a 
58 NOTICES OF BOOKS. 
Hibernieca,’ which we venture to think should have been retained, 
unless a larger number were adopted. A few matters for criticism 
occur to us as we turn over the pages. Thus, of the plants men- 
tioned as ‘‘confined to Co. Cork, in Ireland,” Helianthemum — 
amygdaloides occurs in Donegal : 
Supplement to the ‘Cybele Hibernica.’ Elatine Hydropiper and 
Salix laurina var. tricolor, mentioned as Cork plants in the Intro- — 
duction, are treated as errors later on in the volume. A note by | 
Mr. Carroll that Senecio squalidus “hybridizes freely at Cork with 
ulgaris’’ is of inte d we should have been glad of a fuller 
account of the broad-leaved variety of Erythrea 
entaurium is not the sa E. latifolia Sm. Orchis incarnata ‘ 
may be added to the list; it was found by the writer of this notice — 
in company with Mr. Nicholson, in a meadow near the sea at - 
i 2. j 
fall 
recognition of the usefulness of Mr. Allin’s work, as a valuable 
contribution to the new ‘Cybele Hibernica,’ upon which we are — 
glad to know that Mr. A. G. More is actively engaged. A word of 
praise must also be given to the printing and general get-up of the 
ich i he num i 
volume, which is certainly creditable; the ber of misprints 18 — 
singularly few, although work of this kind must be a tax upon the 
patience and the r ces of rdinary country printer We 
; Asiatic species of Euphorbia ; and some Liliacee 
of Eastern and neighbouring Central Asia. s givel 
o ne ra and species descri in the five fascicles of the 
oses, but it may be hoped, in the interests of Asiatic botany, — 
o. a does not imply that this invaluable book has been brought 
a close. 
_ Tue last part (vol. iii.) of the ‘Annuario della R. 
superiore d’Agricoltura in Portici,’ contains ‘‘ Reliquie Mico 
Notarisiane,” by Prof. O. Comes. — : 
uols 
: gic ne 4 
