m 
166 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 
propose E succeed against a wall in the | less juice. Cherries were divided into о tho HMM 
орен 
air; at all events, it would succeed dd ша | with eoloured and colourless juice 
use without fire-heat. The Early Auvergne | belonged to the pale juiee class, acd when well 
Frontignan (Muscat Hatif de Puy de Dôme) is also own the fruit was quite an inch in diameter, It 
an excellent Early Frontignan, with h, | was originally introduced fn pain under the 
ripening at the same time e others, and superior | name omato Cherry, and ж 
in flavour, being more r to Muscat Salamon. | from having deep fi 8 on its sides like a tomato 
Ingram's scat is an e grape, he seedling Peach 
large, but possessing no Museat flavour in the bunch Frogmore, called Frogmore Golden Peach. 
exhibited. The Blaek eaux ve It was of the kind called on the Continent apricot 
early out-door grape, received by Mr. Rivers from peaches, largely n 
ux, under the name of Museat à Gros Grains, | some "E hie ch, ы; the flesh мма to the 
an excellent small blac grape, ripening fully a | stone, w ер, vies. This specimen was not 
month before the Black Hamburgh, and witha | a clin тэ НЕ, but а free- tons the flesh 
sweeter flavour than that variety. The bunches being very melting and nicely flavoured; but it 
berries are smaller, and it will prove а good | was not so large as the American variety call 
out-door ha: ord's Early, which was a very and 
ere was a grape exhibited by Мт. Veitch early peach. He doubted whether the Committee 
called Muscat Champion. It wasa hybrid between | could take шал, of this specimen, seeing 
the Mill Hill Hamburgh and the Canon Hall they ed E s of the same elass which 
Muscat; the female parent was the Mill-Hi am- ze н" equal to it in flavour, 
b d the Canon Hall Museat, the aaa ЗАРА idle" as early. He would now fora 
consequence of which was, it had the Mill-Hill moment, in conclusion, call the attention of the 
with a strong admixture of the Muscat meeting to the Apr ricots in pots sent by Mr. Rivers 
flavour. It was an immense bunch, and the | of Sawbridgeworth; in the first place, to show that 
berries were large, possessing the fine flavour of fruit grown in pots might be transmitted from one 
= part of the country to another at considerable 
: E А 
surpassed, with the addition a ve ecided | distances, in a state o eness, without injury to 
Front flavour; consequently it was approved | th ; and secondly, as dixe 
as a most desirable pe, and deserving of th pot ss. Fora number 
iversal cultivation it would no dou t receive of years after the pot cultivation of fruit 
Amongst the 55 classes oy fruit ther a | introduced, the failures were almost win 
p ro r. Graham of he production of a ? 
Cranford, remarkable Us its Ф being perhaps as Aoa imply dep d u А р 
large ad ever been submitted to the | when in bloom ample ventilation ; 1t mattered not 
t, unfortunately, the largest berries had h the ernal temperature mi be 
Society, b t тр : ext ie ee 
been removed, pro probably having been tasted by the | That being the case, the plants when in oo 
‘Committee. Although the fruit was large, the pretest эч = the air possible: even though th 
flavour was not equal to oth i 
lie ure wi or 39 below 
tion; consequently the Committee desired that it tat t would n xat affect the plants, but rather Р 
ight ent another year after more careful cul- rationale of the thing was, that ie 
tivation. This being its firs year, 16 was рг 1 doa up the house there was such е 
not hie been expended upon it till it 1 the atmosphere that the f 
nown what the t was likely to pr ower of the pollen of the apricot 
Next year he had no doubt it would eome before lm atmo бы required to ы kept dry, and ue 
them in an improved form. seedling Black | as in the instances ес them, they house 
Currant was sent by Mr. Sidney Ford, of St abund: of fruit, but if g’ d the - 
Leonar e, Horsham. It was said to hang | they wo uld have no Mr. R aueh A 
a month later than the Black Naples; but tne hi jod ofeu 
ches were short, the berries small and exces- apricots in Lee and with this De Hogg mdi 
: id not know whether the recom- his iri de 
" 
to it in other respects, The oe however, | think, to afl our loams used in чү chest tie eom- 
did not think it worthy of an award. Н ; 
of Highgate had sent а Базен. ей Ргїпсевз m therefore induced to recommend to all lover 
Alice, the chi of which consisted in Pd of apricots to use with their compost pomit 
ness, as it wa stated to ir into bea alk. Owing to my soil being now in the the 
after all other raspberries were past. It had a bri ick of a chemist to analyse, I am not able pim эй 
acid flavour, and might do y Mast тей for aedi. exact күш: but a tenth or twelfth 
but as а ая fruit the Committee could п take | perhaps be ce 
notice of it, as it was in оной ju as the des The Bey. M. Y. BznxxrzY said, in y е bene 
bearing sobole] were coming in Mr. | of any number of plants whieh called seet to 
sent а collection of Cherries, which had | he was t teresting, P 
fulvers sent o have an in 
been tasted till they were all gone. The late | bring befo a their notice, viz. that which Б 
гре Gean was a very large and late variety | lieved to be a really hybrid fern. All who yellow, 
which came in after all other bigarreaus, but it | vated fern аиа ранна еде came vp 
ite ripe. Th es; ignies was white, ami, grey-powd од to e 
in the same house, car Gu had | d 
the Love hybrid. Ад у | пона по опе 
› oF enormous size, perfectly тей, with colour- | them to be so, and e believed this, | 
