* 
R 
9 : 
36—1850. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 563 
FIRST CLASS a LING 0 1 UM. cess which has now for several years attended ajthe sloping border — of ierced zinc 
4 * pain 
UNDLES BEAU ONTPELLIER. — plantation that I made of seve Orange-trees in a black. This is how ontrivance of which 
This beautiful SAR was exhibited at the Chiswick Hor- | much colder climate, in the garden of my country | there is no other experience than what Mr, WIILIAus 
Ee e alete ans: a scription of residence, on the hill of Turin, facing the highest gained at Pitmaston in A 1 and there- 
which will be found in the N Chee gje, tebe Gar range of th I was led t e the exp ore we do not insist upon 
e of Botany,” bye. Ne all of whom speak ment from having by accident in he Suk ars of eo 
in the highest terms of praise wo Seedling Sid — also | arri Seen the way in which the Orange- Some time since our attention was called to a 
exhibited at the R yal p vons aod 4 pva — niet Sey, trees in boxes were treated in the ee of a Pied- curious case o: hyper trophy in a crop of Peas ob- 
J Gaya previons X. 7 the editor of the Plymouth Herald, montese nobleman’s house uring winter, where t rl served by Dr. Dicktx, in tke county of Aberdeen, 
alas it eriptic f it we extract it ai were - placed: gren apade: ral months, vias light, or and a somewhat similar case 1 
. of 1 5 are pa iam pi ong ny Ment. heat, or 9 and exposed to * ere a which the great conservatory at Kew, on the leaves of more 
pellier House, Devonport, and hich an extra prize was | almo st e ery winter reaches * even than one species of Pleroma f r 
awarded, It attracted the attention of every fi i and — —. 10 of tia thermom r to—4 Fan iy bodies, probably due to incipient fermen iA 
ou “uo — 2 “over | My group of Orange pate ae taken out of boxes, 0 
e gri 
centre, extending over 
E has a rich tg velvety erim- 
ly tinted, ang shaded off to the 
an ee flow 
E Fi vorget. Me- Ne 
8 eae much the habit * ore flower, being o 
gaor I ee gr 
foliag 
ption would be unnecessary, mo paru 
to £ say, that we are e certain it wi a a e the . sea 
faction to W customer, and we = recommend t with, * 
same confidence — ‘oe 1 ed 8 acer Cornwall, 
and Arnold’s Virgin 
wy . 
ed even at Re 
ach. 1275 over V pas the trade. 
Good s strong E Aap, will TATA 88.7 the middle of October. 
Apply to — E. REN: and © urserymen, Plymouth. 
— e data of —— — . Camel- 
5 &e., is joat, a and can be had on ap 
cation. for one penny 
1917 -n PRESENT SOWING. 
Jo CATTELL has new seeds of the undernamed, 
annexed 
CALOROLARED, * ted to give a good 
ö 2 a o che ine — 2s. 
tions for 
kinds, sent out last year, ‘of florist 
and f tan 9 ne or half of each, at the purchaser’s 
option. “a eax = 6d, 
nee paren 
New 24 5 40 SEMO PHILA MACULATA, a, Old sorts, 
“Bish NOLESTL 1 RETUSUS, 6d 
erat i 2 7 
— and tricolorum — — 
worth — oft the tr trade, Remittances to 
pan — — from unknown correspondents, 
esterham, Kent, 
. TTT 
ECER — — or 9 NSU UMS.—No more 
remittances can be received for ROSA or SILK MERCER, 
as all the ant stock is 
Ca 
talogues — a had 5 10 J. germ enclosing 
a stamp.— Wo ottage, Isleworth, Sept. 7. 
EXOTIC NURSERY, KING’S ROAD, CHEL 
ESSRS. KNIGHT anp PERRY * g great plea- 
om 
wering profusely at this co i 
prope a e theo out the autumn —. be considered one of the 
2 as well ost i: tifu uisitions = as 
n 
ery. 
on of their healthy 
p alae, 1 
unusu 
Uing, to ensure the accuracy of the 
of 
Ring) ave ass very Saupe and cann: 
bang Wege that their Stock of VINES, raised 
. Sra Kes: iaer ——— 
Brared growers in ers in w country, is larger than ordinary, and of 
= PERB 1 BORES 
25 CHATER ann 8 N beg to r enn that th 
ne gi above flower is — 
be . 
SLATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH, MIDDLESEX, 
bm yeep BECK — 1 a variety 
of articles for Horticul og which may be 
seen in use at Worton Cottage, on es rs the — — 
coven ei LA excepted. Priced lists of plant tubs and boxes for- 
warded — 
Tne Gardeners Chronicle. for 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1850. 
sMEBTINGS FOR THE ENSUING 
Counra: — 10 Hampshire d 
Saarn Dahle — ai: gan ony pe and one offi 
fortieultural, Bath 
ee re 5 
orticultural.— aay, Se ae 
ra 
araplar; mali pre rough winters to ches 
served by si 
severity we have mpare. It is related 
had 
rowth, and throws its fine flowers well abov 5 5 a 
are ali sterling 
thay 
pli- | ning of November, an 
b 
w ready to send out in e (postage za at * prices periment has bee 
nnot fail to afford complete satis- t 
and A in earth p 
year n the 122 
three Ay them pta e g rg — of the aad so much 
as the 
a previous tha e three 
which died 8 gt aol that ae to this Aa 
e flourished and increased in I ha 
covered with a round cabin o 
straw on the outside, at the end of October or begin- 
with a wall 0 a Late. 0 5 „to be 
taken = in the summer, I pety 
the plants might be made to grow, perhe the clums 
accompaniment of large wooden boxes, in an Eng ish 
garden.” 
These Statements afford abundant materials for 
speculation. They vor Leal beyond all doubt the 
fact that in the north of Ita 
a degree of winter cold 1 in Englan r 
this it is by the complete ripeness o 
its wood, a state to which it will not arrive 
in this climate the open air re 
Bu 
therefore to infer that it he mat “live with much 
less shelter than it now receives? Such an infer- 
ence is so little justified by other weil kaso facts, 
that w we submit to those who have 
ere winter 1 28-9, dis 
Pen ned 8 filaments 
n 
tried, a pa by a wall. But lula 
f our correspondents, 
285 is almost identical, 
state a mere exuberant growth 
cellular tissue of the leaf, containi 
exists, as 
in Spheria herbaru um, the early om. of 
owth before any fructification is formed, exhibits 
ly a mass of cel 
oped fr 
genus, lately communicated by Dr. Moxradxx, after 
the absorption of the central cells, the basal are 
tra 
sfo spores, as in some Alga, 
n the production before us, the whole pustule is 
at first shapeless, and confused with the tissue of the 
matri fter a time however the surf. is rough, 
with a greater or less number o oints, reduced 
arely to one or two, which are the ostioles of so 
many perithecia re no asci, but 
ertain stage the s 
ton | ooze out, forming a globule or a at the tip of of 
the ostiole, a circumstance depend 
e th 
the d 1 
— a Beek a degree — 
be fatal to dem if exposed, 
ring winter, if 
In 
may be, indeed, that its | Scie Aa has 
liarity that unfits it, more than the plants just 3 
. severe cold; but that i 
duri nomalous 
ot the sh ale 5 K i 
wisdom of nok, 
an eee strongly urge the 
entirely upon others, but 
wers of ob- 
ce of success. We shall 
test it * and ga recommend it to others. 
There other part o 
e Which we aol so readil Paha 
e | that Orange trees on walls, properly ee may 
made to grow in the open ground. much 
raised 
in a ae O or by inna 
eakness. But these poi tg being asce: eer it is 
to "the first observer of the — that we may 
justly ock Wr. available informatio 
The spec es being undescribed 1 may be charac- 
emperature of 
e two years the 
great eaten it was found that t of the 
Genoa in August is 75. mg. Reser of 
is only 62. 18°; and if w 
S mot ogg Va 
or artificial warmth ind were still aliv 
other day, upon Saar over some old letters, 
e dated Dec. 11, 1837, from the la 
Sir Av —— Fer which puts the hardiness of 
the Orangé tree in a still stronger light, Writing 
from Genoa, he says : 
ne Lemont under the impression that single Orange or 
e trees left in the hibernatory without water 
of any 
© 
London 
— the e of the “a ata foot porties 
the shall 
natu omp fhe 
on. ting Orange trees in 
ground, as Peach trees are planted, is 8 
r 
M hea ttempt is to 
be 
at the yen should be round 
might with anh be brought to grow out of the 
— in England like other plants, I have thought | 
it might be worth while to mention to you the suc-| 
pavement. It m a question whether some 
important gain weal S 15 effected by fixing over 
may | 
Á adn) e En a pallid 
a 
nene nt if it were lim 
ti 
gain we would suggest 
the 
“ vel, and ota og a solid flocs of concrete or H 
n living jane $ perithecia oblong 
ee ostioles ; spores minute subelliptic. M. J. B. 
ane TO 1 A GARDEN. 
R V. —It would be ＋ njat ta 
he possession of that — i often ad 
mehi t to the mismanager as i 
to the time 
aig the quantity. Nothing 
can be more — tian than his mode of daii with 
