MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE. 



">9 



Dulcinea 2 6 



Fleur des Danaes 2 6 



Georgius Tf rtius 2 



Grande Rose Imperiale 10 



Hebe Superfine 2 6 



Julia 7 6 



Manteau Ducal 3 6 



Maria Theresa 2 6 



Monsit ur Pitt 2 6 



Perle Brilliant 2 6 



Pretiosa Superba 2 6 



Reine des Cerises 2 6 



Rosa B'.anca 7 6 



Rose Ceiise Blanche 10 6 



Rose Monte 8 



Rose Quarto Rectifida 5 



Triomphe de Hollande 2 6 



Triomphe Royal 2 6 



Vesta 2 6 



B1BI.OCKMANS. 



(White grounds broken with different 

 shades of purple.) 



s. d. 



Alexander Magnus 5 



Ambassadeur de Hollande .... 7 



Belle Actrice 2 6 



Cleopatra 2 6 



De^demona 2 6 



Duchess of Tuscany 2 6 



of Wellington 3 6 



Eminent 2 6 



Gloria Alborum 2 6 



Groom's White 5 



Holmi-s's King 2 6 



Hugotert 3 6 



Imperatrice de Maroc 10 



La mere Brun Incomparable . . 2 6 



Laura • 2 6 



Moreau 2 6 



s d. 



Ne plus Ultra L 



Prince Regent 2 6 



Princess Charlotte Cenatoph ..50 



Reine de Egypt 2 6 



Roi de Bornea 3 6 



Roi de Siam 5 



Rubens 3 



Violet Lelat 5 



Wallers 3 6 



Washington • • 2 6 



BIZARDS. 



(Have various colours on yellow 

 grounds.) 



*. d. 



Abercrombie > • 2 6 



Castrum Doloris 5 



Cato 2 6 



Charbonnier Noir 7 6 



Charlamonte 2 6 



Charles Tenth 5 



Commamlant 2 6 



Duke of Clarence 5 



Emperor of Austria 10 6 



of Russia 5 



Franklin's Washington 2 6 



Ophir 7 6 



Octimus 10 6 



Othello 2 6 



Pizarro 2 6 



Platoff 5 



Polyphemus 21 



Pont de Arcole 2 u 



Porter's Palafox 2 6 



Prince Leopold 2 6 



Superbissima 2 



Surpasse Catafalque. .. 2 C 



Vulcan •••• 5 



William Pitt (Holmes's) 5 



REMARKS. 



On Management of Bulbs in Water Glasses. At this season of the year 

 considerable attention is given to the culture of Bulbs in glasses. I have paid 

 some regard to a practice so interesting, and give the following remarks on the 

 treatment pursued, and of other means come under my notice. 



Sometimes a large vessel, two or three feet in diameter and a foot or so deep, 

 with a cover fitted to it which has holes in it, in concentric circles, on which 

 a collection of Bulbs are placed, the largest kinds at the centre, as Polyanthus, 

 KaicisHus, then Hyacinths, and for the outer circle, Crocuses, &c. On some 

 occasions a cone, or temi-globe, or semi-dome is constructed by tin troughs tour 

 or six niches deep, and about two inches wide, to which covers having holes for 

 the Bulbs are fitted. This form admits the Bulbs being placed in horizontal 

 rows, which rise one above another to the summit. Alter the roots are placed, the 

 whole is genarally covered neatly with some pretty kind of moss, so that the 

 upp r part of the Bulb is only seen. In this way 1 have grown and bloomed 



F2 



