MARCH, 1903. | THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
the order of their first flowering, and have no other significance. Th 
photographs give an excellent idea of the remarkable range of variation in 
the thirty flowers represented, and Captain Sascaes ee that ‘‘of the 
forty-nine that have already flowered no two are exactly alike, and the 
I 
extreme forms are very distinct indeed.” It may here be remarked thi 
varieties). 
ILUM HERA 
PAPHIOPED 
¢ 
LON 
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paper by Captain Hurst, entitled ‘‘ Variation in Sec Pie Sdghionenke 
appeared in our last volume (PP- 7 7 
a series of twenty-six of the flowers here represented; we may oat 
refer our readers to the comments 
value. The forms are not here arranged in the four group 
they were then classified by Captain 
