192 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
H. Shaw, Esq., Stamford House, Ashton-under-Lyne (gr. Mr. Smith), 
exhibited Phalenopsis Mannii, Cattleya Mossiz Shawiana, a light form 
without either yellow or crimson on the lip, and Odontoglossum crispum 
Triane, the latter receiving an Award of Merit. 
C. Young, Esq., The Thorns, Sevenoaks (gr. Mr. Ryder), received an 
Award of Merit for a very beautiful Odontoglossum x Andersonianum, 
Young’s variety, with broad richly marked segments. 
Mrs. Baker, Wimbledon Park (gr. Mr. Goodchild), exhibited a splendidly 
grown Odontoglossum crispum bearing five spikes, ranging from six to 
nine flowers each, the segments broad and of great substance. 
M. Vincke-Dujardin, Scheepsdeale, Bruges, exhibited a fine group of 
twenty-five Odontoglossum crispum. The plants were exceedingly well 
grown, and we counted twenty flowers on one spike with two small side 
branches, two with sixteen, one with fifteen, two with fourteen, and others 
with thirteen, twelve, and eleven, of good size and substance. A few had 
more richly coloured flowers but fewer in number. 
Messrs. Linden, L’Horticulture Internationale, Brussels, exhibited 
a very fine plant of Cochlioda Noetzliana, with about twenty-five spikes 
of its beautiful flowers, an extensive series of named varieties of Lelia 
purpurata, many being cut spikes, the small deep rose Peruvian type of 
Miltonia vexillaria, a few good blooms of Cattleya Aclandiz, Odontoglossum 
Pescatorei Lindeniz, with a single violet-purple blotch on each segment, 
and a good Lelio-cattleya x Schilleriana. 
W. R. Lee, Esq., Audenshaw, Manchester (gr. Mr. Billington), exhibited 
Cypripedium x Winifred Hollington and Lezlio-cattleya x Phoebe, both 
very beautiful. 
R. I. Measures, Esq., Cambridge Lodge, Camberwell (gr. Mr. Chapman), 
exhibited cut blooms of Miltonia x festiva, a natural hybrid between 
M. flavescens and M. spectabilis, and M. vexillaria, Cambridge Lodge 
variety. 
Messrs. James Veitch and Sons, Chelsea, exhibited a neat group of their 
new and pretty Disa x langleyensis, mentioned in our Report of the 
previous meeting. 
CORRESPONDENCE, &c. 
J. M., Hoyland Hall, Barnsley.—2 Leelia purpurata, 1 L. p- rosea, 3 L. p, Aurorea. 
H. H., Whitby.—Three flowers on the spike of Cypripedium Stonei is not unusual ; in 
some cases the markings are almost, or quite, absent from the dorsal sepal. 
H. C., Camberwell.—Miltonia x festiva. 
T. C. H., Richmond.—Many thanks. Next month. 
S. G. L., Beckenham.—This and several other matters are unavoidably postponed for 
