“It will be no exaggeration to pronounce this the most valuable contribution ever 
made to American botany, so far as the area covered by Gray’s Manual—somewhat 
extended... .. . The authors deserve the thanks of every botanist for this success- 
ful ending of a great task.” —Meehans’ Monthly, Philadelphia. 
“This work should be in the library of all lovers and students of flowers; for 
while it is the most exhaustive and complete work on systematic botany that has been 
published in this country, it affords at the same time an easy introduction to begin- 
ners through its illustrations.””— The Churchman, New York. 
‘““We cannot too highly commend the volume before us, and no flower-lover can 
consider his library complete without it.”— 7e Advance, Chicago. 
“The work should find an enthusiastic welcome in the private study, as well as 
in the college class-room.”—Chicago Tribune. 
‘A book of rare excellence, doing on a much enlarged scale for this country what 
is accomplished for Great Britain by Bentham’s Illustrated Flora, Besides the accu- 
rate description, we here have an authentic portrait of every North American species. 
The treatment is popular, but at the same time eminently scientific. A complete cy- 
clopaedia of American systematic botany.’’—PROFESSOR W. WHITMAN BAILEY, of 
Brown University. : 
“As far as the present volume enables us to judge, we have here a treatise 
which will exert a wide influence in inducing large numbers of persons to make 
botany within these limits a pleasant recreative study, and which will at the same 
time afford to those who are fond of systematic botany a convenient work of refer- 
ence, ... A large proportion of the drawings are excellent in all respects. . . . The 
artificial keys are excellent throughout. All of them appear, so far as our exam- 
ination has gone, to be carefully prepared. ... . The appearance of the whole work 
is extremely attractive, and every feature of its mechanical execution will bear strict 
scrutiny as regards both workmanship and sound taste. The authors are to be heart- 
ily congratulated on their genuine success in securing earnest codperation from all 
their coadjutors and thus making a worthy contribution to the advancement of inter- 
est in our native flora... .. In this treatise we have an admirable addition to the 
working appliances of all lovers of North American plants.’”—WV. VY. Evening Post. 
“The work has finally appeared, and its friends have every reason to be proud of 
Was Theillustrations . . . are remarkably clear and characteristic . . . and show 
the salient features of the plants as well as any small figures can. . . . . This excel- 
lent work will have a most pronounced effect in stereotyping this particular system 
of nomenclature. ... . It puts the student in the be, 8 attitude toward the plant 
kingdom, and it is bound to work a genuine reform. e are confident that itisa 
great work. It has taken the latest convictions of the methods of ascent of the 
. vegetable world and has worked them out fearlessly and logically.”,-—New York Sun. 
“‘T have had your first volume in hand for several months, and examined and re- 
examined it with the greatest care. The more I use it the more it commends itself 
to my favor.””—Hon. Davin F. Day, Buffalo, N. Y. 
“The appearance of the first volume of the “‘ Illustrated Flora’ marks a distinct _ 
advance in systematic botany, and in the literature of that science in America... . 
The work should tend to greatly popularize the study of plants. The price isvery __ 
moderate for such a comprehensive volume, and every botanist should subscribe at _ 
once for it.’—American Journal of Pharmacy. gee 
“The work is going to do an immense amount of good in popularizing syste- _ 
matic botany, and eeonatede a greater interest in such study.’’ Pror. THos. A. 
WILLIAMS, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. ; eos 
‘Tam delighted with it, and congratulate you on the success you have achieved — 
in the issue of this splendid volume. Your work cannot fail to highly appreci- 
ated by every botanist in the country, and to make the study of the science more 
popular than ever.”’—Dr.-CHaAs. Mour, Mobile, Ala. 2a 
‘The peculiarity of the book is that’ every species is figured. This, together 
with the com atenins of scope and inclusion of the latest information on the topic, 
