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_ THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Vo. III.] MAY, 1895: [No. 29. 
NOTES. 
A MeetiNG of the Royal Horticultural Society will be held at the Drill 
Hall, James Street, Westminster, on May 14th, when the Orchid Com- 
mittee will meet at the usual hour of 12 o’clock, noon. 
The great annual Flower Show of the Society will be held, as usual, in 
the Inner Temple Gardens, Thames Embankment, on Tuesday, Wednesday, 
and Thursday, May 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, when a fine display of Orchids 
may be anticipated. A number of Silver Cups and Medals will be awarded 
according to merit. Intending exhibitors must give notice to the Secretary 
not later than Friday, May 18th. 
A flower of the splendid Cattleya Trianze Leeana, or what we take to be 
this, is sent by Mr. Stevens, gardener to W. Thompson, Esq., Walton 
Grange, Stone. It is a gigantic form of the species, with rosy mauve sepals 
_ and petals, the latter being three inches broad. The lip is proportionately 
_ large, and richly coloured, though in other respects typical. It is ex- 
ceedingly handsome, and, according to description, agrees well with the 
original form. 
A remarkably fine flower of Dendrobium infundibulum comes from 
E. H. Woodall, Esq., of Scarborough, which measures 54 inches from tip 
to tip of the petals, which organs themselves are 2} inches broad. It is the 
finest we have seen, and an excellent example of good culture. 
_ An unnamed Cypripedium, which was obtained some time ago by Mr. 
 F. W. Moore, of the Glasnevin Botanic Garden, as a native of the Sulu 
Islands, between Borneo and the Philippines, has now flowered, and proves 
