18 DR. E. P. THILLIPS 



22. Notes on the South African Flora. — South 

 African JKailways & Harbours Magazine. 



2a. The Aloes at Union Buildings, Pretoria. — South 

 African Gardening, July 1917. 



ADDITIONAL TECHNICAL ARTICLES. 



The Plant Geography of ^outh Africa, 

 Oljjcial Year Book 1917. 



On the Genera Diplocystis and Broomeia — (with Miss 



A. M. Bottomley, B.A. i Trans. Roy. Soc. of S.A. 



Vol. \'IL Part 3, 1919. 

 Note on the genus Terfezia, a Truffle froia tlie 



Kalahari. — Trans. Roy. Soc. of S.A. Vol VI 1. 



Part 2, 1918. ]). 117 If. 

 Tetl" Rush — Kew Bulletin 1918, p. 228. 



Th( Importance of a Properly Equipped 

 ^tate Berhariinn to an Agricultural Country. 



\^\ E. p. l»HiLLUs, M.A., D.Sc, F.L.S., 

 Division of Botany, Pretoria. 



In the realms of science botany stands out pre- 

 enilnentTy as the science which comes iut(> Sntinmte 

 contact with the fundamental problems of life and living 

 things, it is at the same time the science which lends 

 itself most readily to practical application in many 

 economic directions. As far as agriculture is concerned. 

 Dr. L. Cockayne, a celebrated New Zealand Botanist, 

 remarks " that Agriculture, if it is to improve, must take 

 full advaihage of the methods and discoveries of those 

 branches of modern botany which sj^ccially affect it 



