42—1850.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
659 
WATERER'S DESCRIPTIVE OATALOGUE OF AMERICAN by Linx, in his Remarks on the Structure of above a sone won erf 
WATERER’S FFP OF AMERICAN | by Ling, in his Remarks the Structure of above a score ee ones. The produce was at 
3 s to announce his new 
escriptive . OF AMERICAN PLANTS 
CONIFERS: rad aaen — 
— 1 
Knap Hill — Tp — 3 — 
eS + ate who has any idea 
autumn should — Sie bl. 2 i 25 talogu 
SEA WATER: 
NW ERER’S ‘CATALOGUE - — 
PLANTS, ROSES. CONIFERS, &c., — blished, a 
may i ee It the colours — 
on 
every Bhadodendron.w rthy of culti tivation, thus affording pur- 
chasers 9 510 i i making selections 
= American Nurs hot, Surrey, 
— — may be had 
a 
1 of planting bing ensuing i 
We 
—— Academy in 
sch, in es W 
on 
EORGE 7 aie IUESEREMAS, 
urre - 
We , beg: sw announce that he — = published 
an Plan 
os, * — and 
Dwarf 1 2 Ert) neg big &c., which may be had 
gratis on applicatio: 
—̃ññ NNAMOMUM var. CUNNINGHAMI, 
ESS RS. e. E CUNNINGHAM anp., SON 
are now to send out plants of th 
ODENDRON. It is figure 
Pa: Flower-' — by John Li 
Joseph Pa — for a descri iption 
origip, the advertisers refer the punto t — chat 
price 2s. each, with — usual disco 
Oak V ‘ale Nur 1, Oct. 
periodical. The 
to the trade. 
offi 
Woking, | ° 
Cauliflowers, on Grasse > ulti- 
na |Jlorum, the common Maize, &c.; and in three 
species of Drosera, Aiat oas "the me — 5 5 of 
s 
contain eee starch granules 
thickened roots of som e Or chids, 
very frequent phenomenon, thoug 
ust be o 
a and an 
| pas either th through t 
wW 
ASS anD SOW AUTUMN ip do ither 
of spiral lamina ; the 
of the thread. 
ha ds of hairs, the one ‘larger | 
simple or consisting (in part) of a broad 
other 
T 
simple. In Monatenta rf e bodies 
he latter 
t Roses, a aud oth 
other bulbs 
—4 a — ‘Lists of 
d hav 
e the progress. of the 
s 
„feet long; 
to 
= and Flowering Sirube, Rar gern 
baceous Plants, Prize Gooseberries, and 
hy separate List of Geraniums and other new and seleet 
plants at reduced prices. Catalogues forwarded, prepaid, for 
two Gunes stamps. 
— Bulbs have arrived in condition. 
r — Suffolk. 
i S ROO 
Me. HAMILTON, — À Bey. 156, Cheapside, 
Priced Catalogue of the 
p pehe — n applicati 
en THS. 5 ‘colours, 8 — I or glasses, 65. . 
nd 12s, per dozen; in mixtures, 3s. per dozen. MIXED 
br 00 A 
and Hardy 
other choice 
BULBOU 
to be e 8 by any now offered vaiha publie, 
—156, Cheapside, Lond 
YACINTHS AND OTHER R 
ENDLE’S 3 — ‘CATALOGUE OF 
ej just published, ra de be had ma eae ication, gratis. 
It contains a DESCRIPTIVE List of all the best Hyacinths, 
Tulips, Iris, Ranuneulus,- Anemones, Crocus, Liliums, 
Gladiolus, Ixia, Sc., with some excellent CULTURAL 
apvice as to the best met: į will 
found o, service to 
y7 pyi R ogma e meagan 
uscosa, an 
of the ee Soc 
arise a fro 
iety. In every case t 
m to be a ma dilatation. 
some species of Hria, from the — | 
ey | Hi 
In every 
the external cells, of which they | an 
N. J. B. 
* — jeg od acter pe 9 
— of Roots,” ” which we are certain will please every 
= For the List of Roots contained in the Collections, see our 
new Book Catalogue. 
COLLECTIONS OF —— reg E . d. 
o. 1 Collection, all the most appro 3 0 0 
0 Collection, co! — y ie quantities 2 0 0 
3 for a small Garden a 00 
détails of Collections, see Catalogue. 
the rate of a bus a perch. 
The sin. ig ot the crop does not appear to have 
be 
n the plot 
not improbable that the crop, if 
ound, 
and perform 2 planted at a —.— ge from set to set, would 
e have been u. as gr 
e own t t this Capen o say nothing of 
others cr record, leads us very ee m the 
da |s 
It is probable ene the ey of hairs — — that the Potato crop does 
th 
damage from the * 8 the ha, tit it is 
emoved wd the 
ginni 
method e —— it 055 “alightiy 
ing up the fea and then rolling it well, is 
ne of the best tha k ey been proposed for arresting 
ALrnoven we have not much knowledge of the 
ngs. 
of. the most extraordinary of — 
Orchids, hissing tails > the flowers: more than. two 
ati Onoiditom : 
any 
ing yet The 5 present oppor- 
tunity is a capital one for Seis: novelties for the 
| exhibitions in 1851 and 1 
e, TO MISMANAGE A GARDEN. 
Cuarter XI.— Tools may be made use of, as well 
1 than else, to show mismanagement; indeed, 
may be t taken as a rule that one of the best pos- 
sible ways to turn out the worst possible work is to 
make a bad use of implements 
The approach of the great season for digging 
trenching, and cutting and fel 
akes it desirable that. no time should elapse 
the worst with 
dpe is great rules for doi 
gardem e, amas intelligible to the meanest 
ning-knife: in the first place, take 
blunt ; there are many ad tages 
| app. 
As 
care 15 is always 
s you an opportuni jan — * 
how your pet is to be placed; but y ust be de- 
cided with the other, for t stra once put in 
b er 
action, ‘ie cut is 3 3 ad 
cannot t be e expected to 
ow how or where to cut 
e makes 
without trying three or four times before 
h 2 0 0 
š 1 up 
00 co P sorts. Purchaser's selection 3 4 4 A binn it knife shows that a man has, at some time 
Hyacinthe in 25-supsrior sorts- ditto 1 5 0| a, hairs in a species of Paja springing directly from the ex- | or o scien] Mia sn it; but it it is always sharp, a 
21 Byacinths i — = superior varieties ditto 012 0 1082 — of the aerial ; b, a hair TE the cell Da | suspicio us. masier may fanc cy it is only kept pe 
Hyacint 12 anpærionvarieties, ditta 0 6 which it sprang—in this Gane” emailer than the others—sepa hi Sieh e 
Where af Hyaciatheis loft to, W. By | fina Mery ‘rom tha Tet ot thn amey a tro hinds cf show. Besides, it gives him a chance” of showing 
— — 10 be in form we have not observed the nie hairs to have a spiral struc- ‘that he knows bl a oe per 
Jor: watery, 2 or the 5 — — ture certainly remarkable how a eee. sets about 
hether Hyacinths are preferred. t. will see him rubbing away upon th 
When:the choice is ee to them. 28 generally send about IKE 5 else connected with TO | whe: z i blade backwards and 
two-thirds double, and one-third single, which gias a | Disease, the question of whether TomsELLE-L 6? li h — 8 ei maga care. He knows 
greater variety. may rely upon really good ilp an of mildewed haulm at the period | better o draw the edge towards him ; or to 
soris being selected alen the choice is left to ourselves, | when beginning to form fi +| keep that whieh i is to cut in contact with the stone. 
ti " |-wantageons or not, has given rise to the most opposite | — will tell yon sag if he does so he will rub off 
F For Cataleg nes, and furthes information, ap ney 1 : maintain the excellence of the t hy oree 
practice; others find no advantage in it. We shall tne A are sto tidied for use, a clever chap will 
N. B. 8 other roots have just arrived from | not 3 on the u, to reconcile — pruner for as many purposes as he can turn 
e eee conflicting statements, or to show how — is hand to; a weed-grubber, a cheese-toaster, a 
the Belgian directions have in some ot-scraper, a wire-cutter, are all instruments for 
served ; we sapon describe what — in | which the pruning-knif swer ; and if, after 
The Gardeners Chronicle. 
= SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1850. 
Ir is an established fac 
that the principal part of the Nurrmmenr or PLANTS 
is absorbed by the tips of the roots. In some plants, 
however, where the exigencies of a quick supply of 
moisture are great, and the e num mber of “Toots small, 
t in vegetable physiology 1 — 
W. — 
a case within our personal knowledge. 
of S at excel- 
nce, but st very early. They were immediately 
planted i in heavy, well- ained, kitchen-garden 
hout 
ng — a further provision is made of a 
f hairs, which’ multi ly almost in an in- 
edhe gece 
Narr 
a | extensively s 
rou und, a. nor up any part that grows under — 
. 3 and — 
exception ; a fact pointed o 
rop w 
quality, — ripe, 
may — 
„it cannot be made to prune, at all events it 
has been made to grub, and toast, and scrape, and 
cut wire. 
Then again, you should never have your knife 
about you; it is absurd to . — that a gardener 
should always carry a pru ife ; ou 
somebod 
goes Old-fashioned gardeners prefer 
t | fully formed; and, out of a bushel and a half, not 
keeping their pruning-knife in their breeches; be 
panaan 
