Phlóx var. Princesse Ma- Ribes rubrum 221 | Tetragonothica texana 131 Siandard of Per- Rondelètia speciosa 378 Torenia asiatica 317. 509 509 285 Trachelium cæruleum 426 380 185 variegata 380 130 380 519 Schubertia graveolens 401. Verbena Melindres 360 462 fine varieties named 519 561 Vernonia Lindheimera 131 509 102 speciosa 8. 267. 581 493 493 493 221 132 Rhodora canadensis 132 trilobata Rhododendron chamæcis- Státice Dickensonii 509 Weigelia rosea 500 Ribes aureum 222. 317 purpurea 509 Witsenia corymbosa 499 222 Stephanotus floribundus 286. Yucca filamentosa Gordonianum 317 Sisyrinchium longistylum 499 superba rotundifoliuin 290 509 PROSPECTUS OF THE THIRTEENTH VOLUME (New Series—Vol. III.) OF THE MAGAZINE OF HORTICULTURE, EDITED BY C. M. HOVEY. Published in monthly octavo numbers. - At $3 per year in advance. A few complete sels, in 12 Volumes, may be had, half bound. THE THIRD VOLUME of the New Series of the Magazine, (13th of the entire work,) will commence January 1, 1847. The design and object of the Magazine was to furnish information upon Horticulture in every department, and the Twelve Volumes already issued, contain an amount of original and practical information, particularly adapted to our climate, no where else to be found. Every important subject has been written upon; and the young practitioner, as well as the more experienced amateur, will find abundant information in its pages to guide them successfully through all their Horticultural operations. It will be the object of the Magazine to continue to record all the discoveries and improvements in the art of Gardening-progressive as it must be—and to disseminate widely all new or improved modes of cultivation. In Pomology, the same descriptions and engravings of fruitsand brief notices of all new or little known varieties, as they are yearly introduced—will form its PRINCIPAL and attractive feature. In this department the Editor will have the assistance of the most experienced Pomologists in New England. Already a larger number of New FRUITS have been described in the Magazine, than in any other work extant. The entire experience of the late Mr. Manning, extending over a space of quarter of a century, will be found in the several volumes. The very large and extensive collection of pears and other fruits in New England affords facilities for descriptions of fruits unequalled in other sections of the country. |