188 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
C. bellatulum album, C. Chamberlainianum, a very fine C. caudatum, an _ 
excellent C. Lawrenceanum, and C. barbatum. 
M. Jules Hye-Leysen, Coupure, Ghent, received a Silver- gilt Flora 
Medal for a small group of superb things, including the brilliant Lelia 
x Latona, a remarkable form of Lelio-cattleya x highburiensis (raised 
between C. Lawrenceana and L. cinnabarina) with the sepals and petals 
deeply flamed with purple, Odontoglossum luteopurpureum Vuylstekeanum, 
O. sceptrum, O. polyxanthum with enormous flowers, a plant called O. X 
cordato-crispum, said to have been raised by hand, which looks so precisely 
like a form of O. X Wilckeanum as to suggest grave doubts as to its 
parentage, and Miltonia X Bleuana roseo-gigantea, a magnificent form 
with a lip 3 inches across, to which an Award of Merit was given. 
W. Thompson, Esq., Walton Grange, Stone (gr. Mr. Stevens), also 
received a Silver-gilt Flora Medal for a fine group of Odontoglossums, 
including O. crispum fastuosum, O. c. Thompsonianum, a very large and 
heavily blotched form, O. c. Capartianum, O. c. Lily,’suffused and densely 
spotted with rose-purple, a very pretty O. Hunnewellianum, handsome forms 
of O. X excellens, O. x Wilckeanum grande, the spike bearing two side 
branches and an aggregate of 28 flowers and buds, O. X Andersonianum 
with a fine panicle of flowers very little spotted, and a very good O. 
tripudians, all exceedingly well grown. 
Malcolm S. Cooke, Esq., Kingston Hill (gr. Mr. Buckell), staged a very 
pretty group, to which a Silver-gilt Banksian Medalwas given. It included 
a good Maxillaria Sanderiana, Cochlioda sanguinea, some good Cattleya 
Mossiz and Mendelii, Miltonia vexillaria, Odontoglossum crispum, O. 
Pescatorei, O. polyxanthum, Brassia verrucosa, Masdevallia coccinea, M. 
Schlimii, Cymbidium Lowianum, and others. 
Ludwig Mond, Esq., Regent’s Park (gr. Mr. Clarke), staged a nice group 
to which a Silver Banksian Medal was also given. It included a good 
Cymbidium Lowianum, Cypripedium Mastersianum, some good Miltonia 
vexillaria, Odontoglossum citrosmum, crispum, and others, Cattleya Mossiz, 
and good forms of other showy Orchids. 
E. Ashworth, Esq., Harefield Hall, Wilmslow (gr. Mr. Holbrook), 
showed a fine Cirrhopetalum Collettii, bearing 4 fine racemes. 
W. P. Burkinshaw, Esq., Hessle, near Hull (gr. Mr. Barker), senta very fine 
Cypripedium Rothschildianum, with 3 flowers, Cattleya Mendelii Amelia, a 
very good light form, and C. Mossiz Barkeri, much like C. M. Reineckeana, 
but with lilac-purple veinings on the front of the lip. 
R. S. Bond, Esq., Surbiton (gr. Mr. Pead), exhibited a hybrid Odonto- 
glossum said to be derived from O. crispum and O. triumphans, and thus a 
form of O. X loochristiense. The oldest remaining bulb, however, wasvery 
little smaller than the flowering one, and doubts were suggested as to its 
