Мо+кМвЕв 30, 1895.) 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
641 
n the flowers being full and of fine form, and 
of its size, and it thrives in & warm moist 
uM Lec with plenty of water at its roots. The 
ow flowering in the Botanical Gardens of 
— Colles 1 ce The species is named in 
complim . Godseff, who is well known as 
the da ч — Sanderian саа of Orchids, 
&c., at St. Albans. F. W, В. [E. Cappartianum is, 
we believe, a synonym of this plant, Ep.] 
CYPRIPEDIUM X SELLIGERUM, MALFORMED, 
As bearing on ur remarks at p. 495, October 26, 
at previously, T, W. Swinburne, Esq., Corndean 
N 
N 
S 
E 
N 
aos 
Г WES 
TRICHOPILIA BREVIS. 
T the meeting ig of the Orchid Committee of the 
Royal Horticultural Society, Nov. 12, this pretty 
s , which was exhibited by M nder & 
Co., duly noti our columns, and we now give 
an illustration of the plan ‚ 105). i 
appears to be of the section of Trichopilia known in 
den Heleia, and of which the previously kaown 
species Trichopilia (Heleia zanguinolenta » well 
illustrated in the Botanical Magazine 
Trichopilia brevis is a plant of neat habit of 
rs have the sepals an of 
an Indian-yellow colour, barred with chestnut-brown. 
The ample labellum pure white, with а few purple 
marks at the base. 16 thrives best when grown in 
а moist intermediate-house, such as 
Roezlii, Mil vexillaria, and the 
associated with them, 
Á 
{ 
i 
average crop, Now Hogland being eoposieliy deficient ; 
while in the central 
of contradictions, 
constantly arising of sufficient im- 
enm to vitiate preconceived ideas, 
y frosts 3 followed ы such weather as 
Ros А. to minimise their importance. Drought, 
growing serious r^ June чаб July, was ‘relieved in 
August, On September 1 the crop appeared vir- 
tually made, and in extent there was every indica- 
tion that it was record-breaking. The е gn 
of marketable Apples is large, but a is not the 
_ Dry weather, hot winds and locally. severe storms 
for winter fruit. 
The “ windfall ” has been sur- 
Fie, 105, —TRICHOPILIA BREVIS FLOWERS OF AN INDIAN-YELLOW COLOUR, BARRED WITA CHESTNUT; LIP WHIT#, 
Hall, Мкр Cheltenham, writes:—“I am 
g you a flower of Cypri m selligerum, 
lant which Dane throws up а 
similarly deformed bloom as a preliminary, and after 
that is over, it sends up a spike of good flowers. I 
with a two-flowered spike following & 
The flower is a very singular one, The sepals 
the usual form, but the labellum is 
erly expressed 
— in some plants, 
WITH PURPLE MARKINGS AT THE BASE, 
THE APPLE CROP OF.. 1895. 
appear, it serves the purpose of ultimately 
the 
а distribution — the — of the present year is 
to be peculiar, the pple-growing dis- 
туйн east of the hiilis vap aa less than an 
890 
a measure, but the work was very 
unintentional omissions, Taking that result, how- 
ever, as a basis, and as representing what might be 
called the marketable crop as distinguished from the 
* 
