84 



( i 



& C. Revis, pp. 1-371, illustrated (J, & A. Churchill, London, 



1913). 



" The Valuation of Feeding Stuffs,'' A. Smetham (Journ. 



Roy, Lancashire Agric. Soc), reprint pp. 1-32 (J. Mawdsley & 

 Son, Liverpool, 1914). 



Oil Seeds and Feeding Cakes " (Imp. Inst. Monograph), 



pp. 1-112 (John Murray, London, 1915). 



" Forage Plants and Their Culture," C. V. Piper, pp. 1-618 

 (The Macmillan Co., New York, 1915). 



" The FoodTlants of the Philippines/' P. J. Wester in "The 

 Philippine Agric. Review/' ix. No. 3, 1916, pp. 149-258, plates 



1.-3 



" Final Report of the Departmental Committee appointed by 

 the President of the Board of Agriculture to consider the Pro- 

 duction of Food in England and Wales/' pp. 1-11 (H.M. 



Stationery Office, 1915). 



Tin 



Wood 



up by a Committee of the Royal Society at the request of the 

 President of the Board of Trade/ 7 pp. 1-35 (idem, 1915). 



"Eleven Important Wild-Duck Foods/ 1 W. L. McAtee, U.S. 

 Dept. Agric. Bull. No. 205, 1915, pp. 1-25; Propagation of Wild 

 Duck Foods/ 5 idem, Bull. No. 465, 1917, pp. 1-40. 



" The National Food Supply in Peace and War/' T. B. 

 pp. 1-43 (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1917). 



" Agricultural Seeds and Treatise on Permanent Pasture 

 Grasses/' pp. 1-58, James Hunter, Ltd. (Chester, 1917). 



" Journal of the Board of Agriculture M (Published by The 

 Board of Agriculture and Fisheries, "Whitehall, London), 

 numerous Papers from 1894 to 1938. 



"National Food Journal," issued by The Ministry of Food, 

 No, 1, Sept. 12th, 1917, fortnightly (H.M. Stationery Office). 



" Food and How to Save it." E. I. Spriggs, including list of 

 Food Values expressed in Calories, pn. 1-55 (H.M. Stitionerv 



Offioe. 1918). 



II.— MISCELLANEOUS NOTES. 



8lB Euvvakd Fry. — We record with regret the death of the 

 fit. Hon. Sir Edward Fry, G.C.B., F.U.S., at his house Failand, 

 near Bristol, on 18th October, 1918. 



Sir Edward'g interest in botanv was iife-l<me\ begrinninjr with 



^ _, 



the flowering plants of the neighbourhood of Bristol, where he 

 was born, and ranging in later years over large areas of Crypto- 



gamie botany and over ninny foreign lands. In his busy years 

 at the Bar and on the Bench, bis leisure was small, but he 



gratified his inter* %i in flowers by growing orchids at Highgate. 



At Finland, his later home near Bristol, his garden was a 

 source of perennial interest, and among other botanists he enter- 

 tained here Dr. Asa Gray. 



His interest in botany was of a philosophic rather than of a 

 merely systematic nature, and this led him to value all variations 



