296 THE ORCHID REVIEW. |SEPTEMBER, 1913. 
citrina X Lelia purpurata from the garden of C. J. Lucas, Esq., Warnham 
Court, Horsham. The flowers are intermediate in size and colour between 
those of the parents, and they are produced on a horizontal spike. A 
Certificate of Appreciation was recommended to Mr. C. J. Lucas. 
CaTTLEYA Mossi# BUD SPORT.—Mr. E. H. Davidson sent a plant of C. 
Mossiz Golden Ray, having the petals marked with yellow like the labellum. 
It appears to be a case of irregular peloria, but differing from the usual 
form of peloria in having the labellum characters showing in the petals, 
whereas in the usual form the petal characters show in the labellum. 
July 15th :—Liparis LacERATA.—Mr. J. O’Brien showed an inflorescence 
of Liparis lacerata (Ridley, Journ. Linn. Soc., xxii. 1886, p. 284, Malay 
Peninsula, Perak, &c., Dist. Tenasserim, Borneo). A small example is 
represented in Burbidge’s drawings of Borneo plants in the Natural 
History Museum. The species was little known until it flowered with the 
Hon. N. Charles Rothschild, and was noted in Gardeners’ Chronicle, 
February 15th, 1913, p. 99, from a plant sent to him by a collector in 
Borneo. The present specimen, flowering with Sir Marcus Samuel, was 
obtained from the same source. Some of the flowers had dropped, but the 
spike was about nine inches in length. 
ORCHID PORTRAITS. 
CATTLEYA Mossi (a fine specimen).—Horticulture, 1913, p. 176, with fig. 
CaTTLEYA WaRSCEWICZ1I.—Journ. Hort., 1913, ii. p- II1, with fig. 
CYPRIPEDIUM CALLOSUM SANDER&.—Journ. Hort., 1913, ii. pp. I10, III, 
with fig. 
DENDROBIUM THYRSIFLORUM.—Horticulture, 1913, p. 137, with fig. 
ODONTOGLOSSUM QUEEN ALEXANDRA VAR. THEODORA.—Gard. Mag., 
1g13, p. 601, with fig. 
STANHOPEA CONVOLUTA, Rolfe.—Bot. Mag.,.t. 8507. 
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. 
Orchids are named and ave esttons answered her. as Ae as esate ard os es are 
re —_ ested to oe: the native country or parentage of pike sent, An RESSED postcard be 
ent if a reply by post is dries (abroad, dad  poseaets should be nee vi aide of P pecta 
eee will be dealt with in the body of th ae 
y 
fies in a cardboard case open at the ends. We s suggest that os pe dig dn would pie 
best if gathered hei at rest, freed from m superfluous moisture, and then wrapped in oiled 
silk, with proper protection against crushing in the post. 
E.F.C.—We do not know whether Cattleya _peaphyroetacen, Rchb. f., is in cultivation at 
the present time. We have not seen it for yea 
F.D.—A form of Catasetum splendens, baba: which we havea note about. 
oa —Thanks for note. We nave corrected the record. 
