OcToBER, 1912.] THE ORCHID REVIEW. 3°9 
Orchid Committee present: J. Gurney Fowler, Esq. (in the Chair), and 
Messrs. J. O’Brien (hon. sec.), C. J. Lucas, Gurney Wilson, J. Wilson 
Potter, R. A. Rolfe, R. G. Thwaites, F. Sander, F. J. Hanbury, C. H. 
Curtis, T. Armstrong, A. A. McBean, Walter Cobb, J. Charlesworth, W. 
H. Hatcher, Arthur Dye, J. E. Shill, W. H. White, Sir Harry J. Veitch, 
W. Bolton, R. Brooman White, J. S. Moss, and de Barri Crawshay. 
Lady Wernher, Luton Hoo, Beds. (gr. Mr. A. W. Metcalfe), received a 
Silver Flora Medal for a very fine group, including about twenty well-grown 
plants of Dendrobium formosum, and eight handsome Vanda ccerulea, with 
good examples of Lzliocattleya Dominiana, bletchleyensis, Walter Gott, 
Marquis de Wavrin, and Cattleya Adula, making a fine display. 
E. H. Davidson, Esq., Borlases, Twyford (gr. Mr. Cooper), staged a 
pretty little group, including seven plants of Cattleya Dowiana aurea, with 
examples of C. Adula, Lzliocattleya Golden Oriole Borlases var., having 
bright salmon-red sepals and petals, and a dark crimson lip, with some yellow 
veining in the throat, and Sophrocattleya Dora (Cattleya Dowiana Rosita 
xX Sophrocattleya Cleopatra), a promising hybrid, having broad orange- 
brown sepals and petals, and a crimson lip, with two yellow blotches in the 
throat. A Vote of Thanks was accorded. 
Mrs. Norman Cookson, Oakwood, Wylam (gr. Mr. H. J. Chapman), 
sent a beautiful hybrid Cypripedium, raised by G. F. Moore, Esq., between 
C. Argus Meensii and C. Fairrieanum, having a cream white flower, tinted 
and dotted with purple. It is a form of C. luxembergense. 
F. J. Hanbury, Esq., Brockhurst, East Grinstead, showed Cypripedium 
Winifred Hollington Brockhurst var. (callosum Sandere x niveum), a 
pretty light-coloured form, but very distinctly flushed with pink, though 
lighter in colour than the type. He also sent what we believe to be a form 
of C. longwoodiense (Charlesworthii x Leeanum), having a white dorsal 
sepal, with a small green base bearing a few brown spots. 
C. J. Phillips, Esq., The Glebe, Sevenoaks, sent Cattleya Fabia Glebe 
var., a very fine form, having bright rose-purple sepals and petals, and a 
deep purple-crimson lip, with some yellow veining in the throat. 
Baron Bruno Schréder, The Dell, Englefield Green (gr. Mr. JE. Shill, 
sent a good plant of Brassocattleya Maronia bearing three spikes and six 
flowers. 
Francis Wellesley, Esq., Westfield, Woking (gr. Mr. W. Hopkins), sent 
Lzliocattleya Mrs. Phayre var. magnificum (C. Dowiana x L.-c. Norba), a 
promising hybrid, bearing an inflorescence of three flowers, having deep 
yellow sepals and petals, and an open rosy red lip, with some yellow veining 
in the throat. 
Messrs. Hassall & Co., Southgate, staged a fine group of Cattleyas and 
Lezliocattleyas, prominent among them being C, Nestor (Harrisoniana x 
