366 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [DECEMBER, 1914. 
-of brown, the pure white Coelogyne Veitchii, Cypripedium insigne Sandere, 
‘Odontoglossum Rossiane, some good O. crispum, and others (Silver Flora 
Medal). 
Messrs. Sander & Sons, St. Albans, staged a fine group, including some 
tichly-coloured forms of Cattleya Fabia, C. Fabia alba, C. Hardyana with 
nine flowers, C. Rhoda, Murillo, and Kienestiana, Leeliocattleya Decia and 
Britannia, Brassocattleya Seaforth-Highlander (B.-c. Leemanniz x L.-c. 
Aphrodite), pale rose with yellow throat, Coelogyne brunnea, ccellata, and 
Mooreana, Aérides Lawrencee with three spikes, a richly-coloured 
Stanhopea Wardii, Dendrobium formosum giganteum, a_well-flowered 
Angrecum distichum, Maxillaria luteo-alba, the graceful Dendrochilum 
filiforme, Cypripedium Arthurianum, Corsair, and others, Odontonia 
MacNabiana, Odontioda Devosiana, Cirrhopetalum refractum, Odonto- 
glossum Pheebe, &c. (Silver Flora Medal). 
Messrs. Flory and Black, Orchid Nursery, Slough, sent a plant of the 
original Zygocolax Veitchii. 
Messrs. Hassall & Co., Southgate, sent Cattleya Moira magnifica 
(Mantinii x Fabia), a richly-coloured hybrid, most like the former but 
larger in size, the yellow C. Sylvia sulphurea, and Leliocattleya Nestor (C. 
Warscewiczii x L.-c. Ophir), having white sepals and petals and a rosy lip. 
Messrs. J. & A. McBean, Cooksbridge, sent Sophrocattleya Pearl (S.-c. 
Doris X C. Portia), a very promising hybrid, the plant bearing two bright 
rosy crimson flowers, with some yellow lines in the throat of the lip. 
AWARDS OF MERIT. 
ODONTOGLOssUM CRISPUM MILLIE.—A very fine form, having broad, 
white sepals and petals, the former tinged with rose at the apex, and a 
-cinnamon-coloured blotch on the lip. The inflorescence carried four flowers, 
and had just borne a seed capsule. Exhibited by Messrs. Flory & Black. 
SOPHROCATTLEYA NOVEMBER (Cattleya Portia x Sophronitis grandi- 
flora).—A handsome hybrid, showing much of the influence of the Cattleya 
parent, and having bright rose-purple sepals and petals, the latter being 
very broad, and a bright ruby-red lip, with some yellow in the throat. 
Exhibited by J. Gurney Fowler, Esq., Brackenhurst, Pembury (gr. Mr. J. 
Davis). 
CERTIFICATE OF APPRECIATION. 
CALANTHE Brancuil (C. Textori x William Murray).—An interesting 
and beautiful hybrid between the evergreen and deciduous sections of the 
genus. The plant closely resembled the former in its numerous evergreen 
leaves, but the arching inflorescence and the shape and colour of the flowers 
very strongly recalled the latter. The sepals are white, the petals tinged 
with pink, and the lip and column rose-purple. Exhibited by C. J. Lucas, 
Esq., Warnham Court, Horsham (gr. Mr. Duncan). ; 
