^THE FAUNA OF BRITISH INDIA, including Ceylon 



* and Burma. Published uuder the Authority of the Secretary of State 

 for India in Council. Edited by W. T. Bianford. Medium 8vo, with 

 numerous illustrations. 



MAMMALIA (for sets only), £1. — FISHES. 2 vols. £1 each.— 

 BIRDS. Vol. I. £1 ; Vols. II.-IV. 15s. each. — REPTILIA and BA- 

 TRACHIA (for sets only), £1.— MOTHS. 4 vols. £1 each.— HYMENO- 

 PTERA. Vols. I. and II. £1 each. — ARACHNIDA. 1 vol. 10s.— 

 RHYNCHOTA. Vols. I. and II. £1 each. BUTTERFLIES. Vol. I. £1. 



London : Taylor & Francis, Red Lion Court, Fleet Street. Calcutta 

 and Simla : Thacker, Spink & Co. Bombay : Thacker & Co., Ltd. Burma : 

 Myles Standish & Co., Rangoon. Berlin : Friedlander & Sohn, Carl- 

 strasse, 11. 



Crown 8vo. 64 pp. Price Is. net. Is. 2d. post free. 



Bints on 



Collecting $ Preserving Plants 



By STANLEY GUITON. 



Chapters on Collecting and Equipment. Drying, Preserving, 

 and Arranging, Mounting, &c. Fully Illustrated. 



;< This admirable little book gives something more than mere hints, 

 being really a full instruction book, giving in every necessary detail the 

 means and methods to be adopted in collecting botanical specimens. . . . 

 With such a wealth of information and advice to be had for one shilling, 

 there is no excuse for the miserable examples of pressed plants that one 

 is sometimes required to peruse." — Nature Study. 



. . . " Useful to schools, or classes, field naturalists' clubs, or to any- 

 one interested in the collection of specimens of our native flora, or who 

 wished to prepare and bring or send home specimens from abroad." — 

 The Field. 



" A neat little shilling volume. The young botanist who follows out 

 all the author's suggestions . . . will turn out good specimens ; and we 

 could name veterans who would greatly benefit by a course of lessons 

 based on Mr. Guiton's instructions. . . Distinctly useful, and the worker 

 will very soon modify its elaborate recommendations in accordance with 

 practical experience." — Journal of Botany . 



" The collector of plants . . . will find this small book useful. So 

 long as a collector takes as much care as Mr. Guiton, his herbarium will 

 be a pleasure not only to himself, but also to kindred botanists." — 

 Nature, Feb. 2nd, 1905. 



" This is a most useful and painstaking little work. ... To the 

 botanist who is not a mechanical genius this brochure will come as a 

 boon and a blessing. . . . The botanist who, after reading and digesting 

 its lucid pages, and noting its appropriate illustrations, cannot fix him- 

 self up with an herbarium in first-class style, is— "-as a mechanic — quite 

 past praying for." — Agricultural Economist. 



London : 

 WEST, NEWMAN & CO., 54, Hatton Garden. 



