Tesnvanx 26, 1859. , 
THE GARDENERS' CHRONIICLE. 
171 
Belvoir Castle; and Mr. Judd, gr. to | «o 
» dog ag: Northampton 
Mr. Cox; second to Mr. 
‘Dake » of Rutland, 
— 
7 * First prize 
N schedule it was bistod that the locality 
In as grown n Wes 
2 exhibited by him 
gis ti ut y miles from inp sea in a hres at nan 
wall 
— 
x 
d to south-west winds, | 
t 8 
south-west, one from east, and two from south 
ose 
ther 
est flavo our, the redi —— m the south aspect 
proved magic to those 1 88 any other 
ebber 
was two 
ne they produced a excellent crop; but the 
è Muscat substi 
|, Hambur, gh and one Trebbia After 
wishing to have a 
Mr. Spary grafted 
Armi a g 
oie ge afting. “the M 
The 
xe ear r stock; the mi 
e Quin ock, 
south vail 75 feot high, or "nearly | x idi has 
been nearly 10 y n bearing, is vigo rous, h 
ai 
t 
ng, is 3 — elevated ; 
A. on the Quin 
| healthy, E a moder 
to 
Pea firm, and fi om the m same ' locality, y were ¢ exhibited | 
he junction wi 
th 2 
as wax, and over t 
g 
bound over with nm 72 wort covered, wit 
ng cla 
of graft 
anda covering of M "Prost attention -— pa 
syri 
$ 
FERRER ER 
large specimens a euris Pears 
west wall. 2 d nearly ed years in eating, i is 
Pic iis nd t "is horizontally. It i: 
e bear 
Mr. asda Jones Brynsteddfod 
ngin g twice a day with the other Vin In th 
e weel e end 
which time the Muse 
eat began 
first w 
eee 
, and 
rove, 
the soil stiff, inclined to clay; subsoil gravel. 
* a * sloping a little to the 2 5 is 
rth wall about 13 fee 
Pear. 
From a pri filled up schedule it Vor e | 
A 
W erpendicula 
direction on the so id the portion of 
‘branches trained in ‘this poet the Aaa exhibited 
were gathered on the 1 19th of October r. Ingram 
r|and a 
is on the 
perm moist, ‘of m Sampor ut 
170 e above the Pira of the sea, pes is in hight 
istant; the Situation is much 
4 to ap da * the soil is a d 
loam, 2 fect in depth, rock 
The 
schist. 
be always larger than that on the —.—— side, but 
I J ee of the * I is bn ce e tree is 
‘old, bat pedir and vigorous, € bears well; 
itis trained on the spur sys riko . Tillery’s speci- 
mins of Winter Nelis were fair-sized it w ell grown, 
is flat, on ah f a mountainous 
district, slo opin g to the west; outside the garden walls 
the 15 bead 1 888 n to the 1 Conway. The 
tree is a brick wall 6 feet high on the en: 
side, with a y^ coping having a narro 
of argillaceo | 
walled garden in which the. l'ears exhibited were 
n top lg inch ; Ber 
ood is well ripen d 
gronth 3 Mr. Spary "ated that the laterals an 
ruit is hi igh as the „och or 12th eye from the * 
inth 
the pagent | a little t 
AU 
south wall near London, and 
the Quince stock, d "etr in the ordin 
sandy loam, is on a clay 
o" the nf from the drains was 
um: in the bottom of the borders, and some 
Alit was 
7 feet wide, is kept fre 
except : 0 bon pene 
e Bonne and Marie Louise, 
0 
years back, 
the Pbi 
st eut of 
e Mr. Tillery. E exhibited fair speeimens of Glou 
More ceau, from a est Ua ill; but the flavour was not s so 
nor 
Gardens, Weybridge x 
ha ames, reporte ed th at the „soil is 
Boise Thorpe Perrow, Bedale, York- 
shies Ron a dish of Marie Louise Pears, to wd their 
uM is clear, ripening into zod colour, and epi ng 
ent rii 
ualities ; he stated that he has —— 
ety iffe periods sin 
qve were very 
wal. The Surface is flat. he fruit exhibited was 
LI Banata 9285 which was grafted w ith the 
Wate Nelis about seven years de it is tained hori- ed Beurré d'Arem 
E and bears abundantly. The specimens, though | st. 
8000, were not ix oo to those from the south aspect. 
‘ schedule, it w: — that Bex- 
half a mile from the sea, on the sout 
large and fine, but 
the quality v Mr. W. 
In ngram also exhibited a mas of the Det engin, 
e 
alk than the variety v: iid cott, 
and when that i is the ca , a8 
instance, contains too — 5 cid 
heav vy crop. Mr. D. J udd exhibited wende dishes 
on 
e| 
the smallness 
uU böre n — 
The cane of ae Golden Bamburgh grew with the 
same rapidity as its neighbour, but in 3 of 
of the graft it did not the 
$ 
ish 
Ae b Spary thought a report of it might be 
interest: 
Notices o ot € Books. 
s Serres for Tieni 1857, has appeared 
ompon on 
variety of the Siberian; some superb looking varieties 
ee chinensis, wh ich, as Mr. Van Houtte ob- 
of Dian 
been regarded as tend lyi 
K or} not the Horticultural f St. 
egens t authenticity e givi 
$ gradually com towards the south 
them a egel, a name of 
Sent three dishes, 
hes, respectively from east, west, 
* th aspect walls. L 
The fruits from the “south 
and pose but not ea in cai to e Kats ot the 
same variety produced near London. Mr. Whitin 
s belie the 
t produced in this 
N also 
Very ceny Hi» 
larger than that produstive variety usually becomes. It 
is a good keeper, and when m ost other sorts become flat 
. Allnutt, 
Mg all that has been 8 
in. be for iun P 5 of the > Vanquelin Pear, being, it 
ved, 
Esq., , sent three specimens of the Taster — 80 Pear, arre 
eover J 
eight, — d chat he en hundreds of them in 
flows? with a Mr. Heddewig, and gua: c— à their 
na im ret wers, 30 on 
a plant, of the deep treaked with 
white, and 3 ins.in nadia nal ie otn that Me Van Houtt 
has seed on sale. Another plate represents what is calle 
i th 
d 
Fa 
2 
Ez z 
SSSR A8 
pects. AS. parte *. 
m the east were m — than 
han those fro 
sessing the usnal good fi our of ni sort. 
mittee were of opinio “that the imperfection 
premature ripening of. the fruit "qan Tiot potu 
ig from the tree o Paa suffered from dryness àt the 
r. Gillham, Market Gardener, 
ee - 
e Mogden Lane, 
| exhibited two Black Jamaica Pine Apples; ; they were of 
dsome form 
Journal of the Linnean Society, Vol. . No 2, for 
b. 1. The Botanical papers consist pb 5 of 
so-called new Bellevalia from a 
tionable plant indeed. A valuable pinza rof. ‘New 
Holland ias by Dr. Ferdinand Mit ^ er. Contribu- 
ae 
ecor 
n Belvoir 
Leicestershire, e » 537% 
ea. at. 
Mr. enn 
sent a Seedlin ing Grape 
y 
tions to Organographic Botany, by resser, er 
table enough as a boy's exercise, but st 
M 
ck; those or the Wat 
ined iens the others fan- 
inpton 
„ with 
% Be 
fp 
commence r 
Mo orphology p Ba lsaminaces, a curio us subjeet 
y 
the which from 
— 
s small, , compa 
| eultiv ted for 20 y st 
the Size of "ihe aen e had — the — wer 
Ear arly Ulm hst s 
hee eould have > employ . 
0 
tems were furnished down | 
of the paper is befor Also ng paper 
on the P nation of. Veri nn ^s by 
Welwit eh and a a description of t new * 
ae Ferd. ME The Zoological 
were obtained was 
Which — range, north th, 
the er exhibitions ee e. 
beck — most northern 
Tho 
but the oped though 1 
50 fine ribbed as those of the true Brussels Sprouts. 
written a Supplemental Number 
| occupied by a very v: TM nccount of Indian 
or Savoys, they proved tender and good, the variet y 
Sonig bean acquisition ón account of its productive- 
communication was read from Mr. S of 
Brighton, 2 his mode sof grafting Vines. 
intended to have -accompanied a bunch of 
Grapes, produ uel. by the graft 
pary, 
It was 
Musca 
7 and exhibited . E 
Transactions of th e Linnean Bocielg z 
Part 3. 4to. OF the val valuable papers contained gt i 
art none relate 
bee review of the T e eee 
herbariu A ir. Frederi diae peets 
wor thy the igh reputation of this distinguished myeo- 
‘ord those by - 
dnd not eid. Again, of 
which tbe Vine is growing was built in the spring o 
ere from west aspects, two from 
1855, and planted on the 18th of April with Black 
: 1 
logical pa rof. 
lé deen and morphology ‘of Aphis 
pet i nterest; but they are too technic pus 
