pe) 
THE GARDENERS: 
CHRONICLE. 
RTICULTURAL 82928 OF LONDON,— 
t the EXH 
. 
LONDON FLORI CULTURAL 
80 T 
sena? 8 — — bes follow- 
leaves 3 a dangerous — 
2 kno 
„long ago 
r. PER 
case, unatic 
Be 
— — 
lants. 
ee Feige erde, 22 
the ROYAL ADELAIDE CU 
mem he 
Azaleas, Ta, addition n to 
P, pre 
will be g 
4 Musical Ban nd wil 
d by 
ven for the best: collection 
i be 15 
Prizes, sa Rules 
EA Joun TAYLOR 
etitio: 
own ma 
6 3 20s. per sum, entitling eac su sgr aay Lay? ‘the 
of attending all Flower Shows, 
ia com exhibiting 2 — Fruit, ‘aad * 
N 1s. poy 
ety, may be obtained from 
Secretary, 
mezer House, Peckha: 
of the 800 
NEVILLE, 
n for Prizes, Sensor sono any charge for 
and also 
Flower Show Lecture, or Meeting. 
or friends at each 
gi. The Gardeners’ 1 deontele, 
TURDAY, AP. 
— 4 THE TWO na a Ee 
— Riegel ..s «s.r», 
‘ 5 l Linnes off oe M. 
'EDNESD. — 5— — of Arts (Anniversary r. M. 
i pieneen “9m 2 — eee eee 8 r. u. 
— 8—Royal Bo tanie 4 7 M. 
fruit 
575 this“ A Bucks Yeoman” . the following 
e poison 
w is a narcotic poison, and 
that the co peer accounts of authors ar 0 
their having examined plants 
growing in diferent place t 
logie,” 2, 2 Mr. Tarron, too, e 
3 Pat cd that “ there is no doub 
uote the statem 
T, were . in the prac- 
tice ofan an a physician, who 
the s a 
Not ta mention the make his home what he best 
r 
me at Dublin į in consequence of chewing leaves of is no 
hi OU A etum 
A — combina 
e 
r to place the question beyond 
ent of Bun- gen 
8 
o which may perhaps bea 
t likes it to be himself. 
t him only avoid 
the absurdity of inding to- 
wrda within so small a space characters which 80 
become most palpably in ng s (very like the 
Siamese twins, if one were “the 
of harmony, or contrast, 
ifferent when we rami to 
The 
deal with really extensive grounds. 
is no longer painfully close. The i inco ongruity i is no 
longer harshly repulsive. And the solution of this 
s ve 
8 
tasteful style is a problem 
hat is a case in whic s avowed! 
— only object 2 — ati is to produce 
most . from a 
3$ 
S 
profession 
the high place which all would 
tained. One—and the — — i 
ther he eau measur —— st’s eye, 
and appreciate with an artist's gebe capa- 
i ities of thes spot with which he has to do. On 
th's rock alone the m 
he 
like—and without regard to the peculiar nature 
“Allow me to come to the rescue of the Yew tree, may al the posit of young, or perfectly fresh Yew | of the existing scenery, it is obvious that 
and to assure your correspondent, Epwarp Hates, that leaves be ing different in their action from old leaves, a proper appreciation of these capabilities alone 
its leaves cel rate : Tt m rho Saree ~ or ate sometime gathered and partially dried. ca 9 1 t racte sce be 
eventu i 4 
Killing the good housewife’s chickens. "e 1 mine Dowxixc's definition it GENERAL | tually w — 4 the “ars pat aas is in 
st 7 Geese Soke and F sque Beauty in LANDSCAPE Gii e of the artist or not—whether he can intro- 
of those charming hills, the South Downs: Many | PENING to be correct, is his assertion that the one | duce prin and ob the arious, yet 
trees are of very ancient date, and are, it may or the other should predominate in any created | harmonising beautifully together—wheth 
those from which our sturdy fore- Scene, equally correct? There seems very little | w 0 
their bows. On those trees, when their | difficulty in answering the eaten if it be only 
are tender, or when. the ars a mantle | fairly examined. y 
orses, sheep, and cattle feedin There are two views ‘of the case. The one is 
* 
Torta aan, 
were 9 
to ‘te 90 
rn trees be condem 
. made the reply which elicited this 
. — we 
teply 
Canvorus 
With a decocti 
ee 
%, t 
as poisonou 
no me 
the Yew has been disputed. 
history of the Gaulish Ki 
i involved by a consideration of the authors 
desi i A 
d | freely 
| . . by the grounds. 
tion “involved, 
D| be laid 
e speaks distinctly of having regard to 
ose whom Landscape Gar 
sht to interest. They ar pie sd man 
possessors of widely.s — se 
canvas over which the genius 
range —are the few espect to 
the gratifying of — taste of these many, ‘the author 
undoubted] ect. wien ould be more 
uch a combination of 
wou 
without harmony, but with 
„Only imagine that from any 
can take in at a glance pe whole 
great majority of t en- 
ing ough 
one point you 
What 
ous than to crowd into a narrow 
r very character of wild- 
rsed with little bits of 
In limite ounds, 
e one 
avowed | mo 
variet 
: the} an 
d be 
rer of the wild and the sub- Peru 
And there is no mul 
ge; doubt that the occupiers of such grounds form the 
it eye, 
mingled mass f 
this opens out a field for 
N as it does the importan 
ROP 
and fan 
utterly indigesti 
fathers A 
n of 
thoi 
Wiru reference to a SALE or Onchip; advertized 
in another column for Tuesday next, it m 
then, ther o doubt that the one 
— or or the ‘oth other 500 decidedly, if not en- 
por a | completely, predom 
en in this case reg is pain considera, 
the grounds, thus 1 
oot op e nothing in cultivation 
80 Be bees as t We 5 that the plants are in 
excellent health. 
THE METHOD OF D F. KLOTZSCH TO 
DR. 
in harmony with the surrounding PROTECT POTATOES AGAINST DISEASE. : 
scenery, or in perfect contrast? Ami n and | You had the goodness to insert, in No, 38, 1847, ad 
ed landscape, should your own grounds be wild | commu on respecting Dr. Klotzsch’s discovery of a 
Tugs : method to protect the Potatoes against disease: A com- 
a 00? should the eye find relief by = since’ been appointed to 4 = this 
resting in repose on the smooth and slightly undu- method, and the Prussian Gav 3 a 
>| lating surface—the still water—the gre Wer. | the discoverer a reward of 2000 dollars if it should be 
shorn lawn—and at can pret the idea of calm | found practicable, To thi his the 
| gracefulness? And again—if the point on Potato p t has been made publie, and the following is 
a - Which you dwell, the whole Badge every way a full ion from the German of this interes 
eed ng ith to the horizon, i is a champaign country varied by paper, under the hope that —— ease may be 
t he gave th hly-fl streams evenly-growing | tried in England, and the result cated for 
4 e gave them | smoot owing i Feng S 4, Surbi 
d with twice the quantity of Oats. | vegetation—should you render yam own mere gen neral —— — ‘urbiton, 
» on the contrary, a case i more markedly beautiful by the contrast which | Surrey, Mare 
pherds were attacked with fever in| objects of sullen grandeur yield? 4 a ee = 8 — . me nee 5 
f having eaten Lew berries. Mr. | Appisox wrote o 10 different subject — there ts tu ial part of plant, Though it resembles tm aie 
valuable work on Poisons, quotes is much to be said on both sides; and the reason | 5 annual, its functions are analogous to those 
| child which died in convulsions 1 kor this difference of opinion is ver, . nen — — trees. The Potato differs, 
- Mintheseeasec ling a quantity of Yew berries, | man’s — ee 8 1 5 from inborn | therefore, from all other food plants which are eulti- 
then cases the stones were probably swallowed, Taste. h man’s Taste should vated in and it we only be compared to the 
chief eo * attributable to these alone remain fis Sarto which i is aeli certain ) the con- | tubers of the a pla which belongs to the tribe 
Whatever ma ain t f: P ty | 
| Sones, there cal racy be the fact as ya ds the fruit or troversy would never come to an end. The truth atural 8 Orchidacese, the cultiva- 
| n 
o reasonable doubt about the i 
is that, in respect to this Gangs cock man must 
Ophrydem, of 
tion of which 2 not been attempted as yet. The 
