36 THE ORCHID REVIEW [ FEBRUARY, 1915. 
it was this practice that had led to the existing lamentable. confusion. 
Committee after. Committee had sat upon the question, and had drawn up 
rules upon the subject, but their time had been largely wasted because they 
had no power to enforce them, and now it had been found necessary to 
take more stringent measures. These rules were only intended to secure 
an orderly system of nomenclature. Defendant might apply any name 
that came within the limits of the rules, and such name could not hereafter 
be set aside. Incorrect names, however, received no protection, and it was 
an instruction to the responsible officer to see that they were at once 
amended. There had been too much laxity in the past. Defendant said 
he was willing to conform to any reasonable rule, and on this understanding 
the case was dismissed. 
| NEW HYBRIDS. se 
ATTLEYA PHYLLIS (Lueddemanniana Stanleyi x Schroedere).—A 
handsome hybrid, fairly intermediate between the two parents, but 
the base of the lip narrowed as in the former parent. The petals and lip 
are very broad and undulate, and the colour soft rose, while the throat of 
the lip is light yellow. Exhibited at the R.H.S. meeting held on January 
5th last by J. Gurney Fowler, Esq., Brackenhurst, Pembury. 
L&LIA ANCIBARINA (anceps X cinnabarina).— An interesting hybrid, 
exhibited at the R.H.S. meeting held on January 19th, by Messrs. 
Armstrong & Brown, Tunbridge Wells. The flowers are orange-yellow, 
and are borne on a long and slender scape, and thus most resemble the 
cinnabarina parent in general character. 
CYMBIDIUM Castor (Woodhamsianum x insigne).—A promising hybrid 
from the collection of G. Hamilton-Smith, Esq., Finchley, of which a 
flower has been sent to us. It is most comparable with C. insigne, but has 
rather narrower, more acuminate sepals and petals, showing the influence 
of the original C. eburneum. That of C. Lowianum is not particularly 
obvious. The flowers are light yellow, with very numerous red-purple 
stripes on the lip, these passing into a few spots at the apex of the lobes. 
The keels are villous. 
CYMBIDIUM FLory1 (grandiflorum x Veitchii).—A striking hybrid, 
exhibited at the R.H.S. meeting held on January r1gth, by Messrs. Flory & 
Black, Slough. The flowers are large, and light green in colour, with 
numerous red-brown blotches on the lip. 
ODONTOGLOSSUM N&VROSS (nevium x Rossii).—A promising hybrid, 
exhibited at the R.H.S. meeting held on January 5th by Messrs; Armstrong 
& Brown, Tunbridge Wells. The plant was very small, and bore a single 
