supplementary to Enc. of Plants, Hort. Brit, and Arb. Brit. 395 



at Bagshot Park. Dr. Endlicher, who first described and named the plant, 

 considers it to belong to Sapindaceae j but Dr. Lindley thinks it an anomalous 

 form of Capparidaceae. (B. M.R., No. 70., June.) 



Malvdcece. 



+ Abutilon striatum Dick. " A green-house shrub of the easiest culture 

 and great beauty, being covered all the year long with a profusion of bell- 

 shaped orange flowers, strongly veined with crimson, and dependent from long 

 slender stalks." (B. M. R., No. 53., May.) 



Halsaminece. 



■BALSAMPNA [vi. p. 75. 



MaslerszVJraa Paxt. Mr. Masters's .QJ or 1 my.o C Khoseea 1837. S co Paxt. mag. of bot. 



Avery pretty annual species of balsam, found on the Khoseea Hills by Mr. 

 Gibson in 1837, which continued in flower during the whole summer of 1838 

 at Chatsworth. It is named in honour of Mr. Masters, of the Botanic 

 Garden, Calcutta. {Paxt. Mag. of Bot., May). 



Hutdcece. 



1154. corr^:^ 



ferrugfnea Hook, ferruginous Sk \ | or 3 ap.jl G.W Australia 1836. C p.l Bot. no. 131. 



Many new hybrid corneas have lately been introduced into our gardens ; 

 but this is a genuine species from Van Diemen's Land, where it was dis- 

 covered by Major Dunn. It is a handsome shrub, with elegant foliage ; and 

 the flowers, though not brilliant in their colour (being of a greenish white), are 

 large and well shaped. {Botanist, June.) 



Legumindsce. 



1985. ZUPPNUS [1839 31 . 



HartwegiV Lindl. Mr. Hartweg's O or 3 jn.o Dk.B. Pk Mexico 1838. S co Bot. reg. 



A very fine half-hardy Mexican annual, sent home by M. Hartweg. It 

 has brilliant dark blue flowers, with a shade of pink, and obtuse very hairy 

 leaves. It grows from 2 ft. to 3 ft. high, and flowers freely " from the end 

 of June, until destroyed by frost in autumn. (Bot. Reg., June.) 



1940. HCTVE4 30088 pungens Paxt. Mag. of Sot., vi. p. 101. 



1964. CY'TISUS 17523 trifldrus Ft. Cab., No. 102. 



-f- Isotropis striata Benth. A very pretty little green-house shrub, with 

 clear orange-yellow flowers, strongly marked with rich crimson veins. A 

 native of the Swan River settlement, introduced by Robert Mangles, Esq. 

 (B.M.R., No. 61., June.) 



-f- Gompholdbium versicolor Lindl. A climbing shrub, introduced by Mr. 

 Mangles, with large flowers of a reddish-yellow, changing to a deep chocolate- 

 red. (B. M. R., No. 62., June.) 



-j- Eysenhardtia amorphoides Humb. Bonpl. and Kunth. A beautiful 

 Mexican mountain shrub, or rather small tree, with small pinnated leaves, like 

 those of an acacia, but distinctly marked with glandular dots. The flowers 

 are small and white or pale yellow, and they are disposed in an erect compact 

 spike, 2 in. or 3 in. long. (B. M. R., No. 55., May.) 



2144. KENNE'DY^ 19383 coccinea. 



Synonyme : ZIchy<i coccinea Benth. 



+ Chorozema vdrium Benth. Another green-house shrub from the Swan 

 River, introduced by Mr. Smart. Its leaves are greenish-grey, and its 

 flowers orange and crimson. (B. M. R., No. 62., June.) 



-f- Acacia cyanophylla Lindl. An acacia from the Swan River, also in- 

 troduced by Mr. Smart, with long, glaucous, wavy leaves, " and a profusion 

 of axillary racemes of yellow flowers." (B. M. R., No. 64., June.) 



Yhiladelphdcece. 

 .1479. PHILADE'LPHUS 30450 Gordom<5nws Bot. Reg. 1839, 32. 



Deutz'ia corymbosa Wall. This very pretty Himalayan shrub, which was re- 

 ceived under the name of D. canescens, has produced flowers for the first time 

 in England, in March, 1839, in the Horticultural Society's Garden, in the 



