FLORAS OF THE WORLD—PART II 105 
Manciot, André. Alimentation et plantes sauvages. 2-v. (96,97p.). illus. 
17. cm. Paris, n.d. [194-?] (Collections “Toute la nature.”) (Arnold 
Arboretum library.) 
Popular account of edible wild plants, grouped by uses; account of 
poisonous fruits, calendar for collecting, etc. Only vernacular names are 
given.—See also Ansberque, above, and additional references there given. 
Masclef, Amédée, abbé. Atlas des plantes de France utiles, nuisibles et 
ornementales ... Complément de la “Nouvelle flore’ de MM. Gaston Bonnier 
et Georges de Layens... 3v. 400 col. pl. 24cm. Paris, 1891. (Reissued 
1893.) (Gray Herbarium library.) 
Fair to good colored plates, usually with dissections, representing 450 
species of vascular plants; explanatory text forms vol. 3.—See also Ans- 
berque, above, and additional references there given. 
Mathieu, Auguste. Flore forestiére. Description et histoire des végétaux 
ligneux qui croissent spontanément en France et des essences importantes de 
VAlgérie. 4. éd. revue par P. Fliche. xxxii, 705 p. 22.5 cm. Paris, Nancy, 
1897. (1st ed. 1858.) 
Glossary; descriptive flora of native and naturalized woody plants of 
France (and Corsica) and of the principal ones of Algeria, with keys, 
botanical description, range, habitat, soil preference, size, rate of growth, 
reproduction, useful products, injurious insects, ete.—See also Gayffier, 
above, and additional references there given. 
Menault, Ernest, and Rousseau, Henri. Les plantes nuisibles en agricul- 
ture et en horticulture et les moyens de les détruire. xvii, 314 p. 80 col. 
pl. 24 cm. Paris, 1902. 
Includes (p. 19-130) account.of weedy plants, arranged by flowering dates, 
with notes on eradication.—See also Fron, above, and additional reference 
there given. 
Meynier, Joseph. Flore. Jn his Les noms de lieu romans en France et a 
V’étranger. Mém. Soc. Emul. Doubs VII, 3: 120-167. 1899. 
Annotated alphabetical list of Latin plant names and terms, with French 
locality names derived from them. 
Perrot, Emile. Plantes médicinales de France. 4 v. 224 col. pl. 18 cm. 
Paris, [1928]-43. (Vols. 1-8 are Notice no. 26, 40, 45, Office national des 
matiéres premiéres végétales pour la droguerie.. .) 
Bibliography (v. 1), seasons for collecting, cultivated species, etc.; colored 
plates with descriptive letterpress giving popular account of medicinal uses, 
methods of cultivation, etc., of 450 species, nearly all French. Name of 
issuing office varies.—See also Ansberque, above, and additional references 
there given. 
Rawton, Olivier de. Les plantes qui guerissent et les plantes qui tuent. 
vill, 344 p. 1380 fig. 18.5 cm. Paris, 1884. (At head of title page: 
Bibliotéque instructive.) 
Account of French medicinal and poisonous plants, wild and cultivated, 
arranged by families. There is also an edition in Spanish, apparently a direct 
translation of the French one, since the ranges given relate primarily to 
France: Vegetales que curan y vegetales que matan. Traductién de F. G. 
Brito. viii, 348 p. 130 fig. 18 cm. Paris, Méjico, 1887.—See also Ans- 
berque, above, and additional references there given. 
Rehder, Alfred (Phytography.) France. In his The Bradley Bibliog- 
raphy. A guide to the literature of the woody plants of the world published 
before the beginning of the twentieth century. Compiled at the Arnold 
Arboretum of Harvard University under the direction of Charles Sprague 
Sargent. v. i, p. 404-418. 29.5 cm. Cambridge, Mass., 1911. (Publica- 
tions of the Arnold Arboretum, no. 3.)—Additions and corrections ... le. 
1: 535. 1911; 5: xxi-xxii. 1918. 
Chronological list of floristic publications, with few mainly bibliographical 
annotations, the titles on dendrography and Corsica separated from the 
others. It is, for the years covered (1605-1900), the most complete bibliog- 
raphy available. See also the foilowing sections relating to France: 
Bibliography, general (1: 3); periodicals and serials (1: 20-24); botanic 
gardens, arboretums, museums, etc. (1: 56-60); dictionaries and lists of 
vernacular names (1: 74); botanical history (1: 81); phenology (1: 226); 
