HUBARB.—Messrs: J. 
ock of one-year planted a 
hich wa been the Te adin ng feature 
INNZUS R 
— have a sto 
aenti 
mo Deog fa r 
a: Te Victori ia, 9d. The usual allowance 
3 SN 795 
a ag = to these little 1 of awarding which he should bi 
ann a * 1 ee to explain the t team, as he was a membe a 
rizes has been settled W . e o classification of] We have not space to follow the — fi 
—— e cherefore recommend | But we have said enough to * s further. 
caido to 2 vA on t in the e ing dis- that we w ight © 5 di — ort 
Wes cffeed b y or 1 the edule of ſeandid statement of facts” as an —4 — aud 
Ireland for the i te of 8 Society of | Coun Sa aba — 
during the hay e e ar are the very matters which d — as 
Unless calcu- 
lation have altogether failed us, we should say that 
results that must come out will very — 
enlighten those who imagine that they subseri 
ich in one statement admits 
their departure from three established rules of the 
de Trade. orders made ere Deptford, 1 money for some great public pu e. ro we ess ren ints, in their next 
— sr CLASS GERA have already stated, the Council complain have th p 2 to have adhered to them, cannot 
HINES AUTUMNAL CATALOGUE can be ob- | ‘hat what they term our “ unfounded attacks” upon | manifi a e dence of the public, It does not 
22 es postagestam: dt eon: | their management, have been repeated, “notwith | mun ted 1 —— 
tains r Gl. 5s. Also, Miller's Set of Bight standing the full and 2 ie statement i ] ae ax it which is necessary for the purposes 
Auer for 20n. ; aud ten 2 of the bes t Kinds re olutation forwarded ” im reply, and | of its © 
of last ö doz. er pokes — With . allus course 
Ul dle now sending out UNBLOOMED SEEDLINGS ow it so happen , that, since it reached us, | to We o not crise eile Cs — — 
ay al or 3 dozen E we have discussed none cathe charges made against | We k cise the Council individually. 
ba the Council, e or whom we have 
SELECT PLANTS AND CHOICE FLOWER ROOTS. 
axo BROWN beg to refer to their 5 
ment of selections of the above fe the Gardeners’ Chronic 
isn, page des, and Nov. 4, pag 
utumn descriptive priced Catologue Pas Choice Flower 
collections of Superb N 
Shrubs; Hardy Cli 
be forwarded on applicatio 
— — Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 
The The Gardeners’ Chronicle. eae 
TURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1848. 
ws FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEK 95 
E Entomologie 
Chemical 8 oar 
Moxpay, Dec. 44 1 8 P. 
(British Fetten . 65 chee 8 r. * 
5 nl 5111 Horticu 2 r. M 
Linnean 8 r. 1 
WepnespaY, — 6—Society of Arts 8 P.M. 
Zoological 3 r. u 
„ = 714 uarian 8 r. u 
1 Sg r. c 
Farpar, — S Astronomical 8 P. 
bar, — 9—Royal Botanlie 34 r. 1 
pax, — aE ore ice PE ee ee Sgr. ar. 
Tosepay, — 12—Medical and Chirurgi call Ar M. 
; Le — „„ 3 P.M. 
WIDn ADI, — the — ical iol 
Pharm 3 “P 
Fáma — 15—Philblozical r 
Sarvapay, — 16—Asiatic Jr 
Tar Council of th Roya peel SOCIETY 
or Inetany have ced by a public advertise- 
ment that the Society i is s not declining ; that there is 
to disunion among them, except so far as the resig- 
nation of one of their . e as created it; that 
are ar, imous, strong. This they 
e to prove to the satisfaction of the public 
at a meeting to be held s or other i 
ke ien also they will show that they have 
oe i 1 the Gardi ner s Chroni 
reso. 
While Lave 45 must — — that the 
their owh made proceed from 
pe gm Monds — 8 and that if it has 
1 a new Society t 
fered them, i is Dees if . 
of And 
the opinion of many 
been a à correct n Pol: 
m against a possible 
See e often commit, of m 
n | for the first 2 years 
8 secret 
except those fully aed. explicitly ad- 
atement. So much for the correct- 
even yet to learn that, be- 
cause a reply is both full and explicit, it is there. 
fore necessarily a refutation ty, some men have 
spect true S ‘Our ‘Trish 
e U 
njure it,“ indicat tes 
anything it unexampled b We e 
too, that t ouncil mistake 0 ce of 
those who Fehde ut any aabtonible assemblage fo for 
the support of those who can al — appreciate ce 
horticulture and the improvement 
ind in se eyes the Society iis 
r 2 a long time, been either 
popular or prosper 
But is it true that ‘ie Council really has adhered 
to the rules on which the Society vm established ? 
A few facts will answer this questio: 
The publis shed zaparta of the Societal show that, |} 
its existence—the period 
of its allege Mote “unexampled prosperity” 
—the prizes were aiii to ee 
1834 they appear still to have 
awarded, except in the case of 
then and now 
or the present 
Again, 
ever will be perm à 
remain in the —— J 
wilt and his assistants.” 
them as ic boi ody, claiming to man i 
interests of rorticulture i 1. 1 y ao 
give our opini We think that that 
Society can do little for 1 romotion of its objects, 
in which the Couneil who are them- 
n those 2 labori 
wok out its BS though, as the Council state 
of them may obtain them in tia end from thet 
rs. The prizes are in such case mere 
erlerence, or which does not o 
wards 4 
emplo oyers, 
shilingi and peuce—private wages, not a 12 
„ mpense. 
the competitors as are not 
my 
behind the scenes can never distingvish the fidelity 
with which, no doubt, each different 8 ol tho 
societies of the kind. Total loss of. confidence must 
an * been, t 
t. is for these reasons that we adhere to our de- 
cided —— that the Royal 3 Society 
ought. to be dissolved. We hay 
th 
unitin, 
interests of horticulture * 
ie ne tt 8 
strong body, upon pr * pro 
CULTURAL "aaa 
No CASE alee last week is — A 
illustration of the ~~ of buying such an article 
of unknown persons at a low price. 
appea al 
there is a bye-law that “ no person n what- | 
be brought t forth— ete Ay ile 
the q Prizes awarde at thei. Exhibitions | 
seven years, 
Ay Sppe 
wae ned b 
1 5 pert 
of all Ireland !! 
when it is found that 
in the same rank as for 
in the mo 
each 
Surprize 
eas, or Cam 
can be W 
their . izes | i 
e i 
if they 75 y 
t be — spirit, * si 
in their own favour, though it is notorious that Mone 
! Was t is adhering to 
ver e they no 
between them an * the less 
« three 
ae ~~ 
5 be 
ates — all a 
Rotunda on the days of rege umil pA t 
. 
= 
jud —— appointed for a particular ela 
1 . aca candidate in that class! 
tin his own case. 
ewe tl that he did not ac e we a 3 
nat he ors a candidate w was | 
„or they allowed 
adjudi- | si 
e and 
a8 
will have an effect beyond 
being greedy, and e 
found a an who, being n 
i mself, and who favoured him with 
he fortunate man, w come 
sion of his British guano, discovered it to a 
eart “ve oh: etry gu 
found’ it to be a stone. s gu like poor 
il BAN'S | ace i 
j ja 3 mein Per'enband, 
ud eh' ich's mich 
Iten al? in Erd’ und mh 
bald his da, 
we cae: come 
Casuistry to decide whic — 
cheater or the 9 and how far a court of 
to redress. ot — 
when he ot 4 fe at 
two things, either t 2975 be 
e to be, or 
t which he bought it ee y pot pay ‘the y the freight of 
tọ forgery, roared out 
il cent men are nude tobear ine fee and en 
pri us tra st that the case of Mr. Gronce Brows 
that of compel! 
It shows conch ht e 
cou 
Let 
at his under. 
soundness of the advice which we have 
a su stance ce aan of 
e 2 —.— character and 
“ene k 
fecommend- 
sanctioning lis claim to the prize, t 
nh 
ed him to violate but: 
d 
oves that we were ee ee 
. N 
