PG =e ee 
161848. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 283 
ae hh GOOD PLANT S—, formed, and the larve ¢ g mil 
gt Skinneri grandiflora „0 108. 6d. surrounding tissue ma “gt ee our! ina — ion, — Se a . ers prebuitiiiy 
(The best — in 8 on. 10 
Fran 15 0 
eiiis .. s m * H 10 6 
enia Fortun oe 5 . 1 
bande gZistylaa 4 és 0 10 6 
3 — — oe oe m * 11 
Whitfieldii .. as .. oo D 10 6 
Gloxinia Wortle yars * 2 oe 0 10 : 
Henfreya scanden 3 
. This is a very find haif climbing plant, remaining in in 
bloom several months ; a specimen exhibited by R 
the last meeting of the Horticultural Society of . 
was award:d a Banksian medal. 
— 
— 
oe 
. 6d. 
j 
) 
Sco N= S 
Lindleya me speloides oe 
5 Fortuni (qaite ner D 
Spiræa expansa on oa 
Gra multiforum - .. 
exum 
— — macrophy vilu 0 10 
An bridged Catalogue of Plants may be had on — E- tion. 
R. GLENDINNING, Chiswick Nursery, near London. 
—— SENDING OUT BY YOUELL anp CO. 
HE FINEST CARNATIONS, PI — naD 
IN perd 
2 4 4 
and 
oe oe 
„ 
ga leries in 
creatures in 
It 
was 8 d by M. Roserr t 
seen —— 
e the gallery she was pie 
rhea looke 
her eggs in. 
so found that the 
only bore 
— ba a 
to try whether the progres 
stopped by 2 or removing the 
infested by Sc 
Ro when * 
n Elms, and had for — obje 
severe wounds b 
the neighbourhood of the incisions, 
i certain 
eir galleries under 
Th 
The selection left to T. & C 1 10 4 
. ney w Blower the 18 — r * heat, class . 
10 0 
— mt ized bo pos SOTIR D 
Pinks, finest — varieties, by na pas 0 
. AS. ber dozen, 
All the best varieties of 1847 Be a — 8 
Verbenas, ditto ditto to 0 10 0 
Ditto 28 Wann ROBINSON'S sani 
DEFIA 014 0 
* extra ie show vai tieties g 10 0 
tra best d ctu their cele- 
3 2 ne for Bloom 17 p — >a ( 
Cinerarias, extra fine for 3 spring, 12s to 0 18 
Anagallis speciosa a — * Bre es zen—| 
—— — ö 
ene , finest in cultivation = as 65. to 
Cuphea n an oes 
Dahlias, fine sorts, by name % 6s, to 
Erinus a ea 
i, fine blue for r bedding 
Geraniums, enpi of the saua as for or bedding 6s. to 
8 8. to 9 ( 
-Lobelia compacta, white 2 der ra fi 065 AOE 
` grardifiora, blue 24.45 = * * 
Night.scented Stocks 5 N 
as, extra fine sorts, name ie ai Oh FO 8 
Phlox Drummondi * . 2 4 
Double White Rocket 4 $ £ 
- Silene Schattii vee ee oe ser . € 
Senecio, Double Purple 1 € 
Ch Oe A 
Tree Violets i 9 ( 
Ericas, fine sorts by name 9 „ 126. and 0 18 ¢ 
Standard and half. standard Roses, of 8 sists i 18 
to y 
~ of newest and choicest . per post, free, 
1 of their Superb Seedling PAN SIES, see 14. 
CATION.—Great Yarmouth N 
OSES IN BL 
i Em DENYER Nurs Brixton, near 
ndon, — 8 K strika the — . 
—— t he has 
D CRIPTIVE CATALOGUES. BAY BE HAD ON APPLI- 
a 05 
74 * 
hi ed 
= tained 
4 ‘prepaid application. 4 örlers to 3 of 40s. sent, 
i : to the amount of 5“. and upwards, 
N.B—E, D. D. respectfully informs his friends tha has no 
“other Place of business in London or elsewhere — a above, 
— — 
Gardeners’ Chronicle, ° 
SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1848. 
MEETINGS FOR ie TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
23 on eee 81 zM 
: e first cause was belie 
bably with justice, to be the ill health Pi 
themselves, but a revival of their ancient | 
seemed as rp ea as ation of 
France, however, it would seem 
been solved; ppears, from 
et from a late nu of the 
: proceed 
aun wood, gnawing in their 
the liber and the sap wood a 
. eposits 
eggs on the sides of the gallery thus | 
of 
is Point- du. Jour, = Boulevards the Qua 
In severa 
correspon nds 
ae a great ru 
aged ; 
action osphere, or 
fal wich es old | bark, 
a insects, the females come but s 
eir eggs there. 
on not injure the t 
. — bor ee = 
imm 
nt 
run 
n a single year 
soned in its ae bark 
four or year 
This led M. 3 to — 
2 
© 
= E. 
succeeded. e 
report that they h xamimed 
periods th ae Lon a on 
from trees treated according to —" 
found them co ee eured. He h . — y 
applied his process to more than 2000 inj — Elms, 
and even in the cases of — the loss of the tree a 
does not 8 to have been owing to the oper 
ence the 3 infer 
may be 
tion in question 
barking, the multiplication of these 
istance n unk 
Ptr the trees which these 
hat the larve 
of the Scolyti quickly perish if they are not well 
protected from the drying action of the air; and he 
had also observed that considerable quantities of 
liquids in the vegetable Wen which they 
oy them 
ing t 
t the sap . in any quantity, 
d for lac 
some 2 do mi attack the Page. Faiy 4 8 55 and 
a 
se circumstances led 11 Tae BERT 
ss of the evil might not be 
— — principally made 
t the influence of 
a 
eat ing, which consisted bil in slitting 
thel 75 of the injured tree, but in removing all that 
| Superficial portion of pd bark, which, on the trunk, 
—_ the 
ich it is again e 
th 4 thin ‘for tes En Ra of 
signs et of 5 moreover, 
ts ‘vegetation: 1 * 8 bee 
grow 
as an err tree, ar. 
, of the same age, would in 
eat experiment | 
sti along the avenue 
‘They ha ha 
inspected pieces Ae — hie hl M. eee, obtained 
secondary 
e direction, their diameter 
m the K pe ves 
inbabit 
— insect 
the nor a 
and that 
ace to rations 
most trouble- 
ick, 
= 
= 
bark of trees 
es | ample me 
at this period of the 
year, of uttin 
to the test 480 value of M. Ropert? r E 
s plan, 
ders are aware that we have on sey 
UR rea I 
occasions called their attention to questions of cul- 
ture which are not confined to the limits of the 
are fine 
5 — isles, but which may, 2 us in the 
the cultivation of Tea he Himalayan 
h ros - 
perity An examination into 
the history of these cultures, whether successful or 
unsuccessful, is often instructive to horticultu urists, 
because the 1 a the same as those which 
guide us in our operations at home, whether in the 
open air 7 under glu prs 
e Cereal Grasses there is no plant more 
intimately bound up with the continued 3 
Great Britain — that whic ci elds Cor 
whether we consider 
=. 
so large a en no 
but also of our exports to almost every quarter of 
the globe If w we consider that all this depends 
upon a regular su 
d, 
mate, m 
— ton. 
jae ti 
1 stretching as they do through every gi- 
ht not in some 
e time that they rendered 
e lies * epe ers — — now 
are on both the — ‘wae and the external 
relations of en te countrie 
In order to determine the principles pips should 
guide the te iik: in growing n new situ- 
gered i must first eter wh 
Cotton is now and in connection with these, 
45 — t and pe 
grown 
i oe peculiarities of eg climate, and culture re 
aft. 
Though Indi loubt the 
of Dudin 1 are indi- 
ia is — 
8 
eldom to lay 
ntrary it Ka 
— Pat 
or chemi 
e are equally svitabie in n the several countries sire 
genous, an 
h 
d originated, England was Fie * with Cotton 
wool from the Mediterranean and Levant; subse- 
qu 1 fen the West Indies and Sout h America 
Cotton was then cultivated in Georgia outh 
Carolina, A of late years in greatly increased 
quantities in Alabama and the valley of the Missis- 
sippi. ‘About the year 1820 the cultivation was co 
menced in Egypt, it has been ates ted on the 
— il of —— and late yor ee rt Natal. 
‘le. | Cot 2 3 ued to be cu in almost 
ees part — on — — to the 
present A So also in China, where, — , they 
o not a nme. 
Seeing that Cotton is | in so man 
ng t cultiv: 
ferent parts oF the world, the lige — Aa 
will naturally 
me at once sane a it is the 
same speci 155 — n plant w is cultivated in 
all these ities? a nd igi the ape 
sta 
at kind of soil, either with regard to its physic 
and sim — of culture, 
enumer an r 
great diversities of ade both h with 2 
heat and to ota well as mois- 
ture and the co of che wa Some of these 
questions we shall endeavour to to e on future 
occasions, but will at presen t only point to a state - 
ment of on was imported 
into this country. darias the year 1846, as this will 
an yof toc ces 
which, indepe „ interf ith the 
t 
here were 
1846 :-— 
—— Indice . 148758 
Egypt * * * 71,600 
West Indies e * 14,610 
4,209 bales, or 30, 
658 bales pr we 
the year 1847 h owever, no less an 
t that the remedies 28 sed by M. Ronen 
very useful, and deserve serious att pation: It ap- 
pears clear to them that they can cure 
all the trees ravage colyti ; * they are con- 
vinced that if the . recommende . ROBERT 
be followed in time, the evil will be generally 
before it 5 become of his method -i 
employment of his or 
severing in the employm = 
During 
220,000 bales were imported from India, showing 
ntly a rapidly increasing commerce. in 
the present year it is probable that not more than 
100,000 bales will be sent here, indicating great 
