MR. Moore's report on fuchsias grown at chiswick. 217 
§ 4. Scarlet tube, double purple corolla. 
14. Champion of the World (F. & A. Smith). 
A loose-habited variety with long weeping branches, and well 
adapted for furnishing a pillar or rafter in a greenhouse. The 
flowers are immensely large and full double ; the tube and sepals 
coral-red, the latter tipped with green ; the corolla purple, expand- 
ing to nearly 2^ inches in breadth. It is the largest-flowered of 
all the double red Fuchsias. 
15. Mr. Lyndoe. 
A free-growing variety with very large flowers, of which the 
sepals are erectly reflexed and of a pale red, and the corolla bold 
but somewhat irregular, and of a deep purple. 
16. Prince Leopold eiioh. & Sons). 
In this variety the plant is of a bushy drooping habit and free. 
Flowers with a short tube and reflexed sepals, and a dark purple 
compact double corolla. 
17. Triumphant (Veitch & Sons). 
A variety of rather spreading growth and tolerably free-flower- 
ing, altogether an exceedingly promising sort. Flowers with a 
slender tube and erect palish red sepals ; the large, full, dense 
corolla of a rich deep purple. The individual flowers are exceed- 
ingly fine and well-formed. 
Of this group the variety named Marksman had the previous 
certificate confirmed. 
§ 5. Pink tube and purple corolla. 
18. Hugh Miller (Veitch & Sons). 
A variety of free and vigorous but bushy drooping habit, well 
adapted for furnishing a pillar or rafter, being not only showy, 
but distinct in character. Flowers large, with a long slender pink 
tube and spreading green-tipped sepals, and a bold and spreading 
purple corolla. A very effective ornamental variety. 
§ 6. Vaiiegated leaves. 
19. Aucuhcefolia (E. G. Henderson & Son). 
A very ornamental variegated-leaved variety, having greater 
merit from this point of view than from that of its flowers. The 
