s 
23945.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 431 
c SOCIET — | RES E D 
ORTICULTURAL crue o OR: LON DON. woga so it can be caused by anything except | sy is pierced with pores (stomates), through which 
H mi enpi e n SATURDAY, the 12th | superfluous wes ~ allowed to ak off in the form of 
Tie T map Marie wil tai s erat Do > Ki very sensible and experienced | mt The fluid con- 
ey the President of the ae her ‘kindly ‘rested’ th gardener objects PA this erie sess and adopts the ae within the = baler is derived sn the veins 
sof a e oe! ie. an opinion that the dise o be ne erred toa oft eaf, which eins receive m the — 
visitors te issued to the orders Pme Garden, in te after, ow tem se rature acting on 2-4 nd t hose 
ice 5s. ; a , > 
Bers Se ee rie OX each : x: aloo: emny. a0 oe 28 fr bo (see et 3 gi _ young points suck i it out “of the ground Allihevatery 
‘boon of the 12th Ju Pauxows sijen 1 ye. who first pate at the matter, then 
oa No Tickets will be issued in Regent street, Tey dl gy | has | beat sometimes led to thin k that the deformity | be Pood fr mt mi cots ; and, therefore, any s 
ee cara ae A iber by want of 5 change bis then, at the end | plus of wa tery maté 3 in a leaf is Heder 
ane AND LENDID EXHI y . 18 etter S m to 
WOOD AND, SONS SPLENI Sy eye RE & eems nge mind, obsery ving to the are mp tr cag aes the ake se imp ply- 
i eration 
FIELD, SUSSEX. N mg the honour most ems, it very often finds its way out small quantity of water absorbed: b the leaves 
? he i Gentry, Tavo in of cutaneous erruptions.” Much ae decide themselves directly from the mos b 
F urs My ena A ie vtélenda: t n his o h owers, of Coo it 
_— ‘THE WOODLANDS COLLE CLION pin $ , 
urite flower is now FATE and will hind a us tho follow wing letter upon th 
of the nated 
continue in 
Ww, wW. 
séoded ed fro: 
ny oi obese collection in 
over an AREA OF 
ns, and Flow: 
that th 
(eer itt acer pera nt order, and 
m fitted up at Sherine distances for their ace 
D & Son beg leave 
atii petai 
Ben: Ripped DAILY (Sundays 
Maresfield is 12 miles distant from the 
tion on the London and Brighto: 
stai 
to intim 
eld e 
, and Saturday from the Golden Cross, Charin; 
gral Vans and Mere a Brighton to Tunbri 
through Mar 
Europe. 
pea: the se ing claim on public patronage, the 
hich e: 
40 e 
bind. to Prey in wra description of Ornamenta: 
th g Shrubs, and indeed fons bear t 
e carriage-road 
arbours nage 
ommodati 
ate that they 
orticultural 
pegin 
1 Fé éte, have foun 
Ped of its iHa favourites. 
excepted). so. 
Haywards Heath 
n Railway, from which place It 
very Tuesday, Thurs- | dra’ 
“ee Cross.— 
ge Wells, 
" Se SET H 
q je Garveners’ Chronicle, r s 
EETINGS FOR 
Tuesoar, July Refn 
Daamin aly 2—Royal 
X TURDAY, 
Sarvapay,, ’ July 12 
5—Re aa ay h iioi = 
nt’s-pa: ardens 
Horticultural Gardens 
COUNTRY SHOW. 
Wrowaspay, July 9—Gravesend. 
aoe the 21st of June 
SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1845. 
THE TWO 0 FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
WELVE THOUSAND THREE AR 
n a plant remains in a erm 
y state, rs its 
e excessively eee 
When 
icies |ie leaves ar a watery matter, 
e liiva? ‘asad hips that the following [nt number, or ‘perhaps 1 in both, of the 
nerease in size, or 
green bladders 
x may t 
ow | ous conjectures : i eae known the soil of this | 
that lie between the 
e leaves, and which, 
ea ae oe ee 
| epee and repeated analyses, during t the course of 
feel that my remarks must 
meeta” authority. 
“This property, “ike whole of Mai idenhead 
Thicket, rests upon chalk over gravel: the soil 
cerh is a close, binding, gritty loam, hazel-brown 
ntil it t becomes ting oe the su 
se stamp of, at Jeas 
ect 
expan: ei 
This Coe paian, is, V 
with great vig: 
appeara 
ineries = Vi 
ing's gr S 
innumerable ae 
ri thoir surfac 
eas e-le ery is of the 
e blister of rA- ‘Peach. gant in front 
here is n 
, the accumulation i » aie 
of watery matter derived ~— the soil. If 
this be so, it can h ardly that ais 
aay of venye R My 
or 
y 
a enced in. those Nimrin, where the malady i 
chief; for no cold is experi- 
is the 
most conspicious. 
It is argued that beca! 
use diseased leaves ed in 
well- drained borders, i 
it is impossi sible that w. 
repar 1835, 
ection of a wa Ta “iti exposed vat its 
e Ho et 
s| But soil may be wet te emporari ril 
pup žo have not said t 
tim with tas maven oft 
the “frst ape of tw 
seasons, 
ave ie 
blo at 
hey 
but few 
caused b 
on isons 
of watery 
zanisntion of the 
its th at tl bliste 
| Mr. owERS 
sad byaistght of ain ost: ROEY 
e gardener, and superior eee 
uae Mr. Anprew PATRICK, of bad! j 
r Slough. 
E 
; critical e 
The cri 
ty of ae ies 
ye could discover, indeed, that ae se 
of | of low ie eal 
elica 
Wedonot, 
ogy. 
oe entirely deny the evilinfluence 
ce oe that it does 
© tissue 0 
how same that it it ok be ? fi for 
h 
al 
5 
TE E at er 
ie 
ohik, asit may | 
np? 
as ‘had rh sed away with t 
o take their place, and the | 
sea 
+ 
oS d J J 
“T pring, on kpe contra t 
it inca capabl of perform 
We paiio moreover, that the 
T ery ma mit 
| dise iolen Sarh ane nine- 
tenth oe a. flag, “iy ie entire tissue of the 
tender s 
foliage is 
hich, no doubt, intisfores with 
at perspirai 
ould = vobabl ve dite 
aggravated by cold, w 
the great functio e 
clim: ate, the Peac 
a 
nd it is quite true ord “handed of the | 
one 
one 
n, there te Roses t 
acti, ich o 
bank 
er surface 
mem Pos icles 
receirad tite What = contend fori s that cold 
el ost as ere 
e eye to est ith pl | of a diseased leaf; as do likewise ae: po "Ribis is in e ; that vk mis chi ef as praz 
a wonderful for the richness the Pietinei s of the terminal currant leaves. In | duc ed oro arise E the wet of os soil ‘did n not 
eir colours, were far more beautifu 4 path te is, therefore, 
atlier representatives ; ; and of ‘destruction: Every fact, it ee ari bet to. the border that we should look; ‘od our great 
e, if possibl dir d analogical, ten rove that frost 
r peters Aaa må aS rost, and mot so ea is “the direct cause of Peach trees from being Ararat sr pe ‘ih rater, 
a hund | bladd bli "hti en although it is a y drain 
er must be peia ere M te eri alles: be] W a E 2A ld f this, we shall ni ae ties ieee 
a sorteoponiestyt cnt the amas "T be owing coverings, ays ‘the leave: blistering an 
d o next, and last meeting for the year, will be | o both circumstances combined ; i tye roofs ; and we 
oo Faces of July, on which occasion His itn of cold upon the surface of leaves, a oubt much -w rhether, if the border we 
~ 
a once more thro a fie d nd water, any consi 
ae t ect when th o be acted upon is distende water, any 
a iswick o the weeny 3 with fluid. Is ‘no not pi! gs pth that ae primary appear, even pie ee og leaves og left u nguard 
ef at meas taken to give the | cause of ane blister is e: sap, and that pokona is Ree old of radiation, d at action is 
to’ the this most liberal arrangement, seo a mere seconda ary agen’ nt, aa producing but clans tender as the Pe rite 
the ch: attractions of the H orticul -| vating ke “ise er I 
in England. Scenery of the prettiest "title In order to seine stand this matter nar we | 'ACCUMULATIVE Saeco “en CULTIVATION. 
must begin at the beginning, and first i innie ha a 
th T, whi Preken ra 
tence of wh ‘te DEKH! a vernal malady | a aleat. B ate carts or __ Eanty in the spring a 1844, eee soni 2 pro- 
ot w. ic all ard e p 41 were iecë 
given rise to'a li ttle” disis rij Pa paet $ id os ce fine specimen i but dela: orgie 
leave to j ntil the second week in April, I was arany on. 
atp. 3 oin. without talking Hi thom ety = treat hee, OY iait bah iets ty" aue 
P: 885, sini it to an f perp leaf is irad nets $e wthy with earlysbloom. To redeem 
, 2 ete. note to| most. curious apparat us, € oe of innumerable ne and to obiain-the highest possible vigour, = a 
: “words pa The — ventured | io add add “the illom bladders filled with fluid, iy ra within pa = i rnal lim tod ted period, ing treatment was observ: 
deformed e no doubt that these| layer of empty bladders at her in the a 36 plants,! ‘principally fro 
Pridi vo. ing ed and sage in consequence | o r askin, holing together but ie, and thus in 3 and 4-inch pots, were selected in the eon. and 
fux of sap; and it is difficult to | ing a laby g e | third weeks of April. The Tending or fore shoots were 
