supplementary to Encyc. of Plants and Hort. Brit. 54 i 

 Kubidcece Dec, or Cmcko?ihceas Lindl. 



*388a. OLDENLA'ND/^ L, {H. B. Oldenland, a Dane, who collected plants at the Cape of Good Hope in 

 1695.) afe 'i^ sp 54. [bot. gard. 1. 



*Deppea»a Cham, et Schlecht. Deppe's tt. □ cu 1 all sea, W Mexico 1835 C l.p Birm. 

 Synonyme : Gerontbgea Deppe^ren Link et Otto. 



A plant growing about 1 ft. high, with small, opposite, ovate, 

 and ovate-acuminate leaves ; and small flowers, like those of a 

 species of Asperula. Though it may have but " little beauty in 

 the florist's eye, its blossoms being small," yet " to the botanist, 

 and to the general admirer of nature, it offers charms from its 

 delicate structure, and its graceful panicles of numerous milk- 

 white flowers," which are produced "in uninterrupted succession 

 throughout the year." Received from M. Otto of Berlin, in 

 1 835, and kept in the stove ; though, in all probability, it may only 

 require a green-house. {Birmmgkam Bot. Gard , vol i. ; Sept.) 



Wy7^si7idcece. 



571. ARDI'SIA [reg. 1892. 



*odontophylIa fFa«. tooth-leaved » □ or P6 jy Pa Salra. and R. Bengal 1834 C s.p Bot. 



A handsome evergreen shrub, remarkable for the delicious 

 fragrance of its flowers, which are of a pale salmon colour, 

 slightly streaked with red. It was first introduced by T. C. 

 Palmer, Esq., of Bromley ; and it flowered in the stove of the 

 Exotic Nursery in the year 1834. {Bot. Meg., vol. xxii. ; 

 Sept.) 



Volemonidcecz. 



499. GVIAA [reg. 1888. Gard. mag. vol. ix. p. 705. 



ftenuifl5ra Benth. Blender-teierf-coroUaed O or 2 au Ro and V California 1833 S co Bot. 



A hardy annual, not worth cultivating for the sake of the flower- 

 garden ; but very pretty in nosegays as an ornament to rooms. 

 Its flowers change, in drying, from rose colour to blue. The co- 

 rolla is of a rich, clear, -uniform violet in the inside, and on the 

 outside of a pale rose ; but this colour is much affected by the 

 presence of innumerable short, deep-red lines, which are as de- 

 licate as if they were drawn with the point of a needle. [Bot. Beg., 

 vol. xxii. ; Sept.) 



Scrophidaridcecc. 



1774. ^NTIRRHPNUM [reg. 1893. 



*glandulbsum LindL glandular-Aaired O or 2 au.s. Ro Pa Y California 1834 ? S co Bot. 



" This, if not a very pretty plant, is something of a geogra- 

 phical curiosity ; it being the first species of the genus Antir- 

 rhinum which has yet been found certainly wild in the New World. 

 The specimens of A. Orontium that have been met with in the 

 United States are believed to have been introduced from Europe. 

 Quite a hardy annual, which will grow in any soil. It was sent 

 from California by Mr. Douglas ; and flowered for the first time 

 in? 1835." {/?o/. i^f^--., vol.' xxii. ; Sept.) 



Aca7ithdce(E. 



*V121a. STROBILA'NTHES iVera rt6 77. (sirobilos, interpreted in botany the cone of a pine ; anthos, a 

 flower ;? inflorescence in the bud state resembling the cone of a pine.) Sp. 1 14.2. 

 *Sabinidna Nees ab Esen., Sabine's jM CD or 4 w B P Nepal 1826 C p.l Bot. mag. 3517. 

 Synom/me . Ruellea Sabinf^no Wall., Hort. Brit. No. 28414. 



