49—1850. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
775 
inches asunder; in the row; plant with pn 3 kalische Geographie der Alpen,” which they presented 4 acres ; Suig are two more under cultivation without: 
e ien te 
— — — ited 
ark that one 
prior i 
flower of V. gloriosa (if gloriosa), it will no 
uired, except keeping the = ‘ele of weeds, 
ossom. 
next = [We — neither will letting t the —.— 
year's — „ er 8 
emain spoil nex 
stem r 
case will it blossom ext oi 
to the Society. 
ENTOMOLOGICAL, Dee. 2.—G. R. Warernovuse, Esg. 
President, in the Chair. The he President stated that a 
specimen 
British G ene — He hd ead 
from E the 
g and 
about the end of the year ; ; 
I would advise your co: to do the same with 
his plant. A. S., ‘Stindon, Su Susser, 
3 Dec. 3.—E. Bra NDE, Esq., in the | 
a H. R. Sandbach; Esq., J. — Esq., F. Bar- 
Esq., and Mr. D 
exhibited was icali; and had but | 
fection, —. more were makin 
though t ike in question vold 
a foot in length, se oh gracefully down- 
oi upwards of a dozen. large e | 
flowers arranged thinly upon it, it wan aimed ob tit 
was not near so e as some of ‘the dried's —— 8 Of 
this Vanda which have a received from India. 
pee os as the plan 
aD ed to be yet 
whe it shall have had time to acquire — 
size and si A L Silver Medal was 
i of Pine-apple- 
p a i i ling 
Ionopsis pallida. — Mr. Blake, ge- to J. H. ene 
Esq., produced a nice lection..of Orchids eon i 
Dendrobium sanguinolentum, Zygopetalum er — 
Angræcum bilobum, Soplironitis grandifira, ad two 
charmingly flowered. plants of Epidendrum 
i y 0 was awar — Mr. a| 
| ubner 
of Psondosphex Pi Polistes) Me. 3 exhibited five 
appears to | new Britis Tineide, several of them bel . 
profuse ere production of blossoms; for ing iy an aca 
t in its present state — ad 
much more ha 
S inning; of the Chiswick Nursery, came a large and 
ý tivated specimen of: ‘Hoye ie ‘npécialia, which was 
stated to — s en in flower all all the summer. 
e of Museat o 
black Hamb burgh Grapes w 
. „of Bishop's Stortford, to whom a Banksian 
awarde ibbins, gr. to the H 
e aor 
started e it; off the 
between the 5 w March and Ich of April, aſter —— 
were rested till the 22d o eee e ose aap 
prun put in action for the second crop, w 
ripe now; and Mr. M. stated that he would 4 55 a a 
from the ne 2. — 
E 
d the o samo- ‘three 
ago; but Mr. M. is of opinion — crops should 
F. 
iful | P 
; mined b 
h 
¿| Harrit Givi, ien e of 
OF Ut 
first meeting" of a 
natura 
of 
i variety of Papilio Priamus, 
collscted on the banks of e hmond River, New South 
Wales, by Mr. Leicester oth from 
— thi he name 
of Atriplex, upon — plant it — and 
Mr. Jordan had found some eedin 
flower-buds of Ori 
years. 
on hap shut we in c: 
t exhibited’ a Lampyris wich — tr in A 
Brazil emitting a a bright light on the i. in the month priente, 
— 
ey a 
from the 
and 
m phere entirely » without disease ; Melons o 
follow. 
may hope to enjoy that Aale benle. the. — 
„ ene month later by the cultivation of th 
ed Reine Cla 
| obtaine t m 
valuable for iate crops. Horn Carrots are also suc- 
h 
forcing * but a very ec 1 ool ici 
forcing-pit is pe, fermenting 1 pesas p 
necessary excitement ; a pi 30 feet in length, 15 in 
width, and 4 in depth, has i 0 
convenient i 
carts. This is annually, 
w 23 * 2 er and Rhubarb is first obtained 
Pota 
an invaria ble: sigt pr se- 
g the arts. 
and "W whicli Say! 8 collections have been ae 
It is — atk ssary for the cases in which preser 
birds a ned to have holes for ventilation m 
in the top. cr President also stated that, owing to. towa: 
state 
of the e limate, 
the 
by the Asiatic Society a Calcutta had. been e 
Mr. Westwood M. 
} material y st pak em 
the bed. in Nove ber the: pit ee 
| a valuable supply of leaf monid. In re na our steps 
rds the Vineyard, on Hg hill-side we gain an ex- 
cellent general view oft den from the river’s 
is 
en 
e summit of the hill. 
gave an account o Guer re- than from he old author is 
ch the Which at — and perfectly right in saying that “ the reader must bea. 
cigars, when several of the members present dissented | seer befo ore he e can un erstand th ion thereof.“ 
from his assertic ich any Our 
tured on board shi ip at great distances from 
F. Bond mentioned the faet 
be 
n, Mr. of having r a 
ches, noticed a a specime n of: Sphinx ain in the pupa.| 
te had emitted th in 
the oceurre a number of empty beds 
a A. 
Miscellaneous: 
Winter care ee a a Flower Garden. 
of 
the * is so. remarkable. 
Garden mond onli: 
ae this. old mentioned last wee 
re of yk care 
cal; are not aware of the 
er ‘aad. “pleasing example of i the ancient style of | 
P 
week, ito 
pei Housr. — There is much in the aspect onst 
garden, t 
P 
ing by propagation. 
only ee ripened wil * same Vue once in every four 
Fears. Examples 8 „Grape, 
E a to be 1 from. West's St. Peter's, was 
0 — | by Mr. Seymour, of Ashridge-park, Great 
tead, Herts.— Two brace of Cucumbers were 
lian ments are evidences of 
a a 
to refleet that 
as: the Serei has for ages past charmed our fore- 
fathers, so it may continue to deligh 
to 
l Menziesin — Aironet flori 
r 
—— Several cee ere hs, particular); 
erophylla, — —— Ante 
unda, Pe 
Its walls of Vews are green and v ucron eto va-ursi, ‘Ga itheri Shal- 
N proprietor. of j d House, witha just ‘i i appre-| pre lon; os Rhod — — 
diree ew- j 7 3 
spies merit Fa i ga ae — i of the r Periwinkle. By a: judicious 
mine rather than the inroads of time, had rendered choice and variation of putting one sort only 
necessary. The bowered walks ye other embellish | to a some “of verdure and liveli 
udicious taste of the noble winter, at a cost of labour and 
* 
varieties remar 
* to which the first adds great beauty of 
Fe 
j= colour, 
LINNEAN, Dec. 3.—R. Brown, Esq, in the chair. 
J. Hutchinson, Esq., and J. — Esq., were elected 
fellows. A collection of dried specimens f 2 
made in Ceylon by J. Frazer, — . was presented b 
R. Heward, Esq. The remainder of Mr. Clarke's 
Paper on the position of the — . 
pants Shen one or tw 
Southern Alpe 
thern 
es had been published in a 
he a » from: the lea 
British Worthies, a work written 200 years ago, 
in which, after i . th —.— 
‘of | delights Ar aa — oat uaintly sa, 
„ Within a mile thereof (Gal) 3 Iyeth a —8 
eyard, where Nature 1 idwifery of 
= is delivered c om uch pleasure ; 
ust be a erfection’ 
thereof, haibthis is place age ar Grocia or nigh — 
wh luxuriant sr of the p 
d, improve a tree in 
forest, a brook into a river, priors a pond into a be; 1 
ineyard bee 
itst h d f. th e may quote 
W e Book off 
ignificant in comparison 
The intermixtare of a seme 
beds of va riegated I 
or even the ö Hollies . the prickly), 
variegated Yew, and Aucuba, kept dwarf, would in- 
erease the variety; The ho planis* oe potted in 
rather a poor soil, lest th uxuriant, and send 
‘their roots oe far beyond the 5 Kemp, on Small 
3 
a grove gee 
of difference of y 
mientos copie —— decent, 
Stapl place o of ea 
he 
ee 1 
— 
han by s 
* eee ancien 
ith a row 4 
— es the garden, and 
combining n, u 
* chere is an anatomical, or physi ological: distinction. 
Linneeus is asserted to have taken d nearly all * 
« e natural: ria 
h 
terminates in 
tower. The walls of the kite — — 
entitled 3 — über die Physi- 
Ta time when 108 re now called genera or sub- 
| genera will siono — species: finally, the 
on of Species. among Plants —** The . 
thors” (ol Hooker and: rs vive British Fa Flora), “ are neti 
