WORKS ON BOTANY. 
In crown 8vo. Price 12s. 6d. 5 
HISTORIA FILICUM: an Exposition of the Nature, Number, 
and Organography of Ferns, and Review of the Principles upon which 
Genera are founded, and the Systems of Classification of the Principal 
Authors, with new general arrangement, &c., &e. By J. Surru, A.LS., 
Ex-OQurator of the Royal Gardens, Kew. With 30 Lithographic 
Plates by W. H, Fircn, F.L.S. 
“No one anxious to work upa thorough knowledge of Ferns can afford to 
do without it.”— Gardener's Chronicle. 
By Dr. HOUKER, C.B., P.B.S. 
The STUDENT’S FLORA of the BRITISH ISLANDS. Crown 
8vo, 10s. 6d, 
“ Certainly the fullest and most accurate manual of the kind that has yet 
appeared.” — Pall Mall Gazette. — 
PRIMER OF BOTANY. With numerous Illustrations. 18mo, Ls. 
_ “The most compact introduction to botany which we have seen... .. We 
have seldom met with a more suggestive or interesting little volume, or one which 
is more calculated to lead the student on to more advanced works, providing, as it 
does, a solid basis upon which a more extensive superstructure may at any time be 
raised.” —Field. 
By Professor OLIVER, F.R.S., F.L.S. 
LESSONS in ELEMENTARY BOTANY. With numerous Illus- 
trations. New Edition. 18mo, 4s. 6d, 
“A volume which we cannot praise too highly, and which we trust all our 
: poner readers, young and old, will possess themselves of.”—Popular Science 
teniew. 
“\Ve know of no work so well suited to direct the botanical pupil's efforis.’ 
— Natural History Review. 
ee MACMILLAN & Co., London. 
Se In Royal 8vo, half-bound. Price 3l1s. 6d. 
A TEXT-BOOK OF BOTANY, MORPHOLOGICAL yp 
PHYSIOLOGICAL. By Dr. Junius Sacus, Professor of Botany in the 
University of Wiirzburg. ‘Translated and Annotated by, A. W. 
BENNETT, M.A., Lecturer on Botany at St. Thomas’s. Hospit:l, 
assisted by W. T. THISELTON DYER, M.A., B.Sc, F.u.S. With 
500 Woodcuts. 
e In the rape eae 53 _ oe instruction for teachers—nearly 
a dozen use. i 2 Letter 
as Pooh Mast ae corse nk the translation very happy.”—Letier 
“ The trauslation is very close and idiomatic, and as clear as the original. . . . 
This conscientious translation is a valuable and timely cift to botanical students.” 
—Silliman’s Journal. S38 een 
Qs PoxD, printed at the Crarexpon Press, and published by MACMILLAN 
& Co., London, Publishers to the University. 
ROYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY OF LONDON. 
es ARRANGEMENTS FOR 1876. 
ue ernest OF CLEMATIS, 
_ From Gzorex Jackman and Son, Woking Nursery, i 
co) BAILY, May 1 to Max 23. sans . 
SUMMER EXHIBITIONS OF PLANTS. 
ee WEDNESDAYS, Max 24; Juve 21. 
SPECIAL EVENING FPaTE. 
Es _ WEDNESDAY, Jury 5. 
ee sss PROMENADES. 
é EVERY WEDNESDAY in May, Jong, Jucy, and the first two WEDNESDAYS 
e in Aveust, excepting May 24, June 21, July 5. 
LECTURES. = 
Inthe Museum, at4 o’clock precisely. 
_ FRIDAYS, May 12, 19, 26; Jose, 4, a. 30. 
