F n 
241852. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 871 
T S, CHEAP DAHLIAS ANO OTHER FLORIST FLOWERS. “ It is impossible to contemplate these properties 
DIRECT FROM THE GROWERS PERKINS, Bedford Road Nursery, Northampton, | of ozone, and to know at the sam e. that the 
OHN SUTTON anp SONS no i 8 wise 0 ue — ee ee indicate its presence in the here in 
varions HYBRID AND OTHER Nr AND VERBE WAS ‘gi Ae 8 * . aid Beauty different degrees at" different — Nr —— — 
—— which have given K. ch may be seen by z — Supreme, raven 13 — Charlwoodii, Boule Solana ring snow and thunder di without bei 
toi to the ne first page of last week’s gare are * ruck with the | extensive field it opens for ph ica 
to London, Bristol, Exeter, Southampton, 
Senko. &c., as see former Advertisemeats, 
Reading, Herks, June 12. 
Is 
Jokes ade e ana rugosa, 2s, per dozen in ui Ever si 
gna sph NIUMS m Thumb, — 4 — 
e ayler, meet Rosea, Princes 
ce I became e with the 
i el EE 
CARCE AND BEAUTIFUL FLOWER * 
8 EMPEROR STOCK, a perennial species, and hard 
MOINERARTA — — — selected from collection 
mitted by all 1 who saw them to 
250 seeds 
orthern a 200 seeds, 
GALENDNINTA UM barat} E one of the neates t growing 
and most brilliant fi RNE ia F00 varieties 10,00 « ; 1500 seeds, 10. 
SWEET 1 000 seods, Is, 
Paymen 
ps. 
2 and Co., "Nu — Northampton. 
f the former, and 
of this on an eastern or 
15. 
e 3 ber in plants, and hereafter be 
0 Elan RGONIUMS, good named collection, dwarf bushy|cause of 
8 " 
„ Te in w ms * 3s. to 48. per dozen; in 48-size pots, With a SE to see if L could she inexplicable 
ute been tal spondents 3 1 last autumn to my indulgent friend, 
Professor Farapay, for a supply of ozonometri 
tests that might be relied upon. He most kindly 
n 5 
The Garde ne 18 Chronicle ‘ rans at once to 5 request, though unaware of my 
SATURDAY, J 2 12, 1852 ject; and there is, therefore, no doubt of the 
ex ellis of my tele I inse 
Eger OF AMERICAN on 
try. 
The Knap H ll Narsery is near the Woking Station, South 
= —.—— whicn may 58 reached in about 40 gon 
from the Waterloo terminus > — stop at Woking, and 
conveyances m ay be obtained there, 
OSE T in — ns vat tomas that he is in 
no way concerned with the Exhibition of Am n Plants in 
the Botanic Garden, Regent’s Park, The l ananiona ay be seen 
daily, Sundaysexcepred, gratis.—Knap Hill, Woking, June 5. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. serted small slips of them 
ee ee E derten e * in erg ir ＋ + r during autu 
Tonspay, =  15—Linnean 12 85. er, with very slight indications of ozone in y 
vere 16 Geologie ai ee 2 2 eats and rally none, thoug sometimes there 
Tavaspay, — fàn ene n ss oaa were signs of i pr in air. But in the 
ar 19- Royal Botani Biram. spring of the present year, in inserting them into 
Count oa sae Tuesday, June 15: Cheſt nham.—Wednesdsy, June 16: the tissues of pa — 1 foun very often 
—— 1 Darham, Leamington.—Friday, June 18; 
ewbury. = 
rday, June 19; Staines, 
— oOo 
In a lecture delivered by the Rev. EDwWIx SIDNEY, 
4th o 
EXHIBITION OF 3 - 
OHN WATERER begs . — e that his 
unrivalled collection of RHOD ENDA VS, AZALEAS 
&c., is now on view at the ROTAL 20 7410 GARDENS, 
Park, — be be seen gratis by orders fro embers 
— the Nursery, comprising m — 
lens, is also ‘i — and yond be mye 
— estern Railway, and — miles * 
as wa 
y; conveyances ma 
obtained ac either station. 
TANDISH anv NOBLE, Nn Bagshot 
Surrey, bave to seg the following i and select — been told by rena. os iso that the oxygen =n 
t Azałea vitta 
E 
the last novelties in Conifers ; forms a 
except 
$, seedling plants, Os each this is one of 
noble 9 120 feet in and É a 
"ihis variet m 
n the "Hort, alse that it may ultimately ayer -e 
| ind 
2 ö 
es in po re the sap risin 
par nce of aeit Pig 1 ni fa og 5 oe every trial these Vines blued the paper; but no 
— 5 eee, it, ctrici — ag intro. Such result occurred when a test was inserted in a 
2 Si wahe following m memora iduk rA ith which 1 een — Calceolarias and Petunias, and 
Mr. * 1 me other plants, gave no indication. In those 
e kee, ‘May 14, at the Roy al Pants in which I mere e, cory na . 
y sometimes none metimes feeble d 
2 — on the Rise of the ‘Sap in in Spri a 
memtioned that I had reason 3 believe that I h — frequently extremely deci idea. There r alway 
detected the presence of lanta It has} ne most Mike KES aed srm 
Surrey, one Fatn. struck me that it might be — to yourself |; verctable juleas was CC 
and a numerous — of — —— of your valuable 5 j AI i dP 
s Paper, if I addressed to a f emar the farther sign that e was present. 
* zaii eenlanatory of 50 methods te wit I In the 1 2 * of these experiments, I of 
3 . y course = from hasty inferences, and have made 
arriyed at this conclusion. W: ve frequently wn thus early to induc ? ä 
, 
state as in the air, an more apani ling self, to pursue the 
in plants was not in the sam a Ma 
quiry. May not even these results indicate the 
oe ee suspected that ozone | cause of rapid gro Am of Vines after thunder-storms, 
an 
ent condition. I pote tho n atleast a new wa 
ATA amet any of do lanation of 
ed a Knight w F 
„FFC nr df the chemie anges, now 80 mysterious in . the chemical — s in the contents of vegetable 
is white, beautifully striped with in... after” th a cells at particular perio The properties already 
mannst of a Carnation. ‘Ivis a very free bloomer, 9 inches to — are due to to'this ts fogs describing my known of ozone show that its action is suficient 
1 foot, 21s. enc wn experiments, which are very sim ; 
CUPRESSUS FUNEBRIS.—Seedlings, 56. to 21s that they may be the better understood, ask per- aa pa 1 3 d = in the parts of many plants 
I, mal 3 p ried, tests show t f 
„OEPRALOTAXUS FORTUN e, long le eaves, — Bias Mistion to make a few remarks Oh the properties of | it Ze ia s Ak ests 2 4 c r sane f : 
— it, or a — —— o this condition. 
n “th ig dagen ree ve reg reg eee ey Lo é kiowledge of Which wa e| As s my impera tive clerical avocations will 
se have withstood the 
of 
R 
QUERCUS e its 5 Wees each. 
SPIRHA CALLOSA, an a e bloo 
it has corymbs of rosy purple blossoms, and — a — 
some addition to our shrubbery plants. 10s. 6d. eac 
[MPORTANT ee — ate on PLANTS—The |p 
355 a ry h of riaye, and 
wishing to . o 0 t 
40 fine strong pose of the rama healthy, vigorous, sion 
Plants, all > fs epee ey a Queens, a few 
wand Black 5y be ata — low 
For pardonia Mr. Josera Faun 
GuUTTON'S PERMANENT T GRASSES— keepi 
QUALITY of 
GRASS SEEDS 
late frost “and 
principally indebted to ScHöNBEIN. 
s o be regarded as an allotropic or variable an of the yea 
Fee W ws oa = pirni 3 where their 2 to the matter, it may 
there is a consid et porti on ofit, isimpeded, ay them ; for the existence of such a powerful 
fata *** is produce r s plainly indicates that effec x 
ae ee m a m en rate with the ascertained 
hae ve briefly noti ey H å 0 Á 
ust admitted t at t statement is one 
ses: 2 is $ decomposed guile 8 
est method | important e 
half ai 
FE 
E 
properties I 
aoe in air, as — 
ga 
Mr. StoxRW can be 
that — > inp 
seen the st paper rahe he q% eee ‘ind the 
e | violet — Was still tly — ap onl y 
question is, whether it is s quite plants 
is plainly crv the reco — = numerous a Orders they are 1 eee ee in “bein abun dea, * eg G oa * 1 of iodide of 
Some interesting particulars of Land laid dan a with hosphorus be re h potassium, unless it 
these Seeds io published in the Tanaan CHRONICLE of 8 . thi 2 -n it gm? a asked, be there to do wi = 
March 2ith, page | Ozone instantly decomposes iodide of is element in plan a std 
The prices for the best quality are as „n but for | and recourse i decomp had to this spe a test horticulture To that question we may reply by 
poor reclaimed Lands or other cases where the cost is the pf its presence and, as I shall soon show, was the 2 When the laborious chemi t first 3 
principal consideration, mixtures at about’ half the price ing in redient in in ha one T tisod is that of in from anim of the vilest kind 
may be Send Gi z A ocni of bibùloii a the — sae substance c ed p pon who 
For best permanent Meadow and Pasture, Per acre. "GE RF e ee e could mo Doped aae that this 8 would have had 
mixed expressly to suit the soll 248 to 238. into a rsa of ceive part of iodide of potassium, 1 af sal 1 4 
For best Clovers and aeons ak one, two, 10 of starch, and 200 of water, boiled together for a the rem valuo in the art of cultivation e 
or rs’ lay) 14s. to 208, ts. Th . yet we — w know meg in combination with oxygen, 
r e Pere 2 mi nial Grasses Er — late 3 ate 5 e it forms on most important of all the 
named icularly in our Advertisement on the last page paper is ozone, an 
the Gardeners’ Chronicle of 20th Mare substances ie a which lants feed, as is sufficientl 
__Joun Sutton and Sons, Seed — Reading. Berks. acar Are pre moistened, ag careening i blu sage by the shown by Mr. II N fact tory o of su y 
FINE NEW HARDY PATAGONIAN CONIFERS. 
e GOTHRA CONSPICUA — 
wean. Vn — SÒ (o ovK 
‘t 
ared 10 
es the above-nam named e HARDY KEW ‘cont. with nitrogen ina general way, it Me vo lime- | ses 
ed iodine acting on nto * 
the bottle — ozone, =e this = 5 
appears. The chemical effects of o e most | S° 
remarkable. It has a power . to ‘that of chlorine 
e phosphorig acid 
— it contains, in combination with lime or other 
will be s Feady for distribution on and after the | water is present, and nitrate dEn rmed ; an That being so, who can tell what may not come of 
— n followin it produ 4 di highest possible ecidation of most à diligent investigation of the relation borne to 
— — 1 ave 7 638. Od. le Phomh way vegetation ne ? 
Stine Fitz-Roya patagonica ; 0 eta Phosphorus is con y ime, into 
fila Sate Gothen conspicua =s phosphoric acid, and it aeiee with chlorine e, 
3a — . — 31 6 iodine, and bromine. There are scarcely any organic | ao r may interest our readers to know the depth of 
: do. Fitz-Roya patagonica 31 6 compounds which have been submitted to its action, n which had fallen near London up to the 9th, 
additie ta gi e yon where a number are | on which it has not been found to produce oxidising 3 of the present month: — June 1, 1852, 
W. hese Piants are fally described May Die, Lübbe and Sr | effects, while certain metallic protosalts, as of iron|.07 inch; June 2, .09; June 3, .03; June 4, .02; 
8 . in the Journal of * Horticulcural S»eiety for and tin, are converted into its: its actions are June 5, .03; June 6, .03; June 7, ; June 8 
1851; and 4 w Paxton’s praan 1 ember, | indeed similar to those of the peroxide of 9 ;| 45; June 9, 1.48; in all, 2.61 inches. The quantity 
They lower Ga td 8 1851. : ? ’ 2 
n t Chiswick on the 8 h had a — prevents its formation, but if the Me of pre fell on the 7th, 8th, and 9th, amointed to 
: spend Bae fall descriptions, are now in pre. ether is mixed with air, and a ho t plati 4 inches, and was greater than has fallen near 
pinin, e distribution of which 17i! be announced * bene rod introduced, the ether becomes ede poten on any three consecutive days for at least 
fature Advertisement,—Exeter, June oxidised, to 1 AA acid, and also produces ozone. ' 26 years. 
