i^fjotiolienbron ^ocietp ^otes. 
is another cross poorly represented in point of numbers, but in which the influence 
of the latter is clearly visible; yet this seems to have an indifferent constitution 
and may prove worthless. The old plant of R. Hookerii, badly broken by the 
falling elm in 1915, has at last succumbed to its injuries, and I should be grateful 
if any member of the Society could tell me of a nurseryman who stocks it, for it 
is a beautiful thing, which I should like to replace. 
Commander Millais in his most interesting book mentions a supposed cross 
between R. triflorum and Augustinii— -unlike either parent—in the garden at 
Trewithen, I fear on my authority. I saw the two or three plants of it again the 
other day, and am convinced that there is a mistake in the record of the cross, 
and that it is really one between Maddenii and cinnabarinum. 
E. J. P. MAGOR. 
\%th December, 1917. 
167 
