CALADIUM. 
TULIPS. 
SINGLE. 
Arms of Leyden. White, rose tinted. 
Bride of Haarlem. White and crimson. 
Cottage Maid. Rose pink, shaded white. 
Duc Van Thol. Common, red and 
yellow. 
Duc Van Thol. Crimson. 
Due Van Thol. Scarlet. 
Due Van Thol. White. 
Keizer Kroon. Scarlet-crimson and 
yellow. 
Pottebakker. 
Pottebakker. White. 
Proserpine. Deep rose. 
Rose Grisdelin. Rose and white. 
Rouge Luisante. Rose. 
Vermilion Brilliant. Vermilion. 
Scarlet. 
DOUBLE. 
Red and yellow. 
Brownish-yellow, yellow 
Due Van Thol. 
Gloria Solis. 
edge. 
La Candeur. Pure white. 
Marriage de ma Fille. Cerise-red and 
white. 
Overwinnaar. White, striped with bluish- 
purple. 
Rex Rubrorum. . Red. 
Tournesol. Red and yellow. 
Tournesol. Yellow. 
The following bulbs can be grown in 
pots, similarly to the kinds already named, 
but do best when allowed to come on in a 
greenhouse temperature, or, in the case of 
those that flower in the late summer and 
autumn, stood out in the open air until 
the time of blooming :— 
BABIANAS. 
Blue. 
Purple and white. 
Purplish-rose. 
Atrocyanea. 
General Scott. 
Rosea grandis. 
Speciosa. Blue. 
Blue and white. 
White. 
Chionodoxa Lucilie. 
Gladiolus Colvillei, the Bride. 
Hyacinthus candicans. -White. 
TXIAS. 
Brutus. Yellow, crimson eye. 
Glory. Brownish red, eye dark. 
Golden drop. Golden yellow, dark eye. 
Hypatia. Pure white, shaded lilac. 
Lady Slade. Pink. 
Lavinia, White, crimson eye. 
Magnifica. Golden yellow, crimson eye. 
Prestios. White, eye red. 
Titus. Yellow, centre black. 
Vulcan. Deep crimson, orange shaded. 
Greenhouse and Stove Plants. 
85 
JONQUILS. 
Double. Yellow. 
Queen Ann’s double. Yellow. 
Single Campernelle. Yellow. 
Single sweet-scented. Yellow. 
The Silver Jonquil. Silvery white. 
Ornithogalum aurewm. Yellow, purple 
centre. 
SPARAXIS. 
Angelique. White, yellow eye. 
Grandiflora. Crimson, centre yellow. 
Leopard. Yellow. 
Maculata. White, with purple spots. 
Tricolor. Red, white, and yellow. 
Victor Emmanuel. Red and yellow. 
TRITONIAS. 
Orange. 
Fulgens. Orange-scarlet. 
Incomparable. Very bright. 
Prince Alfred. Rosy white, pink eye. 
Crocata. 
BURBIDGEA NITIDA. 
This is the only species yet in cultivation 
of the newly-formed genus Burbidgea. It 
is a stove plant with thick fleshy roots and 
erect stems, like most of the order Zin- 
ziberaceee, to which it belongs. The 
flowers are orange-scarlet in colour, pro- 
duced in loose, erect heads, that at a dis- 
tance might be mistaken for those of a 
Hedychium. The plant is said to flower 
several times in the year. 
Its cultural requirements are similar to 
those of Hedychiums, which see. It 
comes from Borneo. ~ 
BURCHELLIA CAPENSIS. 
A pretty evergreen stove shrub that 
bears handsome flowers, which when the 
plant is well managed are produced freely. 
The flowers are reddish-scarlet in colour, 
and appear early in spring. 
It can be propagated and grown on like 
Rondeletias, which see. 
There is another kind, B. bubalina, syno- 
nymous with B. parviflora, but it is inferior 
to B. capensis. Both are natives of the 
Cape of Good Hope. 
CALADIUM. 
These handsome stove fine-foliaged plants 
are so well known as to require little de- 
scription ; they are greatly alike in the 
formation of their leaves, which are arrow- 
shaped, and differ much in size and colour. 
The best way to increase them is from 
