376 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
selected for special awards. Lelio-cattleya x callistoglossa ignescens, a 
magnificent form, and Cypripedium xX Milo grandis (C. insigne Chantini 9 
x C. X cenanthum superbum ¢ ) each received a First-class Certificate, and 
Lelio-cattleya x Semiramis (L. Perrinii ? x C. Gaskelliana g ) an Award 
of Merit. Other handsome things were L.-c. X Decia, L.-c. x Pallas 
superba, Cattleya x leucoglossa, Phalenopsis x intermedia: var. Vesta, 
the very pretty Epidendrum Wallisio-ciliare, Miltonia spectabilis Moreliana, 
various Cypripediums, &c. 
Messrs. F. Sander & Co., St. Albans, received a Silver Banksian Medal 
for a fine group in which was a fine hybrid Cypripedium called C. x 
Countess of Salisbury (C. bellatulum ¢ x C. barbatum superbum 3) to 
which a First-class Certificate was awarded. Saccolabium acutifolium also 
received a Botanical Certificate. Other interesting things were a fine pan 
of .Habenaria Susanne, Ancectochilus Sanderianus, Cymbidium xX 
Winnianum, Trichopilia brevis, Catasetum Christyanum, Dendrobium 
aqueum, Coelogyne fuscescens, &c., also some good forms of Cattleya 
labiata, including a fine white variety called Miss Clara Measures, with a 
purple disc to. the lip. 
Messrs. B. S. Williams & Son, Upper Holloway, received a Silver 
Banksian Medal for an interesting group, including Pescatorea Roezlii and 
P. Klabochorum, Ccelogyne Gardneriana, to which a Botanical Certificate 
was given, Catasetum x splendens aureum, and a number of fine Cypripe- 
diums, including C. insigne Wallacei, C. x Adonis, and others. 
_CATTLEYA LABIATA DIPHYLLOUS. 
A very interesting photograph has been sent by ‘F. H. Moore, Esq., 
Royal Infirmary, Liverpool, showing a flowering plant of Cattleya labiata 
with one diphyllous pseudobulb. A flower from the plant is also enclosed, 
showing it to be typical C. labiata. We do not remember to have seen such 
an example before among monophyllous Cattleyas, and consider it to be a 
case of reversion to an ancestral condition. In any case its appearance is 
extremely interesting. 
—-_—+— 
CORRESPONDENCE, &c. 
G. B., Hamburg. Cymbidium giganteum. 
A.W. H., California. Lelia anceps Sanderiana. 
G. H., Wakefield. The plant sent as Cattleya gloriosa is a good ordinary C. labiata. 
There is no such species as C. gloriosa, and the plant originally so named. is only a white 
form of C. labiata, which flowered out of an imported batch of that species. Such plants are 
rare, and cannot be identified until they flower, so that unflowered plants are not the least 
likely to be correct. | 
