43—1850.]. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 675 
EW SEEDLING STRAWB ERRY—MYATT’S 
“ SURPRISS.”—This is a N N from the British | 
ueen, which it resembles, nip amo Tims ai? habit, paan 
gon free bearer, — roduel a greater r abundan e of thos 
large angu pasid | di 
finishing off the last fru ** a — size, price 50s. a 
Also Myatt’s — oy 3 N S Maminoth, 
hg r’s Seedling, Keens’ Seedling, Swan- 
sae ries 12 preg A 38. 5 1 — 5s 
bee. = Black — 10s. Gd. per 1 itley 3s 
er 100.—Manor Farm, Deptford. 
of growth 
— quantity of black “avd, which has 
8 ‘pot is 
res, ow within the an s any enve- 
5 STOCK OF 1 TREES, 
ee SHRUBS, &., NOW ON SALE A 
RENDLE’S NURSERY, — . — 1788. 
Wirten E. REN xp CO, PLYMOUTH 
, have 1 
large 2 8778 STOCK of the following 
TREES and SHRUBS; and as the — —— 
for following | w 
— 1 the will be sold at the 
low 
* CARRIAGE FREE (See below.) 
a “OR QUICK.—10,000 fine transplanted Thorns, 
from 12 to 15 mag high, for 31, 10,000 one-year old Seed- | $ 
lings, at ls. 6d. pe 
— — 8.— We ‘have a very large stock of fine stuff, 
bout 3 
ta taken; 
.— Fine, . well-selected trees, well 
trans rede 89s. per 1000, worth at least 20s. . 100. 
—.— AQUIFOLIUM.—A large quantity * — 
a 
in height; the price will only be 18s, per 1000 if — 
ble growth, is to 18i ae i 
920 BARB: ; MIG SHELLS BOKAR | ALBERT, the earliest of 
anl. — We strong roots, 153. per 
a aa Spring, Ir plant anted 
“RAUBARB: MEATS VICTORIA, very strong roots, 
of 
j Trafalgar-square, and the 
Vic pips k. Mr. 
ange] Oat-smut. ki ana smut-balls, at a certain | it is necessary to understand in deciding upon the 
when torn or ruptured, a arrangement of garden ground. How much it is 
a peculiar | wanted is evident when we look at the hideous 
reeable ate pero * ‘and contains 
Anni, that surround us—from the . — 
s 0 r. and the crinkum 
to the wretched — Sai 05 ‘a 
aceful ugliness 
Kemp may, 2 a 
ar —— n expounder of the views en 1 
l 
— — by 
ot 
wel — the size of 
a. on one of the bracts 
t from under surface, acquain possibilities, 
— i Tike a Filbert though the rest sid with the means that are 1 For b bringing 
Some of the ovaries, 2e 
8 
5 . on this subject; * 2 he was long 
— at Chatsworth, — manage- 
under him of those ose great operations in Toxteth 
Par — nd at Birkenhead, which are among the very 
few public parks es an Englishman can point to 
without — for ountry. 
One advantage which we are glad to perceive that 
Mr. Kemp's z= affords the E is the preeision 
with which he directs how work is to be done, and 
fore 
are produced, It is 
easy enough for gentlemen with a wave of the 
nd a sic volo sic j gesture, to command this to 
be put in one place, and that to be carried out 
P 
another; but they would find their ideas materiall 
expanded, and their expectations greatly re a f 
if if aay povit ë take the trouble to > make themselves, 
the tance, 
ut results. In this respect Mr. 
„ thong reater part ef the found a 1 and useful guide. For 1 
e shows no symptoms r arks upon grouping plants, a principle 
f has swollen to a satak s g in itself, but carried to aridiculous extent 
alg ig Bea r ditto, 9s, per dozen, YOUELL'S’ TO: ing bract, by a late landscape 2 a, this part of — 
bee rn DLE’S LARGE BEEHIVE.—Thisis| The anthers of Maize have not at present been subje eet 2 the only poin view in which 
large variety, very prolitic, delicious flavour, and rved tac is di but M. ed. 
oes 8 rs ea * Avam r poka of apparently another malady towhich|  “ To. pres ce strong and striking effects in a 
e Er ti ee 22 oi ee a eC TAE plans * eres 
I ; | immensely an gesn at last a brown or black | collection o well mi e an 
107 ber 100. Shae et BL NOK PRIN OF 2s p el ae EK these mstances the female spikes | disposed so as to give variety and but 
Myatt’ me Ry 425 their seeds from | groups of pa viicoler binds shoal’ be planted. in 
ee Are » Gole’s prominent places, that occasional broader masses of 
oe Deptford P Roseberry rig 
AR ALE AND ASPARAGUS. in large quantities, very 
BEST ST DoUBLE 2 — MATS, 51, per 100. 
BLACK NAPLES CURRANTS, very superior to the old 
. Bort, 6. por dom: TES.—Some of the best known, 30s. per 100. 
8 Us. —Fine plants in pots, 12 to 18 inches, 5s. per 
N aoe plants, in pots, 18 to 24 inches, 5s, per 
dozen, worth 10, Oba r doze 
captos fit ARA. ide poe of ei young seedling 
plants, two 8 8, dozen 
Our pee aliis of Forest t Trees, 3 
and Fruit Trees can * obtained for one penny stamp 
All orders above 51. will be delivered e 
Free to an ion on the Great Western, Bristol 
and er or South Devon Railways; or to Cork, 
Dublin, or Belfast. Steamers from this port to Cork, 
ublin, and Belfast twice a ae 
The South Devon — is now open to ca ap 
the station being within one minute’s walk from ou 
Counting-house. 
First ORDERS WILL HAVE THE PREFERENCE. ALL 
ORDERS WILL BE EXEOUTED IN STRICT ROTATION, 
WAA E. RENDLE and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth, 
Established 1786. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, OOTOBER 26, 1850. 
Srrance as are many of the effects 
plants by parasitic fungi, none perhaps is more i 
the 
per 
eee pollen of other plants. 
pas pua 
MUT., It is rr ite certain that the peculiar 
1 a4 aie ema 
Zuro t from d fr 
uropean specimens received from 
zouth eee: — believe it to be so, and geen this a 
é case the excrescences are 
aq mmn 
lisease TZ is identical with the 
are sometimes as | 
2 feet page Be this however as it may, the 1 pro. 
— The stem, upper 
braets, b 
attacks “f ‘this mala ady, = the Ag hy ovules, an 
_ male blossoms are not exempt. NaFous records a 
case in which even the ed gintils were swollen | 
to the thickness of a 
The parts 
I 
affected are at first ae or isg — with a 
ed, smooth, and juicy ; the cellular tissue become 
ï mes 
greatly in creased i in volume, and is soon * 
w 
ment. The structure is im this státe easily 1 object 
2 the parasite being composed of short, eee, 
an 42 1 ry ye | 1 
springing 
up in the —— passages, or within the cella ty 
emselves, and gradually giving rise to globose or 
slightly pie tie spores, Which are minutely echinu- 
eye ba exhibit frequently a Hagan ekas. 4 i 
nearly u he | 
appear orm under 
bieder Pi ck dre ower, These —— are about 
twice as large, in linear measure, as those of the 
of a 
onsequence some showy 
e which it * ; but the kinds may thus be planted in an irregular group, at 
mpanying cut represent highly magnified views any jutting point in a bed, or on some swe 
celium ss perfect 
d en 
ome colour, and are w well fitted for 
iar form or colour tained. From 
near enough to eac other to grow into a thic 
den . injury to any of the plants, that only one 
dens . noniis Via Gains! 
advantages of massing plants of o 
any of its evils, is well worthy of oe more 3 
pursued than it is at present. A group o or 
crimson odendrons of one kind, that will bloom 
all at once; of Berberis aquifolium, for both flowers 
and fruit; of the red-flowering ei which is all 
the gayer for appearing so early ; of Laburnums, 
English and Scotch varieties being mixed ; 
ilaes ; of the Cydonia japonica, ith 
Azaleas ; 
t er dark-flowering sort ; of 
eolus, rm and scent; or eve 
of com Dogw w. are icularly at- 
tractive in autumn, when the leaves begi e 
of — — the steep face of a ‘mound 
of ! in the = ae part of an 
7 ‘of Savin, ay Sha 
be or Cotoneaster mier 
phylia lla, or Gaultheria pened, ‘where a tuft of dwari 
wanted; and, not to multiply 
examples 
pb mc “stone variegated, que, oF silv ~ 
leaved — ot pa wil 
but — n 
add a novel . most inviting feature to a a garden, 
an onspicuous at partic 
For the still lower Ade of plants, — even for 
a | annuals, the plan is fully as suitable. Every on 
e of a 
t 
shoul — himself 
those peen —— pe — 9 bm can be best executed, we hove: some highly judicious 
wn that 
now aware what splen lays are created pm 
i j of h 
operation, n winter 
ans on -pap are N as ids, but 8 be decor in masses during summer.’ 
ary, 
A ettiet e to be almost contemptible, acquire a marked showinese 
E er has wholly ruined the effect of if collected into 2 group. And many annuals, that 
many a pta which = genius of the lan uat = fats mape as individual eae become, 
in br 
e which is the — aey of growing 
ornamental and han 
So again, in in directing how tea € bonnet 
must e dae of which the public y cuneate the 
importance 
is, therefore, with much satisfaction that we sses of e 
one af well-timed 2 excellent little e eye will be the ae safest pale 
weary ted with care, and a ki — 
ing that pointe should also be the fullest t, and the 1 ) 
Diare shapi rng says Mr. Kemp, “the out. 
arth, a correct and cin 
remarked that all the more prominent an a 
an 
as a Guide | 
—— a Place 
an ng in extent), with refer- | hasin 
RD Kemp, Land- 
scape Gardener — yack 3 Brapzchr and on the face of natural ills, where fulness and preci- 
pitancy are the common a 
attendants of the more 
—— — . —— 
. 
