9 
THE, GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
ND rae A rr AND BUL 
poe new plants, th the NEW ERAN 10A last out, atr 
pricas, 
r a Sudbury, Suffolk. 
] ie Gove: 
| the cultivation of the Pota 
| for o 
of 
ent returns is he ap mind the fact that 
ff 
. 
B 8 
st 
112 
5 
apo: 
t, although it may be true 
ST IMPORT EO. 
J cin SUTTON. AND — GROWERS, 
S Berka, have just received from Messra. Byvosr 
aad Mr. De a superior — — of 
ACINTHS, ANEMONES, — other — — 
—— ay 
J. S. and Sons recommend — 5 "is the 
ose who prefer it, t t, they ‘import a fresh 
assortment for = er pinning fa 
The Priced L — — ‘ead the following are 
the prices of — pepe — doz.—s, d 
The finest 8 mn —— —— * 15 
o ditto 
datian 
OW eet 
a <5 a 
c 
p z 
3 
+ 
Hi 
a | 
‘ A complete scone 5 me ai ior i most desirable hinds 
0 blooming, or 1 
N. B wer ae to the am — 2 
sent CARRIAGE FREE, 
Address, J OBN SUTTON & Soma, Seed Growers, Reading, Berks. 
3 upwards will be 
GUERNSEY AND 2 LILIES. 
RIDGEWATER PAGE AND CO. 
ure to off. 
er 
95778 H 507488. consisting of HYACINTHS, TULIPS, 
Soa ge “ADIOLI „o., have just arri n fine con- 
jogues o 
NICHOLSON'S TWO) NEW SEEDLING STRAWBERRY 
PLA 
TAM NICHOLSON continues 
unrivalled 5 — — PLAN xe vent the Ard 
and Ruby“ at N. for 100 eats 1l. 5s, for 50 ý 
for 25. 1 rders H aioe $e atten ded to on 
send out his 
es upon it season ; colour ruby, sh 
Oval, size a little less than the Queen,” 
from some 
which Mr. N. will be be 
WILLIAM NICHOLSON, 
— 2 — AA Yorkshire. 
September ll, 
sentation 
the 
LING “ELIZA” STRAWBERRY (Rivers) 
Sante 
ö — pa m peck 
—This 
Eliza, and proves to be one of 
berries known. Keens’ is fully ri this 
y ripe, s 
e 
a an tise toa sh Queen; 
ite habit int npact, ang if, 
S ts, Jast e s runners, trans 
Mare sen eae tea —— e * 
—— — a good early Strawberry, 3s, per dozen. 
3 Herts. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1852. 
— Snows.—Mooday, 
— —4 —— Sept. 1 
15: C cL Pan n 
Belt Fy oi Bath, and 
and Whitehaven Dahlia.—Sa' 
Sept, 16: Hexham.— 
— Er ire ta 
y, Sept. 18 Sept: 18s Biinburgh and Meath, 
ommon practice, has 
the > soundest aropa; — the late — 
— eturns not havin, 
3 nee eg ates 21, 
1 
y certain 
ae circumstances, either 
S or the crop be seriously | 
p Sept, 13. — Tasadar, Sept, 14s North footstal ks 
ny places m more kad! is oecupie 
crop than 2 1847 
than in 1845 and previous years. 
a singular e 
Wea have before u 
— ing A — to — allusion has 
possibility of 
been so often m 
Ir. Santer, of the Versailles Nursery, Hammer- 
smith, observed last year — his — Dahlias 
one which produced a number y flower 
heads, but no perfect on root was 
every plant is now 88 
s of scales, 1 more like an 
Artichoke than i Dahlia. All * are 
vigorous, wat there is not a Esty P flower 
— ad upon any one of them ms so that the sport seems 
o have becom already fixed. 
y one cimens now before us, and which 
we owe — Me, e specie the following is a repre- 
Kb 
ied with this the G 
, yet there is very much less in va 
dis 
mi 
xample of that 
committed by the Grape m 
blighted ta es from that island h —— 
yC. H. C. Pt 
ugh 
owprn, E to Sir W. J. Hoo 
and. thro i a i to an ie 
inspection, It y probable that after a 
long voyage they could arrive in a very satisfactor 
state, bu gh ised and decayed they 
void of inte Many 
the 0 
V. distans. The spore s of this are about yyy 
an inch in length, but mixed with them 
t is Earn A certain that F. so 
is r 
sei 2 so often occurs on fn 1 wore part of the 
stems and tubers of Potatoes in an early stage of the 
P murrain ; and it i is very possible that we hava, g 
fF {a> i — an case, for two forms of 
Poe ructification occur ongst — 2 
y SAEN Another point — interest was also furnished by 
Ee ray AA \ the decayed | odour was at once 
ier EN ) f) i perceptible — the box, and is indeed very’ 
wy aN 1 pai ANE 1 “ero in decayed re ym A 
n . has not proceeded too * 
a wi W then, that the first glance at the field 
„ 
ot raft ar that ie a a 
x va the seen that in this case the 9 diligent { KA 8 is equa 
scales l and the pal ET - use o R 
tacle, i re 1 ora . i Ear. have therefore had some difficulty in — Seah 
n them the — —— exam have obtained mea a a 
state, have all taken o 
an harrowing — bases i 
a mere 
ples. hat w 
to assertion as to the mould in this country affe 
3 the under surface of the leaves, 
de 
K preci 3 with 
0 F507 to it. We have nothing to retract on 
to fect” — except that w 
uch of the same size pe Shape 
A ne ar species of 
Conisporium, consisting of or pyriform 
obov. 
bodies, about +5» of an inch long, ‘ra shed with a 
single septum at the narrow end, an ae 
i A. glawa were bandant on the 
e especially the latter. M. J. B. 55 
, firstly, THE UNNATURAL E EXCITABILITY = j 
that pak — and —— of a Dali, pare therefore TY 
of all composi owers aves imperfectly ‘ s à 
rere or, if the reader shinies, stopped in their . el * 
growth when very young 3 ; secondly, that the recep- pre wend ich 
tacle of such plants, the“ bottom of the Artichoke hes Fe tural: 
for example, is 3 a branch taking a horizontal of extiteh anifeste t this 
development, instead of growing! zand | of the Instead | „ 8 
thirdly, that no Ronan! exists in ing nerly, many o have pr nder. 
* artifici is es ae stem u ae thie “3 
production pore ei 5 tyme a means impro- hea Å i Pe 
paie tc it may again s made to do. so, ciate of 1 it eh 
ng the green of its scales for some bricht colour; | S¢eompaniment of Tae e „ 
and: i609; a very pretty looking garden m plant ee ay — t every unhealthy 
e result. puts forth persevering efforts, often out 
2 well = in eee flowers, -> or 1 
A paracrara was lately copied from a daily paper | and 
Es ie ais giving an account of the ravages 
Sia 83 e vane aral they S fom 
