180 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [JUNR, 1906. 
has yellow sepals and petals, and a whitish lip, all heavily blotched with 
brown. Two forms of O. X Fascinator, which, we believe, were raised by 
M. Peeters from O. X Adriane @ X O.crispum Queen Victoria 3 were 
also promising. O. crispum Coronation is a fine thing heavily blotched with 
light cinnamon-brown. Lastly, a fine white form, with a few round, brown 
blotches, is, we understand, a form of O. x Lambeauianum, though so 
distinct in appearance. 
Mrs. Collingwood, Lilburn Tower, Alnwick (gr. Mr. Lovett), received a 
Silver Flora Medal for a beautiful little group, containing several well 
flowered Vanda teres and a couple of fine Dendrobium Falconeri. 
Mrs. Ernest Hills, Penshurst (gr. Mr. Ringwood), also received a Silve 
Flora Medal for a fine group of Miltonia vexillaria. 
N. C. Cookson, Esq., Oakwood, Wylam (gr. Mr. Chapman), received an 
Award of Merit for Phaius x Doris (P. Cooksoniz x oakwoodiensis), a 
charming rosy purple flower. 
The Hon. Walter Rothschild, Tring Park (gr. Mr. Dye), sent Brasso- 
catlelia x Tring Park hybrid (L.-c. X eximia Arnoldiana x B. Digbyana), 
a fine rosy lilac flower with some darker veins on the lip. 
J. Rutherford, Esq., Blackburn (gr. Mr. Lupton) sent a few white 
forms of Cattleya Mossiz. 
M. Jules Hye de Crom, Ghent, exhibited a pretty violet blotched 
Odontoglossum and O. x percultum var. Junon, the latter a fine form, 
closely spotted and blotched with light cinnamon brown, gaining an Award 
of Merit. 
W. A. Bilney, Esq., Fir Grange, Weybridge (gr. Mr. Whitlock), sent 
Dendrobium Dalhousieanum luteum, a pretty light yellow variety with the 
usual blotches on the lip, 
Major Holford, C.V.O., Westonbirt (gr. Mr. Alexander), sent two 
richly coloured forms of Cattleya Mossiz. 
M. F. Lambeau, Brussels, sent Odontoglossum x Lambeauianum vat. 
lucidum, a very richly coloured form, and two others, one of them 
having rather light spots not extending much beyond the middle of the 
segments. 
In the Herbaceous tent, sadly out of place, we noticed a group of over 
eighty flowers of Cattleya Mossiz, apparently cut from the same number of. 
plants, for scarcely any two of them were alike. They were from the 
collection of W. J. Caparne, Esq., of Guernsey, and apart from albino 
forms show most of the wide variation to which 
forming a most instructive series, 
G. P. Walker, Esq., Heathwood, Putney Heath, sent a flower of Lelia 
tenebrosa, having more elongated segments than the former, and the front 
of the lip very deep purple. 
the species is subject, 
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