EPIDENDRUM_ATRO-PURPURBUM- Guatemala. A 
very handsome species. Flowers in long 
racemes, sepais and petals green and 
chocolate brown, lip white with crimson 
biotch. Delightfully fragrant. Grown 
in baskets, pots, or on logs. A splendid 
Orchid. Spring and early Summer, 
Pots, $4.00 to $6.00. 
Baskets, $10.00 to $15.00. 

EPIDENDRUM ATRO~PURPUREUM 
EPIDENDRUM_ _AURANTIACUM (Syn. Cattleya Aurantica). Guatemala. 
Clusters of medium-sized flowers of an attractive orange red color. 
A free bloomer and very pretty. Spring and Summer. 
Pots, from $4.00 up. 
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a cross between Epidendrum Of Brienianum and E. Ibaguense. Flowers 
on long stems in dense terminal corymbs, sepals and petals a bril- 
liant Indian yellow, shaded with vermillion. Dwarf and compact 
habit. This Orchid can be cultivated in pots in a light rich soil 
with plenty of leaf mold. In frost-free locations it will form 
large clumps in the open ground in full sun, and is almost always 
in bloom. Very scarce. Small plants, not yet in bloom, $2.50 to 
$3. 50. 
EPIDENDRUM_CILIARE. Central America. Spreading flowers, sepals 
and petals greenish white, lip pure white. Winter. 
EPIDENDRUM COCHLEATUM. Florida, West Indies, Central America. 
Pseudo-bulbs, with clusters of flowers on rather long sprays. 
Sepals and petals long and greenish-yellow, twisted, lip deep 
purplish-black and shaped like a cockleshell. This easily grown 
Orchid has handsome foliage, is almost perpetually in bloom, and 
does well under lath. One large specimen in .a basket in one of our 
lath houses has been continually in bloom every day for nearly 
three years, with as many as ten flower sprays in evidence. Can be 
grown in pots, in baskets, or on logs. 
Blooming sized plants, $5.00. 
