74 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



of garden origin. A poorly fruiting specimen, labelled ' Juniperus 

 sp.\ collected by Jeffrey (No. 471), Apr. 1852, at Bellevue Island. 



A small specimen with immature fruit, collected by Drummond 

 (No. 323) in New Orleans. A small fruiting specimen, ' Canada, 

 Pithkethly, /. Sabina.' Two freely fruiting specimens correctly named 

 besides /. Sabina, Linn., Palliser's Brit. N. Amer. Expl. Expedition, 

 Saskatchewan ; coll. E. Bourgeau, 1851-8. 



var. glauca, Knight, Syn. Conif. 12 (1850). 



Three sparingly fruited specimens, correctly identified, of 

 garden origin. 



J. scopulorum, Sargent in Garden and Forest; x., 420, f. 54 



(1897). 



Two sterile acicular-leaved specimens, labelled ' /. occidentalis , 

 H. H. J.,' of garden origin. 



Two unnamed specimens, one bearing fruit, the other male strobiles, 

 collected by A. Fendler in New Mexico, 1847, numbered 835 and 

 835 b. respectively. 



J. mexicana, Schiede in Linnaea, v. (1830), 77 ; not Sprengel. 



A large fertile specimen, correctly identified, with the following 

 note : — ' A tree or mostly a shrub; 10-15 ft. high ; Real del Monte, 

 Jan. This yields sandarach in Mexico, T. H.' 



J. tetragona, Schlechtendal in Linnaea, xii., 495 (1838). 



Two large fruiting specimens, one so-named, the other /. glauca, 

 Bentham ; the former collected on the road from Real del Monte to 

 Chico in January ; the latter in Mexico by Graham. 



One large fruiting specimen, collected by Graham (No. 320 B.) in 

 Mexico, named /. mexicana, Spreng. (Cupr. subnioides, Kth.). 



J. monosperma, Sargent, Silva North Amer. x. (1896), 89, t. DXXII. 



A small unidentified specimen collected by Douglas in 1826 on the 

 ascent to the Columbia River. 



J. californica, Carriere, Rev. Hort. (1854), 352, f. 21. 



A small fruiting specimen, labelled 1 Juniperus sp. No. 1475 ; 

 summit of Sierra Nevada Mountains. Sept. 25, 1853.' A large 

 specimen with male strobiles collected by A. Fendler (No. 834) in New 

 Mexico in 1847, labelled ' (Shrub Cedar, Engelmann).' 



Cryptomeria japonica, Don, in Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. xviii., 167, 

 t. xiii., i. (1839). 



A cone-bearing specimen without information as to its origin. 



Two cone-bearing specimens, the one from the Herbarium of 

 Zuccarini and collected by Siebold in Japan, the other from Fortune 

 in 1845 (a 16), and labelled ' a handsome tree, Shanghai and North of 

 China, Oct. 1843/ 



Three sterile specimens from Nagasaki, collected by Veitch, i860. 



var. elegans, Masters in Journ. Linn. Soc. (Bot.) xviii., 

 497 (1881). 



A sterile specimen from Veitch (No. 77), labelled — 

 1 Cryptomeria sp. Glaucous foliage ; habit somewhat pendu- 

 lous ; cultivated, Nagasaki and Yeddo.' 



