34—1852.| THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 531 
VERSCHAFFELT, Nonsraruax, Ghent, Bel ae 1 pervading th brane ae pt ut the ‘Cherry blight. It will be seen that 
— a.i EULA, d a oat oa t $ | first you can on 15 aT a on the ee — of the opinions in som incide with sug sities 
DROVOT” — the — — — Cherry one or brow: ints, surrounded | lately made in this Journal, when the ogg 
Plants, 3 feet high, bran „El n ; by a pale — — border; shortly after th the spot | raised whether the frequency of mildew and other 
Do. 2 N aaa. cenit enlar, set b the tries rder a ; a depression | diseases in the: ys might not be attributed in 
FPV coe uae, A caused by the drying up of t pa tissue extends, | some way to high modern cultivation, No ing 
NB. E — New General Catalogue of Plants will be ready in sometimes Wastl h, e in t of of er momen this, and we still 
a few a rings. The surr ending flesh is not much | hope that a discussion concerning it i 
OE 8 SEED, ected. The — “shows — the — are this country, among ose knowledge of effect 
EORGE WHEELER, N n 1 deformed in more ess and cause will give weight to any — which 
— ts begs to now sending out the | brown. Small white nanih, — spawn ofa — they may express. We shall take n early oppor- 
c — pt a from bis large, choice, and beautiful 
collec 8 — and fine spotted varieties, from 
25. 6d. to 
PANSY, all t Am ~ sae — 15. to 28. 6d. per packet. 
CINERARIA, from a fine collection, 1s. to 2s. 6d per packet. 
CHINESE LARKSPUR, saved — a beautiful collection 
pure white, skyblue, am a &, 
— as usually noa inies vegeta le decay, are also 
observable under the 
But the fruit of the Cherry i is not the only part 
squint the stalk is gradually marked by brown 
— — h b di 
y degre ries up, its centr 
pith "alike found to Ni also brown, and its cells to 
tunity of reverting to the sub ject. 
Ir has bee 
Mildew of the Vine (Oidium not 
attacked the enor 1 which grow near the 
common Vine in of e learn from 
M. PErix ye in 1 Jardin des P Plantes the ‘American 
n observed in Fiano that the Egg 
uckeri) has 
Remi:tancea accomp the orders will ensure the deformed. pearances extend to the — opsis quingusfotia), Ampe bi- 
4 penn bee — je 1 aa of the branches, ‘bat are attended by no exte heterophylla and —— y have 
7 end 5 Lagen be — — ‘approved, |SYmptoms. It is, however, to be observed that the — as usual, without a = of — Even 
prolife, e an Black — — 100 * spots which are — on the leaves do not the true Vines, such a vulpina, 
— Prince | (Garhi), very . appear to have any connection with the disease of oo and — — with Weder known in 
ani wa excellent ms — per — Sheanse (liyar ae * E arg, pith. Paris for 30 rs under e Massa- 
large, late, good bearing, and kind, somew wiet of the ‘he;vessels which connect the stone of the Cherry | chus rape (oe Vigne Isabelle), one of the Fox 
— 45 ween 7 gee 4 * per 100. Older esteemed kinds from 
poLLviiocks — from Rubida, Rosea Grandi- 
ora, — a. Queen, Model of Perfection, Black 
Prince, Sulphurea 20s. 100, a portion each 
every 100 of these ki 
fem —— superior to * origin ~ 
— Plaats, 12 6 — we kinds, 2 
400. auu plants, tru 
DiLLISTONE and Go.’s Nur Teris Halstead.—Aug 21. 
CAMELLIAS, AZALEAS, „ WITH FLOWER-BUDS, 
A G —— enen and PROVIDER » 
Belgium, begs to off 
beende wellaet with fom with flower-buds, of the leading varieties 
“CAMELLIA STOOKS Lead fe for grafti 1 1 
‘INDIAN AZALEAS, — os Yeading Pe — varieties, 
at ls. each — 
ain; HARDY AZALEAS, with — of — best 
orts, 18. zd each and u ion 
LILIUM — ALBUM and RUBRUM, flowering 
ea 
ASCLEPIAS TUBEROSA, strong flowering roots, 30s. per 100. 
on of 30 fine new varieties of — $ Hybrid GHENT 
N — flowering 
A collection 
— Just published. a be 
Mr R. SıLBERRAD, 5, Harp- 
3. per 
UTILES — OF WALES AND BLAGK 
E STRAWBERRY PLANTS. 
* PRINCE OF WALES was ee in 1849; it 
is the latest we have in this country—was in bearing, 
August 1. The . is excellent; a dt og cone-shaped 
psa tock the size of a aon ; throws its bloom well u 
foliage light green, and, er roy: 
A= * — deme 
1 they w 
à — 
the Duke — Sutherland’s, 
234 instant, 
2 Ps ge 
: Melon, . 
Meke Gardening round- Daras Is. êd., 
PLANT LOVERS who wish to nrich and bea 
A vie t with good e 
0 eap ra 
may 1 <a by to WILLIAM 
MASTERS, — 5 CANTERBURY, as the 
follo wing list will a 
2 Plants baiar, — 12 Stove Plants, 12s. to 30s. 
distinet "hinds, — spay, ag 12 New eee Rhododen- 
a? Ferns, 12s., 183. drons, 
12 Camellias set with flower- 
12 Orchids, 1 
12 — ods, 12 25. 188., 248. 
3s. to — 
12 Heaths, 96. ‘ae, 18s., Zis, 
12 Fan ney Gera ms, 12s, 
12 Greenhous 1 12 DE Plants, introduced 
ortune, 21s. 
„ 98. to 
Orders are respectfully elutes oan will be punctually 
atrended to 
. 
Che Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1852. 
ETINGS wig — THE ENSUING WEEK. 
onal Floricultural . 
7 
— 
24 
24: Handsworth and — 18.— 
25: Trowbridze, Wycombe, asd Thornbury. Thursday, 
liebester, and Chel e nham, — Friday, Aug. 27: Basbury. 
has been 
this year observed in several places 
the Plum, the G 
the branches without h 
rie: or rots upon the 
of little value, being spotted and eee as if it a 
ilstorm. 
ad suffered from a 
Levens stat tes, are * 
spo 
merely the N of a 
e ee eee ai dk tae ba 
consume then all, indifferently, redai 
hin 
and other 
alf | albumen 
djit a 
scatedly any 
with the 4 stalk readily break off, and gradually 
ecome brow 
This disease of the Cherry eng in its symptoms 
rote to the period at Which it appears. If itis 
tacked when young, before on —ç hardens, t sg 
fruit simply dries no spot 
ut if — is nearly * then only these spots 
n the surface and stal 
ren 
e the Cherry , che attack of 
on that point his opin 
LLE ated to 
M. 
nate 
under cir r 
most favourable to their se wrote and are generally 
in good health.” 
“This simple remark i 
Z| theo ory. Weat Kees, e d why land is 
out when the same plant is 5 in it for 
and when very 
however, must 
not 
orotate and 
at, at its 
ece Epa 
thus vitality is struc 
e primitive elements of the 
r contents; 
selv 
entually disaggregate, and constitution 
. — whôlly affected. Parts then become weak, 
and vy or sees the prey of insects and vegetable 
aras 
ie I is 5 not a little papa that at the time 5 75 
M. writing, ELAFOND, Pro- 
fessor a ash Veterinary school of Alfort, should 
have observed nearly an 8 . effect produced 
y from some risen: 
lov 4 addin, an 
upon the horses fed with 
pastures, l of 
foin. The horse, when at liberty „like plants it in r 
wild e selects the food Ag 
Grasses giving him 
tables, w horse i xclu- 
sively with leguminous heals, his W is 1 $ 
ounds in ie and albumen, and contains 
consider by "dimin 
ction of 
ears 3 u 
was in those 
prod 
first e 
departments.“ 
Such is the manner in which M. LxyvxILLEH looks | fess paek ignorance as reg 
su 
man 
aedu ullary i 
* 
r, | arises from 
The N es ecg 
ordinary Vin. has — — m M. — — DE 
Tuvav to resist the egg ben perfectly, 
che surrounding Vines 
Si ne 
at o 
Isabella Grape, d for the sake of determining whether, 
under such circamstances, the mildew 
e hardy than our own, and may possibly 
tn Baropau capable o of acting well in soils too cold for 
al — one of the causes of Grapes 
not — in England i is that they do not leaf and 
flower early enough for our short summ is 
e coldness of Pe soil of Great Britain, 
which usually keeps the e 
e in full en 
arth hen ontrary, they — een a 
r the. cultivate d Drapa is s Eem — ed. P 
then, a: latter on th 
do 
s the key of the oon 
te 
s- | dra 
Worth inquiring, whether a 
on 
es tage. 
m 
i then neither in fruit nor 
ne; the quantity of blood globules | some 
shed, and t is produced 
or chronic inflammation a the ae Ch 
rs als. M. 
are too 
soil. Why, then, may not the same 
thing rag oe with the Vine i 
gain, ndreds of gardens in song 
land in which the Vine —— even flow 
abundance 
thought of. Tn 
berries eithe 
Vineries, the 
ur; and all the 
ining in the world will not prevent it. It is well 
hardy stock on which to 
not prevent this. i 
raft * 2 would 
of grafte tanding;“ 
no fen 
ontra — we nev ard © 
— was — — rs with 7 slightest disad v 
We therefore recommend the e intelligent part 
of che gardening world to el seriously about trying 
the very simple and unexpensive experiment now 
suggested. 
es not ‘sta 
THE WHITE’ WAX INSECT OF CHINA. 
ublic is no doubt aware that there is a white 
wax (Pe-la) produced in China of great value, and that 
tements have been * regarding the inseet 
from e it is prepared, as 
that in Sir 
inse et of this Hts nets 
“busily employed upon the steal branches of a ; 
4 
8 
. 
$ WAX o China is 
the 
wax is rather gri produce of a species of Coccus than 
of the ah tva F. limbata, or even of the allied 
F. 3 
eve, ae that 3 gh entomologists con- 
the insect, writers 
