. The standard cyclopedia of horticulture; a discussion, for the amateur, and the professional and commercial grower, of the kinds, characteristics and methods of cultivation of the species of plants grown in the regions of the United States and Canada for ornament, for fancy, for fruit and for vegetables; with keys to the natural families and genera, descriptions of the horticultural capabilities of the states and provinces and dependent islands, and sketches of eminent horticulturists . ple; petals and lip blackish purple. Siam.—B. nudiscdpum,Rolfe. Allied to B. barbigerum. Congo.^B. orthogl


. The standard cyclopedia of horticulture; a discussion, for the amateur, and the professional and commercial grower, of the kinds, characteristics and methods of cultivation of the species of plants grown in the regions of the United States and Canada for ornament, for fancy, for fruit and for vegetables; with keys to the natural families and genera, descriptions of the horticultural capabilities of the states and provinces and dependent islands, and sketches of eminent horticulturists . ple; petals and lip blackish purple. Siam.—B. nudiscdpum,Rolfe. Allied to B. barbigerum. Congo.^B. orthogldssum. III. 43: 406.—B. Pahudii, Reichb. f. 22:2268.—S. papilldsuvi, Finet. Raceme twice as longas lvs.; rachis and bracts green; lip dark purple. FrenchCongo.—B. Pechei, Bull. Burma. 7286.—B. poli/blepharan,Schlecht. Fls. solitary, dark purple. New Guinea.—,Hort. Fls. green with dense purple reticulation. Siam. — , Rolfe. Fls. inconspicuous. Madagascar.—B. radidtum,Lindl. Fls. yellowish white, with narrow lanceolate petals andsepals: If. linear. India.—B. tr^mulum, Wight. E. Indies. 49:291. 9:361.—B. Iridenldlum. Rolfe. Allied to British New Guinea.—B. trifdrium. Rolfe. like the bracts in 3 rows, dull, lurid purple, with numer-ous minute darker spots on the sepals. Madagascar.—B. virls-cens, Thouars. Fls. umbellate; sepals and petals 4-5 in. long, pale. 692. Bulbophyllum Lobbii. (X?) green, the veins and ncr^cs brown; lip rather fleshy, about ^, cordate-ovate, pale green, purple at the ba^e. Java. III. 40:260.—B. Weddllii, Reichb. f. Brazil. III. 36:382. GeOKGE V. NaSH. BULLACE. A name used in England for half-wild,half-domesticaterl plums very similar in character tothe Damsons. In America there exist no plums forwhich another name can not be preferred. The bullace,or buUaces (for there are sevenil varieties


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