188 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
and another, with longer and narrower segments, as many as fourteen. 
Other fine Odontoglossums were, O. Pescatorei leucoxanthum, O. x 
Ruckerianum with much-branched spike of richly-coloured flowers, O. 
Tamosissimum, O. x elegans, O. cirrhosum, O. Hallii bearing a sixteen- 
flowered spike, and the rare and very beautiful O. x Horsmanii. On the 
second day was added a remarkable and richly-coloured natural hybrid, 
perhaps nearest to O. x Coradinei, whose flowers were only just expanding. 
The collection also contained fine specimens of Vanda tricolor, Lelia 
purpurata, Selenipedium x grande and S. x Schreederz (both very fine), 
Epidendrum prismatocarpum, Maxillaria prestans, Dendrobium Dearei, 
Cypripedium Lawrenceanum, with twelve flowers richly suffused with purple 
on the dorsal sepal, a large Masdevallia ignea covered with flowers and 
quite a picture, M. Wageneriana, M. hieroglyphica, and many fine forms of 
Cattleya Mendelii, Mossiz, &c. Cut flowers were also shown of Cypripedium 
Lawrenceanum Hyeanum, C. Stonei platytzenium, a very fine C. Sanderia- 
num, many Cattleya Mossiz Wageneri, the beautiful Phalznopsis x John 
Leden, and others. Last, but not least, must be mentioned the superb 
specimen of Ccelogyne Dayana, with twenty-four racemes and 930 flowers, 
which is even finer than when exhibited a year ago—a marvel of good 
culture, 
Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., Burford, Dorking (gr. Mr. W. H. White), 
contributed a brilliant group of similar extent (not for competition), which 
also contained a number of botanical rarities for which this collection is 
famous. Among these were the remarkable Bulbophyllum barbigerum 
with its feather-like mobile lip, the pretty Australian Sarcochilus Fitzgeraldi 
with white and pink flowers, a Microstylis with marbled leaves and 
unusually large flowers, Geodorum Augusti, Angrecum arcuatum, Cleisos- 
toma crassifolium, and two fine clumps of the singular British Neottia 
Nidus-avis from the woods at Burford. Here was the charming Cochlioda 
Noetzliana with twenty-one flowers on a branched spike, a good Mas- 
devallia rosea with over twenty flowers, M. x splendida, a fine Odonto- 
glossum crispum with fourteen flowers on the spike, O. x Wilckeanum 
with eleven, Dendrobiums Maccarthie, polyphleebium, Jamesianum and 
secundum, Aérides Houlletianum, Fieldingii and Savageanum, Stauropsis 
lissochiloides, Anguloa Ruckeri, Oncidium lamelligerum, Epidendrum- 
arachnoglossum and _ Frederici-Guilielmi, Cypripedium x _ conco-Lawre 
with two-flowered spike, the fine C. x Eleanor (C. x selligerum 
Majua =<. C. superbiens), Cattleya Schilleriana, a very fine C. Mossiz 
Wageneri, and a large number of showy Orchids in good varieties. 
The Duke of Northumberland, Syon House, Brentford (gr. Mr. G. 
Wythes), staged a neat and effective group, to which a Silver Cup was 
awarded. It consisted chiefly of well-grown plants of the usual showy 
Orchids, and included Vanda teres, Cyrtopodium punctatum, Oncidium 
