62 



>cape stout, erect, bearing a dense 



4-6 in. long. Pedicels stout, 

 about i in. long. Flowers large, yellow, 

 veined with green. A re- introduction, 

 rhili. (H. J. Elwes; Kew.) 



*Cissus adenopodus. (A". B. 1906, 



247.) Ampelidaceae. S. A herba- 

 ceous plant, the stems climbing by 

 means of tendrils. Root tuberous. 

 Leaves of 3 ovate acuminate coarsely 

 serrate leaflets, coloured, as well as 

 the young shoots, bright red. Flowers 

 in flat panicles. Pedicels about 2 lin. 

 long, clothed with gland- tipped hairs. 

 Uganda. (Kew.) 



Citrus Aurantium x decumana. 



(//. P. iv. 174.) 

 garden hybrid. 



Rutaceae. G. 

 (Palermo B. G.) 



A 



Citrus Bigaradia 



(A/Ut.175/) G. 



(Palermo B. G.) 



x Limonum 



A garden hybrid 



Citrus japonica fructu elliptico. 



(<V. C. L906, xxxviii. 446, f. 168 : 1906. 

 xxxix. 90, 46 & 69, f. 29.) G. A 



variety with narrow leaves and small 

 golden elliptic fruits, which are pro- 

 duced very freely even on small plants. 

 (J. Veitch & Sons.) 



•Codonopsis Tangsheu. (zy. ji. t . 



8090.) Campanulaceae. H. A peren- 

 nial climbing herb, with a long mrch 

 thickened root. Stems slender, 2 ft. 

 long or more. Leaves ovate or ovate- 

 lanceolate, l]-2* in. long, slightly 

 toothed ; petioles very slender, §-f in. 

 long. Flowers solitary, on peduncles 

 up to 2} in. long. Corolla campanulate, 

 1-Hi in. long, greenish, purple-spotted 

 and striped inside. The root is much 

 used in China as a tonic medicine. 

 Central China. (J. Veitch & Sons.) 



Coelia densiflora. (jr, b. 1906, 375.) 



Orchidaceae. S. A new species 

 characterized by a dense-flowered 

 raceme, wingless ovary, and an obloncr 

 mentum. The flowers are about I in. 

 long, white, with a yellow anth 

 rase. Central America. 

 B. G.) 



Coelogyne Bry meriana. ( o. it. i m , 



1-3) Orchidaceae. S. A warden 

 hybrid between C. Dayana and C 

 asprrata. (Col. Brymer.) ' 



Coelogyne Mooreana \ G , c . we, 



11-414.) S. Flowers 7 or 8, in archil 

 spikes nearly as large as those Tv 

 crutata, pure white, with a yellow 



er- 

 (Glasnevin 



Coelogyne speciosa x C. cristata 



alba. (Gartenwelt, 

 garden hybrid. (P. 

 burg. Germany.) 



x. 198.) S. A 



Wolter, Magde- 



Colax tripterus. (JC B. 1906, 34.) 



Orchidaceae. S. A new species allied 

 to C. placantherus, but it has a 3- 

 winged ovary, and the disk of the lip 

 bears a broad fleshy callus. Sepals 

 and petals light green, the latter 

 densely speckled with dark brown. 

 Lip yellowish white, with lines of 

 minute light purple dots on the disk. 

 Brazil. (Glasnevin B. G.) 



Colchicum Bivonae superbum. (./. 



of II. 1906, 411, f. ; G. M. 1906, 697.) 



Liliaceae. H. A variety with large 



deeply coloured flowers. (Barr & 

 Sons.) 



^Coreopsis Grantii. 



162 



(£. C. 1906, 

 1 64 ; Gard. 1906, lxix. 

 161, f. ; B. M. t. 8110.) Compositae. 

 G. A compact bushy leafy plant 

 about 2 ft. high, with elegant dark 

 green bipinnate leaves, and bright 

 yellow flower-heads about 2 in. across. 

 It flowers in the winter. Eastern 

 Tropical Africa. (Kew.) 



*Corylopsis Griffithii. (#, a 1906, 



xxxix.19,210.) Hamamelidaceae. H. 

 A new name proposed for the plant in 

 cultivation as C. himalayana* 



Corylopsis binensis. (<?. a 1906, 



xxxix. 18, f. 12.) H. A new species 

 closely allied to C. spicata, differing 

 m having the stipules of the flowering 

 branches broader than long, the leaves 

 broadest above the middle, the orbicu- 

 lar petals suddenly narrowed into a 

 distinct claw, and in having yellow 

 anthers and white seeds. Central and 

 Western China. (J. Veitch & Sons.) 



'Cotyledon devensis. (b. m. t. 8104.) 



Crassulaceae. G. A garden hybrid 

 probably between C. glauca and C\ 

 ifibhftora (Echeveria metalUcd). It 

 is remarkable for its great size, the 

 flower-stems being 5-7 ft. 

 (Kew.) 



long. 



Crassula variabilis, (A. b. 1901, 



122.) Crassulaceae. G. A new 

 species allied to C. pyramidali*. 

 Plant 3-6 in. high, branched at the 

 base. Leaves in 4 rows, densely 

 imbricate, ovate, IJ-4 lin. long, 

 minutely papillose - ciliate on the 

 margin. Flowers 5-7, in small cymes 

 which are arranged in a narrow ter- 

 minal panicle or are sometimes sub- 



