BOTANY AND GARDENING. 
11 
Fcap., cloth gilt, price 2s. 6d., 
HPHE KITCHEN AND FLOWER GARDEN; or, the Cul- 
_ ture in the open ground of Roots, Vegetables, Herbs, and Fruits, and 
of Bulbous, Tuberous, Fibrous, Rooted, and Shrubby Flowers. By Eugene 
Sebastian De lamer. 
Also, sold separately, each Is., 
THE KITCHEN GARDEN. | THE FLOWER GARDEN. 
In fcap. 8vo, price 3s. 6d. cloth gilt, or with gilt edges, 4s., 
WANDERINGS AMONG THE WILD FLOWERS: How 
’ ’ to See and how to Gather them. With Remarks on the Economical 
and Medicinal Uses of our Native Plants. By Spencer Thomson, M.D. 
A New Edition, entirely revised, with 171 Woodcuts, and Eight large 
Coloured Illustrations by Noel Humphreys. 
Also, price 2s., in boards, a Cheap Edition, with Plain Plates. 
Fcap., price 3s. 6d. cloth gilt, or 4s. gilt edges, 
nUR WOODLANDS, HEATHS, AND HEDGES; a 
^. Popular Description of Trees, Shrubs, Wild Fruits, &c., with 
Notices of their Insect Inhabitants. By W. S. Coleman, M.E.S.L. 
With 41 Illustrations printed in Colours on 8 Plates. 
*** A Cheap Edition, with Plain Plates, fancy boards, price Is. 
Fancy boards, price Is., 
B ritish ferns and their allies; comprising also 
the Club-Mosses, Pepperworts, and Horsetails. By Thomas Moore, 
F.L.S., &c. With 40 Illustrations by W. S. Coleman. 
In square 16mo, price 2s. 6d., cloth limp, 
F IRST STEPS TO ECONOMIC BOTANY; a Description 
of the Botanical and Commercial Characters of the Chief Articles of 
Vegetable Origin used for Food, Clothing, Tanning, Dyeing, Building, 
Medicine, Perfumery, &c. For the Use of Schools. By Thomas C, 
Archer. With 20 Pages of Plates, embracing 106 Figures. 
“ An admirable and cheap little volume, abounding in good illustrations of 
the plants that afford articles of food or applicable to purposes of manufacture. 
This should be on the table of every family, and its contents familiar with all 
rising minds.”— Atlas. 
F 
Fcap., cloth limp, price Is., 
LAX AND HEMP: Their Culture and Manipulation. 
E. Sebastian Delamer. With Illustrations. 
By 
“We may, if we choose, grow our own hemp to quite an indefinite extent, 
and hold ourselves independent of foreign supply. The soil of Ireland alone is 
capable of sending forth an enormous export.”— Preface. 
