Мах 21, 1887.] 
distinct from. any individual member, seem to m 
name Evansia. The word 
alisbury (Trans. Hort, 
J. 
ES 303, 1810) in honour of a Mr, Evans, of 
THE GARDENERS’ 
tinuing to call it Iris fimbriata. 
CHRONICLE. 
673 
subgenera of the genus, the old generic name, con- 
Still later (1873), 
300) revived 
е 
mbr chinensis, Salisbury), 
dichotoma, and E Mp tik thus making two 
RAE of e 
is found, and consequently — in as the follow- 
ing Irises :— ra (= nepal- 
i © els, "d the North 
American L cristata i lac 
I cannot regard this to m as a satisfactory one, 
L alata and several other Irises of the Juno group 
ә 
Fic. 13],—oncIDIUM BRUNLEESIANUM: YELLOW AND BROWN, LIP PURPLE, (SEE P, 672.) 
pney, a ачаа аз far as І am aware, otherwi 
а зш Salisbu ury recognised ы 
fim ring кало йы distinction in the Iris known as I. 
or I. chinensis, and without pointin out 
What ы fe po Ра 
eg. „ e the sam 
genus (Cre Tossiris), but still retained, as in his other, 
в of what before and since has been con- 
duel as а single species, viz., Г (oce The 
real SAND Re d of the genus thus con- 
structed by Decais uer i stinct articulation 
e оу iM ^m 
orbes ыр Meu Er: Eva aem Mr. Baker took 
as the gl jo rait the presence of a crest on 
claw of the fall, where, in bearded Irises, the beard 
have a crest, and that often a conspicuous and a 
toothed one, and I have more than once observed a 
pe a sport on a beardless 
da йын Iris а. ae 
eing furnish 
On the oth hand 
rm 
the crest is 
slender cylindrical processes, 
