1875 . ] 
TWO NEW FUCHSIAS. 
129 
tlie plan to all wlio have not heard of it before—those who have done so will 
not require any recommendation. So far as I can learn, the first person to adopt 
this plan was Mr. Hopwood, gardener to F. Gye, Esq., Springfield House, 
Wandsworth Eoad, one of the largest private growers of Grapes in the London 
district.—S abina. 
TWO NEW FUCHSIAS. 
F the many novelties amongst Fuchsias which have lately been acquired, 
few are more strikingly distinct or more desirable than those of which we 
t{G) subjoin illustrations, which have been kindly lent to us by Mr. H. Cannell, 
to who is not only well known as an expert, and also as a first-prizeman in 
Fuchsia-culture, but who has also, for some few years, been devoting his energies 
to the establishment of a first-class nursery for the propagation and sale of these 
and other soft-wooded plants. 
Fuchsia Mrs. II. Cannell was sent out last year, but is a standard variety 
which will not soon be displaced. We saw blooms of it in 1873 which were the 
most perfect we have yet met with amongst the double whites, being remarkable 
for their large size and faultless form, for the unusual purity of their compactly- 
