26 THE ORCHID REVIEW. 
here we noticed some plants of the handsome Epiphronitis X Veitchii in 
flower, which were raised in the establishment. Cattleyas and Cypripediums 
are particularly numerous, and among the latter were some with curiously 
striped leaves, and others nearly all white, yet the plants appeared quite 
healthy. Many hybrids were in flower, those noted being some fine 
C. X Harrisianum superbum, C. xX Smithii, and some seedlings from 
C. Lawrenceanum xX C. superbiens bearing a green scape, the flowers not 
yet expanded. Among species in flower were some good forms of C. 
Charlesworthii, Dayanum, tonsum, callosum, and others. Many fine 
Cattleya pods were also noted, with flowering examples of Zygopetalum 
crinitum and Gautieri, and a batch of Stenoglottis longifolia, of which 
many were in flower. Epidendrum radicans was flowering freely in the 
adjoining corridor. . 
Passing into a warm Dendrobium house we found a fine batch of D. 
Johnsoniz and spectabile, also a curious species with flat pseudobulbs, and 
another with glaucous leaves, imported with them, but whose identity has 
yet to be made out. Both appear new to cultivation. In an adjoining 
house, Phalznopsis violacea was in flower, and in passing through the next 
three or four divisions we noted the handsome Ccelogyne Sanderiana 
producing a fine spike, Mormodes pardinum and its variety unicolor, a fine 
batch of Dendrobium atroviolaceum, which Messrs. Sander have succeeded 
in importing in quantity, and flowering examples of Cypripedium X 
javanico-superbiens. 
Among Masdevallias we noted in flower M. Chimera, infracta in buff 
and purple forms, floribunda, x Courtauldiana, and a pretty little seedling 
from M. Veitchiana x Wageneriana with somewhat flesh-coloured flowers. 
Near by were Restrepia maculata, Physosiphon Loddigesii, the brilliant 
Epidendrum vitellinum, and others. 
A pretty little bank of flower at the end of one of the houses was made 
up chiefly of examples of Odontoglossums aspirhinum, crispum, bictoniense, 
Rossii, Hallii and auriculatum, Oncidium. ornithorhynchum and _ its 
variety album, Cochlioda vulcanica, Lycaste leucantha, and Lelia pumila. 
In an adjoining house we noted a fine plant of Coelogyne Massangeana 
bearing many fine spikes; one of them which was counted bore twenty-seven 
flowers. Here also were many flowering examples of Dendrobium 
Phalznopsis and bigibbum. The next division contained —Sobralia 
xantholeuca, and many flowering examples of Cattleya Gaskelliana, and in 
a succeeding one we saw some good examples of C. Warscewiczii, and a 
nice lot of Odontoglossum Krameri. 
Among the Sobralias, a fine form of S. macrantha, called Holfordi was 
pointed out, and Mr. Sander’s son remarked that it came home with 
S. xantholeuca (also in flower here), together with hybrid forms, including 
