24 CUPRESSACE& (Stapf). | Widdringtonia. 
W. Wallichiana, Gord. Pinet. suppl. 107 (name). Callitris — 
Schrad. ex Drige, Zwei Pflanzengeogr. Doc. 73 (name) ; Hutchin 
Report Conserv. For. Cape Col. 1895, 48, 49 ; in Trans. 8. Afr. Phil. 
Soc. xi. 62 ; in Agric. Journ. Cape Good Hope, xxvi. 661, 662 ; Storr 
Lister, Rep. Chief Conserv. Fort. Cape Good Hope, figs. on p. 2. 
s EL oe ; : : 
v. 951; =a Se Pflanzenw. Afr. ii. 88 ; =—— Kapland, 167, fig. 
on p. rolinia ees, Endl. ex Gord. Pinetum, Suppl. 
107. Pachglenis sp., Hook. f. lc. 142. 
& PRoy : Clanwilliam Div.; Cedarberg Mountains, scattered singly 
or in small fesse over a range of 30 miles mainly between _~ nd 6500 ft. 
Zeyher ; _— ! — ! Pee ge in MacOwan, Herb. Aus fe 1649 9! 
+1 aa sa vt + 
Ty Kew Sebastes phesads de to Bere Wallich collected it in that 
locality. “His specimens are in fact from 
o 
Ww. 
wn handwriting in the Stekons of the British Museum. Leipoldt’s 
q : 
s species. A valuable — tree (see particularly _ d Hutchins, 
i. =. The Cedar-boom or Cape Cedar of the Cape Colon 
W. equisetiformis, Mast. ae Linn. Soc. Bot. xxxvii. ee described from 
—— cultivated in the Tokai pla ntations near Cape Town (!) and others 
—. seh 164 !) communicated to the author from the Kati bergen, Stockenstrom 
n, has since been identified by the oe himself as Callitris robusta, a 
ice rat Australia (see Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. x 2). 
OrpER CXXVIII. CYCADACEZ. 
(By J. Hurcutnson & G. Rarrray.) 
osed of ee 
ae thick and fleshy or subwoody, often peltate scales bearing 
on their lower very numerous and crowded 1-locular 
oes the ee often collected in small groups. Female cones 
* 
; scales usually numerous, more or less 
