XTlll WORKS OP REFERENCE. 



will be found in Farlow's work mentioned above, and to that of 

 the fungi in DeBary's treatise. For other references consult Ben- 

 nett and Murray's Handbook. 



GENERAL. 



Behrens, Text-hook of General Botany. Pentland, Edinburgh. 

 Miiller, The Fertilization of Flowers. Macmillan & Co., London, 1883. 

 DeCandoUe, Origin of Cultivated Plants. Appleton & Co., New York, 



1885. 

 Kerner, Flowers and their Unhidden Guests. Paul & Co., London, 1878. 

 Dai' win. Insectivorous Plants, and other works. Appleton & Co., New 



York. 

 Lubbock, Seedlings. Appleton & Co., New York, 1892. 

 Lubbock, Flowers, Fruits, and Leaves. Macmillan & Co., London, 



1886. 

 Goodale, Wild Flowers of America. Cassino, Boston, 1882. 

 Sachs, History of Botany. Macmillan & Co., 1890. 

 Lindley and Moore, The Treasury of Botany. Longmans, London, 



1874. 

 Kerner von Marilaun, Pflanzenleben, 2 vols. Bibliographisches Insti- 



tut, Leipzig and Vienna, 1891. 



Miiller's work on the Fertilization of Flowers gives references 



to the immense and increasing body of literature on this subject. 



Kerner's Flowers and their Unbidden Guests is out of print, but 



may occasionally be picked up, and is a most charming little 



book. All of Darwin's books should have a place in such a list. 



CURRENT LITERATURE. 



The Botanical Gazette. Lake Forest, 111., $2.50 per year. 



Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. New York, $2.00 per year. 



Annals of Botany. Oxford, Clarendon Press. 



Botanisches Centralblatt. Gotthelft, Cassel. 



The Botanical Gazette and Torrey Bulletin are well-known Ameri- 

 can journals. The Annals of Botany is a new periodical of a high 

 order, with original monographs, criticisms of current literature, 

 etc. The Botanisches Centralblatt is indispensable in botanical 

 research. 



