i 
; 
. 
THE GARDENERS’ 
31—1850. | CHRONICLE. 483 
$s STANDISH anp NOBLE’S new de-|to point out how this burr-work . advanta- the 8. think too that 
soriptive CARALOGUE OF r NA = Sa me geously applied to the CULTIVATION or STRAWBERRIES. | absence of any wich which can press aa 
= ihg braa Besides a * Treatise on he cultivation of n the month of April, 1849, a panili earth in which the Strawberry roots branch, is 
n Plants, it contains Plate and — of the about 6 feet was enclosed by a line of bie important element in success. The burrs rest on 
Funebral — od Cephslo d een | resting on the pez f the ground, and abou e solid „or upon rough walls, and the soil 
— aah macrocephalum, with many recent introductions | foot deep. ong the middle of the parallelogram among them lies as lightly as if it were ir a wheel- 
from the north h of China, quite new to I ante gar — . the was placed a double "tne of rude open wall, e arrow. In it ing can compress it, except 
give Dee i. Laying o out er A AA APUA and P. = n. | POS of broken bricks and old bg. to the Leigh its own upa ght. 
le mt also Estimate zah 12 AE 1 lanting, whe of the outer burrs. The whole was filled w ith rich} We venture to 2 ati that Strawberry beds of 
orn Vor economic.—Bagshot Nurseries, Aug chiefl -dung, up to within inches | this kind will soon * 2 an in 
ATE STRA T y ONG, UP nsable 
WI vars “PRINCE ARTHUR.” we the top. A double line of burrs was t e part of all gardens h the best cultivation is 
J WILMOT, ffering ' of to cap the double line of wall in the middle, a space | arire with the a vans expense. 
. STRAWBERRY to 2 = u 3 of about 6 — being left between the two lin 
does p s5655, bein * clicious dee dend oo bor the pire riage 4 8 paar — 3 rch z d Wux one m through 
i Strawberry season is over possesses the property cia woo 
or Armness of texture, so that it may be transmitted to any | ashes, rotten Grass, and dung; and the woes terial | 1 ‘ 2 rejudiced ey wae it ‘would 
are of ban y ithon tered, Whe } ms. be | was e employe d to ‘top dress the first formed part of * os the great 0 jott of samo ankhon wig 
t for sever ys being ga when y ripe, S ; 
without any indication f deca; pony OF E lois of fla i the amen, intervening between the outer line of 3 . one rade ae in . 
pip orca xh gae he dargent sized, kan z= kasel paai pisdi le lines. ait bo 1 * Engli KA foramen, a stalk a caudi- 
exceeds 6 inches in height; the fruit } W ney? mM order to carry | eula or a a ane a shield an apoth d 
N 3 habit requires it to b ted not pothecium ; an 
gored, ito th e sun apa cea DAIk regat perfec R W 65 ee lines without th thei! sitig When prepared | minute anatomy is s called histiology. If we go om 
rich scarlet, and colouring eq A — er bay. ed 1s appearance in this manner, scien with 
8 — acre re 7 1 — ae Beer quackery, 1 will sink to the l of 
N i go bt bod ion salo fn Si Se eum We next, ‘ 2 chiropodist botanists may — precedence to 
a only, ouN WIL Mor, Isle- 
poe fy aida 8 my, Robert G en nning, Chiswick Nur š 5 the mothers — homœo opa peren 
William Mortlake S George Carl wood, nsequences, n 
Seedsm * and Messrs. Hurst band M. Mullen, ae itself more to the — eng; ene habits of the 
6, e London. —Isleworth, Middlesex, Aug. 3. 
TO THE LOVERS OF FERNS, 
ILLIAM MASTERS, Exotic 
Canter- 
ursery, 
to offer a kye Collection c w, n Plants 
bury, has 
— — n — met per dozen, where the selbotion 
to himself.— rile dg 3. 
SEEDLING PELARGONIUM—* Nhat he ARTHUR,” 
at 
PONTEY begs to announce will send out, 
. on Monday, the 14th October, at 1 guinea each, or four 
pants for 3 guineas, his seedling Pelatgoniuin, for which the 
ighest prize, the Silver Medal, was awarded at the Exhibition 
of the Royal Devon and aape — Horticultural — on the 
16th May; * a certificate of merit was awarded a Devon 
and Exeter E 
cultural Cabinet,” July:—“ Upper petals large, dark clouded 
1 igor 8 off ot flesh calat, lower ones flesh colour, centre 
v uri 
Mr, bk enny's lende “of its ‘habits and the peculiarity oF — 
white oe which he affirms is * pos than that of any 
of the ent varieties,” has — en in the Country Gentle. 
Man, wW 385 garde . 3. 
NEW AND FIRST-RATE VERBENAS, FUCHSIAS, 
PETUNIAS, &c. 
draw the attention of the 
Royal Botanic Gardens, Regent’ the Horticultural So- 
ciety, Chiswick ; the Central Nooloty of Florists; the pts South 
London Floricultural Socie Seot 5 tar eign 
an English ni arieties a 
ope, ee e pow ready, viz Are 
Barker’s Mass, Rosa Alba, Gem, Villag eee Souvenir de 
Katherine, Salter's Infant de V 
Electra 2 
Mrs, Mi 
“EUGUSEAS, —Smith’s Kos Kossuth, outing @ ueen of — Tur- 
aly aed ’s Dr, Grosse, am phon Area 
Action, N Beauty of >t Richmond, e Eclips: se, 
Distinctus, ue, ex, ex, Igne 
Stri chesse de Bordeaux, thee Wallas 6. — — 
Changarnier, ‘General gadis President Porcher, and 5 
Nonpareil: 4 21s. p 
PETUNIAS, * Picta, Letitia, Loungii, Smith's North 
London Miellez Anga — 3 Beauté ah pi and Ne Plus 
The fine tana delicatissima ; HI 
core i, Oh, cee pc iF 
0 osum, 18. Lan uphea urea an 
orym atk de: ch ; ph opurp 
Plants can be me 2 post or a plants for long 
earrings. P. e de payable at at Talin — — 
gton d, Islington, n. 
Seg po AND CONSERVATORY BUILDING ESTA- 
BLISHMENT, HOT-WATER BROW-ROAD, 11 
TORY, KENSALL GREEN, HARRO W-R DON. 
OHN TAYLOR begs 
purposes, 
cee with ue n 
of 
orticultural Buildings. barchas, React Public jie Buildings | 
Entrance Halls, &c., has ved the nn large a mass 
— T gaiis en he lias Eein ie 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle, order 
clusters, 7 * quite ne for it rested on the 
bu y to fall outwards. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, 
egg 
rr 
fo orms, and are the 
what i ue com- 
ich, 
produces on es the 1 most useful as E e 
es in garden scenery. We have already m 
tioned this on ‘cm occasions ; to-day we deuce 
p: 
common 
me: 
44 inches in circumferen 
n addition to all other advantages, the bed pos- 
sae = -a owing; 3. it wa thoroughly drained, in 
ole mass 10 
teinii orol, 5 the 
sonnel 
abo bove the 
it w 91 A den 
vaporation to take a pine except to a 0 
It was n the Po nay if put — 
of the 
eing open. N al 
— e t. 
e, in consequence of the pots pi Oe A a 80 
ckwork, Its dryness 
di 
urrs, 
et 
E 8 tles, 
of bri 
natural tenden 
state, wit 
est iber 9 by the 
vant < (British ent and Kerns’ Se 
asurement y * fo baie was from 3? to 
r to any contri 
oe ces a 0 oe 3 
ee 
edling). A 
t | lables, 
comm 
expense of much t 
hav e one so, he: finds ‘he latter 
needless, denoting nothing but what his = 
tongu ‘as have are Tee a well ; 
afraid ad that, such a ca woul 855 the 
better of Sal and that he 1 be yik k3 apply to 
e science and its un an epithet o syl- 
which we have no do wad at the pes. 
e | of our ein will readily su sugges 
But we shall be red that pA case is stated in 
gi stronger and 1 general than the fac 
justi and that the technicalities of which 
coul 
technicalities, at the e 
trouble; and that 
e: 
vantages to be derived fro the Be Bu ti is this so? 
D igning special and strange names to 
how unningly d ; to 
things which h — little 8 in their 
ish as w 
. We believe “ the ee of a stem to 
be an . as . of adoption as the grand 
9 a ge 
mple or tw. evil 5 our meanin 
botla keri eneral lusion wor. 
the press, and a 
lies by the character of their egg repositories, i 
true these c anot w ell be reduced to oh cess ia 
classes, b 
eas guarded i it 
f, in huge 
ae the first ‘pine 
e eee nidi of 
chara ee Eeg is bs ah r 8 pida ourselves 
understand ote author’s ut 
Fu we a ia to assert ‘hat the the words 
ics are unnecess ha 
gible, een the loss of an precis 
end Som 
mollusks 
animals — * 3 ther 
from the fam ilies which feed on n plants, b 
character 
cops N ed phytivorous, and concame- 
nidi. 
<i next illustration exemplifies the style of a 
dear; then it looks well, popular work on 3 professing to give Engli 
u instead of co 5 a ole thirdly, it harbours no tn great of plan glabrous shrub, Brancheg 
moreover it allows "ain-water to soak fer Lea 3 on short petioles, 
of bin ba the whol f materials 7 coriace . at the Pase, ru gost, ede with a 
which the bed consists. Such s make prominent Nay 55 A 55 secun with 
capital enclosure for kitchen gardens: and o ahr at the base. Corolla 
made cost nothing further. If the soil i exhausted | 0 jor, Picate, ea arate Tii e cilia ANE a 
nothin a easier * to pull the plants out, nts caudate. Stamens easerte 
away mpaired materials, ‘et replace t the 0 by 125 omo orp ae anteri ior barbate, ‘the interme 
new ee a the Eee. is to water the bed, it is diate nd se or compla 
only necessary 9 po into ho es in the upper | — 3 fimbr hate W. vith por ss processes, 
If the reader still doubts viene 
