Variety For Your Orchid Collection 
ODONTOGLOSSUM Grande $12.50 
Scapes 2 to 8 flowered. Flowers large 5 to 7 inches 
across. Sepals and petals bright yellow, barred with 
chestnut-brown. The largest and showiest of the odon- 
toglossums. Grow best in slightly cooler temperatures. 
Season: Fall. 
ONCIDIUM Lanceanum $7.50 
Flowers small—chartreuse spotted with brown—lip 
white with brown marking. Blooms will last for a 
month. Summer. 
ONCIDIUM Variocosum Variety Rogersii 
$5.00 - $6.00 - $7.50 
One of the best loved of the genus. The upper 
part of the flower is yellow-barred with brown. The 
lip is pure yellow, sometimes with a brown spot or 
band at its base, curiously toothed crest. Flowers in 
Winter and Spring. 
STANHOPEA Graveolens $6.00 - $7.50 
Scapes 1 to 5 flowered; flowers large; sepals and 
petals straw yellow, lip deep yellow. Must hang as 
flowers scapes come out of the bottom of the basket. 
Summer and Fall blooming. 
ZYGOPETALUM Mackayi $5.00 
Scapes erect 18 to 30 inches high. Six to twelve 
flowers, about 3 inches across. Sepals and petals yellow- 
green, blotched with purplish brown. Lip broad, white 
streaked and spotted with violet purple, arranged in 
lines. Fragrant. Fall and Winter blooming. 
CYMBIDIUM DORIS 
CYMBIDIUMS— 
Easy to grow. The beautiful flowers, borne on long 
spikes have unexcelled lasting qualities, both on the 
plant or in water when cut. The wide range of color 
makes them a favorite for corsages and their slender 
grass-like foliage makes a beautiful plant. In warm 
climates they do well under the shade of a tree or in 
a lath house. In cooler climates they may be moved 
outside during the summer months and grown indoors 
in winter. Unlike most orchids, Cymbidiums can be 
grown in soils suitable to other shade loving plants. 
Great amounts of water are required by them but they 
need very good drainage. 
Hybrids at $25.00 Each. Mature Blooming Plants 
Cym. Jessica—Pink, Green to Yellow. 
Cym. Pauwelsii—Deep Yellow to Buff. 
Cym. lLowio-grandiflorum—Green. 
Cym. (Ceres X Ceres) X F. J. Hanbury—Bronze. 
Cym. Butterfly—Yellow Tones. 
Cym. Insigne Hybrid—Light rose-lilac—some al- 
most white. 
Cym. Alexander—Bluish to White. 
Cym. Doris—Brown Tones. 
Cym. Doris Aurea—Brown Tones. 
Cym. Moira—Pinkish Yellow. 
Cym. Peri—Golden Bronze with Maroon V. Lip. 
Cym. Ceres—-Pink to Reddish Bronze. 
Cym. Madeleine—Pink Tones. 
Cym. Lowianum—Yellow Green. 
Division of Good Hybrids from Which the Tags 
Have Been Lost 
$8.50 and $10.00 Each 
CYPRIPEDIUMS— 
The lady slipper type orchid, having a pouch. The 
blooms have a waxy texture and long lasting qualities. 
The plants are compact and make a very satisfactory 
house plant. Cypripediums are easily grown. They 
should be kept moist all of the time provided the tem- 
perature is 60 degrees and above. They are usually 
grown in osmunda fibre, or a mixture of osmunda and 
live sphagnum moss. 
CYP. Insigne $7.50 
Apple green, spotted with brown and purple. One 
of the easiest to grow and one of the most common. 
Blooms in Winter. 
CYP. St. Albans 
Green and purplish brown. Season Variable. 
CYP. Maudiae 
Green and White. Season Variable. 
$12.50 
$12.50 
OTHER FINE HYBRIDS AT $17.50 
