35 
W. THACKER &> CO.y LONDON; 
Fourth Edition. Post 8 vo., boards, 3.?. 6<f. net. Rs. 2.8. 
FLOWERS AND GARDENS IN INDIA. 
A MANUAL FOR BEGINNERS. 
By Mrs. R. TEMPLE WRIGHT. 
Civil and Military Gazette.— “ A most useful little book which we cannot 
too strongly recommend. We can recommend it to our reader's with the utmost 
confidence, as being not only instructive, but extremely interesting, and written in 
a delightfully easy, chatty strain.” 
Pioneer. — “ Very practical throughout. There could not be better advice than 
this, and the way it is given shows the enthusiasm of Mrs. Temple Wright.” 
Imperial i6mo. , cloth, 12 s. 6 d. Rs. 9.6. 
A HANDBOOK TO 
THE FERNS OF INDIA, CEYLON, 
AND THE MALAY PENINSULA. 
By Colonel R. H. BEDDOME, F.S.I. 
(late Conservator* of Forests, Madras). 
With 300 Illustrations. 
Nature. — “It is the first special book 
of portable size and moderate price which 
has been devoted to Indian Ferns, and is 
in every way deserving of the extensive 
circulation it is sure to obtain.” 
Indian Daily News. — “ I have just 
seen a new work on Indian Ferns which 
will prove vastly interesting, not only to 
the Indian people, but to the botanist of 
this country.” 
Gardeners’ Chronicle. — “The ‘Ferns 
of India.’ This is a good book, being of 
a useful and trustworthy character. The 
species are familiarly described, and most 
of them illustrated by small fi gu res.” 
Free Press. — ‘ ‘ Those interested in 
botany will do well to procure a new work 
on the ‘Ferns of British India.’ The 
work will prove a first-class text-book.” 
Crown 8vo., paper, 3 a 6 d. Rs. 2.12;- 
SUPPLEMENT TO THE 
FERNS OF INDIA, CEYLON, &c. 
By Colonel R. BEDDOME, F.I.S. 
Containing Ferns which have been discovered since the publication oi “ A Hand- 
book to the Ferns of British India 
D 2 
