54 
Manila, the United States Department of Agriculture and the 
Smithsonian Institution the establishment is particularly indebted. 
Prof. Hans Schinz has presented the third part of the first 
volume of the botany of Nova Caledonia, edited by himself and 
Mr. A. Guillaumin, and 3 Mitteilungen aus dem Botanischen 
Museum der Universitét Ziirich. 
Dr. N. L. Britton has presented 2 further parts of the North 
American Flora, 11 Contributions from the New York Botanical 
Garden, and the issues during the year of the Bulletin and Journal 
of the same establishment. 
From the Director of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, 
Honolulu, have been received a valuable contribution to our 
knowledge of the grasses of Hawaii, by A. 8. Hitchcock, fo 
vol. viii. no. 3 of the Memoirs of the Museum, and the Report of the 
Director for 1921. 
Madame Augustin de Candolle has presented a collection of 13 
papers on Piperaceae by the late Dr. Casimir de Candolle, and 
obituary notices of Dr. C. de Candolle and M. Augustin de Candolle. 
Mr. J. aiden has published during the year 7 more parts 
of his colossal work on Eucalyptus. In all 56 parts have now 
been received from him, while 70 parts (69 and 70 during 1922) 
of his Forest Flora of New South Wales have been presented by the 
Secretary of Agriculture, Sydney. 
Lieut.-Col. Sir David Prain has presented bound sets of his 
Memoirs and Memoranda, 1887-1893, and his Botanical Notes and 
Papers, 1894-1901; also about 30 numbers of the Proceedings of 
the American Philosophical Society, 1917-22, Travaux du Labora- 
toire de Matiére médicale de. la Faculté de Pharmacie de Paris, 
tome xiii., the year’s issues of the Berichte der Deutschen Botan- 
ischen Gesellschaft and the Bulletin de la Société botanique de 
France, the first volume of The Forests of India, by E. B, Stebbing, | 
and several reprints 
Miss ; Masters has presented numerous publications 
that belonged to her father, Dr. M. T. Masters; among them 
are many of papers on Coniferae, Malvaceae and HeRORas 
several of which are annotated by him. 
Mr. C. G. Lloyd of the Lloyd Library and Museum, Cincin- 
nati, Ohio, who is at present on a visit to Kew, has presented 
2 bound sets of the Bibliographical Contributions from the Lloyd 
Library, and a bound copy of volume vi. of his Mycological 
Writings. The first volume of the Bibliographical Contributions 
contains a Bibliography relating to Floras, the names of the 
authors being arranged alphabetically under countries or groups 
of countries, while the second and third volumes contain a 
Bibliography relating to Botany exclusive of Floras. These 
volumes are not merely a catalogue of the botanical books im 
the Lloyd Library, which in 1918 contained nearly 48, 000 
a bibliography. of botanical books as is possible, “from all 
available sources,” to produce, therefore, an up-to-date Tihesauewe 
