— GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
499 
rved fruits, | 
n November, hardy winter flowering 1 and 
ry; 
Hyacinths and pres 
DWARD. (GEORGE HENDERSON anp SON, 
on Nu Soe St. John’s Wood, London, are now 
SUPERS., ‘DOUBLE n 
CHATER . inf 
a his e * — of this 1 
ear is wan 
For 
77 6d. each, with * usual discount to the trade. 
— EARLY — CABBAGE SEED 
— e — Pe quickest grower, and most | 
— Seed, Is. par packet, This is also the best 
THE NEW AND pats: VARIEGATED-LEAVED | 
A 
— le — 
wand A variegated eave ‘imbing p ‘plant cis one 
Chiswick a 
or more plants are ordered. saa alow ö ae We 
* 
8, fo 
stood that the i 1 5 in ‘achibition be chang 
_ Another 
ut as it is announced — 
to any that do not posse 
wW worth looki 
fo 
may . 
nen: h- at contingene 
10 w the adm — na visito 
p rama of the Soci —— ~ 
measures 
42 end with as little inconvenience as possi 
A mean p 
— weer, care! 
the 
1 
should not the sweet Chinese lat 
* | crossed with the scentless European 2 sorts ? 
Why not the Wirrmann Peony be bred on e 17 
pale yellow gains the brilliancy of Escholtzia ? V 
cannot our cottage garden herbs be converted ia 
shrubs ? 
last is possible is clearly shown by the | 
“T mus eaga an attempt made by me to obtain — Au : 
affected. fee agro 
mson — Pony 3 —.— 
mmon garden 
it out of 
a large double 
instead of he — 
has its fine duplication ate va for 
Its female part is undisturbed. 
uta 
right age, 
At three 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1852. 
i 0 
Tun 3 which the Hon RTICULTURAL 
oun 
itions, neou 
— notions which, if 52 80 TS are 
That these 
has been long felt; . are "resp pb aie 
escripti d we will vis 
proper pace 1 bs E exhibitions — — reig is 
uw 5 a 3 | te Pekare CROP x Ai ie . ae it once 
alw much 
ag ds in Sa anuary, T 1 in The Isle 
ibiti 0 
June, and July are limited to 3 exclusively, | 
ft in these months 2 
au han e ae since forei, 
3 
Sewer or rat . — * 
hr o ft rn for 
Lach Late and 
nnua ? 
in October, neun xia Alpi 
owers, 
fan angs and t From the 
and roots of the oiia, and from 
ilo 
raising the suspicion that i 
advantage will 
house 
ry 
Tuumastown, July 31: Fotatoes are a me 
ject. planted, if they keep, a — — 
will be had; but on high lying undrained lands, there 
will be nothing. Since 1846 it has not 5 s0 
— Rostrevor, made its 
appearance throughout Armagh, but up to the present 
no very serious been done ; farmers much 
rm Clonlish, * July 31: Potatoes 
in their r growth ; 0 market well wt with a 
ones, and a slight. We of black. — Kilmeaden, 
alira rae s July 31: aecidely much injured, 
Dun 2 
— —— merit, 
there can be no doubt that — things will generally W 
e absent, and that what do appear will be really 
The ‘realty. hiasi 1 8 has to ee — 
of space in n Regent-street; 
r it is possible * ‘the pre! spirit of elation 
with eg To guard 
will — indispensable 
ular} A et 
& Po otatoe “deca: ying rapidly, and farmers 
doubtful will th they hold till harvest is sinus iio 
Ros : 
wè — rp 8 — Le daly 31 
e under — ea o e which will effect | seri 
sible; 8 has now r opaa the eee. — exists to 
1846 
it that — — — 4 imar had the benefit Bedero 
— 
y were no better than ee. 4 
7 —— 25 in general 
pen very 
ght 
a Seeds se! t recei That the ra vid in 
N rp following experiment, for which we are indebted to | so — * 
ag Ae * — peet oon Correspondents, friend. pren 
an, n, 
very v 8 like al 
ctations. 
orn is but seldom met 
at 
has 
| difficult 
ripe 
me | attack and kill it. 
appeared of a 
— uly: 31: disease extendi 
d 
r extent than 
Wi 
| one 
few of the roots touched. 
so extensive. —— 
ing, cularly . am 
5 even now fully one-third injured. 
t 2: accounts very discour: 
not so mu as 
| Augest t2: Potatoes Betting black, and disease increasing 
ily. : crop not worse these eight 
7 August 
— TETRATHECA VERTICILLATA. 
Wuen well . this must be acknowledged to 
| be a real acquisi It was introduced to this country 
about the year 1845; and notwithstanding that it is one 
the tiest of summ ct eee eee. we have, it 
t collections. It 
habit, but it is by no means 
to manage. A thoroughly porous soil, 
which water will os 3 is is indispensable for it, as i y 
reful wateri lly when in 
e young wood should be well 
ned before winter, or damp will be almost sure to 
Cuttings of firm pieces of the young wood, 
we ien 
light, . piaca — and treated in the 
eeks, 
herbaceous and a frutescent plant of relation near 
ie — ee. the mule 
ordin ng 
rent is the 
at this was a failureis 2 but in dere respect 
for it proved 
‘that 
t 
and it e 
e 
to lead the way to ihat 3 A a somewhat | 
different direction 
will be | P 
as its female 
rubby and 
when they y should be potted singly, and 
laced in a 8 close place until as 
gation should be proceeded with as ear earl 
convenient, in order to have plant ants of som 
tured w 
an * part of a pit o ur 
about 45°, shoul be To 2 Gir 
ason than w 
oven the abolition of duty on corn renders e pe 
verthe les 
That it is 
already sa — — ‘hom pears Engis 
an unfortunate pre-eminence in this respect ; 
8 u e advan seed pon of — 
the ard, and it will 
of evi 
id ele, too, is by no 
fortune, as the f wis ir, extracts from Dunne an 
AUCHINLECK’s report 
|e 4th inst. how: 
own, Haat, August 1: Potatoes are going 
of Wight seems still, as in 1845, 1 grow 
be seen from a . 
homes in nother column to offer now every kind 
means behind in this pA 
o the Advocate newspaper of 
the last two seasons ; Tesal 
rain and lig 
potting as n 
Johns ug 
a [rapidly much more so than 
are going fast since the last hear Jin 
ecessary, 
to have the pots moderately filled with roots ae 
= 
