PROPERTIES OF PLANTS AND FLOWERS, COMPILED BY THE FLOWER COMMITTEE OF THE | Massachusetts Porticultural Society, AND APPROVED BY THE SOCIETY AS THE STANDARD FOR JUDGING PLANTS AND FLOWERS. BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY. 1862. eaenennenennnnnnnnnnnnnnanaaaeseaacac.... PROPERTIES OF PLANTS AND FLOWERS, COMPILED BY THE FLOWER COMMITTEE se OF THE : - Massachusetts Horticultural Society _ AND APPROVED BY THE SOCIETY AS _ THE STANDARD FOR JUDGING PLANTS AND FLOWERS. BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY. | 1862. c . ae eles ers : VOUPoIadorTrat Seated 73 Seb he eee Th Aas '? + S2 Teh DARED 5 awe ta POTTS. Dah BIR TO. “eto. Lapaeie | ne l at 5 i 46 tneta # Bi poltootieg 2a ; the 2) fy : ‘ » Rabe see * Serre ts ame ek Bt FT hie bid 4] Fr tt lo Teer 7 ' peyteagbir arid fi rity 4h aoErOH Ta kame i ‘ vi yepertt fete. ‘ itieeotea Sb Tee eee i t ° eG eft Sas wd brebanie ol) ata ib bape +m ee : ru Ti. yETF C1 et ovgit : BOSTON : baddies H. W DUTTON AND SON, PRINTERS, eax t ail ~ ' a | po « A = ¥ 4 - ; 3 en me Pie tds «TRANSCRIPT OFFICE. Met 8 n> ey Nil, yi : ‘ rT ‘ + ‘ , were Yi ‘si 4 iy OT eed t | i " noo Jog. ORE a . a ax bohiveta i ht ! ‘ r) eollean eee Ge fk tee a | : ; ‘ “at a Thee af bia Nand os ; te coewiee 4 Lie ded iy Agee " nt ot roy ea) oe le bora Bi $ nee Thiet PROP LIEE SOT eo igitodeak ‘i INTRODUCTION. Tue Flower Committee have been greatly troubled by the general ignorance of florists and exhibitors of what constitutes perfection in a plant or flower. ‘They have, therefore, as authorized by the Society, with the consent of the Publication Committee, issued this book, in the hopes it may gain the attention of exhibitors, and be productive of a vast change in the plants and flowers shown at our exhibitions. At first it will be impossible to bring plants and flowers rigidly up to the standard, but the Committee trust in time to be successful in improving the class of flowers exhibited. Your Committee are also aware that, during the past few years, many prizes and gratuities have been awarded which should have been withheld. This error or laxity has been productive of bad effects, and in the future no prize or gratuity will be awarded to any exhibition not coming up to the standard, or showing decided marks of excellence. The following rules have been mainly compiled from Glenny’s Properties of Flowers and Plants, the received English authority. Much has been conte but it is believed all has been retained which can be useful or important to the American gardener. For the Flower Committee, Epwarp S. Ranp, JR., Chairman. POT PLANTS. The great ends to be attained in growing plants in pots, are symmetry of growth, elegance of form, healthy and profuse foliage, and abundance of bloom; and the nearer a plant approaches to possessing all these requisites the nearer it approaches perfection. The first qualification is health, and freedom from insects and dirt. The second, profusion of foliage. The third, symmetry of growth. The fourth, elegance of form. The fifth, abundance of bloom. In laying down-rules for judging pot plants, so much lati- tude must be given and allowance made for species and varieties, for different habits of growth and modes of culture, that it is impossible to fix any. standard. Each different case has its own rules, and what would in one case be excel- lence, in another would be deformity. Compliance with the above rules is necessary; departure from them should at once disqualify a plant. Further than this, the Committee must use their best judgment in each particular case. It should, however, be observed that in foliaged plants, so called, bloom is not essential to perfection, which there de- pends upon variety and brilliancy of marking. BOUQUETS. In judging bouquets, attention should first be paid to their composition with reference to grace and elegance; second, to quality of the flowers; third, to contrast of colors. Size is not a merit in a bouquet; in many cases, as in hand bouquets, which are usually too large, it is a positive defect. Too many flowers and too little foliage is another common fault. 5 A compact mass, a mosaic of flowers, seldom fails to be stiff and inelegant. Light feathery sprays of green and drooping vines add much to the effect. ’ EPACRIS. The plant should be full foliaged, with deep green leaves, free from dust or scale. ' The too rampant growth should be checked, and the pinching have been done so as to cause judicious breaks. Long leafless shoots disqualify a plant. The bloom should be profuse and large: colors brilliant or pure, according to the variety. In judging Epacris,-the chief attention is to be paid to the form of plant and abundance of bloom. BEGONTA. The plant should be so covered with foliage as to hide the root and pot; the leaves should stand up well on stout foot- stalks, which should not be so long as to give the plant a straggling appearance. The markings of the leaves should be bright, clear and well defined. Blurred irregular colors show want of attention in regulating light and heat. If the plants are shown in bloom, (which is not essential, but where the flowers are large and fine, as in B. grandis, Argentea splendens, &c., is an additional recommendation), the trusses of bloom should stand up well above the foliage. These remarks apply especially to the foliaged Begonias: the other varieties are to be judged by the general rules for Pot Plants. TROP_EZOLUM. | The many new varieties of this plant, originated within the last few years, lead us to suppose it may become a florists’ flower. The form should be circular, the petals i 6 overlapping so as to form a circle, leaving no space at the base ; the colors should be well defined, and markings dis- tinet and bright; the foliage should be round and large ; the flower should be on a long footstalk, and stand out well from the foliage. The edges of the petals should be smooth and round; jagged edges are an imperfection. ; The double varieties are so irregular as to be worthless ; they may be improved. These remarks do not apply to T. tricolorum and kindred varieties, but to T. majus and minus, and their many varieties. DELPHINIUM. If single, the sepals to be regularly formed, evenly bal- . anced and well open; the eye to be bright and distinct. The color may be delicate, but must always be clear. Dull and muddy colors are worthless. If double, the flower should be nearly round, with no vis- ible eye; the petals and sepals regularly disposed and indis- tinguishable the one from the other. ; In every case the flower spike should be straight, and the flowers regularly disposed along its whole length. ‘The longer it is the better. AQUILEGIA. The flowers should be large and numerous on the stem ; flower stem strong; color bright and distinct, (not splashed) ; sepals open and fully reflexed, at least two thirds of the — flowers fully expanded. Double varieties should show no irregularity. GLADIOLUS. The flower-scape should be strong; the flowers evenly grown and disposed on opposite sides of the stem, or entirely on one side, at least four-fifths of the flowers expanded; in no case should a half-expanded or double-stemmed spike be 7 admitted into a stand. The color must be distinct and the variegations clear; in the larger-flowered varieties, the upper petals will be thrown back, while in the smaller-flow- ered varieties they will incline forward. Strong spikes with distinctly marked flowers should have the preference. DOUBLE ZINNIA ELEGANS. This new and handsome flower gives promise of soon taking a high station amongst our most popular bedding plants. It grows freely in almost any soil, and blooms in profusion from July till November. The flower should be round,: high in the centre, forming half a ball. -The petals should be thick, smooth, broad, and rounded at the ends, and free from notches. . The flower should be supported by a strong footstalk, and be perfectly double, large and imbricated. The color should be bright and dense,—its want of color, or rather its dinginess, has so far been its greatest fault ; but from the bright and varied colors of the single kinds, includ- ing scarlet, crimson, purple, pink, yellow and white, a great improvement in this respect may be anticipated. GLOXINIA. The plant should be healthy and vigorous, with sufficient foliage to cover the top of the pot. The leaves should be broad, thick and velvety, the lower ones growing in a hori- zontal manner. . In drooping varieties, the tube of the flower should be broad and stout; the throat should be wide and even; the sepals slightly reflexed, smooth and round at the edges, and of sufficient substance to retain their beauty. The color, if a self, should be bright and distinct; if spotted, splashed or striped, the markings should be very decided and not run 8 together. The greater the contrast of colors the better, the markings to be regular; the three under-sepals should al- ways be marked alike and of uniform size. The plant must be a free bloomer, the flowers standing well up above the leaves, and as the front or inside ofthe flower is the handsomest part, it should be the most con- spicuous. The erect varieties should have a long round tube a little» swelled at the middle, the throat to be the same color all round; the sepals the same, and the divisions scarcely per- ceptible. The mouth of the tube should be perfectly round, and the sepals be blunt and smooth, forming another circle. CAPE HEATHS. Few if any rules can be laid down as to the properties of a good Erica. So numerous, so varied, and so beautiful, nature has done so much for this lovely genus, that the - labor of the hybridist seems scarcely necessary. We can hardly hope to do much towards improving them, but we may hope to see them grown more frequently, more partic- ularly the slow-growing and choicer varieties. It is a gen- eral opinion, though perhaps an erroneous one, that hard- wooded varieties are difficult to manage. They must have their peculiar soil and treatment, and are impatient of any neglect. But their successful cultivation is only a question of time, care and perseverance; as from three to five years are necessary to form moderate-sized specimens. The size of an Erica should not be considered of much importance, unless plants of the same variety are exhibited, and these otherwise equal; for some kinds—Ardens and Massoni, for instance—at eighteen inches high, would be as fine and creditable specimens as plants three to. four feet high of intermedia and Wilmoriana, and other free- erowing kinds. The plant, should be healthy, furnished 9 with branches to the pot, and of a neat regular habit. Symmetry of form, with profusion of bloom, is the point we should endeavor to attain. CINERARIA. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, blunt, and smooth at the ends, closely set, and form a circle without much in- dentation. 2. The centre or yellow disk should be less than one third of the diameter of the whole flower; in other words, the colored circle formed by the petals should be wider all round than the disk measured across. 3. The color should be brilliant, whether shaded, tipped, or self; or, if it be a white, it should be very pure. _ 4. The trusses of flowers should be large, close, and even on the surface; the individual flowers standing together with their edges touching each other, however numerous they may be. 3. The plant should be dwarf. 6. The stems strong, and not longer than the width across the foliage ; in other words, from the upper surface of the truss of flower to the leaves, where the stem starts from, should not be a greater distance than from one side of the foliage to the other. 7. Tipped flowers will stand first, and the more abrupt and well defined the tip is, the better. The tip should form a dense margin of color, and the more contrasted with the ground the better; bright selfs next ; indefinite shades last. CAMELLIA JAPONICA. 1. The flower should be circular on the outside, when looked at in front. 2. The petals should be thick, smooth at the edges, broad and blunt outside, cupped or reflexed, as the case may be. 10 5. It should be imbricated, (that is, each petal should have its centre over the join of the under petals); each row of petals should be smaller than the row immediately under it. 4. The number of rows one above the other should form the flower into half a globe. _ 5. The color should be alike all over the flower, if a self; and if blotched or striped, the contrast of the two colors should be striking. ) 6. If the flower be white, it should be pure; and if white and colored in mixture, the white should be distinct and the outline of a blotch or stripe, where the white and color join, should be very decided. CHRYSANTHEMUM. 1. The plant should be dwarf, shrubby, well covered with green foliage to the bottom, the leaves broad and bright, the flowers well displayed at the end of each branch, come in abundant quantity, and be well supported by the stems. 2. The flower should be round, double, high in the crown, perfect in the centre, without disk or confusion, and of the form of half a ball. 3. The individual petals should be thick, smooth, broad, circular at the ends, according with the circle of the flower, the indentations, where they meet, hardly perceptible. 4, The petals must not show their under sides by quilling, and should be of such firm texture as will retain them all in their places. Size of bloom to be large in proportion to the foliage, but the size only to be considered when plants are in all other respects equal. ; FUCHSIA. 1. First and foremost it is absolutely necessary that the petals of the inside or corolla be a different color from the 11 outside, for contrast is essential; those, therefore, which are all of a color are comparatively worthless. 2. The brighter the scarlet outside, and the deeper the purple inside, the better the flower. The loss of the rich purple is fatal, therefore, to the Scarlet Fuchsia. But a Fuchsia may be white outside, and in that case a bright scarlet corolla would be a good contrast, though a purple would be better. 3. The form of the buds or drops, before they open, can- not be too round, because that form is the most beautiful before opening, and gives the widest sepals when open. 4. The footstalks of the flower should be long enough to let the bloom fall beneath the leaves, and not long enough to let them hang into the branch below them, for the flowers should all hang free of the foliage. The corolla or purple should be large and close, and the sepals should reflex to expose their inside surface, and to show the corolla out well. 5. The anthers should hang conspicuously below the pur- ple, and the pistil below them. 6. The flowers of a Fuchsia should come out at the base of every leaf all over the plant, and we have many which do so.. Double varieties are monstrosities, and, with a few exceptions, worthless; they lack the simple grace and ele- gance of the single varieties. ANTIRRHINUM. 1. The plant should be dwarf, the flowers abundant, the mouth wide, and the more the inner surface turns up to hide the tube, the better. 2. The tube should be clear and pure if white, and bright if any other color; and the mouth and all the inner surface should be of a different color and texture, and form a con- trast with the tube. 3. The petals should lap over at the indentations, so as 12 not to show them; the texture of the tube should be like wax or enamel; the inside surface, which laps over, should be velvety. 4. When the flower is spotted or striped, the marking should be well defined in all its variations; the color should be dense, whatever that color may be. 5. The flowers should form spikes of six or seven blooms, close but not in each other’s way, and the footstalks should be strong and elastic to keep them from hanging down close to the stem, which they will if the footstalks are weak. A FINE ROSE. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, and smooth at the edges. 2. The fleas should be highly perfumed, or, as the deal- ers call it, fragrant. 3. The flower should be double to the centre, high in the crown, round in the outline, and regular in the disposition of the petals. MOSS ROSES. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, and smooth at the edges. 2. The flower should be highly perfumed, or, as the deal- ers call it, fragrant. 3. The flower should be double to the centre, high in the crown, round in the outline, and regular in the disposition of the petals. 4, The quantity of moss, the length of the spines or prickles which form it, and its thickness or closeness on the stems, leaves and calyx, cannot be too great. This being the distinguishing characteristic of Moss Roses, the more strongly it is developed the better. 5. The length of the divisions of the calyx, and the rami- fications at the end, cannot be too great. rs As the entire beauty is in the undeveloped bud, the more the calyx projects beyond the opening flower, or rather the more space it covers, the better. 6. The plant should be bushy, the foliage strong, the flowers abundant and not crowded, and the bloom well out of the foliage. : 7. The color should be bright or dense, as the case may be, and if the color or shade be new, it will be more valua- ble; and the color must be the same at the back as at the front of the petals. These seven properties would constitute a Moss Rose a valuable acquisition; and probably at present, the greatest acquisition would be a yellow one. 8. The stem should be strong and elastic, the footstalks stiff, so as to hold the flower well up to view, above or be- yond its leaves. 9. The bloom should be continuous, like the China roses. ROSES FOR STANDS, SHOWING THE SINGLE BLOOM, LIKE DABLIAS. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, and smooth at the edges. Sean 2. The flower should be highly perfumed, or, as the deal- ers call it, fragrant. 3. The flower should be double to the centre, high in the crown, round in the outline, and regular in the disposition of the petals. 4, That is, the petals should be imbricated, and in distinct rows, whether they are reflexed, like some of the Velvet Tuscan kind, or cupped like a Ranunculus; and the petals to the centre should continue the same form and only be reduced in size. 5. The color should be distinet and new, and stand fast against the sun and air till the bloom fails. B 14 6. The stem should be strong, the footstalk stiff and elas- tic; the blooms well out beyond the foliage, and not in each other’s way. 7. The plant should be shrubby, the foliage a fine green, and growth strong, the flowers abundant. 8. The bloom should be continuous, till the frost cuts off the growth altogether. NOISETTE ROSES. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, and smooth at the edges. 2. The flower should be highly perfumed, or, as the dealers call it, fragrant. 3. The flowers should be double to the deine: high in the crown, round in the outline, and regular in the disposi- tion of the petals. 4. The cluster should be sufficiently open to enable all the flowers to bloom freely, and the stems and footstalks should be firm and elastic to hold the flower face upward, or face outward, and not to hang down and show the outside, instead of the inside of the blooms. 5. The bloom should be abundant at the end of every shoot. 6. The blooming shoots should not exceed twelve inches before they flower. 7. The bloom should stand out beyond the foliage, and the plant should be compact and bushy. 8. The flowering should be continuous, as long as the plant is unaffected by the frost. CLIMBING ROSES. 1. The petals should be thick, broad, and smooth at the edges. 2. The flowers should be highly perfumed, or, as the 15 dealers call it, fragrant; except in Prairie roses, where perfume is not essential. 3. The flower should be double to the centre, high on the crown, round in the outline, and regular in the disposition of the petals. 4. The joints should be short from leaf to leaf. The blooms should come on very short branches, and all up the main shoots. The plant should be always growing and de- veloping its flowers from spring to autumn, except Prairie roses, and the foliage should completely hide all the stems. SWEET WILLIAM. 1. The head of bloom should be large. 2. The individual flowers should be round, smooth on the edge, flat on the surface, thick in the petal, and the edges should touch each other without lapping over. 3. The color should be pure, free from speckles; if marked, the circles should be well defined. 4. The divisions in the petals should not show, and the footstalks of the individual flowers should be long enough - to throw them up above the green of the plant itself; there should be not less than nineteen pips or flowers in the truss. 5. The double varieties should in every pip form half a ball, and should stand well out, edge to edge, without lap- ping over. CARNATION. 1. The flower should not be less than two and a half inches across. 2. The guard or lower petals, not less than six in num- ber, must be broad, thick, and smooth on the outside, and all the rest, as well as these, must be free from notch or serra- ture, and lap over each other sufficiently to form a circular roseate flower, the more round the outline the better. 3. Each row of petals should be smaller than the row 16 immediately under it; there should not be less than five or six rows of petals laid regularly, and the flower should rise and form a good bold centre or crown, and in quantity should form half a ball. 4, The petals should be stiff and slightly cupped. 5). The ground should be pure or snow white, without specks of color. 6. The stripes of color should be clear and distinct, not running into one another, nor confused, but dense, smooth at the edges of the stripes, and well defined. 7. The colors must be bright and clear, whatever they may be; if there be two colors, the darker one cannot be too dark, or form too strong a contrast with the lighter. With scarlet, the perfection would be a black; with pink, there cannot be too deep a crimson; with lilae or ight pur- ple, the second color cannot be too dark a purple. 8. If the colors run into the white and tinge it, or the white is not pure, the fault is very great, and pouncy spots or specks are highly objectionable. 9. The pod of the bloom should be long and large to en- able the flower to bloom without bursting it, but this is rare ; they generally require to be tied about half way, and the upper part of the calyx opened down to the tie of each division; yet there are some which scarcely require any assistance, and this is a very estimable quality. PICOTEE. : The properties of form are similar to those of the Carna- tion; but the distinction between Carnations and Picotees is, that the color of the former is disposed in unequal stripes, going from the centre to the outer edges, and that of the Picotees is disposed on the outer edges of the petals and radiates inwards, and the more uniformly this is disposed the better. Whether it be very deeply feathered at the edge, 17 like the pattern on the edge of a heavy feathered tulip, or an even stripe not wider than the thickness of the petal, all round the edge or something between, it is only necessary that it be uniform; that none of the feathery marks have a break, and that there shall be as much width of white as color seen on the petal at the deepest part of the feather. It is not necessary that the feather be the same width all the way round, but every stripe which does not reach the edge of the petal is a blemish. DISQUALIFICATIONS OF BLOOM IN BOTH. 1. If there be any petal dead or mutilated. 2. If there be any one petal in which there is no color. 3. If there be any one petal in which there is no white. 4, If a pod be split down to the sub-calyx. If a guard petal be badly split. 5. Notched edges are glaring faults, for which no excel- lence in other respects compensates, but they are not abso- lute disqualifications. HOLLYHOCK. 1. The flower should be round, and the principal or guard petals should be thick, entire on the edges, and lie flat, being free from puckering or frilling. 2. The centre, which is composed of florets, should form half a ball, and the more it covers the principal or guard petals the better. 3. These florets should be thick, large, whole on the edges, perfectly free from fringe, notch, or raggedness all over. 4. The color should be dense instead of watery and trans- parent or washy, as that of the Hollyhock is generally. The more bright and novel the more desirable. 5. The spike should be close, the flowers touching each other, and tapering from the bottom to the top; the foot- B* 18 stalks of the flower being larger at the lower end of the spike than at the upper end. 6. There is no fixed height for the plant, but the flowers should begin one foot from the ground, and open all at once. CALCEOLARIA. 1. The plant should be shrubby; the habit bushy; the wood strong; the foliage thick and dark green. 2. The flower stem should be short and strong, and the footstalks of the blooms elastic and branching well away from each other, to form a rich mass of flowers—without crowding. 3. The individual flower depends entirely on the form of the purse; it should be a perfect round hollow ball; the orifice and calyx cannot be too small, nor the flower too large. 4. The color should be very dense; whether the marking be a spot in the middle, or stripes or blotches, it should be well defined; the ground should be all one color, whether white, straw, sulphur, yellow, or any other color. 3. The color of a self should be brilliant, and all over of the same actual shade; dark flowers, with pale edges or clouded and indefinite colors, are bad and unfit for show. 6. The bloom should form one handsome group of pend- ent flowers, commencing where the foliage leaves off; the flower stems should not be seen between the foliage and the’ flowers, which latter should hang gracefully and be close to each other, the branches of the flower stems holding them so as to form a handsome surface. PANSY OR HEARTSEASE. 1. It should be round, flat, and very smooth at the edge, every notch or serrature or unevenness being a blemish. 2. The petals should be thick, and of a rich velvety text- ure, standing out firm and flat without support. 19 3. Whatever may be the colors, the ground color of the three lower petals’ should be alike: whether it be white, yellow, straw color, plain, fringed or blotched, there should not in these three petals be a shade of difference in the prin- cipal color. : 4, Whatever may be the character of the marks or darker pencillings on the ground color, they should be bright, dense, distinct, and retain their character without running, or flush- ing, or mixing with the ground color; and the white, yellow or straw color should be pure. 5. The two upper petals should be perfectly uniform, whether dark or light or fringed or blotched. The two petals immediately under them should be alike; and the lower petal, as before observed, must have the same ground color and character as the two above it; and the pencilling or marking of the eye in the three lower petals must not break through to the edges. 6. In size there is a distinct point, when coarseness does not accompany it; in other words, if flowers are equal in other respects, the larger is the better; but no flower should be shown under one inch and a half across. GENERAL REMARKS. Ragged edges, crumpled petals, indentures on the petal, indistinct markings or pencillings, and flushed or run colors, are great blemishes; but if there be one ground color to the lower petal and another color to the side ones, or if there are two shades of ground color at all, it is not a show flower, though many such are improperly tolerated—the yellow within the eye is not considered ground color. In selecting new varieties, not one should be let out which has the last- mentioned blemish, and none should be sold that do not very closely approach the circular four. One of the prevailing faults in the so-called best flowers is the smallness of the centre yellow or white, and the largeness of the eye, which 20 breaks through it into the border. We are so severe in these matters ourselves, that we count the very best of them no bloom in summing up the good ones; there are few stands of over thirty-six, that contain twelve good show flowers. HYACINTH. 1. Each pip or flower should be round and not ragged. 2. The petals should be broad, thick, blunt at the ends, not pointed, and reflexed enough to throw up the centre well. 3. The footstalk should be strong, and hold the flower out stiff in a vertical position, that is, facing the spectator, and by no means weak, to allow the pip to hang with the face sloping towards the ground. The footstalks should also be of a length to make the pips touch each other and no more. 4. The pips should be large, for, unless the pips be large, they cannot touch each other without very short footstalks, and the flowers would be so close to the stém that the truss itself would be no size. '5. Double flowers should have the rows of petals above each other very regularly imbricated, so as to throw up the centre. 6. The outer petals, therefore, of a double flower need not reflex and should not reflex so much as a single one, because the centre is raised by the second and third rows of petals. 7. The spike should be bold, round, compact, and pyram- idal, with a number of flowers at the bottom, gradually diminishing to a single flower at the top. 8. The flower stem should be very strong and upright, and no part of it should be seen from the lowest flowers to the top, in consequence of the closeness of the pips to each other. | 9. The colors should be bright, clear and dense, whatever the shade; and any better approach to scarlet, blue or yel- Cie SE Se ne a See 21 low than those shades we now possess, would be highly esteemed ; flowers with dark eyes, very clear outsides, and those with striped petals, would be held to be better than selfs in general, but would give no point against form. TUL. 1. The cup should form, when quite expanded, from half to a third of a hollow ball. To do this, the petals must be six in number; broad at the ends, smooth at the edges, and the divisions between the petals must scarcely show an in- denture. . 2. The three inner petals should set close to the three outer ones, and the whole should be broad enough to allow of the fullest expansion without quartering, as it is called; that is, exhibiting any vacancy between the petals. 3. The petals should be thick, smooth, and stiff, and keep their form well. 4. The ground should be clear and distinct, whether white or yellow. The least stain, even at the lower end of the petal, would render a Tulip comparatively valueless. 5. Roses, bybloems and bizarres are the three classes into which Tulips are now divided. The first have a white ground, and crimson or pink or scarlet marks; the second have white grounds, and purple, lilac or black marks; and the last have yellow grounds, with any colored marks. 6. Whatever be the disposition of colors or marks upon a Tulip, all the six petals should be marked alike, and be, therefore, perfectly uniform. 7. The feathered flowers should have an even, close feathering all round, and whether narrow or wide, light or heavy, should reach far enough round the petals to form, when they are expanded, an unbroken edging all round. 8. If the flower have any marking besides the feathering at the edge, it should be a beam, or bold mark down the 22 centre, but not reaching the bottom, or near the bottom of the cup; the mark or beam must be similar in all the six petals. 9. Flowers not feathered, and with flame only, must have no marks on the edges of the flowers. None of the color must break through to the edge. The color may be disposed in any form, so that it be perfectly uniform in all the petals, and does not go too near the bottom. 10. The color, whatever it may be, must be dense and decided; whether it be delicate and light, or bright or dark, it must be distinct in its outline, and not shaded or flushed or broken. 11. The height should be eighteen to thirty-six inches; ~ the former is right for the outside row in a bed, and the latter is right for the highest row. 12. The purity of the white and the brightness of the yellow should be permanent; that is to say, should stand until the petals actually fall. DIGITALIS OR FOXGLOVE. The plant below the flower should be only the same length as the spike of flowers. 1. The individual bloom should be as bright outside the tube as it is inside. 2. The tube long and large, the mouth wide, the petals thick, and free from notch or serrature in the margin. 3. The footstalks strong, that the flowers may stand out from the main stem, and rather droop. 4, Contrast in colors is desirable, as affording a greater variety, and the colors always bright and striking, as the great fault of the Digitalis or Foxglove is its dull, Nanaia dingy color. 23 PETUNIA. 1. A Petunia should have strong stems, and a close habit; large, thick, round and flat flowers; abundance of bloom, while short and handsome. 2. The color or shade is a matter of taste; but such is the fancy of people in these days, that a new, ugly color would be thought more of than an old, handsome one. 3. Such is the state of glorious confusion into which botanists have brought things, that when Mr. Tweedie sent home the purple variety, Dr. Hooker called it Salpiglossis integrifolia; Professor Don, Nierembergia phenicia; and Dr. Lindley, Petunia violacea. ‘The green-edged varieties are worthless, and the double varieties are as yet hardly up to the mark as show flowers, though susceptible of great improvement. VERBENA. 1. The flower should be round, without indenture, and no notch or serrature. 2. The petals should be thick, flat, bright and. smooth. 3. The plant should be compact; the joints short and strong and distinctly of a shrubby habit, or a close ground creeper or a climber; those which partake of all are bad. 4, The trusses of bloom should be compact and stand out from the foliage, the flowers touching each other, but not crowding. 5. The foliage should be short, broad, bright, and enough of it to hide the stalks. 6. In selfs the color should be bright and clear; if white, pure and constant. In striped or variegated varieties the colors must be well defined and the lines of demarkation distinct ; blurred, irregular flowers are bad. If eyed, the eye must be well defined, the larger the better; the-colors 24 must never run into each other; the greater the contrast of color the better. Eyed varieties are not to be considered better than selfs in judging a stand, but, other things being equal, the stand having the greatest number of distinct, well-defined varieties should receive the prize. IRIS. This flower is composed of three principal and three secondary petals or divisions. The three principal fall down and the others stand up.