﻿THE ORCHID REVIEW. 



[October, 1904. 



bulare, and an Award of Merit to A. Rothschildianum, a very interesting 

 species whose history was given at page 230. 



H. S. Goodson, Esq., Fair Lawn, West Hill, Putney (gr. Mr. Day), 

 also received a Silver Banksian Medal for a good group, containing two 

 specimens of Lycaste Skinned alba, Cattleya bicolor, C. Eldorado alba, 

 two good C. Dowiana, C. X Pittiana, Laelio-cattleya X bletchleyensis, 

 three good L.-c. X elegans, two fine L.-c. X Gottoiana, Polystachya 

 luteola, Cypripedium Spicerianum, C. purpuratum, and a number of 

 interesting hybrid Cypripedes. 



Sir Frederick Wigan, Bart., Clare Lawn, East Sheen (gr. Mr. Young), 

 sent the handsome Miltonia vexillaria Leopold!, Cattleya X Parthenia 

 Prince of Wales, Sophrocattleya X Chamberlainiana Wigan's var., and 

 Laelio-cattleya X Constance Wigan (L. xanthina X C. Rex), the latter a 

 handsome thing, with clear yellow sepals and petals, and the front of the 

 lip purple, which received an Award of Merit. 



J. Colman, Esq., Gatton Park, Reigate (gr. Mr. Bound), sent a pretty 

 hybrid called Cattleya X intermedio-gigas, and very much resembling C. X 

 Minucia. 



Malcolm S. Cooke, Esq., Kingston Hill, sent a fine form of La;lio- 

 cattleya X elegans. 



H. Little, Esq., Baronshalt, Twickenham (gr. Mr. Howard), sent the 

 richly-coloured Lselio-cattleya X elegans Littleana. 



F. Wellesley, Esq., Westfield, Woking (gr. Mr. Hopkins), sent the 

 handsome Cattleya X Maroni splendens bearing a spike of seven flowers, 

 C. X Lady Ingram Westfield var., another very fine example bearing a 

 five-flowered spike, and Cypripedium X Shawianum magnificum, a fine C. 

 Lawrenceanum cross with handsomely spotted petals. 



Messrs. Charlesworth & Co., Heaton, Bradford, staged a magnificent 

 group, to which a Silver-gilt Flora Medal was awarded. It contained a 

 small plant of the Javan Paphiopedilum glaucophyllum (J. J. Smith), 

 an ally of P. Chamberlainianum, six good forms of Laslio-cattleya X 

 Haroldiana, several fine L.-c. X callistoglossa, L.-c X Mandarin, a fine 

 Brassocattleya Madame Chas. Maron, two fine examples of Odonto- 

 glossum grande bearing spikes of eight and nine flowers each, Miltonia X 

 Bleuana, M. X Binotii, Cattleya X Vulcan, C. X Chamberlainiana, and 

 other interesting things. A remarkable batch of the handsome Cattleya X 

 Iris (bicolor X Dowiana), showing remarkable variation, must also be 

 mentioned, and two of them received Awards of Merit. These were var. 

 aurifera, having golden yellow sepals and petals slightly tinged with green, 

 and a brilliant ruby-purple lip, and Prince of Piedmont, with bronzy- 

 yellow sepals and petals, and a rich reddish purple lip, with traces of 

 orange-colour near the base. A First-class Certificate was given to 



