5/- Garden Botany. 20 pages of Coloured Illusts. Agnes Catlow. 5/- Greenhouse Botany. 20 pages of Coloured Illusts. Ditto. 3/6 Gardening at a Glance. Many Illustrations. George Glenny. 2/- —— Cheaper Edition. Ditto. 2/- Hardy Shrubs. Woodcuts and Coloured Plates. W. D. Prior. 1/- Town Gardening: A Handbook of Trees, Shrubs, and Plants, suitable for Town Cultivation in the Out-door Garden, Window Garden, and Greenhouse. R. C. Ravenscroft. 1/- The Kitchen Garden. Roots, Vegetables, Herbs, and Fruits. E. S. Delamer. 1/- The Flower Garden. Bulbous, Tuberous, Fibrous, Rooted, and Shrubby Flowers. E. S. Delamer. 3/6 The Kitchen Garden and The Flower Garden in one volume, gilt edges. E. S. Delamer. 1/- The Cottage Garden. How to Lay it out, and Cultivate it to Advantage. Andrew Meikle. 3/6 Roses, and How to Grow Them. Coloured Plates. W. D. Prior. 1/6 —— Cheaper Edition. Ditto. 3/6 Wild Flowers: Where to Find, and How to Know Them, with 12 Coloured Plates by Noel Humphreys, and many Woodcuts. Dr. S. Thomson. 2/- —— Plain Plates. Ditto. 3/6 Haunts of the Wild Flowers. Coloured Plates and many Woodcuts. Anne Pratt. 3/6 Woodlands, Heaths, and Hedges. Many Coloured Plates. W. S. Coleman. 1/- —— Plain Plates. Ditto. 5/- History of British Ferns. 22 pages of Coloured Illusts. T. Moore. 3/6 British Ferns and their Allies—the Club-Mosses, Pepperworts, and Horsetails. Coloured Plates by Coleman. T. Moore. 1/- —— Cheaper Edition. Coloured Plates. Ditto. 5/- Profitable Plants: used for Food, Clothing, Medicine, etc. 20 pages of Coloured Illustrations. T. C. Archer. 5/- Palms and their Allies. 20 pages of Coloured Illustrations. Dr. B. Seemann. 5/- British Mosses. 20 pages of Coloured Illustrations. R. Stark. 3/6 The Family Doctor. 500 Illustrations, comprising all the Medicinal Plants. For Books on Potato, Apple, Asparagus, Mushroom, Fruit, Grape, Flax, see "Agriculture and Farming," page 41. George Routledge & Sons, London, Glasgow, and New York.NOTES[1] Plural Chrysalides. [2] Making Lepidos in genitive. [3] A word derived from the Latin, and meaning literally a "sucker." [4] Antenna in the singular number. [5] Bailey's "Festus." [6] As beginners in entomology are, I know, often glad to be informed of some reliable dealer from whom to procure the apparatus required for the pursuit, I have pleasure in here giving the name of Mr. T. Cooke, of 30, Museum Street (six doors from the British Museum), where all the apparatus mentioned in this work, and numerous other natural history articles, are to be found, good and cheap, I believe. For the guidance of young amateurs, I will mention the prices of a few of the more necessary articles I have myself purchased or examined at the above establishment. Cane ring-nets, with stick, and ready for use, 2s.; ring-net, with three-jointed metal ring and screw-socket, 4s. 6d.; pocket collecting-boxes, corked, 3d. to 1s. each; store-boxes, 10 in. by 8 in., corked top and bottom, 2s. 6d.; drying houses, for securely keeping setting-boards when in use, and containing eleven corked setting-boards and drawer for pins, &c., 10s. 6d.; sheet cork for lining cabinets, 7 in. by 3½ in., 1s. 6d. doz. sheets; entomological pins, three sizes, mixed, 1s. oz., &c., &c. [7] Polyommatus Boeticus. [8] A very ingenious and neat contrivance—the invention of my friend Dr. Allchin, of Bayswater. It may be obtained of Messrs. Cooke & Son, Naturalists, 30, Museum Street, London, W.C. It is of brass, with screw caps, the inner one having a small hole through which the chloroform can be used, drop by drop. The price is 4s. Also, the new Cyanide Killing-bottles, 1s. 6d.; 2s. ready for use. [9] Cleopatra, as Duponchel observes, is found in France, only in the hottest parts, and is first seen as we go southwards, about Avignon, but abounds most on the shores of the Mediterranean. Why the two varieties Cleopatra and the common Rhamni fly together we cannot fully explain; but it is possible there may be a constitutional difference between individual insects, just as we see that of two Englishmen going to a hot climate, one will brown deeply, while the complexion of the other will hardly alter, though exposed to the very same external influence. |