663 
42—1850. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
success, and I fear most persons are similarly dis- that time to this 1 he specimen in question had about 
have never heard it mentioned as 
of 
informed rèh he ha 
picture—just as true pict ures are as 0 
i him 
me mA I the slightest idea rori Bi en, 
1 
vantage 
as erer, like water, is as it were © another element 
m gar 
be distinetl 
* ps are imitated. The best place for en 
— a — round it, in — — shape > 
t not be any part of 
regular, no: it | from 
8 double the e breadth of the lar * the Bi 
with: a a broad moulded e of stone or 
y 
mass in a round pond does best, the three angles 
very varied. No jet of water can be admitted in any 
rock- shape or small t 
work, No water o 
ought to be on Grass. T. A. F. 
ine.—When I questioned th 
k 
to prevent m but suppose he only a 
knowledge of * e * not the 3 — result 
ok its 2 
course i — in 
have so long r ned unanswered, It may be a 
secret (perhaps pany knowing), mes Ph ps te our 
imagination, and then rmed, 
prejudiced, ul. Give us = in bit cae roof 
that you have grown better Grapes without “ stopping,” 
than your 
will 
may also profit thereby, but actice 
(the results of mee. are pi Psd by physiological 
conundrums, whose basis is your authority. Give us 
facts, that we may judge for ourselves; if we 
attempt y our suggestion and fail to realise such facts, 
ile may geal justly inom f ose . 
one es our method, that we 
Southampton. 
— When at Mistley-hall, i in 
e; 5 mane with stopping, and your | several glass ho 
essenti 
whieh was exhibited some time since by Mr. F. 
Sodieties. 
TURAL EXHIBITIONS IN AMERICA.— We learn 
wr in gre 
‘They were exhibited in 
terns, in e uets, in dl stands, and mixed with 
other flow Various Verbenas, Asters and Petu. 
rl 
_my invention unti was assi 
ed a 
50 large bunenes on 
ie which no doubt would have rr zi they had the 
of a wall. Its fruit is sai $0 dipai before 
Y. A few examples of this bie 
ve been sold, we believe, under the name of Musca 
de Fontainbleau. ve 760 re possesses anothe md 
2 
e+ 
E 
he glass hou e young 
the celebrated d Stanwiek ‘Neva. 
h P 
oir, * not on the Muscle P 
be worth 
nts 0 
Among 3 there were Cab- 
2 „Tomatoes, Bee 8 
ages, among Fruits: Grapes, 
Pein — 1 ane, Pears, Melons, Cucumbers | 
per at Toronto, 
bited, viz. : 
ri indeed ta A Aa ur). 0 — (hot - 
use 0 ns, Squashes, Toma- 
toes, Broccoli, Cabbage, rho Pegg white Ce 
le 
75 
8 
OS 
lias, 
Coffee, Water Melon, and Musk Melon, 
Garden Memoranda. 
Mn. Rivers’ Nursery, SawBRIDGEworRTH, Herrs.— 
business, he is conti y trying 
sults of which are — 3 — often 
instructive. Within t few he has erected 
in which not * utility, but cheap- | w 
ness of construction have been t aimed 
Some of these houses have only a Beech-hedge for 
— and back wall, in which stakes are placed for the sup- 
ort of the roof, while ; 
then in height) ae lem open, Under these circumstances 
-eonstant cireulation of air is kept up . the 
interior of the house in 2 although 
sheet glass of the ch most common dese 
ip- | kno 
tion, no no scorehing « or de . ever takes place. One — 
Sed Pota 
1830 or mr 1 store few b 
otatoes 
ſorem an, therefore 
orders to pot them. Upwards of 1000 8 small pots, 1 e 
60's or 4-inch pots, were used for the purpose, placing 
Show, for two or Gas | 
ve not allowed 
an dither baia 
which they are ‘intended to be kept entl , and 
— kinds of P 
Plum, with its fruit incase i in gauze bags. 
e 
ing a fine flavour resembli sp alg rhe 
y 
o he Toronto British Colonist, of Sept. 24, informs us | their heads 
that at the late 9 — = on 
rel paren article, 
. | the ae was founded 
pa 
in pots ; Coe’s Golden Drop 
hav ing 
Gage, but 2 to Pee. pA fruit 
later than ty, to which it vil — a good 
were likewise dwarf 
| ee were yellowish or white, 
ther. 
g) owned that 
seemed Lee to Ja ify 
Sas ted ong G j were Cosford 
Nuts, worked on the clean stems of seedlings, 
high. In this state they occupy little room, are 
from suckers, and produce, 
e al 
and some account of these will form the subject of 
* Ph 
Miscellaneo 
Varieties of the Ruby lipped Catileya.—: —These mag- 
sa varieties e the Baby iis Cattleya are quite. 
a 
Fo or 2 te one we are ary b the noble * 
J 
wainson, W. 
2 kind oe 
ichens, &c., which he transmitted to 
William (then, Mr.) , * * Where he 
not infi we learn something precise on 
at. | the — — from Mr. 8 This lamented * 
eastern. 
from Rio 
edro 15 miles 
į Janeiro, where — en oe pe with lamang the Mackay 
opetalam aud Dipladenes (“ Journ. of Hort. Soc., 
a Zyg 
vol. i. p. 196) ; aud also A 8 or Topsail 
h Mountain, so ealle 
veins of whose lip alo 
weve er a most 
— 
ere Peaches and Figs, &e., in pots, in | those 
permanently 
— 
f this Cattleya Mossi, we can 
characters in it pm ap size and 
enumeration 
now figured with White Ruby- 
lipped Cattleya (C. labiata candida) and the Blotched 
(C. I. picta.) The followi limate in 
Proporiy wit ban the . 
sorts, the 
strong and he: 
allowed 25 1 
mes Cu thill, € Ca 
Fry's Suiphurator—A À rere is given 
e invented b 
root pruning and feeding w with liquid manure. In 
ict of th of a elose and warm de- 
ere the; * of 1 
which Cattle en 85 l 
which t ill 
this elevation (2000 feet) the 
readily apply to practice. “ 
climate is very much cooler 
io e months of May and June the 
been known to be as low as 32° just 
ies ae diay. : the lowest at which I observed 
myself w morning the end of May, when, at 
8 o’clock a. m., it indicated 39° bar 1 to eo 
it rose d he six mo 
„when, one Pg it indicated 34° — 
e season 
van is 
o Manure), itis 7 * that the mass of the Orchids, — almost every 
other tribe of plan! j 
h 
Con s to this bling over a | it must be obvious that to grow them wel 
bank of stones faci ; them was | a somewhat similar Sines ought to be 
a new called Prolific Sweetwater, whose size of greater part of the Orchids which are sent to Eng- 
bunch it toa situa- | land from tains grow ie the 
tion. It was stated to set well, and was ripening fruit the above temperature, ele ae inthe from 3000 
under a ht. Among pillar Grapes, of which to 3500 feet above the level of the sea. 
Mr. Rivers a t baa i. one called the purple | which I shall presently give of my visit to summit 
Fontair attention; for we will be of those eee ee which is more a dats that ele- 
mistaken it does not prove a valuable cottager’s Grape. . 1 * occasion to mention several 
grows freely in the open air, and bears abundantly 
be cultivated in a much cooler temperature, 
it in Brazil and i 
8 to set fast certain chip 
