are in keeping with the key given in "The Cutter-Sanborn alpha- 

 betic-order tabic." 



By this system, any one knowing the author and subject of a 

 book can find it on the shelves without even consulting the cata- 

 logue. Thus, in looking up Babington's Manual of British Botany, 

 knowing the book is in section L of English Botany, if you refer 

 to the shelf in that section, following the index letters to B, you 

 will find the nine editions under the initial serially arranged. 



We believe that the system we have adopted for the Lloyd 

 Library is the most convenient and practical that has been devised 

 and is capable of indefinite expansion without derangement. 



