310 THE ORCHID. REVIEW. [OcTOBER, I915- 
Messrs. J. & A. McBean, Cooksbridge, staged a choice little group, 
including Vanda Sanderiana, Cymbidium erythrostylum and Doris, 
Oncidium varicosum Rogersii with a very compact panicle, Masdevallia 
Chimera, Cattleya Iris and Enid, Sophrocatl#tia Iris (L.-c. Gottoiana X 
S. grandiflora), with rosy purple sepals and darker lip, and Odontonia 
Scylla (O. cirrhosum X M. vexillaria), having pink, acuminate sepals and 
petals and a darker lip (Silver Banksian Medal). 
Messrs. Armstrong & Brown, Tunbridge Wells, sent a fine Cattleya 
Armstrongiz, Brassocatlelia General French (L.-c. George Woodhams X 
B.-c. Thorntonii), Odontioda Gloss (Odm. triumphans X Oda. Charles- 
worthii), orange-red, and Odontoglossum crispum memoria J. S. Moss, 
heavily blotched with brown. 
Messrs. Hassall & Co., Southgate, staged a pretty little group, including 
Leliocattleya Pearl (L.-c. Norba xX C. Gaskelliana alba), a promising 
white flower, Bassocattleya Nestor (C. labiata x B.-c. Maroniz), Cattleya 
Naidia (iridescens x Hardyana), most like the former in shape, and C. 
Beatrice var. rubra. 
Messrs. Flory & Black, Orchid Nursery, Slough, sent Brassocattleya 
Doris (B.-c. Maronie X C. Rothschildiana), a large lilac-purple hybrid 
with light yellow disc, Lzliocattleya Soulange (L.-c. Lustre x C. Dowiana 
aurea), and L.-c. Rossetti (Antigone x bletchleyensis). 
FIRST-CLASS CERTIFICATES. 
CaTTLEYA KING-GEORGE (triumphans X Dowiana_ Rorita).—A 
magnificent hybrid, most like the latter parent in general character, and 
having the sepals and the broad, undulate petals clear light yellow, with 
the lip strongly undulate, and of a ruby crimson shade, with a paler margin 
and some yellow veining in the throat. Exhibited by Messrs. Flory & 
Black. 
CaTTLeEyA Lapy-VeitcH (Lueddemanniana alba xX Warneri alba.—A 
chaste and beautiful hybrid, having very broad petals and lip, and the whole 
flower pure white, with a light yellow disc to the lip. Exhibited by Messrs- 
Sander & Sons. : 
AWARD OF MERIT. 
BrassocaTTLeya Mars (C. Maggie-Raphael alba x B.-c. Leemaniz).— 
A very promising hybrid, most like the latter, and having broad white 
sepals and petals, and a well-fringed, rose-pink lip, with a light yellow disc- 
Exhibited by Messrs. Armstrong & Brown. 
LINDLEY MEDAL. 
VANDA SANDERIANA.—A splendidly-grown specimen, grown from @ 
dwarf piece imported several years ago, and now with four growths and six 
flower-spikes, with an aggregate of 42 finely-developed flowers. A seventh 
spike was also pushing up. 
