306 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [Ocroper, 1913- 
these albino seedlings, and a few were pointed out having colour in their 
leaves when under the influence of the sun. There were also seedlings 
from C. intermedia alba, and Mr. Sander remarked that these when crossed 
with other albinos never give coloured forms, the white being too intense. 
Of course the albinos, numerous as they are, only form a small proportion 
of the thousands of seedlings seen in all stages, and which must be passed 
over with a brief remark, so large is the establishment and so numerous the 
features of interest noted. 
We now passed into a Cool house, containing seedling Odontoglossums, 
Miltonias, Odontiodas, &c., including a good many in spike or flower. A 
batch of Miltonia St. Andre X Roezlii was very interesting, and showed 
some reversions towards the latter, while one showed a pretty radiating 
blotch at the base of the lip. A seedling from M. Roezlii x vexillaria memoria 
G. D. Owen has a very pretty plum-coloured blotch at the base of the lip. 
This, of course, is a variety of M. Bleuana. A good dark M. Roezlii was in 
bloom. Here also was the attractive hybrid from Odontoglossum Edwardii 
X Miltonia vexillaria which was described at page 180 under the name of 
Odontonia brugensis. Cochlioda Neetzliana X Miltonia Warscewiczil was 
in spike, and this has since been described as Miltonioda Cooperi (see p. 232)- 
In other cases Miltonia Warscewiczii has been used as the seed bearer, and 
several promising seedlings between it and various Odontoglossums were in 
bloom, or spike, and these have been noted elsewhere. One curious cross 
was M. Warscewiczii x O. Edwardii. A deep rose-purple form of 
Odontioda Cupid (C. Neetzliana X O. ramossisimum) was in bloom, and 
batches of other promising Odontiodas were pointed out. A lot of seedling 
Odontoglossums were producing their first flowers, and we have examples 
and notes of some of them, which we may be able to mention later. Some 
promise to develop into very handsome things when the plants become 
strong. There was the usual amount of variation between seedlings of the 
same batch. 
In the next house were some older plants, as well as a lot of seedlings, 
and we noticed some good Odontioda Bradshawiz in bloom, including one 
with light cherry-red markings on a white ground, two good O. Cooksoniz, 
O. keighleyensis with a large panicle of flowers, and examples of O. 
Charlesworthii. About 150 Odontoglossums were in bloom, and we noted 
some good forms of O. eximium, O. armainvillierense with large round 
white flowers and a single blotch on each segment, a very fine rosy O. 
amabile, blotched with cinnamon, and the lip very broad, O. bellatulum, 
a very fine well-blotched form of O. excellens, O. armainvillierense X 
crispum, white with a light purple blotch on each segment, O. loochristienses 
examples of O. spectabile x Edwardii, one of which was nearly black, a lot 
of Edwardii x triumphans, several of them in spike and bloom, and a very 
