248 THE ORCHID REVIEW, [Nov.-DEc., 1917, 
and resumed when more propitious times return. It is not a matter ofa 
season’s growth. There are still thousands of seedlings raised before the 
war that have not yet flowered. The plants must be cared for ; the industry 
must be kept alive, and its special journal should not be allowed to collapse 
en erent 
cpa se pT ee ae as, Aten 
and OrcHID STUD-BOOK. 
VIE 
y 
‘THe ORCHID: RI 
at want of a little support. We feel that the work cannot be given UP; and 
if our readers take the same view we have no doubt of the result. Thet® 
we must leave the matter for the present. 
The accompanying illustration may be interesting in this connection: 
It represents the first twenty volumes of the Orchid Review (we cannot show 
