"JOURNAL OF BOTANY" REPRINTS. 



In view of the fact that the stock of these is in some cases 

 practically exhausted, the attention of our readers is directed to the 

 list which appears on the following page. Old subscribers of course 

 already possess the matter contained in them in the pages of the 

 Journal ; but some of them appeared several years ago, and recent 

 subscribers will thus not possess them. Some, which do not appear in 

 the list, are ah-eady out of print ; of others very few copies remain, and 

 it will of course be impossible to reprint them : among the latter may 

 be mentioned Mr. Jameson's Genera and Species of British Mosses, 

 Mr. Riddelsdell's Flora of Glamorgansliire, Mr. Dallman's Notes on 

 tie Flora of Denhiglishire (1911), and Mr. Bennett's Supplement 

 to * Topographical Botany: Of the Supplements to the Biographi- 

 cal Index no complete sets remain. It had been hoped before this 

 to issue the second edition of the work, in which these Supplements are 

 of course incorporated, but the present cost of paper and labour has 

 rendered this imiwssible. Of \X\<^ Index itself no copies remain, these 

 having been lost in the course of transferring the stock to Messrs. 

 Adlard. Mr. Garry's Notes on the Drawings of Sowerhfs 'English 

 Botany: containing, as it does, much topographical information and 

 numeroi^ unpublished notes by Smith, Sowerby and others, should 

 be in^ the possession of all interested in the history of British Botany : 

 only sixteen copies remain. 



It may be pointed out that, although for the most part relating 

 to British Botany, certain of the reprints have a more general appeal. 

 Such arfe the Index Ahecedarius — a list of the plants in the first 

 edition of Linnieus's Species Plantarum, showing at a glance what 

 are included in that work, which has no index of species ; the 

 History of Alton's ' Ilortus Ketvensis,' which contains much in- 

 formation as to the authors and contents of that classical Avork ; the 

 Flo?'a of Gibraltar, which, besides a complete list, contains notes on 

 the more interesting species ; Linn^us's Flora Anglica — the first 

 English Flora — has a bearing upon nomenclature : of all these 

 there are numerous copies. 



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