698 THE Dm CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jory 23, 1864, 
very slowly, even although 9 cold becomes mueh 
. He remarked from time to time how itg 
more intense; for the water below is in fact pro- and with what care it was tended and Patahed. 
d - nor the — es by accidental | Wow: tes ns 
The manufacturer states that 1000 of of these 
f , n have some beaded Drika are "required to to 3500 com 
s well; L il s are made with the bead either Vertikal a or orani es. They 
e nder the ice 
goes on very slowly. * * Water plants, therefore, psi 1 po 1 replied the wo: bie “Then w. 
are in fact preserved from cold by the coating |do y it? 
if water 
seldom injured; but if it is shallow, and the cold | comfort to me plant. dis ihed , 
o one, not even the most pe can cultiva tho Jon ves "T p" ime Mec and the oed 
inju '|plants without being led to study and reflec t. y large, o ure snowy white, retaining thé 
Bot " 
long-eontinued, cvs whole y depth of it will in time 
freeze, and the o planis wi 
These are facts pom highest importane , and | Suc 
well deserve po rto If they are borne must soon be pre 
i ture to s will be} d g 
h a aneen, 
take so much care of it?” he asked. 
of ice which forms over the surface, of the ond in | “ Well, sir,” she replied, ** I’m very poor, too poor | M, v Wetéwtà BORTENS MVN N E - given b 
h th Um living creature, but it is a great which h he has introdu ced to the gardens of Eu A « 
ct 
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& NH dos rG 
but the latter is peter for general use, 
for exam le, as the following Ma Fe during the whole time “Of flow wering. Both thi 
sented "i e “Wh por Mr r. Fortu ne's white bee en will be valuabl 
m Ww 
experienced in growing this charming plant in any ek or if its leaves. get smoth red wit h 
had it fo 
row sickly if i ni » kept in a es 
dus kinds s already 
| 
perfume, re — that of the Hawth orn, Our] 
plants are about 18 or 20 inches under the surface | 
| 
of the water, d although their leaves are|o 
al 
v 
annually killed during winter, being inerust 
with ice perhaps 6 or 8 inches thick, yet, on the 
retu 
s 
healthy and strong as ever, only requiring a 
renewal of the soil in the pote in whieh they are 
own. 
We would not, however, have it supposed from 
this "tha an favourite plant has changed its 
ontr 
Hemd 
hand to promote 
eno 
y artiume, Mi E n ME bm d Nas-|7 dvety ert son cet: M. Dandi dwat 
and we hope. ther 
nd w 
Y and tidy-room movem go 
ms, Min 
: Roui 
raniums," were "the principal plants exhibited. | iion; v. Lem e with ehónüdud a vel al 
We may suggest that in E oy exhibitions— | fowers, garn po d shaded with vermilion, 
the eare whi ais a4 grow wth of ee IN Rooms has 
and in giv ving it, now and engaging the attention of continental eO 
- Henne of 
it in kee 
hen, a little d P rn Sena ir? Then, i if cleanli- | well as our own; and some time ago 
ness and fresh air be gend tà r plants, may they no —— : Saxony, made known. the Tenli of his 
e equally ——— and beneficial to the owners of experience in the matter. M. HENNING has itis said 
e ves 
?” In this way the growth | [cultivated a collection of 200 plants with no other 
the health and: happiness P" the spa 
op ^ 
Some of the plants in this show of the working lanis were protector A 
ang it was not forgotten ia give them a little air, even 
Dr d M gr heri. d nat - in winter. Proofs are multiplyi » — ther pt 
8, thought 
howed they had ^T 
ts fo rà 
years. It is a curious fact that most of the things}  —- Among the New Flowers of the year 
which have been found to grow and bloom best in | of "attention JI? Horticulte - Français mentions: 
a London atmosphere were exotics, Fuchsias and | 1. Dov ier en at te TILLAS, raised b 
appear far bette i 8 e 
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et 
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ge taxi 
wi ith railed veins; Louis Van Boutte be lar 
3 
Meo red f — » M. 
H ae 
re will be aayo f them— pete bordered with as William Rollisson, with 
. 678 we gave a aes, of the fourth 
EA FLOWER SHOW FOR THE WORKING CLASSES 
RES 
p 
4 
u 
pr 
© 
EB 
5 
ze 
Bt 
"Tis 
i 
B 
d 
ing the matter e more under the notice of 
] M nt, Sunda 
our oh ey and in our absint ark 
d wi 0 
80 ars ago, fully prove this 
But, a rule, emt ranch aged ry Ls 
do m ek dir hir ly t wer orders he 
ental 4 
e the mere 
flow 
of Indian rae bordered n posit 
2 Ape 
If this were i it ald add 227 ^ the = lively page= 
in jem of the Exhibition in so far as the visitors ANTHA from the pos in Df ag 
are concerned. This year there were five classes : ocn , with flow "C times pt de rud 
>| —Class I. for Persons dut. bi Little Coram | floribunda, with very ab undant flowers in nd 
e cles, and bos than queen iy of a coc! 
Street eng ER. (the poorest portion of T parish) ; am d 
I. Pers ving in other parte of the Parish ; e during ee 7 th orange in o 
idc Datur ET whe Children i ne National and splendida, vith the to e variety dam 
in 
4 ohal; Hogarth, and the fine oe i Cleiantba itself. 
Althou zh —— In May last, a at a meeting of the Soci 
cal of Le 
" ene were ae Tanai bey describing the | Jmpériale d^ Horticulture, one of the members d 
different elasses, n 
it then Our anggoa 
not one person in fifty saw oe which he had employed for the DESTR| 
ear is diet Jaret pintada or | oF — This genres in the use of a solution 
a conspicuous | arsenious acid (acide arsen ed | ip. the ep 
" " span aie the iste nee toshow, | of one-tenth m mamei water, 
"| at ngu , to what class the exhibitors belong. 
p e of carbonic ozide (oxyde de "n 
but this iciatis was objected ti unt 
peine et din ^ elass soris danger attending its use. — M. Botp vt urat 
people. The prizes Vieh they usu ually offer are 
for and 
dree 
sr 
shildven n belonging to the different schools. the visits of ants, might try these and such 
" The result, P 
di 
litte interest, it would be very differen it were the use ofa miei of hemenn water Qd T 
be asks M. 
prey of Bloomsbury and his | remedies as they suggest, and report the 
so who feel 
— — THE BEADED OR Connvaaen ‘Bricks which! Another feature yet remains 
1 iac heo MS Stratford. | one the existence of which I was not aware 
is à sw 
skill as some of our best ae al These shows 
t deal of good i 
| and of foun a sample has adem nt for r inspecti ,|ushered into it. It is a eet ngular i 
appear) e e to be i stove, 
walls intended for fruit trees. ey are well made | on the other for about 160 ft. by a glazed rustic ate 
pertures hrough pointed Gothie 
Takaia aan _bricks,. with three half-i inc 
useful in the poa ieai of iaa 2 | garden bounded on one side by the great stove 
a eich 
with iar vertical 
i beautiful tufa into the garden. The 
h the arcade were 
of nd they h tha om centre of one face astout | side of t 
ional be d a "€: Camellias, Sikkim and oben Ri are 
d | about hal 
m inch in ry and projectin 
na the wastes is being pi s, Loniceras, ar many such plants, that i 
holes placed al about s 5 v inch apart. It conditions intermediate between those P 
enhouse and the open air. Along 
35 tnd 
nate courses wi 
better name than corrugated, should be used in alter- 
h 
view they are made ‘of the. ordinary : size. As the 
front oF 
arcade ran a border lented with the choicer vi 
and with this| Roses, mostly on their own roots: the te 
ribs | arcade 
tervals, | varieties, and with Honeysuckles, enclosed by f! 
they will serve to 
general 
keep the branches at that distance jade er = On the little lawn iron 
surface of the wall, while the holes were flower b P. ey ing Be 
used e of the rarer 
tn | ^ At one end was a bank a 
| 
