1860. 
8°. pp. [2], 136. 
449 
McIntyre, A. G. The forest products laboratories. Ottawa. 
1914. pp. 8. (in Canapa — Department of the interior — 
Forestry branch. Circular, 8.) 
Mclvor, William Graham. Notes on the propagation and 
cultivation of the medicinal cinchonas or Peruvian bark 
trees. Madras. 1863. 8°. pp. 21. 6 plates and plans. 
—— The Madras. 1867. 8°. pp. [2], ii, 33. 
9 plates. 
same. 
— Report on the cultivation of chinchonas in southern 
India. (Jn Markuam, Sir C. R. Travels in Peru and 
India, 1862, pp. 566-570.) 
MacKay, Alexander Howard. Botanical bibliography of 
Canada, 1901-1905. [Ottawa?] 1902-06. 8°. 
“From the Transactions of the Royal sociely of Canada,” 
ser., Vili—-Xi. 
Fungi of Nova Scotia; 
1904. 8°. 
“From Proceedings and transactions of the | 
sctence,”’ a xi, 122-143. 
Labrador plants collected by W. H. Prest on the 
Labr: ador coast north of Hamilton inlet, 1901. (In his 
Phenological observations in Nova Scotia and Canada, 1902.) 
— Nature study 
historical sketch. 
study, 21.) 
“Reprinted from the Ollawa naturalist,” 
1903-07, 2d 
a provisional list. Halifax. 
fova Scotian instilute of 
in the schools of Nova Scotia; a 
[Ottawa. 1905.] 8°. pp. [4]. (Nature 
1905, xviii, 209-212. 
Phenological observations, Canada, 1899. Halifax. 
1900. 8°. Table. 
“From the Transactions of the Neva Scotian institule of science,”" 
1900, x, 303-318. 
— Phenological observations of the botanical club of 
Canada, 1900.— Abstract of phenological observations on 
the flowering of ten plants in Nova Scotia, 1900; with Re- 
marks on their phenochrons. [Halifax. 1902.] 8°. Diagrs. 
“From the Transactions of the Nova Scolian institute of science,”’ 1900-01, 
x, 379-398. 
Phenological observations in Canada. 
1902.] 8°. 
“Reprinted from the Canadian record of science,” 
1899- 
{[Montreal. 
1899, viii, 71-84. 
Phenological observations in Nova Scotia and Can- 
ada, 1901. [With “ Early intervale flora of eastern Nova 
Seotia, by C. B. Robinson.’’— Labrador plants collected by 
W. H. Prest on the Labrador coast north of Hamilton inlet, 
1901. Halifax. 1902.) 8°. Table. 
“From the Transactions of the Nova Scolian institute of science,” 
x, 486-508. 
Mackay, George Grant. On plantations on the estate of 
Glengloy, Inverness-shire. [Edinburgh, efc. 1880.] 8°. 
Transactions of the Highland and agricultural sociely of Scotland, 1880, 
xii, 193-196. 
1901-02, 
Mackay, George Leslie. From far Formosa; the island, its 
people and missions. Edited by J. A. Macdonald. Edin- 
burgh, efc. 1896. 8°. Illustr. 
“Trees, plants, and flowers,”’ pp. 55-75. 
Mackay, James Townsend. A catalogue of the plants found 
in Ireland, with descriptions of some of the rarer sorts. Pt. i. 
Dublin. 1825. 4°. pp. 98. 
“Books referred to,”’ p. 6. 
Flora hibernica, comprising the flowering plants, 
ferns, characese, musci, hepatic, lichenes and alge of Ire- 
land, arranged according to the natural system, with a 
synopsis of the genera according to the Linnean system. 
Dublin. 1836. 8°. pp. xxxiv, [4], : 354, 279. 
McKenney, Randolph Evans Bender. Notes on plant 
distribution in southern California. Cassel. 1901. 8°. 
pp. 11. Map and other illustr. 
““Separat-abdruck aus Bolan. centralblalt. Bethefl,” 1901, x, 166-178. 
Mackensen, Bernard. The trees and shrubs of San Antonio 
and vicinity; a handbook of the woody plants growing natu- 
rally in and about San Antonio, Texas. San Antonio. 
1909. sm. 8°. pp. 51. Plates. 
(Mackenzie, A.] Papers regarding 
Bengal. See Inp1A — BENGAL. 
the tea industry in 
