— . E - — 
e Bas, Libocedrus « chilensis: top shoots ; distinct hardy y shrub, with shining | gm we cannot praise its style we may give it creditor 
rocarpa, g Messrs. — ay eying good useful practical advice to bonam mot 
ity ued back; P. californica ditto ; P. | son & "Co. furnished Griffinia Liboniana, a rare plant y in the manner of working but also in the choice 
urt. Prinos lucidus, in leam ; the | with prettily-spotted leaves and flowers tipped with of ve tools. 
Li the 1 gone, but not s eriou sly | blueish-lilac ; Messrs. Ivery & Son, of Dorking, ex- = Ssrs. — have announced a new Encgolo- 
es Shrivelled, especially hibited a small blue-flowered Hardenbergia ; $ o niver. “4 e ' 
pr toting ^t which look scorched; E. G. He nderson also had Rhododendron Blumei, a appear in N. at lid. or monthly, price 7d. 
eneral Jacqueminot unhurt; but * Jules nt with small c i on err flowers; and Penta- It will, doubtle: ess, be wor E y the reputation of the 
ve th a: 
8 
ji 
me 
*i 
& 
F 
£ 
B 
in i same ce . We 
3 the 15th of March, and ne shoots |niaceous ‘flowers ‘Of Miscellaneous Plants Cut- practice of referring * fni future article for ‘the 
i H. P.'s generally very y Tittle the — of Barnet, had a collection in Which a fime mass|meaning of a familiar word is more honoured in the 
hearty as ever. Taxus adpressa, in | 85 Begonia Rex was conspicuous; Messrs. Fraser, Cut- breach than the observance. Why should Abele be 
touched. x also exp — by | 
e 
Cin came fro | easy a 
‘ured. Weigela rosea exposed s n and "Turner, and de Miner also sent Roses in once — the Abele is. So of ee which, 
w of the — — vosmet, “but very [m ju Of Amaryllises € — enderson had a mo m r, is not à Hebiscus, but * ns 
Le the fruit s, Nectarines and Aprieo collection which — t — nd (No. 64) 54) of a rich rs. Bradbury & Evans have & noed their in- 
with a white tna 1 star, and of superior * or extending wa e 'applicntion “o ot the Nature- 
Bir; ; "Y — Beurré Diel Pear exposed to A form ; it was — without name. Messrs. E. G. Hen- | printing process to Sea and Mi ne of also 
Pied with bloom, and apparently as safe-as | derson contributed a mixed collection of plants, both in | producmg a Fern "oo ER in — — s of the — 
; "Brown Beurré, standard, looks queer ; — and out of flower, containing many novelties, some ot of the proposed wi have been put into circulation 
an's on a north wall 2 begun to push. But we which -— reported on at the meeting on March 23. | —* first volume of the Seaw. 
ms wait a bit to know what amount of i inim — Of the more striking, not already noticed, were and on July 30; — 
o fruits. Ch s ever, but hrami De la Reine, a fine large delicate rose-co oured |w mich will occupy only a single volume, are we believe 
I doubt if we shall have any Plums near London. "€ of wem nt form and slightly cupped; Rhodo-| nearly re ady. These will form a beautiful set of Mas- 
“ley Hibberd, Stoke Newing! n jasminiflorum ; ce silaifolia and hetero ti fi t 
Veitch’s Early White Bro ecoli.—I feel sure that | mo mph, 22 e A elegant Fern- leaved plants, 
when this 8 variety sh cue p become m more Arauca a glauca, &. Mr. Turner had awell- —— —— Lists REC omas Barnes (Dhne- 
ly kn its merits cann tio of 12 Auriculas, among which was S Stowmarket f Delon sap re , and various 
ourite. Its an ason is — a “early spring. ‘King called 1 Imperator, a green-edged — of dist. —— ut plants. Tte "i ‘collection of really 
For the last two years I have grown this, t Messrs. E. G. Henderso eived ‘an useful uini Six of Dahlias appear to be new 
others of pales Msg excellence, and in my opinion award for t three standard Azalea indica ; N Mr Turner S. Sims's C ony) "Catalogue of Stove, -Green- 
it is unequalled by any of them, certainly not surpasse ed. for Seedling Cineraria Brilliant, a free-Hloom i e, and rom n very small 1 
It produces fine db compact heads, quality, r its ri ich dark pple- | Mr. Sims eat — of — advanced to the dignity 
flavour. If sown the last week in March it is fit to | crimson flower heads ; also for the following — Se ing of a volume, 62 pages being occupied by: descriptive 
the first week in Janu and will iyiyi in-use | Cineraria Duchess of Sutherland, ‘a large bold variety, account of what he now has to offer. It is prefaced 
. I. E. t i ow Bass 
ary, & y : 
icklow. in the very useful ultivation.— 
ases.—I shall, with many others, feel upper; for $ eedling Cineraria Highland Mary, pure Brown's (Sudbury) Spring Catalogue No. 5. This as 
1to Mr Hibberd for information respecting these: ^c A florets, purple disk; for Seedling Camellia |a list of Achimenes, Gloxinias, half-hardy and hardy 
where best to be procured ; 2d, cost and expense in | Elea a fine bold een, smoot petalled, ‘bright pipet plants, hardy — Roses in pots, Ke. 
wing; 3d, how they are managed. Any advice on rose-coloured € and 12 Hy acinths, mt ot ore common things we remark such rat 
points will much oblige 4 Constant Subscriber, | show’ ariety ba well grow Mr. | as Arum crinitum, Calliprora tutes, Gloriosa Planti, and 
. Melntoch furnished a Miel of Tulips in 
Gall a ons Quercus-petioli.— —— —.— as Considerable variety of form and colour. To Messrs. phai Cy clamen — macrophyllum, whatever that 
yet been co; ar. yt on — 1 s Paul a prize was given for s i of Madame | may be. 
it is desirable "to record its — inthe Cambridge William, a Tea-scen pas — yellow D ET AU ᷑— 
ical Garden ine: aul mm of 1858. pes —.— — — — —— — shown in Garden t 
N young Oak gil ues eight e * cellent con — ing of the Horticultural THE Grove, ROEHAMP L 
d been looking r | Society, i inst. —— where it was greatly STEPHENS, ES. — The jos e range of forcing- 
an former mer years it ot likely t dat there can have admired. Mr. Bragg had a stand of Pansies, as had also houses, for sape this eum is sede ts A eing now in 
qme of it in the. "ec before 1858. As this is | Mr. James of Isleworth, and peer A.H fi of thei miner tog 
country o vi Oaks it will probably do very litte dish of their new Australian ‘Cress From Messrs. nit 2 2m erus rem — 0 ma’ be unin- 
— here. C. C. N Smith Saft Dulw: ich came. Seedling ‘Cineraria Lord esting. 
Andromeda poriolie — brio a slip of a plant Clyde, a dwarf variety, with bold — ud er Cucumbers, which are ga on trellises, axe 
»- 3 first dis wech didus cupped dores of a deep purple crimson. ‘Cineraria |. grown Tomatoes and Figs. Both are covered with 
xp It is it ei t aste s E f Perfection from Messrs. Smith, “previously fruit, which will be ripe in May. Bane, pots they 
hardy | rub. very d character allowed to root into the bed on which they are 
ly in vey eran int culture nid tt named Hilax, shown by Mr. Holland of Houns- placed; when therefore they appear to be grow- 
AS for its K low. In to the foregoing, Messrs. Milne ing over -luxuriantly, their progress is readily 
specimen, | Arnott and Co., of Vauxhall, had A aan Duchess of checked by lifting up the pots and P 
ellington, a à e; Mr. Turner protrude j The 
» 
m if possible. kind with a baa 
cursion to the e I dis- Camellia Lady Mary ` ein pi 
my dg and et with several | with a 3 to be blotched, a cupped variety but This induces them to form Knit instead iof 1 
bers ebe her and there, except one patch of | with ragged ls as shown; and -— W. Ivery of thus a crop is ob 
n flower, and beautifully they Peck, Seedling Azalea Queen Victoria, a free-| A second supply of fruit g^ also * from the same 
blocked. That it is a ro of this locality is certain, | € wering kind, white m with pu angle. Some other | plants in one season by th e moe n In the 
d it 8 qm olia, ? 8 T. is it | seedling Cinera: rias, € renes &c. of|Peach } ops, the he cath of = 
new eing indigenou: ritai i hael inferior uality were exhibite t sti T ti: Pi f 
Westcott, Wells. |'Yhe plant in question is Andromeda MO. ———— : I ü ed nin poo 45 - 
“polifolia. 
n of Tre ee — Allow me to call atten- 
tion to che "followi ing:—“ The system of stripping the 
bark off the trunks of trees, for sx purpose of destroy- 
rg 
th aS 
m 
Notices of Books. Es of which, especially t those of Barbarossa, prom: 
- 
— 
8 
Br teirte Lisa Flower. 5, Parts 2 to 8 (S by) This | | been P aetised here with success — the case of pot Vines 
fi WO: — i 
hy 
ing as now been gene ow advanced s that f s. This was 
— s en umber in in the Champs Elysées dread opin of its value than when the first dec done last year, and this season mem are bearing fi from 
Bib fact, 1 d y of a | appeared m^ p. 543, 1858). It is an account of our h Vine. 
ilt em M “communicated to the Imperial wild flowers illustrated by miniature 3 dcin trees, w hich had got into in health through h having 
Horticul seal Saclay i by 55 Robert. It appears that or Lupe at the option of the purchaser. ‘The |! I 
oiy without epriv whole of their bark, not | figures are reduced A all possible skill from the old | of the Vines in a bed of ! The recensere 
N pon injury, but even with plates of English Botany, and to such an extent that| with a view to improve the i vi to prune in their 
À each plate parece d 20 different species, "These ds, then — shake a’ all soil from their roots, 
i m of . Elms, for example, which species being arranged 1 to natural affinities, | which were washed fee y clean, a 
15 Mire iiid | in di mam "more an one or | the vua cu m" young botanist capital means of remove orari ing that appeared a 2 
ioi eee, t ^ ares aot ua ^ been fo ‘ound | comparing one thing with another. It is announced — trees were — retubbed ì — h soil, ; 
^ E thes 2 5 stripped af their bark. that the Eie pod complete will contain 80 plate the conditions just and — — . are 
N aes m ed — uk, M as ecc Birch and | and thus will represent 1600 different species. What bero co vigorously, and will evidently soon make 
s pont "d it ds sufficient f 2 o * ain a similar would not the writer of this have given when a boy for | hez ads, , The Vines which o them have 
Ei td b 3 y ias o make longi- | such a charming volume of natural history ! nis y they 928 MN armor 
Ert AF Agent are a Wind of | hoec dis 3G volumes B what ing of ‘30 bunches to cach Vine. in che 
8 S ui b dabo th this subject in the present instance is is collected into one volume | the Grapes wi ripe in May. n 
out Jum, el s siha ades A petty only. e have seen no abridgment so 2 Strawberries are cultivated largely here, 
6 Uy wel as this, e Calwer's wonderful . of | rummond, the gardener, treats them ev 
a a 
p if correct, promises most valuable results. fs br om ught t j| i5 er Dm ag — 
- M., Court Lodge, Lamberhurst. fi ious C bed of dung 
F ( fe. ini wman, Scho. Squar A E HR The el house, and when it 
Societies. X ie s Wie treatise is not Der to point out to the warmth the pl 
: oil colours and water colours 9 set 
aae ee employed in art, but also to show how 
ES domine, REGENT’S April 6,—The poner pictures are 
: v EI. three spring ca hibitions took 1 ion that p togreph are 
— edis me aye E a ux 4 pes inaccurate; wrinkles become farro 
Ezam ndsome Madeira Musschia Wol- action of “the one Cyclopæan e 
not however yet in . Hen- es; A i 
shanties ri 
» and table, a neat sbrub, with xcept skilful touching 
2 ie nent Auenba himalaica, a — XE. 
