a > 
50—1852.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 791 
— ... — 
— we ithorp Crassane a transition = — s — into — b Wheat of Mr. Parker, gr. to G. Josselyn th Macame Poggi; 4, 
montel, _Bishop’s Thumb, — — | is exhib — foga ä with eag aiar P ten pots (9-inch), 
Town, Knight’s Monarch, acon’s ncomparable | the south * etailed | distinct varieties: 1, Mr. Whitman, gr. to W. H. Alexander 
the latter beautiful pan of — excellent variety, from Pew — of — ci — — nees —.— — this inte- Esq., with Nancy de Sermet, Christine, Vierge Marie, Princess 
y’s owick.—Of for — Pear rs res ing transformation, see pp. 451,467 of our current Maria, Annie Salter, and Queen Victoria; 2, Mr. Furze, po 
` Hengist, Christine, Ros: de Ciel, aay pee e Camerson, 
which it — be — to state do not compete with voi volume. From Mr. Grey, gr. to W. Cuthbert, o 
— of ‘English growth), Mr. Lewis Solom mon, of Esq., of Beaufort, H came fruit of the n anda, nee Aarie, Th S ee " and ae 2 
Covent-garden, sent an excellent collection, consisting. Houghton, or Raby tle Currant, a large red | serme gis — — Pompones (8-inch’, distinct 
urré Rance, Glout peri a Uvedale’s variety, which is excellent for — —— It varieties: . as “ite, La 1 oops with Sa — — — 7 
: onis, La Pacto et hitman 
Germain, Jean d Witte, Cha montel, Bon Chrétien’ — hen grown again 90 orth — I, | Adonis, La e, Pols ae ey 157 a Mos 1 
and Belle Angerive. A Banksian Medal was aw and protected from —.— rain, — — St, it will continue Class IV., 6 pots Mr. Gilbert, with Annie Salter, 
— An interesting trayful of Apples 2 contr good till the latter end of Decen ber. —The on ly — r — —— bampestroni, date i. — — Fée 2 and 
i from hire: ristine; 2, Illine, with Vesta, Princess 
buted by Mr. Errington, Cheshire 2 — uppi gi, Vierge Marie, Golden Cluster, and Pom — 5 ; 3, Mr. 
rove 
that instead of the Golden Pippin wearing out, as some 
imagine, the fact Po it — sas too tender for our were extrem 
te i 
important — of this fruit, in the ans of 
tiful exam 
b 
ples of the true old Golden Pippin, was 
š v ans 
been grown all, 
pa fine ee ps are — gathered; while 
from 
of this ae in the 
d; surely going far to 
were con i 2 Ingram, gr. to her 
ripened fruit of this varie — per ree 
gr. to Col. 
sent an Enville, 4 Ibs. 2 02.; an Provi 
12 oz. wi i 
S 
sent a 
Qu ueen, 5 
— J — se 4 — Certificates of Merit were 
to Mr. P. 
for which a Certifica fieate. was awarded, were produced, in 
uscats, beautifully 
of Oak 
Dor 
Baker at Salisbury. Mr. Davis, o ~ ue ipn 
da 61 
— — 5 Queen 4 bs. 5 oz., and 
oare, gr. Hailey Bart, M P., a Ripley 
ibs, 10 8 ere with a — "cultivated 
a Me "Hoare. —— ent Grapes, 
d fine 0 same . 
Hill, contributed a dish of Oldaker's Weste St St. 
Peters, in first-rate condition, be being ae plump, and 
m pary, of 
— ; and J. Taylor, Esq Oakley, 
nt three bunches of bay colour 1 Black Ham- 
burgh, — basket of Museats J. G. Nash, Esq., of 
Bishop's Stortford (which pron very late), were 
y in: 
0 
d, best land in the United Kingdom is the clay, when | Caratocuss received trara Je, 25 Harrison, Grange Nursery, 
2 
n ha 
I ass. 
them in a high state of luxuriance: — Mr. 
mæ to F. Newdigate, Esq, of Blackheath, 
lant of Amaryllis reticulata. Messrs. 
Sanh said sen again sent the new Ey 
ree neat A ö 
It — that Lemons had — cultivated l against a a 
wallin Mr. for se. last- 
as Grapes. possibly could 3 a Banksian 
was awarded them. Black Hamburgh and 
Hall M = fi 8 
> 
U 
y had been produced in 
, at Trentham, E. Paver, Est of Taunton, | pr 
— in the spring of 1851 it was 
0 
by Mr. L. Solomons, of —— whose collection Whitman, with Nancy de Sermet, Queen Victoria,’ Annie 
con good examples of kale, Endive, Lettuces, | Salter, Madame Poggi, Christine, aud — Marie. ees 
i d green aragus, the | 2+ cut blooms. 88 not less than 12 varietie > 
— Carrots, <m — — ” — e a | Barnes, with th of Gold, Orion, "Péruvienne Queen 
gree ng what is calle ew à scat Marceau, Golden Cluster, Madame Cha 
Banksian Medal was awarded. Othe: mae — vière, Lysias, Pilot, Gluck, Count araia. Nonpareil, Lady 
sisted of arge purple-topped Swed: Talford, Voltigeur, Christine, Satyr, Dupont de l'Eure, 
it R — some — cultu Fée à’Ivry, Annie Salter, and Versailles Defiance y 
4 Gardener to Sir T, Cullum, Bart., wit on, Queen of 
and disleafing 55 which — be found at p. 707. Then Fellows, Hengist, Fée d'Ivry, Lady Talford, Madame Shas. 
e solid, fi and good, eighed | vidte, ilo, Madame Hardy, Phidia „ Lueidum, 
d re, Beau 
. Certificate of Meri to 2 9 ibs, and 9 — 40 z.— From the Garden | Annie Seken, King ot — Golden Cluster, Queen 
Mr. Snow for tis exhibition, —Some good Pine $ 
ted. 
of the Society came various Pom —— and other Chry- 7 ” 
= emums, adverted to i in our rt at te 175 5 the | 3, Mr. * sae with Golden Yellow, Annie Salter, Queen ion, 
ogland, 
per olum Lobbi ianum, Ba aumann’s vari e e age h de veh Mad, Hard 
arge p o ran , 
i i i de Een, Mad. P King, Ma amerson, and * npereil,— 
has been long lost sight of in in — but which makes | oi SVL, 1 1 distinc jamerson, Tae tae na 
ndsome summer-flowering bush ; and Often, Oiristine, Queen of England, Queen of Yell —. Annie 
a collection of winter-flowerihg Heaths, the only one | Salte ter, Non „ Milo, — de Sermet, 3 (new), 
‘od The sorts were Erica nidularia, the la: Vesta, Princess. ‘Maria, and Lady Talfourd; 2, Mr 
i d 
n 
p 
1 55 
* 
w 
* 2 
3 75 
3 
ap 
e 
mn 
2 
8 
e e Na 
hiemalis, and meee ersailles Defiance, Dapout a and Agenor; 3, Mr. Gil. 
It was announ 3 the next Meeting would be — with Vierge Marie, Annie Salter, Temple of Solomon, 
held on January 18, 1853, at 2 rat, when the. special eee Bes 4. Queen of Hoglend M. tna toa 
1 of exhibition may K be— —the best collection of Class vir, six cut blooms: 1, Mr, Sy, with Nonpareil, Gluck, 
ar yW Queen of England, Vesta, Lady Talford, and de 
English 2 and the best — most varied Salad. 18 2, Mr. Cuthbert, W — Ly — Rose de 
je ê 0 g 
— — — oa H 
B Count —— 
í Novpareil, Mr. — hibited ceedingly good 
Motites of k Books, &t. th but they were n disqualified 4 * consequence of 
t being n 8 —— Prae- 4 re R e 
Cam estroni, Annie Salter, 0 nglan 
. pac 9 By ©: W. H. Christine e, Vierge — le Belle 2 een, & e. Mr. 
collec nes st 
Tun readers + Pa Agricultural Gazette need Hadan mo Lemichez, Solfa roan Sacramento, Ninon, Argen. 
not be informed of the merits of the articles on a fie, Le Sirocco, La Ruche, N. Jules d'Ivry, Maria Vorzel, 
fi x i í 
Mr. Latter 
humorous way 2 deseribed very serious facts about Fiancée, Surprise, 3 r 9 
the heavy land ngland, and we doubt not have — — Ninon, — and Henriette Lebois. 
ne 
B 
® 
© 
is — — Durham Mr. Richard — ley, Halam, 
e intelligence that is demanded in the Borit kwelt; e . from Mr. James Finlayson, 
management of it. The aot is a beautifully got up Be dhills, Paisley. 
book, illustrated with numero amusing woodcuts | Pa Es: Old F iend. 2 = Krag th up every shoot to within 
characteristic of the clever artist, 87 x ‘Cruikshank, of h some nice sweet and some- 
— — 3 Fee pegging them down — A . 
ontaining new matter, relating to the right w way of | * have oat * — 
steam power to tillage, - caual distan — 
Williams on the Cultivation of Ferns and and Lyapoine advances bend 2 e 
(12mo, Chapman and Hall, PP. xige kori is a useful ac | rooted into the sandy directed a 
f the er in which s lants are tically supply young plants wili be the result; these may 
d by one of ore moa successf be planted in rows, mee will afford y — p le stock 
Wks y to take the place of t ——ů plants. We seldom 
It is, however, to be that more pains shouid found euretives oh by this simple process, and 5 
regretted ort 
not have owe taken with the orthography of the had to take cuttings. J. E. 
scientific nam N Foxe: 
— — seeds. — “tea 
cannot ta F 
FLORICULTURE. nde rden J H. They may be pruned any time 
. * but as good a time as any is just after 
a . 
GERMAN garde Perhaps i in a history of German he anc P Dy We ott maddie rt Ia the 
| Stock growing, are few instances on record of „ 3 rave 
the plants keeping in flower fo — 25 a long period as the bi mho end b ataie dd produet of dust — nat coe T a 
| following :—The seed was sown in the spring of 1850 ; way regulate et price, 
a the plant flowered — — towards the end of 
and placed in a 
. — en border, still in flower and continued 
H paein a mets To 3 
mn 3 ter, not bite 
2 v f 1850 to the: ghts of the cold season. From what I have seen, I 
Si s of Zygopetalum, Mr. | owers * nig the i „in. 
flowers of Tropzeol — : = is autumn of 1852. P. M. think that it only requires three or four fies to kill a 
identical with eee 5 — — 5 oe Rosks.— The r are eee 9 large ox. We . ours’ which 
Lobbianumm; examples ,| here :— Bourbon Quee had been and died ; they all same 
handsome — ory — spotted Pe éant de Batailles, — ‘Reine, Pierre de St. Cyr, 15 
TT... — Fabvien, Williadie- Deane, e Duval, 
W * wi wering plants. The Lon. Rosaméne, M 
lection Strangways sent a highly: interesting cob | Desprez, 
which eee pni winter-flowering plants, | Moore eme, 5 —.— ) n —.— 
Which moet, 2 un the mild climate of Dorsetshire, but ut a contracted and emaciated organ which might be 
Gert Londen, Tite: the protection of greenhouse | rf, chi rel Bein Soe ber u Ore . — quancty and each by the least pressure of its'wallsiz it resembled 
an Azara , integrifolia, which. ivoa in the open dern exhibi fos. The day was Soe, apd ce wana . fin repre nde We l 
n at C uswick, but does not flower; the beautiful | attendance. The o largest ox did not e than 20 pints; it was 
. — Convolvulus Cneora,| 1 attention. These, with tue other Clirssanthemums, thick albuminous. The hands, when imm 
e Garen Double Priania’ Cipeles EAR | ste blood; were not spotted by lt. Ie poison appeared * 
t eschensultia formosa, Coronillas, G. Demet ese coils “ch 4 
kee “Carnations, ain winter to spread in the blood and to chang the rest of — 
chow | The prizes wero awarded . he following m „Bong. organs through 
adame Poggi; 2, H. Furz 
ae ‘specimens : 1, Mr. Benin a Pilot; 3, stic animals, except the goat; die of the bite of ä 
5 — 
