Marcu, 1903.] THE ORCHID REVIEW. 93: 
A very pretty form of Cattleya Triane is sent from the collection of 
the Rev. E. Baddeley, Long Marston Rectory, York. It is of excellent 
shape, and the sepals and petals are of a pretty shade of rose-pink, while 
the lip is bright rose-coloured almost throughout, for the yellow disc is 
completely broken up by a series of radiating rosy lines. 
Flowers. of the handsome Odontoglossum crispum Lindeni are sent 
from the collection of Richard Ashworth, Esq., Ashlands, Newchurch, 
near Manchester. The shape is good, and the ground colour nearly white, 
while the markings are very heavy, and of a peculiar shade of red-brown. 
On the sepals they are aggregated into two very broad irregular bands, and 
on the petals into one very large zone-like blotch, with a few small outlying 
spots. On the lip there is one large blotch in front of the crest, and a pair 
on either side. It is certainly a very striking form. 
Another seedling of Dendrobium xX Ellisii has bloomed, a flower 
having been sent from the collection of the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain, M.P. 
Its parentage is given as D. Hildebrandii xX nobile albiflorum, and the 
flower has evidently not yet reached its full development. 
Flowers of the pretty Cattleya Triane ‘ Mrs. T. Miller Crook,” which 
was exhibited at the R.H.S. meeting on February 24th, are sent by 
Messrs. Hugh Low & Co., of Bush Hill Park. They are light blush in 
colour, with the front half of the lip rose-purple, which extends backwards 
in lines into the yellow disc. 
A fine form of Lelio-cattleya x bella is sent from the collection of 
Sir James Miller, Bart., Manderston, Duns, N.B., by Mr. Hamilton; also 
a six-flowered inflorescence of a hybrid between Lelia cinnabarina ? and 
Cattleya amethystoglossa g. It most resembles the former in shape, but 
the segments are suffused with rose, and the front lobe of the lip is deep. 
purple crimson. 
ODONTOGLOSSUM CRISPUM VARIETIES. 
WE have received three very handsome varieties of Odontoglossum crispum 
from the collection of J. Leemann, Esq., West Bank House, Heaton 
Mersey (gr. Mr. Edge), ‘‘ for description and registration.” 
O. c. Mrs. F. PEETERS was exhibited at the Temple Show, 1goo, by 
M. A. A. Peeters, of Brussels, and was briefly recorded at page 176 of our 
eighth volume. It has broad, undulate sepals and petals, the latter being 
slightly toothed, and the ground colour is prettily suffused with rose-pink. 
The blotches are light claret-purple in colour, rather large, and more or 
less irregularly confluent, with a zone-like arrangement of smaller spots on 
the petals. The spots on the lip are small, and cinnamon-brown in colour... 
