85 
sa a P. A. The Scandinavian Botanical Gardens. Jour. N. Y. 
ot. Gard. 2: 129. 1. 
Sea A. Forbes. Gardens, Ancient and Modern. London, 
8 
1899. 
Tissandier, Albert. The botanical garden of Buitenzorg, Java. Trans- 
lated from La Nature. Pop. Sci. Mo. 48: 335. 1896. 
Trelease, W. The ee Botanical Garden. Pop. Sci. Mo. 62: 
193. 1903. 
— The Administration of Botanical Gardens. Sci. N. S. 32: 
681. Re 
e American Botanical Gardens. The Missouri Botanical 
eae Plant Wor 9 
Treub, M. A tropical botanical garden. (Trans. from Revue des Deux 
Mondes 97: 162. 1890.) Smithsonian Inst. Ann. Rep. 1890: 389. 
1891. 
Underwood, L. M. The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. Sci. N. 5. 
Io: 1899. 
Vail,A.M. AnOld Physic Gardenin New Amsterdam. Jour. N.Y. 
Bot. Gard. 2: 183. 1901 
Watson, Cambridge Botsaie Gardens. Garden and Forest 9: 
443. 6. 
—7 ee Botanic Garden. Garden and Forest 9: 483. 1896. 
C. STUART GAGER. 
BROOKLYN INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, 
BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN. 
SPRING LECTURES, 1911. 
Lectures will be delivered in the lecture hall of the museum 
building of the Garden, Bronx Park, on Saturday afternoons, 
at 4:00 o'clock, as follows: 
April 29. ‘‘The Preservation of Our Native Plants,” by Dr. 
N. L. Britto 
ay 6. ee is Botany ?” by Dr. C. Stuart Gager. 
May 13. ‘Transforming an Old Swamp,” by Mr. George V. 
May 20. “The Reef-building and Land-forming Seaweeds,” 
by Dr. Marshall A. Howe. 
May 27. ‘The Influence of Soil Acidity on Plant Distribu- 
tion,” by Mr. Frederick V. Coville. 
