290 MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE. 



Name* i Prizes. 



. J" amps. P.p. I 2 3 4 5 C, To t. 



Bellerophon 2 13 4 3 1 2 4 29 



Bates's Wellington 1 3 5 1 4 6 1 21 



Wood's Commander 5 2 4 I 5 1 18 



Wilde's Marianne 1 2 5 2 3 1 14 



Alfred the Great 3 I 4 5 1 14 



PINK FLAKES. 



Lady Hood 4 2 5 8 9 5 33 



Duchess of Devonshire 5 6 1 2 8 7 1 30 



Clegg's Smiling Beauty 2 3 6 4 1 6 3 25 



Miss Foote (Sir Geo. Crewe) 1 .1 2 7 3 2 2 22 



Redfearn's Miss Ward 3 (i 2 5 1 2 19 



Wonderful (Faulkner's Eliza) 2 1 5 4 2 2 1 17 



PURPLE EDGED PICOTEES. 



Lee's Cleopatra 1 9 5 8 7 3 2 35 



Princess Victoria 2 5 9 6 8 2 3 30 



Hufton's Miss Emma 6 1 3 8 5 3 26 



Beauty of Northampton I 3 2 6 7 3 2 24 



Mason's Wellington 2 5 4 6 2 2 21 



Fletcher's Maria 1 1 4 3 8 3 20 



RED PICOTEES. 



Hufton's Will Stukely 4 6 7 3 5 6 31 



Martin's Prince George 1 8 6 4 3 5 2 29 



Pearson's Chilwell Beautv 5 4 .6 4 2 5 26 



Hird's Alpha ." 3 6 7 3 2 3 24 



Kenney's Incomparable 2 2 5 3 6 3 2 23 



Bright Star (Ringleader) 2 3 3 6 3 2 3 22 



QUERIES. 



On Blooming the Partridge Breast Aloe. — I should feel obliged 

 by yon, or any of your numerous correspondents, informing me of the soil 

 and treatment required to make the Partridge Breast Aloe bloom. I have 

 had it more than six years, and as yet there has not any sign of bloom ap- 

 peared. An answer as soon as possible would greatly oblige. 



W. J, Linton. 



On the Schizanthus. — Will you, in your next Number, give a bint of 

 the best method of raising and treating the Schizanthus '. We have found 

 it fail so completely this summer, that 1 fear there has been some error in 

 the mode of treating it; and a few hints will be gratefully received, by your 

 well-wisher and admirer, Violet. 



Shapivich, near Glastonbury, Sept. 8th. 



On Hardy Plants, &c. — You would greatly oblige a very considerable 

 number of your subscribers, if you would, in an early number of your valu- 

 able and interesting publication, favour them with a list of the principal 

 hardy plants now in cultivation, similar to the one of greenhouse plants 

 given iu the April Number of the first volume of the Cabinet, p. 38. I think 

 it would be an improvement if, at the end of each description of plant, it 

 were specified whether they were evergreen or deciduous shrubs, herbaceous 

 plants, perennials, &c. &c. A Constant Subscriber. 



Sheffield, July 3 1 si, 1834. 



On the Genus Musa. — I should feel obliged to you, or any of your mi 

 roerous correspondents, to inform me, through the medium of the Cabinet, 

 what class and order the genera of Musa properly belongs to, as I find in the 



