208 
Editorial. 
contributed by the different members of the staff of the Cambridge 
Botany School will become a regular feature of the New Phyto- 
logist, beginning with the new volume in January, 1909. 
At the same time the journal will be enlarged so as to contain 
at least 36 pages in a single number, that is, a minimum of 360 in 
the annual volume. It has from the outset been the Editor’s desire 
to increase the size of the monthly issue, and thus to secure a better 
balance between different parts of the subject, but it is only quite 
recently that contributions have been received in sufficient number 
to justify such a course. 
The price of the journal will be raised, to correspond with its 
increase in size, to fifteen shillings for the annual volume, and two 
shillings for each single number. It is hoped and believed that 
there will be more than a corresponding increase in the value of the 
periodical; 
In conclusion the Editor desires to express his very cordial 
thanks to all his contributors and subscribers during the past seven 
years, and his hopes that the New Phytologist will now enter 
upon an era of increased usefulness and increased circulation. 
