“Tt 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; s.". 4 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; fot: +3 
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.’’— 7he Churchman, New York. 
“We cannot too highly commend the volume before us, and no flower-lover catl 
consider his library complete without it.’— The Advance, Chicago. 
“The work should find an enthusiastic welcome in the private study, as well as oe 
in the college class-room.’’—Chicago Tribune. 
“4 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 
_ ‘' The work has finally appeared, and its friends have every reason to be proud of 
it... .. 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. .... 
“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,. Davipb F. Day, Buffalo, N. Y. 
“The appearance of the first volume of the “‘ Illustrated Flora ”’ ‘a disti 
: , : é arks a distinct 
advance in systematic botany, and in the literature of that st ih in Amesibe te 
Set het lobe pager to pe | Cag ota the study of plants. The price is veTy 
e for such a comprehensive volume, and e : scribe at 
once for it."—American Journal of Pharmacy. very botanist should subscri a 
“The work is going to do an immense amount of nod i izing syste- oe 
matic botany, and arousing a greater interest in ude aude eee eon 
WittraMs, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. . 3 . 
‘‘T am delighted with it, and congratulate you on the succe hieved — 
in the issue of this splendid volume. Your work cannot fant is ls epee g 
ated by every botanist in the country, and to make the study of the science more _ 
popular than ever.’’"—Dr. Cas. Mor, Mobile, Ala. ae 
__‘'The peculiarity of the book is that every species i . the e : 
beter ag com ae of scope and inclusion oF the latest Sitation hue eee 3 
be: cs it rae oc. value as a book of reference, while its moderate price _ 
: Lateas tay ot =~ of all botanical students. It fills a gap, accomplishing for — 
The sical exeention. ferent hag Rind for Great Britain and northern Eurcpe- 
alist, Boston. - wings is admirable.”’—- The Congregalion- 
