194 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
photograph of this and one of the preceding are also enclosed, together 
with a flower of Cattleya Mossiz grandis. 
Two good forms of Lzelio-cattleya x Schilleriana come from the 
collection of E. A. Beveis, Esq., of Oxford, one of which has the lip 
as strongly three-lobed as in L.-c. X elegans, though it is a finely developed 
form of the first-named. A light form of Lzelia tenebrosa is also enclosed. 
A photograph and flower of a handsome hybrid Masdevallia have been 
received from the collection of Captain Hincks, of Richmond, Yorks. It 
was raised from M. ignea Eichardti ¢ and M. coccinea Harryana 4, and 
thus is a fine variety of M. x Fraseri. Captain Hincks has been remark- 
ably successful in hybridising this genus, as our pages have testified from 
time to time. 
The June number of Knowledge contains a series of half-a-dozen 
photographs of Orchids from the collection of the Right Hon. J: 
Chamberlain, M.P., with a short descriptive paper by Mr. H. A. Burberry. 
The plants represented are Cattleya Mendelii, C. Mossi Wagener, 
Cypripedium bellatulum, Dendrobium formosum giganteum, Miltonia 
vexillaria, and Oncidium Papilio. 
A supplementary list of hybrid Orchids, by Mr. H. J. Chapman, 
appears in the Gardeners’ Chronicle for April 4th (p. 431), in which 
however, we note the supposed natural hybrids Dendrobium Donnesi® 
D. Statterianum, and Phalznopsis speciosa, all of which should i 
expunged. 
A recent issue of the Journal of the Linnean Society contains a pape 
entitled, “ An Enumeration of all known Orchids hitherto recorded from 
Borneo,” by Mr. H. N. Ridley, M.A., F.L.S. (XXXI, pp. 261306 
t. 13—15), in which a new genus and about 47 new species are described, 
mostly of botanical interest. The former is called Porphyroglottis : 
Maxwelliz, and is allied to Chrysoglossum. 
The same author announces (Gard. Chron., April 11th, p- 452) bes 
re-discovery of the long-lost Ccelogyne Rumphii, Lindl., from Amboina, 
in the Moluccas, by one of Messrs. Sander’s collectors, so that the 
species may soon be expected in cultivation. It is allied to C. specios® 
Lindl. 
A fine species of Vanilla from the Cameroon district, West Africa, 
described and figured by Dr. Krinzlin under the name of Vanilla imper i 
(Notizbl. K. Bot. Gart. Berlin, 1896, p. 155, t. 1). It is nearly a 
V. grandiflora, Lindl., from Prince’s Island, and has yellow flowefs 
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