LIST OF NEW AND RARE PANTS. 
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ARTICLE VIII. 
SALPIGLOSSIS INTEGRIFOLIA. 
Called also Petunia violacea, and Nierembergia phaenicea. We 
have adopted the first name, not because we consider it superior to 
the others, but because the plant is best known by that name. It is 
the name given to it by Dr. Hooker, but Mr. Don, in Sweets 
Flower Garden, has referred it to Nierembergia, and Dr. Lindley on 
a further investigation considers it a Petunia. There are but few 
plants in our gardens which surpass this in brilliancy of blossoms and 
general beauty. It is a native of Buenos Ayres, from whence seeds 
were received at the Glasgow Botanic Garden. It succeeds extremely 
well in the open border, during summer, but must be treated as a 
greenhouse plant in winter. It forces well; and when grown in a 
greenhouse, with its branches tied to the bars of a trellis, it soon 
covers a space three or four feet square with its leaves and flowers. 
When planted out of doors a whole bed should be entirely devoted 
to it, if convenient, so that the branches can be allowed to spread 
carelessly and become entangled with each other. It then continues 
flowering from August to the middle or end of October; if the 
weather be mild. Some beds, so planted at Chatswortli, last summer, 
made a very splendid show. It will grow in any soil, but thrives 
best in one that is rich and has been long cultivated. And it requires 
rather a sheltered situation. It will readily increase by cuttings, 
which may be put in at almost any season, and treated like those of 
the Geranium. It also produces seeds, and this is the best mode of 
increasing it. 
ARTICLE X.—LIST OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, 
NOTICED IN THE SECOND VOLUME. 
Agrostemma pyreniaca, li p. 
* Alpinia? maguifiea, ss . 
* Alstromeria aurantiaca, f b. 
* - psittacina, f b . 
* Amelanchier florida, h s. 
Andromeda Jamaicensis, g .. 
* Aristolochia cymbifera, s s. 
* Arabis rosea, . 
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