31—1853.] THE 
GARDENERS' 
NEW e 5 PE EURAN; ETC., 
8 SEA 
ENRY WALTON, ‘Front, ce. „ Edge End, 
Marsden, ear Burnley, L neashire, is prepared to send 
out nice чун». of f the following 
* 1 . Collegian, Dr. Lindley, 
Duc f r, England's Glory, Glory (Banks), Incom- 
Emily Cavendish, L 
parable, — | Charming, Lady 
tagu Model ‚Р Ре 
trick, Glory, 
E n ——.— 
rnier, 
— eur 
ommery, rr very, Princess 
adame Barn rnes, — 5 Bonchariet, — 1 conrad 
e Ivery, — Fulgorie; the a 
12s. per y od ded for 7s. 6d. 
* m S. Une 
Lady Cul а Бомбы, Eastern — Eva, esa Exhibition, 
and Баат, the above 2s, eac ach, or 18s. the doz 
Gloxinia Wh ite Pe — Bs. e ach; Veron 
— - ека Dru i 
Зз, 6d. ondi Kilburni, 2s. 
* ARLET GERANTUMS. —Skeltoni, 5s. each; Rosea 2 
* 
le Tom, Lavinia, Pet, Fairy King, Ponceau, 
— Turneriana, 
. each; Begonia 
Prestoni 
— wees we each ; Miss E. Field, 3s. . 6d. eac 
del nec . each Highland Chief, 3s 
CA LOEOLARIAS.". неа 8з. 6d. each; King of Crimson: 
35. 6d. 
abov: 
Al 
ЖП 
опе 
each ; Magnificent, 3s. 6d. each—nice healthy plants of the 
best v: — —— 15. 6d., 2s. 6d,, and 8s. 64. per —. „post 
It is respectfully requested that all orders be accompanied with 
a Post Office Order, payable at Marsden, Lancashire 
GL m XINIA WILSONI. 
(G rende ama t VIES begs respectfully to inform — 
ind the Public that he will — — — e A 
T Floricultural Cat 
son's “ Floricultural eee, ” where a faithful represen- 
i 0s.-6 
EYA 
lection of 55 n | 
ed trom 
| extracts from some interesting details- 
he by M. H. Lro 
out the first week in Augu ; 11 was exhibited 2? Chiswi ck in 
Wien a m bru 
ken of in the h 
ot is superior some of whom ordered ы plants. On account 
of its 8 merits, it obtained a prize s M Liverpool 
im in May E. Th is a free grower 
2 a fine d^ are of a deep 
ps gn * our, with dark Mrd T pi LO ys pere 
and is much s Mmi or to Symmetry in 
recommend the above Mat as real gems, 
Price 1 
G. D. 
ID wil — D: t purchasers, Orders will be este in 
"rs secure the best pl reall & s 
w extra sized plants c 
; . D/s Catalogue of Plan nts will 'bu-rendy 
will be forwa: forwarded on application 
Stanley and Green Lane Nurseries, Old Swan, near Liverpool. 
EA BRACTEAT 
К ura ic SON, of Exeter, and the 
e aoe t. uch pleasure in sta 
do — — 
- 
by Dr. Lindley, 
—.— of — the 9th. 
established TI pots, — 
— "à 1 
beers e — the cone as fo aa 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
e JULY э 1858. 
Gs 
„ 
— loricultural 
"iier Pe POR THE ENSUING MowTH.—3ü and 4th: тоң, 
ED A A kan et e Mesh. rhe с Glasgow Carnation a 
————9— ——. 
Ir the variations which have taken lace i in th, 
kingdom are du wi 
ed 
other kinds of grain, 
T 5 en recien as — 
P ants, uninfluenced ma 
among җе y any “ п 
Horti- | re 
Plants — shove bn NEW CALIFORNIAN | ‘ 
rdeners О 
e, wi 
ed their daa tat state of perfection t 
ам 8 
2 
ys the 
cultural Aaron d “We have known Dahlias from 
à poor single rine "pres РЕ менн into superior 
forms and brilliant colours 
tion, by the ене st its ca 
almost the e appearance-of an ear 
like e a glumaceous plant; we have n Ho ollyhocks 
in their generations bond i into a Pesca of colours 
r 
which are reproduced by the ms descendants 
with мини» certainty. We cannot, therefore 
tha t the r to mu Miply -— their kind mea 
s the . should be precisely similar to the 3 
riginal type ; and, if сз trpi wasallowed to repro- 
duce itself with variation, who can 
aná 
an à that this glorious scheme for clothing the 
earth was not the creation of a ce er of 
ed by Him in their repro- 
certain variations, which should 
ers, as we 
ose which are more o and v 
subject to — 2 in reproduction?“ 
Advantage has been taken of this general dis- 
ee of plants to produce varieties еа тоге 
or less from their сатр ape many valuable 
sequiition have bee de i 
cro 
na vt operation is well understoo much 
has yet to be learned 1 regard to the есеп of 
| proper subjects. will best appear by a few 
ex xperiments 
epe with чы view 
tricolored flow 
en ч вресїев 
| м Jalapa and M. longiflora. A plant of 
the эр» g" crossed with the former, but not one 
fertile ined. From M. ра 
fertilised with — of M. lo ngiflora, some E 
d which prodüced seed. 
vil of various gum and the roots of E 
length pe enormous sito} feet in 
en, 
“ When 1. obtained," says M. Lxcog; in 1848, 
E istinct and decided hybrids, intermediate in 
all t characters bet - Jalapa and M. 
longiora, 1 endeavoured to fertilise these iyi 
their h each other. 
CHRONICLE. 
a Carna- | cli 
E 
2 betwen species 
e 
crown, the New 
483 
in our gardens, and that the aitempis at their 
ау — and crossing should be made in different 
M. p а deduces ee — experiments that 
xactly in — at 
least i e of the Mirabilis ; but he arrives 
the e singular po that hybrids from hybrids do not 
follow m m become infinitely varied and far 
— fro original type; that all hybrid 
eee, are ts veri and although they may produce 
8 but sparingly, yet when the plants from these 
are — ith their own parents, the plants result- 
ing are of great rtility 
rec end our En nglish breeders to turn their 
| attention to these Marvels of Peru, which m 
easily brought into fashion again, and 
marvels of another kind. 
ight be 
— 
Pass we now to that ancient possession of the 
Forest, from which at least some 
| result commensurate with its extent, 2 
and once great reputation was to hav 
expected. Here, alas ! asin the other forests, there i 
th 
to which have to be added frauds, to an unknown 
amount, disclosed to Lord Duxcax's са yis e 
1849. "This case is indeed so flagrant, and so uni- 
versally known to be so, 5; we gladly limit our 
he » a few of the more fac 
анир consists d e ,000 acres, of f which 
45,000 w ut timberin 1849. I 
then estimated variously from 429 m to 1,293,000. 
Accor RIMMER, about 4 
Mr. д, 
ru З d of the first class; the 
sh réside e, if we poe him rightly, is poor, 
barren, v» 10075 
ent 
iency of 
ess our о discover, 
midst the mass of — — relating rs the New 
“| Forest; the eviden which this statement is 
founded. Therefore, without 2 upon that 
calculation, we select from the ual 
— to us seems to have been * "e state of the 
рө that the expenses cdl "i 66 — 
which 40,000 are adapted to grow ing Oak, w 
e 10 years "me 1846-47, 92,976/., 
зан 4 778ʃ., — profit of 6801. a a z 
aving been a a t is to say, of a 
r acre. s a uring that 
never exceeded 10 ,638/., not much more chan 
average. Daring 1 
id 
erably on the 
— a stick of ti timber had been to the navy. 
In че three years ending 1850-51. 3 * 
. — also found among the 
3 nts зет none; others in 
undance, a ving 
many seed-vessels had even e ovaries. 
so varied considerably in form, some being round 
and others long and even 
The flow. 
This genus 
well sand for showing h how muc 
plants may be iner 
yb 
of Mancuesrer, in the Journal P the "Forti. 
I 
diferent species which are either rare or un 
abortive ; and | vi 
he seeds 
dues ann be ч 
this year obtaine tween | 
ud x dichotoma. 
ce with "difculty w pre m h bids | rec eipts were 33,426/., and the ex 
fertilised by M. Jalapa A Al none from . Poles. leaving Е: country saddled with a — of about 
But the M. Jalapa hybrids crossed by hybrids gave | 2207. a year 66,000 acres of E 
seeds in abundance, which produced plants exceed- | forest. >» deficiency occurred i in the years 
ingly curious, and nearly all fertile. It would be and 1849-50; we see, however, a surplus of — 
impossible to describe the various types produced; 3000“. ~ ла ; succeeded by a urther surplus 
hey are too numerous, and so different from M. of 90007. in 185 1-2; and there is an estimated gain 
-] ha and M. longiflora that many of at of 14 ‘6781, reported for the 1852-3, the 
east might be taken for entirely distinct pr gon counts of whi e looked for with impatience 
Certainly the specific differ as as m ж іе result "pm che icd that 
those which exist between any species of Mirabilis o have returne EP ө P. gu 
and M. Some of 7 were entirel 600“. is to be expected, notwithstanding the out- 
bald, others were К.җ or downy ; the stalks were | lay of 32507. upon new plantations, and is in part 
recumbent in some and upright in others. The | produced by the a the I Warden's 
flowers were sometimes few and attered ; some- | department. an that 
ti they were close and ificent there is no reason end that the gross pro- 
bouquets. The tube was longer than in M. Jalapa, | duce need be less for a number of years te come. 
the smell partook of that of . Many t sort of ma nt, then, must that 
of the flowers were 2 inches in diameter. The | been which was in operation to 1850? 
corollas were in some eee dips 2 eA in others d | 
fectly round the colours it would | 
— pi 8 they were so 
had flowers with a ‘tube, yellow or | to 
seed with rel ad yaw t i E M MI y negligent of his daty, and as 
I had large flowers, | originall who, we believe, 
coloured ; some were Snow whit, with t ha h tube. "^ still holds ea oly Frida Тновкнп, ар f 
throat Im £z sorts of imaginable peed were | have succeeded for a short time by 24 or 
exhibited, . marbling, streaks, spots, &c. F The nt ma sa Mr. 
e | Singular CUMBERBATCH, appointment and 
cerning whose 
qualifications we find no record. ‚ He e is s said to be a 
we are not at all desirous ! 
1 he sage a баабы fond to 
executed uties e D as з honour- 
ably, without fear or favour, and with h that fall 
