Mr. O’Brien to give evidence of having had seven or 
eight flowers, and living plants once more reached this 
country. The plants of this second consignment were 
distributed under the name C. Sanderi, which name, 
however, cannot now be taken up. In February, 1908, a 
fine flower spike was presented to Kew by Mr. J. Gurney 
Fowler, from a plant in his collection at Glebelands, South 
Woodford, and a living specimen which flowered at Kew 
in March, 1909, and from which our illustration was 
prepared, was presented to the collection by Messrs. Sander. 
The colour of the sepals and petals varies in cultivated 
plants from white to rose, and there are forms in which 
the spots on the labellum are even darker than is shown 
in our plate. The species thrives well under the treatment 
that best suits C. grandiflorum and C. Tracyanum ; the 
temperature of a warm greenhouse, a compost consisting 
of two parts fibrous loam and one part leaf soil with a 
sprinkling of silver sand and small potsherds, Liberal 
supplies of water should be afforded whilst growth is being 
made; thereafter the soil should be kept dry for a few 
weeks. 
Drscriprion.—/Terb; pseudobulbs ovoid, 23-3 in. long. 
Leaves elongate, linear oblong, acute, 14-34 ft. long, 6-8 
lin. wide, rather wider at the base, conduplicate. Scapes 
suberect, 24-4 ft. long, clothed with lanceolate acute 
sheaths; racemes many-flowered; bracts ovate, acute, 
23 lin. long; pedicels about 3 lin. long. Flowers hand- 
some ; sepals and petals spreading, subequal, elliptic-oblong, 
subacute and somewhat recurved at the tip, pale rose, 1}-? 
in. long. Lip suborbicular, 3-lobed, 14-14 in. long, pale 
rose with purple blotches; lateral lobes erect, rounded and 
somewhat recurved at the tip, mid-lobe suborbicular, obtuse 
or emarginate, the disk villous and bearing two yellow 
velvety thickened lines extending from the base almost to 
the tip. Column clavate, incurved, 1 in. long. 
Fig. 1, crests of the labellum ; 2, column ; 3, anther-cap ; 4, pollinia ; 5, sketch 
of a plant, showing habit :—al7 enlarged except 5, which is much reduced, 
