. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. ng, 1.; to 2 inches wide,suddenly reduced at the base to minute deltoid spar-like segments, the apex terminating in a pinnatifidpinna 1 to 1, inches long, broadest at the base, butotherwise similar to the lateral ones; pinnce spreading,linear, J to lj inch long, 1J to 2 lines wide, Novembeb 23, 1895.] THE GABDENEBS CHBONIGLE. G13 broadly adnata and narrowly decnrrent, forming a•lightly interrupted wing to the brown wiry slightlyflexuose rachis, terminating in a minnte obtuselobe, cnt two-thirds to th


. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. ng, 1.; to 2 inches wide,suddenly reduced at the base to minute deltoid spar-like segments, the apex terminating in a pinnatifidpinna 1 to 1, inches long, broadest at the base, butotherwise similar to the lateral ones; pinnce spreading,linear, J to lj inch long, 1J to 2 lines wide, Novembeb 23, 1895.] THE GABDENEBS CHBONIGLE. G13 broadly adnata and narrowly decnrrent, forming a•lightly interrupted wing to the brown wiry slightlyflexuose rachis, terminating in a minnte obtuselobe, cnt two-thirds to the dark filiform mid-veininto obtuse obliquely deltoid decurrent segmentsi to | line wide and deep, with an opeD, iblique,•ub-acute sinus between; veins simple or forked, the latter abruptly pan. Though the fronds arelarger, the pinrjfc are only half the number of thoieof melanolrichum. The cutting of the pinnaj isexactly like that of Xiphopteris fronds. P, achillcce-folium, Kanlf, of Ecuador and Brazil, is the onlyother species of this small group. G. S. Jenman,Demerara, Oct. 24, Fig. 103.—coedtuse banksii, on stewabt iscind. not excurrent; sori terminal on the short spur-likeanterior branch, one to etch segment. Gathered in Cuba, by Eggers, matted with otherspecies, and apparently not detected. Near to , Baker, of Roraima, Britiih Guiana,but distinguished by the obtuse—not finelysubulate — final segment, forked veins, thesori on the short, nearly basal spur, much longerpetioles, with minute spur-like segments apartnear tbeir top, darker colour, and the distinct ter-minal pinna similar to the lateral, and into which COEDYLINE BANKSII, ONSTEWART fine Palm-lily is one of the most beautifuland interesting plants in the New Zealand florcAlthough occasionally cultivated in the southernportions of the Britiih Isles, it is not so well knownas it ought to be, from the beauty of its inflorescence,and the picturesque effect of its long drooping


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecad, booksubjecthorticulture, bookyear1895