476 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
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Gardens are connected by ave nues of Lime trees of the subjacent tissues lose their ‘vitality, and | important an ovent ee Oe dis amissa 
with the bea autifal pa of Chiswick House ? Ww ich may be more or = announcem: an alon 
The Horticult week now pass- | less rapid according “to e xisting circumstances, or o-day. Next eee will pec: 
ing away has never been excelled ; the ab i | the gener: ral health of the plant. If the plant a ed he of his high scientific a 
masses, “the many-tinted, many-fashioned foliage, f may be confined to the Leo = 
the ceful forms, the glowing colours he | first affected, which however cannot for the m New 
ious flowers, and t part be thrown off as in t parai and be affected b sa . Cruse w Plants, 
the fruit were wonderfully set off by a profusion |t which rest upon ae ugh si HUS DAMPIER, B. x a. 
of pegea decorations contributed by Messrs. k a or a removal to aed per warm reser a Exeter, and Kine’ house of Messrs, V, 
Austin & SEELY, Ransomes, Hoop, and others. check the progres of t the evil. If how ing’s Road, Chelsea, vhs i itn 
When to ih shietts of admiration are added | the plant is s we eakly i in ¢ constitution and the ti present year. isa auaa 
the beautiful conservatory of Mr. egag and | gorged 1, the ae eleri, qual to those of the now well-kno foreman 
the smaller very pretty one will be r ni and in after the log bet in richness of colour far own Pon, 
e long lines garden Takciabents| of hospital gangrene, ia Sestenetion. "of all neigh- | crimson of the petals is reliev, mbt for the miia 
for the information of practical men, and the | bouring parts almost instantaneous. black disc of the standard o; f the o velvety 
admirable ea = the place itself, the EOR, er KA AP of these circumstances will enable | puniceus is considered t tee a native of New 
and was that this | many of our friends to prevent or arrest the pro- | though a decidedly wil ity has perhaps Teun, 
thi a been recor Si rad 
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afifal Way sree PS e We IRE cee to ee Bleed ee 
scen ecomposed tissue; neither is there the slightest | visit to the Northe A 2 
R. H. tee President himself brought to the "ecm suppose that the evil is due to faa tre lant, and its peculiar oii e 
Garden of ost remarkable of all the | Sulphur and other nostrums then will prove use- | ward of the Bay of Islands, where Allan nth. 
datae of “exhibition, in the form of some most |]less, and he must not trust to blind chance or subsequently phan i it also J 
ite models of fruit. These had _— mere quackery. No rule of thumb will keep the|of the River Thames, at M 
exconted i in paran at Gotha, and were wonder- whole of a collecti Difterent afforded the “naturalist s w o accompanied that 
ful specimens of artistic skill. "We doubt whether species, will ve rong a very “tis t treatment, l near 
the guickest eye could discover that they e which is needa 1 to- spy Missi ec ne , in the Bay of Plenty, are the 
fruit ; one of the Plums, indeed, even when out ihe exigencies of ea particular = e ttot one an ns, fi ae -the 
taken into the hand be ould only be discovered by| We ote t t this principle ot a e t the | T Tii, of Titsey a! te iets ad y Y. Teves Gove, 
its pee to be un combined agency a cold and moisture is applicable | « Flora Nove Zelandiz,” gives the locality of Banks rr 
The most remarkable feature in the exhibition | , we other plants as well as Orchids. The | Solander, and says, “ more generally cultivated.” = 
"a enormo f rare and beautiful stove | Spot i n Geranium arises probably from the same species now be ae is a ps an 
and greenh s an so lon; 
& SoN, grouped with great taste within the end and we have seen some cases of rust in oe Dampier (and | a ed and Sacre ty b nia a 
ese’ 
. a 
on with others 0 mark 
gratuitously for the decoration of the Show, and | that in his exoti io fruit house he could ät pleasure |! latitude 29° 19 to 20°: 30, longitude 1 1 w1 
in order to prove how much finer an effect may be | produce spot on ender tr tropical ee ae See = pe ji 
né y breaking up col- | plants, by cold combin ed wi 
[ections into classes ; as is usually done in this em soak in Vineries that vem bane. SR zy hear ae as Mr. ag i T 
untry. No ba riran could haye been more | to the outer door are Sarakai iable to rust, | H.M.S. Beagle . t ME ‘Allan Ci ami 
satbenstal, In Sapa ge mass of Orchids, | and that they are rusted sometimes when there is with i game. egy in the western interior 
Pitcher plants, variegated plants, Palms, trees, | not a trace of the affection in other parts of the n Wales, on the eastern shore of et aiea 
shrubs, and gay flowers, producing the effect of a | house. It has indeed been hinted that persons| the river Lachlan. The same plant was observed on 
scene in a tropical forest, : entering the house are apt to pass such bunches the Gawler ae not far foe iy had of Speneer’s 
elties were sparingly exhibited; the most | through their hands, but we are iai rather to | Gulf, in 1839, by Mr. E moie ANAY 
o were some wm epenthes, Olea iii attribute the rust in such portions to the sudden Darling Stuart, on his “ Gate 
; 4 I : : 
and a very striking golden Salpiglottis fro srs. | h satisfied i that roar belong to one and 
8 eon Berberries, japo- | se "E tissues, though enough to damage the| “yr, Bro judging from the Esh epi m ay 
1 with fruit,  Raatod a OE ae this way herbi, wae of opinion “ an or 
sent by Mr. SrawpisH, of Bagshot; very nice | in houses where the Vines are in the very highest | distinct from the original New ew Zealand ps ff 
ants of the hardy Torreya grandis, from Mr. | state of health. A specimen was lately submitted | a distinct genus, but the pods and the seeds a 
~ wig Satta ; and a small specimen of the} +, us under these nie, which led to an exhibit no ee as far as can be ‘else 
7 er rub; Thujop | 
the rarest and oe finest of all hardy Conifers; This may be too ce Bay Paih the deep has ned specime 
d iki m Mes 
neer Darlingtonia californica, a kind of two- | observation which is not unimportant and wit heen a tate, ote in the absence st the 
orned ous. anal from Mr. Jackson, of) which we shall beg leave to conclude this article, | stance in the former. The mnie 
: Kingston though not exactly connected with the subject. | and are ‘each on a long podorea arming plant atthe 
he specimen was so nicely packed that it arrived | __ On of arrine Ta 
A STATEMENT was made in this journal a n as great vigour as if it had been just cut from Horticultural Socie ety, bs aver a etl Bot. ni Mag. 
time a to the effect seca s es the Vine. ee leaves Se ei se m awarded to Messrs. Veitch an 
combined agency of the cold an ea wo or three days, but the berries which were well m aee Ta 
an Orchid pb 7 ecome so diseased that, „the formed immediately began to shrink, and before EDUCATION OF GARDENERS we 
course of a single day, 4 ark spots he leaves had at all withered had completely| Te great mistake made by yo une eons 
ntents of their omy shrive lled. It should seem then when the supply shart in life—at least, so ib appeoa ciently High | 
cells i in a state of eee decomposition e| uot marking out for themse gee wo 
will be likely to fail sooner San the leaves, seg of rer ig 9 very few branches 
gm „a which water acts necasionaliy upon a in edly rooted plants therefore we nee Sica, dale crtmaents of scietice, which may nt W 3 
ts Pona which it is in tact, |not wonder at the shanking, spotting, deficiency E by application and perseverance. oe 
ur to Grap badly managed ordi fri 
olaia T 
though i well known if all who hate c &e., c t success 
anxiously vee “the Les get of some favorite | houses are so subject. Ifthe root is in bad con- | difficult undertaking, we have the evi himself aè 
n frame, lier look | dition no skill can produce certain results} but person than the late — Aan eee pratt 
upon the statement pA more or less of unbelief. even then, as in cases where there is no fault ias bert, | 
the roo na Vine grower = Kenes with the | determinatio bai man shonli le ae. 
son worthy of all confidence, and a case bly has | cultivator of Orchids may take a lesson and | that the ie of th tn t great sat and good man 5 ; 
just come under our notice, in which th o = L against m D agency of cold and | and his well diges yee 
Cattleya labiata within three days became brown | mois M. J.B. ne a E h stan 4 son è 
as chocolate, while a dark b Lee rs “With the rert — a hig! ptm Ed 
their diseased tissues, completely co s the fact, young men appe: asic installed 48 
strange as it may seem. It was stated again, in | cultural Exhibition at Caen wom the 224.8 psd 24th, vantage Got py, Swing Ga ving the foundation 
the course of last year, that overheating, over- | ang 25th Jul , upon the occasion of the visi eg oe ton the soi A 
over! g, 0 
watering, and underventilating were at the bottom | that KI s Proiek h it may ti take $ 
saa hd tn te | at al ae Amar am ames pë ghe p ma E i a fea og 
causes may e : : a e | livered at the Garden of Pl: . ardener has increase of salary am! 
tendency of cultivated Orohida to in from any | award of prizes FARS oe pg ~ ie ait Mie Eras Of obi wii owledge pte ‘peter degre 
Lom} ae eY | tors must announce their intention to the Se is bona a eh ste e h 
_ may be subject. With plants so treated, however, cretary | ot en once becom 
4 = X ble cot tition è , Ci Neuve St. Jean, No. 24) before the 15th of |7 think th that ges goal o of 7 wish ith Pei bei 
eminent ha t jects w pit 
mora’ a Orchids has pointed out a RE Ne re training is unm 
hich we 
e little = doubt is the THE fR 
ne‘ ter “of mischi After heavy | eminent Tati “of the. day wish tac = most | oy ever ier tad mie to 3 higher a 
ee pas not boeni i ban enough in the | his house fn Dean Moist os Thu adap: Tas x refine liana Onr 
k off the moisture, either the | = fa rae “be nr a = a quarter of a century, ® 
a d mediate any a valuable plant is lost from want of constant | fact dates o of our young 
tion. We may perhaps be ed need 
of cold air by injudicious ven entilatio ON, | witticism a WE wee made i in dr proseno ce is fat ter of me ae pape nd advat well oo ee 
chaos of the water in contact | aaibare wore in tho pine eine as heat relma | then became stationary, So aden HP / 
in the utmost vigour. r riend in! , 
1n consequence of which the walls | to the plant, quietly saying, ‘ Fiat fous, ruat ccelu m: beyond that of a ret 
T 
3 
