THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
Vot. II.] APRIL, 1894. 
[No. 16. 
NOTES. 
THE remarkable Eulophiella Elisabethz, we are able to announce, is now 
flowering with Messrs. F. Sander and Co., of St. Albans—probably for the 
first time in this country. We have just received a beautiful raceme, 
which shows the flowers to be over one and a half inches across, pure 
waxy white, tinged on the back of the segments with reddish pink, and the 
disc of the lip deep yellow, while the base of the lip and column are marked 
with deep orange. The raceme and bracts are deep reddish purple. It 
is suspended in a warm, moist house, and grows freely, and thus should 
become a popular favourite. — 
The meeting of the Royal Horticultural Society on March 13th was a 
highly successful one, and noteworthy on account of the award of a gold 
medal to the magnificent Odontoglossum crispum apiatum exhibited by 
Baron Schroder. A report appears on another page. The report of the 
meeting held on March 27th must stand over till next month. 
Two meetings will be held during April, on the roth and 24th 
respectively, when the Orchid Committee will meet at the usual hour. 
On the latter occasion the subject of the afternoon lecture is, ‘* Botanical 
Exploration in Borneo,” by Mr. F. W. Burbridge, M.A., which will 
doubtless contain interesting references to Orchids. 
The Orchidéene of Brussels celebrated its fiftieth meeting on March 
r1th, when the members marked the occasion by a presentation and 
déjeuner to the founders and organisers of the Society, MM. Jean and 
Lucien Linden. It took the form of the cartes-de-visite of the members, 
seventy in number, arranged together and mounted in two large and 
handsome frames. The recipients were also presented on their arrival 
7 
