FLORAL COMMITTEE. 



Silver Flora Medal. 



To Messrs. Cutbush. Highgate, for forced shrubs and Tulips. 



To Mr. C. Elliott, Stevenage, for rockery. 



To Messrs. Sutton, Reading, for Hyacinths, &c. 



To Messrs. Wallace, Colchester, for rockery. 



Silver Banksian Medal. 



To Messrs. Alhvood. Haywards Heath, for Carnations. 



To Mrs. Balfour, Oxford, for Hyacinths. 



To Mr. J. Box. Haywards Heath, for rockery. 



To Mr. H. Burnett, Guernsey, for Carnations. 



To Messrs. Jackman, Woking, for hardy plants. 



To Messrs. Low, Bush Hill Park, for Carnations and Acacias, &c. 



To Messrs. May, Upper Edmonton, for Ferns and flowering plants. 



Bronze Flora Medal. 

 To Messrs. Blackmore and Langdon, Bath, for Violets. 

 To Messrs. Cheal, Crawley, for rockery. 

 To Mr. C. Engelmann, Saffron Walden, for Carnations. 

 To Messrs. Carter Page, London Wall, for bulbs in bowls. 

 To Mr. M. Prichard, Christchurch, for hardy plants. 

 To Mr. G. Reuthe, Keston, for hardy plants. 



Bronze Banksian Medal. 



To Mr. R. d'E. Day, Sutton Scotney, for Spanish Iris. 

 Award of Merit. 



To Mazus rugosus (votes, unanimous), from the Wargrave Plant 

 Farm, Ltd., London, E.C. This charming plant is one of the most 

 distinct early alpines. It is said to be quite hardy, and is of creeping 

 habit, growing I inch high. The leaves are sessile and measure about 

 \ inch long. The flowers are large in proportion to the size of the plant, 

 and have a short notched upper hp and a large lower lip with three 

 lobes, the two outer ones of which are white with brown spots, while the 

 other parts of the flower are violet-mauve. (Fig. 106.) 



To Saxifraga x ' Faldonside ' (votes, unanimous), from Sir Everard 

 Hambro, K.C.Y.O. (gr. Mr. Grandfield), Hayes Place, Hayes. A 

 charming garden hybrid Saxifrage of great beauty. The flowers are 

 large and of a pale lemon-yellow colour, and measure f inch across. 

 They are abundantly borne in twos or threes on short stems arising 

 from tufts of leaves which are larger and bolder than those of S. Boydii. 

 The petals are prettily crimped at the edges. (Fig. 107.) 



To Syringa vulgaris 1 Hugo Koster ' (votes, unanimous), from 

 Messrs. M. Koster, Boskoop, Holland. A very free-flowering Lilac 

 bearing large dense trusses of lilac-mauve flowers. The individual 

 flowers are of large size. This variety was raised as the result of cross- 

 hybridizing seedlings, and it is said to force earlier than the well-known 

 variety ' Marie Legraye.' 



