2$ 6* 34 Gtorgf /F. Bridge, Edinburgh. 17 



Jones' (Professor T. Rymer) General Outline of the Or- 

 ation of tht Animal A "///;'./'/, and Manual of Comparative 

 Anatomy. illustrated with 571 engravings, thick 8vo, half roan, 

 gilt top (pul) ji Ms 6d), 6s. Van Voorst. 



Jones' (Professor T, Rymer) Natural History of Animals, 

 Lectures delivered before the Royal Institution of Great Britain, 

 209 illustrations, 2 vols, post 8vo, cloth (pub 245), Js 6d. Van 

 Voorst. 



Hunter's (Dr John) Essays on Natural History, Ana- 

 tomy, Physiology, Psychology, and Geology, to which are added 

 Lectures on the Huntehan Collection of Fossil Remains, edited 

 !> Professor Owen, portrait, 2 vols, 8vo, cloth (pub 32$), 5$. 

 \ an Voorst. 



Forestry and Forest Products Prize Essays of the 

 Kdinburgh International Forestry Exhibition, 1884, edited by 

 John Rattray, M.A.. and Hugh Robert Mill, illustrated with lo 

 plates and 21 woodcuts, 8vo, cloth (pub i6s), 55. David Douglas. 



COMPRISES : 



BRACK'S Formation and Management of Forest Tree Nurseries. 



The same, by THOMAS BERWICK. 



STALK KR'S Formation and Management of Plantations on different Sites, 



Altitudes, and Exposures. 

 The same, by R. K. Hoi 



Afforesting of Waste Land in Aberdeenshire by Means of the Planting 



Iron. 

 MAC LEAN'S Culture of Trees on the Margin of Streams and Lochs in Scotland, 



with a View to the Preservation nf the Bank* and the Conservation of Fish, 

 inimical Pine Planting, with Remarks on Pine Nurseries and on 



Insects and Fungi destructive to Pines. 

 ALEXANDER on the Various Methods of Producing and Harvesting Cinchona 



Bark. 



ROBERTSON on the Vegetation of Western Australia. 

 KRAI K'S Formation and Management of Kucalypus Plantations. 

 CAR HICK'S Present and Prospective Sources of the Timber Supplies of Great 



Britain. 

 OLDRIEVK on the best Method of Maintaining the Supply of Teak, with Remarks 



on its Price, Size, and Quality ; and on the Best Substitutes for Building 



Purposes. 



On the same, by J. C. KEMP. 



ALEXANDER'S Notes on the Ravage* of Tree and Timber Destroying Insects. 

 WEBSTER'S Manufacture and Uses of Charcoal. 

 BOULGEX'S Bye- Products, Utilisation of Coppice and of Branches and other 



Fragments of Forest Produce, with the View of Diminishing Waste. 

 S TON-HILL'S Paper Pulp from Wood, Straw, and other Fibres in the Past and 



Present. 



GREEN'S Production of Wood Pulp. 



T. ANDERSON REID'S Preparation of Wood Pulp by the Soda Process. 

 CROSS and BEVAN'S Report on Wood Pulp Processes. 

 YOJ.HII (L'r*ski\ Inscription, Cultivation, and Treatment of the 



1 rcc, the Chemistry of iti Juice, and its Industrial Applications. 



Sent Carnage Free to any part of the United Kingdom on 

 f>t of Postal Order for the amount. 



JOHN GRANT, 25 & 34 George IV. Bridge, Edinburgh. 



