132 THE ee atin [Manch 2, 
0 at a time, owing to 1 
about it—for ready fon bes always plenty of Fær >e E aee pom ural mep gees 4 4 Ten poe cr deney to | to b — e — ews i ending p eye; bu ae 
. Spriccins, on Ty, neve in some measure, his 
Mr. pepsi _ 1 > Oe ge UiS iigh skill be — — the field to develope r me ths | the pi the lant is z , Teak . evil, if 
spare ; an 7 ht, but rt them, and we shal see 2 making vigorous root. trained 
close, and on no account allowed be | arig! 8 j an regular cone, and no more than one 
chill 25 thus far he beat Jon hollow. Jon As ne! He prop 8 1 
5 out of doors, when the i Nay ey — t he cannot grow his This Hovea e ot require very liberal p potting, ang 
over, are a long time about none ny for stoning : Hovea Celsi in th —.— of a Primula He will learn | the operation should be 2 — the flowers 
he had see n that their grow stiff and | from the above, that such a Wer for this fine shrub is — om for at that —— application e E eae 
t, and the w; 1 pray = joins them | neither natural nor d reg * important 1 
fi d he had watched] The soil . three fibry | scarcely be gi point to 
to the 3 3 Pretty rm, degrees the tiny | peat, one part mellow turfy loam, and a sixth ater of ee a and oma to keep it aor na dai 3 
threads that bind the stone to the pulp grew larger, — whales * enge these, should be „Le might rr roots are apt to ae 
h day by day till all is safe * pa se e | to sul r New Holland plants. Hovea ae wet in winter, consequently, it is one of those 
never hurried But the t Mr. Senio- 1 run up, and which must have at least an inch of dra age 
all > . = dat was done and on he went — = — pad d us = ge Ber g * the bo sy iol, I shall discuss the subject of Potting 
n watched when R-n is v 
with his fires, and his 2 pp = erage young, and the shoots pinched bac uently, or, ~ more at length. Pharo. 
i had heard that ow movements o at ond joint. It is dimas to get i 
ature Ve in part to give time for the earth 0 e i — — 
, and ts to draw well by the time that PLAN OF HEATING FRAMES AT CASTLE MALGWYN. a shows itelt 
the swelling fruit wanted plenty of sap. Mr IId to send yout the accompanying plan, by which top and bottom heat are obtained for four generally by 
Spriccins, who been told this, enquired with hoe mech 
air wether the ovarium grew on the branch prove sae oe t y amateurs who have got a few BE. 
or on the root? he to what the | Cucumberor Melon frames, and whose ex- = 
lum wanted more receive the i tent of pits — y ee or enn 0 
tubes ? and he expressed his | wise is ite persons, fra: 
total disbelief 1 Jon 8 qod of roots. is for roots | heated on the 1 plan would be fohi 
“ drawing,” as 18 was called, he ene that = ey 4 — IN e oe bit; 2, stake-bel g 
sion was made endosmotic ac action, which w aham”, A ; D 
; plan) flue running 
U — ints as the ovarium. along the Fon and beak of tht frase, Ds 
fancies might do very well for 2 last ee S, (in edlen) fire brick, 2 feet 3 
but are beneath ovr contemplation. evert 23 inches thick, —— 
as we have seen, Jon's fruit set, and Mr. Spricains’ 53 (6) rests; 7, 1 by which the j 
"te hot air through 18 
The truth was, that Jos Turn was a philosopher from R a stove into 
in the garb ean a “practical,” while Mr. Spricens | the bers (8) ; > 
‘was a practical who shammed the philosopher. ar- ele A ins i] 
ormed with brick, AE 
In another column will be found an announce- | the h, or 6 < 0 
plants, now in flower in ae the stoke-hole, is 1 poll 
the Horticultural Society’s Gard d the | o east iro eac A wanner in 
attention of the Fellows and friends. The | drain je supplied with | st I N 8 i which, the 
wing are the particulars of their dimensions: a damper, e p 1 P A 7S ol.: | F 
LÆLIA surersiens has 9 flower-stems aerate 2 — ee ! 1 ont saa 
6 feet bak with clusters of flowers varying fro * ai TERE 1 aia 
8 to 14 on each; the total number of flowers on the Se gee fa — ** anz 
9 stems is 90; the plant measures upwards of 6 feet E attached ae à it sn pi aro far non 
12 3 has 18 3 from (10), of 2 en. bore ; 5 | cersthanany 
inch one of these pipes is s 
flowers on each ; the epig mieleni nearly 6 12 placed within each, In eae 
across, with leaves from 9 to 12 inches long and | and the 0 gentle slope to the ple tree 
3 inches broad. bottom of the hot-air — givin; Aar es channel 16, to carry ; 
NOPSIS AMABILIS has upwards of 40 of its | mois proportion to the heat. ep * n 
white flowers now ex — A damper (11) is also A svete: spay each of eep the whole ap- 
is superfluous to that these are plants these pipes, £0 thatthe supply of meistaro a — 
hi } } 7 patel 2 8 * can ju according ‘Fe 
session te h eg cay apep The pipe (12) is l-inch bore, with a taining post 
I E to pl material; 18 
a d potted. mov cope, allowing the unging N * 
K | nn ea ae eke mit hent into the air of 
„ a 1 2 
ere Purpose of d l it the latter is supplied with [oi the frames s 19, brick 
— — i > i i on 
column, that the 1 whole of Mr. Lopptens“ extensive | lination to T uab 15 8 Paid o| Larch poles and frames; 
be sold by a next week. This | stone covering in the stove and hot-air « 20, portion of cold air 
has long been celebrated as the collection of | chamber. nouND Praw or Srovs, drains, of which 
hardy trees and bs in any - The sale] The space above the flag stone is levelled prio lag B., C. P. are four, one from 
ill exten wi d a great oppor- | up with dry sand, and conereted over with a : frame. W. Hutchison. 
tunity for buyers to avail themselves of. 
nning the eye over the catalogue we find 
the number of lots in Acer to be 58, of Esculus 
of Alnus 42, of Betula 50, of Viburnum 66, of Aza- 
lea 218 d so on. We shou ould also add, that this 
has the reputation of being one of the most correctly 
named solacia in Europe. 
VILLA AND SUBURBAN GA GARDENIN 
Hovea Cetsr is perhaps one of th 
plants we possess either for the greenhouse or the 
therto stood 
yo ageing * its habit of growth has hi 
in the way ——— The ty 
— rope eer in the form 
of a low bush i specimens 
fee are either tied to a wire- or distorted 
stakes. Now, the plant is an erect growing shrub, corrodin, ý 
and not a climbing or trailing bs take dif- is di i SECTION oF 8 FRAMES A, B, bei 
< fo bene spon Neveu CHM, r paier e ight, take 1 
wrought to upon Hovea Celsii, could not | uence of others, and it would be difficult, if not fun e are in nothing but rotten 
prodace it in the form of a beehive. Nor is this desir- ede to show tht i has not e — t matter. Tn neh places, nt much expoel 
able; cultivators have run into extremes in this particu- | by checked perspiration, by laceration, amputation, or | to the sun, fruit trees, ave a in ted meadows 
Jar, and have infringed ev rule of nature and good | some other ; — it declares itself in often w thene ulcers, Chich tee someticnes — 
taste, in training all their plants in hemispherical forms. | trees growi with great vigour, and s o distinct | They are seen also to occupy the centre of the stem, 
As the Lombardy Poplar, together with the Oak and | indications mg E argon pt A stad sir te alio Ob: the eire In Willows and Pop 
» constitute a combination, in a park, much served in poor localities on otherwise n- | lars, for instance, where we may find the entire 
effective and pleasing to the eye of taste than the | ditioned, I h I have and the inside quite rotting away, with a scareelf 
Oak would of itself, so on an exhibition stage, or in a 3 k kasei ay Nosology, | perceptible exudation. Any by which 
or conservatory, the natural forms of plants | otherwise I might gtd nage a distinct class of or insects can penetrate into interior of plants, bY 
would more imposing and gratifying to men of | diseases the results f other amongst which ing the disorganisation m 
3 it they all appeared as if cast in one ica hada pare uce ulcers. „ 
e earances which characterise First species. INTERNAL in Second L EXTERNAL ULCERS. — 5 
what has been misuamed cultivation, is one of the | invades at the e time not only the layers of bark whether attacking only the osit 
tremes into w are likely to fall when but also the woody tissue. rab mon in layer of the bark be not the first stage of the in 
emerging fi Pot bound system of the old | p. especially in those whi but as it often arrests its progress without 1 . 
school. I, however, do not recommend a retrograde | rately. The Orang treo, which it is custom to A ˙ esac i a ce 
system of culture ; but I should like to see p tid t very subject toit. It species, in gummy and s 
A 
4 
