THE ORCHID REVIEW. 315 
JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE. 
STANHOPEA AMESIANA, Hort. A white variety of S. Lowii.—Aug. 24th, 
p. 175, fig. 26. 
CYPRIPEDIUM X SANDER-SUPERBIENS. (See p. 307 of our present issue.) 
—Sept. 7th, p. 215, fig. 31. 
LINDENIA. 
LA&LIA PURPURATA VAR. FASTUOsA. A handsome variety, with light rose 
sepals and petals, the latter irregularly variegated with a darker tint along 
the centre and towards the apex.-—t. 385. 
L&LIO-CATTLEYA X ExIMIA. A handsome hybrid raised by Mr. Seden 
from Cattleya Warneri 2 and Lelia purpurata 3, now in the collection of 
Baron Sir Henry Schréder, The Dell, Egham.—t. 386. 
MASDEVALLIA xX Poursarxu. A handsome hybrid raised by M. Eugene 
Pourbaix, of Mons, Belgium, from M. Veitchiana ? and M. Shuttleworthii 2. 
It flowered for the first time during the past summer, when it produced a 
single bloom.—t. 387. 
OpontoGLossuM THOMPSONIANUM, Garnier. A handsome form, with 
short broad sepals and petals, the former very dark, and a broad lip with 
orange-brown crest and a similar blotch on the disc. It is compared with 
O. hystrix, but is evidently a variety of O. sceptrum, which is similar in 
shape. It was imported by Messrs. Linden, L’Horticulture Internationale, 
Brussels, but has since passed into the collection of W. Thompson, Esq., 
Walton, Stone, Staffordshire.—t. 388. 
REVUE HORTICOLE. 
CATTLEYA xX BLESENSIS. A very pretty hybrid derived from Lelia 
pumila ¢ and Cattleya Loddigesii 2, by M. Ch. Maron. The cross was 
effected in November, 1885, the seeds matured and were sown in February, 
mei and the first flower was produced in November, 1890. It can only be 
considered a variety of Lelio-cattleya x Aurora, which flowered with 
Messrs. Veitch in September, 1889, and had Lzlia pumila Dayana as the 
seed parent. 
REVUE DE L’HORTICULTURE BELGE ET ETRANGERE. 
CaTTLEYA Mossi#.—Sept., p. 201, with plate. 
WIENER ILLUSTRIRTE GARTEN-ZEITUNG. 
— x SCHOENBRUNNENSIS. A handsome hybrid raised in the 
lon of the Emperor of Austria, at Schénbrunn, near Vienna, it is said 
a and L. Skinneri, though its characters resemble L. 
ee a rather than L. gigantea. It was described in our February 
> P- 51.—Sept., p. 288, t. 3. 
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