THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
703 
time g 
— he popes n some nice little short-jointed 
paltripened cuttings, which are n to be found 
ind 
been m 
d 
may enjoy a full current 
em 1 ely dry. hen they 
ich will be in about 
t carefull y wt —— them 
ters. 
3 My e spin 2 me to 
* & sheet glass — only in a mo derately paR 
here, —— with a: — supply 
of air and mater is in pefea us tenden 
wing year my 
and the m 1 
more or Jess burning has then annually occurred ; 
George pe, so Scot otney. [This reads like a case of 
scorching, not ing. 
— ral Improvement Society of Ireland. 
—In your article of Sept. 30th, upon the Irish Horti- 
are Seco 
would be a very desira 
of Oct. 7th, 8 thi 
summation few u 
Feud: 
ese 
upon which they are ‘severally. fo 
one exclusive and he orher po pular. No men in so 8 
— — aracter, eg is speaking, 
y, — there are few members 
so much is ais 
toon em — 
And al ewe the 
3 difficulties to prorat 
ings have ever been 
C 
a new one formed. 
7 0 let it be imagined we 
i t Society any such blame as 
to the Royal ; bat i —— 
by — —.— aultless, as Mr. H. 
F 
Sotieties. 
ONDON, Oct. 64H. The Treasurer 
3. 8. 9 exhibited specimens of | 
he white-flowered 
ae es will with diffculty be 
in England, 
“Emap a paper, "being covers : ee space with bold eee e eee e 
” e considera . 
ee —.— i Pg to the soil of Italy and the south of 
Review Eu several species of Q s, the Stone Pine, 
i iew Pi itima palustris ; then the Cypress stand- 
A for sa e of a ie of gosea cele ing forth in bold relief ; this,as may be readily inferred, 
tty an, Be, By A Paul a and Son, Nurserym gs mn group of mu 1 5 
„ B Edition for 1 i ediately follows it, and which is dedicate 
re go R Cattell, W = 2 Kent. to one aa fa We have here those beautiful | 
BrP fox hich the eee ur 
Seat un der beem forwarded | tong foliated Pines » „ 
8, 
essential thing is a dry subso 
will be found useful 
Mr. Gulati, 
extrac 
* The 
guides to the Rose grower. 
the following paragraphs seem 
h of November is the best season to trans- 
plant the generality o of Roses ; 
be safe mee das Ma 
60 
as Ma 
as to Soil. — The 
il; this — be — 
In light soils, add some 
eral Directions 
made so, 
. some 
mixed with — 4 —.— 
tr enched : charr 
and applied to 
The best manure for Rose 
by being trenched an 
d earth bu 
istance earch of 
f 
ourishment, 2 planting, each standard — be 
tied to a neat stake, to prevent their bein ng blown about, 
tl 8 55 . sarge wong ad 
3 
en groun 
in 
and likewise — the at- i 
e house 
two ded by Mr, |; 
Walker in a short tm sensible letter in x Chronicle is ex 
mly 
e r one. Mr. Flemin 
m which 
sp with 3 Heath, thrusting itself ere 
marked with | Heath, wh 
phr 
te highly a 
classes in the op 
a 
: they will grow vigorously 
rden Memor 
bery, : a mass of 
i 4 of ti lake is seen 
i ee 
In, tions of 
seem worthy of | selliana 
A 
n 
nevertheless, they ma 
h. 7 may 
first and most | dro 
alf rotten stable dung, — let it it "be wel huge 
cross 
m the e — n spring ad ur 2 during the 
er and a em 
The greates 
a surface with 
as far as 
ost — portion “of the pleasure. grounds 
at Traian as fedan as os Ee interesting, 
few years ago a mere quagmire ; and when we iain 
a its its proximity 1 to the 2 it must have been 
e 
an feature of the place, as we 
h 
7 5 posed 
this fen of som 
gul 
of the smoothest gp ee ag 
ferrugine es sorts; t 
ia me e ae a bed of ä plants, 
wn, bas a charmin ffeet. 
lants. Pinus Devoniana, Rus. 
ee , thrive in this murk 
— ey — 
ithe e points of this <r 
* Het ney riche, = tsa e lux: 
of t 
more — ig and — the. 
= 
5 
meria and — 
ge yup of these, 
— with Weigel rosea, Daphne 10 ortun, Jasmi- 
nudiflorum, tree Pao ies, and enlivened with 
othes of the 
e has been — 5 out, “iti is 
one bushes of common B and 
Heath, mt towards the margin striking 
tes, Singita Poppi = = 
effec 
a Gs desired 
This ga 
tion, whether ir 
ich cover 15 surface. We leave it rg pa regret, Here- 
a a — another department of this fine establishment will 
ecupy our attention; G. 
M 
i pring of ae 
to two d 
me agriculturists have 
we 
ath (Ja mort) is incurable 
Three 
to e bulbs. The first is the rot (Fauiniss), 
which, ‘hough ee 1 a the substance 
of the bulb. — ond 1 rnip- like ex- 
crescence it bn — e piem ) which ap- 
pears mostly on oe inferior part of the bulb, aon it 
as 
ge 
of the edging. A Rosery is also introduced in this 
: brub Bert aldi 8 with . the rar, Roses ; fcr: 
climbing varieties. aF over — and 
— ai to hort 
w them, in full — 8 of this = 
esi of pagar ds in autumn piers — pieke com. | size 
dation. The 2 perpe to us 
In some large m of plantation, which blend the 
shrabhery into ages more Tofty trees, we find the Arbutus | 
and Yew in background, while in advance a — 
of cona s, embracing nearly all varieties, 
5 i spring and 2 n these Thorns 
are ex- 
m ental, ands fo was and l fruit, 
n winter the eye — 
Tries re again there is no tame no 
nei of 3 = aene in front is a 
urze and Heath bursting out of the smoot 
een =v faa Lam See 
Bee of some dest plants being pla 
ed groun nd surround nded by an endless 
variety of — 1 ice all countries that will 
gr pen Italian group, which 
ps rests satis- | i 
| factorily on the bank of jee shard and 2 covered with | t 
y their b ness, 
* 
by digging 1 foot deep 
in 
large coloured, 
spn pal 2 — ide ne ball to the other, gg 
roun — bulb like a 
neath the e eee to the 
the bulb, and then kill it. In Lower Austria the disease 
around nd 
placing in heaps the earth of the infected spots ; Phar- 
geet 7 Journal 
e of Orchids 
—À collection of ans which was 
Mr. Stev vens, 
an Acineta an 
