THE ORCHID REVIEW. Saas 
flowered in the collection of A. Worsley, Esq., of Isleworth, in a batch of 
bulbs which also yielded C. rubens, a species known to grow in this locality 
(Orch. Rev., iv., p. 84). ; 
C. TurNERI is a plant which seems to have got into cultivation without 
having been regularly described. According to Messrs. Veitch, who intro- 
duced it, it was also sent by Thomas Lobb, from Moulmein, at about the 
same time as the preceding, and was named in compliment to Mr. J. A. 
Turner, of Pendlebury, near Manchester (Veitch, Man. Orch. vi., p. 71). Its 
history was given by Mr. James Douglas in 1878 (Gard. Chron., 1878, ix., 
p. 105), its habitat being given as Java, which appears to be a mistake. It 
differs from C. vestita in having a larger, more slender pseudobulb, which 
is constricted just above the middle, and in having rather smaller flowers, 
which appear later in the season. The flowers are white, with a :ed-purple 
blotch at the base of the lip, or pure white in the variety nivalis. 
C. GRANDIFLORA is a remarkable form, which was first described as pe 
vestita igneo-oculata (Rchb. f. in Gard. Chron., 1876, v., p. 534). Itisa 
native of Borneo, and flowered in the collection of Sir Trevor Lawrence, 
Bart., Burford, Dorking. In 1886 it was figured in the Orchid Album \(v., t. 
211) under the name of C. vestita oculata gigantea; and in 1889 as C. vestita 
grandiflora (Rev. Hort. Belge, xv., p. 121, with plate), though in the text 
(p. 122) it is called C. v. gigantea. Itisa much more robust plant than C. 
vestita, and retains its leaves until the flowering period, in March or April, 
after which it commences to grow again without resting. The roots are 
also said to remain plump, instead of dying off, as in C. vestita. The 
flowers are very large, and cream-white, with a fiery red blotch at the base. 
Beccari also collected it in Borneo, whence also Mr. (now Sir) Hugh Low 
also sent a very fine painting. i 
C. LABROSA (Rchb. f. in Gard. Chron., 1883, Xix., p- 44) was sent to 
Messrs. James Veitch & Sons, of Chelsea, in 1878, by a correspondent in 
southern Burma, and was at first described under the name of Limatodes | 
labrosa (Rchb. f., /.c., 1879, xi., p. 202). The pseudobulbs are long and 
narrow, constricted in the middle, and the flowers smaller than those of C. 
vestita, the sepals and petals light yellowish brown, tinged with purple 
inside, and the lip broad, obscurely lobed, light rosy purple with some 
small darker spots, and white at the base. It is very rare in cultivation. 
C. ReGNIERI (Rchb. f. in Gard. Chron., 1883, xix., p. 274) is a native of 
Cochin China, and was introduced by M. Regnier, of Paris. In the pseudo- 
bulbs it much resembles C. Turneri, and it blooms at about the same period, 
but the flowers are smaller, very variable in colour, and the lip less deeply 
lobed, with the two front lobes often united at the base. The typical form 
is figured in the Garden (1883, xxiv., p. 46, t- 397), and has the sepals and 
petals white, and the lip rosy carmine, with a darker blotch at the base. Of 
