1014 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
7 
[OcrohxR 22, 1t64, 
c Ph ny tophagous Beetles ; RS nd 
fine specimens of eri Beurró de reden | 
s Bergamot, 
f Kitchen 
4 Derkbampetend, pbi Black P. 
ain, and Catillae, 1 
Beu 
cen at p akt came a s lesti of 
ae ues gigs qi m Standards. 
Of Figs excellent Bro 
Pes gr. to E. Ellis, Es aa 
erpetual from Mr. Rogerson, 
Acie Of Cur rants, both Red and White, there were some 
es of well retarded ne The best 
sq., 
ey came from 
ES and goed kas’: 
r. to E. B. Brown, Esq., | 
all over the country. 
é 
t. | British and Garden 
an d Mr. 
e Gel he had found the erops o Phe cites whieh 
be had shot filled with the larvæ of Agrotis segetum, 
which have this pe proved so destructive to root crops 
Poticeg of Books. 
MP others nd perspicuity, 
. Abno 
deis (fg. 
pet 
kun 
RO 
4, Nariéal ‘units 
T bra 
Botany ; consisting of D 
of the Flowering Plants ve, and Trees pnt ee 
to Great Britain, with Notices of a is Fen com- 
monly paises in this cou i Jor use and orna- 
ment ; ceded by an introduction * Structural 
ia ocn zu B. H P Medi 
cine, — L3 
Lon s Routledge Warne & Routledge. 
Svo., 
We heck upon the plau of this book asa mistake. ‘The 
Pe 
nigra an 
rfect, 
Plums 
ine account e) a certain enr of aes Ry Take 
were good for The sorts were chie 
Golden Drop, and lek worth Imperatrice. 
Peaches were confined to the Salway, a yellow 
variety, fine-looking fruit of which came from the 
co. Gardens, Frogmore, and iot) Mr. Ward 
; of | Pu 
| fro e information on * peris — of the “ Pea 
family :" — Next to the e a multitude of 
pretty shrubs belonging pun the ra Chorozema, 
ltenæa, Eutaxia, e ners &e., pue with simple 
and í often holly- -edged leave 
and abundantly repre- |, tabu 
d C. Scabio 
mal WOO (i. e 
"167 
pinnatifi 
dh. 
&c. 
hich 
eler 
another of théso ‘simple practical’ ke ys Cen 
e distinguished in 
di- | C. Taint, by attributing ig the two wes 
7 ra the apad AE 
. Umb belli 
with very P A individualit ty of ‘Ee 
he EE Penta with the leaves q 
lon 
NA aha d of 
rely too, Alex anders, "ingelen po Co: 
Men 
the prima TS 
fe HO respect rese: v 
iur, aai 
uasi. 
ger than 
n the ise ds vided ini 
aro placed there, 
Ih part from 
crimson T 
T» 
r ? 
ron 
n 
ds 
al 
Shaves were scarce, 
a nece kind, oc eri in flavour, 
sted wholly of cfe good d ama of 
y Mr. Willia Potts. 
orange-yel 1 
"n from cwm in the open gr cking. | tà 
and ved ad aua ost Africa. — of them are climbers 
or twiners, some are rush- “inc an nearly leafless; very 
of colour frequen tly 
and in many there is 
elsewhere almost oreo 
that w 
» 
There is lue 
e can find to Chorozema, for example, beyond j 
in Bú 
shire; ; Eugenia Ugni, and peer: japonica. f Some 
d Ap 
ple. 
whole of the v 
at o means handsome, eith shap colour. 
‘rom Sir Wentworth Dilke, But, eame a ish of f good 
Blenheim Orange A . Fle 
y highly coloured sire Of |n 
egetables were not very plentiful. The best Kidney | 
Potatos came from gr. 
_ Mr. Mo ffat, to Viscount | 
Maynard. isted of Fleteakinned ee ^ 
Mrs: M eere Kidney, and 
— Kidney, The same exiibitor. leo contr ributed 
s 
ae "Ten Seedling, Pheasant’s | 
Eye, Devonshir Lady. Among other 
kin " we pere the Forty fold, both late and early, 
York Regents, Red Robin, and Red Regent. Of on 
lish of Kidney (Lemon) the bast came from Mr. Bentley, 
T. to Lor d S Leonard" E and Messrs, Veitch received 
Now, of what — on ean be such pn. Roane who have toiled hard to get in 
geh herlid osip as this, in of reference | into form, have them looking their best on the 
professing to afford the means E £ ascertaining the | day of exhibition, are quite indignant, it is said, 
naines of the plants of which it The book is peti aret erities interfering with their subjects, 
really, as they say, either fish, cg nor fowl, but a | and are not slow in censuring what they call “un 
eedlessly inconvenient and  cumbrous volusas. suras ble attacks on first-class cultivation.” 
Besides, with Babington’s and am's works before | regards formality of training, it is urged that 
him, no ney can say that we have here the best account iy cn is agere peng sf that ectly flo 
to be plant must of necessity be formal, and that t 
mi 
As it is, T bd next to 
arden rs, and we meetin st find a word to 
useles: A hu the 
ent, " hich occu. era le space in worki i 
| out the name of a pi e^ ae means of what are called yet only the pro t parts of such pl ll bear 
analytical charts, eritie would call i papecon t > sy tothe quality gá the Then 
muddle. to the "-— = ‘or reg K — eH 
! lou it is sh his a is — 
"While w plan of this 1 
of British "ub ue emg we are compelled to 
Am a reis more — as one of the merit of 
auth 
| ool acted on in pone ore fone s establishmei 
country. _No gardener Places all his f org plants 
n than the author himself seems to hold, 
for lis "telle. us in his preface, 5 ‘that no o work has e ever | 
a the e oou, Bee da is 
on, in a sca 
something very grand, it. 
par Azalea, 6 feet 
- pau hed in 
of Contine: aL origin c Chardon, The Garden 
the Society at Chiswick gol furnished an interesting | 
— of Potat 
came fion Whiting, Mr. Scrymger. and | n. 
Me. Midh The lien were apparently the Ret 
and gom " 
co mpass of the Nataral gode hee ve 
rp 
exhibited > a. Ss practical | ."  Surel 
we 
h the by D 
"been | sight 
Of Carrots, medium-sized c skinned spe 
came from Mr. Whiting and lin  Drewitt, sad of of ‘White 
he, s samples were furnished by Messrs. Veite 
Tet pae Scorzonera, fine roots - bee eA 
by Messrs. Drewitt, Morris, and Whiting. 
Turnips of the White Stone kind came from Messrs. 
Ford, Drewitt, awe "— Whiting. 
ren I: be Pine Apple variety, came from 
— m and others. 
were som: 
igerian 
a list of z^ awards on this occasion see p. 1009. 
x 
te ltaiicl Welheeh, Ve 
V. Mel 
natural o Plum aceæ—“ EX ie adis p ane 
ginoides, cy some pus Plumbago ii any is an 
annual from — 9M "—a state; rden 
m LA i e to 1€ 
be 
preme of ^ 
ye zling. Lnd 
"o; the 
a 
es ren "- general | 
& it is 
tha! in 
exhibitions that the "fault ba not i 
di 
experiments of 
t| The 
dnd i. Castle. ee gn 
An article on Potato Culture in the Sco 
ener contains ng passage, cor! 
AW, recorde ded at p p. 
e followi: 
r, M. 
a om perc of the 
Shei 
ais pa 7: i 
1011 :— 
an that of 
ealled 
an nd 
fen p green" &e.,— 
ikania scandens i be dren thora different thing. These 
are only a a few dom instances, but they do not 
ENTOMOLOGICAL: Oct. 3.—F. Pascoe, Esq., 
F. L.S S., 
President, in the chair. | 
pupa I. a ve ery f: 
iet 
of small siz, 
to the 
he had 
e a irge weotil 
rindon, if we may 
t | pride es EADIE và the es ee - aga he 
calls his — keys and e E 
wherein we iret 
rom 
wit, to make the igo fruits furnish bis own n ending 
distinctii we at all agree w at 
ovary two or 
in the case of such 
Du , though only seen 
if found to be so, it is an 
botanist l 
truth being that 
fi 
|Qi 
udge Mn “his Preface, 
is paid 
de Le nnt 
ions, 
especially Tulips, of all mh 
rh rad a most en and 
rding to 
moving MA far the heaviest e 
mson consider 
argon 
lon, 
spe 
the ccompeny, bh 
accidentally TN A we 
— - of th 
poc 
rop 0 
s Mrs, Pollock an 
wo of the finest edi 
g amateur 
ig pias 
orists’ Guide for " med of of September tha 
vas ics sete ba govt "n of card y 
oak etna 
noi intended 
ngon Ba ins been 
u 
ried the 
e iria 
October 
