228 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Cypripedium x Vervaetianum was raised by Messrs. Vervaet and Co, 
of Mont-St.-Amand, Ghent, from C. Lawrenceanum and C. superbiens, the 
latter believed to have been the pollen parent. The foliage closely resembles : 
that of the former species. 2 
Cypripedium x Lemoinierianum was raised by M. Lemoinier, of Lille, 
and obtained the first prize for a new seedling Orchid at the Ghent Inter. 
nationale Show in 1888. Its parentage was not recorded, but it is a Seleni-_ 
pedium of the Sedeni group. 
Lelia x Horniana was raised by Mr. F. Horn, Orchid grower to Baron 
Nathaniel de Rothschild, of Hohe Warte, near Vienna, from L. purpurata? . 
and L. x elegans3. It was described as a lovely thing. oF 
Cypripedium x Pageanum was raised by M. Page, of Bougival, near 
Paris, from C. superbiens and C. Hooker. It is not stated which was the — 
seed parent. 
be the inverted mule of Cr x calanthum, raised by Messrs. Veitch, but to 
have more of the character of C. Lowii than that one. . 
Cypripedium x Savageanum was raised by Messrs. Seeger and Tropp, of | 
East Dulwich, from C. x Harrisianum ? and C. Spicerianum gf. A note — 
States that the opposite cross resulted in C. x Seegerianum, which, i 
ever, is not described. yy 
Cattleya x flaveola was raised in the establishment of Messrs. Hack 
house and Son, of York, from C. intermedia and probably C. guttata. Thus i 
it would appear to be a variety of C. x picturata. ° ' 
The most beautiful hybrid of the year, and a very remarkable one tod, : 
was Phalzenopsis x John Seden, obtained by crossing P. amabilis, Blume — 
(P. grandiflora) with the pollen of P. Lueddemanniana. ‘The flowers ate 
intermediate in Structure, densely spotted with light purple on a cream- — 
white ground. The seed was sown in November, 1881. It is one of the 
It is curious to note ho 
bining the erect habit of one parent with 
the pendulous one of the other. It flowered when 64 years old. We mu 
here point out that it was not this Dr, Harris who first gave Mr. Dominy 
the idea of hybridising Orchids, as Stated at p. 133. : 
