47—1850.] THE 
WATERER’S * 1 OF AMERICAN 
nmnounce his new 
deseriptive CA OGUE or n 1 
S, ROSES, & — is ublished, aud 
gos 0.5 pe fox posta ostage — 3 — s 
Knap Hill . Woklag, 
Sur 
who has — iden of planting the eer 
aamiin smia postes them s of this — 
È RK PLANT 
OHN WATER ERS CATALOGU Uh or AMERICAN | 
be atis on 
every R ORR — wor ae * of bade. thus affording p ur- 
a ae 
c 
pone rican — 
GLENDINNING — — st 
R. a aluable kinds, which have been proved a 
ate N n of N Society of L. 
perfect 
— rds, 
ure 
th : posse 
loguse ma: 2 
MESSRS. “STANDISH AND NOBLES new de- the 
scriptive CATALOGUE OF SELECT HARDY ORNA- 
MENT AL r is Besides 8 and al, jst —— for four 
vation of 
cont nains a d ar inan Desert pt gd the 
2 aoe s of bene alotaxis Fortunii, Cry 
meria mpdnies, Q Fuste kolè hylla and inversa, Viburnum 
seid eae ropes recent introductions 
north of China, quite z —— 
srs, S. and N, take ity of stating that t they 
give arte for La ng i out New Grounds and Plans for Im- 
Provements; atso 1 at > 5 e 
128. per dozen; — ria 
Mitchell's Royal Albert, 128 strong Plant ts 
of the New Currant ‘ Castle,” dozen, or 
N 100; and Rigid Rasp berry, 10s, per 300. per with the L 
Trade. Post-o orders are requested to be 
—— JOSEPE MATT, Manor Farm, Deptford, near 
ov. 23. i 
G JACKMAN, Woking, 
N- — — mile from the W he South. 
EAA announce ett he 2 * iat 
anew ow alla rai egalat A 5 e Plants, 
pr — — 
er mab } 
F IB on, Fral and 8 
—— MAN — 
tock of very healthy Seedling CEDRUS DEO 
in 0 25 to 5 inches, at from 81, to 107 per 1000. 
bi monton, Nov. 23. 
— — 
ondon, es r 
—.— ean fit for immediate anting adapted 
Ae, ndards Si half — 
the In 
gold with the Coreopsis? Unti 
been made with 
Be dozen; aud | selves much oe 
GARDENERS? 
graceful, much easier to c as prone to — 
into varieties, and hardy e of tender; yet the in 
lumpish Dahlia is seen ev 
formed t DAIN i, e in it; and t 
Hollyhock is nsigned to a few places where, as at 
* ‘dined taste still ag des fashionable } 
race peculiarly 
mums, 
— 
Surely it to improve 
these | of 
ancient pot which are so well suited to our climate 
il 
they are incapable of improvement ; who trie 
experi Who has d to cross the 
Prince’s Feather with the Cockscomb ! or - 
lies-bleeding wi a Tricolor? or e with 
the -Dwarf Larkspur th 
tum Se pur e Persi arm ria the 
straggling Buckwheat (Polygonum a or 
dian Pink wi arnation ? or he Mast 
at least as much care as has been 
‘Shown in managing the Caleeolatia, e or the 
we must be permitted to 
te tifali treated; and that we are doing our- 
CHRONICLE. 
5 is as showy as a . infinitely more | that 
e Windsor to the King of 
y — abandoned |i 
Pansy, | se 
say that our ancient Haende P. 
_739 
the Muscat, ‘nor that 6 die B Gr 
but one peculiar to itself, . which must fed 
order to form any idea of it!” This Grape, it 
is stated, could bear a n with those sent from 
the Belgians. Its origi 
~ — ile, satiifactotily ascertained by the author 
of t 
We o the kindness of M. de Jon of 
ee 4 a batik of this Gite, and additional de- 
pecting it. He says that the 22 nal 
old, an as raised f 
out a league and 
hol ; that i in a 1848 a bunch of it wa toa 
gardener of the name of Dr Craan, of f Brassey oho 
obt re] i prize for 15 and it was In 
September last another age . 5 ibited by 
, and this a also 
awarded. If considered $ be real y igp Kas ba of 
cultivation, ind new, Malle. — 
intends devoting the proceeds of the sale t 
charitable 
It is impossible not to appreciate the kind-hearted 
irit in Which — lady proposes to apply the 
produc T to benevolent objects; and 
the G. 
e regret to 8 that her 
‘tions are ee, i ppointm 
When received, many of the kan rries were bruised 
shall be d that e riments of the elass and decayed, pring to the bunch having been too 
gested are e We believe them to be likely > | loosely: d in cotton, and, in forming an opinion 
to lead t — important consequences, os, especially of what the Grape is, this circumstance had to be 
in thos where the result of su would be —— n into —— 3, but — . making — 
perenn 0 allowance or any o 
i improve a po ror A vo pra — ‘way, we come to no other conclusion than that this 
those who have no better — N or greater skill Raisin Royal De Caan is neither a flavour, nor 
than are required to deal 
ther plants on which to daes their 1 
Take 15 er instance the neglected Daisy, than which 
DARA | no species pad be z pd, which more strikingly 
il 
The Gardeners Chronicle, 
SATURDAY, NO , NOVEMBER 23, 1850. 
MERTINGS FOR EENID THE ENSUING WEEK. 
25—Geographical 
Sonny, € 1 
i Oit Baete, és 
26 Medical and Chirurgical . . . Shr. 
i 9 
1 ia 
mf: ae ——————4 b. 
e f. 
that sa 8 under . or what may 
be expected cuit ning from a combination of 
patience and 
Everybody who remembers the cottage gardens of 
‘his youth will — the double Daisies which Vat 
ther borders and un 
as prone e to N 8 colour asa C 
chase to which they are — gee as fixed 
the 
sters when obtain 
it 
100 REI 
ti Z 
deserted for en fo 25 j 
gardet be the ‘most 1 To- 
3 = compte! there 
is no beauty like a Pansy, an spar 
pen ig 4. for a Cineraria, in t tel are F age isa 
crime, and ag owers ar 
to the or onde, We eise Ber when Ca 
were the rage; a Brunsvigia, or an 
ape plants 
btful company. 
ollies to have no mat Shall we 
of a few fashionable rac es, to the entire 3 
the ancient inhabitants “ot the flower-garden. A 
t lovers, 
th 
2 
tly 
teilessly consigned n l 
xia, or a Protea, 
ir objects impossibie to 
few beautiful 
| tipped with rose quilled, 
e they 
appea 
|| having in the 8 with tien 
e elegance wd stature. 
| they will 
Tan is n 
as a fine tale 
ce 
Hort 
of the volume 
3 
imagine 
white, ros white 
red- eyed, richly variegated, | ov 
r to combine all that is mn Ma 
We trust That |e 
3 thoug 
wronght among 
Y | observed a 
4e Seurlet — 
free the gardens of 
find in any respect of the — importance 
| the common Muscat 
of Alexandria! It must be ad- 
mitted that it is not good, but all Grape growers 
iknow that the Muscat itself varies extremely im 
ey ——. to ee pr mea in which it is treated. 
eaders will be y 
obliged 10 M. DE Sones fo having given us the 
means of 
— — to all 
. by thus true character of a 
which, in the dee * — an examina- 
— IN = NORTH OF aA 
saa a wero AND IRELAND 
f ot "Edina y Hagh a gah Path), H 
0 in a e, ew ok 
addi A good collection of yak tae 
stovo and babe ‘ 
collection of Orchidaceou 
i ble 
an that o Drum- 
variety for small beds; even 
it an acquisition. 
nothing that gehn swallow so 
about a new Grape. Not that the 
poblic appetite has become 
velties, but that a 
against the magnificent exagge 
ons with which what purports to be a new Variety | d 
of this fruit is introduced to the notice of their 
goodn 
in September 1848, at the 
cultural Exhibi 
tion. It 
eases in the above mentioned 5 4 415 
for 1848, under the name of the 
pe Craan. Iti — a white vari eras the 
is 
reedily le 
garden, h 
deseribe 
impossible to give a real description of such 
a 
without a plan ; and i you ba a pian, pi bat & 
in the Annales de la Societe dull affair, 
vou must see the origi 
extent and of the delight p produced 7 the di 
and small masses of colour skilfull 
of its 
i 
it 
planted om e patterns, 
a 2 effect. 
descri 
— y high divouted, ‘sugary, a 
sty, extreme with “a indescribable aroma, hick is Fats 
en, = seen from „ was 3 ee 
ened by the grandeur of the surrounding park scenery. 
