LOVELL REEVE, HENRIETTA STREET. 7 
really wanted in these busy times to bring the elegant in country residences 
abreast of the useful.”—North British Agriculturist. 
“Tn describing the characters and requirements of the various descriptions of 
ornamental grounds, Mr. Smith has happily chosen language so plain, and rules 
so simple, that he leaves nothing to be wished for.”—TZiverpool Standard. 
“The author gives the result of some twenty years’ study and observation in 
a methodical form and practical style.”—Aberdeen Journal. 
“Mr. Smith, who is a landscape-gardener and garden-architect of great expe- 
rience, has worked out his design with ability and judgment.”—G/obe. 
“The character of this publication is altogether practical, from the opening 
hints upon the house and offices, to the closing directions about the arboretum 
and the pinetum,”—Spectator. 
“Mr, Smith is an experienced landscape-gardener, and a man of much good 
sense. His opinions are therefore entitled to attention.” —Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
PIII PADI AINSI ISIINSIRPALSISRISP PSI ADSL RISD PILL AE 
SANDERS’S PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE 
OF THE VIN#, as well under Glass as in the Open Air. 
With plates. 8vo. Price 5s. plain. ; 
“Mr. Assheton Smith’s place at Tedworth has long possessed a great English 
reputation for the excellence of its fruit and vegetables: one is continually hear- 
ing in society of the extraordinary abundance and perfection of its produce at 
seasons when common gardens are empty, and the great world seems to have 
arrived at the conclusion that the kitchen gardening and forcing there are 
nowhere excelled. We have, therefore, examined with no common interest the 
work before us, for it will be strange indeed, if a man who can act so skilfully as 
Mr, Sanders should be unable to offer advice of corresponding value. We have 
not been disappointed. Mr. Sanders’s directions are as plain as words can make 
them; and, we will add, as judicious as his long experience had led us to expect. 
After a careful perusal of his little treatise, we find nothing to object to, and 
much to praise.”— Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
“A clever, well-written, and nicely illustrated horticultural pamphlet, telling 
us all we want to know on the subject.” — Guardian. 
(Under the Authority of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty.) 
BOTANY OF THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. HERALD, under the 
command of Captain H. Kenuerr, R.N., C.B. By Brrrnorp 
SepMAnn, Member of the Imperial Academy Nat. Curiosorum. 
To be completed in Ten Parts. Plates. 4to. Price 10s. plain. 
THE TOURIST’S FLORA. A Descriptive Catalogue of the 
Flowering Plants and Ferns of the British Islands, France, 
Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. By Josrem Woops, 
F.L.S., F.G.8. 8vo, Price 18s. 
“The appearance of this book has been long expected by us; and we can justly 
state that it has quite fulfilled all our expectations, and will support the high re- 
putation of its author. Mr. Woods is known to have spent many years in collect- 
ing and arranging the materials for the present work, with a view to which he 
has, we believe, visited all the most interesting localities mentioned in it. 'This 
amount of labour, combined with extensive botanical knowledge, has enabled him 
to produce a volume such as few, if any other, botanists were capable of writing.” 
—Annals of Natural History. 
Nee Oe 
IRI 
~~ PPI LIS LILI PILLS 
RAR ner 
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