Jeux 20, Зет мб] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 671 
ioios. Seeds, y роз | their common origin would never have | ваше individual exactly co итерди, no two species 
TM. PAUL Choice 1 Su кз» „үе late A. PAUL, je aS cted, Е have equal differences, and no а countries pre- 
W of the Cheshunt Nurseries) has to offor the following| Now it is the prime opinion amongst horti- | sent all the аф орав species common to both, 
Seeds of tbe best Lv F jeu lturists and y ung gardeners especially, that | nor are the speeies of any 696 countries alike in 
N-— eem p p а чазы he sudden sports last men- | number and kind." 
Gerria a i mixed .. l&to? » пены {һе n is effected by the operator | The fact that по p of an individual is eyer 
Hollyhock Sole to 4 » | influeneing the plant, and causing it to vary; but | exactly reproduced is is 58-ы, ough. Itisasom- 
Delphinium ; d iis b eng v | the principal object of this artiele is to show, that mon scho ol- -boy s triek фс. that E cannot 
CEnothera Drummondii nana .. 0 "» | result deduced from the practice o , or leaf о very 
tem mixed. "Em "з i » eei that the operator exerts S influence | gar кечсе df P. ow “dionale it d to ар the 
e ristiam name in full) o new v rogeny true to the parent; that 
— T Waltham Croes; N. кү has alaye tho power of. extinguishing + spem does not Bored m Ул independent 
o and often. of perpetuating it, but not of| өгөй and that {һе races of one plant raised 
"NICHOLS SON desires to inform his ding an of 2 manifestations i in the progeny he | in, Belgium differ from the races of the и 
W.3 numerous friends that Һе can now эс aimh ere тесла Belore p ceeding expou und th da Fra ance, Holland, or England. 
er han 3002 diri rr n me rer E рч, all Tm m t thi d hold good i in other matters ; the peyeholo- 
Al true Cvm € or E nd m ; to su пеһ a dos gist tells f one man is never 
A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of the above may be had thinks and | exactly re soduool 4d another, and the pain 
Grower ав under, and а and corrected | thinker as Mr. Danwiw (for he n y rep 
Ке зр 4 when some этно irn жрм, though he may carry |and sculptor assure us that it is ы ваше Sy the 
weslis san above ell or bability) much | human and face. Moreover, we are com- 
Pie or ths чш bray o ie me e чынае сс (ss, etel ignorant of what differences will appear in 
What is written here is for the е ration of | the progeny of any plant ог animal; all we know 
Ж. P , Gentlem d Others. gardeners, men who are in i dieti acute observers, | is that there d анду be differences between 
RO TH OE AND MC ORRIS | respectfully announce [= laborious experimenters, and successful ones | all the progeny and their parent, and that they 
that their Н — of ROSES is d in bloom ey I aen the oues new varieties e | may be so great, as in the cases of the Thuja and 
and aro unusually fin à dere ere. MER нро » Сеск ANTS, |. us shows) ; ; but whose profession leaves | Be egonia mentioned above, as to кын, Е idea of 
healthy. id Enn DET with flower- buds, which, wi! lites e for abstract деа ning а — pe ge. Bo itis wi he human 
— "Fruit and general Nursery Stock, are well he tendenoy to. р roduce a var RR offspring is | individual. noy eite a pinta r on the 
Tram na ICM and Bishopsgate Streets 12 times | inherent in the ci an of mer. plan nt, an. doo. strength of a lib Mg intimate Toren with 
aad la 30 Se. ertoenaa, Rotten, which adjoins the Nursery indeed, a necessity of its existeno ; there is no | your own and wife's persons and fa — to paint a 
po of your 
адр 5 ursery, Leytonstone, N.E.—July 20, 1861. р ins Led is 
is to be when 
The Garyenerg Chronicle, arrived at man- 
^ hood, or asking 
TURDAY, JULY 20, 1861, tim cube hes 
C presided over 
FOR THE ENSUING CN education of both 
Tesspas, a iy s [tora TRUE (Plon € Com. a V parents to ргор- 
trei ores е; р 4 
ege career of their 
E ee ue. m vire Шы: The 
the attention. of TP E n Á no xs 4 
Now отун, ture essenti- { 
aliy бшш in subjecting living organisms should it be soif 
| tastes, and caprices of map, who oblig Rupe & 
ы Y wants or admires in its natural condition 7 j ў vail сует е 
to live e he _р1еавев, however far f " ) s vaile over the 
native -— } N \ E. d ces ? 
in that | „ы to i ур, ne 
It is true that many ends are served i phia ' «ғ, XC idi NOR TT BM ; 
hortionliury, and ahy qualifications, т j _ =,- впеоеваїүе, 
artistin, ud ME mie, are required to make a good | — N t mes is to 
Ah Y if 
proved, valid 
гоша, of - doctrine that 
ther are limits 
pr L bud t hold inte: 
m a EA, ard one pretends ааваа have 
past history you th турдун Vua Uo чал а £ any garden 
it yon ar dien plant previous to its ` historic 
Men We all know that it will never reproduce 
йшй тез Tres ааа 7 ошонтсе, Drogen. 6 диа eres о Татан а ee erst oountorpart, at ac ve эла eee 
it is one link in a chain iof life of whose beginning | varieties, and all h m g 1] зр "Ваё the departure from the type is to be, the 
you ean бан nothing, but of whose бн if you | choosing which of them is best suited. to. his les that it will vary o mly ni certain 
i ough e cen um er & false 
^ 
ith 
m agate Я - p — oug nable | wants, Me again selecting from its progeny | Tm —————Ó—— 
rou to predieate something; wbat is is stil better suited, and n til his| Тноѕ i i 
?—for instance, will all future linke bed 9| wants are  satisfled—there is no reason to might "IT E m 
the esent or the contrary? Your answer w sup that the еч progeny of the › | botany by earefi о 
at if à жы been left to itself, would have di Я 
aa make the of this seed | fered t e 
олу also alter its colour, very its form, | gard 
care ; the js that 
evidente you point to the multifarious changes | been sd Htt the par ; p тч paribus, 
moe or пса skill; to m ч, x 
oxinias, Fuchsias, an d 
leaved Aroids and o кк ug ЕГОР inherent power of Fiais Эй its 
|a definite 
xis ature a few years one a ould now be directed, xi first prin- 
ago; or the still more wonderful се detailed in| eiples in п Biology: There s p a pangs it De. 
SBEN n Hooxzn's ** Introduction to the roban ad Flora," the 
ing its whole floral organisatio E; the Tiloja pendula which broadly announces that anes belief in sus taken of the теч е D eet ^ Kmgden 
зек m from T. orientalis in s menti IGES' nursery, | incessant vari. riation, acr if true, goes far мает ттт itself from a “ double " gem. of view 
andtothe ra) ende oe (according | overthrow the dogma. th that кем C ean v in 1861 ust betaken. Am 
to old MILLER) under the в f P. orientalis, | only within certain lim s this:— amount "of f info rmation d application would be 
мич eer т |t for this task. Не should start 
puoted, the changè betwee the origin мет ав, тан forma aro more or ar prone to vary n| fit for зө with clear ideas 
| 4 
эж жу is so o бе been | symmetrical, no two are exact counterparts, no two | be registered , Chrysanthemums, Dahlias, Chinese 
Moa » А imported, о fum, Pv. same | individuals аге exactly alike, no two parts of the the | Asters, Daisies and other Co mposites misnamed 
