20 ECONOMIC BOTANY OF ALABAMA 



17. Ueber das ^'orkomme^ des Balsams von Liquidambar Styraciflua 

 L. — Pharm. Rundsch. 13:57-58. March, 1895. (Abstracted in Just's Bot. 

 Jahresb. 23 [1895]=:387. 1898.) 



18. The timber pines of the southern United States. (With an intro- 

 duction by B. E. Fernow, ana a discussion of the structure of their wood 

 by Filbert Roth.)— U. S. Dept. Agric, Div. Forestry, Bull. 13. Quarto, 

 160 pp., 18 figs., 21 plates. 1895. (Revised the following year, with same 

 iUustrations, and additional notes on Pxnus hetcrophylla and P. scrotina by 

 Dr. Roth, making 176 pages in all.) (First edition reviewed in Am. Jour. 

 Pharm. 68:689-670. Dec. 1896; and abstracted in Just's Bot. Jahresb. 

 24[1896]':326. 480, 489-490. 1899; and in Bot. Centralblatt 70:288; and sec- 

 ond noticed in Just 26';124, and Exp. Sta. Record 8:602-603. 1897.) 



19. Notes on some undescribed and little known plants of the Alabama 

 flora.— Bull. Torrev Bot. Club 24:19-28, pi. 289-291. Jan. 1897. (Abstract 

 in Just's Bot. Jahresb. 25-:209. 1900.) 



(Contains the original description of Vacciuiiiin sta)nincuiii iiiclaiwcar- 

 piiiii [p. 25], among other things.) 



20. Report on the forests of Sand Mountain. — The Forester 4:211-215. 

 Oct. 1898. 



21. Notes on some new and little known plants of the Alabama flora. 

 —Bull. Torrev Bot. Club, 26:118-121. March, 1899. (Abstract in Just's 

 Bot. Jahresb. 27^:374. . ) . . 



(Contains the original description of Pninits Alabanioisis, among other 

 things.) 



22. Plant Life of Alabama. — Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herbarium, vol. 6. 

 921 pp., 13 plates (colored regional map and 12 line-drawings of new or rare 

 plants). July 31, 1901. Also issued by the Geological Survey of Alabama, 

 with the addition of a biographical sketch of the author (by Dr. E. A. 

 Smith), and portraits of him and Judge T. M. Peters, in October, 1901. 

 (Reviewed in Pharmaceutical Review [formerly Pharmaceutische Rund- 

 schaul 20:85-86. Feb. 1902.) 



23. Notes on the red cedar. — U. S. Dept. Agric, Div. Forestrv, Bull. 

 13. 37. pp.. 13 figs., 3 plates. 1901. 



Nellis, J. C. 



Lumber used in the manufacture of wooden products. — U. S. Dept. 

 Agric, Bull. 605. 18 pp. 1918. 



Palmer, E. J. 



Is Quercus Arkansana a hvbrid? — Jour. Arnold Arboretum, 6:195-200. 

 1925. 



(Answers the question in the negative, and mentions the occurrence 

 of this species in Pike County, Ala.) 



Pinchot, Gifford, & Ashe, W. W. 



Timber trees and forests of North Carolina. — N. C. Geol. Surv., Bull. 

 6. 227 pp., 23 plates, and manv small distribution maps in text. "1897"' 

 [18981. 



(One of the best of the state tree catalogues.) 



Pollard, C. L. 



A visit to the home of Neviusia.— Plant World 3:136-137. 1900. 



Porcher, F, P. 



Resources of the southern fields and forests. — Ed. 1, xxv, 601 pp. 

 Ed. 2. XV. 733 pp. Charleston, S. C. 1863 and 1869. 



(Contains valuable notes on medicinal and other useful plants.) 



Power, F. B., & Chesnut, V. K. 



Ilex vomitoria as a native source of caffeine. — Tour. .\m. Chemical 

 Soc. 41 :1307-1312. Aug. 1919. 



