eo THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
two well-flowered plants of Lelia phylla, Odontogl Harryanum, 
O. bictoniense, Miltonia Reezlii and its variety alba, Sobralia Xx Veitchii, 
two plants of Cycnoches chlorochilon, two plants of the pretty little 
Saccolabi d i lenipedi x Phaedra, S. x Brysa 
candidulum (S. xX Sedeni candidulum ¢ x S. Boissierianum $), 
pripedi x thum superbum, C. Curtisii, C. x Milo (C. insigne 
Chantini ¢ x C. enanthum superbum 3), C. tonsum superbum and C, 
X cenanthum superbum. An Award of Merit was given to Cattleya x 
Euphrasia, a handsome hybrid from C. Warscewiczii ¢ and C. superba 3, 
which is described on another page. 
Messrs. F. Sander and Co., St. Albans, staged another fine group, 
containing Cattleya granulosa, C. Harrisoniana, two well-flowered plants 
of Rodriguezia fragrans, a good plant of Zygopetalum Gautieri with eight 
spikes, Coelogyne Micholitziana, a well-flowered Dendrobium bracteosum 
album, Epidendrum inversum, E. fragrans, a pan of the brilliant Habenaria 
militaris with six spikes, the interesting little Trichocentrum iridifolium, 
Miltonia spectabilis Moreliana, Cypripedium insigne, C. x Cahuzac, C. X 
Mabeliz var. Lord Derby, and C. x Rothwellianum (C. Argus 2 xX C. Stonei 
¢). An Award of Merit was given to Maxillaria striata grandiflora, a fine 
form of the species. . 
Messrs. B. S. Williams and Son, Upper Holloway, received a Silver 
Banksian Medal for an interesting group, containing the handsome Pesca- 
torea Lehmanni, and P, Klabochorum, the latter with three flowers, 
Angrecum citratum, Pachystoma Thomsonianum with three-flowered 
spike, Oncidium dasytyle with branched raceme, Cochlioda vulcanica 
grandiflora with four spikes, Cypripedium tonsum, C. x cenanthum supe 
bum, C. x Adonis, and C. Charlesworthii with five flowers. A First-class 
Certificate was given to Arachnanthe Lowii, with a raceme of thirty- 
six flowers and buds, the two basal flowers being orange-coloured and the 
next one intermediate between them and the red-blotched ones, of which 
the rest of the raceme is composed. The cause of difference between the | 
flowers has hitherto remained a mystery, but it is said that the orange ones 
can alone be fertilised, a Point which we should like to see confirmed. 
ao 
CORRESPONDENCE, &e. 
J. H., Whitby, Stanhopea Wardii. ra, but 
J. B., Hessle. Pescatorea cerina, 38 devallia Chi 
No. 2. is hardly true Backh hin Cee en of 7 wiry vas <— _ 
segments and comparatively short Gin is a large and very hairy variety 
W. S. B., Dorking. Eria floribunda. 
We JARs Lellio-cattleya x elegans, about typical. 
eee en 
