ЖУЛТ ee EIER RE ЧОЛ Түү 
Остовкв 12, 1895.) THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 419 
WITHOUT ANY RESERVE. 
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1895. 
000 CATTLEYAS 
IN SIMPLY MARVELLOUS CONDITION. 
The Grandest Lot ever Imported from SAN HUACA, 
SANDER'S 
MONTANA TYPE OF IMPERIALIS AND AUREA MIXED 
These are the first and only plants from ye алаи, апа аге е quite a different part of 
Colombia to those sold by us on October 4 
REMARKABLE PLANTS 
CATTLEYA, PROBABLY ШЕ OR AUREA SECTION 
All Seedling Plants, and mostly as * А re diversified and most remarkable 
 GATTLEYA  CIGAS, IMPERIALIS TYPE. 
275 LOTS. 
Arso, 187 LOTS or A FORM OF 
SANDERIANA, 
From a Native 2 from the far interior. These are of a а АЕА distinct-looking and 
promising character—bulbs are long (as in Lelia), club-shaped, with thick, short, broad leaves. The 
plants are simply gra and, This m agnificent type of Cattleya gigas | together with С. aurea, will be as 
prolific in quite new forms as our —— Montana varieties 
CYPRIPEDIUM INSIGNE. 
Our Collectors are . ying) vast districts, at great expense, to secure all the forms =н these 
magnificent Cattleyas, which w to offer to Orchidists without any reserve. must 
sell them, if only to continue the ула work of collecting we have undertaken in these new a ce 
Sage and bi therto impenetrable mountains, Every importation и e offered as it comes to hand, 
the best time of year to buy this type of Cattleya ; г-к ебанд, the plants ате 
ы-ы bed: and could not be in finer or more perfect condition cs growing 
A NEW GUINEA DENDROBE, 
With large white flowers, as large as D. bigibbum, with bulbs in the way of D. FRETS, 
Collector describes it asa GRAND NEW DENDROBE, 
Together with other fine Orchids, including TWENTY BOXES OF MIXED ORCHIDS, 
FOR ALL PARTICULARS OF SALE, SEE CATALOGUE, 
F. SANDER & CO. ST. ALBANS, 
PROTHEROE & MORRIS, 
67 & 68, CHEAPSIDE, LONDON, Е.С, 
Gardeners’ —— 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1895. 
THEE S prm 2 MEUS ay ОЕ 
HE disease ае as “ ae which appears 
under the form of brown spots or blotches 
on the living leaves of Orchids, is unfortunately 
too familiar to cultivators and admirers of these 
plants, and although the health of the plant is 
xcept when the spots 
from a fall appreciation of the beauty of Orchids 
when in bloom. 
The disease first appears under the form of 
in others, few in number 
a Pi portion of the leaf is equally p 
tible the disease, and the f 
young sii of diseased plants frequently 
show “spot,” has been considered by 
strong evidence in favour of the ee тш — 
nism called Plasmodiophora orchidis, was 
based upon the absolute agreement with 
the microscopic details of two diseases of 
Vine-leaves described by Viala and Sauvageau,t 
and attributed to the 
are not a con us, and are likely to 
escape observation unless specially looked for, 
soon assu pa ale brown colour, and gradually 
increase in size, Beer Ps an irregularly- 
circular ere until t = Me tain a 
varying from fou 
cells beneath the epidermis, the surface of the 
t becomes depressed below the level of the 
surface of "the leaf. In many instances, the 
e passes completely through the leaf, 
rming а ерби brown depressed spot 
on ciné under surface, 
* Annals of Bot., vol. ix. p. 170 (1895). 
t La Brunissure et la Maladie de Californie. Journ, de Bot., 
tom. vi., pp. 355 and 378, pl. xii, (1897), i 
