DRAC2ENAS—BAPTISTII AND HENDERSONI. 
53 
1875. J 
result will be most effectually promoted by affording the tree a due amount of 
plain and substantial food. We shall find in after-years that a very great 
advantage will result from the application of stimulating matter, since it will 
impart an increase of vigour upon which to work when the energies of£the trees 
become more severely taxed than they are in their young state.— John Cos, Uedleaf 
Dracaena Hendersoni. 
DRACAENAS—BAPTISTII AND HENDERSONI. 
|F the many new Dracaenas which have been introduced to cultivation within 
the last few years—novelties which have afforded considerable variety as 
regards the form, size, and colour of the leaf, and the contour of the plant, 
few are more strikingly distinct in their way than Z>. Baptistii and D. 
Hendersoni , of which, thanks to Messrs. Veitcli, we are able to append very char- 
