390 THE BOTANISTS OF PHILADELPHIA. 



From 1892 to 1805 he was a reporter for the Progress of 

 Pharmacy, of the American Pharmaceutical Association, 

 and for a while was the editor of the Alumni Journal, of the 

 College of Pharmacy of the City of New York. He w^as Sec- 

 retary of the Botanical Society of Pennsylvania, during 1897 

 and 1898, and has been acting editor of the Americayi Journal 

 of Pharmacy since the death of Professor Henry Trimble. 



Bibliography. 



1. "Tannin of Quercus alba." — American .Journal of Pharmacy^ 

 1890, 236. 



2. "Fungi.'- — American Journal of Pharmacy , 1894, 424. 



3. " A Microscopical and Chemical Examination of Cloves." — Amer- 

 ican Journal of Pharmacy, 1894, 479. 



4. "The World's Columbian Exposition from a Botanical Stand- 

 point." — American Journal of Pharviacy, 1894, 80. 



5. " The Materia Medica of Ceylon." — American Journal of Pharmacy, 

 1894, 530. 



6. "The Violet Perfume." — American Journal of Pharmacy, 1895. 



7. "Chinquapin (Castanea pumila, Mill)." — American Journal of 

 Pharmacy, 1895, 453. 



8. "The Pharmacist and the Microscope." — American Journal of 

 Pharmacy, 1897, 398. 



9. "Botanical Study of Viola tricolor." — Inaugural Dissertation, 

 Ilarburg, 1897. 



10. "Examination of Powdered Drugs." — American Journal of 

 Pharmacy, 1897, 523. 



11. " Asarum Canadense." — American Journal of Pharmacy, 1898, 144. 



12. " Note on Saffron." — American Journal of I^harmacy, 1898, 386, 



13. "Qualitative Examination of Powdered Vegetable Drugs." — 

 American Journal of Pharmacy, 1898, 506, 558, 607. 



14. "The Study of Starch Grains and its Application." — American 

 Journal of Pharmacy, 1899, 174. 



15. "Origin and Detection of Mucilage in Plants." — American Journal 

 of Pharmacy, 1899, 267, 285. 



16. "On the Morphology of the Genus Viola." — Bulletin Torrey 

 Botanical Club, XXVI : 174. 



