SHORT NOTES. 487 
No. Names. No. Names. 
+156 Staehelina, elega 166 Uniola, paniculata 
+157 Stewartia, fe: ee ee 167 Vaccinium, arborea 
158 Styrax, officinale 168 —____—_. sae pina 
15 ] 169 ——____— a? 
160 Syderoxylon, angustifolia ie Viburnum, Mis um 
————— latifolia +171 Walteriana, nova genera, a 
+162 egg coe very beautiful evergreen 
163 ——————_—altre species shru 
164 Tatnall Gras é, wick a variety +172 Yucca filamentosa* 
oe tg mci he from Ame- 173 ——— gloriosa* 
174 ——— nova 
165 refi (supposed) 
Those marked * are to be found in Walter’s Flora Carolina. 
Living plants of ot above Seeds, as well as Phloxes, New Magnolias, 
Rhododendrons, the Four distinct Species of Sarracenias, mentioned in 
Walter’s Flora ‘aroting, Violets, &c, &e, many of which are not to be 
found, as yet, in any other Person's possession but himself, will be ready 
for Inspection i in a short ; J. Fraser will give the earliest Informa- 
tion, as he intends to sibel § A General List of his Plants, as soon as the ey 
can be properly arranged. He is happy to inform Nobility and Gentry, 
that it is now in his ee to supply them with the most curious Plants 
s of the Wo rey on the a reasonable Terms ; 
ahama’s, a list, with their Native Names, is ready to be seen by any 
Person who will do him the Honour to call. 
James Brirren. 
SHORT NOTES. 
Nore on Livaria.—lt may be of interest to British botanists to 
note that Prof. Weitstein in his monograph of the Scrophulariacee in 
Engler and Prantl’s Pflanzenfamilien “ag Theil, 3 Abteilung, p. 57) 
divides Linaria into three genera: Linaria proper, with terminal 
inflorescence and valvular dehiscence; Elatinoides, with axillary 
cence ; and o a. with leaves 
ened veined. The two latter names are given for sections by 
Ch in his Monographie des Antirrhinées (1838) ; Cymbalaria 
was established as a genus by Baumgarten (nw. Stir D. Transsilv. 
ii. 208 (1816) ), who named the typical species C. muralis, and b 
Gray (Nat. iat Brit. Pl. ii. 321 (1821)), ind called it C. hederacea, 
Mr. J. rnhardt, in the Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 
te July (p. 377), rightly points out that the name Klatinoides is ante- 
ted by Dumortier’s Kickwxia, published in 1827 in his Flora Belgica 
. 85, and that the names of the two British species cannot stand 
as Kickeia Elatine Dum. and K. spuria Dum. if the genus be regarded 
as distinct from Linaria. In that case another name will have to 
be found for the Apocynaceous genus Kickwxia, but it seems doubtful 
whether under any circumstances that can maintain the name. It 
ublished as a nomen nudum by de in the preface to Flora 
= p. vii (1828), where it is spelt Kixia—a spelling retained by 
Endlicher, who first published it with a duped in his Genera, 
