14 



bution atnongst cottagers and allotment-holders, and not less so to young 

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NATURE. — "The Primer is eminently practical and is sure to prove very 

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IHE SCIENTIFIC WORLD.— " As a. simple and exhaustive treatise it could 

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Garden Flowers and Plants, A Primer for 



Amateurs. By J. Wright, F.R.H.S., Assistant Editor of 

 the journal of Horticulture, With fifty illustrations, 



THE HORTICULTURAL REVIEW.— " T):\& work undoubtedly g'ains from the 

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 the denizens of the cottage gardens, and the directi9ns as to the culture of these 

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THE GUARDIAN. — "An excellent piece of work. It isjust the book that many 

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 and also gives very useful lists of plants suited for gardens of different kinds in 

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THE EDUCATIONAL TIMES.— "Much, pithy instruction on the choice and 

 culture of garden plants in a very small compass ; an excellent little compendium ." 



FORESTRY. 



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Text-Book of the Diseases of, Trees. By 



Professor R. Hartig of the University of Munich. Trans- 

 lated by William Somerville, D.CEc, B.Sc, F.R.S.E., 

 F.L.S., Professor of Agriculture and Forestry, Durham 

 College of Science, Newcastle-on-Tyne. Revised and 

 Edited, with a Preface, by H. Marshall Ward, D.Sc, 

 F.R.S., F.L.S., F.R.H.S., late Fellow of Christ's College, 

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 The excellence of the illustrations add greatly to the value of the book." 



GARDENER'S CHRONICLE.— "In nO other work that we are acquainted with, 

 is the subject, within the limitations tixed by the author, treated so lucidly; in 

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Timber and Timber Trees, Native and Foreign. 



By the late Thomas Laslett, Timber Inspector to the 



