271848.) THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
435 
dis, 
H a SOCIETY OF LONDON. — 
2 Pas 
— 
55 
WEDNESDAY 
pny ae te 
adde matt riting 
their sses in w 
le pehin — = ri kh — 1 may obtain * m 2 officer an authority 
3 oceasion. 
. No tic — be issued in Régent-street on the day 
of Exhitition, 
Che Gardeners’ Cheonicle, 
SATURDAY, JUNE 31, 
MEETINGS r = TWO FOLLOWING bln 
—Entomologi¢al ri, 
8 — -H rilgnitaral M. 
Wapwesvaxr — —35 al Botanic Gardens 8 22 
Farparx Botanical oc 8. Pe 
SATURDAY 1 — — od . be 
‘DNESDAY ultural Gardens 
Coonrer SHOW. Tie oe 1 Sate 11: York — nl.. 
Severav statements have reached us announcing 
ATO DISEASE; we have 
open 
a 
d in the neighbourhood of Ashford, ‘and in | po 
information 4 is important to any o s it most un- 
doubtedly is, it is more especialy e 7 gardeners, 
e re varied than those of 
the feed 
alkalies are to a certain extent Alas is 8 el known; 
baits according to the authorities we are now quoting, | s 
when they — analysed * means of burning, as is 
the usual practice. “ From the great rapidity,” 
these ¢ — Wit „ac ü on. 
these materials contained in nE by the results 
of incineration e that in nota few 
often be done i — the most — ä 
if ever, with single s pecimens as every 
or carrying a principle too far. 
Intricacy and irreg gularity eh be gag e their 
are of picturesque t w 
will say that single objects, and duels ing are 
never a qu ue? Is not magnificent, aged 
for example—standing bys itself in a pation 
is | object pictu . — the most picturesque ? 
Is not an isolat in pictures Indeed is not 
that very’ — of certain objects the very source 
of their on © neness then we think the 
author he principle that “every object 
should nen to eapnest itself with something else,” 
hana 
ery sameness of ‘intricacy. The truth is 
ko principles papey — 3 the 
end aimed at. gle and i pieturesque 
objects aun He. of fect of the . — masses 
Yorkshire—the a in as bad a state as any we FE it seems a little | remarkab! e that ar source | aroun aids the other by the contrast which 
saw in a how see nothing | oferro n brought | it vie 
of it in our — ighbo rhood, and uld be to e notice of analysts, as likely to Modi niate- The ame indeed seems coms aro with 
oblge ed to our correspondents in different parts of Pally their 9 imself when . on this point. There will 
England for some inforiiiation as to crop within eem s important that ee unexpected state- be open glades unpic turesque as in . planta- 
their observation. — — n impression was, that it Sead should be verified by those who are labouring . e a openings in the for will be 
had either disap or ceased to be of any con- 
sequence, for the present. 
£ last number of the Chentiesl Gazette” con- 
wi paper by the — Rocks, on THE DECOM- 
WATER, AND or WATER 
at the tedious but — suninideiion of the 
ts. 
Lovnoy, in one part of his remarks on Grovrtxe, 
to which we have alrea 
alluded 
sepii, WITH 3 acıp. This communica- mutations and combinations. His statement is 
tion is of imp ance to parrak — throws simple and very confident. “Of this any person 
light upon some hitherto obscur nts in the may convince himself by ‘placing a few dots 
theory of cultivation. More e 3 it shows paper. Thus two trees, or a tree and 
ca an s 
s constitute the 
manure, not only act as themselves 
t of m 
by emitting carbonic acid, 3 
hydrogen, | fixed if he — round . they will — 
and other 1 of deconiposition, vit that they vary — — separately, and nex 
also — — and reduce — their elements the | two oS Reap ede to the Porttten ok the Wee. 
8 — e mix tat nner, three trees may be placed 
The OGERS ‘hive prived experi- | in four d sitions s four trees may be placed | 
mentally that water holdin; ic acid in solu- in eight different positions; five trees -may | 
tion acts with much energy in a short space of ere in 10 different bathe as ee six 
ime, — Time, nesia, alkali, &c., from be placed in 12 differen 
the ‘hardest ‘rocks. su an A 
ubs 
finely powdered, “ proof of the solvent power of the 
carbonated water may rally be o . in an 
— 10 minutes after adding it to the er. 
The nat er — —.—— By Aideptng bes 
to came —— i i 
rature of 60 
‘artificially deprived 18 air, a 
acti 
” 
in a ack 
i t nat 
dients Which 775 require | 
acts so beneficially, 
ERER 
pa 
E 
matters, which then, and then only, become the food mea 
2 4 fare 
sae nage — — 
e nt absolutely pure water, |. 
here, too, there are two distinct schoole—t 
s in 48 hours what pure water only a ful and the 
and 
| plantations 
: w ea shrub, 
which is the smallest group, may be placed in three 
ee Ee bose with reference to a'spectator in a 
ase the simplest forms a bea 
some allusions to the office of the artist in Ameri rie 
he eye w 
linge or ** open 
ost 
— the objects should be enti connected toge 
ery ja 
by groups and thickets of every fo oye m, and 
of bal degrees of 8 in the —— 
repose on baw a roun masses of 
of wess with finely 
nches.” How 
ether 
es is to m ‘rather 
eve- 
need and graceful hesti and bra 
d be 
an pied 
ness ; above: all, his great defect is the te total . — 
of th 
which becasionally isolated and — well placed 
are charactéristic features of the 
DI! NING, i var 
of grouping, ‘which he advocates in respect land- 
‘scape gardening generally. He insists * at that 
pi ms to us 
he says, “a 
perfect — — . 
commence By choosing, mainly, 
outlines: and of 
this ‘that ‘close a ai 
— be toa, but that there should be 
Water with it a some wy . un- 
“expats gl Might n or instance, 
the air carried off Sy dice 19 ich consis 
Cate acid, be co d to pass over 
an ex 
largely o 
tanks of wa 
| group is pans the tr 
0 e 
trees 
same or a similar kind, in „ 
t grow in fine luxuriant wreaths an 
ft moapae to occasional — in — — 
Cle 
rticular 1 —.— 
o Dert | 
it. “One 
no obvio 
dill ences, penile 
p'a 
their weg 
* eo by — the hollows all ‘istinction 
his dee 
but aten and scarcely perceptible ee area, 
1 the swells of the 5 alre 
| exist 
ar 
i ase of ou 
together and form one finely i 
* Eie ‘to mention, with — regr 
val. 
composing it should be | knowledge he 
babies f Andy 
and t be ill with ‘which gone el 
dee ` f For m “years 
rmingham, with 
advantage to the 
——— 
re -) manne r ‘smooth stems, fresh 
ment were tried it would be capers to use car- tender bark, und a soſtly rounded, pyramidal or 
TEA plants for some | dr g he ad, are the characteristics of a graceful 
w aud carefull: ‘to mark the 8 A bottle of tree. e need not add that gently sloping ground 
— alk and Some eſeap i acid, with a bent tube rising or surfaces rolling in easy u tions, should ac- 
rom the mouth ker oe 8 water, would 2 such plantations.” ie meaning seems Aeon 
Supply in abt d, which might be pretty clear—and it would be difficult te find ariy in the * 
caught in a large bel glass, from’ which the water error in 80 far. nom kear him 1 
“would soon | absorb it ak on the Picturesque School: “ All trees are . 
Bete W ike researches of the Messrs. | issible in a ‘picturesque place, predomi- over of flowers, I 
hs has has also a high, practi tical value. Attention nance must be used by ‘of what ate'truly | says, 4 have lately 
of been drawn — many years to the importance called picturesque trees, of which the Larch and Pir Bourbon Queen) thinking it was 
2 y ‘chemical — — the — 01 R and the Oak, may be taken as e In e its place, — — umn, a strong 
Po probes left a t by planes when burnt; and e r- | the Picturesque School everything depends on int i looking Plant, w which will not grow or flower in any but 
money have been expended dye —— idey and irregularity, and grouping therefore must the most uncomfortable diseased-looking mapper’? 
