194 
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, 
one (of the two just referred to), which I think there can be 
little doubt is as yet undescribed. The specimens were unfor¬ 
tunately lost off the pack-horse, the single pitcher only being 
saved by Mr. Jardine having placed it in his pocket-book when 
gathering the specimens. This species I intend to name 
N. Alices (fig. 31), after Miss Jardine, who, like her father, takes 
a deep interest in our indigenous plants. 
“ F. Manson Bailey.” 
He then adds the following descriptions :— 
Fig. 31.—Nepenthes Alic;e (Bail.). 
Order Nepenthace^ (the Pitcher-plant Family 
Nepenthes, Linn. 
Table showing the differential characters of the Australian 
species :— 
N. Kennedyi. Fig. 32.—Stems long, climbing. Pitchers 
inflated below the middle, without any crest on the anterior 
