362 Floricultural and Botanical Notices. 



Sent by Mr. Drumniond from Texas. In general habit, it 

 comes nearest to C. tinctoria and C. Atkinsonm/ia ; and is, per- 

 haps, intermediate between them and C. verticillata. It appears 

 to be annual or triennial, and flowers in the open border in the 

 autumn. {Bot. Mag., July.) 



Lobel'iiiceai. 



•SIPHOC A'MI'YI.OS D. Bon. Siphocampylos. (From siphon, a tube, and kampulos, curved ; in allusion 

 to the curved tube of the corolla.) 

 •bScolor D. £)y» two-coloured Jt pr 3 ap R and Y Georgia 1835 C s.p Swt. Br. fl.-gard. 389. 



Raised by INIessrs. Lowe and Co., from seeds collected in 

 Georgia, United States, by Mr. Alexander Gordon, a zealous 

 botanical collector, to whom we are indebted for the elegant 

 Gardoquirt Hooker/. The plant is hardy, of vigorous growth, 

 and produces abundance of beautiful scarlet and yellow flowers. 

 [S-cot. Br. Fl.-Gard., July.) 



Ca mpa7i iddcecc. 



607. CAMPA'NULA 



•muriilis Maund wall ^ | p.r J s B S. Europe 1835 R co Maund Bot. gard. GOO. 



Called Portenschlag/a/m by Rbmer and Schultes. When kept 

 in pots, a mixture of peat, loam, and sand, with abundance of 

 drainers, is very congenial to its growth. i^Bot. Gard., July.) 



GesncrdiCG2e 



169S. GE'SNER.4 



•elong-ita Humb. elongated ««. □ or 2 s S S. America 1835 C p.l The Botanist, 27. 



A plant of this species, 2 ft. high, flowered, in September last, 

 in the stove of Messrs. Pope of Handsworth, Staffordshire. 

 Several British cultivators imported this species from the Con- 

 tinent in 1835. {The Botanist, July.) 



^ricdcece. 



521. AZA^LEA var. Seymotiri Herb. 



Raised from a plant of 22hododendron 7?hodora impregnated 

 with the pollen oi li. ICiteum. {Bot. Reg., July.) 



Tiie flowers are of a pale yellow or straw colour, slightly tinged 

 with purple. {Bot. Reg., July.) 



Labidtcc. 



1681. THY^MUS 



♦azareus Maund azure tt. or J jn P S. Europe ? 1830 C co Maund Bot. gard. 604. 



This species spreads closely over the surface of the soil : it 

 partakes of the perfumes of its congeners, and continues in 

 flower several weeks. It merits a place in every collection of 

 alpines, whether kept in pots, or cultivated in a compartment 

 adapted to the peculiar wants of this class of plants, {Bot. Gard., 

 July.) 



OrchiddcecE. 



BOLBOPHYLLUM 



*saltat6rium Lindl. dancing ^ (23 P-r J d R Sierra Leone 1835 D p.r.w Bot. reg. 1970. 



" It is worthy of remark, that in all this genus Bolbophyllum 

 the spiral vessels are particularly tough and numerous." {Bot. 

 Reg., July.) 



