280 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
[SEPTEMBER, 1923. 
able amount of sunshine to ripen the growth sufficiently for flower buds to 
be produced, so that under artificial cultivation but little shading is required. 
It grows well when the staging is covered with a bed of sphagnum moss 
that is kept constantly moist by frequent syringing, and a fairly high 
temperature is maintained. Propagation is easily effected by separating - 
some of the pieces of stem having live roots. In colour, the flowers are 
whitish, prettily stained with rose-violet. 
eee 
NEW HYBRIDS. 
NAME. PARENTAGE. 
2 acs POT RW oe 0 Sgn RMSE i na a 
C. Iris x Be. I 
EXHIBITOR. « 
Brassocatleya Maisie 
aes a Ilen ... | Flory & Black. 
Brassocattleya Orel del ae eer Pues bees sea x C. Mardy ana ... | Dr. Lacroze 
‘Cattleya Gladiator Glady iowiana aurea .. .-- | McBean. 
Sattleya Tag hoda ‘ing Ge Flory & Black. 
Leliocattleya Biddy . C. Iris X Le. Wellsiaca ie C. J. Lucas. 
Leliocattleya Lamart L. Latona X Le. Martinetii os wee) | ed TE SP te, 
Leliocattleya Nanon Le. Ivan -. Dowiana aurea Cowan. 
Leliocattleya Princ Le. Ville de Bruxelles Sa Se Rsilatts Armstrong & Brown. 
Miltonia William Pitt | Isabel oe * Bleuana Ht. Pitt, 
Oda. Joa Charlesworth 
. 
. 
psis as 
So epoca Delice we 
Wilsonara ti pies 
Oda. Charickeoithat. 
Oda. ae. * Odm. Alexandrina 
. Jo > u 
uianum 
- Rio Tinto * M. Warscewiczii 
Lindenii X rosea 
Sle. Hon. Barbara Wilson x CC. Tri 
On. tigrinum * Oda. Chinsicscchit 
ee 
Stuart Low. 
Sir J. Rutherford. 
GOVENIA DELICIOsA.—This small genus is seldom represented in present- 
day collections, although G. deliciosa is worthy of attention. It is figured 
in the Orchid Album, t. 210, and is of terrestrial habit, the erect spike 
bearing six to eight flowers, white, the lip yellow at the base, the front half 
covered with purplish dots. 
+94 
PHOLIDOTA IMBRICATA.—The genus Pholidota is allied to Coelogyne, 
and the plants require a somewhat similar culture. P. imbricata is the 
species best known. It is a native of India and Burma, and consequently 
requires an intermedia temperature. The pseudo-bulbs are stout, oblong, 
about two inches high, the leaves varying from eight to twelve inches high. 
The flowers are closely set, yellowish-white, sometimes shaded with green, 
and generally produced in summer. 
