ae ae 
s 
HFR A i 
tpl Arbuus unedo, 7 fe 
52—1852. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 819 
1 CHRYSANTHE = UMS. SEED AND Mom IOVET ORAL ESTABLISHMENT, | ge. . re like — cost but a few pieces 
of e —and of the custom the Lhassa belles 
work, 
t — —— let out 
the selec x 
proof 8 hs po 
-that be exhibited at Stoke Newin: this season a an of 
22 — gaining the first prize (a handaome siiman eup). 
gt TATLOR, Park-street, Stoke New 
> 
® 
* een, Bicolor, Dido, Charles 
Turner, of Perfection, Rosea Alba, 
e e. Perfecta, White e Blue B ‘ai Mulberry 
Superb, ball, aud Queen of En gla nd. 
. Lhe nem 3. 
— will be forwarded post free, upon the r — of 
4 6d. worth of Le te oh stamps, by R. B. BIAcRHAM, Hedenham 
Rosary, Bungay, S 
GPECIMEN 
haying determined to dispose of a few of their magnificent 
«specimens, the like be — — found in Gre 
persons — should send their gardeners to select 
Without delay. be aid aioe’ of Forest Trees, Fruit Trees, 
** to be sold che 
2 W. Jac An A Bedale, Yorkshire, 
TUART AND MEIN’S PARADISE PEA.— 
J A very superior — — Pea, a distinct variety, o 
size; a most t bearer, and excellent flavour, 
‘partaking of the Marr — 
„Sonn May 17, fit for use togae About 4 feet high, Fe 
straight, flattish, containing 6-7 Peas of good quality, An 
abundant bearer. „ From Journal of — phe ultaral Society 
— r Oct, 16, 
to Sir — 
ore the he Paradise 1 a Be be a from any at present 
n | 
straight ; 
size, of an ie and alto- 
a pry e e Gardener to the 
ie on, Lord Chie 
EES 
— bearen 1 
Sob A CUMMINS, 14, Tavistock 
Garde on 32 sra. NUTTING and Sons 
— ok and Messrs. Lamang and Son, Edinbu argh, 
Nurseries, = Knightsbridge. 
Ll 
Trained full Standard eon Peach 
Double Swalsh 
9 41 by to 20 ft. 
tol os eee ou 
erophall, 12 to 18 fe, = ove 
— = 20 ft, 
ee lm, fine * ee 
— Laurel 5to6 ft., will move weil ae ona 
e 
Fir, 15 to 20 ft., w we 
1 e or 8 15 ft, Pt ia a fi 1 
drons, large, chiefly ponticum i 
d Dwarf = titi 9 ee the epos 
in growth 
rt 
oe oe 
t **. oe 
* 7 Ey 
* Cepress, upright, 4 2 oe Sei 8 
m, . . aes ’ 
us, 5 ft. 
tee ... ae coe 
. 
ari 
feds 
trained Pear Trees 
the strat in sailing: — ny Sdan Trees at this pri 
ne T stock. r 
Wiauresti tinus, 18 gi . 
- (The object of 33 ese- Plants 50 low i in Fag 
uce N stock. i a 
Dartford Nursery, Dartford, 
3 HYBRID WHITE "SPINE, CUCUMBER. 
10 
E 
the 
W: 
, 
* s in the s oes will then be prepared to 
Ay out in the —— week in February, otherwise it will be 
to keep it in for another season, 
abundant, of Savant 
It E equally ae adapted f for T — for the 
ferret crop, and excellen em of culture. Th 
tin is very thin, its fine green — a 
t 
; the flesh is pear 
his Masa has the singular — 
* old 
under his own ppe 
, consequ mens 
sip anp BR Rows 7 — “te . easure to announce ine of 5 
ackeni 
pel i att cir call p . ning their faces with peaa 1 
. and we nd to send out in Ase; condition, which they beg Tibet 
ffer as under, Their similar f ious 
NE e 8 satisfaction, and they can recommend T 
em with the hi t confidence, 
veer ice D SEEDS IN ASSORTMENTS. | ropeans on the frontier of "India, and 
Full particulars of the assorted collections are given in 2 | that they retuned thro 2 ina is as certain “me 
Catalogue. that they have 
. bey choice, ne nd best sorts, 1 wun of each, ** ab as 
ged for 3 r 14 0 r 
ande eemed — 1 * of each 
übel. ie shane sor, l pint Ag ach, for succession 4 6 | 
SHOW PLANTS. The Subscribers |» 
at Britain, 
T integrity of 
— — 2 intentions 
—— — ca 
0. 
1. Collection of 3 table Seeds, , containing the 
quarts o a each of the Broccoli, 5 
all — * Se — ti t £210 0 
—— ee proportion, 5 he best and berin 
2. Collection, ‘maller quantities a AN So 110 
1 0 O|« 
Garden 0 10 ( 
w be bad, which comprises 
of our general Spring Catalogue, the whole of 
will be e ready pais in a 
4, Collections of 6 esteemed "kinds for small 
èed List for 1853 may no 
and 1848, an 
nearly 1000 w 
wage ntains select New Plants, Paris! sto 
— Shrubs, Ha erba — ng tary Fruits, Bulbs, and lon nged 
Oar 
the 8 N 
whic ia 
ar yH 
Flower Roots, &c., sent * for cms postage stamps, sab: 
Post-office ape Le eee to STEPHEN Brown, Remittances 
ese, 
ination, however fertile, 
requested from the 
n, 
wholly “ais — clothe with 
— ponaiaii. 0 
owever retentive, wet 2 
of. 
Established about Half a Century, 
‘The Gardeners’ energ’ Chronicle. as alvisedly t that we called this work 
of pass ing 1 only, ven value as a boo 
of information will 3 ced 4 interest as a 
aA TURDAY, DECEMB ae conten — — lues, lively narrative will be r soon after the 
Wapnuspar, Dec, -Microscopical countries it describes shall h ve gone over by 
accu and ant travellers. gossi 
I> PARED 5 following :— rat nt. 
„a. |? 
Amonest books of passing interest, there is none 
of its kind that has claim incredibly 
small. The scanty geographical details are wholly 
insufficient for the superficial compiler to 
pm by; the soil and its produce, climate, zoology, 
botany, are scarcely alluded to, and the doc- 
— of Boodhism the nen do not appear to 
have comprehended in the leas 
Ve eee been ge bres 22 respectin 
this tree fr lle aia ng 
hay. rather 
„ and i t 
vergreen tree, said to be the alt extent of their superstitions belief —— these an 
te of mind 
| they arrived at the tree, their — wound 
to the teh of curiosity — pet 
E four s ls, and covered by a silver * 
ite 
es they had heard; they were “consterné 
he trunk is 15 feet in circumference, m 8 feet | up to 
high, above whi ch the branches spread and * by 
ied the bark nas off like that of the Plane, 
e wood is red, smelling deliciously, , some- 
thing like Canella tack: ib haracters are 
formed naturally on various parts of the leaves, in € 
different shades of green, and similar ones cover the 
old as well as the cp ti gar ark. It is said 
roduca large and beautiful red flowers in summer. 
mi re 1 convinced that no 
was practised as; that the Devil has a 
insisted 
good deal to do mh it; — . rs not suggest the | the shores of New —— were Basaltie columns, 
be added t n 
Ee 
= 
Es 
probability of insect 2 — [tong Fa oy Monch oe f 
t| noun em ce 
the climate of the country is Para 2 cold, bu tropi 6 hag & 
landed on, thousands of miles from any land; 
ne do the large red flow 
| its 
ni ig to the great extremes of a long ic cy winter 
short hot — — that Kounboum is pro- been , 
ab y ata considerable elevation, and that few besides hundreds that are = an a y, and 
other ne o wt still finda — in our e nt was 
We ee (if we remem bon hi vouched t to — been seen 
so well and na aye face 
the observer wo ed it; the distance 
proving, on Cross- . ng, to be th eeu of 
raduate of Oxford, not lon „told 
Lean 
darcely as say that no known tr 
answers rs this souvenir of MM. Hvc and- GABET; 
nor can we offer a very probable guess as to what it 
may the best we have hear ba answering 
several of the —— is, that it may be a 
variegated-lea agnolia; t — rs 
scented wood — — chis idea, but the oes not in one of our subur 
ng | correspond mate is against the proba- 
cap of an evergreen tree of that genus survivin 
lis nter. The Fun wo * oe 
ccu 
fag eee “of the 
in 
"a 
sunrise 
| evergree Syel as a sweet-scented red wood, and 
what flaking bark, fs he pret do aae answer, nor 
An 
rı ee by e sums up our 
scanty catalogue = possible: train ignorant observers to do 
science, know the diffieu i of — ra the 
Before dismissing this subject, i 5 * well he ra age rt 8 
m in “this investigation, and what atlas Our opinion with re 
pt e placed on our authori y: A 
proof in their volumes, that MM. Hue 
d Gaser were no impost 
use and i 
for 
pa excitability ; or sat distrust too 
erburdened fe withe any “souvenirs.” Add to 
a want of . so inexcusable, that they 
whole idleness at Tchagertan 
felling out the salen — 3 the mear 
arminster, Dec, 
a pay geese pod aad trong transplanted pai Ñ 
wooden cups which cost ounces of sil re remained a summer in at , 
