144 THE ORCHID REVIEW. Ne 
J. Leeman, Esq., Heaton Mersey (gr. Mr. Edge), showed Odonto- — 
_ glossum X Ruckerianum illustre, a very fine dark variety (F.C.), O. K 
Andersonianum, O. luteopurpureum, Lelio-cattleya x elegans Queen 
Empress (A.M.), and a very effective group, comprising the above, Lelia 
Digbyana, Cattleya Mendelii, C. Lawrenceana, Lelia purpurata, and many 
other fine things, for which he received a Silver Medal. 
H. Partington, Esq., Glossop, showed Odontoglossum x Adrianz.- 
H. Shaw, Esq., Stockport (gr. Mr. Cliffe), showed Lelia x Latona. : 
‘ _E. H. Seddon, Esq., Brooklands, showed Cattleya Schroedere and : 
Odontoglossum x Andersonianum. e 
Mrs. Stanley Clarke, Wrexham, showed Odontoglossum crispum, Ore 
Hallii, and a very good form of Cypripedium Curtisii (A.M.). ie.. 
Mr. James Cypher, Cheltenham, staged a very effective group, in which 
we noticed Cypripedium Lawrenceanum, C. ciliolare, C. hirsutissimum, two _ 
very well grown plants of C. niveum, Epidendrum radicans, several good, ; 
Dendrobium _nobile, Rodriguezia (Burlingtonia) fragrans, Sophronitis : 
o grandiflora, Cattleya citrina, Lzlia Boothiana, Diacrium bicornutum, and 
ae Cattleya Mendelii. A Silver Medal was awarded. ie 
_ Messrs. F. Sander & Co., St. Albans, showed Cypripedium X Mrs. 
Leemann (Rothschildianum x Morganiz burfordiense) (A.M.), and two — 
very fine varieties of Odontoglossum triumphans, both of which received — 
Awards of Merit. b 
Messrs. Charlesworth & Co., Bradford, showed Cattleya Trianz, with 
a very good labellum, but poor sepals and petals, and Cattleya Schroedere 
Neptune (A.M.). heen he ; 
Mr. A. J. Keeling, Bingley, staged a miscellaneous group, for which he 
received a Vote of Thanks. 
ODONTOGLOSSUM x WENDLANDIANUM 
CRAWSHAYANUM. 
FLOWERs of this handsome form, which received an Award of Merit from — 
the R.H.S. on April 24th, are sent from the collection of De Barri Craw- | 
shay, Esq., Rosefield, Sevenoaks. The lip is not pandurate, as in the form © 
noted at page 122, being more like the original form in shape. The flower — 
; measures nearly three inches across its broadest diameter, and the sepals 
and petals are very strongly flushed with rose, and densely spotted with 
chocolate, in this respect resembling heavily marked forms of O. X _ 
Ruckerianum. The spine-like crest is a constant feature, which seems t® 
fix O. crinitum as one 
it was imported, and settle the point whether O. cris 
. pum was the other 
_ parent. At present ee 
the information seems contradictory. 
