| Nov.-Dec., 1918.] THE ORCHID REVIEW. 256 
is of special interest to British botanists, to whose attention we commend 
it.” We thank our contemporary for the complimentary reference. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle announces with regret the death, from 
pneumonia, of 2nd Lieut. Jack Hardy, the younger son of Mr. George 
_ Hardy, of Pickering Lodge, Timperley, for some years one of the leading 
Orchid growers of Lancashire, in whose collection the handsome natural 
hybrid Cattleya Hardyana appeared in 1883. 
DENDROBIUM HANBURYI.—This is a distinct and striking hybrid raised 
_ 4nthe collection of F. J. Hanbury, Esq., East Grinstead, from D. pulchellum 
(Dalhousieanum) x D. fimbriatum oculatum. The flowers most resemble 
those of the pollen parent, and are deep orange-yellow, with a broad, reddish 
maroon blotch on the disc of the lip. The margin of the lip is neatly 
fringed. 
C@LOGYNE GATTONENSIS.—Raised in the collection of Sir Jeremiah 
Colman, Bart., from C. speciosa X C.Sandere. It bears an erect spike of 
three or four flowers, of fairly intermediate character, the sepals and petals 
being ivory white, and the disc of the lip yellow, with a pair of curved keels, 
bearing numerous short dark brown hairs. The imbricating sheaths at the 
base of the inflorescence of C. Sanderz are absent. 
CaTTLEyA Frestus.—Raised in the collection of Sir Jeremiah Colman, 
Bart., Gatton Park, from Cattleya Dormaniana X C. Adula. It has much 
of the general character of the former, having a bright purple lip, with very 
ample side lobes, and a broad rounded front lobe, while the sepals and 
petals are rather broader than in the same parent, and blackish purple in 
colour. ' 
ORCHIS INCARNATA, L.—We are indebted to Miss Gertrude Jekyll, 
V.M.H.., forthe following note from Mr. W. R. Dykes, Charterhouse, Godal- 
ming, which was written in reply toa query as to the Marsh Orchises of the 
district. ‘The flesh-coloured species with unspotted leaves (O. incarnata) 
8tows only on the Lower Greensand bogs on Thursley Common, and near 
the head of Frencham Little Pond, in both cases with O. latifolia and O. 
maculata in close proximity. O. latifolia grows at Hurtmore Bottom, and 
with it specimens with unspotted leaves are fairly common, though no other 
Species grows there. This seems to show that the plant with unspotted 
leaves is merely a form of O. latifolia and not a hybrid.” The note came 
after the article at pp. 162-166 was printed, and it suggests that the name 
O. latifolia is used for the plant with spotted leaves, which we refer to O. 
Braunii. We regard the unspotted plant as the original O. latifolia. In 
any case the secondary hybrid between O. Braunii and O. incarnata might 
be looked for in the locality first mentioned.—R.A.R. 
