THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
nd Muscovie Roses,” Fox Grapes, from | 
White and Red Burlett Grapes, Cu rrant | 
uscadells, “ Frontignack or Musked Grape, | >| 
ite and red,” and as many other rarities of theft 
as authors report, is able to 
the “ Doder, 
r-foote 
i» fishes, ned shell- creatures,” in- 
; “outlandish fruits, an 
s 
court, are de: rincipall Benefa 
the clleton TE must hve been a marvel 
n the words 
now before ae É the Trapescants, both fat 
a 
© 
"t 
er and 
son, though common gardeners, were persons of un- |an 
common genius. 
According to . 
le time 
the elder TRADE ScANT was 
. a oan i 
n the service of the Lord 
ALISBURY Sy Lord ootron. He 
ected ap various parts of Eur rope, even reaching 
Russia, no ta astal resort of Englishmen in ‘ee 
een on board a flee 
which now 
w of the Second TRADESCANT 8 in 
Lambeth Church the m 
her father-in-law, , husband, and son, and she h 
: = accidentally drowne wned ina pon nd, 3rd April, 1678. 
mon is now in a state of dilapidation; 
ag EES by Surrn “as 5 curious and rather 
. — d . remarkable for its allusive decora- 
tions.” oters of its restoration say :— 
monum wie repaired by pu ublic aye TA in 
pián p 
The 
LE 
grave, who was himself buried in Lambeth Chu 
is now very nearly e 
ure 
ffaced. The restoration of that 
Medica. b 
of a manuscript note sh 
absorbing moisture from the specimens. 
e then unpressed, the paper 
d t 
dles ar 
of aga as is 
ting in 
fore indispensable. 
of paper being ee west compact pect 
which air is un nable to 
A trellis-wor 
he usual w 
enabled to ei 
W shiftin 
all the 
s might remain 
narrow laths, halfa an inch 
would 
moved by the dry air moving 
G 
ry, a 
reulate. 
enient s 
m 
conve 
y tl 
ele 1 among 
till the whole of its 
The 
—— to Tre ome this difficulty 
. 
e wooden partitions of h 
y nailing 
apart, to both sides of cross 
orm the ends of the par 
became n bapa. and moist and mod 
among the 1 
bun- 
dried, or Lae 
aced 
through 
their pots; and if the ball is full of Active roots, Pora 
once into pots two sizes larger tha 
best soil for 
55 
5 
porosit, place, 
aera A of clean potsherds and liardo will 4 
useful in keeping t r and permea! ay 
carefully drained. U 
b> 
be 
col 
which are injurious to the tende: F 
owards 
pleted their Srodas 20 
“ths 
oints of the shoots had 
best during winter, an 
comparatively little water. 
n the return spring they mB * be placed in 
he 2 Soiled, ii d mended for last 
| season, except shat "when they ! “have pea their 
hould be 
be gradually 
shady place 
while there they will require 
hardened off, and ultimately n temoved toa 
rs, where they m carefull: 
7 I have said nothing about training; but any E pen can 
effect that, as th ost plants, 
uring winter, place 
| perature may average fro ; 
3 and keep them "propery ore with eo 
tions, fo formed 
17 oe 
i na n lachs en 
s | formed of laths, nailed longitudinally to cross-laths 
about 6 inches apart ; similar parti- 
swise hree | 
this is ale bet ter than having 
upon 
Some of the varieties have 1 
Th Ritle thio, cite by heat iid Ai m flo owes one 
improved 95 1 fur AG experience : —A and E, the season’s experien e cultivator tat thes 
top and bottom, consist of half-inch e e, * bet 1 oa rr blooming s and akol also how Aare 4 
the inner side trellised by longitudinal a halt 2 ing the pliate be we f — or oon. 
an inch apart; this is better than havi the e top tory while in flowe te cars deja 
and bottom untrellis ed. Cis a trellised partition — from to 50°, and they ust not be 
od of rest 
ere air is admitted. 
When ng tes have done flowering, remove the decays 
w them a short period 
ee — ~ * pet 
ing both these monument refore : ngitudinal, in which case the |a Sopy o el 7 
rope d tor : a fand Sor he ARs 8 * ee g ot ie RA distributed, at and the pi sale = oh i this must be prove rty iaa 
of the tomb o 2 OO eee : removing 
al form, N e mle ie 5 paper (more or less) filled l pl tome are placed perna one 1 till July, 
served in the Pepysian Library at Cambridge, and also | p°tWeen, eac pair of partitio whole is 0 
l d = t. With this 
— 9 The oat will not yan —— seks. ts a stout leather ae i strap, 185 butas e . ps a 2 
than assistance ressure i : wan 
i te ste tower | wooden wedges, F F, are driven between the strap erin col ua havea . — br pene 
those who are following the dere and the top board, by which means any amount of December to the end of May 
and who are daily may be secured. tempt to force 
— e labours an If too many e o paper are not placed | for early blooming by ear 
of English gardeners q | together between tions, plants thus managed] Most of the varieties ae eee eating 
à| will generally 8 attention tever from the sch wood, se not bard es 
e should ht those who ren — = the time they are idèa between the sheets; but | These sh i — eae 2 
n ra press miiy stan e the floor of a aA room, and | bell y 770 in a cool part for a m pom 
Size he i a e plan wh then placed in a m 
muta a J Hoox, perfectly ce to do so ni o e a roots, and may be potted singly in 
ew ; Sir CHARLES kept close = es Th 
2 oN, Esq., es are 
D., Lambeth; Parr Bury Duncan, Esq., keeper — THE AZALEA. stronger 8 kinds, but any | of the 
the Rev. C. B. Tue glowing banks of S ich are annually i e ; and 
Monik e 8 at the May Exhibitions at Chiswick, and grafted form nice d 
18 cuttings. Cultivated in this way, 
Paternoster- ; Mr. Paurrix, Frith- her fully bear me out ‘when I state that there is som: t tender, andliable to 
treet, Soho Soho ; = he the € Old Bank, Oxford. ly nee showy tes cultivation than that | perly treated. Al 
i one $, ta 
n Srp sive „ od — — by oe wha. take delight in in gardening 6 ee GARDEN GLEANINGS. FIA 
Sux medrai that exist of their great predecessors are not confined ang induced yin May, f for it adds the DRESD: „ t the best establi bins 
2 being easily in to bloom during the | far-famed town is that of Jacob Seidel, wen ooh 
z are so frequently asked what is the best either in th y acceptable, | the north for his gener e 
for pryinc PLANTS, that a few words gaben 9 it e — ae 1 — — . ped 
ijiet; now that the season = — botany | Whose accommodation is but limited. yizo 2 
enerally ac n buying a stock to comm 
lants are dried b e dwarf, healthy plants, ee ee yi 1 
fter being deprived of 
having had the thick useless 
f, th id 
[Marcu 13, 
May the agers will probably have come 
Í 
— eee e 
. — 
T ee eee, 
