i 
| 
g 
4 
; 
E 
: 
| 
; 
i — s volum 
religious 
„Tis init details, we think, that the aberea is valuable 
tte flecti 
poe of many 1 observati 
5—1852. | THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
71 
eee during the winter, and sown in spring, there 
„The normal cells of the epidermal stratum are filled 
dulous ; very large and beautiful ; 
hardy W 3 
might e an a acceleration of the harvest. He con — on chlorophyl-grains. These consist of chlorophyl,| Devoniensis: Creamy white centre, changing to pale 
yf and rotein substance which is mixed with | straw colour tinted with pink, petals thick and Camellia- 
a saving of a few weeks in the ripening cf the crop Bassorin. The chlorophyl-g grains lose thei en colour like, very large an most po owerfully scented, one of the 
ould be 1 vast incr in Moats ritain. Moreover, | and break up into much smalle r pale granules, e- hardiest of its el urtis ; large delicate pale sulphur, 
eis might be less necessit ing the crops to | are ended en or collected by apposition or con- superb — Francis ise nuvage : Fine yellow, bu 
the variable springs tee — va a for the sose might fluence into a om this confluent substance, in | centre—Francis, Eugéne Desgaches: Light rose, very 
be retarded. 4. Notice of plants found near Lon which iodine exhibits some very fine protein molecules, | double—Foster oiret: Pale yellow shaded with 
By Mr. wson. 5. Notice of the abnormal str eae one lar or elongate rate, | fawn and rose, superb, very large and full Pau 
of a Turnip, by Mr. The a rv of — which 28 clothed externa ally with a ruy wan sear Souvenir d’un Ami: Salmon and ro ded, large and 
peper after defin — the nature of — root of of Bas While eiad ging on full, fine—Paul. The Tea Roses are celebrated 
rnip, giving so n tap-roots in in gener, 
er showing 8 relation to those of a fibrous nature 
to remark that roots are 
4 the — of two bulbs joined in the form 
an hour this he conceived to have been e 
the superi 
hibited another specimen 
unite 
the membra 
se (Gelin), in Een — 
dissolved mass 
fungal cells as — me —.— 
they become enlarged rease or — eee 
and then, by the —— of protein 3 
ch, by means of the 
t 
upplied. 
e, whose erte ar 
e the of the eins — cell which at 
d at the n 
their circumference, Mr. Davis did not believe | 
h trosities as. this resul fi the 
l condition of the soil, or fro tion of 
any external body in the soil; but that one, instead of two, 
taproots were originally uced of dimensions 
T he hadarrived at, from an examinati 
of their internal structure, having traced a mass of the 
resembling those found tow. the exterior 
the fibres, that two great masses arose 
and in separate courses, one 
As a remedy for the disease, Mr. Davies recommended 
the raising of seed from tr: transplante ted roots 
four read a letter from Dr. — of Koni 
mating the transmission o ecti 
ts from M. Patze, who has a apne attention 
—— . — Willom e As the Willows,” 
Dr. rks, which — — atze’ 
delight, 7 a0 rar sci yoru that each specimen i in de is 
tak as those which are in flowe 
0 
ture in the 
g pale violet ae 
first unites them, at — deliquesces. Other cells are 
elongated and branched.” 
an the membrane of these cells consists of cellulose 
not — ad moment's examin ema * the 
mical r oot 
athe 
—— rr convertible 
nt appears i ki certa Our author 
— with Mitecherlieh, makes the principal ken- 
conversion of 
alls in to Bassorin; wee other 
pores “this i is viy no m 
re hly di — Pota 
original cellulose is often pi ainly discernible, fro 
when treated with * phurio acid aisi 
iodine. Dr. — however seems to l 
retic stress on the atte arising, — ably, from 
s fact that — — other cells, do not consist of 
cellulose ; froi — ich arises, perhaps, his notion of the 
erformed by Bassorin, in the origina- 
The elongated branched cells (mentioned 
f the paragraph), are those of Botrytis 
_ i there is not one of them erar 8 pa „ a fact which we are surprised that Dr. Küt- 
y atze aa ap zing at re 0 we at he detected 
3 always sterile, and in small aia among the the mycelium neither of the Cystopus nor Botrytis. 
two common species, which he suspects to be the | These, ever, minor poin hat concerns us 
parents.“ Three gentlemen were elected Fellows. at — is t way in whic Professor pre- 
— — i as it were, over the work of ereation, in which he 
- seems 40 find little difficult We might other 
Pott ces of Books. xamples to A But ae in th eases, 
der Philosophischen Botanik. Von Dr. F. T. | though we may not like the general tone, there is always 
Aeg Leipzig, 1851. 8vo, pp. xx. and 336, poe vee in the details to attract attention; as, for in- 
tab. 1 stance, in the origination of oil- cells in Lavandula spica, 
Ir more were expected from an pa koe by ns of little cavities (vacuoles), with which Dujar- 
oi than ve mere repetition or new arrangement | din’s account of the formation ch in certain 
of what has be better said a Infusoria d lye — y refer 
before, a work Tike that karga us . well be thrown also to what he says about th 1 of Salvia. 
— wer. and left to the mere f friends or . One of Dr. Kützing's peculiar notions is, that Gum Tra- 
—— ly conne canth isa species of fungus, resembling Ve 
It 5 however, i avoni te practice with professors to em- We supp at he cannot have been much in the habit 
notions in „Perhaps, for one | of examining fungi, or h ly ha 
re Sanne in such a shape they are sure to com- dea, the s trueture —— totally ee e — 
original illustra- 
ton it is — nme for thor those who wish for the 
recent information, to to what 
at the frst gl 
We ase reng extended — rears beyond the 
might space whi which we can usually a such notices, 
y we should have 
ver — fault may bean with Dr. Ki Küt. liked to yA attention ; we — — content our- 
which is, however, only the commence- selves with assuring readers of German, that the book 
of the vori — is no want of original matter; | will certainly repay a careful perusal. 
e figures, drawn and engraved by himself, Ea 
ail the merit which those in his other more ostenta 
9 . 
regards what may be called the mag — ba 
tion of the work, on which the author lays great 
it is not our —— —— er any observation. 
no means in with English 
at 
tastes, is as 
fanciful as most — — of the kind, and i FA little 
y carm 
Sc ooh atarna to strengthen or exci 
or reflection and giving the 
in all the 
or rather 
a want of any general sound views, which is frequently 
very exing. 
contains much that is 
ations ; 5 but, as 
son and purp eee. oat de la 5 $ 
Pale flesh, tinted with fawn and splendid 
esh blush, with th magnificent 1 foli 
nnerh h 
oosely siais but of the most luxuriant e 
Lamarqu me 
otsette.—Aimée 
Vibert: P t Cloth of cmt Outer 
petals pale yellow with coe n lar, large, 
nd magnifi ent, rather a shy cig ‘a the most 
uxuriar — Troy oth Corks 85 e ants a W. 4 a 
Fos ; globular, ! arge, and magnificent, rather a shy 
Francis. Pour de Tyre 
: Bright straw arm 1 e e 
marque, rather tender, splendid for a wall— 
ttes ntain some 
nal bloomers—Wilkinson. J. Z. 
Targa gpa td FOR hee inks, Carna- 
tions, and many o things which require, to be 
supported ae props, frequently present the arance, 
ofa grove of sticks with dane tied to 
E 
s uni- | them, instead of an orde i mass of well-shaped plants, 
versal. Ot tainly, ta nll s | which may be owe their n 
frequently, and even 1 — — 
v s 
avoidable, of having props as conspicuous, or more 80, 
than the Plants which they support, is little recognised 
b 
by gardeners or amateurs, but it is constantly pointed 
at by . of taste, who are not cultivators, and par- 
Plant growers have a 
seats gory by the ladies. 
kind of necessary respec 
employed with egosi success and sa 
36-inch lengths of No. 6 wire (about 3-16ths of 
an inch thick); but wire of this weight would 
soon ha in 
e 5 its small 
motion, 
hite, large, very double- Appleby ; ; white — ooden sockets w ade for me by P bobbin lalate, 
rosy tinge—Foster. Dupetit Thouars : Beautiful bright, at 2s. 8d pg the wires I put 
crimson — Francis. George ier : Bri rosy a spoonful of paint into a woollen cloth laid in the 
— Appleby. Graci „ perfect, | hollow of the left hand, and — 4 rir through it, a 
dee Appleby. Le ee 72 Palais: Deli- plan I find as good, an itious, 
cate ee AP —— Joseph: 5 le a brush. Above will be foan, a sketch; in outline 
er e erimson Prose’ : Bri aon as ant c -| of the socketed shoulder a 2 — 
peop: 
= the socket is for laying hold of vie pressing it 
und, W. C., jun. frand 
gr 
THE STOKE NEWINGTON C apea 5 a 
very targer 
bosib Pome E: geand — agri soap 
SULLIC 
account w te ogee cae change 
thingy such as 
—— emical ——— —.— a place in the cells e 
walls o indicated b ess. hp 
. hich d 
cen : beautiful, very large and full— Paul; ; mag- 
ificent in foliage, very large and distinet; a superb 
son ; perhaps the best of its n— Wood 
a charming family of autumn blooming ppleby | 4 
—— 
pue ersary meeting ith inst. 
n the chair, The auditors report for r past st year was read, 
— officers electe t year. e important 
in 3 — uniform 
through a 2 Wee this splendid class blooms very freely, but cannot boast} wbich, together with several 
thefattention of all i in er tangle ha this 4 contains some] S ke Howington Dahlia 
8 i to agree in his t bea Roses of autumn; with b eby an exten 
peculiar notions or inferences. The whole of his account especially, it may be said, that it is nota vigorous — a wide fiel 
of the cell walls of Algæ is full of i T produces the bestand most perfeet flowers. They day 18 fred for W Weenesday, Se — 
that some chemist of comp ive views, like Mulder, | are very hardy, of free growth—Paul ; the vi; 
will submit that strict comparative analysi kinds require moderate, and those of compact habit, Caratoour received from ca from aie. Smith, T Sith,  Tollington 1 
is the greater need for this, because our author Rose, large — Foster. Marjolin: Deep crimson — e 3 4 — — © aes 24,'June 22, 
Seems to us to lay greater stress on physical age oster. Bosanquet: Pale fesh—Foster. Tea A hgate: Sept. 14. Camberwell: 1 855 15. 
than mag tabi: Sinan: or rational, Take, for R Comte de Paris: Deep flesh coloured, blush,| Caledonia 12 arch 4, May 8, June 3, August 7, Sept. 2. 
instance, owing account of mode 0 : pendulous very large and beautiful 
of the common white Cabbage rest, which eee te Curtis ; rosy ‘ = i FuoricuūLToRAL RE Nos, 1 and 2, from Mr. Slater, 
to border very closely on materialism :— 
. VIEW, 
S 1 Cheetbam Hill, near Msnchester. 4. 
pen- Lasers 
: EC. We use s rips of zinc, ene eee 5 
