SELECT LIST OF NEW AND RAEE STOVE PLANTS. 
BILLBERGIA AM(ENA. 
This handsome and free-flowering apecioa has pale green channelled leaves, minutely spined on 
the margins. The inflorescence is extremely showy ; the peduncle, which is semi-erect and about as 
long as the leaves, is clothed for the greater part of its length with brilliant vermilion-scarlet bracts, 
and terminated by a loose spike of about seven green flowers with recurved petals and protruding 
orange anthers, in striking contrast to the deep bluish-purple tips of the calyx. It is a native of 
Brazil. 10». 6rf. 
BILLBERGIA NOBILIS. 
Awarded a First Class Certificate by the Royal Horticultural Society. 
A magnificent species with semi-erect broad serrated leaves marked transversely with a grey 
pulveresoence. The handsome inflorescence is produced on a long drooping spike, furnished 
on the central portion 
with large lanceolate, 
spreading bracts of 
the most ornamental 
character, the colour 
being a brilliant cerise 
carmine. The flowers 
are green, the petals 
rolling back and ex- 
posing the greyish-blue 
anthers. This handsome 
*■’ species is without doubt 
one of the most beautiful 
and striking of Brome- 
liads. 31s. (id. 
BOUGAINVILLEA 
FORMOSA. 
V f " "'.-I 
■ V"- I 
' I 
It. 
BILLBERGIA NOBILIS. 
A showy and hand- 
some flowering variety 
introduced from Brazil. 
Owing to its free growth 
and abundant flowering 
<iualities under compara- 
tively cool treatment, 
this plant is admirably 
adapted for the decora- 
tion of warm green- 
houses and conserva- 
tories. It is of semi- 
soandent habit, and 
boars its richly coloured 
bright purplish mauve 
bracts in wonderful pro- 
fusion. 6s. 
CAMOENSIA MAXIMA. 
One of the most gorgeously beautiful of tropical climbers, a native of West Africa. The 
splendid bunches of pendulous milk-white flowers, tinged with gold on the edges of the petals, 
grow in erect racemes from the axils of the leaves ; the petals are white, venose, frilled at the 
margin, where they are tinted with golden -yellow. This plant has been desoribod and illustrated 
.n Vol. XXV. of the Transactions of the Linuoean Society, p. 301, t. 36. 21s. 
