Моүвмвев 21, 1863.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 1107 
p the race of ia эг which the plant is indigenous. 
ong jo urney ve EAr the p^ of the flower and different 
e some ' 6,000 mi а. һе been att farie ат shades of colour, we have completely outstripped 
жи important results to йойгпнате, То the Orientals. We could now send them man 
á x Senit от all о ho ый -like doc d са оа new kinds which would astonish them, and whic 
R. WILUAM BULL е дЫ to — d E "Pon om whieh ar so common ín our|they would по doubt highly prize. In t 
iN Auer en enia ила perds агада ни. OM ompon class іп partieular we have left them far 
нутта Roc pertice mand sema, ar now rond? ges of the varieties of the Chrysanthemum | behind. Like the Irish emigrant, the little 
Chronicle, Nov. T. М “sport” іп а very remarkable wa Ow to | **Chusan Daisy ” would seem to have been mue 
са IVE PRICED LIST of Novelties can be had on | - cause, airs e are unabio t поа а | more useful and produetive abroad than at home. 
Establishment for New and Rare Plants, King's Road, | plaut will sometimes send ou Side-shoot от 
Сорил ошат i ranch with flowers of a different can from 1» | Tag annals of Horticulture bear witness to the 
BUTTON'S and if this shoot is taken off and propagated | success een has attended at least many of the 
wn I. А. 8 
SORTES TP арыйлар. а 
Unrivalled Collections of Bulbs, | 2“ 
wil eured. -k 
—— GUINEA COLLEC- |and favourite kind with sg Pe ctp pit m 
TION of BULBS for BLOOMING in ees y Mr. SALTER, of Hammersmith, and | ieniniiuel am A short, man fr 
LN \ заа рд COLLECTION for 220181 "Queen of PNE, has tbrown out піз we чаары. owe their T this 
— d BORDERS. several distinot kinds in this way. Its first sport | soupe, Some have been crossed and intercrossed 
j or particulars see Sorrows AUTUMN | was of a rosy-pink colour, an nd rtly ip бы, they haye been thoroughly ее 0, aud 
CATA OGUE, which may be had Gratis | another branch produced yellow flowers, and is ПОФ yield us seminal varieties fo an unlimited 
ЧЕРТА now known es ollections as the * i e while in others, as 16 were, ће first sod 
SUTTON & Вомв, of England. This prolitio kiud has produced only has as been turned, and rieh diggings remain 
Royal Berks Seod Establishment, several other the persevering operator. Con- 
Beni act M ЙЫНДА "ГА one of which has flowers of а pure white colour, ролей hat has been already done in this 
HE Ehk ЖӨ: TH aatataaanren ide LIMITED | while in noter instance they dre i genet rose. Айар м Жа жаК abore. DE 0 inals as yet 
D COMPANY LIMITED. ese changes have not been confined to the дош, which is from year to year aecumulatin 
er an 'Offüces: 68, Welbeck Street, Cavendish Square, Lich alone, for varieties with nra. күч in our gardens, should set some of our busy an 
rem М ЫРДЫ арЫ ЕКА eS rn also been produced by the plant we have just intellig ent cultivators to w б 4 ereating new 
/0() ЕА Wiper ava mani named, The soris named Christine” and ^ jul forma оГ foral Panty, Which va cannot doubt 
in tho FULHAM NURSERY, and on Wednesday Night or быс чы agio s r produ EE Ner 4 ^ the | await only the fiat of a clever не alil to 
И у ning the 12th inst., many valuable Plants | S: . ши, dert e most beau- 1 i і і 
stolen. бошоп among others tho folowing:sComorimE п} АР (ho ae А а oc usher them into Hg Ore vl have indeed been 
А К . 
VARIEGATA, — aa LEPTOCLADA, А, Bei: de DULABRATE: аз sae er PERDE which is i я Я: ыя жечу аз орен, 4 as witness some of the fine productions of 
мону —— | the others already mentione: as Mr. NY; but much о doubt. i 
ill lormation th Шаа to the Convietion of more, ou Bor aio 
the e Ofender б Offenders Ee on RE in опе instance, a kind with yellow flowers, and | to be зое: even with "ihe em, à and they аг 
[Чын Nursery, a iu "Овну E боа, _ in another а lilac sort has been prod Man КАЕ not the only plants whieh invite experiment with 
REAT FRUIT c DHEIBANCHEMUM SHOW | other асана might be brought forward, ай |a fair M of something like a suecessful 
SOURD, fnd CHRYSANTHEM Hw UA 66. ali A showing the results of some curious chemieal | result, o there is the pus and Important 
, milak ке placo su en Mel Birmingbam, in con. | ation whieh is continually going on in the stems | class # ul plants open to experi ent—our 
t in t the Cattle, ‘Boult eTA E PES" rt e A cre ut ты | fruits T vegetales and feld ‹ à 
БЕБИ" ipt and THURSDAY, December the -— shet i es of the Chry тА in cultiva- | these, but the economical plants, such as Co ied 
утс. ре CE M No da 1 ks unte s 9 which latter happens to be just now one of the 
о in number, e now | d 
Collocti epe? d e oady, aee к р ^ , | most aded ^ ot crops, 
оп ) are now ready, and may on LS i ii TSY uo а thousand, А poster забава eb and further partieulars which 
lication, 
close on THURSDAT, November 26. n the flowers has also been 
c Jas. Peray, ме ае ^о | лаат Sales of — red, orange, yellow ГЕ — next tel, iin — 
| lila à " еў а о has м have been led, rene to call attention af 
: а thi t, to the wide field which lies before 
р: Gardene rg ЫШЫ еа a bl us Баша, is still one MEN де bo ныз ott the | the. ы not so much from an summi) 
TURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 не саме ov kinds with | аз from а decorative ve point of vi еа е Д 
| been ey АЗАР in These may give some. be теб 
THE сасе і is опе of the gayest and | variety in eolour and in form, whieh our florists EE at garden gem Е АУА 
most useful z our garden flowers, 1% к uces its | may yet ад to ес account. euh Ar ВЫШ d TA MATIS, 
b!ossoms т тїз at a season when our summer avin sited the great exhibitions of the!summer, has seryed us ad E p 
favourites, vitii ав Geraniums, ееп, and | Ch rysanthomnm lue faa in the Agrienttard "E. climbers the Clematis iador, occupies 
Roses, have all passed away, and thus forms, as Б Hali, and at Stoke Newington, we may make |. high position, especially since Ale 
were, B Dok i the chain which unites the bea on a few ES on the cultivation of this. {үө ной cation of the ттан y Chinese 
wi Е a ire уж It is very hardy i autumnal flower. Тһе barbarous system of|Japanese kinds, which we owe to the t€ 
cons n on, easily e g larg 11 g sive ings of Mr. Fonn NE. Both ©, 
in great profusion, and is useful to all а of losen to be formed on the top of a tall, Le in M endi egri ie 5 and C. i nd now well 
the people, whether they dwell in in palaces many — bare stem can poly, we think, be | known, are plants of à foremost rank in the ciass 
cottages, 1 тау well enoug igh to to whioh they bel aud they have alread 
Аз a window flower too, at this dail season ot the | y yielded—eccerulea at t Jil sodio fine тает Д 
year, nothing ean ass it. and асс їп тб: like D du, but the ong varieties ot greater ca if possible than that 
f 
Upwards of 30 years ago 49 eafless stems ought to be kept at home. If ssessed by the originals, But it oceurred to Mr, 
introduced to England by the Horttonhtorsl Society ен сап only be produced in t e maaner they | JACKMAN, Hi the fem of G. JACKMAN & i aaga 
of London and cultivated in the Chiswick Garden. | are scarcely worth the ng, to hybridi i ah pakis 
They attracted а good deal of attention at һе Qur idea of perfection in Cultivation would | pale blue flowers, with C. Viticell b 
time, and were largely muon amongst Ње | реа bushy plant covered with bloom, and at {һе | Hendersoni, whieh have very dark red-purple 
Fellows of the Society. It would appear that un same time exhibiting а green and healthy foliage flowers. The result has been the production of a 
had been finer and more attractive kinds Фра all over it. Тһе small-fowered Pompons which | batch of seedlin. 
that had been previously introduced. Ав p we met Wi 
Chrysanthemum at that time did not produce | most part, remarkable examples of good cultiva- 
he. seeds in England, no new varieties were | tion, but the taste displayed З in training them is 
er gsy 
t with at these exhibitions were, for the | some of which will be most valuable acquisitions 
to the class of hardy climbing shrubs, Cut flowers 
ot two of ат exhibited on the X ы аары 
eh 
(ч still eapable of some improvement. e table-|to (Ang. 4, 1803) obtained each an mons 
training system seems almost too idee: to be|award of a First-elass pou: ; ind PS us d 
ext period of new introduetions of t leasing. The pyramid is a more na га га, deseryed ES. for certainly not ia their 
Miet occurred in NN т 1838, e pega when Ше flower x more 
Cmax and irregularly than are nerally Cnr DR 
forward a number se-dlings which had allowed to do. БЕЙ EE Ч T these two which were nam dod 
MET ERU, e это є oliage—we again pem dll c x: 0-VIO а wh 
merly in cultivation. ieties them mc imen, are cared for. C. Jack- 
named rm While we es ive ise e our ue 
** Formosum," ** LR — g P aed Sini 
santhemum growe ae igi 
чат in rome cule publie, and may still be in th man of thei fav ite - e | is rather ET T 1 1, as well аз 
Мт. vr! 
We are а инде ed by uns н y that of & "rm 
of B s of seed saved ann f r to six sepals fi 
нете Бу т has been. ms SCENE far behind the ла 5 іп а little point; these sepals were 
ас, Ss Mi. ass ч а 
raise many new kinds of great beauty both in form o 1 ио dw ou s 
in е0 and he i. on MIC to pied year — m od и, and penali А 7 | vivlet on the upper, colour 
by year ndeed, now that seed e procu named, i i no uncom Din esi editi |remarkable for ча рн ; 
annually, both at heme and abroad, there seems covered with hundred dred com чык cf which i - ne. wing from the Pase 10 ihe «PE, —— 
no limit to the umber of 1 new varieties whieh may | as large as näreds the standa rds above a ica а линген Ji^ by three «һай» ра (М 
be obtained. The little **Chusan Daisy," intro- | aes upper surface, which was also rugose and veiny, 
duced from China іп 1846, has played а E qo eme | d їп haviog its leaves 
аан аата бы тал Um ына i Бирү тетү d e Ug e pr 
теа йында S, English seed are Е. P than t are in| smooth, and its flower 
ot are now much more numerous 
