ee 
TH 
Aveust 23, 1856.] 
= vii Peadioe an Heomiisaa ky ve-| ing queen Brants; FG ead Agrettia, ons oa] of Sisk Ga Oiiypede Winnie’ Orchi TNN 
experiment with ee 
a Nectarines, by re- 
moving from pa orchard 
Nahl 
E GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
|in pectralar seal to Caro ce Festuca, inter hid Noaeared trom ihe era "Wollaston 
two her mid- -season Paas arp ith pasi 
and placing with a souther! ect, 
within 2 fi fit t I shall have Boble 
ang ith a “ie e pi ater flavour three weeks after 
the orchard house and 
articular and the three flowing ‘ora 
ual | shire, including Seraptia fuse: a Galeruca with 
change o the In the Papi- | monstrous antennæ, that on the oie pea hapag three 
lionaceæ the author ariar en the produ uction of the | separate b branches, A pa sper by Mr. Newman was read 
The. treos arp a prepared for removal by lifting 
them eek o: previous ara ant if tre ees are fixe 
J uly 
Jetch from the V. angus p gp 
hae = aca Trfolum he made ~ following | from bruised Laurel leaves. 
and T. medium. The T. pra 
varieties of 
uta 
dee rkr ‘all the I 
pepe tat oy ive -jat oad ‘t om 
rehard hou s 
Peace —an 
large flowers ; this ripens at the same period as mN 
Early ann? is ye ofa od colour, and decidedly the 
finest early Peach yet | kno 
etn 4 e 
r 
ome fruit et the "Early Y a 
ty with serrated leaves am 
my | by the T. medium, on whic 
TARDEBIGG E e S, SEN the aii 
sandy soils is supplied | Hon. the Baroness Windsor threw open the par! 
Guach the latter ens of Hewell Hall to the visitors ot T. Tardebi 
into agriculture to | Horticultural Society’s Show, which w. in th 
failed. e . The object o society is to e saan yy 
tanical name of | for horticulture among the cottagers of t the parish, 
T. medium ; but it isa curious jarioa that all judging from the display they aet of flowers, frui 
npr its Seay neces in poo: 
= 
ree ERE 
eg 
p! efforts of 
Ma 
syan J 
the con 
y of T. pratense, and hence, at present, the mittee met their due rewar ut the beauty of tk 
te goke to eg fruit trees in pots in a state 
of health, and then when it was found that the trees 
a exhibition 
a. Ba t 
was mainly attributable to the splendi 
l persar botanical designation of T. medium, but u collection of plants and fruits exhibited by 
that of T. _ pratense pene nae fact being er Markham, gardener to Lady Windsor, which were 
= 
he 
ond was taken Vand my system of not r Pp ing th 
(3 
ieties of broad Clover | ning establish that gentleman's skill as a culti- 
hilst the. hen T medium has i unag had a great treat i 
t this moment only the 
The visitors to the in 
entirely lost oy agric cultur ; and the whole —— bold allowed to inspect e part of them, The 
d — 
nable. I hay: 
a state in a reply to thee a ae | tad apron trees 
that hav nin the 13-inch pots some five, and 
some six ea rs, are ‘shes ‘hi fruitful ‘and more luxuriant 
in their growth than they have ever yet been. Th 
ewer wh garden a is bess magnificent, and with its get tle 
lost from neglect, but ti that it has merged into T. pr: 
tense; and if so, it remains as a most 
matter o experiment, especially when it is considered | ji 
what nature and art, combined 
proo oar nee 
pirwa can effect. The Dutch garden, in quite a 
botanists of their dierent aace to this, with its geometrical be 
shaj si 
Rivers. 
Wellingtonia.—I received from the United States 
late last autumn and in the winter some or 700 
Wellingtonias raised fro in the spring of 1855; they 
distinction as species. Many experiments of a like|s ortugal Laurels, formal 
ae" is also an object 
out. 
| The President called attention to Prof. Buckman’s | tain som ies beautiful and immense specime: 
uring more than twenty feet. The 
pier 
| manence of specific characters i in plants and animals. — | and lawns are are all in the highest state of keeping ; a 
Mr. 
a ouse 
s! well all the Springs and w emoved to the open 
air 
ds, 
led 
; and their practical utility clearly of 
pointed empiri ‘ane conservatory a d Camellia house con- 
some 
ens 
any 
as 
t risk ; 
med be in most vigoro! us h health and growth 
| „and the, whole management of the A aae 5 
TA a fal ABE tisa th 
eih 
w neat i=) 
omar and not much noticed. Darieg n r eiA, re 
June and July past the re isease ve progressed to 
a extent, so that perhaps one 
? joo Birmingham Journal. 
paper hear 5 both in an hera pa taxologia 
ee e ea P a Hottees of of Books, 
ird of th 
are affected ; a on not all di oa after losing 
thelr p anches break again at the ear the 
t. I have nev n Manne Pardee Biase 
i I 
i 
Milford in 
p jun, t that out of 
Veitch, the: 
ts appearance 
. Young’s woah at 
Juu e last, I learned from Mr. Youn 
had lost ‘half by th e'same eisd z therefore 
t | general imp! 
- | carried too 
ey | two plants formerly thou ii hed Sd dregens the 
how certain forms could be produ oa which ‘ieldod a 
er amount of profit to the farmer. There was a |The Secrets KA French, oton, By A. Gogué. (Les 
ression among ven the tendency Secrets, & 12mo, 2fr. 
rms T l 
ar, and deer! f£. Buckman’s paper — t d lete insight into the piadade 8 | 
indicate H way in which forms had teen pro- | kitchen, and tells those who can why all 
duced.— The Rev. L. sacle referred to the re, that end oer kitchens are so unsatisfi Physiolo- 
that cooking is only a preliminary digaso, 
ase. ae see ae 
oe to the met at least in its young s p this 
mate, Whet age will make it inse is is er o be 
ant fi 
ng the stomach more easily to 
dite near Bat! 
i | with those coll he T A of Europe, it would i ove: 
d then the found that certain regarded 
gòr that it ~ Be a tells us that they are 
in mi rah the other. Mr. Bentham st sted quite mistaken and that among the middle classes in 
that by taking a single"isolated Flora like that of Great | ss pbr king | has been expressly co pe to "aR 
Britain, ts might be though ong to diffi 
if the Briti 
h species were compared | M. G 
his little book, w 
r enters into many Piai details ssn ba ag se 3 
ms which were A; | invitations, guests, servants, and entertainments, not 
| distinct vaste “evidently run into a He re-| omitting the daily cares of housekeeping. About eight- 
| ferred ral species of Trifolium as con-| and-twent are occu soe 4 bats 2 
Whines accuracy we ty E Perhaps i 
not like poi sonia ine roots ecimen sent us we! 
already corkse The Acton plant never had an 
meine of being spoiled by “ pot-cramping.” ] 
Th i 
need act t that not a single prana, plant w 
ia 
i ing ur in the In me sumed 
e | plan 
irmatory re “his remarks. He also 
pe o the British ang bu t all were connected vin - | Let 
f Eur, 
regions, Provence 
cits is greatly es teemed, and is cooked in 
n Par 
it is difficult. to obtain 
“Choice 
pening of Tai ie according to sho mld always pe mae 
Garonne,employed by a fruit rover ia tn ‘trict, i wild Parsnip, which Prof. Buckman had su successfu ly : 
consists sin the piger m ofa d n: te in two re aa remove a kig of the 
lied with | referred to and Mr. Lawes’s wade and | fies’, mince it and add an equal quantity of minced 
h only the centre. This T perntion | stated that certain i inorganic sul substances, ieke w Mushrooms, or, if you have not got Mushrooms, as 
d much soaked broth or milk. 
Spit d ey tint, and in the evening after sunset. The agricul cultural plants, producing considerable er ejesi in | Take a piece of butter as big as am egg, as much 
Fig yee it green, small, and h sg re charact f their peri leaves, and stems.—Mr. | finely. minced card some oe oil, a little 
next day swollen, soft, and with a yel ellow t inge. The ars C. C. Babi n stated th at, with regard to to the great | Parsley, two cloves Garlic, and six minced Shal- 
is open, the flowering commences, and the fruit is a lots ; [Pa em with the Mushrooms and the flesh 
ee on Pony morning of the fou rth day, when. the | | there was: no -i to aras in their pron | of 1 the Au bergine. When the whole i is well warmed, 
aayo ab tto be formed, B, } > 
‘dpe th | poss ssibl vari ty f ted | and fll th Aubergine, finish off pe 
byt the os ripening, and is free f agen were ag m eg He | stuffing Z, etro =e kroli crumbs, and put in the 
e disagreeable small seeds. W. M. iM. [The e process in | protested oan A Pe ileke. that because ewe sag | oven or on a gridiron heated from above, and cook for 
question is well known ; experience shows that the | Pope’ each other i therefore the ey were not distinet. He | half an hour at most. FRIED AvB es: Cut them 
advantages attending it are more imaginary than real.] g in four wise; dust them with salt, and let 
btai. } stand for an hour. abate sh ants 8 
| + T af hehwitestion tole af Ol} il, and f h i drained 
ere y cloth. ix a little 
Sorieties, psoralen marten apy ra a e oil. —GRILLEDÐ 
EnTOMOLOGICAL, Aug. 4.—J. O. West wood, Esq., V. priama Cut them in two, and afier having well 
Bri SSOCIATION FOR occupant or in the chair. Donations to the library from the Royal score d the eel sh season them with pepper, salt, s and 
Sereno dg. 7 — SECTION D. ~ Zoorocx AND Bota Kole: nati, Guerin-Meneville, “ 
„— | and other societies, Messrs. 
e business of t the r reading | Nylander, &c., were announc e ntle taking care to turn the 
of a paper, “Notes on Experiments in i otanical | mr ranp of the very rar h Drepana Sicula, of | è wry ge rm ‘AW g ripe and aia ot half 
Garden of the Royal Agricultural College,” by . n ngle example a had sie reviously cap- pln naoa gi aro in this an, will soon 
Buckman, of the A C ir cm , in Leigh Woo ome Bristol, by Pis Ap Suen oe Sous a 
is paper the author escribed the soil and orton Mn Bolt. Mr, ter exhibited Erispos Latreillii, a nen Heak Gan’ as Nil be useful, for 
tion of the locale oce d a as his garden, wbich, from | | | beautiful moth belo g "Noctuids, quite English cookery books } ing ahi lent 
g situate on forest marble clay, is of a somewhat | new to this country, which he had succeeded in rearin ‘And yet they are g the nicest of delicacies, Even 
sterile character. The experimental portion is divi | from the larva ; a th Spi palealis, Tro eon Arts equaint é 
into 200 psa most of which are 24 yards square, _ | chilium chrysidiforme, from Folkestone. Mr. Weir 
double that and a few a anger, er engaged in | exhibited a number of specimens of Macaria notata, all 
experime! ne are Psa arious he plots are | ofw Eer komee mo: formed, ` wanting 
empl h wi Aih ei cro al experi- | othe ings, a » 
sheet, i in the following classes os Grams 83; ; Papi - | seems — liab! . Mr. Samuel Stevens exhibited CULTURAL To oat pacer Se eas GREEN. 
lionaceous feeding-plants, 25 ; aah ees p several specimens a Trochilium y ani age anda EI T. pled et a Shick tle 
Be ae T pirden te vegetables 3 a ae ne tw yoo a ead phe yp Lasik ae sia ment has of late been subjected, the itika 
with man nts, 13 ; rate Gena lli from the san a 
ornamental pl 40 : š sree y 197. For the aia Other rare species of moths were e hbited b y Messrs. | of pu ng both par mee ri aE a 
cap ati given tending to show that |F. Bond and. Tomkins, and Mr. Waterhouse exhibited In he arbors E ay TASS k 
oS ga in cultivat atio on n to t alks smoo 
several so-called species 
varieties—instances of w 
and had it not been for the 
Jin the aay rainfalls which ai have Lay preira the 
a eM a 
including P 
