Abstract
OUR first duty, and a very pleasant one it is, is to welcome our foreign guests, our friends from across the sea, as I prefer to call them, to thank them for their presence here to-day, and to express a hope that their sojourn among us may be both agreeable and profitable. At the same time we regret that some, such as Dr. Focke, the historian of hybridisation, has not been able to preside over this meeting, as we had hoped he might have done. Nor can we at such a meeting do other than express our abiding regret at the loss, though at an advanced age, of the great hybridiser Charles Naudin.
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Hybridisation1. Nature 60, 286–287 (1899). https://doi.org/10.1038/060286a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/060286a0