APRIL, 1907. | THE ORCHID REVIEW. 103 
Jongheana it is a form of L. xX Gwennie, described at page 271 of our 
twelfth volume. The flower is much larger and lighter in colour than 
L. Cowanii, but here the resemblance to L. Jongheana ceases, for there is 
not a trace of its purple colour. A good flower of Odontoglossum luteopur- 
pureum is also sent. The plant was purchased as an imported O. crispum. 
Several interesting flowers are sent from the collection of Walter R. 
Scott, Esq., Craghead, Chester-le-Street. They include the chaste 
Ccelogyne cristata alba, one of the few absolutely white Orchids, there 
being not a speck of any other colour visible, the curious Epidendrum 
cochleatum, with its dark, shell-shaped lip, Dendrobium nobile and D. 
crassinode, the latter with very dark purple tips to all the segments,. 
Odontoglossum crispum with pure white sepals and petals, and light 
cinnamon blotches on all the other segments, Cattleya Triane from a 
recently-imported plant, the handsome Paphiopedilum x Calypso, and 
Lelio-cattleya Glycera, a pretty little hybrid from Cattleya Trianz and the 
rare Leelia rupestris (Lindl.), this, and indeed ‘several of the others, having 
been obtained at the sale of the late Mr. Reginald Young’s collection. This. 
hybrid was described at page 111 of our twelfth volume. 
Those sent from the collection of J. J. Neale, Esq., of Penarth, by Mr. 
Haddon, include the brilliant Lelia harpophylla, L. cinnabarina, and 
Sophronitis grandiflora, the very distinct and fragrant Odontoglossum 
pulchellum, Miltonia cunéata, Dendrobium crepidatum, D. primulinum and 
D. fimbriatum oculatum, the graceful Platyclinis glumacea, Cattleya Trianz 
delicata, with a good rosy form, and another nearly white with a rich purple 
front to the lip, Epidendrum cochleatum, and a fine spray of E. Stamford- 
ianum, the latter one of three now borne by the plant. A later series con- 
tains an inflorescence of the brilliant Renanthera Imschootiana, and Mr. 
Haddon remarks that there are four plants, each carrying a branched spike. 
They are grown with the Vandas, and seem to enjoy plenty of heat. The 
Odontoglossums are now making a fine show, those sent consisting of Q. 
Pescatorei, triumphans, sceptrum, Rossii, Lindleyanum, X Ruckerianum,. 
Hunnewellianum, crispum, and X -Adfiane. The latter, as usual, flowered 
out of an importation of O. crispum. The remaining flowers are Dendro- 
bium chrysotoxum, D. aggregatum, Epidendrum evectum, Ccelogyne 
flaccida, Maxillaria variabilis var. unipunctata, Cymbidium pendulum, 
Rodriguezia secunda, and the brilliant Cochlioda vulcanica. 
Some beautiful Odontoglossums are sent from the collection of R. 
Stewart, Esq., of Glasgow. O. X loochristiense is a very fine form, 3 
inches across, and bright yellow, regularly blotched with brown. One, said 
to be a hybrid between O. X loochristiense and O. crispum, is much like a 
small edition of the former, both in shape and colour. The others are a 
dark O. Hunnewellianum, and what we take to be a cream-coloured form 
