27—1852.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
—— — 
419 
EW PLANTS SENT OUT THIS SPRING. 
ANTInRHINUM HENDERSONI 
CHRYSANTHEMUM HENDERSONI 
HELIOTROPIUM VOLTAIREANUM NANUM 
A large moet of CHESS LETHE MOMS fone flowering 
tes hae 
3 Stron nts from 6s, to State 
— — Earl’s Court Nursery, Old Brompton, London, 
PLANTS OF CABBAGE, ‘SAVOY, : KALE, 
BROCCOLI, CAULIF LOWER, — GELERY. 
i a. ELL, NuxsRnruax and SEEDSMAN, 
am, Kent, begs respectfully to inform the une, 
that Haute of his superior true sorts of the above are now | 
ready, and will be forwarded, as usual, to order, on 8 
postage stamps — Post-office order, made — here, at the 
* * or mat and eluded, 
ens ts o of E arly * — Sa vo e * including 
Brussels Baroat, 43. 6d. per ain AA: all af 2 of Autumn 
and * — roccoli, 5s. 6d. pe 
536d. ; Cauliflow en Baty 
dd. 3 we per 7 at or pac 
required. 99 of 1000 po 853705 delivere: 
2 — to the Edenbridge Station * the South-Eas 
Railw 
—— dr CArTELL's Dw 
Jas ad. each. Ee 
YHOICE AND RARE SEEDS, confidently recom- 
mended, sold by WILLIAM DENYER, SEEDSMAN and 
FLORIST, 82, Gr apa odas Pres ee. ear the Spread 
TI Saved by an 
wG 
— crimson. A ‘white, Sey all re differ 2 ut shad 
y 
CALCEOLARIA, rom the most 
lendid ae fi Baty 
CINERARIA, 1s. suited by. 1 ye florist from a mos! 
superb 18 5 iono med prize flow: 
GAILLARDIAS PLENDIDISSINA PLENA, ls. Anew and 
— ben 
rs ve — — banii flowers, ls, Saved by Thomson 
. 0 
New r perpetual G Gigantic Emperor double STOCK, 1s.—Colour, 
rosy cri ndid novelty, lasting several years, 
— tumbal-owering double STOCKS, 6 best and brightest 
colo 
TRITOMA UVARIA, 1s. A hardy perennial, growing from 
TY, | 4 to 5 feet high, producing long spikes of crimson and orange- | in 0 
eas coloured flowers, 
ee ERS, e gigantic 
wa excelle 
1 by the mode of treatment employed 
and they also * “i 81 this skilful ati: 
eulturiet was entitled to 
1 consists in n spring- 
In 
singular colou 
varieties, Saved. by a celebrated 3 — who 
pee on on several occasions gained the first prize for double Wall. 
arf Barnes, and superior 
Reliance Cabbage, ar be had in — = — for 12 one 
binii E. . 
tter balf an oun 
— containing 1 ounce, as usual, 
THS, ETC., noe EXHIBITION. 
fine plants, in and 8-inch 
tulzeflora (true), 10s. — —.— 
Emes 
s dilecta, 7s. 6d. ; —— 
vi sore 155 ; Splendens, * ôd. ; 
ventricosa ros ea, rba, 53, ; brevi- 
. densa carnea, 22 5 bl — major, Ta. 6d. ; 
N 218.; Juliana, 58.; denticulata mos- 
chata, pr * 
sa, 58. 
Fine pans of the following, in 48-sized pots, 188. to 21s, per 
dozen : mige Mac rosea, tricolor Br ig tetor 
a. — aristata vitta per 
Bacchus, * . propendens, —— — — fulgid 
vestita rosea, e 5 ela na Cav 
guinea, i 2.5 a, physoide el 4 ae — 
Aristata — „Shan alba, — 
gemmifera, — wt ua nana, favoides e 
nghamii, Banksiana, cerinthoides, — ob ny a Eansoniana, 
Ep purpurea, — T superb, depressa, d. . — 
AZALEAS, -Pine Sar fay of all the 1 
varieties, 12s, to 21s. per d 
Fine bushy See of- — best — not to be 
equalled in the trade, 30s, to 42s. per d 
CELLANEOUS P 
— aud best 
n = ed; 6d. ; 
folium lexis. won 
As, 6d. to ii “vt ene Aphei 5 „ 
. bows to remark ck that he basa age and — 
8 of young wW e 
Ah — Ba worthy 
Bower Nurseries, Maidstone, July 3. 
NEW pid cig «Sot iad a f, 
GUST 
mower CHIVAS. pinch te sie sequainta noblemen, 
prietors, and agriculturists generally, that he 
will EXHIBIT, at STALL 94, at the approaching Show o f the 
wee England, at Lewes, specimen 
of his QRANGE JELLY 
oti eh which he 8 laat year; ; and for th * 
which, from July and August sowings, he 
— six guin eas in prizes, one of — 
to Mr. Willians Becorote, of Upton, 
Statute acre; and the other to Mr. 
tom, weight 29 tons a8 per $ statute acre, whi 
— t — 
mosa, 
C. a pmen superba, 28. 
; Lawreneeanum me Ts 
f Halton, 
a madia no 
pf fed delivery 
Ba nge, with the e pE of the 
Aires year’ 
JULY, price 25 ie and a 
at forw 3 to neste, revious 
ivered Free in London and Birming 
description of ni ORANGE-JELLY. — aon 
. to which. is 8 . ef 
Grasses, a ode gi ta cation, -from 
het puia 
— A full 
been 
and wi “i 
Teeter, and may be had i vine $ Stall — of charge. j 
— Bell's Mee bl Ma — =% range. Telly 
3 have received fro —— oo Cm s, the Seedsman,of 
our, 
9.18513 —" Crrvas’ Orange- 
a specimen of this new 
offices for ins The 
pection 
seems to be for late sowing, and the following 
e pro. 
and 
shoo 
| vatad althou 
trials were — — ear, for prizes awarded b 
Gaia on y P y th 
3 pa FIRST PRIZE. — — 
— am Beecroft, Upton, Chester, per 
op 2 Peg yards n ek: 1 5 July 28 5 8 20 
- Ford, gy Liyngwerne, M eth, 
1 61 yards a mn July 29 4 3 21 
Taylor, Dalton, Preston, Brook, 
E ards Aug. 6 4.0 0 
0 ‘ide iar Walton, ‘Warrington, fy 
. 30 4 1 11 
— tei pie 
R PRIZE No. IL 
Mr. J. Barber, Hatton, Warrington, 
; j m, W i 
age yarda "a 22| 7 3 25} 
rood of tewart, Esq., Paddington, per 
xr ah 10 yards Aug. 803 1 16 
= ne 14 3 2 
ug. 
ee, iwi per 2 
diyer “sarki, [AN 2% 1 1 26 
—— e e 
tons per acre, ie that 
from late — 
mand erisia. 
that spp aeg 
Che Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1852. 
EETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
p par iragai July 5+Entomolovica) wove eet mm 
Satun —  10—Horticultural ‘Gara 
Counrrr Basi. —Tuerday, Jul 
Friday, July 9: Chichester, Mid-C 
„and Whitehaven 
Now that the v. NE — is reappearing, it 
may be useful to lay be the public certain state- 
ments ae it ma = n the proceedings of = 
cientific They will ome 
_ t — * our weh neighbours, who 
uch more inter than — in pan 
this 2 aber regard the practical manner 
of dealing with it. 
Pranok (C. R., 
whether the disease is solely ca used by t 
ae 
® 
— 
= 
— 
— 
© 
= 
=e 
T — 
E 
a 
S 
2 
2 
o'o 
— 
E 
tad 
®© 
U 
arly period 
in the 8 of a It Ae the Vines 
when 
rrinkled, 
lowish grey, inert coating Was formed, — as the 
uices wre de d to flow 
elastic envelope was burst 
expose he disease * atlas s the Vine shoots. 
Their surfaces exhibit 1 yellow grey 
tracings, and sometimes the whole assumes a blacki sh 
xtre miet, of the w 
S were 
“leaves, 
en ere to the to 
this it is tide + that the —— is not confined 
the fruit, and that changes are caused in other — where 
of the plant ; ; but the more superficial cortical |a 
yers appear only to i attacked. It is remarkable 
that this general affection does not obstru vege- 
tation of the plant, for the latter pushes a 2 e 
as if it had been in a healthy state. The 
quences of the disease are visible on the fruit, ~ cen 
and leaves; but o 5 — old wood they cannot be 
detected by the — d e 
The sabrem of. all tempts to: . the dise 
3 — 1 fac 
m | bury: t Hee tes — in 1850, a Vine 
tidied in in a anial garden: m Montmartre was attacked 
byt the It was an old Vin was buried 
N it in the Trou, in Mare ch, 1 1851. ‘The 
ts from it continued 
gh all the Vines near it were. 
ase 
This is a simple mode, and the operation may 
performed in November March. All the old 
stems should be buried, otherwise the sporules of 
the Oidium, supposed to lodge in the bark of the 
old wood, might develope 3 and again 
invest the young growing par 
Grison’s method 
6: Thirsk oe bind Ae k 
pint of the Tiquid, mix 
is 8 
September 8, ae doubts | i 
pensed with, unless th 
into the interior, this non- is muc 
and the 
pron 
has op = right to adopt such designation, 
dou 
Pranck proposes to on 
e | quarts ; 
thy throughout the i 
d 
s done 2 about four pints of 
the clear liquid is 1 for u 
This liquid is not, heaped; directly applied. to 
the Vines. Before using it, 100 parts of water i 
ad to 1 part o iquid [or, in other terms, 
each pint of the liquid is mixed with gallons of 
ater]. Thus diluted, N has ascertained that 
l litre of hydrosulphate will be sufficient for 100 
perficial mètres o is is at the rate of 
1 od 68 square yards; or 51 feet along a wall 
2 feet hi 
This method is much more economical than that 
1 
of employing the pre of sulphur. The pound x 
sulphur employe e preparation of the hydr 
sul nha te of lime jo not cost [in Fra 
gp ape —— 
y the Oidium, 
the value of a balfpenny we, may 
extent of Vine-wall from the 
7 5 
e lime costs almost nothing 
that one syringing before the Winer are in flower, 
and another when the Grapes are formed, will be 
sufficient, and that a third syringing may be dis- 
e Oidium should re- =. 
But a vigilant inspection of the Vines is necessa 
for it is well proved by 8 that the 2 
asier destroye the commencement of 
the attack than it is Aer it has overrun the whole 
plan 
„we 
mer. 
frequent repetitions of the operation 2 
pe eg We ks ov 82 ese powderings 
injure the be the 
rak 
| accordin 
Vigorous ‘goth, an produced large. bunches. — 
fine acts 
afl 
his n ae — of stopping the ravages of the 
Oidium i is known under the denomin sen of the 
océdé Grison. The ne of enquiry 
No 
ments — ve already tried with 
solved in Anker in the pro- 
was to the litre, or i oz. to 25 
er has, in Englan 
ployed 1 part of 2 1 par 
e 
M.Grison are all his own 
nd to hi 
ince ’s preparation 
cheaply mae, ik might be tried — for the 
destruction or prevention of mildews. which infest 
ost kin 
"$ 
be 1 to field crops of 
for the prevention and cure of 
this disease appears to merit particular attention, | and to Hop hag * of the 
It is detailed by Gustave: HEUTZÉ, Secretary to the | substan eth At Do a s rate ea whe 
Seine-et-Oise 5 Society, in the “ Revue | sulphur. vas employed by 3 pM. G Grison, 18 Ibs. wor 
Horticole, for May, 1852. be sufficient. once over; the materials 
Horticulturists having so frequently ＋ only | fos sh this 9 bas i yi: wi may be or 
egative results from the different modes of treatin an 566. 
Vines 3 by the Oidium Tuckeri, = — — $i A different method — Per by M. wee’ 
. Grison, head e ng- | gardener 
* tise in the Ritehensgarden of of Versailles, wes Vines pogin to fon and before, or at all events, 
induced to employ a t th l — makes its 3 M. 
— bleso BERGMAN liti CH . of the hot-water 
esome disease. “Convinced that the means he 
| had discovered were more us than all th 
previously tried, M. Grison requested the 
ose | pipes and 5 them over with sulphur. 
Felpharous 
he 
vapour was found to destroy the Oidium. 
