4—1852.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 51 
ELARGONIUMS. AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. _ | rises up a line of young roots, which are, in fact, a 
HARLES TURN ER’S Plants of all the leading TOHN WATERER begs to announce that he has direct continuation of the wood veins that lie just 
yee arieties are unusually strong and healthy. Purchasers published a new — an of 2 Rhodo endrons, h 
sho’ ald lose no time in makin ng their selections, as the plants 
should now receive t — final shift. 
L NURSERY, SLovex. 
stam 
he colours of a ‘the Rhododendrons worthy of pann 
Ranunculuses, T Auriculas, Pelar: 
and Lilium Lancifolium, 
goniums, an ifolium 
ENRY — — —— — near London, by 
appointment Fo —— MAJESTY THE QUEEN, AN 
To HIS MAJESTY THE — pte Y, begs to recommend he 
above Flowers, . he can ‘supply, of the! best ae E £ a & 
100 Ranunculuses 0 
Superfine — — 100. — to = H i 6 
100 Anemones, in 50s perfine — med „10 0 
le), per ino, from 65. to . 0 10 6 
25 5 Auriculas, in 25 . sorts, named P 0 
25 Pelargoniums, in 25 superfine sorts, — iw eS 0 
Fine named varieties, per dozen, from 125. 8 * 018 0 
Lilium age ifolium album, per dozen, from 9s. 018 0 
ay pu — each, from 2s, 64. to... 0 6 
. = rubrum true, or speciosum, = 3 
š — — n y es jf oe E Oy are 
.010 6 
A new collection of Hybi iat Sesli. Lities, 6 soris ‘named, for 15s. 
NEW KITCHEN ping n SEEDS 
Til Aa E. RENDLE anp Co., Plym uth, have 
* — PRIC CED 
N AND FLOWER 
had in exchange for ONE 
uch pleasure in stating aad 
CATALOGUE) oF ih al — E 
EE DS is 
—.— Sra 
Great 
— de paid to the Seed Department of thei 
business, every sort being carefully proved before — 
sent — They — many of the — * sorts themselves, 
and p r from ers on whom 
ocure 
they — place the. ‘fullest re 
b give 
reference to Nobl lemen in almost every 
unt i in and Ireland, who have procured | 
the supplies from them—qnd herewith take the liberty f 
before t 
eee some unsol 
being a few selected from several hundreds ob jai tey ake 
* 
a Gentleman in Yorkshire,—I find your seeds so gene- 
wall 2 and cheap, it apa answers ji aay L to have to 
send to such a distance. I have grown e fine — nrg 
from your seed this season. I — — — r fin arz 
and the best at a recent show — were in 
n 
Cheshire.— Your seeds are ve 
—All 2 annuals are well 
u water gtast. The n 
abi ly ; so son so, that I know three or four gentlemen who 
— a their collection from you an pa dor 
4 Cle in Dorsetshire.—I was much pleased with 
my y last y 7 s seeds, particularly Se — — which proved | ; 
oe 1 — 4 —＋ rsnips 1 lendi 
entleman in Wiltshire. ~The — great satis- 
— 
From a Cler Freland:—I have much pases a 
Mase § you that all th all r. seeds grew well, and gave great sa 
—My = teems 
with gaiety from 5 — 8 e been, and 
8 f your see 
most excellent, I have tried all the sorts now, and they 
are all excellent. My brother, who bas a large and most beau- 
tiful garden, intends now, after all his 
nnuel and vegetable — from in future, 
fie Bros li plants, the pans of mich — iiie cent ak 
e Brocco s, the s of w were you b 
e Honoura F named — T should 5 
— by — = me 8 oz., &. 
in Devonskire.— Your seeds have answered 
ve recommended my brother-in-law to procure 
what he requires from you. 
rom a Herefordshire.—I approved very much of 
gone seeds last year, all of which were — 
3 
0 well that I ha 
t. 
have fi is 
as before, ‘that your seeds always come u true, and pro- 
‘duce a beiter piant, in Proportion to the quan — hove 
From Mr. J. C. "Gasidener to to the Most Noble the Marquis 
Downshire— —I beg leave 1 on most sincere thanks 
‘for your very interesting and | good wor! 
— 0 m —— — a = i which is — — 
a ee ap haa 
m the Journal of the Tonin Mortiestésinsl Socket. — Parsi 
3 s Noble Garnishing, from Mr. — This is erg 
ding, and beautifully curled. cel- 
They could fill the columns of this Paper with extracts 
sof letters opinions of the Press, if it were requisite 
to do so; but the above will, they be ient to 
prove the l exe of their Seeds. In fact, it is 
their ; t to send out only what is s they “wal 
be only injuring themselves were they to do an 
They would particularly t attention to 
of — — and Flower ng e, —— — Mage dere the fal fullest 
they have to their nume: 
8 COLLECTIONS OF "GARDEN SE SEEDS, 
one year—comp 
onal crops; | s 
Lettuces, wer, Celery, Cucumbers, Tur- 
nips, 3 quantities of every Vegetable 
i 4. wis . . a 10 0 
No. 2. Collection, but in reduced quantities 1 1 
— 4— Ditto 5 ditto 10 2 am 
Ditto ditto 012 6 
The ¢ Quantities for each STATED IN FULL in 
their “Price Current and Garden Directo: so that pur- 
“chasers may see emselves what they are buying. 
2 M orders for above 21. es, such 
as Grain, Tares, Clover, Ke. ], will de delivered FREE OF 
"ARRIAGE to on Rail 
— ol and ¥ 
and. South W 
Scuthampton and South Devon, 
Tn hn oy onii, 
_ CORK, DUBLIN, and BELFAST, by Steamer. 
For Catalogues and ; Currents renta apply to — E. 
RENDLE and Co,, Seed lymouth. 
P Established more 22 Half a a Century. 
ost. oe Orders are not ince „„ 
Clergymen, or Resident Geni 
e described; thus purchaser afforded every facility 
en selection 
TURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1852. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, 
4 aiseria 3 
an. 
Monpar, British * — chit 
2 2 
a ore 
2 ba oe 
* 
as 
2 2 
2 2 
nae 
Torspar, 
WEDNESDAY, 
THURSDAY, — 
29 Royal. 
30 - Royal Institution 
31 —- Medical 
* 
21 
E KERN RNEKKEKEKRKEK 
n 
Frrpar, 
Saronpay, 
Tuere is nothing like . 3 is a 
useful er Rar and e then does 
it le —.— as s thoy = a, to “highly 
suggestive” delt ions, which we have no thought 
of undervaluing. But Fact is a friend who never 
changes with circumstances ; happen what may, it 
is true to i its destiny, and ne gw 
relies upon N e eee the ca 
par here ventured upon making m 
ison w. 
be cartiod forthe $ ; for bay grates are as plentiful | f 
as to have, lorg as ready to 
as friends gaa 
this merit, that if — are hard — sane by, they are 
as un willing o leave 
Among the matters that a gardener pap — wants 
—— about is the or OF ROOTS 5 
to produc 
ils; and y be 
ass 5 nowing what their true origin is. 
If he looks into the books to raa he naturally. turns | 
produced by leaves,” says ots a 
not pe Me by leaves,” * asa that “ root | 
are produced by bark,” ured by o 
2 of ge small fas al while another y Ka ma 4 
the root “is inv ariably an extension of the | 
longitudinal or fibro-vascular coe 3 when it 
s first born in the s the truth 
as all this Perhaps the Buioni “little fa 
may assist the inquiry. 
young gardener, Mr. Wittiam Forn, sent m 
the other day, from Lord TO residence, a 
Berrington, a piece of r which the annex Bre 
sketch is a representatio: 
eti 
“This leaf of Celery,” he writes, “is one from 
ongst many others that have come under my 
dition within the last few days, with numerous roots 
form th blance 
It will be observed, that at the r part of 
ig specimen there has been “ callus 
orm: 
or swelling of polygonal cellular setg by which 
* 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle.“ 
one writer; “ ro re Ger 
ect In 
igging for use, * the — — very 
| have emitted roots quite freely.“ wh 
beneath the ons T surface of the stalk of 
h 
the Celery lea ey appear no where else. Ex- 
mine with th e mic sarge it is found that the 
ins themselves consist of bundles of long dotted 
tubes, being clothed ex ternally i 
cellular ese extending from the “ callus 
pare pert roots. 
ney then, it is perfectly clear, that 
ee oats of the Celery roots is in the fibro-vascular 
tissue of the veins, oak at no other — of tissue 
contributes to the structure of the ots, except a 
thin layer of mat cellular matter which pervades all 
organs whats This is a Fact, which no one 
can gainsay. 
Ma 2 assume, then, that roots are extensions 
the woody bundles which constitute the to oug 
elastic — nt? 
must be failures 7” These are CONJECTURES 
THERE has always been some “degree of doubt 
about the luminous appearances igi d by th 
is difficult to 
rtain fing or or by w. 
tate of — M. Torasx ap „however, 
this matter at vest by his didnt. paper on 
aricus olearius, and ‘other . — fangi, pub- 
| lished in the “ Ale s des turelles 
set 
| Aga 
wever, i first part of his 
53 to Botany, ” lately published, called 
ae subject in ques estion again, eee ot havi 
n M. Turasne’s Memoir, though co 
w 
iven in the “ Botanische Zeitung,” for L But, 
unfortunately, too y Ge a the 
present day do not give either the credit or attention 
o memoirs written tanists of other countries, 
to which they are entitled. It is ihe that if 
this carelessness or superciliousness were general 
i ralists of all countries, must at 
mass of almost i 
fusion. 
Our attention has been m 
the subject, oy = — of a piece of 
luminous m Y Mr. Banineton. All phos- 
ourselves 
fasily at it, b 
the wound has been healed. From near the outside 
again till re 
chanced, in passing and repassing, to look at it ob- i 
