THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
607 
f The leaves * 8 : ed mola N ior ans purple a t the base 
when from the following extract | ° = s, shaded off with lilac; to H. W. Collison, Esq., 
oe sorts, — of 1846, may be T en like for. Dreadnought,“ a flower of excellent rir finely-shaped 
i Le Bon ardinier 9 p and daa . d petals—colour erimson; o Mr. Hunt, Pad- 
fon The Morelle (Solanum nigrum) is an annual, | dington “General Cavaignac,” fancy mei good in form, 
"Spinach. in Europ America. It has app —— coustaut— colour, purple tipped with white. 
i erep idered a dangerous plant in France ie — e s 5g — 4 by — 4 of London), 
~ been e best Seedling exhibited, arded to Mr. Turner, 
uently, it has been treated as a noxious | for“ Mr. Seldon.”—The — — paS each, 
_ where, wee leaves may be used as 222 Messrs. Keynes, Turner, and Bra g, was decided on 
i 
not un 
der the name = Br ade, and likewise in 
Baritius enal — of Lama 
Indies ny of the 
— for the plant and 
. nr asa plants are 
poison, due caution was advised in testing 
— 
eeler, of Values r, 
all growers, equal 
Mr. 0. — Chalvey, and Mr. J. 
. Tarner’s stand contain ed M arquis of 
5 — i lock. Captain Wa arner, the Hero, 
Indispensable, Toison dor, Turner“ 2 The Hero 
* ellow Bouled de Feu, | , 
Mai of Cornwallis, Marquis of Aylesbury, Non- 
Mrs, Anderson, 1 Standard of — — 
Pec Princess Rad ziwill, "Miss Vyse, “8 2 * of — 
Foli 
Mr. Optimus of 
cester, Admiral Stopford, 
oule de Feu, 
Essex 
Widnall’s 
undi, 
Vise, pan Stop- 
let 7 
m, 
2. 
ptain Kenaa Prine 58S | except in a 4 — of caterpillars and insects, in 
Antagonist, "Widnall’ fect health and extremely vigorous, It is propagated 
gg, Slough, for Shy- » 
f Cornwallis, Mynn, Toison | by th hich are deposited 
carlet, Walter mS — immediate contact, or by the air, 
St — . > n the “ey fall on a silkworm, they are are pro- 
ece, Princess Radziwill, 8 ably absorbed by the po _ of its go or by the organs 
of respiration, and penetrate thus into the body. 
eeswing, Essex Rosy 
onthe Class, —— 
e, to Mr. for 
W Sh —.— Yellow 
e eswing, Gem 
vateer ; 3d, — — 
3 to J. r 
forest sof Corn wallis, Cassandra, 
Forcester, — 8, ope 
Ist Prize, 
pri, Rem 
Ludwig = — 
1 Freund Schmidt, 
arrison 
—.— for Mer 
—.— x i Braga fo 
ap es T; 2d, to Mr. Wal 
ee -claes 
r, for nN Mr. Seldon 
h close de centre, petals goo 
caped otic pe 
» | gentleman, on his arrival at Sainte Tulle, i in hoy south of | Some were in 
5 | France, which as the point fo also 
ed 
f amongst 8 and other inseets by the eee. 
ed by Balsamo 
© 
> 
ee er is — in proportion to yond age of the silk- 
fifth s stage of 
worm . a rosy ; ually ha 
of ier mould. 
. The 
are detached by the slightest touch or breath, 
finge chalk. 
— iy it lated w 
pan y inocula 
— Terai wands at, in the fourth or fifth stage of growth | and 
is n fa 
worm 
dead, ins 
soft and soon pu ae 
1 
— tan 
Ther 
s. K u 
8 occasion, the con nditions being for Seedlings nf i four 
varieties, three blooms of e The censors dec in favour 
of Mr. Turner’s flowers es ext mee pet ot “ill 1 the 
Surrey Gardens, on Wednesday next. 
Hartburn and Meldo 
Society aa its first sh ay w 
and the goo od one, ked oan — 
d, but we beat only been furnished 
wards, s Without the names of faa — tor 
h they wits ven 
Reb telus, 
Expériences sur un Champignon en- 
e de la Muscardin 
Observations et 
in Les 
n Confiée par M. Cunin-Gridaine, 
e P Agriculture et du Commerce, à M. 
Guérin- apnea 184 
„ Bonafous, ae ao Mémoire 
ur la Mus —— MM. 
Guérin-Méneville. Ne 
ma ar 0 
* be shut up or left open as the ease may re require. 
y this means a fied 9 of air is maintained 
whl the _ are on in wet weather, and even — — 
they are off in dry weather a freer lay of air 
the’ Pl . is afforded by this neee, a matte aa of 
A ranri which confinem ent in 
would 5 in ruin 
e planting oa sy stem 
tried here, but s has 
pe "e 2 pos 
n grew M "a 
i n their wo od, 
— his experi 
dee 
In on 1 
® 
propagating hous 
tted up in 
t | those inarched t 
an 
as just been — —— of Nen from the 
— on whi oa — i ) 
spring a ver, equally for- 
uch o is done then 
atter 
assi . tid 
een ie contested. The 
ew 
e is a nilai ious malady produc 
mould discovered by Bassi, and nam 
Bim 
t seems incapable of being oe 
: thu or eight days were sufficient, in the 
art of the Bae 
4. In 
0 or e? hours after its death the na 
nge d 
after a like period it is whitened by the first branc a 
mould now increases rapidly, and the spores 
and the 
s are powdered with them as wi 
meter 
— oe he 
silk- 
e spores hen 
tead of becoming hard like pastilles, they are 
useardine ca 
ce of spores or —— of Botrytis is 
necessary. 
e are some other important conclusions, but we 
W. 
u 
reumstances, and v fungi which occur on silk- 
— thoigh padana with the disease. 
Garden 3 
Messrs. Fairbairn’s Nursery, Cla pham.— The exten- 
si of young Cape Heaths at noe ans |" 
some 
beds ai 
are also still in their eg, r pit. This 
oga form, with woo n walls, on which the s 
the top board, both back and front, is Le, 
id hinges i junetion wi the e board below it, and 
— m 
fix 
vor wth, H effect the death of the ‘greater 
ill w 
ese spores are extremely small, one hundredth 
ari of a millimetre in dia tact with 
athe worms a have been dusted with the 
fi is also the case when 
re 
t occur spontaneously, The | m de and a 
Bassiana 
much but Christmas being a comparatively — time, 
ft e 
nerally aie ded 1 months of s spri 
The specimen Heaths! exhibited capital health, and 
flower, ev even at this late period, as 
0 a fow vigorous specimens 5 Leschenaultia 
cellaneous. 
Artificia Phere: curious pre 
unds are likely to 
substitu Mth for court 
Mr. M 
Mis 
Skins.—W 
veri 
5 similar applications, 
the « 
plied to a wound f w perm 
5 hich will not wash of. Dr. "Bigelow, . Mr. 
Maynard, both 3 at Boston, U. S., claim the 
pig of a substance by disso ving gun- 
eee ive . This tance is thus 
serbed i in the “ Pharmaceutical Journal:“ 46 Ist. By 
its powerful eon upon evaporation, it p 
edges of an incised wound in mu re inti 
tact than is obtained by sutures and adhesi 0 
unites them by equal press ssure throughout the whole 
extent of the wound, and i em immoveably 
oi 
kin 
clude 5 ot = ie entering b beneath the ed 
bstance ing with the 
ws 
a 
t ma ade at a 
an ounce phial, intrinsionliy w worth little, being 
for a great number of i dhe ai 
: . 
—1 p= 
this. solution of ae -cot 
:— He a ge ga 
and by a thin layer of the solution, 
long and 1 wide, el rugs oe 
A 4 atta ed to the 
secon P 3 e 
„ e e hand by a 
sisted * force 
urt 
* of —— 
For the nisi JB Week.) 
CONSERVATORY. A REENHOUSE. 
ath 8 athe — 2 
oat — ay hesitate in the w 
house plants while the promise 
- 
