cannot be given, and too little water.” This opinion, however, 
must now be modified, as Mr. Fleming, of Cleveden, has caused 
it to flower freely under the more ordinary treatment of a warm 
greenhouse plant, and fine pot-plants of it have been exhi¬ 
bited by Mr. Turner, of Slough. 
Bougainvillcea lateritia was exhibited by Mr. Charles Turner, 
of Slough, who obtained it from Mr. Daniels, and has received 
three first-class certificates; the entire stock of the plant was 
purchased from Mr. Turner by Mr. William Bull, of Chelsea, 
by whom it will be let out during the present autumn. The 
colour of the bracts, in which the great beauty of the plant 
consists, is a delicate salmony-pink, forming therefore a pretty 
contrast to the mauve-coloured bracts of Speciosa. 
