560 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART 111. 
Spec. Char , &c. Leaf lanceolate, toothed, scarcely solong as the raceme. Stamens 10. (Dec. Prod., 
ii. p. 74.) A shrub, a native of the Island of Owhyhee. (Jd.) Introduced in 1795. ‘The plant in the 
Horticultural Society’s Garden was placed against the wall in 1828. It is probable that plants of 
this species are extant in many old cullections in conservatories. 
App. i. Other Species of Duvaia. 
There is a plant belonging to this genus in the Horticultural Society’s Garden, which was placed 
against a wall there in 1831, but which has not yet flowered. It seems somewhat different in 
foliage from the preceding sorts, and may be a variety. The others we consider as nothing more 
than varieties, unless we except D. latitdlia. 
App. I. Other Species of Anacardiacce, hailf-hardy, or conjectured 
to be so. 
Sabia parviflora Wall, and S. campanulata Wall. are climbing shrubs, natives of Nepal, and 
included in our list, p. 174, as likely to prove hardy when once introduced. In Don’s Miller (it 
p. 69.), they are very properly marked as requiring the green-house ; and we should probably not have 
included them among the half-hardy species, had we not had the aid of Mr, Royle’s opinion, as stated 
in p. 173. 
% Schinus Milli L. (Don’s Mill., ii. p. 76.; Lam. 
Tll., t. 822.; and our fig. 234.) is a deciduous 
shrub or low tree, a native of Brazil and Peru, 
where it grows to the height of 20ft. The leaves 
are impari-pinnate, with lanceolate serrated leaflets. 
The flowers are small, and of a yellowish green ; 
and they are succeeded by berries about as large 
as a pea, of a singularly beautiful rose colour, and fx 
highly polished. This species was introduced in ” 
1597, and, till lately, was kept in green-houses ; 
but a plant in the garden of the London Horticul- 
tural Society has stood out several years in the 
open border, without any protection whatever. 
It well deserves a place against a conservative wall, not only on account of 
the beauty of its foliage and of its berries, but from the interest attached to it, 
from the usefulness of its products in its native country, were it is called the 
Peruvian mastich tree. The Peruvians are reported to make a vinous liquor 
and a sort of vinegar from its berries; and, from the resinous gum which exudes 
from its stem, they prepare mastich. The fresh leaves exhibit the same 
phenomenon, when immersed in water, as those of Duvada (see p. 558.), 
and, probably, other terebinthinate genera. The leaves, the bark, and other 
parts of the plant, when bruised, emit a terebinthinate odour. There are two 
plants in the garden of the London Horticultural Society, one of which, in 
1834, was 3 ft. high, after having been 2 years planted; and the second, 
which differs in its foliage from the other, was 3 ft. high, after having been 
planted 3 years. The common name in gardens is S. Molle; but the proper 
specific name is Muli, which is the Peruvian name of the tree. 
S. M. 2 Areira Lin. Spec., 1467., Don’s Mill., 2 p.77., is a variety with the leaflets almost entire. 
S. sn Mol. and S. virgata Sweet are species from Chili and Lima, probably as hardy as 
S. Milli. 

Triceros (from treis, three, and keras, a horn; because the berry is three-horned) cochinchinénsis 
Lour. (Dec. Prod., 2. p. 89., and Don’s Mill., 2. p.77.) is a tree with impari-pinnate leaves, a 
native of Cochin-China, oun the mountains, where it grows to the height of 25ft. It would forma 
most desirable acquisition to British gardens, as there can be little doubt“of its proving quite hardy. 
Heterodéndron oleefolium Desf. (Don’s Miil., 2. p.78.) is an evergreen shrub from New Holland, 
with the appearance of Cnedrum tricéccum. 
Styloplasium spathulatum Desf. (Don’s Mill., 2. p.78.) is also a native of New Holland. 
Cnedorum tricbccum L. (Lam. Iil., t.27.) is a native of Spain and the south of France, in dry 
and gravelly places. It has been an inhabitant of our green-houses since 1793; and, on dry shel- 
tered rockwork, it will stand the open air with little or no protection; producing its yellow flowers 
from April to September, and ripening its brownish red 3-seeded_ fruits, which resemble in form 
those of Euph6érbza Lathyris, and remain on all the winter. 'The plant is evergreen, and grows 
to the height of from 1 ft. to 2 ft. A specimen of this species in our garden at Bayswater, planted 
at the foot of a wall, and protected with a glass case, but without any artificial heat, has stood for 
the last six years; and is now (April 23. 1836) 18 inches high, and covered with fruit and flowers ; 
ontrenting pUnety with Coronilla glatica, planted in the same glass case, and beautifully in flower 
at the same time. 
Cneorum pulveruléntum is a native of Teneriffe, and probably as hardy as the other, 
