REVIEWS AND EXCHANGES 
• 5 ‘ 
which, by the courtesy of the publishers, we are able to reproduce, are eminently 
educational in calling attention to that character of the bark to which the Auras 
seldom do justice. Mr. Irving has, we think, taken too many of his examples 
from Kew Gardens, thereby losing natural surroundings, and in some cases 
having to be content with immature, and therefore less characteristic, trees. 
BOLE OK SPANISH CHESTNUT. 
Rowan, Larch and Silver Fir, for example, would have looked more natural in 
more rugged surroundings. Its portable form and small weight add to the 
usefulness of a Arst-rate achievement. 
Proceedings of the South London Ento7nological and Natural History Society, 
1903. Price 2s. 
Papers on* the Pearly Nautilus, Amersham (Bucks) and Dawlish are hardly 
to be looked for in the Proceedings of a South London Society ; but this 
