320 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Messrs. F. Sander & Co., St. Albans, sent a group of choice things, 
including the beautiful Cypripedium bellatulum album, C. x H. Ballantine, 
the rare and beautiful Selenipedium Xx Saundersianum raised in the 
establishment, some good Odontoglossum grande, Miltonia X Lamarcheana, 
M. X Bluntii Lubbersiana and M. spectabilis Moreliana, a New Guinea 
Dendrobium called Gratrixianum, with slender stems and white flowers, 
having a purple blotch at the base and apex of the ovate lip, D. 
Guibertianum, &c. 
Messrs. Linden, L’Horticulture Internationale, Brussels, received an 
Award of Merit for Vanda amcena, a supposed natural hybrid between V. 
coerulea and V. Roxburghii, with which it is said to have been imported. 
It was fairly intermediate in character, and the flowers of a bluish-grey, 
with numerous violet spots on a violet-blue lip. 
Messrs. Collins and Collins, Cumberland Park Nurseries, Willesden, 
showed a group of twenty-four plants of Odontoglossum Pescatorei and a 
small O. X excellens. 
ORCHID PORTRAITS. 
CaTTLEYA WARSCEWICZII VAR. Mrs. E. ASHWORTH.—Gard. Chron., 
Sept. 4, pp. 162, 163, fig. 47. 
CIRRHOPETALUM CurTisII, Hook. f.—Bot. Mag., t. 7554. 
C@LOGYNE SPARSA, Reichb. f.—Gartenflora, Oct. 1, p. 449, t. 1442. 
CYCNOCHES CHLOROCHILON.—Journ. of Hort., Sept. 23, p. 285, fig. 41. 
EULOPHIA GUINEENSIS, Lindl.—Gard. Mag., Sept. 18, p. 581, with fig. 
L#LIO-CATTLEYA X D1IGBYANO-TRIAN&.—Journ. of Hort., Sept. 9, pp- 
244, 245, fig. 34. : 
PHAIUS X ASHWORTHIANUS.—Gard. Mag., Sept. 4, p. 551, with fig. 
SOBRALIA LEUCOXANTHA, Rchb. f.—Rev. Hort. Belge, Sept., p. 205, with 
plate. 
TRICHOPILIA suavis, Lindl.—Rev. Hort. Belge, Aug., p. 169, with plate. 
The species here figured is not Trichopilia suavis, Lindl. (which was figured 
at page 273 of our third volume), but T. coccinea, Warsc. 
CORRESPONDENCE, &c. 
W. J., Hale. Cymbidium giganteum. 
Oe a Cattleya Lueddemanniana is the older and correct name for C. speciossima. It 
is not constant in its time of flowering, but the spikes appear just as the young growth is 
finishing. See vol. iii. p. 272, and iv. p. 70 
A good form of Dendrobium formosum. 
Selenipedium x Sedeni has a remarkable tendency to produce abnormal flowers, 
and the character is also seen in S. X cardinale. It is difficult to assign a reason, 
