350° THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
generally, also show the influence of P. Charlesworthii, and we refer it to 
Paphiopedilum x bingleyense. 
Mr. Ross alludes to the “‘ curious seedling,” growing on a green seed pod 
of Cypripedium xX Lathamianum (see page 357 of our last volume), and adds 
that the pod in due time matured and dried up, and the seedling was then 
cut off and pinned down at the base of another plant, where it is doing well. 
A similar case now presents itself with Angraecum citratum, for Mr. 
Ross writes :—“It may interest you to know that I have an Angraecum 
citratum which carries at the extreme apex of the last flower spike a sturdy 
seedling with two leaves and three vigorous roots.” The case is certainly 
interesting, but is it really a seedling? Young plants of Phalznopsis are 
sometimes produced on the flower spikes, but they are developed from buds, 
not from seeds, and the question arises whether the cases mentioned are 
not analagous. 
Mr. Ross has also a curious spike of Oncidium Papilio, which he 
describes as bearing two open flowers back to back, and as it is a fine variety 
the effect is very handsome. The flowers, as is well known, are usually 
borne singly. Mr. Ross adds:—“I have a number of these plants, and 
they are always in flower throughout the year.” 
The September number of Messrs. Cogniaux and Goossens’ Dictionnaire 
des Orchidées, which has just reached us, contains figures of Cattleya Eldorado, 
C. X Vulcain, Cypripedium x aureum var. Cyrus, C. xX Adrastus var. 
Hurstii, C. X Cardosoanum, Epidendum x elegantulum var. leucochilum, 
Miltonia Regnellii var. Veitchiana, Odontoglossum coronarium, O. crispum 
var. Madame Emile Praet, O. Hunnewellianum var. Madouxianum, ‘O. 
luteopurpureum var. mulus tenebrosum ” (which should have been called 
O. X mulus var. tenebrosum, being a hybrid between O. luteopurpureum 
and O. gloriosum), Oncidium nubigenum and Spathoglottis xX aureo- 
Vieillardii. 
A flower of the charming little hybrid Cypripedium X Muriel Hollington 
is sent from the collection of Sir Frederick Wigan, Bart., Clare Lawn, 
Fast Sheen, by Mr. Young. It was raised in the collection of A. J. 
Hollington, Esq., of Enfield, by Mr. Ayling, and flowered in 1891, when it 
was described as a hybrid between C. niveum and C. insigne. The latter 
parent has since been doubted, and it has been stated that it came out of 
the same batch as C. x Aylingii, of which C. ciliolare was the other 
parent. A comparison of the plants in question only serves to confirm the 
original record. The two hybrids are quite dissimilar, and the present one 
has, not only the general shape of C. insigne, but the characteristic fold at 
