r 
remarks that'itis the first example of this section bearing three flowers 
is4° THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
sown in Decca 1894, and the plant has now produced a single flower, 
though the racemose character of the seed parent is sure to manifest itself . 
as the plant becomes stronger. 
PAPHIOPEDILUM x CYMATODES. 
TWIN-FLOWERED scapes of the normally one-flowered section of this genus 
are now pretty common, but examples bearing three flowers are very rare, 
those we remember to have seen up to the aes being P. Spicerianum 
Fig. 32. PAPHIOPEDILUM X CYMATODES. 
‘eae P. X Rossianum. The annexed figure rspresents a plant from the 
collection of S. G. Lutwyche,, Esq., Eden Park, Beckenham, and is 
reproduced from a photograph kindly forwarded by him. The plant is 
P. X beechense, a hybrid between P. Cuitisii and P. superbiens, but as 
there is an earlier name for this hybrid we adopt it. Mr. Lutwyche 
which he has seen. The peculiarity is probably due to the exceptional 
vigour on the part of the plant, arising from good culture, and in any case. 
it is interesting to preserve such a graphic representation of it. 
; opr if \ 
