JUNE, :1922.| THE ORCHID. REVIEW. Igt 
Charlesworth were prominent features. Lc. Wish Wynne (C. Mossie X 
Lc. Bellata) was a fine flower of the Lc. Canhamiana type. 
H. T. Pitt, Esq., was awarded a Silver Banksian Medal for a neat 
exhibit, comprising the fine Miltonia Bleuana Princess Elizabeth, M. Venus 
var. Dulcis, the scarce Cypripedium glaucophyllum, and the pretty 
Epidendrum Endresii, which was much admired. 
Dr. EF. Bedford showed a robust plant of the very rare Dendrobium 
Ashworthiz with a spike of eight well-developed flowers. 
Richd. G. Thwaites, Esq., exhibited Cattleya Mary Sander, Thwaites’ 
variety, with pure-white flowers. 
May gth, 1922. 
Members of the Committee present :—Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart. (in 
the Chair), Prince Tadashige Shimadzu, Messrs. J. O’Brien (hon. sec.), 
C. J. Lucas, Gurney Wilson, R. Brooman White, H. T. Pitt, Pantia Rall, 
F. J. Hanbury, E. R. Ashton, R. G. Thwaites, W. J. Kaye, A. G. 
Alexander, Fred. K. Sander, A. Dye, W. H. Hatcher, Stuart Low, and 
A. McBean. 
A Silver Flora Medal was awarded to H. T. Pitt, Esq., for an excellent 
exhibit containing the elegant Maxillaria Sanderiana, Cymbidium Low- 
grinum, with a richly coloured lip, the rare Cypripedium glaucophyllum, 
and a fine variety of Lycaste Skinneri alba. A special feature was the series 
of Miltonias, including many of the G. D. Owen class with handsomely 
blotched labellums, and an example of the scarce pure white M. vexillaria 
alba. 
G. W. Bird, Esq., Manor House, West Wickham, exhibited Odontioda 
Sultan var. Scutari with a grand spike of 18 finely developed flowers of 
reddish colour. bes 
R. Gerrish, Esq., Milford Manor, Salisbury, staged’ Odontoglossum 
majesticum, Gerrish’s variety, the result of crossing eximium and percultum, 
the spike carrying three large flowers of claret-purple colour. 
R. G. Thwaites, Esq., exhibited Sophrocattleya Gwendoline var. Golden 
Dawn, a pretty flower with buff yellow sepals and petals, the latter rose- 
tinted, the lip having the front lobe ruby-purple. 
J. J. Bolton, Esq., Claygate, Surrey, showed two remarkably fine cut 
flowers: Brassocattlalia Jupiter var. Jonn Cowan, over ten inches across, 
of light blush-rose colour, the deeply fringed and crisped labellum being very 
wide and tinted with violet at the front. The other flower:was Cattleya 
Corydon, about nine inches across, with segments of perfect shape and 
unusually well coloured with ‘rich rosy-mauye, the large labellum being 
ruby-crimson. 
