January, 1916.] THE ORCHID, REVIEW. 9 
C. insigne has been continuously cultivated in this country ever since 
1820, in the autumn of which year it flowered in the Liverpool Botanic 
Garden, the plants having been sent home a few month previously by Dr. 
Wallich, who originally discovered it in Sylhet. The descendents of the 
ERNESTIL. 
SANDERA, 
iNE 
INSIGNE 
C. INSK 
C. NINOS. 
ARTHURIANUM. 
oe 
(four flowers). 
5. 
LEEANUM GIGANTEUM 
C. SPICERIANUM. 
ee 
original plants are still grown, though they have to a large extent been 
superseded by finer varieties selected from the large importations of the last 
twenty-five years. A flower of the old type may be seen in fig. 10 (p. 12), 
where one of the flowers of the freak variety Oddity has reverted to the 
