4i6 NATURAL SCIENCE. Dec. 1894. 



separated any distance, and the former may also be used with other 

 pieces of apparatus where a continuous record is desired. 



The Discoverer of Dion^ea. 



In the Journal of Botany for November the editor gives some 

 account of WilHam Young, an American adventurer of the last 

 century, who first brought to England, in 1768, living specimens of 

 Diona-a, the carnivorous plant commonly known as Venus" fly-trap. 



Young seems to have been a pushing, uneducated man, who, by 

 dint of impudent self-assertion, got himself appointed Botanist to 

 their Majesties, in 1764, much to the disgust and surprise of honest 

 folk, like John Bartram and others, who knew him at home in Phila- 

 delphia. Apparently his only other claim to distinction rests in a 

 MS. volume containing about three hundred rude figures of plants, 

 and a corresponding volume of specimens, both now in the Botanical 

 Department of the British Museum. 



Change of Address. 

 We beg again to draw the attention of our readers to the notice 

 that appears under the above heading on the last page of the 

 present number. It is hoped that the new arrangement, which will 

 come in force with the new year, will have the effect of facilitating 

 our own business and our dealings with the public by concentrating 

 the Editorial, Printing, and Publishing Offices at one address, instead 

 of distributing them among three as has hitherto been the case. It 

 was well at first to place ourselves in the kindly hands of so well-known 

 a firm as Messrs. Macmillan, and we should like to take this oppor- 

 tunity of thanking them for the assistance and courtesy that they 

 have extended to us. But now that we are growing up and begin to 

 feel our legs, we are bold enough to think that we can walk alone. 

 Whether we can succeed or not must of course depend not on 

 ourselves but on the number of hands stretched out to help us. 

 Since the Reviev/ will still be conducted by the same editorial staft 

 and on the same lines as heretofore, we appeal confidently to our 

 readers, subscribers, and contributors not to desert us ; indeed, we 

 venture to hope that they will now aid us all the more both in purse 

 and person. If only their sympathy be assured, we shall step from 

 the cradle with a light heart. 



