, 
26—1853.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 403 
— HOT WATER. | EXHIBITION OF AMERICAN PLANTS. | direction of the Commissioners of her Majesty's 
HEATING BY H NTEED. ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, —S rue A Woods and Roya Forests : 
OHN WATER pegs to is 
— — — tees eee — Eine — on ‹ of RHODODE NDRONS | AZALEAS, Name of Officer in ‘in Charge, 
— 102, тасран четче Lond ғ The Plants at the — Bio I in p beauty, and 
— MM — ill continue in perfection * it mon ne. TRITT. se 
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING | The Military Enoampment оа Chobham Common is but two 0-0 IE — TA poe Bart, 
— va 
s BY WEEKS Qui J. W American Nursery, roe ** near the Farnborough ы r теру Edward Machen, 
сарсу King’s Bend, Chelsea, are now in a . South-Western Railwa Delamere Forest .. „ William Lipscomb. 
position io usen e . EXHIBITION OF ‘AMER САМ PLANTS. & Holt Fotest | Newburgh Higiubothom. 
т, and at uced price. s and orkmanshi; URREY. p гучаў and Nn) b. E. ољ. 
"Lon de d rfr AMERICAN. PLANTS at this Nursery ame f. Parkhurst P. - 1 | Bir James Campbell, Bart 
estin foral — Offices, є just now in t beauty, and may be seen daily The 8 у Forest d 25 ES ý 
I ye md dmi Nursery is within an hours Tido of London, being near tho 9. Whittlowood Forsi” "| Thomas Linnell 
i i wi wi trains mer Fo „1 Newbu 
Bazes always on a rr — — — ve — Wychwood Forest . — 22 — 
———À reet AND HEATING *e* The Military rame on Chobham Common is within | ; — 
ES the urse "t А 
As cus ped — M — wiTH Соор .. Hosea WATEREN, Knap "Hill Nursery.—June 28, 1953. n In ne Bond t now we believe 
MATERIALS AXD WOnKMANSIEI. XHIBITION OF AMERICAN PLANTS. __ экес ныд and ы "ange of this 
EXHIB 10) о M inquiry ; and there is Windsor, a domain f n" 
WINDLESHAM Nu Bacsnot, SURREY, NEAR ТИЕ — , , аш irom 
"aur, VIRO i W adum, ame Ore — се ААД у урек but rather а vast park 
EORGE BAKER i begs to announce his ing a — of the Sovereign. 
ma. forests above enumerated, 
8a "large contributor — the p Exhibition in the 
— Bota n Garden кр ark ey are now in perfec- 
EXHIBITION OF IRIS 8 
OWN SALTER, Nurseryman, William Street, 
Hammersmith Turn pike, begs to inform — Putt Am Ms 
ORMSON, Danvers t, i 
having had considerable СЕРЕ in the con- 
Erections, , for — nee of 
Street, Chelsea, 
G™ po og 
struction of Horticultural 
By and — ith 
ical adaptation, cannot be su — by any- 
thing Thing of 2 Mind in the country, are 
r^ a position to execute 
= т the lowest 
& О. have been extensive 
у pg hep Du 
most 
give the 
Their Hot-weter A is on the most 
approved and scientific for all se which the 
application of Heating by Hot Water can be made e av 
HOTHOUS CONSERVATORIE! made and 
complete mit . e te, maa med 
0 
e 7 
«у 
go 
Qe 
1 
E) 
n ee 2 n ш 
ми 2 "i 
4258 
ne Buildings; also- 
Twarded on application 
| more than 200 varieties, and far 
, 1593, 
Pla — in "pn 10s. 6d. СЕ 
the trade when three or more are 
Asa ere ез — June 25. 
— SEED, 
ECTIONS FOR SOWING, 
| E DWARD GEORGE HENDERSON awp SON, 
, Bt. John's Wood, London, are 
paved to send out their newly-saved Seed of the above useful 
winter Flower, ao from fine d v ties, at 2s. Gd. per 
packet; also a few ets at i. amongst whieh is Seed from 
C.PRINCE ARTHUR. ROSAL IND, —— lending varieties 
heg to Caleeolarias fi 
which the Seed Seed is ва sed “ean now be soen im dower a 
worth.— Жн: Lesern, Liverpool, Thame, and lrekend loyal Most. 
я, Seeds Ker, fi 
EFKS & 8 г е Road, [on Tandon 
"| were returned as ке at that time under the! 
PION of IRIS is now in 
surpassing M — — in 
Engla nd. June 25, 
— 
JUM AUTUMNALE 
rare and elegant little — 
can = sent by post, and а wil tp pe 
е amount of the order given will be е 
correspondents. 
„ but the flow. 
im the greatent pU ewe are raised well above 
the cx upon s tout foet-stalks. 
Nursery, packets of which will be booked at 5s. шша 
y" 2 end of уйу. 
The Garvencrs' 5 
SATURDAY, JUNI JUNE 25, 1853. 
Gs 
8 — й ron run rue MowTE.—25th: Meath, — ‘ana 
——— DÀ 
Tue public will learn Yos no small satisfaction 
that our criticisms upon the management of the 
| Rovar Forests, after being adopted by Mr. Camo 
a re-echoed in the Times, have found another 
ылла e te of the grave Oar 
Mese г contemporary, in his issue of June 11 
p. 652), assures us that the * forests under 
y| they must have | 
every 
€ one уна па cnt 
apply 
admit therefore t - 
ге appeared upon the s 
possesses the highest 
part of the readers of 
For the convenience of reference hereafter we shall 
examine these ЕЕ alphabetically. 
On the 
1852, the коз wing forests 
it {з unfair to 
of 
subject. The subj 
interest, especially with a large | mana 
this Paper. 
Bere Fonzsr is a district in 1 consist- 
ing of 1462 acres, in the rhood of the 
South- Western Railway. 
m to Mr. 
E young plantations were very thriving, but 
Duncan's committee, in the course of Mr. C 
examination 
Upon turnin to his formal report, 
1840, we find Mr. CrLurron stating that“for 3 5 
with good ment, I have e no doubt a ver, 
In азр he adds, the state of the plantations 
in Bere and the other forests shows that they have 
ar well planted and judiciously managed. 
ust be own this would have been a 
stata isis rn of the state of things in the Forest of 
to May 1849, so fer as Mr. 
«АА d, if it had not been Е; - hint mis ГЕ 
him when айа o what fi 
might do. Let u money-matters, 
which alone the true value of eiim 
can be measured, 
3s. 8d. per acre which had 
ised, instead of 10s., the ел 
ed in cuiting down to 2s.; and this in face of 
e notorious fact that, after a ? rel 
from forest spony ought to be continually on the 
increase, as LUTTON 8 
In 1848-9, 204 according to 
very considerable income t е 0 
realised, the profit upon tbe 1462 acres it to 
one shilling an acre, or of 
the judicious management to “which Mr. Соттон 
