118 THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
_ [| Fan. 21, 
my mycelia could be found developed with a good micro- 
of 
155 which she carried in her hand; the porter refused 
e unless 
gh pow Moore. the flowers were left in his charge 
* 8 e Lehe following memorandum of some | or cae: away ; at first I did not see me mason or 
ill-experience in this matter was published in part o this 8 er, but it was explai that me 
article in in Oe Dublin 1 headed “ Botany in the attendants would not be able to judge whether 5 no 
Bohe or Walks after Will Flowers.“ It can the flowers had been picked in the garden (i. e. stolen) 
however claim t on e a se E to your correspondent’s As it was the rule, the flowers were thrown away befor 
at p 40, as it has been! written more e than a sniering, L observing, that persons having stolen t 
were not likely to leave the garden with them 
ÈD. „Cork “ 12 the high prices ofsi map “oils, in in 1820, 
le to in unt of soap 
age P imprim on 
unbelief, at's a Title chemistry was imagine 
ay. It was said that the renr 
Soap, — the ‘may it not? 
soap bubble, — its slight beauty, 
became 
— And 80 what we have to say of ‘ 
a”? 
1 wal ya vin the dma 
meas 56 feet 
2, height 80 feet, cir 
the t from the ground, is 14 feet 
9 9 inches; Taxodium distichum i is 66 feet rth, ete well 
Pin 
! iong b, by 12 feet 6 inches 
M: 
nee bal the — at 3 feet from the inste 
0 
m the ground, 11 feet 1 a him 
in s their h Map ds. 
wo 
sunt 8 ts. 
pressing an opinion that th 
not very decent or aceurate article in ger Quarterly, 
are not only proper but necessary : and so we think i is 
that 
ep 102, your un 
s the accurac . Riv 
ide, e 
ers’s book with sufficient e 
does not profess i to be for a 
r ever, in order to 
Rhod 
pots int: parcifolia with. very pretty tufts * — 
r. flow 
t sa, the 
b eautifal Scorpion 135 a alata), “he bean Lithosper. 
® wall aa 
H. B. Ker r, Esq., contributed a 1 r 
ulti 
5 10 Ma 
pripedium (ar gne, poe 
A Certificate of Mer 
eximia, — 
Mr. N ere Bay furnished a be N 
gain: Camellia flowers, gathered from. a 80 a 
where they had r 
ways also s 
x Dorsetshire, i in ho shap 
ollection of cu 
aceous 
Among them were ee purple 
ers; ; E uc ane 
a splendon ns, — 2 * 
narias axifrag 
an ee 
rare 
nolm tar, 
s forcing orchard 1 may 
plan, and 8 Faq nth case only that 
I have this very day completed 
down 
ing up the sides of 
ath with l-inch deal, I have pe com 
tter ; aa instead o tting in 
my glass cut s u 20 inches, a a sate 
suits a 14 feet f your ndent wis — to 
build an orchard house, k aa * penes to tell him how 
furnished with branches from bottom to top. Pinus I have named. The parti- 
halepensis, which is not quite hardy in some s of | culars are shortly 
> ap to be thoroughly so here, as 80 | 52 t x . 
7 e. Picea religiosa seems to enjoy its situation, | 1, ben * h Sao héi ae at 8 5 er 3 40 
as do also P. nobilis and P. a s, which are uch Nala aad cat SUPT . 
hardier. Magnolias bloom with us very freely eight 280 feet of glass, re 11 1 Belen coon bob tang 
months out of 5 12. The highest of those on a wall | Brick and labour for path. 3 
2 rn feck, iod ok and labour for pa „ 
K n eat: S a 8 
W. P. P., Gloucester me to 8 Tonan my 
2 time sinee I tried 
some 3 ts of Bago nen 
I placed them in pots, in a mixture 
silver-sand, the lower half of each pot | un 
beuge filled with pieces of broken ae — — plunged 
an those of our neigh- in 
| the 
bout | į 
Allow 
own experie nee, that Mr. Rivers orchard house answers 
perfeetly, and is as — making allowances: for the 
different prices at pep timber bought in 
different localities. ibes it. The. felt, the tar, 
pal the heating apparatus, have nothing to do with se 
ovat ard h ess you wish 
erer, forcing house, it 2 of course extra 
Will you also 
n orchard house which 1a 
— — ge of t SORN of Mr. 
or = ven 
o lea from 
3 that gassit if broken can be replaced 
y a o has the free of |® 
e 5 resting on the earth 
n the bores, thus . of Wardian 1 
cool room, 
am meets disappointed at fl 
jefore they are —.— 
overed 
E 
* 
t 
jin 
> 
glass.) 
Kew Gardens —The last number of the 
Review” con an interestin 
fountain has orev ixi 
Even the “Q 
We 
“ ii Reader, 
Quarter ly been Xp in 
e xing with its sweet 
45 
| excels, in 
Constant 
t [This p 
our volume for 1851, at p. ay 9] 
composition 
$ Pandelion aren t: 
4, Lambs” Lettuce ; 
bi nature, 
delion 
— es 
in my opinion 
Sotieties. 
HORTICULTURAL, Feb. 17.— 
e the use of the e Fat H * 
a as Spinach, he 
ing, e! veny 
8 | glass; on account p its beautiful bricht blue b. 
d., as the 
not oak wel I have | si edal. 
hich e au wag Algo awarded to Mr. Butcher, gr. to W. Lest, 
e 
were distributed :—Josephine 
middte-sized excellent 
. Leicester- r-square 
he fields, Ae pasa 
2, Burne I 
and several other plants, all finely in flower, Ita 
mentioned, with . to the Scorpion Iris, thy 
refused to flower until it was panies: pe reach of 
spray of the sea. Althou ugh it grew satisfactorily ing 
2 land . et 
of Maidst 
—— Cereus 
fragran 
The ley were Just beginning to shrivel, and wa da 
ones by that fine 4 tinge which is peculiar tot 
mie when a rfection. Along wit 
were some 
means ol ventilation, s 
that, if ne „other frames might be-added, 
view to i the of th 
Everett, Es ss š a Chase-side 9 
others it has this a eg the panes 
when ken, new -a put in 
garden- 
ed, or 
trouble or 5 patent 
shown by Mr. Hall, of Munster 
Pear, aan’ 
fruited in the Garden ; —— js 
igarreau d’ Esperen, reported to be a PP, i 
arge pale fruit, red next kie en 
Familiar Letters 
Buff, edited by A. 
Maberl 
Tis small sb admirable work is a translati * 
German, of etters on subjects relating! 
55 
Fo 
