252 
THE FLORIST’S JOURNAL. 
particularly noticed that beautiful white, Wildman’s Bianca; 
there were several plants of it, and all.held good flowers. 
Among other acknowledged standard flowers were Smith’s 
Coronation, rosy scarlet—Silverlock’s Candidate, deep purple— 
Smith’s Hon. Miss Abbott, lilac—Gaines’s Orange Perfection— 
Sheppard’s Bedford Surprise, rosy crimson—Hellier’s Sir F. 
Johnstone, rosy purple—Hudson’s Princess Royal buff, tipped 
with purple—Thomson’s Princess Royal, orange, tipped and edged 
with red—Ansell’s Rose Unique, light rose Jeffrey’s Lady Har- 
land, lilac—Whale’s Attila, shaded rose and lilac—Neville’s 
Cyclops, crimson—Low’s Duke of Cornwall, light ruby—Thom¬ 
son’s North Star, dark crimson—Browne’s Marquis of Lans- 
downe, shaded orange —Gaine’s Compacta—Widnall’s Mar¬ 
chioness of Exeter and Majestica—Stanley, Jones—Wildman’s 
Hope triumphant, rose—Dodd’s Prince of Wales, yellow— 
Adams’s Prince Albert, bronze—Trenfield’s Admiral Stopford, 
maroon—Walter’s Array, crimson—and last, though not least, 
their seedlings Sir R. Sale, Rainbow, Rival Yellow, and Duke 
of Wellington ; of these we shall probably have occasion to 
speak again, 
LIST OF NEW PLANTS. 
Pentandria Monogynia— Apocynacecp.. 
Echites Atropurpurea. A splendid stove climber, intro¬ 
duced from Brazil by Messrs. Veitch of Exeter. The plant in 
its general habit very closely resembles E. suberecta , but the 
flowers are of a very rich deep brownish pufple colour, having a 
tube nearly two inches in length, expanding about halt way 
from the base into a wide throat, which has an ample and 
spreading wing, about an inch and a half across. It requires 
the same treatment given to E. suberecta. — Pax. Mag. Bat. 
Octandria Monogynia — Ericacece. 
Erica Niellii. A fine hybrid variety, between E. aristata 
mdjor and E. Linnceoides . It possesses somewhat of the cha¬ 
racter of aristata in the disposition of the leaves and flowers; 
but in other respects it partakes equally of the character ot 
