Fonon] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 487 
F e their Erionda they | in ample is afforded by the pl th 
UELL & CO. beg to remind g e: p: y the plants in ago 
OP occa rei the following fine CAMELLIAS in | iron pane aiena of the Horticultural oa aià 
goed haer n > them ox to the Purchaser, namely + that place frost is pE permitted to enter ; pai 
gelection being lina, Conspicua, Double Soe the Ro i tho 
| manir wna A oo, Striped, Chan ert, Colvillii qaas ‘area can be seen sii among ae most | = hem mgr non are so te “by a a eta of 
Lefora, Beallii, Imbricata, Eclipse, Florida, Ele s, Ruckerii, | Nor can =o a e contrivance for which a Mr. Barrze has taken 
aaki Fimbriata, Also, as ae Fen flatter ourselves that chemistry has | out a patent ; for his is unexpensive, and cannot be 
The rey best FUCHSI D ‘adde aay rt aurel a is wreath by discovering a f der: d i i 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS: . 12s. do. Re anged, 
Dito VERBENAS - _ 6s. do, salt which will len i tect 3 tothe 
Ditto TREUNTAS . 2° do. ts pionit, and su sali ates, and nitrates, are all th 5 
= Mtl aiaa se aman nimat | very good things in their way, and ot are ammonia | any objections, It consists. f ri 
ne R be oe aa ET 2 aale Jie fonon ot gt cannot be permitted to claim | louvres, which are perma, $ 3 
Tcl AREI G VERBEN Pea era im proved ithe “hel h of the | inclinati 
S P ARSON, ‘in ech the ‘following. ee Ros tr . mp autiful where pen — ne ink A vida 
JE ye io. tho publio can, mith, the sroatest confidence, | i} b Pa e EE a noire 
+3 $0. the: pal hav me ve secondly, of a sliding valve, likewise of glass, ke 
E nit. st ancl E st Wha Khama is it hes has wrought this change in | which the quantity of air z 
A t canal rth > he constitution of the Rose ? Surely n nothin alia lated at pleasure, and w 
VERBENA “DEFIANCE,” a fine rose-crimson ; truss large, | fhan the last hot and dry autumn, with a cloudless | the openings perfect ly ai 
with good habit : the former was awarded a Gor tificate at the | sky, and (for England) a brilliant sun. These 
Meeting of the Hordioultaral Society of Tohid on Saturday, fi bl bal 
June 2ist. Good Plants on. be obtained at 1 Bschool Nu rsery, bei hi porat sre done what they |b by a common glazier to any o ye the 
ad, London, s.. 6d. each.—Verbena * Ava- j always do; t fey pi ; 
T Tmpeteaa.rat at the above Exhibiticn by mistake under bad ag y; Biz. ey oe Mig = Fin Rose t ge: madiw,. whan ant Mra a ariga, Fegan en. the 
the name of “ Hampstead Lily.” organisation of the Rose instead of being moveable. For 
> tn eto ~~ | abundantly secreted; they have called forth all the | exa ample :— First, the draught of cold air is avoided, 
The ‘Gardeners ” Chronicle, |t eaka s power ® whic pling Senco ub possesses they which, in case of moveable louvres, ome 
the eaves to arrange them- | through the intervals “oe are required to be left 
SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1845. selves as flowers, pcs pta effect thai arrangemen betw. a their ends and the - 
EETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. perfectly. There never was a bad Rose enc coe the apparatus has no join 
remman, Ja ae ee Hees after such an autumn as the last. There never w 
COUNTRY SHOWS. ` any other than a good one. And y b ort 
y g ie becom me arden ied, so as to o 
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| streams of air enter at eg a often very conflict~ 
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which 
eee “lie smord d Hili Hortieniearal: A means we can always secure such a aie 
Barkshire E pnra pleny kyen y a may always calculate upon the same r a . in iy Ba most op me situations bog: d 
Dvgmbar,.. Jaly.s0— Nory m Carnation and Picotee. e have already stated that the Roses produced tion is so simple, that fag but r ugh u usage cam 
Wire the 12th of July the Garden Exutarrions | on the bushes planted in the iron conservatory in | injure it; and if out of order, it pre hy pairi om. 
ofthe Horticunrurat Socrery pens terminated for | the garden of the Horticultural Society are un- any ordinary workman. And fourthly, 
this year, and the beauty of the closing scene was | surpassed, and hardly rivalled. The we ine line by which the sliding valve i is "oped aa shut 
of e ple petals; d ) may be carried to any part of 
ushered in the season. We have witnessed many July | season there is nothing like them. In t iat ~— a room, — as the bed-side, in ‘ae same manner 
Exhibitions, and our ' ge neral rare al has ge ke n- | they are ee during all the latter part of the | as a bell-ro 
urable to e favourable influences as 
We have o 
of faded or fading bes auty. f the.| affecte ri ai She open ground in 1844; they | of this eniran | in a hot a Ta and 
kind was vis anaj last Sa w tog On r ssl are constantly § surronnde ” by ahot and dry air, and | we only wish it were possible for it or yd o 
the plants were in some respects finer than on any pon by a rays of ee id which a apparatus, to exclude the soot, ou as mit 
former occasion during the _year—in the Orchids | wana roof i= pts aie toe ollect. They live in nes ir. On a larger nie it would pr obably form 
nd Heath imate of Italy or Provence. Laial, ventilator for hothouses in winte: 
Although we seldom er ourselves in’ this Shi is this which Rose-growers have to hie ar in| sib] n f all greenhouses, pr pears the 
oh: ur oul to the details of Exhibitions, gas mind; bt that when acres | apertures between the louvres were further 
we must’ be permit ted on t this occasion to me ntion | are covered wiih glass, as. will happen Aiii that This, however, is a matter to be H aeia by ex 
the remarkab] a foot, aud the trade is conducted | periment; in the m — the personal caudate 
ARDEN at Frogmore e. It abundantly proved Mr. | upon fair principles, we entertain no doubt that all | of the thing is unden 
gra: e worthy of the sgt honor of| the- finest Roses will b cultivated under a, ——SSS 
My CHRYSANTHEMUM: 
this and last season, I am in duced to offer my mode of 
a oe a I have always succeeded in growing 
tha h a i sees lants having been cut down in Feb. 
ri 2 ý : i gs. have done blooming, in March E 
aceful little novelty of a lower 12 feet wide in front of it, might be easily fitted Bp oe sow ms the pots ito a bed nie ihe vill aik; 
a glandulosa, with trailing shoots, | with a moveable eg lean-to, and planted wit 
ellowish green pendent tube: e-shaped | multitudes of Holland, Cape, Chilian t 
Span ish, r Ebina pana, That cence be the | attention being necessary until the end of April or be- 
uthorised to add that I fc mellias, Tree Rhododend f May. ‘or our first and what I 
We are a best 
season will d very soon be taken int dy Aaralan Myrtle-blooms. oe Lilies plants, having selected the strongest ts, I take 
„i parz 
for the next 
_ consideration by the Ad Sorin Cape ane | away the soil from the old stool, and remove with the 
— urpose, And. may in es a | perso s{and al oe thousand gay forms of ‘twinin g exo I hav š 
th Suggestions to snake e aa ‘the d etails ofl aaah now known in a languishing state in ou 5 
e Exh hibition, to communicate their won in gree enhouses, would 6 n thickets uititivalled ¢ even in 
writing to the Seer l her 
Havin r 
Iq | With pode sah to sand tnai, and dung, in any 
retary without loss of tim tf a et hee p y A part of the kitchen-garden, I plant them out with the 
i COAT IgEE ree tae e no need o. ating sppar atus. The autumn sun, | dibble about four feet apart, and stake them directly, 
Rees f usual bea iy of Roses this year is the} and the rain st oer roof would a against cold ; | and by attention to watering they quickly recover their 
"in which the See y- No one remembers a season | and as for ou mers, why they would suit Fok | removal. I water them occasionally with manure- 
c trees ba so healthy or.the flowers so | ve getation, even aia than that which nature lia s | water, or as ~~ grow, payo to akaaye _ tying 
©. Nature seems to be surpassing | provided them with at home. out ; by September they are (according to the so 
If in fecundity, So profuse is the supply of this] Such a border would bea shrubbery, glass | from 4 to 6 feet an height, and a from = p 
the dime flower, so bright the colours, and so arge | roof; a walk cou re be conducted sro it, “and bottom. A a = this T or w the fon u 
ix On nsions. People naturally inquire how this | ever ybody who, heretofore, has built a eenhonse, | have ips. eae the size of Peas, I prepare ze 
of aphides a ne the explanation in the absence | scans pa kt a winter garden That euch things | P'a g 
; did it, and a third beep was the winter that | may be done is certain ; that: t i in th gi vanes them to root quicker. Having the pots, soil, and all 
manure Tefers the phenomenon to new i glass is cheap, i is, we thin in e highest | sead y, I take the plants up and pot them on the spot, 
We can cannot say th anie. Th pran e | reducing the ball as little as possible; I then place 
--viction to y that these explanations carry co considerable, will er, aan if w m- | them in a lonse previously cleared for their reception, 
iy own minds. The green-fly injures al ber that with glass . a foot, a bandas 12. feet give them a good watering, and shut them up pai 
te . appear, or soils them; but we | wide, and 100 feet a may be covered in for less closely, ivi lieth a yo syringing every time 
ela isely see how. its absence į is to improve than 2 Ol, so far as the glass is concerned. to the house, if it is a dozen ER = day. With this 
a4 Fite Rose: that is settled before the parte atmosphere I do not min eaae ie aay but if 
; Mosr of the visitors es London have seen in the rta latter is too Fre 2%, hae ihe Bouso " to E 
Mysterious . re can have done is yet more ean of Club- Apan S, and ofw ealthy y persons, a after moving, the y al besé aa with =e 
and cold ono ican winters are lon ng enough age Soliahad M. having g quite | Wih , th i, fh thae weeks they will begik io 
_ Tepose, and ik > sen the Rose-tree to its annual e appearance ofa a Ve enetian blind, like which it | | expat à thait bloom, at which time I remove thence 
e Severe winters ahtedis requires. Very site [bis contrivance i is for “the eH urpose of ventila- | the reer a isen that they kar ats poi 
Never heard of, ory to the tender kinds, but we fon allowing warm | selves to the bes nite. ota Rann Fo 
- And in fac eir improving the har y ones, escape, and cold to mn g in, without its ‘ ap foment 
t, the su p „n o a A E 
hard yi l ich succeeded the very possible for the latter to interfere with t y, h g 
not at a d season | of the interior. tr 
est Roses of mode *" But it has its disadvantages ; it is expensive, and | voted to th 
armer blood in their veins than | it is apt to get out of po The account ofitin| At the ne of removing the shoots for meg, ~ 
og 0 Roses and briars of| the “ Mechanics’ Magazine” is very just. Of the Aa i neat cea nt them out as above ; 
d as soon expect Lapland | inclined glass bars, technically called louvres, z s| heso = Se ants of a more dwarf habit. I pot 
mne, as a hee English | which it were “ itrarely ‘happens sam = = dh heute 
ution of a southern Rose-| remain for any length of time in the a cool pit ; th 
it, but cannot, upon any | some w nit not turn as poe iy, or to sa samo n cates —_ forward frana For the next succession, I pae 
e z it. What they do as others ; while one r two will ni e at all, f the remaining shoots in the beginning ‘of Au- 
nter, just cold e ith the k 
and not more ; of which a strik- | in consensos; ` proportionally eriek es | gust jand t the mt the path in the conservatory, L 
Be 
