294 APPENDIX 



BOOKS FOR GENERAL REFERENCE 



1. Allen: The Story of the Plants. D. Appleton & Company, N.Y. 



35 cents. 



2. Bailey : New Encyclopedia of American Horticulture. The Mac- 



millan Company, N.Y. 1900. 4 vols. $20.00. (By subscription 

 only.) 



3. Bailey: Talks Afield. Houghton, Mifflin & Company, Boston. 



1896. Sfi.oo. 



4. Boyle: The Woodland's Orchids. Macmillan Company. 1901. 



5. Campbell: The Evolution of Plants. Macmillan Company. 1899. 

 $1.00. 



6. Crozier : A Dictionary of Botanical Terms. Henry Holt & Com- 

 pany, N.Y. 1892. 



7. Darwin : The Power of Movement in Plants. D. Appleton & Com- 

 pany. 1886. $2.00. 



8. De Candolle : The Origin of Cultivated Plants. D. Appleton & 

 Company. 1884. $2.00. 



9. Ganong: The Teaching Botanist. Macmillan Company. 1899. 

 $1.10. 



10. Geddes: Chapters in Modern Botany. Charles Scribner's Sons, 

 N.Y. 1893. $1.25. 



11. Gray: Structural Botany. American Book Company, N.Y. 1880. 



f2.00. 



12. Jackson: A Glossary of Botanic Terms. J. B. Lippincott Com- 

 pany, Philadelphia. 1900. $2.00. 



13. Kerner & Oliver: Natural History of Plants. Henry Holt & Com- 

 pany, N.Y. 1896. $15.00. 



14. Sorauer : A Popular Treatise on the Physiology of Plants. 

 Longmans, Green & Company, London and N.Y. 1895. gs. 

 (about $2.50). 



15. Vines: Lectures on the Physiology of Plants. Macmillian Com- 



pany. 1895. $5.00. 



Of the works named above, Nos. 2 and 13 are expensive and not 

 likely to be accessible except in communities where there is a well- 

 stocked public library. Kerner's work is written in a simple, popular 

 style, and so profusely and beautifully illustrated as almost to explain 

 itself without the text. No. 2, as its name implies, treats more partic- 

 ularly of botany in its practical relations to horticulture. No. 14 is a 

 simple, practical treatise, easily understood, and as free from techni- 

 calities as the nature of the subject will permit. 



No. II can be consulted with advantage. It is written in such a 

 clear, intelligible style, and makes so plain the subjects with which it 

 deals, that the student will find it very helpful. 



