THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
A 
511 
in very severe weather, and they 
22 by some of them re peep the 
pega 
e . oa 
ana what I can judge it promises to be a good trusser. 
ope to show it tag year eh the Ng kag and Botanic 
meetings, where its merits be fairly tested ; Wm. 
cay K. E. L. C. 95 
his is the an plague of my life, 
matched im lants with | 
€; 
* e flowing extract | 
g e of 
anahe] 
very suecessfully 2 amo 
us, is is that of 2 m with frozen balls o 
in mid-winter. ne trees to be removed are se po fo 
the situatio and the — poh ug, while the 
ground is yet — in autumn. en the n 
somewhat frozen, -= operator M. to dig a 
around the some 
ng | 
earth 
neh 
istance, gradually sara n 
N g my p 
and water, and I aga cal es 
[Are to 
Sugar an 
0 it es a fa trial; John Experien 
you jo or 
New at Regent park Show. — Your 
respondent says there was no Rose in Mr. Francis’s 
collection that was not Wa new or first-rate. 
earth. The whole ball is then left 
return of fi 
r of location.“ 
[This i is the 1 * of al e modes of re- 
A unt 
wea so scorch ; but this is easily avoided 
by the g lazier using such squares for other parts of the 
wn glass 
leaving. out of — — the isan ow 
such a hail-s Friday, the 14th inst.; 
James Heiley ley & Co. % 30, Soho. pies London. [Th at 
sheet glass does scorch there is no room to doubt 
. and why it cannot be — we shall so 
soon 
rontoa: salicifolia.—Veronica L 
ss hardy, and 
indleyana 
consequently not identical with 
hardy I send 
Vika appears to 
ign oa the » grounds — G. K. Ward, 
fom to the severity of last 
winter without i injury ; a 2 Northwood Park, 
est — — 
Ros 
p. 472, will ‘find d rani a solution of soft soap 
insects in garden, and it will . — 
louse, and tick; as also 
excellence, im mean, of London, & f 
wh menue Prices —Why do not e and 
tise their p Oth 
others adve with their w. 
do with their books, plan ts, flowers, &c, ; 4 but it is too 
e pra bien ee pei padin 
the ithhold their prices. 
If I want 4 4 — — or a “ Cutting and Rolling | ain 
Patent Seed | * 
he flen, | 
account of my own (supposed) loss in the 
considerable r and am quite 
en throu 
the public 
stated | rece 
a 
correspondent of pes pat 7 
t 
n 
ination „ &e. 
ery kind, note, of which the — Ma 
e yet been sufficiently pro 
the | raised by Mr. Mitchell, of Brighton and 
Master, was 
in. 
Says, 
thin, pii wooly flow 
ith Mr. Fran 
xhibited one 
or 12 n s from 
Gold will yield o one bloom this. wi will yield 20, in a general 
war, but, kgr err ve ed in pots, 50. The Cloth 
f Gold bloo were not ex 
ey were bad s sie Me of this gen nerall 
beautiful Rose. With re ian Teake 
d tai 
— — 
but I think Beben“ ‘5 biush variety, is very sweet 
deci the 
ed t k en to another, = whose fi 
tere 
at the Rose to 
ori 
and aborigin 
— — . — — 
rosy pink with a habit i to be a free 
Pad — good habit, appeared 2 
both good; 
l ie ro et 
rosy ret with a good habit, and Smitta 
scarl 
French Ve erbenas, we 
large, PDS blossomed variety, called Junon, 
which prom uisition. a wall 
eir comparative 
Misc nancous. 
mark$ on the Migration r the 
following notice I have — 
33 g mis one arm 
ood has been 
t in this country 
also ood, and on a . A. Rosse and of 
— 2 N species: tes from 
change of food is 
probably not aboriginal, but consequent * 8 cultiva- 
n of the latter plant. A. e A. Rosarum 
gen 
n Grasses, amg the Kren of 
it with a new and abundant source 
from the 
e ee t as 
The food of A. 
ally on 
permanently 
grounds now 
—— it witha plentiful provision in inthe summer. Its 
3 shoul 
the lot of the abov. ower, and no o 
presence on the Hop is dependent on the aoao of 
be gulled as lia public was!“ 
r prised leks 
the Nurseries, Great Berkhamstead. 
Sotteties. 
OF 
E. Lane, 
Your r says, “ Is the Rose public doomed to pe į 
F and their distanee fro 
the Sloe * the ———— aes these plan 
inspe and the f the 2 
—— 
the fii cit ofthe Aphis ould alao be oberved 
eans, — 'P 
y to its 
March 7, 1848, pre ji 
ty; nd 3, of T. 
logical Society of 5 — 
can Philo- 
mete by that — 3 a parcel 
2 
of the 
by — Sa. — 
ciety, prese 
„W. H. 
— and 3. Moo 
| its food’ in 
Plum since — tree w. 
itself — the 
urope ; but its other name, A. 
primitive habitation and food. 
— 
T., collected by him i — a cave ty the side of the moun-. 
road, from Capel Cerrig to Llanrwst, in May last. 
Garden Memo — 
Mr. Conta 's Nursery, Earl's-court, O 
—This is one of the gayest little nureries inthe meh 
— ap London. 22 Con has long been 
and th these, together with Ver Verbenas and the little yellow 
Calceolar a, planted’ on the lev 
| Th umb’s. mted out in 19 deat céliars, 
weather 
season, not j ithe 
it or the others. A seedling called Symmetry ap- 
p compact dwarf habit. Of|t 
but is smaller ae Annn: mi 
beg to assure you 
no stage di it ever reflex, 
UF ono 
in its su ve cultivation. westward. f 
that 
over 
2 and — the e Raspberry, an i 
urbanum, the common A 
-punctata) was also ex 
tremely common with this Aphis, and it — to be 
equally so this pela for great’ numbers have already 
appeared during March pril- raneis Walker, 
F. L. S., in the Annals of Natural H Histo 
Advancement of road &e. — New Zealand =e 
road oem mtg 
je- | 
iid, . ae —— wheel-barrows tremble when they 
:” but, notwithstanding, it will prove an an invaluable 
boon to the community. The othe 
towards Waikanae and Wai 
deli te pink; Desirable proves to be th 
abate pink Desi Lady oF tha. tale, 4 bright! 
in w 
occupied to the greatest extent in their own 
