OCTOBER 3, 1863.] 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
high up, admitting a subdued light only, but в 
what unequally distributed. „Thi is г iding schoo oli is tho | 
gour of the law." It may p stems, 
941 
The Boursault Amadis, crimson, is also a good 
їп cem mean р ваше E but how delicate 
t is 
exbibitions, and it was so by the Stettin Society in the 
pres n pm e. Their bu ildin ng was s from 
, 15 to 2011 
was laid мат out of 
i urf 
" some d us е nts is exhibited appeared to g 
cially raised, up which 
ачы, bow the contingencies which seem іпеуіќа! 
sooner or later to attend the best constructed an 
compared with our coarseness! I like the | Тһе following autumnals, thou 
practice of medical men in their treatment of the|allthe conditi nies just named, Apul MR 2 
insane, who when a patient is more than ordinarily | purpose, viz., Acidalia, Anna Alexieff, Louise e, 
rude or violent confound h y ceremonious polite- | Caroline de Sansal, Alexa ndri rine  Bachme teff, Jules 
ness, which often res estores him ac ss, which | Margottin, B 
gl force wou d de Dijon, La Ville de St. De enis, Souvenir de h R eine 
e years the "Ботан lasts the | d'Anglet Duchesse de Cambacóies, Sir J. 
For 
trees Aet own—not alw. li at once ; sometimes в 
nd 4 
Mrs. . Elliot, Mew lw n ien che ss of „Мо rfolk, рне 
number of the best Шш» 5 
t dark R and abundant 
m xa а : йул n hey are cut Agen too. The y 
uted d, d, aud the ground i is covered as 
years; no knife o 
the 
r axe comes near them. 
ey are bu s она squirrel, and 
| eii ратли bloomers. Y. 
The —— — Roses are also good for E 
urpose, ei, Madame Zoutman, La Ville d 
"QE is di rfe Lawson, 1 Panl RATAAN and Chénédolé. 
These. autumnal and summer Roses „аге not Mes d 
et 
he martin or their like. Even ү o higher 
The exhibition E vegetables was very meagre, and 
servi 
mid gr и. - гале апа apil " midst them ; | 
height, and with branches 
we did not obs an 
interesting kinds fi or which Pru Prussia is celebrated, viz., а pE rues eom on, it = € ible. 
the Telltower Tarip robably this is accounted | After having been once thinn: ration 
for by that singular Tu - -— — 2 native of the periodically repeated—but the effect of "heir close | 
district. 16 is confined to mall s during the early period of their life is 
place called Telltower » for гае Berlin, and every 
n bes 
never | lost. 
They: are m up into long wt s trees | 
24 Perfect Ros Mi: Коз may be perf d 
flower, whether it be smail, modium, or large. 
how purposes large Roses are best adapted, and 
find] defeat the medium iai Roses, altho! ugh, 
perhaps, the latter may be the best. At exhibitions, from 
travelling and other c у оп the 
ber ; then the big ones are sure to beat medium- 
а 
For 
en unsuccessful 16 кар chless as the mast of а | вїлей Me s in LS same condition, Тһе grandeur of 
is small, about the size i Radish, with a delicate | ship. Nature has бн d them herself, and во they | sek and the contemplative minds of 
aromatic eon: It is highly prized by gastronomes ; | grow poi their фт to fall again erm round. ee е judges imagine a the: rest. I - iur ey that 24 Roses 
шапу attempts have been made to introduce it into | at: least has been their fate hitherto, but the beat a oses where 
other districts, but it has inva deside s 2 eme lig: in jet indicative ofi more mq and the zd are various, ен eins to beue e 
the or inary fine ge Turnip, This the re | frequent falls of timber to satisfy the pet — : кой ier other r perfec ctions, bui I fear that 
cii etimes ase. 
to all а appearance d of к ы вате оду et me endeavour, without regard to py uade to 
materials as that of Telltower, апа the same treatmen 7 же ent to clear away а large im a these what constitutes a first-rate pao >k 
has been tried with it, but all without success. But forests ча turn the land into corn fields. "This was | end be stiff, and the се close A he of 
if we saw happily defeated, chiefly, we believe, , through the | good size and substance ; the. ре ofi ве Rose Жош 
plenty of the em at the вое ө the. real energetic pro st and remo; ns f 
tarile” 9 e alderman, o r the duck and green peas of | Stettin, " lk t, wl the way | edged, rou eta «cna the 
ес "Turnip i is pum par excellence | presided o die recent мете m of t e Association at | The colonie riei be decided eut fixed, and the Fée 
ihe peche of the season in that country where Stettin. new better than our idi cal sparrow | of the petals should be as well coloured as the surface. 
«‹ delicatessen” are so much appreciated. Their era the viue of small birds to the rece re of a 
Sanderfish is а dish before & king, their raw | country, an ponpen out to the Parliament of which what a sorry figure do many, otherwise | nice Roses, 
smoked eels feast for the gods, but Telltower eid а mener hat insects i 
Rüben mit Enten—Telltower Turnips with duck : mark | ci there were no small birds to Кее tpe their s regards shapes, the recognised forms are globed, 
the emphasis !—not duck and Telltower Turnips, but numbers, and that he small birds ОША 90 Dt upraised or vased, тн. expanded, 
e principal, with duck'as а mere | exterminated if there were no woods or crest бїйрї бї; rosetted, and peony-form The two first 
The argument pre- 
M. 
vailed, and the woods were saved for the time. 
HE BARN А. РТЫ. со. 
Last year, the ho huge Oak tre I had | 
an RIA аа псуе edd. family. The’ lower | 
qm gug 307 
a 
The lar 
serta 5 every im of LE in Great Beitain 
especial ad: 
gives the Society ев 
а successful і 
require a à peculiar 
+ + 
soil e as the condition of th 
di te кее annual distribu- 
tha Tall 
parts of this ове serve me for а 
ea I think, the best P but still we require 
iation in m е, ^i be in colours, and if each is 
bes erfect i in its shap ust k be accepted. 
пеге are б йз» besides fot canti which con- 
sti ide а perfect Rose. Тһе habit and hardihood "E ie 
plant, the free-blooming, the continuity and abun 
of blooms, the invariability of good fo: orm, the pow 
‚ | seat, to watch 
-their 
entrance into the uppermost chamber. 
tion of seeds in spring, pack а | 
tower Turnip, with е of a Mocnen 
ihe wild water-fowl in the lake below it, | in 
Arctic regions; 
| condition under 
Cue ina Rose 
Te 
is only one pa and its lowes! I do not know an; 
The tree is so well to the fi ing н туе 
that, in lifting up Senateur Vaisse. Chabrillant у Паво ПОШ ап but the 
which is different 
d x them, rs can see, with a nicety, 
already possessed regarding it, wn analysis on amongst the tenants. from that of the má Аме the silvery Whiteness i is 
sample of thig "id in which 16 grows, and we may ext "^ year, in у month of July, I made my usual | very beautiful: erfection of de ime nothing 
autumn hav own Telltower üben mit Ет od t | visitation Sideways from the entrance, a jackdaw was superior to her. "Mains ie Fu rtado Me perfect 
Me eio cda "Ne expect а gend of Oak leaves | satn on five fici 
from the Lord Mayor for the sugges! tion.* 2 feet i "e e daws н there was a гейвіаті?в | In A аеро "i a m tro are usually 
Before turning our backs upon Stettin we must nes, wi it. Тһе rest of the | these mportant о : th h Lao 
notice another subject which may interes rbori- | cham xity of ptm and бет petals. also want 
iends. We mean the Pomeranian forests, | of of the t two olà birds, which а away at my intrusion. | variety i in colours. People "ds рни to give up the 
more especially the Beech fori near tin; these | Two g owls were nearly feathered ; but, | varied tintage of summer eee t Hybrid 
extend from about eight or ten miles north-west of "— not quite ready to fly. others were | Perpetuals, which ar dus efly rose 
Stetti: es or more in length by five or|halffledged; and two others (making six in all) e readers of t no doubt, think that I have 
віх in b: А poi f them (perhaps five miles | barely covered wi hite down. then bade good | overlooked the ой of M. 
in extent) is of considerable age, 200 or 250 у ; of | night to these р — abes of the old € — de Rohan, and Charles Lefebvre. Fer from it, they 
the beauty grandeur of these it is impossible to | the way, it was 10 o'clock in the morning), and I closed | are most noble met and they ma; ibly beat 
convey by words any adequate idea ; the rest is of all the slates, promising that nobody should T" vens S. V: ; ut, ti ve seen an Кыс Е 
ages, from one у 120 Instead of a | them. ese fou side by side go thro 
rotation of cropping it is subjected to а ro of |_ Some years аро 1 had two cerne atur pi БӨ ий end two summers, the one wet а си, tie 
cutti ion is cut down every year, and the in an adjacent tower, on Owls|other torrid, it would be wise to suspend such 
parta cu! arrang at th to be birds of mysterious ла ЛА € judgment. W. F. Radclyffe, Rushton, Sept. 26. 
again laid low will not co d for 120 or 180 беа ~ d forty years apada field of aem acne 1 
) Wh i n for an rtion to eal ound and examined minutely eggs of a 
me en the Hime. gus — А кы for | partridge, and six of a рһепва laid BIRDS versus GARDENS, &o.—No. I. 
securing a fresh crop of trees after the old Pe cà | — i A BOMEWHAT lively discussion has been going on 
the portion to 
but pas- 
J4g turned 
But now that 
seem di 
no fences ' nor SU 
vay of Teather be 
called -— on атт 
cd чана connubial understanding betwixt 
two old hen "birds which had laid their 
same nest. C coii жы: u se ма 
mere con a m not worth 
Charles Waterton, Walton H 
ipe. em there К 
4-1 
n to gardens, &е,, 
both йө =. the mr r ге Ъееп advocated 
with considerable ne › discussion necessarily 
е | included the fam sit and certain *' large 
— along e to 
‚| pher, 
list of 
what is pum idle 
