5918501] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
Rickard’s Seedling, 
Duke of * — nw . ] 
Mr. F. e Best Fuc chsia, specimen iis (D 
W. Hoc 55 Admiral Reynolds. 
e. — — 5 — 1 Mr. 
Hect 
„W 
— e e Lady. o 
Mr. 
e Lake, Box, . Sir E. ea Du 
ia, Yello ndard, P 
e eg ore ney, 
duke 8 
aque e 
Paris, Géant de — Genie e), Mr. M. William Best 
ollection o; 2 M. Williams, 
rs, a C. 
argaret, — , Mr. «Tw 
—.—.— St. Mar argaret, Tricolor alba, * ral Lamoriciere. 
White Perfection), 3 Mr. G. N. Simmons. “Best ene Ad- 
miral Reynolds; 2d, Sir O. Lemon, Extra: Zinnias, 
Admiral Reynolds. Achimene es, Tana Reynolds.. Ba Balsa ams, 
Mr. F. Passingham. 
Reviews. 
The 9 a Creation. By J ohn Anderson, D.D. 
: Longmans, 8 vo; pp. 
Tars ya is po ‘introduction to the study of Geology, 
in the shape of essays on — e. ter of the country, 
through by a 
and 3 to the ‘Aloe "by wa 
France. he author tells 
ent, and col together a 
2 3 of notes, both of — own Areeni 
tions and of th othe bli 
works. 
of iliuatration N 80 iesit 
made use of i 
Dr. departments of nature, has ever been in such measur 
as 
sse mros x 
. — Warner, Cleopatra, Beeswing, 
m 
the secrets of a ure, i ssue in surest a 
Je, d 
t water, ar 
4 established, . e answer the finetions to — 
rforme thousands 
| 2a e attac pee 
esas tainin 
ia : | it does many thousands of Roses of all classes 
ed | of the Quee 
my è 
the RE ur and oise 
ries. ities be an. any nov roe the volume, it will be 
found not in the © subject-matter itself, nor in the mode 
of treating — by a the i 
sequence in —— tio 
formations, ps their, relations to each other in the 
countries passed 
commences 
eotiand: describing. in na the first 
— ain — pik the primary rocks | d 
to the ca — syste! im the se „in 
which tie treats on the eae of En ala, notices 
= Permian and 1 systems, the Wealden formation, 
Cretaceous 
Accordingly the 
of the geology of Sı 
part, all the 
> the ma latter being, perhaps, the better of the two. It bloo 
In iil, the physical union of — freely under ordinary treatment, but it requires e 
with England, the eological structure of Switzerland, | care in e head should be well thinned, and 
the Alps, e, Boulder formation an te shoots that are left for flowering suffered to remain 
ers, as well as the thiek of the earth’s crust, If shortened in much. e head of wood 
* with the ies of central heat, are dis cussed -y forme ed, but "heal will be The old Double | 
mined. The fourth and last Part contains an Yellow, when it opens well, is, as most peo an 
outline o of — L Prineiples of the science, and an admirable Rose; but 5 ten chances to one if it ex- 
of the oe in which the conelasions | pands 4 flower - b With the e epee! of sapan 
Pa AS SG 
b an outline 85 
eeg at by m d 
mosaical account of the creation 
The Stes 8 grt is goer and familiar, and the wor 
is wo hy of a peru lovers 
ö these 
s of science, the deeper they go into 
he 
isclosures of the 
nowledge. 
and purpose of God i in pe 
e see in many instances what 
po 
9 
5 
85 
E 
r 
ad 
B 
° 
Lx] 
4 
he erse, we discover, is not only 
und by laws eee and unchanging : the laws | 
themselves have an end to serve, a particular result to 
accomplish. Accumulations of matter are b 
together with r definite precise Wr living su 
rz karan nstructed with orga suited 2 eir po a 
xistence ; 12 tions of air, eart ter, are 
good v ts &e., for the 
Mirai of eee the text; but the ere being no 
index, a student cannot find, witho ut considerable loss 
of time, ea cùt he may wish to refer to. 
Garden Memoranda. 
„ Paul's eee CHESHUNT. e 
seriptions, it is scarcely possi 
n of Flowers” at almost any season of 
the year maak perhaps, the at © dead of 
recat without findin 
thing to repay one for a 
inning of Jun 
ette, 4 which 
are to be found mee. $ the most valuable Roses | 
in 8 cont: flower from aa middle 
of < une to 
with them are the Provins, Moss, Albas, Da yer 
and their hybrids, together with the Frenc 
hybrid Provins. few of the best of ear 
Roses Bren 
ses are 2 uval, 
Coupe ore Hébé, Frederick I., Fulgens 
Paul ; 
e 
ee Thou 
| = ami in colour, 
rought | ad 
bstances 
wW 
h | tion, which is 
nearly the 13 or July; and contemporary ar 
Bourbons heme sory in flower, ed of the best 
w 
see them in 1 
as a nice white, perhaps in som 
bad 
yellow ; Eelair de Jupiter is a good climber, cherry 
aroline M 
ee also deserves a place for this purpose. 
y possess them ; å 
e rather tender, and 
some protection from . The 
Baronne Prevost, and La Reine? These are the 
of : 
and th at which they 
now sold brings them within the reach of even the 
coitagor. Comte Bobrinsky i 
General Cavaignac, Madame de A gee gg pb Rosine 
tin, Duchess of Sutherland, and Laurence de 
as | Montmorency. 
2 aul are i 50. Ras a double span- roofed house 
for wintering small pot Roses in. It is 
about? 20 feet bsg 3 7 feet hig 
the 
also effected by means of woo 
lators placed i in the brick. walls which form 
and ends. e passages are immedi 
i a 
y means 
tt stoves, one at each side about way 
either end of the house. The roof consists of sixteen 
pieces screwed — and, if necessary, may be en- 
tirely removed in om a 
f o flo ists f ‘heads es Roses, M 
cultivate Dahlias and abe 
n; 
but their beauty amply repays a little 8 attention 
Among Damask, Alba, French, gu hybr 
Soetmans, Sextus 
MadameAudot, Princesse 
de Nanteuil, D’ Aguesseau, Jeanne d’Albret, Marjoli 
Obh Pashot, 
d La lupté itia ersian 
Yellow are te two best faci yellows in cultivation, nol 
75 
2 
5 
uds; 
Paul dans; v which are not very n 
fe 9 of any note have been added to any ol 
Owing to the long continuance of dry 
we have ex season, Autumn Roses have 
rhaps the best ar ig Ville de ei, Madame erimson ; 
weather which twigs 
S| named kinds which we were—Sno whall, white 
elicata, Fr * white ; osea alba, and white 
e, light b lush ; Rosea — iag light pink ; 
nchantress, deep pink; Fulgens, dark shining 
8 perfeeta, sg i Napoleon, red 
ele 1 „ pu reddish 
3 
Model of Perfection, whee. a chocolate ground; 
3 
3 
yo 
trees and shrubs, object being to sl 
purchasers good examples of what they buy in a 
small state. 
jeh wo amw here. ine in asing sual 
we saw consisted. in using 
linders about ob long, composed of alte: 
layers or —— of — and mat 
the study of natural history and of geol flow 1 st places, and Messrs: Paui’s 8 5 
ticular, 3 — e faba disrepute, and | Nu ex The H Per- in this way a large house may be readily filled with 
to lower the moral and intellectual character petuals, not above 20 years back, limited to the searlet | moke, and it is said in Lead — H 
n what point of view the au regards geology will | F Rose du but now, on ae- | trouble, beyond that of lighting th 1 six or ure 
be apparent from the followi unt sot =- numbers and beauty, usually the glory | small Jast eee * pker 
The magnificent , whose cou the mnal en are season. almost not possess Brown's fumigator, may * 
have bee eing se * i “Primordial nge- destitute z flowers, offering 3 respeet ~ striking a trial. 
ments, in the geological phenomena of the earth’s crust, ning with their brethren t ourbons, Noisettes, | ee 
oad lations to the vast planetary. syst f eas, which are at present everywhere a. 1 
which it is a member, is the result over all of design and tolerably gay. This is a fact worth remembering ; for ee e tin 3 4 Grasses, &c.— I have often 
intelligenee. The arn wrought in the e Pe „ with ir t beauty and strong been suddenness vi which 
ture and framework, from period to period, have not | Rose e, have of late been their wa the r — 
— boal by merely mechanical changes 5 into gardens, to the exelusion = fe Noisettes: and | (Triticum repens and Alo 
ph; nditions. are order and method hinas; but in a very dry year, year, like the sar and | number) gro ng by the sides of walls 
-i inorganic, no less ex in the — D, ‘ito in naturally dry soil it + wilh be peg hat the latter | în. minute s and i 
matter in any of the earth’s ons has been | are our . grateful fei ien „ | surface, Soy neg mgd n ex! 
bi There is prospective contrivance por for . | of fresh „which otherw uld have searee. | or had left fieh cells by a 
The alte made in the outward surface, whether | We, however, remarked that Géant des illes, a | for others, Thave 5 ‘found ‘aie ee 9 
of sea or land, have been always such = were best | Hybrid Perpetual, and e y the glory of the Rosery, 1 = -legge el mite, bern under 
adapted to the-habits and eee f suecessive | as far illi colour is concerned, was flowering | stones, but in the 
tribes, “And the whole amount of change, in both | finely, as were aiso one others. 
5 erent tn i si ha at aa Ri aes iota hata 
