^ocietp ^otesf. 
*Nuttallh, many plants killed, I fear 
hopeless. 
Thomsonii, much injured, but growing. 
wiNDSORii, very much injured, but 
growing well. 
I have not included any European hybrids in my list, of which, between 
Himalayan sorts alone, I know many, and have a great number of my own 
rearing also, and the reason I do not give up Dalhousi^ and Edgeworthii is 
that I have seedlings from crosses of them which promise well to be hardy. 
One especially, between Edgeworthii and, I think, calophyllum, which only 
lost its bloom-buds last spring, I am very proud of ; its fragrance is far beyond 
any I know, Rollisson’s “ fragrantissimum ” and “ Lindleyanum ” being, 
so far, the best. I have named it the “ Empress of India,” in honour of our 
Queen. 
Glenville, Fermoy. H. H.f 
WINDSORII LEUCANTHUM, very much 
injured, but growing well. 
The last two plants appear to me less 
hardy varieties of R. arboreum. 
t Dr. Henry Hudson, whose grand-nephew, Sir Edward Hudson-Kinahan, Bart., is the 
present owner of Glenville Manor, where the collection remains undisturbed.—C.C.E. 
