Periodical Literature . 
xv 
Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1888. 
Britton and Rusby : List of Plants from Texas, collected by Miss 
Croft. 
ASIA. 
I. CHINA. 
Journal of the China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. New Series. 
Vol. XXII. 
Henry : Chinese Names of Plants. 
II. INDIA. 
Journal of the Agricultural and Horticultural Society of India. Vol. VIII. 
Part 1. Wood-Mason: Report on some Insects destructive to the Castor-Oil 
plant in the Bellary district. 
„ — Blechynden : Note on the Cultivation of the Tea Plant in the Anda- 
mans. 
,, — Divi-Divi, or American Sumach ( Caesalpinia coriaria). 
„ — Sabe, Sawey, Bhabur, or Babui Grass, some information as to cultivation 
in different districts in Bengal. 
,, — A Bifurcated Bamboo. 
,, — Final Report of the experimental cultivation of certain fibre-yielding 
plants. 
,, 2. Warden : Note on Erythroxylon Coca grown in India 
„ — Prain : Note on Lo-Kao : the Chinese Green-Dye, yielded by various 
species of Rhamnus. 
,, — King: Annual Report of the Royal Botanic Garden, Calcutta, for the 
year 1886-87. 
,, 3. Wray: Notes on the Cultivation and Curing of Patchouli, and its 
adulteration. 
„ — Pineapple Fibre, a note giving the original sources of existing information 
regarding pineapple fibre in India. 
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. Vol. LVII. Part 2. 
No. 4. Blandford : A list of the Ferns of Simla in the N.W. Himalaya, 
between levels of 4500 and 10,500 feet. 
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. Vol. III. 
No. 1. Cane: Notes on Vigna vexillata. 
„ — Dymock : Marathi Names of Plants. With a glossary. 
,, — Kirtikar : The Folklore of Indian Plants. 
„ 2. Carstensen : The Conditions for the Distribution of Plants, and the 
means by which it is performed, with special regard to Indian 
species. 
„ 3. Starling : On the Cultivation of Ferns from Spores. 
„ 4. Dymock : The Means of Self-Protection possessed by Plants. 
„ — Hart : Notes on some Branching Palms. 
Records of the Geological Survey of India. Vol. XXII. Pt. 2. 
Waagen : Further note on the Carboniferous glacial period. 
Scientific Memoirs by Medical Officers of the Army of India. Part IV. 
1889. 
Cunningham : Are Choleraic Comma-Bacilli, even granting that they 
are the proximate cause of choleraic symptoms, really efficient 
in determining the epidemic diffusion of Cholera ? 
