Britton’s Manual of the Flora of the 
Northern States and Canada. 
By Dr. N. L. Britron, Director in-Chief of the New York Botanical Garden. 
1080 pp. 8vo. $2.25, net. 
A comprehensive manual of a thousand pages, containing about 4,500 descriptions, 
probably one-third more than any other. It is designed to meet modern requirements 
and outline modern conceptions of the science. It is based on Am //lustrated Flora, 
prepared by Prof. Britton in co-operation with Judge Addison Brown. The text has 
been revised and brought up to date, and much of novelty has been added. All 
illustrations are omitted, but specific reference has been made to all of the 4,162 
figures in the ///ustrated Flora. 
“It is the most complete and reliable work. that ever appeared in the form of a 
flora of this region, and for the first. time we havea manual in which the plant 
descriptions are drawn from the plants themselves, and do not represent compiled 
descriptions made from the early writers.” —Prof. L. M. Underwood of Columbia. 
“This work will at once take its place as a standard manual of the region that it 
Bs . ” 
covers. It is far superior to any other work of ‘its class ever published in America. 
—Prof, Conway Macmillan of University of Minnesota. 
“This book must at once find its way into the schools and colleges, to which it 
may be commended for the students in systematic botany.”—Chas. E. Pessey in 
** Science.”” 
* It is nothing if 1t is not compact; it is nothing if it is no up to date ; itis nothing 
if it is not the work.of a master. What more can be said, save that the more it Is 
used the greater the appreciation by the plant-lovers in the-region which it covers.” 
—Prof. Byron D. Halsted of Rutgers College, 
“The work is well done; and as it is the only volume which gives in 4 way suit- 
able for students the present state of the science, it cannot fail to take its place as @ 
standard work,” - Prof. George Macloskie of Princeton. 
“I regard the book as one that we cannot do without and one that will hen oh rth 
take its place as a necessary means of determination of the plant species within its 
range.'’—Prof. V. M. Spalding of University of Michigan. 
“An exceedingly valuable contribution to our botanical literature. * * It is com 
venient to handle, and the low price will help to give it a large circulation. —Prof. 
T. J. Burrill of the University of Illinois. 
‘*No botanist can get on well without this Manual. Its more than 1000 pages 
are in a type which means more than 3000 pages of ordinary text book type and siz 
of pages. It is so complete, and its information, methods and nomenclature are so 
entirely up to date that it is absolutely indispensable.”—Journal of Education, 
Boston, Mass. 
HENRY HOLT & CoO., 
29 West 23d Street, New York. 378 Wabash Avenue, Chicago 
