DECEMBER, 1906. | THE ORCHID REVIEW. 375 
known and handsome hybrids, and the remaining one is a hybrid from 
P. concolor X tonsum, and has the specific name ‘‘conco-tonsum.” It is 
fairly intermediate in size and shape, and the colour is light yellow with 
many small brown dots. 
A flower of Leelio-cattleya Perrilosa (L. Perrinii x C. granulosa) is 
sent from the collection of the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain, M.P., by Mr. 
Mackay. The sepals and petals are purple, and most like the Leelia parent 
in texture, but the lip is like the Cattleya in shape, having deeply cut side 
lobes, whitish in colour, with a deep purple stalked front lobe. A second 
hybrid was obtained with the record Lelia pumila x Cattleya maxima, but 
the first mentioned must be a slip for L. Perrinii, which was clearly one 
parent. The other may be correct, as the flowers looks like a\small Leelio- 
cattleya Statteriana, in shape and colour. 
THE LATE G. W. LAW-SCHOFIELD: A MEMORIAL CROSS. 
(See Frontispiece). 
In our Obituary notice of the late G. W. Law-Schofield (p. 314) it was 
mentioned that a beautiful floral cross was sent by the members of the 
Manchester and North of England Orchid Society, made of Orchid 
flowers from their own collections. A photograph has been sent to us 
by the Chairman, E. Ashworth, Esq., on behalf of the Committee, with 
he request that it should be reproduced as the frontispiece to the 
present volume. The cross was over six feet high, and the photograph 
over ten inches, and in order to avoid much further reduction of detail 
we have omitted two inches from the base. As the flowers are only 
about an-eighth natural size it is not easy to make them out in the 
figure, though in the photograph we can trace sprays of Odontoglossum, 
Dendrobium Phalznopsis, Oncidium, Cattleya, Lelio-cattleya, Brasso- 
cattleya, Calanthe veratrifolia, and several Cypripedes. The original 
must have been very beautiful. It was made up by Mr. Mason, Florist, 
Victoria Street, Manchester. 
NOTES. 
THE next meeting of the R.H.S., the last of the year, will be held at the 
Royal Horticultural Hall, Vincent Square, Westminster, on December 
r1th, when the Orchid Committee will meet at the usual hour, 12 o’clock 
noon. 
The subjects of the special Diploma competition on this date—which 
completes the series—will be Cypripedium Spicerianum and C. insigne 
with their hybrids, together with Calanthe and hybrids. 
