The American Botanist 



A Quarterly Journal of Economic ^ Ecological Botany 

 WILLARD N. CLUTE, EDITOR 



SUBSCRIPTIONS.— The subscription price of this magazine is $1.00 a 

 year or $1.50 for two years, payable strictly in advance. Personal checks 

 on small or distant banks must contain ten cents for collection fees. The 

 magazine is issued on the 20th of February, May, August and November. 

 BACK NUMBERS.— Volumes 1 to 10 inclusive consists of 6 numbers 

 each, Vols. 11 to 13 of 5 numbers each and all later volumes of 4 numbers 

 each. The first 18 volumes may be had for 76 cents a volume, or the set 

 will be sent for $9.00. A full set contains 2312 pages. 



THE FERN BULLETIN 



In 1913, at the completion of its twentieth volume, The Fern Bulletin was consoli- 

 dated with this magazine. The back volumes average more than 100 pages each, and 

 since they cover the entire formative period of American Fern study they are invaluable 

 for reference. The majority of new forms discovered in recent years have been 

 described in its pages. First six volumes out of print. A set of vols. 7 to 20 will be sent 

 for 17.00. An extended description of the contents of the volumes may be had for the 

 asking.' 



WILLARD N. CLUTE & CO., PUBLISHERS 



207 WHITLEY AVENUE, JOLIET, ILL. 



ENTERED AS MAIL MATTER OF THE SECOND CLASS AT THE POST OFFICE. JOLIET, ILL. 



BOTANICAL 

 ENCYCLOPEDIA 



There is no botanical publication in the whole world that contains as much 

 information of value to the plant lover as THE AMERICAN BOTANIST. 

 Since the beginning it has consistently made a specialty of those fugitive notes 

 about plants, which other journals neglect, but which are at the base of any 

 intelligent interest in plants. Nowhere else can one find so many and varied 

 notes on such subjects as latex, perfume, flower color, nectar, pollen, dyes, soaps, 

 pollination, drug plants, edible wild plants, seed dispersal, freaks, Mendel's law, 

 evolution, the Mutation theory, the use of the various parts in the economy of 

 the plant, etc., etc. In the cumulative index to the contents of the volumes in 

 this office, there are 138 divisions, many of them with 50 or more titles each. 

 There are literally thousands of articles. If bound in one volume, the numbers 

 would make a book larger than the largest dictionary. The information they 

 contain can be found nowhere else. All the large libraries as well as many 

 private individuals have complete sets, and every plant lover should follow their 

 example. We have less than 60 sets left as this is written. Get a set while you 

 can. The first 22 volumes will be sent unbound and postpaid for $12.00. 



WILLARD N. CLUTE ca, CO. 



JOLIET, ILL. 



