THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Vol. XXIX.] JULY, 1921. [No. 337. 
NOTES. 
The Orchid Review. —Owing to the sad loss sustained by the death of 
Mr. R. A. Rolfe, the “ Orchid Review” has been suspended for the period 
of six months. The present issue forms the first part of the twenty-ninth 
volume ; further numbers will be published on the first of each month. 
Distinguished Visitor. —Prince Tadashige Shimadzu, who has been 
invited by the Council of the Royal Horticultural Society to be a member 
of the Orchid Committee during the current year, attended the Society’s 
Meeting on May ioth, and subsequently visited the extensive collection of 
Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart., at Gatton Park, Surrey. The Prince, who 
is a member of the Imperial Orchid Society of Japan, possesses an 
extensive knowledge, not only of the plants indigenous of his own land, but 
of those cultivated in other countries, and is, in addition, widely acquainted 
with Orchid literature. 
Roebling Orchid Collection. —Mr. Eugene Dixon, Ogontz Farm, 
Elkins Park, Pa., U.S.A., who, in 1919, purchased the whole of the Orchid 
collection formed by the late Mr. Chas. G. Roebling at Trenton, New 
Jersey, has recently removed the plants to the above locality, where a range 
of six houses, each 100 feet in length, and complete in every detail for 
modern cultivation, has been erected. Mr. James Goodier, who has long 
had charge of this collection informs us that the plants are in every way 
better for the change. 
Onciijium Papilio Gharlesworthii.— One of the surprises at the 
Chelsea Show this year was a new variety of Oncidium Papilio exhibited by 
Messrs. Charlesworth & Co. Although by no means white, it belongs to 
what is generally known as the albino class, for the heavy blotching of 
brownish-red has changed to light orange-yellow. The curious point is that 
several plants were exhibited, each differing slightly in degree of coloration. 
Which throws a little doubt on their true albino nature. Even in the 
variety most devoid of the typical blotching, the two cirri of the column 
