JOURNAL 
OF 
The New York Botanical Garden 
Vox. II. January, 1901. No. 13. 
FACILITIES FOR INVESTIGATION AFFORDED BY 
NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN 
advancement of botanical science and knowledge and 
TO 
cilities for the study of hybridization, development of races, and 
varieties, and all phases of horticultural practice, plant diseases, 
and plant culture. The rapidly increasing collection of fopieal 
co) 
available for study to nearly 6000. The plants native to the two 
hundred and fifty acres of diversified land in the Garden, supple- 
ment the collections to an important de 
These collections also furnish a wealth a minteaal for the study 
of any question, concerning the structure, development and rela- 
