196 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Dendrobium x Cybele, derived from D. Findlayanum 2 and D. nobile ft : ) 
a very pretty hybrid most resembling the pollen parent. 
Cattleya x suavior, derived from C. intermedia? and C. Mendeli?, a e 
delicately coloured and pretty hybrid. 
Cattleya x Zenobia, a handsome hybrid derived from Cattleya Lod- 
digesii 2 and Lelia x elegans Turneri 3, which flowered when seven years © 
old 
Lelia x Timorra, derived from Lelia pumila Dayana? and Cattleya 
Lueddemanniana f; the flowers rather larger than in the former, and a 
modified in colour. 
Cypripedium x obscurum, described as a plant of obscure origin, but 
since considered synonymous with C. x Ashburtoniz (p. 37). ae 
From the collection of Norman C. Cookson, Esq., Oakwood, Wylam-on- 
Tyne, came the following five Cypripediums :— 
C. x plunerum; parentage doubtful, but supposed to be C. venustum 
and C. villosum. Thus it may be a variety of C. x Williamsianum. 
Reichenbach compared it with C. x patens, though it shows no evidence 
of descent from C. Hooker and C. barbatum. 
_ C. xX auroreum, derived from C. Lawrenceanum ? and C. venustum 4, 
and intermediate in character. 
C. x lineolare ; origin not stated, but the plant is compared with 
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C. x Williamsianum. It may have been derived from the same parentage 
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as C. x plunerum. 
C. x doliare, said to be near C. x plunerum, and possibly even from the 
same seed-pod. 
C. x almum, derived from C. barbatum and C. Lawrenceanum. It is — 
not stated which was the seed parent. 
From the collection of D. O. Drewett, Esq., Riding, Mill-on-Tyne, came 
two Cypripediums :— 
C. x delicatulum, derived from C. Dayanum @ and C. barbatum War- 
nerianum f, and thus a variety of C. x Swanianum, in which the ordinary 
C. barbatum was used. Reichenbach speaks of it as the ‘‘ inverted” cross, 
but C. Dayanum is recorded as the seed parent in each case. 
C. x pleistochlorum, derived from C. barbatum 2 and C. virensd, and 
thus the first hybrid in whose parentage the latter had participated. 
From the collection of J. C. Bowring, Esq., Forest Farm, Windsor, 
came— 
Cypripedium x amandum, derived from C. insigne and C. venustum, 
and thus a variety of C. x Crossianum (p. 37), which it closely resembles. 
Lastly, from the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., of Burford, — 
Dorking, came three Dendrobiums :— | ; 
D. x chrysodiscus, a very charming hybrid, said to have been raised 
from D. Findlayanum crossed with the pollen of D. x Ainsworthii, and 4 
Sasa etebet % 
