316 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [OcTOBER, I9QII. 
L.-c. bletchleyensis) are sent from the collection of Messrs. Sander & Sons, 
St. Albans, one having bronzy brown sepals and petals and a deep purple 
lip, while the other has buff yellow sepals and petals with a light purple 
lip. A large number of plants from this batch have flowered and show a 
remarkable range of variation. A flower of a handsome hybrid derived from 
Lzliocattleya bella and Brassavola Digbyana is also sent, having bright 
purple flowers, with the front lobe of the lip darker, and elegantly fringed. 
It is a bright and attractive flower. 
A flower of the striking Oncidium Janssenii (tigrinum x Forbesii) is 
sent by Messrs. Charlesworth & Co., Haywards Heath. It combines well 
the characters of the two parents, having yellow sepals, heavily barred with 
brown, similar but much broader petals, and an ample three-lobed yellow 
lip, with an oblong crest, bearing many brown tubercles. A good plant was 
shown at the R.H.S. meeting on September 26th last. 
———+0< > 
BULBOPHYLLUM ORTHOGLOSSUM. 
AT the R.H.S. meeting held on September 12th last, a striking Bulbo- 
phyllum was exhibited from the collection of Sir Jeremiah Colman, Bart., 
Gatton Park, Reigate, and was referred to the Scientific Committee for 
determination, where it was determined as Bulbophyllum orthoglossum, 
Kranzl., a Malayan species introduced by Messrs. Sander & Sons, through 
their collector Micholitz, and described in 1896 from a plant which flowered 
with M. Wendland, at Herrenhausen (Gard. Chron., 1896, i. p. 326). In 
June, 1908, it flowered in the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., and 
was exhibited at a meeting of the R.H.S., when a figure appeared (Gard. 
Chron., 1908, i. p. 406, fig. 182). It is a large-flowered species, most allied 
to B. mandibulare, Rchb. f., and has broad, acuminate sepals, these and 
the petals being striped with dark red-brown on a greenish ground, while 
the fleshy lip is recurved, narrow, and dark lurid red in colour. The 
original habitat was not recorded, but the present one is said to have been 
introduced from the Philippines. 
DENDROBIUM UNDULATUM BROOMFIELDII—At the R.H.S. meeting 
held on August 29th last an inflorescence of a very distinct pale greenish 
yellow flower of Dendrobium undulatum was exhibited from the collection 
of Sir Trevor Lawrence, Bart., Burford, as recorded at page 278. It is 
possibly D. undulatum Broomfieldii, a variety figured and described by 
Fitzgerald (Austral. Orch., ii. pt. 3, tab.). It was discovered in Northern 
Australia, and flowered in the greenhouse of Captain Broomfield, who 
submitted materials to Fitzgerald for figuring. The flowers are said to be 
rather smaller than in D. undulatum, and they are shown of a nearly clear 
canary yellow, but in other respects they agree with the type. R.A. R. 
