220 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [JuLy, 1910. 
Messrs. Stanley & Co., Southgate, sent a few good coloured and white 
forms of Cattleya Mossiz. 
Mr. H. A. Tracy, Twickenham, sent Cattleya Mossie delicata, C. M. 
colorata and C. M. Fairlawn, the latter a pretty white form tinged with 
lavender, and with some slate blue veining on the lip. 
Messrs. James Veitch & Sons, Chelsea, sent Anguloa X dubia superba 
(Clowesii X uniflora superba), an interesting hybrid having honey-yellow 
flowers, densely spotted with light rosy red. 
At the meeting held on June 21st there was a rather small display of 
Orchids, and the awards consisted of two medals, three Cultural Commen- 
dations, and one Award of Merit. 
The President, Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., K.C.V.O., Burford (gr. Mr. 
White), received a Cultural Commendation for a very vigorous plant of 
Odontoglossum X Vuylstekei with two sturdy spikes, each bearing ten fine 
flowers, heavily blotched with purple brown on a yellowish ground. He 
also sent the beautiful Odontioda heatonensis var. St. Vincent, bearing four 
graceful spikes, with good plants of Octomeria diaphana and Physosiphon 
Loddigesii. 
Lt.-Col. Sir George Holford, K.C.V.O., Westonbirt (gr. Mr. Alexander), 
received a Cultural Commendation for a fine plant of Lelia tenebrosa 
Walton Grange var., bearing a spike of four flowers, having canary yellow 
sepals and petals, and a white lip with purple suffusion and veining in the 
throat. 
Leopold de Rothschild, Esq., Gunnersbury House, Acton (gr. Mr. 
Hudson), received a Cultural Commendation for Cattleya Warscewiczii 
gigantea, a very vigorous plant, bearing a spike of six remarkably fine 
flowers, the lip measuring as much as 2 inches across. 
W. Thompzon, Esq., Walton Grange, Stone (gr. Mr. Stevens), received 
an Award of Merit for Odontioda Vuylstekez, Walton Grange var., a fine 
and very richly-coloured variety, the greater part of the flower being deep 
scarlet, with a few whitish markings on the sepals and petals, and the crest 
ofthe lip yellow. Several other plants from the same cross were also shown, 
with examples of Odontioda nevense (C. Neetzliana x Odontoglossum 
nevadense), having light scarlet flowers, Odontoglossum X amabile 
Graireanum, having the markings on the flowers orange-brown, O. X 
eximium Centenary, O. crispum xanthotes, and O. xX armainvillierense 
xanthotes, with a spike of 12 good flowers. 
Walter Cobb, Esq., Normanhurst, Rusper (gr. Mr. Salter), sent Dendro- 
bium Dearei, Cobb’s var., a particularly good form of the species. 
Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart., V.M.H., Gatton Park, Reigate (gr. Mr. 
Collier), sent Odontoglossum crispum, The Hon. Marguerite Joicey, a fine 
