;rs- chronicle. 



* at Grotto Henri 



1 Italy" One of the most striking objects 1 

 a yellow Banksian rose, supported on a pole, 





They are all plante 



e healthy aspect of the 





ar rate. Azaleas, ;•:■■! ■ -; -la;-, n v.-ry tine Rhododendron ar- 

 ^L~ ? m ° ng8t W i ich l observo , d . fiue specimens of Olea 



"wrtwS from f- c ' ' treea ,Iad Offered 



y that most probably it is t 



ing than others.— W. mor * * n " 



of Technical Terms. By John Lindley.Ph. D.,F.r!| 

 Although a fifth edition of a well-known work, *- 



having enabled it to reach a fifth edition, the Author 

 has taken advantage of the opportunity tlm, afforded 

 him of bringing it completely up to the present stage of 

 with its original plan, 'by the introduction of douUfuTor 



the addition of Explanatory Notes, the latter have never 

 been permitted to appear in a form likely to divert at- 



_'i .it If. u pu i w . _ 'he bCici ■• t- entialU i. |>*r 



can then turn to the evidence and explanatory mat 



examination. Nothing tends so .much to perplex a g 



dent as a cloud of facts which he cannot condense, a 



i iaipossible for him to distinguish 



n; f tion which the one bears to the other, orth 



to look upon a clear well-defined o 

 throw what is prominent into relief, and what is dist 



. : 



economy. He 



th: 





roplished by the action of pollen (452) u 





. The pollen ii 

 e coat (454), ii 



of the Bonace bark , j foramen, with t 



*k (Lagetta hnteana). Perhaps Klein^! * the style ^ .ii »< ' 



