Feoavary 20, 1864.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 175 
orbicularis, Berk., which grew on the same Gourd with | with a long discussion on the influence of beaut ty, and 
Macros 
We XA however, to give an example in which | win m" up 
ossible i every produ ction, however 
porium sarcinnla, B. may possibly belong tole event ages thak result from embodying as much of 
nean, he 
x 
by ho wing that in this ay sie ia cai o 
Polynesi ia. Dr. H, Schott describes four new species 
of Aroideæ ; according to the writer, who is a high 
authority on the subject, the plant recently figured in 
the Belgian publica ed as Dieffenbachia Verschaf- 
ii e orata 
2 "f we t find a better | beaut TE in his hoppy: mombinstion of e wie utility, feltii, i b 1353 of Martius. A further 
is opas all appa, and w wn our phon common | lay alee ood's ie celler “His most signal|note from Mr. Jarruthers indicates the he n 
M i, which occurs in the form of little black shields | and char. arie i E yy: in ty firmness rots Td pad | Irish Fucus, prone at Kilkee, and referred succes 
nma twigs of Ar ae and Gooseberries. Here we | with which he perceived the true law of what we term | sivel tus and F. distichus, proves to be an 
have naked spores (conidia), growing on the external | industrial art, or in LL words, of the application of undescribed Species ie wiel i Alineo) ae i 
e of the stroma; we have naked spores of a second the hig her ' art to aon me the law igure tea. ches " i beet prd ED ion leds is deme 
we have minute bodies of a third kind (spermatia) | degree of fitness an nd convenience for its pu Mid and| of the American Woodsia glabella in the T ol and 
d again in distinct cysts, resembling very | next at making it the vehicle of the highest degree of | Carinthia, by Baron Hausmann, in 18 1861, and 
closely similar bodies in Taolas, nd we have a third | beauty which, compatibly with that fitness and con- by himself last year, the PARE hay: je com- 
dof cysts containing the usual sporidia in sausage- | venience, it will bear; which does not, I need hardly | pared at Berl at the Britis , pemg 1 t would 
hyaline sacs (asci). Even here, however, we | say, substitute the scegnibtig. for the primary end, but | however be desirable to e urt m if those who 
have not done with marvels, for if the stylospores are | which recognises, as part of the business of ss heye identified this Sw ant with the North 
a strong 
ced in water, the the stud 
n . 
twenty ies conidia of a second order exaetly grasp of this principle, 
analogous to those which arise on the germination of | in the details of a 
to harmonise the two. To have 
H H 1 a q 
S 
vast and varied manufacture, is in | mo 
merican species, A ones ros alpina or not. 
The last issue of the > Sco tti. sh Gardener, a cheap hor- 
ticultural magazine, 
the spores of the rusts and mildews which affect our | praise high enough for any man, at any tiwo, and. and in | more than a decade of volumes, contains a thoroug ip^ 
Spee and other pla nts, any place. But it was higher and m peculiar, 
bvious instances, but if we think, in i" ease of Wedgwood, than in almost i any | ki jenen gardening papers to which the remarks we 
f | Which ke greed adverted to were introductory. There are 
case it could be. For! that ih "f — 
oot 
to the connection of. Helminth 10spor saw SO iy and which lies at the 
v fort dici 
and Sphæria polytricha, Wallr, where the beautiful was one 2 
mould with its umbels of large septate spores is seen | had a pe 
th i 
gr 
ome interesting “ fuer notes" on ifs 3 pleasan 
which England, his cou i e n 
y; 
ception at all corresponding in strength and 
ing from the sides o e thick perithecium and fulness with her other rare end dowm rents, She 
ie illus 
ot usna My 
s lo ong | 
tration in m omen late, — XXX., of Sphzria Bee of hey manufacturen; not so AES ab at. Andif 
ría si mes e 
alle come, when she shall be a 
Clava 
hornid inthe wil vor apparent setae yet where | in true taste as "she now is in economy of pr 
every part is per fec tly distinct—a prodigy in fact of 
5 
z 
will probably be 
Q 
t 
Scottish Garder y Mr. Cramb; 
e o dea a by Mr. 
pe er; ang n various other ma 
The We est of Sootland E oo ee l Magazine is of 
s eminent | 
roduction, 
due to no 
dg- 
drawing, which it is ale possible to equal, much | other Single man in 30 “great a degree as to We 
og. 
excel. 
ue colour 
umma Vegetabiliu navie, of Cesati and T Lu 
Id cds 
ering more or | excellenc 
Fries, however, and E ~ is and his colleague, have | latter Mr. 
Much remains still to be ed amongst the At the present day it is too often supposed that the 
eshy Sphæriæ, and we pot only hope that our AG term *“ Wedgwood ware” applies exclusively to the 
we in the wo eh haye so well beg gun, beautiful vases and other articles, principally of a 
t they will u blu with but 
exqu 
enus, which at the present moment is in gat con- | as t Pit pro aT aétipus are, it is not by them that the in- 
nion. We dat = P oii i of Fries in pis oF W sug wong has been most widely felt; they 
relaxation, the (often Pxpeneive) luxuries in 
Votaris in hei lately pind NS a ein which he de Cm pis taste; and were paid for-b 
e of his more ordinary n sree and the 
less from each -— and all with kk. bin dag of merit. ge aT Wu eh for them. Som 
Gladstone describes : ordinary water-jugs, an 
fucipally from their own ps * constructed in a URDU e capacioys form of flowing 
that a| Prime 
of yiew, t ho former from the vegeta ation, the latter from | curves, broad at the to op, and so well pois 
the detention of light | us 
n i 
e European | « take, for instance, his common plates, i A 
by totic, Fate to what I know not how ew, but certainly a ve 
me X^ ils ech pe piep belong: Witho ut each. They fit one another as closely as ae 
hovered will no 
te ae are ealenlated to s «m DOM - 
np they sly to dl d $ fe, po ESSE 
geh not to be entirely set | re A fie 
pac ack. At least L for one, 
t 
here is tempting matter before | peculiar OA of 
pale 
uisite | J 
ne foregoing, but similar in 
character. The. February 2 number (No. IX.) contains 
Some well w articles on practical horticulture. 
[o cial 
BB 
a- 
E. 
g 
b 
B. 
Es 
© 
d 
[c] 
E 
E 
BS 
© 
~ 
& 
As 
d 
LE 
bad 
Pg 
R 
"e 
= 
Š. 
= 
5 
an n ansonpeament that Mr. W, Pamplin, ca na nn 
been known as a intet bookseller, h 
“ee z MIB So at Llandderfel in Merionet! m. 
established the North Wales Central Botan 
Garden, which E — no pecuniary speculation, 
or by the 
, 
me of the 
» pene 
ah ina} 
ave never seen plates that 
d ae of We odeio become one solid | 
ox eie form - must, I a 
much more safe in carriage. 
ese plates is pot. noticed, 
th 
2 amongst the. re € moulds, and the cyst bearing | namely, the plight! y concave edge 
LA a fheir pea may be i ini hoa to deposit the an improvement 
pprehend 
pene 
which 
Ou must 
e 
DE ca 
(way. a gr g gardening, economic sith use cola, 
d that chie oy a the smaller farmers, the 
a s e 
in planning and m the garden the small 
: naging 
f farms and cottages, prieg in gering aes ‘suggestions, 
ch 
hints and information s " the reums tances of ea 
quire.' 
ma 
Lay a Sketches A the English Constitution, and 
conomy 
(Murby, and Simpkin "Marshall & Co} which belong to 
nele series ja Readiag Books desi to be used either 
as de xt books to be amplified € gesto ote for 
lear Prt conci 
useful to those who may not oe ap - 
tun 
can nowhere be appreciate, who ha E. Hu annoyed by the rommen 
m DER dro vint th they reti E edge, which seems Ed * n pur uniky to consuli more sxkendad in 
ra n e volume before us, shoot the salt into the gravy! The great secret | of the à 
» —— excellence of these homely articles is the With ters: paw ce Tengen, " m wienn 
patiren, e i ht : them as with everything and eet a modest | Pere G QU EC Pages - een ies zw 
“apoo: a a on, W, E. yehing y Statistics. By J. R. Pik t 8 
one, M. P ^ Murr aiming at perfection. “They haye no pretension : 2 EMEN EY i eae 
? are so tevionsi gem Me. Gladstone's | Wedgwood s works, from the lowest upwards, abhor Pdpriet, mithoat M-B Deme E E ted 
Mi the Ho use of Commons and financial ; did pretensio | b ram h T and and S y 8 iino iom A 
ba it is som ewhat startling to a Poule iti is scarcely fair to criticise the English of a | °¥ Ped V rre Sues oap —- 
his, containing n. no allusion to his usual rg ; r" spoken address; butif its author tunka it of sufficient | Capital pamphl 
eet istant county on phe occasion importance to ‘print a nd publish, it is surely Es 
5 foundation of Hi cal institu. tian, d in hongur oper revision ; and since this Li evidence of having eno 
a mative of LI Es qna an een somewhat pareflly pre prepared E the press, it is the Vr Nior, Reswppyoe oF E. 
us hon more unp: able P wan sli -shod expressions 
| ied Te E Wale t the Arrar a (mE AS i " A "t n" oo SIUE, Y iod - rey A is attached more 
, Mr. Gladstone ey are the more to be re; "ela - ‘the "Aie gi is 50 = an n visae; ; : f its being i kare 
“commercial "welfare of the|ctrefully got up and worked out, that the little | ffo ele the re nove ites Wii mtitally 
t that its commerce and | Pamphlet is gaits worthy of a place on our shelves, | EP? x quae Me evi: Tts be "y 
ence of with without taking oa inii the three woodeuts | "3s are almost | by the waters of the 
d in this light, Wedgwood |" h which it is embellished o ET 80 Bo airin is ^ Mo od "d — 
ne climate o ing bay in which i 
benefactor; «kr: Hore. than any sí ni ie is situated is most delightful, Here Dates, Oranges, 
o the improvemen due emann’s Journal of Botany, for February, con- Lemons, m Guavas, and Pomegranates ri 
fe, sy uch a height as not only | t a synopsis of the British Aicidia weg ipd Mr. M. C. in singe Silla azaleas , Abatilons, Passio 
sou petition with the productions Cooke, ilustrated by a plate of new e kn inm Pelargon niums stand the winter 
ad ip take the very highest place, speci es of ZEcidium. eae species are Ke es There unburi in ae open air; and during Christmas week 
or uti i » a ai Sam Aima i Kk a £ Mr ord Analysis of Indian | flowe: ers were gathered from the Ser plants, vi. 
ond, who, in his ‘Travels in ps Lx “Hypericum sda à m. dion te d Muss MM, MAN E 
in 
dgwood’s und in two places near Pl: 
ts solidity; the advantage m it atone plenti ES 1 bue oun 
latus, yelloy Cards 
jasminoides ; jeg Heliotrope, C 
Genties 
lanceolata, and sweet-scented Pit tig Ch it there- 
or 
esses of standing the action of the fire; | mar gins of streams. p! i eb ered at that seeds which refuse to 
ze, i ne able to acids; the beauty, | over Southern Europe, Northern Africa, Madeira; and England arrive at full Pe ben a clima oae v 
Ms a y of its forms, and its Magen ap: the Azores, and bears the additional names of|to heal tation as this is. New Holland plants 
TN a commerce ctive and so| H. decipiens, H. ne politanum, and probably- also | and e beti Pelargoniums are grown 
ìn travelling from Paris to St. Pater H. beticum. The Plymouth plant, accordin, Mr. | here in great profusion, as are also Cuphea cipes. 
bd. 2 furthest pins of Sweden, | J. G. Baker, * differs from H.p perdu Py its uad- Draczena terminalis, Ardisias, C Carnations Picotees, a 
pow southern extrem France, stem, broader lera with: network of pelluci e walls ar of what is ed 
^g, ^U every inn from E Englis| sh IO mes Mea Te 8, broader and blun i ag ond and ile only bal Tacsoni: ered dur Aus — ith multitudes 
Ru y | afdazting suit dues de mollissima, Ine 
> adorns the. tabier i oF pipin, ss oig ne the capsule ; froma 
ort 
Aintion of them gore d Editor ee 
y; it provides qua 
x. 1.05, the West Indies, ani dui ries br = less robust E less decid 
y which Wi Kery ined to such a| more dotted leaves, larger 
ice are w as ; consideration, | shaped Fasaha 3 DI 
placed redd of its p 
c z £A of the Cucurbitacer of 
m by its clos 
d 
y the much See 
panicie. 
ra 
rently 
d 
Huge a Kenn M. Mapes villas, Lapageria rosea, H 
Pd "Pinged stem, 5 is R ien dee 
ifferen 
Un ler plus aro thousands of choice seedling Pelar. 
goniums, of which, as a raiser, Mr, Stuar e h 
Té tation, and which, when in bloom, mak te a gran ; 
display ; also — in the form of specimen plants ; the 
