37 —1853. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 583 
mere number len-masses shali definitively vantage, towers from y 
separate the Cattleya and Ілећа. The pollen- | which the Mr he tin tanti is to be obtained. conservatory, or wherever their 
| 
| 
| 
| 
iz 
1 
: 
| 
t 
fe 
Н 
: T 
i 
1 
TELE 
i| Bur 
: ur 
; 
: Bh 
AE 
$ 
s 
# 
s 
Ў 
i 
g 
з 
a 
Gar emoranda. . great of. the 
Tur New Crrsrat pente ge fa | — are ce very far — went and quantity of clean, sand, sufficient to render 
irectors ight and i 4 
some f ve operations in i 
Let pat "has. Жым dfe progres we have mentioned shall ha 
which, e extent o — verg ^ 
＋ which are thicket, will: probably be converted into a kind of gypsy | Beauty — (Br 8 55 . ra ae ^ 
stone, with- cireal ich A. әсі aud . o by forming walks through the wood ; but mot n nd-colour, and оцей lar 8 ome ie. tonis 
— on the are Ae built and some of ће | character. This : 
TR Are —— P — of the — hens а mn from the heat ———— in ted . 
intone — are ready. for settin mers which we 
The narrow er between the basemen: d too little of this year. x кетей) А sin low Da LET -A 
the palace an and A — of te firs о, d is ——— үттүн d v ea an ee i. d tg and showy 1 ower; the 
might soon made read » т s Uf 
gravelling. ч he second. terrae; which i ja to be al ов FEORIOULT URE: E51 fly maintained thet former god y Keynos n 
Pearl (Chater) received а first-class ( delioate 
walks, has been | put into form, the basins for the fountain. , Сотов or Panera — А ThE ighly | Bush 5 4 paler gua rd petal, holiy hock ay t ‘Chestnut 
were first brought into notice a few je Paul), — itis a primrose coloured, woll-dbaped 
cata! wal laid for — irm m with water. The ме, years vow fitis dep our great London nurserymen ; | S a vecta C M. ax» fweoku Newrwüpox 
transept throum and ne oh the have been greatly admired those | Dama Show, which was held on Tharsda y, the Lebo Repiember 
two terraces has been put into ape as far аз w who s — йг them d y t by Certificates were awar to the ae Dahan Rashma 
ve culti y are not nearly so © ре 
— fountain in the park is to play, and te rally known as rr фу rve to be. They do not, cer — e en (Ke oa 1 e зл mune 
en va (Key yuh), 2d nas; Prinos 
— des the top of. the lower terrace wall Ins | tainly, possess ne markings of the summer. | A tite AtW ynas) lot slew "Marvel (Р 1 ; Lady Brome 
MÀ ye mas qe im sides еба walk as far ait | flowering kinds ; — rra ferior ію point of variety of | тае 1 — . — in een jom of the 
tain till it terminates in (wo | colour, they are equal wi em in respect to fragrance, —— 2 фе 
nent piers a lit little below the latter. The slopes from. he | Very little artificial treatment is required to have thís rx biome Ad erbena named Mrs, Saute 
for 
class 
ground have b been turf. monnit of seting | aided by a moderate number of plants we may en 
off i " Cit " 
— — which the terrace D . the fragrance of the Carnation the whole year — = 8 
wall 3 ing over the | , however, necessary double, and large in size, and ang m to flower as 
on the magnificent gardens below, with Lad De tete ie proper tma a hich — Dart in mg ip my Ae — gy eye BG 
T т | ld receive r АЛАВ ғ А м those exhibit tt Burrey show 
and fountains: A large tract of ground lying | fin stopping ; as this mer very much upon Из» given next w et. 
у е | meri — Lich 
| general culture 
alto- that a few plants of various colours been pur. made by sugar manufacturers. Others ascribe 
| that љо 
а 
eminence, or little knoll, just mentioned, we believe some where the wood is firm, but not hard; after g. 
of nade is to be raised, from which views of the plant in — 1 MÀ soil, in thoroughly drained pots, point of view, and has at the same time endeavoured 
be obtained; but by far the best view, both | cover with a bell-glass, and plan ge the E in a mild | ascertain whether, as regards the per eentage of 
the, май виш valey bey d cn fbi 5°, If attended to я ater, and | there is any difference between i 
i m 
ill soon ma 
A : pieces of lawn 4 or 5-inch pots. It will be necessary to k — ncn а were a ваа на are distinguished 
which have been finished; but they have not been plants in a somewhat MEN Wale auaji, ud in France vert amd collet rose... Com- 
4. 2 лапи nts | М ter i soon ey have Finds o — — чар of these and the same 
ге been : „ and out in nursery | become rooted and made some growth, pinch out their ei Dock irem the бый Of Me — * 
“lines merely to ` wth a little, in order to induce them to throw out shoots, It Peligot’s mode of examination was —— ы Мн 
Р Í қ 
boundary of the раг 
from the palace, between which and the station there is bloom. For such as may be intended for — | elders, however, that this may be disregarded. 
to be a glass covered way, so that the contents of the during autumn, 7-inch pots will be sufficiently large ; albumen and pectine are determined together 
gni i 
i у be without inconvenience, use ma inch pots; lignine. The ashes (obtained by calcination in a ) 
1 — dba — xu Ti a pass down the liue of the | portion for spring flowering, and ре bres large f —.— e е the loamy. soils of va Loire 
to of the | specim have 10-ineh 
park, decorated zs it be either side | during summer in the cold frame, and y e — 
Be — wers и төк ve with fountains and | по further attention than the ordina 
we É g on; but ing, stopping, and staking. As 
nothing is as yet и a to y Е be def every case 
correct idea of what it is ultim , matured ; for if the plan 
We learned from ilner, however, t mai dormant state, the 
em n 6 + е 
' equals will only be found at Chatsworth itself. lated by the period at which the plants may 
some ides of the Degree of the display ретт, to produce t blossom, and the temperature 
which i 
| Per centage i 
үз 
i Percestags, 
of Sugar. 
of Lignine, 
Albumen, 
nd Pectíne. 
d here pedi cq they can be kept, &c. 
‘hat the e re column of water will rise 230 feet n | regarding this part of their Е 
гет plants intended to farnish a 
— 4 
їп eight, aad these pies Е be surrounded by 16 flowers in November, should not be stopped later than 
others, each Wo height. Nor is this all; there are July. During their : 
‘other groups as grand, besides multitudes of smaller posed to light and air; but after the flower-buds are | Valenciennes 
decorations о of a similar — which m themselves | formed, — — it necessary, 
btless be worthy of Sir Joseph ton’s e sub to a higher temperature, 
Tience in such matters. On the — — ; їп 
I end just deseribed will be a lake covering | cold and damp, they 
Acres of ground ; other ornamental water will chiefly or to а pit, where they ad ees 
WR two n: — A reni rr cipal walk, | but unless ín the case of plants which) may have been | "Tee 
150 feet in length, vane will be fashioned in fer cascades, as they will bloom in p 
cmn Api of water on ihe | tem * of about 45°. It — — 10 — the blado, AGE — ы 
Tight and left of the walk, and lying at right ang! wth completed during autumn, and to keep the plants | Com XXXVI, ; Gite 
to it, each 1000 feet long. — — i es will ina eo sry pert ot the house, until the flowers The Slippery ry Ет — Peri Fulva,— The bark of 
each contain fountains of great power and beauty, | to atop very late, and depend upon this tree is extens used in the United States, and 
80 that there will ce ptr A ac no want of decora. ea in heat, мен should ee — in the ease of | has lately been ordered in „ Tue inner bark 
tions of thie kind, w so much to set ed ind While | js the part employed. - It is a demulcent, and is recom- 
