AES 
Ѕартамвев 23, 1865.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONIOLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 891 
y age ET m 
of the glass, that originates drip. The colder useful, With al the neatness of leafage of tl of clear yellow flowers, and us 
L 2" the жазаса ir the and has a | grows about 18 inches high. The faded | corre y 
ta be, and the glass remains cold | dwarf zeoumbent pabis, which will cause it to be alf А. aurea is also worth trying 
фе water уеге емие, suspended on it, Е & по sooner useful edging p in this way, а itis hardy, and if rir to ri 
s ie glass warned tha ter. On] ould ы, clean: -grown 1 plants of Santolina iu the ground during the winter the second prs 
bl is of much shorter duration than the ИА 
Water in го rows of drip, running Mf with the ends for which Antennaria aria margaritacea was recommended | To succeed with it as a lusor АЕ Р subject, it should; be 
М the panes of glass. In Mr. regere houses 1 The Lavender Cotton, too, has the | planted out Th the Pel: ms, &c. 
ёдегпа1 water can get vg. о Бон is thicker, | advantage of hardiness and is evergreen—or rather] Salvia argentea is is unquestiondbly the finest large- 
consequently warm than tj ordinary houses, ever pe 4. Ar onfident it might be used with | leaved silvery plant. we have, and now more than ever 
iberefore there e drip тшй; 5. lastly, what is | grea et gardening " gubject. useful for association with the лч and handsome 
runs down the lev ternal surface * the The Trop Теа" are certainly establishing | Биё habited plants which are beginning to tastefully vary 
vtm its exit into Ys roof plate, whi claim ms аз, ‘first te plants for summer dec the masses of gay flowers. It may be seen at Battersea 
ape the best l M anybody, not much more than half the size ib 
This mode ol of glazing meets" and „destroys another which, | without е ог pegging of any kind, mM usually grows, perhaps from being om a raised brick 
objection u rged ag vell е ed with brilliant MTM inel It grows freely in ordinar den soil, but of 
mueh colder than wood. It is well known that all | flowers. It has the d 00, of not getting | cou so like most other things 1f. it rich and deep, 
metas are extremely active pp rs of caloric. ой | of bloom by such M b coldest soil, or fullest exposure 
They heat and i qu eer D 5: extremes, | times have, a е eom ou eas ч lu is also | do not affect it in the least, though some at. first sight 
moi regulari But by placing two M. Ia eat in habit, with orange- yellow. spotted мема —judging by its woolly aspect— must be 
thicknesses of дашы pin nd one of y between Sowers and i is probably the best of its ts class. Tro. | spoiled by rain. If planted round large-leaved things, 
the main raft should not be — to overshade i 
i 
i h sorts, suited for trailing over the edges .of| Gibson uses аз а Ец pho rbia 
cold can pass iie P Poem: conduetion or radia- jen a cm This ia 4 Терини possesses а | Сурагізвіав, an hi к. lant ^ne orms ^y ut very 
tion Hence I believe these bars are rl good decided мне an Ma "ro from seed, | neat green bush; round it, for instance, an edging of 
10n-conductors, a аз „wood of similar r scantlin anaona е кти ways | this Salvia would tell wi ell, 
y : 
of p ng the p ting ae cuttings, ts hand- 
are facilities for double glazing, which is now chm The Fr incus ani im in ve other somely tipped leaves, is d phe] k take 
dopted for Orchid cages ens and as a means of|plant to produce a M Жү ы ecedence among dwarf edging Ee it is neat 
vonomising fuel and ing a more etim Among the novelties and SM po TM | clean in growth, and moreover quite hardy, and 
emperature The T deu. bar has only to receive | Battersea, none is more beautiful than a bed of Viti as presentable at Christmas as at midsummer. No 
bottom end, thus T, aud the glass, asphalte, and heterophylla он В е. have grown the plant for | pegging down, no getting green, no annual propagation 
1 and know thatit may be depended on|required with it, Bu X. t has been a neglected 
of air the эү” of the rafter thus secnred. Either as a beautiful variegated subject. 16 has remained in| plant, of course it can {Ае diately be had in 
і bed аб Battersea during the past winter. That | sufficient quantity to re ue of, and those who 
at pleasure, I f no rafter or mode of gl azing В oae Ы а covered with its slender shoots, which | have the plant at present yen do well to divide and 
med шаны! for де Айра on g this wise car “airy” but not straggling mass, every leaf | increase it as much as poss 
g heat by the aid of -- thickly dappled over with pink and white spots, | These notes chiefl irag ^4 "bedding plants as seen 
mm Pr an indescribably pretty effect. Many |in the neighbourhoo "i of London—the centre of gar- 
mM: ventilation of these houses is singularly perfect. | variegated plants “get green" as they get old in any dening as of thought. T antur Wy lam going іо have a 
ve in in at the surface of the sartha ad age; with this Vitis it is the reverse, as the later | гип towards the circumference of the zx and ifI 
шары ai highest point of the house e | formed leaves are the most prettily mar and th. * anything "and new i nof mentioned here, I 
ical ffect of a mass of it is mo: TO AHEMEN, at the end | will reporb oh ik W. Robinso 
m m Аа iha — from the "a | -— » beginning of the summer, 76 ———Má 
| the groun e whole area of the houses is flooded | eat dwarf and hoary Vi ca incana is capable | мј 
with light, and permeated by air. Тһе ductility оѓ | оғ уз чо а good deal as 4 oui s plant. It has| гры ас arme sm ы prai edet 
metals and the improved methods of bending glass | also some advantage in belig hardy. has been sent us by the author, as P sample of the new 
0! rei to . 774]. 
of e вһар e y most attention to autumnal t 
and pattern. They are equally suitable for sheltering | decoration— whose employers only frequent their| Tris most valuable timber tree is в indigenous to 
A regal collection of tropical flowers and fruit, а peach | gardens in autumn—would do well to use the new байм, and Spain—nay, it is found more or less plenti- 
Wall ora poor man's window plants. Their cultural| white Anemone Honorine Jobert, and to "E with it ful all „over „Eastern and Southern , Europe. I intro- 
zm i obvious at a glance to your practical|the old Anemone japonica. Among low or traili t 
i reat 
A umm ein jatena, bilig chea: — | MN as about the houses at Chatsworth, only as а rare or new Pine: for à only during the 
rom h, elegance, сас т ет D. T.| Euonymus radicans variegata, well pegged down, last 20 years that its intrinsic 9 as a -class 
to E inp Hardwicke House, Bury St. | foras a А var, distinet, and ty sil edging, of a | timber tree, in every respect well adapted for profitable 
gliste tint too, w. which is sometimes desirable, planting in this country, have been appreciated ; and 
mice | wes not со mmon, among variegated edging plants. even at the present time it is sadly neglected by prac- 
Ni By this gli For quality, quantity, Teen үн, 
OTES ON BEDDING PLANTS. & low margin, Arabis alpina variegata differs from | and early maturity it may have equals, but no superio 
ding-out, as in other t, things, we keep moving m albida variegata, than which it is а more effective amongst the true Pines, 
though it may sometimes be difficult to fi plant tis perfectly hardy, and what is equally necessary 
ux ts worthy of popular Е yet so шапу | - Bouvardia angustifolia (Van Houtte's Weny k н отео ийг Qe of ura ges growtb, sur- 
resources of our nurserymen, and so wide |free-blooming E «АМА fine heads t| passing its and Ч 2A our const 
arc| 
ме 
the rua of botanical travellers, tha i à din h Fir; of 
X тв, t there EE | flowers. It, as other varias оша be pat | tutionally LEE ge now e $ 
i fw candidates for popular favour in the field. | out in the form of established plants. Very young ones | large dimensions, attaining heights of from 80 to 
Wing had pretty good opportunities of observing wer 130 р : 
these, Iwill endeavour to in dieatejtheir merits as far| Ofsilvery-margined Potes Chain чон Меш ie timber fit for any purpose, "т 
be the i na i in 
w or sit 
DNA ragusina 
ippear a © deci spongy 5 
ich asit does not grow mor half pa bran pleasing. го иы of solls И T ndi 
dithe common form, and is therefore suited for Of the “ * Cloth | of Gold er Иж Жы Hut- | not sureharged with би water, in which it 
кы and small t s perhaps would not grow, and produce wood (relative and com- 
tan is fitted, It must be planted more нн There are some mpm coming out in Me parative), of as quality and 
the original, Mrs. Pollock qd s bata as ca im they are too. rare to Бе | yield as quick and. profitable a return as any timber tree 
we Herbst, or Achyranthes Verschaffeltii, talked of. Bri y the most beautiful masses а of | extant. Is special an a 
umero to be a perfect failure generally, and | Mrs. eae ep don. are А. grown estimation is, в, that we. «> y^ if an other 
i у of the large sale it has had. At Battersea | mend. ren 699, by having “gravel гд ponen trees, either indigeno xot 
LM a miserable object, and, im , that is its | rubbish к the bottom да bring the variegation well| well remunerate for panting the man usand ч 
бт, though with Mr. Eyles its character is | out," but by the contrary process of bed xd — nd unprofitable poor barren r май which аг 
lim, t tosome extent. It is, indeed, so good with | the richest in the T ag Mrs. Paint. Dengin is almost as | in this country —lands which, when we çon- 
nig a had we not the Coleus Amaranthus we | fine and brilliant flower as some of the standard sider er the | genius, the TE rural economy, M 
Mi. tk ^ a useful plant; but at its best it is | green-leaved qe nm weal € our 
M y Sea ; that T the 'ezoeptions ot pom poon 
in ^ E s à eni 112. „51 ^ 
[a arrant its About | Daisy is er It is very aee nn rem | mtn 
: it has = э узбе Sith шө ias in fine | onl ЕЧ 18 inches high, and the flowers ere "also deseriptions of soils already mentioned) of the ponas 
ed оуу Sen in p where it looked sickly at exceedin pretty. Itis r ehange- | yea, too many, thousands of de^. waste lan 
of August. - able in da xm ff from lilac е са аге not more than five per cent. which might 
d ibson. is certainly justified in — | now and then, but always pleasing, and likely to be| through the medium o of practical kpoviedze: к and Fe 
me the ls plant in its with | most useful for cutting from. MT carat orden dii n profitable account by 
ji Arundo Donax grows very anted wi 
ad it is in Ap armes a mri Да ^ Polon E beds : lie met when young or goy мб is creamy-white ; 
anl i ied. after. In other gardens, though good plant of dT Pisa э Өчкөнү hen matured - seasoned brownish-yellow; \ 
that indispensabl le subject, it it does not b attain fully marked leaves, wi woi "think — ver a lide i e cuir worked 
і b тесе 
t bed. It would be neces- sai 
holicas нде ни deinen ino & pl y guod c p м 
is displaya great beauty of colour | У а They would not get highar than 20 ins. иа б nin wn 
laces i i ү те e ravages 
of the and should be protected in winter with an old mat or|of no "Jess subj 
ondi maaa sikiy g а E (of the sort ty of Vinca major, called elegan- | 32-95 for y й the. а ран ne еч 
n throughout T Ri t^ à d Mus A NUM; 1t к а» 
dus 
үү 
| 
H 
Ё 
Hn 
Du 
AH, 
iit 
Vire Coleus is цве! г 
В edging, shining, and | disposed ineonstancy guis n4 
а ушшш iem Mec арй ай 22 L d DE ix m шеек which may have i c£ y its 
гей, ства р ts of it, са ægyptinoa is y of a trial as a bedding | oceup; ing so wide and жи а gras of native 
from s now at a bigle lai, partient i tish. ground, it has leaves some- 5 | eta ad which has led to usion in its 
=ч pronipos бо bo | what like those of a whitened Nothochlæna, furnishes a | introduction, eultivation, and ooa t for itis — | 
Т 
р. 
