NEW PLANTS. 
15 
... PANAX DIPPISSUM 
triangular, bipinnate an^ rriW ILF jointed stems ; these leaves are 
si.iny-toothed, bluntish secondary divisbrs’‘\L‘^totrL^^^^^ Imear-oblong, sometimes lobed, always 
the ieaf a crispy appeara„ee““ riil“inel ^i-s to the surface of 
. , , , PANAX DUMOSUM. 
olivc-gieen, mottled with brif»bter »ro i * • • colour. The petioles are brownish or 
of nuLroi s ^--‘-ting in a roundish-ovate pinnately divided blade 
The compact habir toiX spiny teeth. 
extremel^rnamenir^t guinea " 
, PANAX VICTORIAS. 
M,l. l.l„at, ., .1,.., p|'.n.4 L lateml "Zd™/; "wZSfrf ' l-t- 
s4=;c.S“ztr^^ 
Islands: and is 0 ^ 0 ! t^lst L‘l ^ and pictorial character. It is a native of the South Pacific 
illustration, Me page 10. IJ and 2 guineat introduction. For 
PHCENIX COMPACTA. 
m, . , , „ , PHCENIX HYBRIDA. 
rY' '“If”- ■“" * 
PHCENIX INTERMEDIA. 
nilirfordl^eTuS^^^^^ 
POLYGONUM MULTIPLORUM. 
:c !:is:x ™:irz;r;r,“' ,1™“ f 
POLYSTICHUM POLYBLEPHARUM 
SELAGINELLA CANALIOULATA. 
A remarkably handsome species of Club-moss, introduced from the Islands of the South Pacific It 
the base ^"Icste stems as thick as an ordinary pencil, rootin- freely from 
t he base, tinted with pale brownish red, and furnished with scattered appreLed ovatc-oblon- unaiual 
■ ded leaves ; the branches are tripinnate ; the larger leaves are distant sLi-ovate, while the leavS (li- 
the altcinate divisions arc close set. ovate-oblong acute, with the smaller intermediate ones acuminate 
inaiived, the fructihcation consists of (piadi-angular terminal amenta. 10 s. 6<f. ’ 
A . c , SELAGINELLA INVOLVENS VARIEGATA 
A (IwaiT densc-growing variegated form of greenhouse Club-moss, introduced from Japan • some of 
the branchlets, instead of having the ordinary green colour, are creamy white, and these be\ng mLxed in 
leely with the green braimhlets, produce an elegant variegation, similar to that which occurs in sonn- 
of the finely-branched Coniferous plants, such as the Retinosporas. The plant forms a pretty dwaiT 
t^t consisted of an overlapping series of llabellate or dichotomously-forked branches, surmundinl the 
ccntial axis. A "•ell-grmvn specimen is a very pleasing object amongst the dwarfer hardier forms ol 
the Club-moss family This was one of the twelve New Plants with which Mr. W. B. gained the First 
i'lcpage S.' ir 6(C “‘“I 1882. For illustration, 
