CHRONICLE. 
9—1850.] THE GARDENERS’ 135 
l mana ment it may ad in flower for still in possesssion of but one species, an and that perhaps especially those — rel 
— te ah suecession. The dark variety of one with which he was previously familiar. To effec l t| bilit ty, an pea 8 E. ana Be mag 
Barbacenia 3 was i a Sere in company this purpose it i o separate each Number i 0 important us — 
with the pr white-flowered Oldenlan dia Dep o distinct parts. In the First Part will be found Three | treatise will be the aid which its numerous illustrations 
which kee lossom the whole winter through, and — Plates lants, which from their beauty afford to ntry gentlemen, in enabli em to deter- 
Bilbergia zebrina, whose beauty "consists in the large le tints r iar gn this —— style | mine the kind of fencing or gates most eligible for their 
oral es rather than in the little greenish- | of illustration n. Here it is not o introduce | requirements. The fpes too, of all the forms of fences, 
yellow flowers, was just going out of bloom. It gene- which can vie as well 2 without | gates, bridges, &., are given in eatal 
rally flowers here twice spring and in per ; W = means a large part e expense of | nexed to the work—an important item, by which gentle- 
autumn. In the Heathery we noticed a good plant of | B cal periodicals will be saved for the purpose | men, er remote, can ascertai a 
— Indian Daph . indica rubra), fe bei seule to the canines t of the Second | expense of any work he may contemplate having exe- 
fumed the whole ho This is Nor will the public be in any respect a loser by | cuted, before he begins operations. On these, as well 
one of 1 — ‘plants which everybody might cultivate this pa! ment, for it is doubtful whether more than | as on other grounds, we consider that Mr, Young’s 
poss reenho D is as easily | three really fine ants appear in a month in this will prove of much service to all landed pro- 
ma as a Camellia, and its sweet scent will be sure | country, on e. The title of the Second Part, | prietors. . G. 
to render it an universal 28 Som pag pen ‘t Gleanings and Original Memoranda,’ fully explains its — 
forming, as pu 8 ill consist of Notices rt, The Catalogue of Seeds sold by J. C. Wheeler and 
of it, — 3 2 
little quets of wers backed: up wae some half 
N bright green — — * Pet attra 
n the specimen house t 
examples o ot the — — — * double Chinese 
rose. white, aud kringed white — the 
of blush in it 
raceful 
spe of the double 
red measured upwards of two feet across, and, althou 
3 in 1 it had 130 
blossoms on it, of large size a 
is obtained by keeping the plan 
house. 
iN r 
cut will give some e idea of the appearance of a well |1 
grown specimen of one o of the white-flowered kinds; the 
red sort is more diffuse mg trator in habit. The wa 
in which these here is to 
ust, when 
juuin in per 
l The old plants are 
ter thəy have bloomed the second year, 
and — Paces are supplied = hey See plants. 
e first 
The la allowed to bloss season, but 
they ren si so large and. pi as they are the second 
year. Bas the same house were Hovea pungens major, 
a kin le for — bea deep purple colour ; 
mark 
but dificult to cultivate ; a 
grandin lia tubifiora, 
33 Bossi a let 
of Correea called ci Brilliant 5 i 
least, Eriostemon intermedium, one 
shrubs. Among fa Oxchids, which were in 
excellent health, there nopsis 
allichii, 
amabilis and grandiflora, Phat onto- 
glossum pulche some Ones — Dendrobes. 
; R ebie 
den for Mareh. 
and Joseph 8 London: Bradbury 
THE folosii oe published viih. — first | tian 
Number of this new periodical explains the 
“ The design of the work now a to the public is r 
Parts, as fu, 
Partons Flower G By John Lindley | ¢o/ 
B rad and Evans. 
account of all the 
dued into <n 
and 
> 
to to supply, i in Monthly 
remarkable 
the p 
extent be a periodical will permit. cle e or fers 
published 
pl: 
Pinari peer 
an prar length ; ma bes 
pages ced Woo 
time, for the 
. | employed in 
ase 
lossom | of years, and of thus i ee a 
specimen of Mirbelia | u 
ich be 
ions, or o 
enumerated in eight 
ortant PB me 
mentioned ; those of higher în interest will be iag 5 
ra mbin curate representations with some 
picto Si effect, The effect of this arrange 
introdu uce in 
t y species, a yearly 
lants, of which 
the pir number yet 
in any Scien tific English Botanical 
In the selection of species 108 full illustration, it is 
intended to divide the plan nearly as possible be- 
comprehended 
Periodical. 
tween Stove, Greenhouse, A 1 Ha ardy Plants; so that 
each 22 of the Flower Garden may be equally 
The editors, however, anticipate some occa- 
wo, and 
thins there ey more than 
ote coloured 3 in —4 
ce this work is intended for r Engl ish readers, the 
English l. language — be adopted, as far as possible, in 
all familiar n nà descriptions. nglish names of 
pia coloured plates will be 
cal Latin ones, in the hope 
m the ne- 
those who prefer r technical to familiar wo 
strict science om also given, and the dis. 
were characters of the s 
“The P 
spare their Subser 
Hie 
expense of u 
amount, it is intended absolutely b terminate the pre- 
sent work with the tenth cares i e cessa- 
tion ọf resent work it is intended that another, 
with a new title b lan, shall im: 
diately succeed it; wish to ex- 
tend their subscription will have * 3 of 
acing so, while those wh * a eee 
issues—whic 
conceal the — 
entirely avoided.“ 
Personal considerations prevent our adding any re- 
ured figures con 
d 
of fragments e a work—will be 
* saem of our own, except that the colo 
sist of Drummond's Side- ere 3 Lan ge. 
Drummondi), the A 
flower (Adenocalymna dee ma: ‘Walker's Gat ya 
ther 
rang de Walkeriana which, to 
toria 
tolochia picia, the fine new 8 called loæensis, 
8 "tinctoria and acters Grammanthes gen- 
cides 
Treatise = * System < Wire Fencing, 
With explanatory C cane yints En- 
gravings. C. D. Young. Burness, urgh. 
Tun volume before us, although in some measure ex- 
nent nt firm of which Mr. Young is a partner, enters into the 
Co. Gloucester, appears to us dee hema eh notice, because 
author 
ei tote a and a: 
necessary, 
= and others, against t the — incomprehensib! 
* of the day. In this, as in all matters of taste, there 
ill be a 
8 of 2 as to the relative quality 
of varieties uyers, who have no 
ancies, but = dislike Seine — and are satisfied 
rag ee hv will greatly e a — select 
interm pie labyrinth of which, 
for the psi h resent — or gee cers. 
Messrs. Wheeler’s itl book will do something to 
satisfy their expectations. 
Sra wbat is 
lis 
Miscellaneous 
Mr. Scott, gr. to Charles Barclay, Esq, of 
Bury Hill, Dorking.— We re 
ent * which took 
place on dr 2 hs before his decease 
ape of A 1 so unfitted him for 
t he had to leave 
afier he w bad lived with him n 
se of dea 
an an exocllont eer and was much respected by all 
who 
an of Orchids. A small importation, from central 
India, was sold the other day by Mr. Stevens, at the 
obium Devon nianum, from 
drobium Sauen. pr 21. 
ogyne cristata, 51. 10s. ; 
m 11. to 5l. ; C. Wal- 
lichiana, from 2. 10s, to 60 10 
merii, from 21. to 4l. D. Dalho 
11 18s. to 27. 4s. ; D. Griffi — fo DL to 47. 108.3 
D 8 10. t 5% D. Gi 
J. 1 “a new species of Ses 
to 4l. ; dito * Sa from 1/. to o 20 
in all 232 
Calendar ol of € Operations. 
7 
» from 21. 10s. 
There were 
E 
* 
* 
aR 
82 
2 
2 
Š 
DH 
2 
S 
require a ti he moisture, 
Encourage their healthy development by sufficient room, 
and 7 1 3 a s as circums 
will 255 cient = hoa all times to ensure a 
the ere renders 
ts d the 
growing repotting, be 
state of the Toots than by the tops, as t 
a | exposed to a disproportionate e are liable to start 
into growth without roo ressin 
g in a corre- 
hie are therefore. not so well 
those at 
with 
safety and — re pes fen plants are passing 
through your hands for , let everything 
needful in the way of pruning, ty 3 or ru. them 
oori M insects be that your work 
Lege 5 
bergias, e and other stove an 
n of the conse summer and 
c 
and shaded till they appearance above 
ground. As the majority of plant houses are better 
ada for small and moderate sized plants than for 
l ia ae Botanical Works tation, and qualities of the subjects repre- | large ones, and as me description of plants 
on the Contine bloy — —ę—ej rs bavo little sented by the em Mr. Young trate at Hien most j i tal Ch 
} well as in those of our own country, and i e unix plication of wire fencing in vases in the drawing room, &c., it is important that, at 
the Gard : from which they are derived. arrangement of park and gar scenery. There can | thi: a yo stock be raised of all the choice 
It is expected that by this means reader | be no ion that of iron feneing in the division things which are ornamental and interesting as small 
will be by degrees, by mere o the of grounds, and in protecting es of trees, is a very — And this matter should be particularly attended 
indexes of matter which will accompany each Nene, great improvement in a pictorial point of view, as com- ith reference to such as will be useful next winter; 
to ascertaiu the doba ene, 8 wi Pied: umber- | pared with the old tection by means of +i a few of these we subjoin a list. Euphorbi fulgens, 
less so-called no ists of dealers | hedges and ha-has or stone walls. Cases, however, Gesnera elongata, Manettia bicolor, Begonia nitida and 
are crowded., “the ‘infinite nema of pma names, | occur, i icinity of almost every mausion of any | B. insignis, Abu tilon venosum m, Poinsettias, — — 
be — basani wad Denner, which in con | pretensions, in which we would by no means emp Franeisceas, Tremandra verticillata, and T. Hugelii, 
grad il are termed aldses, will KA it is hoped, be | wire fencing, as for instance in gardens of an orna- |&e. Such well-known Sorar as: ’ Chrysanthemums, 
dually referred to their true denominati id the | mental kind; pro y and agra taste would suggest | Cinerarias, Primulas, &c., will suggest themselves to 
that after e ing different. Therefore Mr. Young’s views and | every mind. All f whieh it is desirable to in- 
"i i he is | ours are at issue on this poiat, Many of his arguments, | crease t the stock should be ated as soon 
