154 
THE FLORIST AND POMOLOGIST. 
and in the course of a few weeks will again require a large pot. After 
that they will do in a vinery, if not too much shaded, or they may he put 
into the stove. These large plants will hear several heads of flowers, and 
are very ornamental and showy ; hut the bracts will not be so large as 
those on young plants that only hear a solitary flower-head. 
Stourton. M. Saul. 
SANCHEZIA NOBXLIS VARIEGATA. 
Sanchezia nobilis is one of the finest amongst the brilliant-flowered 
Acanthads that are so abundant in our iflant-stoves, being remarkable for 
its numerous fascicles of erect blossoms, collected into a dense paniculate 
inflorescence, and consisting of long, bright yellow, tubular flowers, emerging 
