166 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [(JuNE, 1912. 
some fine Cymbidium Lowianum, Ccelogyne pandurata, Cattleya Skinneri 
alba and others, Phalznopsis amabilis Rimestadiana, Miltonia vexillaria, 
Odontoglossum crispum Solum, and other fine things, the staging being 
alsc carried out with excellent effect. 
In an Amateur’s class for fifty Orchids in not less than twenty-five 
species, varieties or hybrids, the first prize of a Gold Medal went to M. 
Firmin Lambeau, Brussels, for a very choice group, including the hand- 
some Odontioda Coronation, with a spike of twenty flowers, O. Ajax, having 
bright red flowers margined with white on the lip, O. Bradshawize Vogel- 
sang, with a rosy suffusion and dark red blotches on the sepals and petals, 
Cochlioda Neetzliana, Miltonia Hyeana Vogelsang and maxima, M. 
vexillaria Sanderiana and others, and some handsome Cattleyas, Lzlio- 
cattleyas and Odontoglossums. 
In a corresponding class for Nurserymen the Gold Medal was won by 
Mr. H. Dixon, Spencer Park Nursery, Wandsworth Common, his group 
containing a beautiful specimen of Oncidium phymatochilum, O. Marshalli- 
anum, Dendrobium Jamesianum, D. thyrsiflorum and D. nobile virginale, 
Ccelogyne pandurata, Cattleya Dusseldorfii Undine, Brassocattleya Marie, 
Lzliocattleya Canhamiana, Phalenopsis amabilis, Maxillaria Sanderiana, 
Cypripedium bellatulum, and others, Odontioda Diana, Charlesworthii and 
Bradshawiz, Odontoglossum hastilabium and other good Odontoglossums. 
The second prize, a Silver Cup, was won by Mr. W. A. Manda, St. 
Albans, with a good and varied group. 
For a group of Orchids of botanical interest, not necessarily in flower, in 
a space not exceeding twenty square feet, the first prize, a Silver-gilt Medal, 
was won by Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart., Gatton Park (gr. Mr. J. Collier), 
with a very interesting collection, in which we noted the remarkable Bulbo- 
phyllum virescens, in bud, B. inflatum with five spikes, B. macranthum, 
nigripetalum, mirum, erythrostachyum and tremulum, Eulophia 
Saundersiana, Lockhartia robusta, Nephelaphyllum pulchrum, Nanodes 
Medusze, ria pannea, Masdevallia Courtauldiana, xipheres, calura, 
Chimera, simula, O’Brieniana, and others, the rare Chondrorhyncha 
Lendyana, Ponera juncifolia, Microstylis commelynifolia, and others too 
numerous to particularise. It may be remarked here that the two groups 
staged from the Gatton collection contained about 112 different kinds and 
an aggregate of over 530 plants. 
In the class for Ornamental foliaged Orchids, not necessarily in flower, 
in a space not exceeding 100 square feet, the only exhibit was ten plants of 
a remarkable Habenaria hybrid, derived from H. carnea X militaris, shown 
by M. A. Regnier, Fontenay-sous-bois, France, to which the third prize of a 
Silver Medal was awarded. It is more robust than H. militaris, with hand- 
somely marked leaves, and the flowers were flesh-coloured in the one plant 
