6 Oe 
— 
DLING PELARGONIUMS of 18 of 1849. 
K S SEE. 
the first remittauce 
For ger repayment only, 
t selection. Po 
at Brentfa rd. 
—A bright rose-coloured fl 
a free bloomer, e 
rate variety for all purpo 
ses. 30s. 
of the bloo: 
1 
SILK M MER 
free bloomer, and very 
rate quality, ground 
lity, ve 
55 aa, — eR well —— 
3 * 
oe 
bl 
Ma ther 
«Little at Good,” and 2 
vhich make it necessary to try them another seaso! 
parable will not be sent out until 1851. 
unequalled. 
TIES OF 184 
CUYP.—A novel claret-coloured pores maak 
per petals, ae very free 
t. 
Good habit 
LOVELINESS.—A striking flower, of excel 
. very free 
— stif, smooth flower, of 
3 
and lower petals 
habit. Ed. 
Foster's qipiy Bride and Gontance, 108. 6d. each. 
— —— ie T 10s, and 
OLDER 9 AND OTHER — ie FLOWERS. 
Twelve of t — — ing varieties, ＋ e box and 
carriage —.— will be sent due — 2 — 
i — roo! mon in Z. in 3 pots, — ready 
diate shift into a larger size: — Blanche, Cenarion, Gaunt ms. 
Doreas ilia, — 8 
na 
Crusader, Delica a, 
Lalla Rook, 9 Mont Blane, Me Mele: 
* 20, Ru ubys Leary 
dine, 
. — or ‘provincial J. Dobson hag invariably taken 
thet great metropolitan exhibitions with the 
3 Isleworth, Middlesex. 
w EW FLOWER OF Tun pay” 
Lies, SE T WAE e EN 92 vig ET d 
—This fine ding t is very vigorous, an ae: 
variegation, per The foliage is bright green, 
beantifully l er, with Sead 
am occasiona pi The trusses: are large, of a light 
(the most conspicuous colour), and the general effect it 
produces is 8 beyond description. 
“THE FLOWER OF THE DAY” may be n in bloom 
at Lee’s Nursery during the mon n the Ist of 
ready for delivery at 
tablished plants will be re 
each, — 9 — allowance to the trad 
tion.— Address, Ki ind 00. — 9 
— near London. July 
Seedsmen, 
THE GARDENERS’ 
st-office orders are requested to be 11 
ower of great ess 
and of e 
onstant, 
ry large rose-coloured 2 with 
"yea 
free — tik strong 
CER.—A very close compact- growing vases, | 
constant; smooth silky flower of first- 
ya: colour rose, with deep maroon bloteh on 
—A medium-sized flower of excellent 
constant, and a free bloomer ; rosy crimson 
ee the — 
lt the large nenea mulberry-coloured top 
lower ones, 
At present ait 1 15 
Po 
— K cloudy 
nent quality; 
spot on the ——— petals 
upper petal ar 
shading off into 
from the great amount of 
not 
h quality ; 
op petals, v be a ＋ hen. tigh t — Be wee 
1 
BOS „sized fresh-coloured flower, a glo 
— upper “petal, with “dark blotch ; a Sensi or white centre, 
am A, light rose; free bloomer, constant, and good 
Symonds’ Field 
. iat 
and Symmetry. 
are fit to & at any exhibition, 
ers will be executed strictly in rota- 
and Ham- 
e Fusarium, both in British and foreign specimens, d 
and the one, notwithstanding the great difference 
between extrem e forms, runnin rceptible 
pau into tho other. last | s 
en shah avoured 
degree, and e 
measure | topp 
isease, in every case ae by the 
little . 8 The portion of the stem near 
the tubers is blotched with “brown spots, which 
enter deeply into ga substance, so that not above 
half cells are 
and discolo 
pa ney superficial. 
n the tubers, strings, or Tet o 
cité 5 is distinctly visib 2 same 
is 
o present on the old sets. 
CHRONICLE. 
ed Po tatoes in our garden exhibits unequivocal | irre 
at the affection is entirely 
from that of the ge 
a and evidentl of 
must be which destroys the ae on whi 
erfect development. of nag ant and tuber 
ends, and that this ee commences 
may pass 
So 
through its course, but we shall watch _ progress 
e positive 
with interest, in the hope of gaining s 
information on the subject. 
A corRESPONDENT assuming the e signature wi 
of Dovstt Yew has sent us a Monstrous Foxorovx, 
of one of whose rach the fellawing in is a representa- 
tion, of the natural size. We notice it thus pro- 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
Werowespar, Jul: een 
Counray nimme 
— Di 
Hortic: 
ssseserssssesesess 
Ir is a very 8 opinion am 
have paid m tion to 
155 te 
2 i like thiss 
ane those: who 
Potato DISEASE both 
t, 
rs aa prada 
ving bee 
means im 
tendency to become double and by repeated so 
e boun: 
as.| sufferings, petab 
But it is by no 
ed. those lateral | 
flowers —— produce Planta — a still greater | 
ed. Both opinions were La 
bably right, tek a differs nt disease was the s 
under investigation We abe that d 
ase has. 
— 5 
last w occurred to us illustrative of 
ds of possi 
sidering the 
stri pest parecer: would be adde 
. garden. 
In a merely s pon aeai eren of view the struc- 
ure of the 
eep rich rose, with the peculiar ocellated spots o 
Digitalis. Near its base were 12 perfect 3 
1 another calyx, . F N 
at A eth. ourthly, 
secon r. gal er, with pre not ocellated 8 
almost n ay: Fi egularly lobe ped pS 
ular whorls, w 
— 
monstrous state. 
* regret to announce the death of the Rev. 
„M. A., Rector of Barham, Suffolk, at 
years, 
in the 91st ass of his age. 
dent of the Ento- 
mologieal Saen; of 3 r of the Ips- 
Museum, and Fellow of the Royal, Linnean, 
vaa — and Geological Societies, em being, 
honorary member of several foreign societies, 
has left behind him an imperi 
N 
at DA 
n of which were 
is express purpo 
of 200 of the wild * of this country, 
ctness of view as to their 
labours—his numerous ua i 
Transactions of the Linnean Society; the“ Intro- 
duetion to ae mg Ah ” written in conjunction 
; the entomological portion of his’ 
Bridgewater 1 Freative - On the History, Habits, and 
Instincts of Animals; and his root Fron (occupy= 
ing a 5 volume), . the Inse ects of the “ Fauna 
Boreali-Americana ” of Sir Joan Ricwarp~ 
SON ; it will 10 evident how td tthe 
piccaa r he has contri tributed to 
this without encroaching i in the sight 
gree on or social —— 
plary an 
by his prises pe all ran 
of the warmest of — — and most sim- 
e kin and — 5 of 
men. 
Mr. Warrer has made a very fair 
reply to our epi of the proceedings 
at the late meeting of the Ganůzxnns“ 
STITUTION. He admits that 
„votes should in general be given ee 
didates who have subscribed to its funds,” 
but he thinks Brach an exception tothe 
rule, and he —— to — — eto of 
renderin 
We 
proper pers to el i 
alone. to be pi E but so are we 2 to W 
who e 
a} them 
n 
sume 
the funds. as 
the charity w ere rich we would throw 
as wi as possible but — we see 
. and know 
funds cannot * distributed 8 a greater extent, them 
arity begins 
its funds. Iti oe well to talk of philanthropy, 
and self-denial, and patriotism ; it may be the prou 
this su aa t showed t a flower i bra that ir- boast of f. Bngland that she is the country in which 
Without amkk assertion — to the origin of regular flowers will occasionally bee regular; those virtu es flourish most; and we admit their 
these affections, it may be assumed: as a pretty well | and A ing so, they make to yá all the | existence regi wonderful extent ; but we submit 
established fact ams the two — in question are | deficiencies and a of the age struc- 45 self-interest is wi mass of the world 
characte d e period of their develop- ture, by taking on the cu 3 gular | paramount to — sach feelings, especially where 
ment by the 3 of a aperliat parasitic fungus, | flowers; le par 7 flower are ee in 3 is in ques 
the true Potato murrain by Bo otrytis s infestans, and various states of . and that the axis of a That such is cap case among many of f those who 
the other form of de y a F usarium i; it flower is owing point, le of indefinite ex- ad v the present sys nag be; 2 is A least. 
was ERKELEY, his moir on ion as soon as the forces whic the | bafficiently plain. There cor- 
me in the Journal of the Horti- production of a ve are — respon ndents who coolly doaa “that ue “they subscriba 
€ tral Sit," » that he believed that a little mould, What we found w. follo the hope that they may thus ure a 
figured un name of 2 tenuissimum, Firstly, a e 3 of 12 sepals, — to penx to some Jat the persons whom e they “happen 
was the ieee F m, the Dactylium | the base. y, a corolla as ebe’s of a guinea a year 1s no 
being very generally 5 in the Same tuft with 
rge 
Cup Rose, lobed with considerable eee ; 
scription 0 
er- an e way of procuring pensions of 
