o 
406 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
[June 14, 1856, 
Many buds ; but atter a time they all become deforme d, | 
and the ealyx ses its and none in ope ‘Tikely to come to 
f doo: oors. Many 
=? 
es 
a appear to su 
Company. We have also other communications recent Azalea grandis, Cereus Austini, Tefrathera. ——<f 
us, of which it is sufficient to print the following lata, Erica Beaumontia, and E. en 
In justice to the Crystal Pa lace awe sh we o Mr. Blair, who preduced Erica ventric sal x ane 
y nt, at | Torenia asi iatica, Garde enia apiieane, Ardisia crenulata, 
. 390 respecting the prizes give tl A phel p Tropæolum tri lorum, 
? for we Norco iiy that 
th hi or had he plant better be raderar y 
onti subject wortby of merit received an adequate 
ngst the successful c e 
i collection of Exotic Terns, 
[it has ey ived t uch water and has too Atte 
bu ry hea and „amo 
Jomi Miesfort H 
p d your ~*polite attention, I must 
kindness 
for a br rief 
h I 
turn to the schedule, it will b 
| prizes only i in Class XXVII., and ye are certain 
before you, whic 
to benefit much by y r | 
i a Jour | 
were awarded the censors, wha 
vere well selected for each cept Seg and the exhi- 
| bitors villas fuer expressed their full sati ipipction: | „with 
Re Eish 
Maxillaria Dieppii, Ese hyn anthus — pere Pime. 
spectabilis, Gesnera iiih, s. a 
The best collection t eee was se 
the kinds bein Pk 
m Adiantum- (crt “ys 
tery se be eo rere sens. 
Athyrit 
Besimin tumit Cystopteris montana pal fragilis ; 
Lastrea | dilatata and | var, ; Filix- -mas and y: ar. cristata, 
O: 
ntanu rinum, Ruta mu- 
ra Trichomanes, Fand viride ; 
smu 
3 il 
hen sey there has 
pret Say fll F 
gh at my | sive 
a 
so much s0, peels iad ne ih A irain l ia 
“complain, Wm, Cutbush ar nd Son, Highgate Nurseries, 
| June 11th. 
t Hybridising Fala ionis. = am working the rough 
oly di vulgare, , calcareum, Dry yopteris, Pega! 
eris a mi alpestre ; Polystichum Lonchitis, aculeatum, 
ee ngulare, vars, angustatum and pro! oliferum ; 
Seo topendrium agate and var, fgg areas m; Adiantum 
pay 
the e ground well dry and levelle ow was Fiat 
not quite He ht? Then I sete some halk put over it. 
Weli, I looked i into your Paper, and found epi T could 
buy 
the rass mixture for lawns, and wrote t a 
hored Any in Pe oe of England, and he sent a 
ag of seed which my servant sowed c: arefally, ahd 
plore dry, the w 
ASON | S 
ing thing o r two. Iam jus 
out of Rising pa ty fulgidum. The tapettaben ‘of 
cross-br em t be over-rated. I believe that 
sr uce impr ‘oved seedlings by thei eir 
any now trying t to ge eta 
pahence atum ; Lomaria Patersoni, Wo 
tusa ; jeak rom alcicorne p Niphobolus sinensis : 
Pteris ula, hastata, chinense, serrulata o- 
tundifoli ; and Struthiopteris P 
s 
Mr. Blan, ye paia: Adiantum A Me inn 
assimile, um and hapii any Poly- 
ti » Polypodium 
y are 
weal or of their lightest coloured par Three 
self. -bred generations | have — = Tike toa 
h colour which 
urely this was all right, v was it, mrt t| 
me I shall Base an excellent crop of 1 Rye-| 
does not always descend will it aste2 a ah the pracnea 
of another sort. Much observation and registry of 
paama are yet needed on this wu = T. Q 
A Few Thi 
and Clover, and offers to give me a a for it ings which Ever rybody ough now.—A 
Shen Te ut it. Provoki iA n! bow I hat o be | quart of P box, is fue wide by | fr 
quizzed, “Frue it is, a long coarse Grass gro tufts,| 18 inches long, at any t the year, and cut off 
and looks just like my husband’s Oats and Tiy. and when about 4 or 7 inches ‘Nigh, and boiled like Spinach, 
gly, tall, large. a little salt, makes a most delicious dish. Th 
cows ! and sheep eat. Now, i is snot this a shameful trick? t about 6 inches 
rope of Jerusalem Artichokes cut o 
mak 
cope Pe all the additional expense (sei) 
shall t to in going over the same 
ake a capital dish, 
Boiled bya eee 
t 
vies partakes in some degree of the flavour of the co 
hum liaki aans oly, 
ecaneital olium Sat oa angus alien, Cyrtomium falca 
ii longifolia and rotundifolia, and pper tae exalta- 
erous productions were rags on me ge 
for r exhibition op at _ From Messrs. P. Lawson & Son 
ne ime! eleas S, 
ted Jew ved Vine, as a collec. 
Į Lawsoni 
mj ws 
and Heaths; e 
dendron Dalhousize in fiower, blooms of a hy 
Rhododendron d Countess, ustrali 
Fy 
thven, ep Sor rral iam including a a superior variety 
delicious dish. us how be 
f r “impaired | cor stitutions ‘it i is invaluable, 
before, which cost 51.2 I have met with” £0 5o many 
vexations and disa isa l Prepa yh from your 
friends, o be angry with y 
JM 
Messrs. 
Laird, Cinerarias, Mimuli, and Pansy israe- aoe a 
Pansy named 
I have wrong seeds, and sad rabbi sh, „and wrong ‘abate 
In 
some 10 or 12 hours and steeped in cold spring “water 
This is a great M Orica 
uchess of Wellington—a 
have suffered similarly that in “my own and 
gne I eee. you to devise some means vei Phe 
hall f sould 
ies who are considered first 2 and 
ed trade, who have se 
Denton many part 
forem iost in the fi ower and se 
my notes 
The proper wa Me ood te: 
of some importa The plan whieh I have practised 
for these 12 inet is this. The tea at once 
— up with boiling water, then vif ten = but into the 
q for five es before it is 
o make ea cupo of gi 
y e 
ey and without ever getting a I really 
gradually sink to the bottom ; the result is tha t the tea 
hi3 the leaves gradually absorb dedik so and as |B: 
yellow w gro round iit broad et belting of superior size 
aon. A aig for a rtificate of Merit was 
; from Mess: Ge Enin F. , & Co., 
m prema et —— Mr. T. _Dou- 
Ci 
and a promising seedling, of wt habit, stated to have 
been raised — se =~ of an Alpine oe fertilised 
with Primula 
antyne 
Mr. 
my, ro 
ink if a number of us of the weaker sex, as you men 
were to de 
oe 4 
r and y ou ‘get all the true flavour of 
please vise some means 
communication by w which we „could ma åke each ot 
us ricks, and those who treat us fairly, (a kind of pro- 
teetive seeoeiation) we might put a check upon such 
atrocious proceedings. H, sent me a set of bluish 
nemones this season, and I ordered sippe bags Seen 
t to do 
—he on. bh be e whipped, oiei tell cathe 
future, ie spirits sh 
pales Re eg See E Payee sea I Sros 
Tead attentively ; - though it is in part ve hard an 
ntt less tea is re 
> 
A thn Ti: | 
truth, m quire 
way eri mae the old and common practice. imal 
Cuthill, bist eari London. 
- Sorieties, 
LEDONIAN HORTICULTURAL, p i ea this 
any confidence again in the nurserymen, who seem to 
advertise for the sole purpose of entrapping those who | Struthiola stricta ; 
iy) 
ssrs. J. iia 
| semiduplex, pitistaniitecs, aieri violaco, and 
second, Messrs. Dicksons & Co. 
to their ae eden for pleasure 
I am sure if 
and amusement. | 
e dealt fairly with, and upon reason- | 
expose ose the name of the person in 
of En itsi who swindled he: er. 
We cannot rc 
with Azaleas i 
ndica alba and Halfordi, B oronia tetran- 
| dra and Tropæolum tricolorum. 
E Aaii of 
Plants, first, Mr. Fowler, Glenesk, with Cattley. 
| Mossize and Leschenaultia formosa ; second, 
ston, with Azalea 
Cactus, 
sers] 
~ Combine _the ` Wheaten meal wi 
in t 
hr 
inant 
first, Mr. Blai 
th 
th | is not everybody who cares 
a — on Azalea same, saperia Qn s sisin 
e and fine flow r. Pender, 
and other rare Alpines ; from 
Asparagus, weighing 43 oz. ; 
Porterfield, 14 stalks of Rhubarb, aeo: 40 lbs. 
anarai of Books, 
lacie England ; or we of our Social History 
in She e Feige ae cas evel By G. W. Thornbury. 
2 
Pit a -u in the History of 
ur social condition 
pee 
g A 
ate of water so Sante of hal a 
eal. A teaspoonful of sugar and a te 
t 
itia ‘ilva a oer preestantissima, rarias, firs 
ral 
d of m 
fal of salt may be igen v up with the meal, or the sal 
may be e emp loyed alone. For pe edespem use, a 
Cine Mr. 
- | Reid, reap gies Pe groom Chieftein, Esther, 
Mr. ME ngewe 
and 
Barnton, with Bessi ona y ues 
aval glory ; but all desire to know how ir fore- 
i lived, ate, drank, dressed, and soiree them- 
selves, what sort of houses and g ardens they occupied, 
in, Aks 
of Beauties, blocms, firs 
poun meal, mixing 
of kly together 
at the same time at, 
for ery ' domestic use, I 
ansy b 
vom Beco go end Tia Ri a Napier, ‘Mary "Taylor, 
cart. npa 
d-all „the other little details whieh make up p the round 
of man ’s existence in n society. cele os 
x 
late years—for example Gailard & Dubois’ sapene- 
Omitting the first expense of the gazogene, the xe fabrica- 
tion of efha neid nt thus cosi crash sa vet De 
nothing ; and, for the cleanly and 
lean 
ferment ted bread, is vastly rirako to every 5 ToriG of 
— R and d soda, bakin ing and other powders, whatsoever. 
Earn Sie k ‘Napier Poker of the Day, he 
and Bride ; second, Mr. i illiam, Mi 
ancy Pelargoniums, first, ka 
follows :—Various kinds of baking powders used for 
plant 
first, Mr. Crombie, en, ‘wi Die elytra apeetabties 
d, Mr. Smi th, Clerm' h Anthericum liliago. 
iqua 
i ma 
reach of ordinary eyes; but it eannot be denied 
ethan w 
his picture of the the Elizabe orid is esse ntially true, 
if n e long 
ee the author’s pages which we gave last week will 
ve prepared the reader to ee much en! 
on the volumes themselves, nor will he be dis 
appointed. 
when they come in contact with water in the dough. 
i } d as some | 
Alpine plants, first, Mr. Falconer, Savova Cottage, 
pyrenaica, 
contain heel sea tasa I have mostly used | 
bread, nor 
Full _divectons for | 
‘ampton ‘on Court. 
ee 
the arrangements on 
conse tae nk he compliant wold d better 
to forward them to tthe See oe Crystal Palace 
last | the 
e ford 
with Maianthemum bifoliam, R: 
An eae 
Houstonia czerulea, and ‘ae 
pos M‘Farlane, with Dianthus 
rnatum, Linaria 
aria alpina, and Ajuga pire Mepit 
Dickson & Co’s. prize for the four newest and 
E Azaleas s i ed by Mr. Cam 
Prinee t, magnifica 
On this oc the 
Of the eardeniog of the 16th nee T 
pinion has been formed from the fragmentary acco mT 
hat have reached us. Its worst features are. probably 
ony ia the 
Gardening in the third volume of ESA aar of 
|the walls of houses. Oe tke pardan by abriek 
oa by ME e 
: ©The privy 
wall, In the middleit contained a round knotdivided into 
