SUPPLEMEXT. » 



2 Queen of May, do. 4 Prince Regent, Duchess of Ha- 



3 Shaded Blue, do. milloii. 



4 Seedling, Mr. C. Clart. 5 Fletcher's Defiance, Messrs. Con- 



6 Duchess of Hamilton. nelly and Son. 



6 Seedling, Mr. Walmsley.R.L.M. 6 Prince of Wales, Duchess of Ha- 



SEEDLisGs. inilton. 



1 Auricula Seedling. Mr. C. Clark. red. 



2 Alpine, do. do. 1 Stead's Telegraph, J. Hargreaves, 



3 Ditto ditto Mr Walmsley, High-street. 



R. L. M. ' 2 Secretary, do. 



POLYANTHUSES. 3 Hardman's Strange Friend,Mes- 



DAKK. sieurs Connelly and Son. 



1 Princess Royal, J. Hargreaves, 4 Seedling, Mr Walmsley, R.L.M. 

 High-street. 5 Do. do. 



2 Pearson's Alexander, Duchess of 6 Do. do. 

 Hamilton. seedlings. 



3 Black Prince, Messrs. Con- 1 Mr Hargreaves, High-street. 



nelly and Son, 2 & 3 Mr Walmsley, R. L. M. 



Green-house plants. — 1st Piize, Bletia Tankervilliae, Miss Dalton ; 

 2d, Erica propeudens, do. — 3 Epacris gnindiflora, Messrs. Connelly and 

 Son. 



Hardv Plants. — 1st Prize Pulmonaria virginica, Rev. T. Macreth, 

 2 Sangiuaria canadensis. Miss Dalton. 



Shrub. — Ribes sauguinea. Rev. T. Mackreth, 



Rare Native Plants. — 1st, Sasifraga Herculis, Mr Hargreaves, 

 High-street ; 2, Gentiana v6rna, J. Glover, Esq. 



Earliest Pair of Cucumbers. — Best Pair Duchess of Hamilton. 



Brocoli.— Best three Heads, A. Eidsforlh, Esq. — Rhubarb, H. Har- 

 greaves, Esq. — Sea Kale, T. J. Knowlys, Esq. — A,sparagus, J. Stout, 

 Esq. — Kidney Beans, J. Stout, Esq. — New Potatoes, Rev. T. Y. Ridley. 

 —Pears, Rev. T. Y. Ridley. 



Apples. — Several excellent varieties, Rev. T. Mackreth; Do. do. A. 

 Eidsforth, Esq. 



LIVERPOOL FLORAL AND HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 



Yesterday the first meeting for the present season of the Liverpool 

 Floral and Horticultural Society took place at the Corn Exchange. The 

 display of what we may term with Shakespeare, " the flrst-born infants 

 of the spring," was nothing inferior to those of former years. We may 

 : : said scarcely yet to have thrown the long protracted winter behind 

 us, and it is in truth a charming and exhilarating sight to find ourselves 

 at once, as it were, translated into the regions of spring and summer, — 

 to see ourselves surrounded with slender and graceful branches, and 

 flowers, and green leaves. Nor must wc omit the enhancement which 

 the scene received to its charms by the presence of crowds of our fair 

 townsmen, the fairest flowers of all, arrayed in the newest fashions of 

 the spring, who display the purity of their taste in the eagerness with 

 which they bestow their patronage on those interested in these delightful 

 studies of the gradual developemeut of the improvements of art and 



