alb'ida, flowera of the same size aa j 

 that species but of a pale pink colour. \ 

 Cilicia. (Miss Willmott.) I 



•Aralia handsworthensis. {Gard. 



1901, lix, 401.) AraliaceiB. S. shrub 

 with very finely-cut leaves of a 

 beautiful pink tint. Fisher, Son & 

 Sibray, Ltd.) [This is A. Veitchii 

 ffraciUima.] 



led ; leaves fleshy, glossy g 

 in. long and 2 in. broad, i 

 e at the base ; flowers pinl 



Begonia Theulieri rosea. 



1901, 344, t.) G. A garden 

 lierrParis)"" 



^tt 



Flower-head 3 in. across ; ray-floweri 

 deep oranofe - red. Namaqualand. 

 (W. E. Gumbleton ; Kew.) 



*Arctoti8 staeehadifolia. (<?. C. 



1901, XXX, 108. f. 34.) G. An old 

 plant first introduced upwards of a 

 century ago, but apparently lost to 



•Asparagus sieberianus. iLem. Cat. 

 1901, No. 149.) Liliaceaj. S. A 



219.) Compositae. H. A straggling 



glabrous leaves and flower-heads wit 

 violet rays and orange disk. J 

 America. (Henkel, Darmstadt.) 



Aster subccerulea. i6. a i9oi, xx: 



ffiilatut, but differing from it in leaf 

 shape of involucral leaves ; pale bin 

 not purple, ray- florets ; differei 

 pappus, &c. N.W.India. (Leichtlii 



Asterogyne Martian a- (^. 



• 1 Palmie. " '"^ 





•Begonia forgetiana. 



XXX, r>6.) Begoniaceas. 

 nearly 2 ft. high and 



. em- 



pale yellow, solitary or 

 pruinosa. Yunnan. 



•Beschorneria Wrightii. 



t. 7779.) Amaryllidaceae. w. mucu 

 the largest of the five species of the 

 genus which have as yet flowered at 

 Kew. Most nearly allied to B. decos- 



glabrous flowers. Leaves densely 

 crowded, spreading and recurved, 

 ensiforro, coriaceous, four to five feet 

 long by two inches broad about the 

 middle. Panicle pyramidal, eight feet 



