THE ORCHID REVIEW. 24 
H. S. Leon, Esq., Bletchley Park (gr. Mr. Hislop), sent Cattleya X 
Maggie Raphael (C. Dowiana ? X C. Triane g), a very beautiful hybrid, 
which secured the award of a First-class Certificate. The sepals and 
petals are Indian yellow in colour, the latter being tinged and veined with 
purple towards the margin, and the lip of a rich purple shade, somewhat 
lighter towards the sides and apex. 
The Right Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, M.P., Highbury, Birmingham 
(gr. Mr. Smith), sent Sophrocattleya x Chamberlaini var. triumphans 
(C. Harrisoniana @ x S. grandiflora ¢#), a _ beautiful variety, 
to which an Award of Merit was given. The sepals and petals 
are reddish crimson with darker veining, and the lip chrome yellow, 
with the apex of the front lobe and margin of the side lobes purplish 
crimson. The original form was described at page 270 of our sixth volume. 
He also sent the pretty Cattleya x Miss Endicott (maxima xX Loddigesii), 
a pretty light-rose flower with the labellum finely veined with purple. 
John S. Moss, Esq., Wintershill, Bishops Waltham, showed a fine form 
of Cymbidium Tracyanum and C. longifolium, the latter a Himalayan 
species allied to C. giganteum, to which an Award of Merit was given. 
The Hon. Mrs. Albert Brassey, Heythorp Park, Chipping Norton 
(gr. Mr. Downing), sent a group of well-grown Calanthes, consisting 
principally of C. vestita rubro - oculata, C. v. luteo-oculata, and 
C. X Veitchii. 
R. I. Measures, Esq., Cambridge Lodge, Camberwell (gr. Mr. 
Chapman), showed a fine plant of Cypripedium X Leeanum giganteum, 
rather darker in colour than the original. 
Leopold Rothchild, Esq., Gunnersbury Park, Acton (gr. Mr. Hudson), 
showed the pretty Cattleya Harrisoniana candida and Lelia autumnalis. 
T. W. Thornton, Esq., Brockhall, Weedon, sent a spike of Cattleya x 
Euphrasia (superba X Warscewiczii Sanderiana), the produce of a plant 
raised in the collection from seed sown in 1890, now flowering for the first 
time. It is much like the original form raised by Messrs. Veitch. 
Messrs. Linden, L’Horticulture Coloniale, Brussels, sent several 
Oncidium Forbesii, one large and handsome form called O. F. 
moortebeekiense securing an Award of Merit. A similar award went to 
O. varicosum Lindeni, a large and handsome form with a chestnut brown 
blotch surrounding the crest. 
Messrs. James Veitch & Sons, Chelsea, sent the pretty Cypripedium 
X Minos magnificum (Spicerianum X Arthurianum). 
Messrs. F. Sander & Co., St. Albans, staged a small but interesting 
group, containing Phalznopsis Sanderiana, the distinct Dendrobium 
Hodgkinsoni (Rolfe), a plant introduced from New Guinea with D. 
spectabile, and allied to D. atroviolaceum, except that the petals are 
