r 
* 
j 
26—1852. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
403 
1 CHRYSANTHEMU 
ASS anp OWN can supply the lowing new 
—.— strong — 4 wea ell e 5 
tio Fens ozen—viz., 
Argentine, — dee, Autumn ronstignac, 
Eliza, Gil — — „itani, Madame 9 Mignonette, 
Modele, Nino: , Per „ Roi de Liliput, Sacramento, Solfa- 
, Su — 
And FLOWERING . bead 12 
superb varieties ne 12s., viz; — o, Atroru — Erinne, 
Madame Laborde, Miss Kate, —— Nandee, e plas Ultra, 
Plutus, Racine, — Mystica, —— 
. . of best of older varieties, 5s. and 
73. 6d, 
EW AND SELECT P TS. 
Azalea — — . * — ; Azalea Se 5s. each. 
Ipomæœa palmata (figured in Mag. of Botany for February), 
74, 6d, each. 
Gloxinia tricolor, superb and first-rate form, 5s. each. 
NEW CATALOGUE OF PLA 
VAN GEERT, Seana, Ghent, 3 
begs to inform the Trade is new 
* 
ATALOGUE OF PLANTS is rome publi. hed, — may ~ 
had on application to his Agg Mr. R. SILEERRAD, 5, Har 
lane, Great Tower-street, Lond 
PER na FUCHSIA 
UCOMBE, PINCE D CO. intend ening out, 
on the 5th of July ae nh following very bea utifu new 
FUCHSIAS:— 
APOLLO (Pixce’s).—Rosy tube and pees well reflexed ; 
3 1 lilac, finely ee 
SPASI 2 . finely reflexed; 
RINCEPS (Pincz’s).— Brilliant scarlet-lake tube an 
sepals, reflexed.to a greater extent than any other Fuchsia, 
which produces a novel and most attractive effect ; 
deep blue, 10s. 6d 
5 R „F., and 5 as the raisers of « Exoniensis” si and oe ‘Coral- 
na,” 
corolla 
14 * 
Paul's s — Mere. —— strong plants, 73. 6d. each. 
Besant — 25. 6d. each. 
— m Primrose se Pe erfection 6 each, 
1 25. d.. ea 
„apania grandifora, fine plants, Is, A each ; extra strong, 
S faly t 22 * gules 1 un * anor oe whole 
since. 25 Sors w Show were seen 
— 9 — a vi si — They, ee waxy firm 
and a sap tokiari smooth and fine 12 goni, Gola: of all 
coarseness, of excellent habits, and bloomin ost profusely ; 
nde the high character which these Fucheias | have obtained 
e iodine ha fica, fine Say 105. Gd. ; oe strong, 158. 
-eac ne 2s. 6d. eac 
Cantua dependens, strong, Pi 6d. each, ibs. t; dozen ; extra 
bach 28. 6d. each. “i 
Dielytra spectabilis, 12s. per 
aC n” 23. ôd, — r 215. per dozen; extra strong, 
Hoya bella, strong, 1s. 6d. to 28. 6d. each; extra strong, in 
flower, 33. 6d. 
Achimen nes, 12 fine N 6s.; 12 super — um, 10s. 
Gloxinias, 12 fine vars,, 123. ; 12 ‘superb ne 
iraia Plants. 50 vars, fine and pes viriy 453. ; 25 vars., 
24s, ; 12 vars., eet 12 new and select, 25s. 
rare ors ants, 5 0 vars, fine and select, 65s.; 25 vars., 35s. ; 
s ars., 183. 
etunias 3, our 1 new vars., Braganza, Ricartonii, aud 
* satay 2s, 6d. 
Our Description Priced * Catalogue, free by post for 
four penny — or gratis to purchasers. 
oods carriage free 45 land, Ipswich, Norwich, or any 
Station on the Wer Jian, and with orders of . aud upwards 
extra plants added g atis. 
Remittances re ed — from unknown correspondents. 
een 80 generally seen in all — eir stages, 
render it unnecessary to say any more in their pra 
2 8. 1 — the Trade, one over when tad of each 
ordered. r Nursery, Exeter, June 26. 
hoic E tes igo 
UCOMBE, PINCE, O. hav w ready for 
ending some 8 fine CINERARTA SEED, 
5 saree d from a very select collection of all th 
pee 
and finest varieties of a bi season, in packets, sealed a 
warr “pee them, 7 y post, = 6d. each. 
L. d Co. have mg some 
‘SUPER RIOR CALCEOLAR! IA SEED, 
Saved from well-shaped, highly out well marked flowers, 
which they can strongly reco — ia u pa ckages, sealed and 
warranted by Go. hi free b s. da. = ch. 
eolar son, and — 
respectfully solicit — orders, as stron "pleats for early | 
flowering w = obtained kes sowin ng A 
— e 26, 
x Post-office orders payable to Bass and Baown, or to STEPHEN 
BOWN. 
Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 
‘NEW PLANTS INTRODUCED BY MR, eee 
— anp NOBLE beg to ann that 
possess all the high! 2 . — — 
‘by Mr. Fortune, and mentioned by him in his recent reper 
work on a sale, Of t 
> 1 8 
may de obtained 
—— Baaai June 19. 
CARCE AND BEAUTIFUL FLOWER SEEDS, 
pat seeds. te. STOCK, a perennial species, and hardy; 
see ds, 5 
by app 
CIN 1 se er — — from collections 
P tted by all persons who saw them to 
be the finest th any oie ga — comms 250 ee of the former, and 
-500 * the latter, ls, each p 
OSOTIS AZORICA, * "bed of this on an eastern or 
r F re 200 seeds, * 
CALENDRINIA UMBE LLA TA, on e of the growing 
and most brilliant flowering of all * * — U 1500 seeds, 15. 
— al 1 in a varieties ; 10,000 seeds, 
n posta; 
Paymen . 
4 — = Nurseries, Northampton. 
IP DWARD * HENDERSON AND 
a 
fall bloom at the Nursery. Early orders are requisito to to 8 
Su 
N take it Kind if 
rut NEW PLANT. 
AYNA HUS SPLEND 
UCOMBE E, PINCE, AND leave to inform 
the 
July next, strong popes J ase = their * acon d NEW 
HYBRID ay wha nk NTHOUS, ch t wi 
confidence r end to all ivato asa sane mt that 
fail to a general 9 Excellent 3 of it will 
Lon found in ‘ Gardeners’ „ee. of Botany,“ Dec., 1851; 
in the" e 3 Cabinet“ of last month, to which 
they Pe ‘fully refer, and also invite attention to the following 
bybri d production, and a very . one. 
doubt, ia finest of its race; which, as is w 
ontains ma any vory — p 
ost use * amen 
cuous — t the most showy plants.“ Gar 
of Bota tany, Deo. , 1851. 
“Th e species under oomsidatation (‘ Æschynanthus splen- 
didus “) ecently — Te and certainly 
one of the Shed best.“ — — Journa rok 13, 1852, 
8 rice 218. each, Allowance to the R one over when 
ates: ordered.—Exeter Nursery, Exeter, June 26, 
eH Low and Co, 
r ys ae eg 
wer the 5 
g ae Tosti Institu 
if any, w re not 8 
will, at the forthcom e their infi 
J sai EEN, who, althou — perhaps one of t of —— — 4 — 
aer st of a pplicants, i is assuredly the 
ording to the rules of the Institution, hae . aeyn —— 
upon its supporters, he having been a Subscriber to the funds 
for TWELVE YEARS. 
3 has been confine „ y six 
years, — au a e of K by which he bas mid — 
this seed, which will be sent out in July, at 5s. per p aculty of ona side e ly, a $ cannot leave his B 
; t w i — or about 18 years in his 1 — 
l 80 T vee GARDENS, REGENT’S PARK. | situation, at prey Park, near r n Gloucester. 
to announce his Collection | Shire „ by strict economy, save ittle to help in his 
EDN hogs jeclining t this small sam has been swallowed up b 
Ge of AMERICAN AA 8 . may S ‘bills at and Cate, necessary er es attendant on his 
MEN Fie Tisei vot 8 ‘i the Nursery, brag of many — — ‘Of this Tastitation F ns 
thousand Rhododendrons, 1 a ums, &., FO in his behalf will b most thankfully received by 
is now in <a Hot may be see r, COCKBURN, 3 to the Lord Mansfield, Kenwood, 
Nurs Windlesha: ty — "Ba shot, Surrey; fon stead ; — by H. Low and Co., 2 Nursery, 
peron — 2 . Staines Station, th three from irginia Water, | London.—Jan an 
ere conveyances may 
Grone as Selections from tho following The Sandee r 
es, stron; ee ee 
dozen :— Alba san guinea, k endens, candida, TURDAY, 
„carm —— caulescens, - m a 
ylla maxima , Passinghami, Professor MEETINGS. FOR TRA EN 2 WEEK, 
Decaisne, rubra . Faroa 8 major, Teuchlerii, Vic. Mp brnt. Jone 23—Britis — ——ͤͤ' 8 F. u. 
7 , Violacea, and Wortleyana. No charge 2 ‘Wapnuspar, 30—Royal B — u 5 7.7 
Nurserymen and Seedsmen, Lea Bridg — iar 11355 idee 23 9 9 2 dy: 
road Essex ee 3 Bo janie, 22 P.M, 
EW CAMELLIA Cov shee — 9: Ker er ad Low-th can å 
Jackson's « A "gad dae OF ELLES SMERE.”— sian us and Pink arpe i co a 30: 55 . * 
The e now sending out the above price aud Thame,—Thursday, July 1: meee Royal H 
each; and dered one added gratis, 
the 8th of — SeT was awarded by the National Floricul-| In all directions BLIGHT is ait havoc ; that is 
—— q iar g 3 ss Certificate and received to say, the fungi which produc the appearances 
rate of eat broad 38 of a bluish white, faintly 8 known by the none * blight are 2 | 
striped ee i ardener . 
Journal for report of meeting, Apell 173. tek Aged in as hemselves in p- — eans are zattacke 
2 Flerist , for May, 1851, and is again mentiened in the by Uredo Fabe that farmers are plou; 
de os 1 on f hibited, and ; Wheat is 3 under the joint or separate 
form of the fe te ia marpa manne It has the beautiful infliction of the e Rubigo and er 
MAS 1 and a ; 
— Kingston, near London (on the South Wes cidium cancellatum is rav : 
pa Aia ene rees ; Oidi um N is smothering Vines | . 
siphes are tpar nnin eee t Per Su 
STUBBLE SWEDE TURNIP. SEED. 
Erysip. 
matter of course, is is once 
old enemy 
more a visitor to the Potato porada of Sussex, 10 aa 
all 
2 men are alarmed, an 
enqui what 
Pg 
5 immediate remedy within 
r 
ateni BENEVOLENT PIETTE EON 
2 for sulphur, the only agent that has stood 
the test of 
n a large — 
answer, even ved it — — 
— Bat, at time 
present f helplessness, it may — 
to some result, if w awing atten- 
tion to certain points connected with fungi and their 
manner 
The — “of mildew or blight fungi appear to 
exist everywhere—dis air and 
in 
— 
m. 
i=] 
0 
they appear every year in 
species nge 
each animal i yed upon by vermin peculiar to 
it. The mildew r must be coæval wi 
— 
Te 
It w mari m that their poe dee. 
eee with: the arch 5 aoe aF mbóns and it is 
an al — aniversal aii that now, whe 
culture an i 
ini 
e fact, if it be one, capable of 
explana 
The —— inflicted upon crops by fungi is ones 
to the action of their mycelium or spawn, a cobweb- 
esca 
a plan 
s the ag say t wp all fun 
absence of damp, they — 7 to 
as is known to builders and dockya 
ly the 
ac — that deep 
which indicates the absorption of nitrogenous matter 
— — non calle airy ring, caused by the 
of yea e in is a ] 
. Marcet, of Geneva, in his 
enquiries into 3 respiration off fangi, — the 
following result: 
Hydrogen. Nittogen, 
Sphæria digitata gave off... 65 .. 33 in 10 hours. 
Agaricus ericeus a o OO sys May 20 5 
„ delique a VC 
„ Physalod e 1 a TE apeie 
ie ee e e Os wp G 
o that it is fully demonstrated that „ ngen 
nitrogen are a ' undant elements in the 
gi; see 
should be their course 2 
vea; y 
other „those s are sure to mildew. In 
like m manner the watery wood of Peaches í is the 
to exhibit With fung i 
vidence obtained in the long inquiry made into the 
Potato disease all went to 8 that rich manures 
auses 
and wet soils were among the cause: 
of that terrible 3 In oath of the — 4 
ae frm belief that 
no water yielding hydrogen, 
nitrogen, existed i in excess, There 3 
fu in abun 
l w 
scarcely felt in the dry hungry sands of England 
and always produced least injury where no manure 
