DEPÔTS,
Shrewsbury and Chester Railway Stations, Salop, and
the Stations on the Shrewsbury and Hereford Railway.

F. H. WORTH,

(FORMERLY ACTON AND WORTH,)

COACH BUILDER,
OPPOSITE WELSH BRIDGE, SHREWSBURY.
HERALDRY,
HATCHMENTS AND BANNERS.
COACH AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTER.

In one handsome volume, 8vo. with nineteen Plates, cloth, 8s.

A FLORA
OF
SHROPSHIRE,

By the Rev. W. A. LEIGHTON, B.A., F.B.S.E.

We cannot too strongly recommend it to the notice of our readers. For though as a local Flora, it professes to treat only of the plants of a single county, that county produces more than half the number of species of flowering plants indigenous to the Kingdom. The descriptions are unusually full and carefully drawn up. We have good ground for saying that the Flora of Shropshire should be in the hands of every one who feels interested in the botanical productions of the British Isles.—Phytologist.

We look upon the appearance of this work as being a great step in advance in the progress of British indigenous botany—for although it is professedly confined to the description of the plants of a single county, yet as clearly shewing the incorrectness of the idea “that a New Flora in the true sense or the term has become impossible,”—it is indispensable to every botanist who desires to obtain a thorough knowledge of our native plants.—Jardine’s Annals of Natural History.

Highly interesting work. The “Index to the Localities,” where each plant may be found in Shropshire, is very elaborate.—Shrewsbury Chronicle.