April, 1917.] THE ORCHID REVIEW. bi 
At the meeting held on March 27th the exhibits were rather more 
numerous, and the awards consisted of three medals, one First-class 
Certificate, and four Awards of Merit. 
Orchid Committee present: Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart. (in the Chair), 
J. O’Brien (hon. sec.), Sir Harry J. Veitch, R. A. Rolfe, R. G. Thwaites, 
E. R. Ashton, T. Armstrong, A. McBean, J. Cypher, J. Charlesworth, 
J. E. Shill, H. G. Alexander, W. Cobb, S. W. Flory, W. Bolton, C. J. 
Lucas, R. Brooman White, and W. H. Hatcher. 
FIRST-CLASS CERTIFICATE. 
CYPRIPEDIUM EurYBIADES THE Baron (Hera Euryades X Alcibiades). 
—A magnificent form, the flower being of exceptional shape and substance. 
The dorsal sepal is white with an emerald green base and numerous large 
purple blotches, while the lip is dark mahogany-red, and the very broad, 
horizontal petals are heavily marked with the latter colour on a rosy yellow 
ground. Exhibited by Baron Bruno Schréder, The Dell, Englefield Green 
(gr. Mr. J. E. Shill). 
AWARDS OF MERIT. 
BRASSOCATTLEYA Lapy JELLICOE (Bc. langleyensis xX C. Gaskelliana 
alba).—A very beautiful white flower, with a tinge of rose-colour in the 
sepals, and the throat of the lip orange yellow with a narrow purple line in 
front. Exhibited by Messrs. Armstrong & Brown. 
CATTLEYA ENID VAR. SILVER QUEEN (C. Mossie Reineckeana X 
Warscewiczii Frau Melanie Beyrodt).—A beautiful pure white form, with 
a deep yellow throat and some yellow lines in front. Exhibited by Messrs. 
Charlesworth & Co. 
OponTIODA ST. QUENTIN (Oda. Zephyr X Odm. Wiganianum).—A 
large and beautiful hybrid, having canary yellow flowers with broad segments, 
each with a cluster of red-brown blotches below, and the lip with a zone of 
the latter colour in front of the yellow crest. Exhibited by Messrs. Flory 
& Black. 
SoPHROCATLELIA MEUSE VAR. GENERAL NIVELLE (Scl. Marathon X 
Le. callistoglossa).—A charming thing, the flowers being of fine shape, the 
sepals and petals light carmine-rose, and the lip darker, with some yellow 
lines in the throat. Exhibited by Messrs. Charlesworth & Co. 
Mrs. Bischoffsheim, The Warren House, Stanmore (gr. Mr. H. Haddon), 
showed Brassocatlelia Queen of the Belgians Warren House var. (BI. 
Veitchii x C. Mendelii), a well-shaped rosy-mauve flower with some yellow 
in the throat of the lip. 
C. J. Lucas, Esq., Warnham Court, Horsham (gr. Mr. Duncan), 
showed three seedlings, Odontioda warnhamensis (Oda. Cecilia x Odm. 
armainvillierense), a well-shaped dark bronzy-red flower, and a broad 
Pescatorei-like lip with a white apex; Odontoglossum Delta (Rolfee x 
