IV August 30, 1890.] 
CONTENTS. 
[The Gardening World, 
Codifeum Warrenii, 45G 
Coelia bella, 236 
Coelogyneasperata, 732 ; cristata, 396; 
pandurata, 637; sparsa, 476 ; tomen- 
tosa, 604 
(lolchieura luteum, 373 
Coleus Cleopatra, 60 
Collinsia verna and C. bicolor, 508 
Collinsias, notes on, 442 
Colours of plants, 75S 
Columbines. 659 
Columnea Kalbreyeri, 460 
Commission agents, fraudulent, 454 
Commission salesmen, 404 
“ Compleat Florist," the, 456 
Condensed fruits and vegetables, 86 
Conifers, a choice display of, 76 
Conservatory, a gay, and how to 
maintain it, 390, 407, 423 
Convallaria majalis, Fortin's var., 492 
Coolatton Gardens, 790 
Cordyline indivisa varieties, 171 
Corn harvest, the, 787 
Cornish Moneywort, the, 140 
Corn Poppy, English names of the, 
520 
Corns, concerning, 490 
Coronilla iberica, 6S1; varia, 27 
Correa Harrisi, 340 
Corticoatzontecoxochitl, 2S4 
Corydalis solida, 525 
Cottagers, fruits for, 4 
Cottagers' shows, 791 
Country, the, in springtime, 469 
Covent Garden Fete, the, 596, 617 
Covent Garden Market,-the, 260 
Crackley Hall, the Orchids at, 396 
Cranberries, 117 
Crassulas, new, 292 
Crata?gus pyracantha, 155 
Crieff Flower Show, S26 
Crinum brachynema, 651 
Crocosmia aurea, 811 
Crocus biflorus Weldeni, 346 ; chry- 
santhus, 363; laevigatus, 204 ; 
speciosus, 90, 140 ; Snsianus, 373 ; 
versicolor argentat.us, 373 
Crop prospects in Cheshire, 772; in 
Kincardineshire, 70S 
Croton, Mrs. Dorman, 156; Laingii, 
204 ; ovali folia, 411 
Crotons, culture of, 410 
Crowea macrantha, 331 
Croydon Gardeners’ Improvement 
Society, 365 
Cryptophoranthus Dayanum, 124 
Crystal Palace Fruit Show, the, 20, 99 
Cuckoo spit, the, 664 
Cucumber, Allan’s Favourite, 708 ; 
Empress, 812; Model, 651 ; Tele¬ 
graph, 796 
Cucumbers, power of, when growing, 
10 
Cucumis dipsaceus, 341 
Currant bud mite, the, 252, 284, 315 
Currants, the cultivation of, 214 
Currants, Black, 231; the red flower¬ 
ing, 503 ; the double flowering, 603 
Cyclamen AtkiDsi, 37S ; Count, 347 ; 
Duke of Fife, 488 ; the Neapolitan, 
140; repandum, 587 
Cyclamens at the Aquarium, 308 
Cydonia japonica Moorleyi, 604; 
japonica virginalis, 410 
Cyinbidium albucsflorum, 605 
Cyperus alternifolius, 123 
Cyphomandra betacea, 228 
Cypress, a new golden, 565 
Cypripedi'imAinsworthiicalurum,221 
Alfred. 8 :6 ; Aylingii,652; H.Ballan- 
tine, 79b ; barbatum grandifloruin, 
619;barbatum nigrum,732; californi- 
cum, 669; callosum, 509 ; cardinale, 
Vanner’s var., 461; caudatum 
roseum, 637; caudatum, with a 
spiral lip, 633; Elliottianum, 605; 
Galatea majus, 236; Gerininyarmm, 
411 : Godefroyte Laingi, 509 ; Har- 
risianum, 76 ; T. B. Haywood, 237, 
34S; hybridum Toungianum, 716; 
insigne, 253 ; insigne albo-margin- 
atuin, 140 ; insigne, a white mar¬ 
gined, 2S4; twin-flowered, 300; 
insigne punctatum violaeeum, 315 ; 
javanico-superbiens, 781; leucho- 
rhodum, 316 ; Lindleyanum, 332 ; 
Morganiae, 618; Niobe, 236, 300, 
600; Numa, 461; picturatum, 92 ; 
porphyrochlamis, 428; purpura- 
tum, 76 ; Schomburgkianum, 461; 
spectabile, 701; Spicerianum, 157 ; 
vexillarium, 124 ; volonteanum, 637 
Cyrtanthus obliquus, 571 
Cyrtopodium Andersoni, 525 
Cytisus filipes, 525; racemosus, 298; 
scoparius Andreanus, 604 
D 
Daffodil Conference, the, 520. 535 
Daffodils, the smallest, 373, 393 
Daffodils at Chiswick, 519 ; from Ire¬ 
land, 521; at Long Ditton, 538 ; in 
pots, 475 ; some good, 55 
Dahlia, the, as a show flower, 58 
Dahlia imperialis, 220 ; Juarezii, 123; 
siDgle, Tweedside, 764 
Dahlia Centenary, the, 19, 21. and 
Marquis of Bute, 73 
Dahlia Exhibition, the National, 3 
Dahlias, 104, 377, 405, 648, 728, 793 ; 
cultivation of show, 23; Mr. S. 
Hibberd on the, 22, 3S ; fancy, 104 ; 
notes on new, 8, 40 ; new, certifi¬ 
cated, 56 ; on pompon, single and 
decorative, 70; selections of, 566, 
600; single, 20, 739 ; single at 
Chiswick, 55 ; single, the parent of 
our, 56; late, in Ayrshire, 135; 
with purple foliage, 3SS ; winteiing 
outside, 135- 
Daisy, the Swan River, 731, 789 
Daphne Blagayana, 475; cneorum, 61, 
596; indica rubra, 389 ; odora, 315 
Datura suaveolens, 139 
Davallia Tyermanni, 37S 
Deal, Mr. G., death of, 697 
Dean, Mr. A., on Potato improve¬ 
ments of the past twenty-five years, 
69 
Dean, Mr. R., presentation to, 551 
Dean, Mr. W., testimonial to, 120 
Death tributes, floral, 372 
Deepdene Gardens, the, 454 
Delphinium Autolycus, 635; Alfred 
Kelway, 668 ; Horace Kelway, 668 
Delphiniums, notes on, 708 
Dendrobium Aspasia, 444; atrovio- 
laceum, 525 ; barbatulum, 557 ; 
Bensonifealbum, 637; bigibbum, 73; 
Brymerianum, 526; chrysanthum, 
187; endocharis, 300 ; Falconeri 
giganteum, 700 ; Falconeri delicata, 
637; infandibulum Jamesianum, 
187; Juno, 332 ; Linawianum, 204 ; 
lineale, 652 ; Luna, 348; McCarthise, 
637, 660 ; Macfarlanei, 34S, 428 ; 
mosehatum, 619; nobile, 493 ; 
nobile (Burford var.), 348 ; nobile 
and its varieties, 526 ; nobile gigan¬ 
teum, 396; primulinum giganteum, 
525 ; signatum, 444; xanthocen- 
trum, 532; Wardianum Baron 
Schroder's var., 476 ; Williamsoni, 
573 
Dendrobiums from Longfords, 557 
Deutzia candidissima flore pleno, 492; 
gracilis, 104 
Diamond Ring, the, 267 
Dianthus Grievei, 680 ; sinensis flore 
pleno, 61 ; species, 503 
Dicksonia Sedeni, 427 
Dictyosperma aureum, 299 
Didymochltena lunulata, 364 
Digitalis ambigua, 715 ; lanata, 795 
Disa graminifolia, 509; tripetaloides, 
604, 685 
Disperis Fanniniae, 62 
Disappointed exhibitors, 5 
Downingia pulchella, 681 
Dracaena australis Doucettii, 300, 731 ; 
Miss Glendinning, Sll 
Dracaenas, culture of, 410 
Dragon tree, a large, 357 
Dressing flowers, 116 
Drewitt, Mr. John, presentation to, 
436 
Drought, the, 676 
Dunedin, Streatham Hill, 459 
Dunmore East Flower Show, 823 
E 
Ealing Gardeners Mutual Improve¬ 
ment Socinty, 52, 125, 157,187, 220, 
235, 253, 270, 301, 365, 397, 428, 518, 
756 
East, Mr. D., presentation to, 388 
Easter flowers, 485 
East wind, the, 612 
Echium callithyrsum, 571 
Edgend Nursery, Brierfield, 292 
Edinburgh Chrysanthemum Centen¬ 
ary Celebration, 199, 230 ; Centen¬ 
ary Cup, the, 265 
Edinburgh International Electrical 
Exhibition, 420 
Education, a new departure in, 167 
Education, Horticultural, in public 
schools, 486 
Education of Gardeners, 165, 186 
Education, technical, Is it necessary 
for a gardener, 679 
Elaeodendron orientale, 122 
Elder, the, 309 
Electric alarms, 454 
Electric lighting at Reading, 436 
Elm, a noble, 420 
English Fruit and Rose Company, 
132 
English Madeira, the, 198 
Enkianthus campanulatus, 604 
Enville, fruit prospects at, 684 
Epidendrum ciliare,221, 332; Cooperi- 
anum callo-roseum, 300 ; faleatum, 
748 ; prismatocarpum, 652 ; Randii, 
669; sceptrum, 124; vitellinum 
majus, 732 
Epigtea repens, 347 
Epiphronitis Veitchii, 6S5 
Epiphyllum Russellianum Gsertneri, 
491 
Erchless Flower Show, 805 
Eremurus Bungei, 763 
Eriostemon mucronatum, 378 ; myro- 
poroides, 410 
Eryngium planum, 5 
Erythrina Crista-galli, 155 
Erythronium grandiflorum gigan¬ 
teum, 518 
Eucalyptus in Devon, the, 342 
Eucharis, 394 ; amazonica, 405 
Eucryphia pinnatifida, 35S 
Eugenia myrtifolia, 10S 
Eupatorium aromaticum, 139 ; Wein- 
mannianum, 394 
Eupatoriums, a plea for, 59S; two 
useful, 252 
Exhibition plants, specimen, 70S 
Exhibitions in Scotland, 71 
Exhibitors disappointed, 5 
Eye, one, advantages of, 534 
P 
Female Apiarians, 436 
Fern Conference, the, 747, 504, 522, 
538 
Fern hunting, 569, 586, 598, 615, 629 
Fern, a good basket, 346 
Ferns, hardy, for windows, 1S0; 
mimicry among, 315 ; tropical, 250, 
262; for window culture, good, 185 
Fernery, an outdoor, 458 
Fern wall, a, 37 
Fertility of plants, influence of vege¬ 
tative reproduction on, 216 
Ficus bengalensis in fruit, 492 ; Por- 
teana, 299 
Fig, St. John’s, 70S 
Figs at Gunnersbury Park, 374 
Filbert, the, 554 
Filmy Ferns, 263 
Firs, Scotch, 64S 
Flood, the late Mr. James, 587 
Floral beauty, 612 
Floral Committee awards, the, 43 
Floral death tributes, 372 
Floral debaucheries, 612 
Floral decorations, Mr. Hudson on, 
166, 182, 204, 215; at Birmingham, 
315 
Floral extravagancies, 756 
Floral notes from the Continent, 103 
Floral Nursery, Maidenhead, 245 
Floral proliferation, 140 
Florists and florists, 403 
Florists in council, 136 
Florists in a flurry, 392 
Florists flowers in November, 152 
Florists flowers, the Philosophy of, 
296; the Rev. G. Jeans on the phi¬ 
losophy of, 328, 344, 360, 376, 392, 
408, 424, 440, 456 
Flower carnivals, 404’ 
Flowers, dressing, 116 ; Easter, 485 
Flower Gardening, Spring, 507 
Flower Garden notes, 135 
Flowers, hardy, from Tottenham, 558 
Flowers of Spring, hardy, 485 
“ Flower Land,’’ 248 
Flower pots, a substitute for, 409, 
439, 488, 540 
Flower Show notes, 135 
Flower Show, our, 822 
Flower Shows, Spring, 469 
Flower Show season, close of the, 195 
Flower Show regulations, 147 
Flowers, train loads of, 421 
Fogs, London, 3S9,455; effects of, 197; 
the, action of, on Heaths, &c, 37S 
Fog enquiry, the, 212 
Forest, a black, 693 
Forest grove, a tropical, 596 
Forests, the regeneration of, 171 
Forestry, an English School of, 5S2 
Forsythia suspensa, 540 
Fort William, a Flower Show at, 825 
Fota Island, 36 
Foxglove, the woolly, 795 
Fraser and Hall, Messrs., drowning 
of, on the Clyde, 68; memorial, 101, 
116, 132, 148, 165, ISO, 212, 244, 260, 
660 
Fraxinella, the, 699 
Freesias, 378; seedling, 437 
French Gardeners’ Society in Lon¬ 
don, 394 
Friary, the, old Windsor, S07 
Fritillaria recurva, 556 
Frosts, late spring.and vegetation, 583 
Frost on June 1st., 628; in Sep¬ 
tember, 36, 51;losses through the, 
in Belgium, 52 ; in Perthshire, 6S 
Frost, effects among Rhododendrons, 
551 ; effects of, on tender plants in 
Australia, 821 
Fruit and Vegetables, condensed, 86 
Fruiterers, a warning to, 612 
Fruiterers’ Company, the, 36, 37; 
prize essay, the, 4 
Fruits for Cottagers, 4 
Fruit catalogues, 421 
Fruit crops, prospective, S3 
Fruit crop prospects, 647 ; in Dorset, 
773 ; in Lancashire. 758; in Mid¬ 
lothian, 741 ; in the West of Scot¬ 
land, 807 
Fruit culture, and the Fruiterers’ Co., 
85 ; the state of, 644 ; the revival 
of, 102 
Fruit drying by evaporation, S04 
Fruit culture, hardy, in Scotland, 340 
Fruits, hardy, in demand, 421 
Fruits, hardy stone, Mr. Fairgrieve 
on, 457 
Fruits, hardy, grown under glass, 134; 
marketing, 419 
Fruit markets and shows, 518 
Fruit prospects, our, 485, 533, 771 ; in 
Inverness-shire, 684; in the West of 
Scotland, 615 
Fruit question, the, 120 
Fruit Show in the City, the, 660, 675, 
820 
Fruit Show at Ghent, 75 
Fruits, tinned. 404 
Fruit trees and their crops, 788 ; and 
a warm September, 60 ; by the way- 
sides, 565 ; on renovating, 70; 
root-pruning of, 186 ; summer prun¬ 
ing, 682 ; wall, on planting, 245 
Fuchsia, Countess of Aberdeen, 794 ; 
Dorothy Fry, 442; Riccartoni, 825 ; 
Riccartoni nana, 747; triphylla, 443 
Fuchsias, &c., for exhibition, 650 ; 
out-of-doors,133; useful and showy, 
697 ; sportive, 824 
Fumigating, hints on, 389 ; new 
method of, 38S 
Fumitory, a climbing, 747 
Funeral floral offerings, 196 
Fungi of the east of Scotland, 772 
G 
Galanthus Elwesii, 389 
Galtonia candicans, Sll 
Galashiels Horticultural Association, 
455 
Gardener, a centenarian, 566 
Gardeners and show places, 3S7 
Gardeners’ education, 84, 165, 1S6 
Gardeners’ engagement, an ancient, 
551 
Gardeners’ examinations, 476, 50S 
Gardeners, jobbing,581; single-handed 
132, 156, 171, 1S3, 247 
Gardeners, young, drowned in the 
Thames, 676 
Garden engine, a new, 551 
Garden gospel, the new, 228 
“ Gardening in India and Ceylon,” 294 
Gardening notes from Sydney, 773 
Gardeners' Improvement Associations 
100, 139, 4S6, 524, 714, 727 
Gardeners’ Orphan Fund, the, 4, 2,S, 
310, 329, 344, 356, 420, 456, 4S6, 551, 
5S1, 62S, 644, 660, 707, 739, 763, 772, 
775, 795 824; annual meeting, 742, 
761 
Gardeners’ Royal Benevolent Insti¬ 
tution, 117, 628, 662 ; annual meet¬ 
ing, 309, 326 
Gardening papers for young men, 540 
Garden walks, 502 
Geranium pratense pallidum, 747; 
sanguineum lancastriense, 716 
Gentians acaulis, 252; verna, 588 ; 
lutea, protection of, 596 
Ghent Chrysanthemum Centenary 
Show, 201 ; destruction of plants 
by frost in, 36 ; Fruit Show at, 75 
Gilia androsacea, 795 
Gishurstine, 101, 38S 
Gladiolus Lenroinei, 795; Snow 
White, 268, 340 
Gladioli, new, 9, S12 ; early-flowering, 
3S9 
Gladstone, Mr., on Botany, 480 
Gieichenia dicarpa longipinnata, 249; 
flabellata, 363 
Glenart Gardens. 806 
Glen, The, Innerleithen, 710 
Gloneria jasminiflora, 395 
Gloriosa superba, the unstable colours 
of, 10 
Gloxinia, the, 62S 
Gloxinia, Agnes Cook, 651; Mrs. J. 
Donaldson, 604; Mrs. Stanley, 764; 
Sutton’s new netted strain of, 635 
Gloxinias, netted, 779; new, 635, 716; 
at Chelsea, 676 ; at R.mpell Park 
Nurseries, 710; at Tower House, 
645 
Godetias, 794 
Golden Feathers, 583 
Gold, frankincense, and myrrh, 359 
Gongora truncata, 476 
Goodyera discolor, 411 
Gooseberries and Raspberries, keep¬ 
ing birds from, 10 
Gooseberry bushes, protecting from 
sparrows, 555 
Gooseberry Caterpillar, 587 
Gooseberries, on the culture of, 74 
Gooseberry, Wliinam's Industry, 119 
Grammatophyllum multiflorum, 74S 
Grape, Diamant Traube, 43 ; Madres- 
field Court, 812 
Grape, a new black, 116 
Grape culture, eccentricities of, 213 
Grapes, exhibition board for, 718; 
field mice and, 356 
Greenery, Spring, 533 
Greenhouse climbers, 437 
Greenhouse in winter, the, 27S 
Greenhouse, Amateurs’, 631, 059; 
heating, small, S4 ; judging small, 
650 ; conserving heat in, 460 
Groundsel tree, the, 588] 
Ground Laurel or Mayflower, the,347 
Grove, the, Harefield, 776 
Grubs in leaf-soil, 286 
Gunnera scabra, ISO 
Gymnogramme Muelleri, 171; Pearcei 
robusta, 363 ; schizophylla gloriosa, 
651, 700 
Gypsopliila elegans, 61 ; muralis, 108 
H 
Haarlem Quinquennial Bulb Show, 
436 
Hall and Fraser memorial, the, 116, 
132, 14S, 166, ISO, 212, 244, 260, 660 
Hall for Horticulture, the proposed, 
291, 293, 309, 326, 341, 372, 435, 502, 
507, 518, 534, 549, 581 
Ham House, Petersham, 4S9 
Hardening off, 551 
Harvest sermon, a, 89 
Hawthorndean, Didsbury, Orchid 
notes from, 236 
Heat, conserving in greenhouses, 460 
Heating small greenhouses, 84 
Heath, the fringed. 155 
Heaths, Epacrises and the fog, 378 
Heaths, Irish, 68 
Hebenstreitia tenuifolia, S25 
Hedychium Gardnerianum, 43 
Helianthus orgyalis, 140 
Helichrysum arenarium, 699 
Heliconia aureo-striata, 314 
Heliotropes in Winter, 213 
Heliotrope, Winter, 299 
Helleborus foetidus, 470; colchicus 
coccineus, 394; Commerzienrath 
Benary, 347 
Hemerocallis fulva Kwanso, S25 
Hemionitis palmata, 2S3 
Hemp, African, 394 
Henderson, the late Mr. Peter, 3SS 
Hepaticas, 90 ; notes on, 373, 554 
Hermitage, The, St. Margaret's Bay, 
613 
Hibberd, Mr. Shirley, on progress in 
Chrysanthemums, 154 
Hibiscus, the Chinese, 406 
Hippeastrum Grand Monarch, 508; 
Prince of Orange, 442 
Hippophse rhamnoides, 235 
Hoes and hoeing, 617 
Hollies at Killarney, the, 36 
Holly, the common, names of, 26S 
Hollyhock Delicata, 10 
Hollyhock, a glimpse at the. SS 
Hollyhocks,16S,S19; from Darlington, 
56 
Honeydew, 662 
Honeysuckle, the scarlet trumpet, 
664, 6S3 
Honours to Gardeners, 372 
Hop, the common, 6S2 
Hop industry, the, 775 
Horse Chestnut, the, 616 
Horsefield, Mr. John, 292 
Horticultural College, the. 260 
Horticultural Congress at Paris, 372 
Horticultural Exhibition, an Inter¬ 
national, 549 
Horticultural Societies, restriction 
in,436 
Horticultural trade, the, 277 
Hot-houses, ants in, 427 
Houses, metal v. wood, 502 
Hounslow Horticultural Society, the, 
683 
Hvacinths and Tulips, on the culture 
of, 266 
Hyaeinthus azureus, 347 ; amethys- 
tinus albus, 61S; candicans, in pots, 
427 
Hydrangeas, blue, 5, 37 
Hydrangea hortensis flore pleno, 7SS ; 
hortensis ramulis coccineis, 4S6; 
paniculata grandiflora, 779, S12; 
Thomas Hogg, 404 
Hydrants for washing buildings, S4 
Hymenocallis caribsea, 421 ; macro- 
stephana, 139, 2S3 
Hypericum Moserianum, 596 
I 
Iberis saxatilis, 395 
Incas, Lily of the, 556 
Incentives to study, 6, 25, 55, 71, S5 
Indian Crocuses, 157 
Indiarubber Plants in windows, 202 
Influenza epidemic, the, 30S 
Insect and weed destroyers, 692 
Insect enemies, our, 565 
Insects, injurious forest, S09 
Insects, Laurel leaves and, 436; the 
unworthiness of, 635 ; the warfare 
against, 712 
Inventors, Jordan's instructions to, 
S4 
Iris aphylla, Bridesmaid, 66S; 
Barkeriana, 346; Bornmuelleri, 
331 ; foetidissima, 10S ; germanica 
Kharput. 61S; japonica, 363; Korol- 
kowi violacea, 61S; pallida, peloria 
in, 651 ; Rosenbaehiana, 346; sind- 
jarensis, 476; stylosa alba, 346; the 
Spanish, 666 
Irises, dwarf, at Chiswick, 560 
Irish Heaths, 68 
Isle of Raasay, weather in the, 355 
Isles of Sciliy, the flower industry in 
the, 2S4 
Isoloma Deppeanum, 331 
Ixias, notes on, 66S 
Ixora salicifolia, 43 ; salicifolia varie- 
gata, S12 
J 
James, Mr. J., the late, 793 
Jams and preserved fruits, 772 
Jam exhibition, the proposed, 740, 7S7 
Jasminum graciliimum, 340 
Jobbing gardeners, 581 
Johnson, Mr. T. S., presentation to, 
628 
Jones’ “ Heating by Hot Water," 420 
Judges’ liabilities, S3, 115 
Juniper, a dwarf, 22S 
Juniperus canadensis aurea, 604; 
sabina, 250 
K 
KaDsura japonica, 37 
Kaffir Lily, the, 139 
Kalanchoe carnea, 220 
Kettlewell’s “ The Art of Landscape 
Gardening,” 420 
Kew, ths Alpine house at, 330 
Kew Gardens and the employes, 245 
Kelham Hall, Newark, 756 
Kent County Chrysanthemum 
Society, 356 
Kingston challenge vase, the, 179 
“ Kit and Kitty," 244 
Kitchen garden, on cropping a, 229, 
246 
Kniphofiaaloides, 181; Macowani, S25 
Kola Nut, the African, 566 
Kohl Rabi or Turnip Cabbage, 790 
“ Kokuwa,” the, 59S 
L 
Label, a new copper, ISO, 201; a 
useful, 404 
Laburnum blooming in October, S7 
Laburnum, evergreen, 571 
Laburnum flowers, poisonous, 644 
Lace-bark tree, the, 26 
Lachenalias, 346 
Lachenalia pendula, 26S 
Lady Market Gardeners, 420 
L*lio-Cattleya Canhamise, 685 ; ex- 
irnia, 6S5; Hippolyta, 476, 493 ; 
Pallas, 236 ; Proserpine, S26 
Ltelia anceps Veitchiana, 2S4; 
autumnalis alba, 92, 396; Craw- 
shayaua, 348 ; elegans Blenlieim- 
ensis, 364; elegans Turneri, 796; 
grandis, 716 ; lobata, 652 ; majalis, 
700; pnestans alba, 92; purpurata 
Brysiana, 619 
Landscape Gardening, 149 
Lapageria rosea, Nash Court var., 156 
Lapagerias, double, 636 
Lasiandra macrantha, 422 
Lastrea Filix-mas crispa, 346 ; Filix- 
inas cristata fimbriata, 635 
Lathyrus Drummondii, 664 ; rotundi- 
folius, 6S4 ; Sibthorpii, 649 
Laurel leaves and insects, 436 
