194 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [SePTEMBER, 1917. 
C. H. Lankester, and flowered in the collection in July, 1915. It is allied 
to D. hystricina, Rchb. f., but has much broader and shorter leaves. The 
flowers are pale buff, with red-purple spots and bars, the lip white with 
purple spots and a purple suffusion on the side lobes, and the column pale 
buff, margined with dull purple, and the rostellum violet—l.c., p. 86. 
The other four species are South African, namely, Eulophia triloba, 
elegantula, obcordata, and durbanensis, Rolfe, and are described from dried 
specimens. 
9 NEW HYBRIDS. i. 
HAVE to report the following Orchid hybrids raised and flowered in 
i this collection, and which I name as follows :-— 
L2&LIOCATTLEYA BREBURNE (Lc. Geo. Woodhams X Thyone). 
OponTiopA BacHEHAM (Oda. rosefieldiensis X Odm. Thais). 
OvonTIopA BoLTonE (Odm. Aireworth X Oda. Charlesworthii). 
OponTiopa Borne (Oda. Bradshawize X Odm. Louise). 
ODONTOGLOSsUM BADELSMERE (Odm. Jasper X hybrid unnamed, one 
of Vuylsteke’s). 
ODONTOGLOssuM BeREwic (Odm. crispum Floryi x Her Majesty). 
ODONTOGLOssuM BorowarT (Odm. Ianthe x Kilburneanum). 
C, J. PHILLIPS. 
The Glebe, Sevenoaks. 
An interesting and pretty hybrid, presumably of artificial origin, has 
heen sent from the collection of W. Waters Butler, Esq., Southfield, 
Edgbaston, unfortunately without any clue to its origin. One parent, how- 
ever, was clearly a Miltonia, from the shape and colour of the lip; the 
other, from the dark, somewhat elongated sepals, petals, and column, may 
have been an Odontoglossum. There is a suggestion of Miltonia cuneata 
about the. shape of the lip, which is obovate, with a cuneate base, and a pall 
of small auricles above the base, but the colour is entirely purple, with 4 
yellow crest. The sepals and petals are broadly lanceolate, and of a darker 
purple, with brown underneath, which comes out stronger in drying, while 
the column is rather elongated, and with rather narrow, nearly entire 
wings. We hope that an effort will be made to trace the origin of the 
plant, so that the parentage may be cleared up, and we may add that this 
note was written without an opportunity of comparing the specimen. It 1s. 
particularly difficult to trace the origin of certain hybrids when neither the 
parentaye nor the origin are known, and such cases, unfortunately, at 
becoming exceedingly numerous. 
