39—1852. | 
E VINES FROM EYES, ee FINE. 
s Road, Chelsea, ha 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
j — species of Spharia, when growing on a. thick] 
| 
pricked with Peas is quite a novelty. Let us hope 
ul as 
— ano Co., K ve ch and — a filiform * The rac ye — it may be always as „Barak 
iakeas tion of VINES, Tey strong and Spheria her m, again as found it. The plan evidently rests upon the same 
clean, two 1 s 1 * from Eyes, resent a age A _— a ji on th — vg lat that h : 
for PLanmna or Pauris — a Soa ions av ived 
Also e and valuable panes | of STOVE and red sea-w exposed ach, | 80 pr — to the influence of weeds upon 
GREENHOUSE PLANTS, e cnr instead of ‘ing developed vin t — of| the Potato e rop. ey off the disease, 
CULTURAL Boitpine and HEATING by fler | herbaceous stems. Nor are there stranger differences | says ewes us they screen the Potato plant from the 
J, Weers and Co., King’s-road, Chelse of eatity 8 'the higher fungi. Agaricus currents of malaria that is the 
— ROMAN AND PAPER WAITS NAR- ee so common on old trees, occurs also on theory of a second; at all events‘ —. do act . 
CISSUS, 4s, per dozen — former ol us plants, as Lupines. Agaricus præeoz; | somehow,” cries.a third. The di has 
which is — 222 0 — tor 4 — carly blooaing and wee bes a grows usually on exposed pastares has been that. there is no lack of bance rat and yei 
8 „essarr 2 and Foreiga Warehouse, 7 posers n the dead stem p ulosa. | weeds were not found a safi in that countr 
Palimall, near Wa garicus portaran a the ca sioni eddie . — and that. wich us a weedy fi is is often found to 
Tr ae . of Fer ssings one “a the worst. 
5 HEES, 
—— tlio 
f Roman Narc 
Le. T — 4s. dozen ; orm largest 
—— e ozen. lörders above 10s: ôd. Sete 
oun. TULI 
14 AGINTHS, 
geai ghar tes, Catalogues of 
f Ae namore, and Co. 
PS, 
— ‘iu are d in fine con- 
Seed 
— — 
SHALE MAN NURE, 81. per ton. 
Manure 
Company 
1 
n stems. A Copri dre 
of fractured limbas and ——.— * * 
ar habitat might be noticed, In — neral, Eg 
urring in. suc range are 
— 0 ith some ee’ the * they 
ibit Being seldom speci 
These observations Save: been called forth by 
the examination of some Agarics fo 
. on the walls of the sew. 
ratus at egy ram 282 out 
soum and fæ o the brickwork. One 
a Coprinus, 22 aa not bear a lo ong 
CAMDEN NURSERY, CAMBERWELL, LONDON. 
TLLIAM BAR Es inform 
ery sup 
tends out in Packets at 2s. 
A remittance is pone Po from unknowa corresponden 
ös, oach. physaloides 
— nd has, consequently, not come wit 
our notice, except so far as the de — spores certain] 
indicate that ge nus. The other is a u uzzling 
species, which we believe to be a form — 
of E is in fact . inter- 
mediate between that s 
Oe — AZALEAS, anb RHO- 
SEALE AS ie. 183., 856. — 905.5 N 
57 1 76555 70 iio Sad 7 f various shades), 
::; . eee ED which 
WV BIGELA ——— — 2 ll — c 
ia Paris a quant 
15 — Fhion wa we —— to 
ese hav k 
recei 
wW 
plant. From 
the same 
the mat 
ae which is patente identical t vitat tho fi og — 
res. of Sow 
affinity to the plant of Sowzunx, as they have 
strong Mushroom scent which might ——— prove 
deceptive, M. J. B. 
success. 
bel yei aud un! 
e 
Saini 
ror produced, T 
r pig y wae wood early in 
have nice compact 
may be Sones ured that where weeds an 
sound Potatoes have been found in connection the 
eeds were thin enough and s h 
exhaust the land of its ee „ over- 
ading it; and if so, that may ing 
e e Y at M. Baran. tell us of his Peas 
ith w e recommend to al 
r co 
least W attend the p 
gmet — a crop of Peas, if you lose the crop. of 
LEONOTIS LEONURUS, 
1 autumn, o 
ha vo 
will 101 in RUS course 
1 in 4-ine 
| the . are acy band, gent 
1 4. a ap AA Pot them si 
„ * 
a1: 
and 
FRUIT TREES. 
W anp OO, invite the attention of the 
Trade to their Stock of Beane Fruit Trees. They are 
of — Sao sr growth this season, and the collection com- 
pak aeiee — Peaches, Nectarines, 
NGHORNE'S SEEDLING EPACRISES. 
Jons anD CHARLES ES LES Pom fez 
re prepared to 
3 Aian 
jar, Dare whe Ui, at * — * well 
E. GRAN DIPLOMA BBA. Tobe. — 
much higher Sora tips pure — 8 
. e —— ed — and longer than 
—— tip more 
ERIGI at 
CE. OF THE bis 1 — a usual discount to the 
patep —— a —— —— red. 
ily 
offered to “the 4e Public neo — hey are — eat improve- 
ments, hin habit a ad profasevens of blooming, over all 
former. int . d will prove highly valuable for 
on. 
Nursery and Seed Establishment, Hammersmith. 
fae gg = at Seedlings, 
— a 
3 A 
peat, plaste all da: 
subjects that Mics ge Teal “till Gua. and | 
Comptes Rendus 
us a thoroughly new project, of whieh we 2 a 
literal translation. The article is headed“ Fires | icogulacty 
Economy — On a method calculated to 
the Potato disease. (Extract of a letter 
o the custom of the country, in ridges. 
ground (abont a hectare) was set 
ith Potatoes not ies ed with — 
“In spite of the — ss of the summer, the Peas 
grew strong 2 flowered, while the Potato stems 
pushed vigorously. 
Tok x atter were 3 N ias nor 222 
were all sound, but were small an 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
` SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1852. 
1 supposed, especially by those 
species are 
botany, and į 
Those, Towevet, 
| Searcely worthy of the 
these eur who eae diligently sed 
ll assured that th 
the vegetation 
of 
the t 
nu A They ke ‘ont perfectly well, and some 1 
prar for setting, = last (1852). A part of the 
er Potatoes was disease 
„While this vn riment was going on in a field 
of cei soil ce hardened 51 Ls 
dryness of the n, similar trials were made 
kitchen pe aa soil of ii h was lighter, ‘ead 
ee = a good tilth by 5 ; thie: seedlings 
watered. was the s 
eover, 
The tubers 
rapidly indicated si signs of i 
“ Duri wth of the Pea stems and 5 
pear in 
2 hey erat ne 
f the saline matters they eee, 
Wers i is no henge ics: eai of absorption as 
0 
all heard of a “capon pricked 
e€ ve 
the bacon,” and a very good thing it is; but a Potato 
— 
to prevent 
from 9 
cn regula 3 “it — a 2 5 
ured, Protection from 
requiro 
the stopping. 
285 
| 
others planted in the same soil | 
lh 
| secon 
w the shoots gen 2 
ay five or six sets of pnd before giving tng the nal 
rhs aa is done the outside shoo’ 
be 
T 
where an abundant sup Ae is nper 
When the plants start into free growth after stopping, 
they may be shifted into their flowering po size 
of which must be b 
sun, sudden ex 
0 
probably 3 their growth, and the A ‘onl bea 
hen they should 
to remain in this 
at growth in autumn, when 
er. If allowed 
month, 
H 
| have 
t flo 
with 8 
N the 
e them in flower, keep the atmosphere 
moist, and give manure-water 
r aa n 
will 
3 them. While ! in bloom 
|i rather dry atmosphere, with a temperature of 
