—-- 
Marcu 15, 1856.] THE GARDENERY’ 
TET I LESSEE OPIATE bapan Poda kenar sajo Gal Wiis Gaus RRRS as 
many centres, fro which love and study of horticul- subscription would hereafter enjoy only the same privileges 
CHAROT gee 175 
purchase. The ae 
ture would be diffused throng their iman A neighbour pe new two-guinea subscribers. All ae oe be due aa 4} tei er, maps. Sere 
hoods, and by which attention would be called to opera- the day of election, and annually y h Se irs to y, being paid | ht pony oe Feta to hee a infor 
tions and merits of the E AA can best be oe by , in advance, as is the usa, ge in othe | mig might dem ut on apply z z A 
the Vice-Seeretary, ees would entail upon him a large amount) Lastly: since there are some he By aper EON remaining | na ately explaining pir mga of affairs, he reaive for 
of administrative la our, and a great increase of rong peeve — and it re most essential to seg ra ae ip we can n rely answer that rms whatever would she anci- 
r is this all, for ACRE rojects are announced to be in contem- upon the assistan xisting w rrying o ps 
Dn, vi which would be projects valued by all those who look to | proposed experiments, it ia higbly desirable that a letter should pate her slave, ‘Reng e fort was used to shake 
the Society, not only for amusement or profit, but for instruction | be sent by,the Council to every Fellow, the object of which oan resolution, which appeared unaccountable ; but argu- 
too. The success of these schemes w nuch de’ : d upon’ o $ àd = hrer t no st i aie eant assurance of conti ro ued | ment, entreaty, and money were ora unavailing, and 
the assistance of the Vice-Secretary, a upy a portion | Support—a' St, for a year ut to remin ppoe ħe end 
of il besid Dn wn h is iapa for the determination | of their privileges, by reciting them, with which some are very gosts lad kegi ained inexorable ; giv sth t ‘ = = 
of n ds an It is desirable, therefore, on every | | imperfectly acquainted, and at ae samo time to test their feeling, | Clue to her obst stinacy by observing t A she wol 
pti hat he shoul in enabled to devote himself entirely Gd pe eed through them, the feeling of the public, pe respect to the a see oher f her, she would 
the science of horticulture, by relieving him from all other e of those kidee prom Bien so that agepan may } el, hil 
sponsibility. Me sale toindee what those are with which it a auld be undesir- idow ich, wie Hea AAA I tokdi 
The Committee therefore propose, that the nagement of | able to interfer 4 major e y bi bej ~ 
the Garden and the Exhibitions shall be confided to some one As one ae ‘of lessening the expenditure of the coming y: an i e girl’s hiari hs ah happiness destroyed. o 
ti an of first-rate skill and energetic charac! agter, who shall | peti cr given a his salary of B007. for one 3 al, by volun | pr kert her misery, her peg revoked her leave of 
have the superintendence of every department, and try to raise | tarily offering to give up his salary o. . for one year, while 
the nepeletion of the Garden as a model of go! ‘ood management for | this* experiment to revive the Society s, naive il and ordered her immediate! Ea tem return to her 
a 
all other gardens, while at the same time he may be able to | withdrawing his valuable assistance. 
o improve i er i 
a letter to the Council, dated 18th July, 1854. 
o resist or evad 
Arrive d in the village, the unhappy gi il penal omed to 
s | 
fi t is absol y necessary that the person filling this id “Tt qe the tare wish of some of the best a peia “ae 
office should thoroughly identify himself with the interests | that a subscription should be raised to pay off the loans, whic 
he So. iet 5 aiid oats lo r losing sight of a proper | bear an interest of 6 per cent., to the amount of 2,4007 n he habits and comforts of prn life cunt or Gas 
economy, yet he should manage the Gardens in the most pace rable donations have been promised, in the hope of pte coarse gar of an in ry peasa > and wi 
efficient manner with regard to beauty, utility, and profit; for extricating the Society from its difficulties. moreover ordered forthwith to marry a met i adat 
ich pt e he shonld have the absolute control of all the | 8. Homes Go š jik, or hic ate db peat g at 
whic Ar pos: h e $ he | 
persons employed in the garden, subject only to the authority of | A lo ong discussion suecee: 
i i 
: eeded the 7 we 
ae ear | ment, the several speakers ain that the Com- i i i 
eare that nothing is done to conpromise the character of the 3 P a väk though she still resisted for awhile, a long continuance 
: : rr 7 : sa 
ciety, or to lve it in an unnecessary ex e- But while ttee had f.: a to point ut in way funds were | of cruel and degrading treatment conquered her in the 
E k pees oe eo thi in view, tae Ba wart Laveen to be raised for the immediate purpose of carrying out wi ced to submit to the miserable lot 
at it shou. e conducted more as an experimenta. arden than ta J3 
heretofore; that experiments: should be there tried, not only on | | the ed i a recom “ ee rI t re ae ted until it bad entailed upon her by the wretched je ousy of her re- 
a ner gr eo ut omg .imp panis, boilers, eroh | ten that the-report. conid: no adopted until 1 eo tory of this pritari? yr 
' provided that the persons bringing them stec | me with an indignation as strong 
at their own expense, and that honest aad trustworthy reports o lad 
their success or failure be inserted in any publications sbi ees ‘he | ts renga —— tie of coms oe = ong ourselves, but there was no redress for the 
Council may see fit to sanction. Should the plan here proposed | w f no An y * ne a sufferer. he mistress up to a certain point had 
pret path o saa Cer ath bard re palet a z y oF pei oni ae been de areal — na am sae s hour | Jaw on her side, and aa she had not, as in the com- 
necessary to in wi e ser = efore e chair was en. his ‘so een pulso: sor’ marri e mi hto owered right. That such 
those at -e employed in the Garden, the Comm 3 y age, mig erpo 
earnestly re Like {a sa offices. of. the Cone ‘it objected to, it was Tha by Colonel ‘Challoner, seconded | a ease should be possibie sufficiently condemns the 
Other situations can be found for them: especially | by Mr. Ga desden, ‘That the ar of the Committee | | whole system of serfdom 
oe hed we ompson and $ ami ENR feara Sgm Sey “ie for | app 
Mey [YCOTS TALNI BOTTRAUF OF MRS SEE) es ae to the ar ic Creation, by Drs, 
the highest charact d the Society, which | y 
has a lods jie r the gra of np Oo eae srt cannot | do report to a future me ati ing on ny pr astieability a aioi es yore pice "(aunt ' Constante, Bros pp- 
d seria fom ws = without ge sense of pelereproach, -_ IAS tg e adopting on them," Upon a 3 of aot: ), is an in n final 
without some discredit in the estimation of right-feeling | Com) any par causes—one a ‘the t best that a Prenat I since «Rays 
persons. ci n z k 
_ There are two other alterations in the construction of the So- ans the e noble cto declared the mo Wisdom of God in the Creation,” now obsolete. Such 
iety, which we deem essential to its future success: havi ving by Ayes 24 to sll. We oe pra D Fellows æ work requires a more critical examination than we 
noticed’ tha that te + least, if not inore, of the prs aba of Coupe pt Bee on from wn It was t the | can nt give it. e can therefore only 
in t T were pract orticultn: e consider i ourn ; A 
it nt the same principle should still be our guide, and meeting pat ould adj till Monday, March 31, at | mend it sev ati wig pi orb ate cars t ns 
that one-thi the whole number should consist of such , | one o’cloe’ e take an early opportunity 'verting to some 
os — — paar sca judges of re paiso of the G: $ of the views advocated by the learned authors, especially 
ely to take a professional interest in its proper manage- . M’ correspondence 
ment, one being always included in the annual change directed Rotices of Books, se thet of Dr. i man whio peapa of 
by the Charter. Provided always that, while in office, no Member btween trees and leaves in se veral respects, beni 
of the Count shall be allowed to take advantage of the position, i 
pr sa e Gonn oai ees Sia eee are | S E S Murray,) is a | branched from the ground, and a long stalked leaf the 
sion ounei’ ot teration, which we recom- i ibing | 
ea R a pnie e will be much facilitated by the | pisaaan of rte interesting le cece em stay at contrary. Dr. M’Cosh goes so far as to believe that 
adoption of this Rule. At present the Garden Committee | country life in Russia, by the . 
ev. R. 
— of five Members of the oy ene oe three of its Recent events have rendered vey work more than ever 
the English Oak tree, whose leaves have no stalks. 
We consider that those three to be practical acceptable to rr and i boven enjoyed much | That is surely going very far. 
any 
Horticulturists, and on the Council. 
p 
income, io 
mode of increasing it is by diminishing mas but your | | to see. One extr 
Committee have looked minutely into the details, and are of, « Tn almost every = ace a peda artis paas on Garden emo gn a 
ao t ars 2i went has ra it as low as | | tal : and the women are ning ten His Mr. GLENDINNING’S, TURNHAM GREEN, rhaps the 
0 e Gar wi erm ere is one point, how- 
ever, to which they wish to pee She Sttontioui of ae Gounsil: ss eo knitting, erp ain B dev 5. for ‘the most _interesting object at present in ore here is a 
while they quite approve of a liberal distribution of grafts and raw ma anUurac 3 
ee cso > gs ere the mae gh they e | tured orn a ne is valuable i mn tiie arket Mr. For It carnati: i E oa kind, very 
pro al waste and labour, and | eri 
house-room and expense, in the wholesale aaa paren aeons A The ladies of ne however wre e at home | di ferent however She any wo ore ag cea a 
things for the benefit of a few Fellows, who oe e easily obtain | at ease,’ little know the disagreeable and fen blesom: ipasmuc k the s abi ihar P 
the same things at a trifling cost elsewhere. A revisi “a of ae | duties of ro and correction which thus isole onilo than in any v. o now ‘have of hra frown 
E eon oaen h ak. nw" | open the mista af» fil kn Rami from all the nod the general olin eu form ofthe lo 
in 
Dubtles thing g migh t be ga ined by discontinuing all | V@tiou a es of domestic industry ‘tthe she is | that the 3 most fastidious in su oul 
publications ; but - would ill beco a Horticultural Society to | oilai Se superintend. The discipline of t 
refuse to dissemina e horticultural “knowledge through the land, I se of the household is maintained by mean: It may be mentioned that the plant 
Cl ee Alabat Mammie Jaalt ee cee ae frequency wi edgar oa the ao eae en 
benefit from their subseriptions, except a few seeds and entti (and rity oi ri of its use -o ds 8 2er mg iva ad foliage } “therefore = sateen when pro- 
fared ie imo oF te Exhibitions at Chis a has fill | aster on r mis y of whom, like — — 7 a i pis be much more 
s of timid people with mi ings, which, after all, may be whom I ene lived, votes ae the aa cation uci y y spe eer 
unfounded, and if, in future years, they are confined to two, one eri anaimani to male irem and always resort to = eng shelf in the ges aena. sabes nage in which 
in June and sone in July, and the tickets if not used in the | p ws ced the Camellia as fine 
Garden a derstood to, give admission to the Exhibition iu | it with great reluctan he tem, however, is re- 
g 
is reason ejs that they may at least be | volting in itself, and it peste 
Regent Street, there 
self-supporting, pee a S Eito expense which must frequent scenes of 
l the door to 
n age cruelty, where, 
Chinese Primulas as perha aos oun saiia 
stage. They consisted of double varieties, white and 
ith 
necessarily be incurred by a wise liberality in encouraging TEE D È flow each plant measuring 
exhibitors to encounter the ri cae ex! and inconvenience of AS Sometimes happens, the tones is vested in hands | pink, co with flowers, plant 
sending their plants ie exhibition. pies ioe toward eliotn aeg rude as those of the serf himself, All |15 inches in height, and as much in diameter. The 
which ted so disastrously upon the finances of the Society | owners sl seris ar e noble. SP enh law cannot mak et produced by such a row of specimens a 
the last two years aie be looked upon as an unhappy accident | them all g 2 fore easily be conceived. Though comparatively com- 
which may never occur again. With such means and appliances | Sma y Das nihai 
as the Society possesses in its Garden for exhibitions of unsurpas- | ® eee flowing paint which I am assured n, whai ve 0 
a why should the ‘Society: pong The season will i results of pr taisi pin i cack decoration at this gon of the year agers | 
Sg Sie parecer Aip in i p ts marks in a n the ; or bouquets, we need 
pe yore tha : in they o! sa t 3 € i 
eagen e be So long “eg cay is nthe ‘Russian system o coe as por will furnish an inexhaustible supply. hd 
a reunion Senteibatene h to the happiness universal rule of precedence. Among the serfs owned l every attentior that ae | 
the ‘Fellows wS no to De fat faint-hearted, D t te trom to aan by a widow lady was a girl, who had been brought up | on i y p s riod, rained 
ine aa ei ed pianeta “ ie DONET eae 4 With unusual indulgence in the household, ae a together. These is te es, we oan et 
celebrity of the Society, as may carry it through all its diffi- | superioreducation, and acq g jane bottom heat; 
Shell be had nf Bepa? Seay hnestery nt rolex piss | ee Of Har cess 5 to which! od sera ee ack ere ered ito TE po 
eld a tofore, at whic! } 2 
should be given for ke AINA, fruit, and flo ed | natural gift of ai fe gage r At a proper age sum til at into 
of great merit or novelty. The basis of this increased popu- She was apprenticed a F cds Bia de aerei bere re in abundance. 
i li oung 
larity is to be found in er sixteenth and seventeenth resolutions | j! illi 
t 
of the Council, but the Committee suggest some important | the business, she was after a time offered pelt ie eem- 
This her mistress 
alterations therein. It is proposed, therefore, to admit birth 
“= veer one paying four iE as at present, iia 
itted her to accept, 
_ - inet ps + nae usive a pya of sharing od usual payment of an obrok to herself in lieu of no 
istri ations Pm t but shall be entitled to fete 5 The gi ucted herself i Yr. 
transferrable ivory ticket, which shal admit the holder to it | rey Rees 1s pint ennden miine 
the irige 3 hs the Library, and a 
tu: 
itions, x to all | 2 z 5 
Meetings in the ihar oe at: the second class would habits of some refinement. Here she attracted the 
two-guinea ‘subscribers, paying an admission | notice of an officer of the rank of colonel, who in due 
ad y offering her marriage. 
where it has lanted out is said to have been 
5 ae 
established. Here, then, we at last possess the of 
varying our lani c : with one of thé most peculiar 
forms of vegetation the , and P: 
wing in the open air in ma: be e 
consist 
fee of onl guinea, and entitled to free mission | 
to all Exhibitions an and Meetings, and to all the other privi- | | tim Akie Lad E thi 5 
wai of Fellows, except the ivory ticket and a share in the | | The thing remained 
distribution of seeds and plants, &e. It is not p to | but eae her om her mistress, the con- 
ee Spat ent nenea cu E We presen vill | sideration for which—or in poet words the purchase- 
on the same footing as heretofore; at rese: 
four-guinea Members ay =: _ cause to Lt t | money— the colonel pee meget to pay. images. re 
propose to give them the either reod with she | ‘have been regulated by the obrok which th 
same privileges as hereto! “99 wit h the addition of the tr: 
ferrable ivory ticket, or of dividing their present Soubguteen » ”* There is evidently some misconception here a of the 
subseription into two two- tions, thereby ee Committee. Dr. Lindley could not have pon ween i to be aid aot 
and bringing in some member of their immediate THIS or an: a arane experiment, because 
family, as a two-guines subscriber without PaE af fate. np what experiment w ouid Me proposed atthe time when he 
Of course, the ‘Subseribers so dividing their present four-guinea made the offer alluced to. 
t We regret to say that the specimen in the Garden of the 
| Hortie Society, planted in a lo ld bank 
TIS treo U apod to the North, is ow dead 
