1876.] 
LILIUM GIGANTEUM HAEDY IN MOEAY. 
115 
CHLOROPHYTUM ELATUM ARGENTEO-LINEARE. 
^^HIS handsome variegated plant, which is almost an exact reproduction of 
Pandanus Veitcldi on a smaller scale, was introduced by Mr. B. S. Williams^ 
f of Holloway, from South Africa in 1873, and has been certificated under the 
names oiAnthericum variegatum and Antlw'icum Williamsii at the meetings 
of the Eoyal Horticultural and Eoyal Botanic Societies. It is figured by Cogneaux 
and Marchel in Dalliere’s Plantes d Feuillage Ornemental, under the name of ' 
Phalangium argenteo-lineare; and by M. Van Houtte, in the P'lore des Serves^ 
under that here adopted. 
The accompanying woodcut gives a very good idea of the aspect of the plant, 
which has the long narrowly lance-shaped leaves of a bright glossy green, beauti¬ 
fully striped and margined with creamy-white. Being a native of South Africa, 
it is a hardy greenhouse plant, and its remarkably free growth and easy culture 
will make it especially valuable as a decorative object.—T. Mooee. 
LILIUM GIGANTEUM—HAEDY IN MOEAY. 
AVING in a former communication to the pages of this journal given an 
account of the successful cultivation of the above Lily in the open air, it 
may not be out of place to draw attention to our continued success under 
the out-door system of treatment in this northern district, in the hope 
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