eee 
45 
= KE. H. Wilson’s monograph, The Cherries of Japan; also a 
opy of a facsimile reprint of a Catalogue d’Arbres, Arbustes et 
Petes Herbacées d’Amérique, by William Young, Jr., origin- 
ally published in Paris in 1783; this reprint, which is furnished 
with an account of the author and critical notes, has been edited 
by S. N. Rhoads 
A selotion of the numerous publications of a United States 
Department of Agriculture have been received from the Secretary 
of Agriculture, Washington, those of the Department of Agricul- 
ture in the Dutch East Indies, the continuation of the North 
American Flora, published by the New York Botanical he 
and the first part of the Archivos do Jardim Botanico do Rio d 
Janeiro, from the Directors of the respective establishments. 
Other contributions to the library, received from their authors 
or publishers are :—The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, bv 
L. H. Bailey, vols. iv. and v.; Marine Algae of the Danish West 
Indies, by F. sd vol. ii. pt. 2; Philippine Dipterocarp 
Forests, by W. H . Brown and D. M. Mathews; La Végétation de 
Paraguay, by R. Chodat; Lichenwm Lusitanorum «we Cata- 
logus, and other ublications, eis . X. P. Coutinho; A Hausa 
Botanical Vocabulary, J. . Dalziel; Third ania aeport 
The 
dans Vide. bs A. D. Achart, — W. C. Worsdell: Sleeping 
Sickness . . . in Principe, Portuguese West Africa, by B. F. 
Bruto da Costa and others, translated by Lieut.-Col. J. A. 
Wyllie, from the translator; Notes on Nigerian Trees and Plants, 
by E. W. Foster, and a Report on the Afforestation of Togo . . . 
by Unwin, from the Secretary, Southern Provinces, 
Menara Flora of the Carboniferous of the Netherlands and 
