Flowering Seedlmg Cdcii quiddy. S57 



" Hortus Lignosus," and the " Arboreium et Friiticetum Britan- 

 nicum." 



Curtis' s Botanical Magazine ; in monthly numbers, each containing 

 seven plates; Ss. 6d. coloured, 3s. plain. Edited by Sir William 

 Jackson Hooker, LL.D., &c., Professor of Botany in the University 

 of Glasgow. 



Edwards's Botanical Register ; in monthly numbers, new series, each 

 containing six plates ; 3s. 6d. coloured, 3s. plain. Edited by 

 Dr. Lindley, Professor of Botany in the University College, 

 London. 



The Botanist ; in monthly numbers, each containing four plates, with 

 two pages of letterpress; 8vo; large paper, 2s. 6d.; small paper. 

 Is. 6d. Conducted by B. Maund, Esq., F.L.S., assisted by the 

 Rev. J. S. Henslow, M.A., F.L.S., &c., Professor of Botany in the 

 University of Cambridge. 



][^elasto77idcecB. 



MAKCK'TIA Dec. Mabcetia, (In honour of Dr. Marcet, who has written on vegetable poisons.) 

 decussata Grah. cross-leaved jtt □ V- f s.o Pli Brazil 1840. C co Bot. 223. 

 Synonyme : Rhexia decussilta Mart. % Sclirank. 



A pretty little shrub, with pink flowers, a native of Brazil, raised in Mr. 

 Cunningham's nursery, Comely Bank, near Edinburgh. " It has been kept in 

 the stove ; but one plant, placed in the greenhouse, stood there in October 

 without injury." (^Botanist, June.) 



Acanthdce(B. 



3659. STROBTLA'NTHES 



scabra Lindl. rough 3^ □ or 4 m Y India 1840. C p.l Bot. reg. 1841, 32. 



Avery handsome stove shrub, with bright yellow flowers, which flowered 

 lately at Syon. " It requires to be managed in much the same manner as an 

 Eranthemum or a Justicia. It strikes readily from cuttings, and grows luxu- 

 riantly in any free soil." (J5o/. Reg., June.) 



ThymelecB. 

 87. PIMELE'A [1841, 53. 



spectabilis Lindl. showy 3^ i | or 3 ap. my W.Pk Swan River 1840. C l.p.s Bot, reg. 



A showy species, with very large heads of flowers, and " smooth, rather 

 glaucous leaves, so arranged as to form four rows along the stem." It is 

 easily cultivated if grown in "a mixture of loam, peat, leaf-mould, and sand;" 

 and, though it is usually kept in a pot, " it is most beautiful when planted in 

 the border of the conservatory." (^Bot. Reg., June.) 



OrchiddcecB. 

 2530. CATASE'TUM r34. 



triilla Lindl. trowel-shaped £ El cu 1 s G.Br S. Amer. 1840^ D p.r.w Bot. reg. 1841 



A curious species of Catasetum, which flowered in the Stanhope Nursery 

 in September, 1840. The flowers are of a dingy green and brown ; and " the 

 lip has much the form of a trowel." (^Bot. Reg., June.) 



Palmes. 



2682. ARE^CA 23570 mont^na. 



Synonyine : Euterpe raontana Grah. Bot. Mag. 3874. 



Art. X. On bringing the Cacti raised from Seed quicker into Flotver. 

 By M. VON Warszewitz, Gardener in Insterburg. 



(From the Transactions of the Prussian Horticidtural Society.) 



In 1835, about the middle of May, I had two kinds of Cacti in 

 flower, viz. Cactus speciosa and Cactus alata. C. alata had 



A A 4 



