828 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
ipa ae ntl Linn. Soc. 2nd ser. Bot. vol. v. part 12), read 
supplementary paper on the same subject, in which he gave 
additional papmile ene gained from a recent examination of spect- 
mens in eleven continental herbaria, cungvaes those at Paris, 
Geneva, Vienna, and Berlin ome new forms were described 
(notably a new ae s from ‘Sen egal), ey) some fresh notes were 
d 
a CO led Leg The proofs in some ee do not seem to have 
been corrected. 
Mr. Spencer Georce Percevat has lately ser in se 
Proceedings of the Bristol Naturalists’ Society (vol. tl)a 
interesting ‘‘ Journal of an Excursion to Eastbury oo Bristol in in 
ay and June, 1767,’ by Sir Joseph Banks. The Journal is pre- 
faced by an account of the distressing dispersion of Sir Joseph’s 
correspondence by his great-nephew, Lord Brabourne, who claimed 
all the Ba 
but a sm . Several localities for gains are noted in the 
Journal—e. . “ “] saw through the Windows of my Chaise, nes 
Gale growing in Plenty upon a Bog near the 21 mile Stone on 
Bagshot heath.” Plants —— “by Banks on St. Vincent's 
Rocks are in the National Herbarium. Mr. Perceval contributes 
some oe notes to the Feats al. 
Par and 5 (May and June) of Icones Selecte Horti Thenensis 
fing. Brasséls) which M. de Wildeman is superintending, are 
noteworthy for the excellent plates by M. d’Apréval, as well as for 
the detailed descriptions and copious notes by the editor. 
contains Fscallonia viscosa, Melothria punctata, Corethrogyne filagini- 
folia, Ardisia humilis, and Buddleia auriculata; no. 5, Acacia obliqua, 
Crassula Schweinfurthit, Olearia erubescens, Ca wendishia pubescens, 
and Ligustrum Massalongianum 
Tax fourth Appendix to the Kew Bulletin for 1900, containing 
a ‘List of Staffs in Botanical Departments at home [excluding 
the British Museum], and in India and the Colonies,” has been 
So far 
ppendixes, no number of the Bulletin having been issued since 
that for ‘‘ September and October,” 1899. 
