In announcing the following NEW PLANTS, MK. WILLIAM SULL begs to 
say they will all be found to partake of the usual excellence of his introductions, and 
to maintain the high reputation of the Plants previously sent out by him. 
ISm PLAITS. 
ADIANTUM LINDENI. 
Adiantums rank aa one of the handsomest seetions among Ferns, and this takes a foremost place in 
its class. It has been introduced from the Amazon, and hence requires to he cultivated in a stove ; it 
has tripinnate pentangular fronds, and large oblong dimidiate dcorsely-faloate pinnules with reniforme 
sori. 
Price 31s. 6d. each. 
ALSOPHILA LEICHHARDTIANA. 
This Australian Tree Fern has a slender stem, and produces an elegant crown of fronds. It ranges 
from Sydney northward to Queensland, and is known as the “Whip-stick Fern” by the Colonists j the 
fronds are dark green, with the segments rather sharply but not deeply toothed. 
Price 31s. Qd, each. 
ATHYRIUM COSTALE DISSECTUM. 
A fine deciduous Indian Fern, with fronds 2 ft. to ft. high, oblong lanceolate in outline, bipin- 
natcly divided, and furnished with numerous obliquely ovate pinnules, which are stalked, and from their 
obliquity resemble those of some of the more divided stalks of Polystichum angulare ; these pinnules are 
deeply divided at the base almost to the mid-vein, into oblong lobes, which are prettily toothed along the 
margin, and of which the basel anterior one is the largest, resembling an enlarged auricle. The sori are 
crowded in the centre of each pinnule, close to the costa, whence the name costale applied to the species. 
Price 7s. fid. each. 
COPROSMA BAUERIANA VARIEGATA. 
An exceedingly handsome variegated Greenhouse plant, introduced from New Zealand ; it has mode- 
rate sized glossy obovate leaves, which are bright green in the centre, with very broad white marginal 
variegation, the marginal portion of the leaf creamy yellow in a yoimg state, which diversification adds 
to the beauty of the plant. 
Price 31s. fid. each. 
GAULTHERIA LEUCOCARPA.-GAULTHERIA PUNCTATA. 
These have been introduced from the high mountaios of Java, where they were found growing 7,000 
feet above the level of the sea. The description sent with them states that they form little bushy plants 
with neat small foliage, and are always in flower or berry ; the berries imparting a very omamenbil and 
pretty character to the plants. The flowers on both kinds are white, the berries also of the first-named 
are white, while those of the other are black. They are easily cultivated, and make pretty decorative 
plants ; and being found at such a great elevation will succeed admirably in an ordinary greenhouse. 
Price 10s. fid. each. 
