ND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
[Suny 2, 1859, 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE A} 
t the Marrows) and pretty g eal of light, but not th 
1. 1 Lech AC Mc: of Pe onville. | sun. W “alg the first two lea aves are ? — ray: 
: oncurred i "^ ms opinion of others, imi im E we a frame, gradually giving 
it i tl hybrid, b robably a variety en them y these means, = discard ar h 
that it is apparen T TN t pro n Š à 
A: and 
Company consented to 
rour * and ui 
materials, and as: 
“ie es d last these . — 
rk of inspection 
from Kew, the Hon. East India 
«oliections "being — under 
the Hon 
»de fray common I Lentil, 
a : grow in erhaps my pl . 
d | Plante, that i betw icm g pe np y pian nf be of 
til, ith a statin that it is a hyb "ei between | others. Tentor W. Buller, Strete 
Pare: tua iad -— as bee, guar ted by June 22. : 
: wore 70 
during Government ‘mis : France, I believe. The sample I recet oíato Disease.—A report week] 
o borders ET wes ing 5 sk] | 4. perde the RUM information led ae at once S | respecting the iter ess of this diii E zT Pape 
8 awings, a à f 
1 r Hel 1 5 — en and consider it identical with the Provence Lentil (Ervum |a able in different parts of the e country, m; may be oben. i 
The whole are still regarded as | — which I have grown a sold un hat if it E accompanied by statements of Serviceable | 
epartment of - Government of India, me fi 30 yea and of which I forwarded | planting and mode of culture. Do you not 
imate desti e roductive | In this neighbourhood I hear 
Nor are nefits of this establishment at all restricted to bon a sample at the time. It is a voy 2 E lea C pensonn. ^ thet the han] 
the authors, more or less eminent, who by i je aid have carried | | forage plant, yielding | e e of stalks an igns of decay, Bot begins 
out the above-mentioned works ; they are also educational, in either in a green der 19th of February and 4th of March 1 planted 
a very important degree. PY cio for EE a sina, and-wuiteblo ay any sort Of fl Hov ver, I breadth of Prince egents, of a sort 
F i " ation, are i J B E DE 
ey nee and seat inthe duties connected with | doubt the value of its seeds for culinary purposes, shire as Golden Reeds, and of Ash-leaf 
it, we train them for more lucrative positions; and a respec um Pe which hane the bitter taste e A clita. I do not know | few of the former were damaged by the ja 
able list could be offered of individuals, BOW ANE aeg fear opr of it the e Ervum prod is correct, bu nr it is by not seriously, and their growth à 
ic: perinte' nts | a : 
olomial 7 33 the Indian Presi- P no means a variety o CM cia sativa, as ‘suppo osed by and gradual, evidencing a robust Tibit 
-dencies), who have gone from Kew. The ill-health of the late | several authorities. ite different in form of the | and strength of the haulm, which is mot 
able Curator, Mr. Alexander Smith, has deprived the Museum — m habit of the — from tliat 8 alth Pm | too high, but short and stout. No ; 
‘of his valuable services; but suitable training has enabled Mr. f We believe at the time of planti 
-Jackson, nee. commended by the President of the * e some other species of Vicia. [ p ; 
nnæan Soci: pp Song cs aam suecessor. Mr. Oliver b bosa, as was lately sta al Along with strong; and I had prepared it by 
y 
Li : ted. ; p 
es Black, pei n the Herbarium and Library, are rende Edo sample of seed sent you of the above I|Parkes's steel fork two spits deep. I 
d icd n service by "their industry, tact, and ae . haita ubmitted to you a parcel of Beans, known supposed that this mode of 
n culture 
Japan A Oain ^t TB palante c TONY quintum 918 this 2 y od the name of  Lareh|ensured a diminution of the evil; but boy 
ifia — e to the Library must not pass unnoticed ; it E Egg Run Bea old-fashioned sort almost last week the dise ease a ppeared 1. 
is the very extensive and 3 cosa collection of Botanical | ont of Mis acer being ak in quality l 4] 
rints and Dr: mainly presented by pesa th „und kinds. I consider it identical with the Ney Zealand | all the sorts, which lie av fe 
ce to 
Runner Bean, of which I received one dozen seeds for ^ the distance of 22 i pis d 4 S 
: aw: | 3s. p ost. I have some very handsome new annuals, remarked yesterday in 450 ee 
wade i Renkin n V o| &c., from name of which I would take the liberty to peonliarity i in the aspect of m [s this season, 
& r^ TE di Si 22365 the pua of Mon day) | | send you pla nt ts i n flowe ud your opinion, if you will |^ | Nash, dis ant two miles, a lot f Po tatoes entirely fm 
erta 
beantiful orange- coloured large flowered | M dear as|on Saturday to be affected; several bad 
m free vocem ts er Mer asting as S. procumbens, but much | taken up in a bunch of tubers which were quite 
an drawings, prt PE | more show xtremely ne ong (Enothera with beauti-| and the haulm of which, quite devoid of spot or miller 
Garden Report, as presented by Miss e mai | fal l flowers; a very free blooming only showed tokens of maturity. I fear that ar 
5th, $r considerable series of coloured drawings made a „ Lopi 1ospermum ; of garden hybrids a brilliant carmine | that has been said and written on es er eci 2 * 
<= conta striped variety of Verbena Maouetti (Imperatrice 3 prt as wellas 
Elizabeth), a striking improvement on the old variety ; the dark as at the first on beesik of the ‘ial 
a beautifully variegated variety of Coba scandens, &c. J. S. Temp "4 T'hornborough, 
e c W. Haage, Erfurt. We first observed it last Monday in 
Lightning-struck Oak (see p. 54),—I suggest | Chiswick, and it is spreading there. 
and Picotees. 
] n nu 7 that “L, W. G.“ will do well to let 25 Bak remain| Sardinian Carnations 
ird ly small ex pense to 2 ya entirely under the fostering | care of f old Dam me Nature of a correspondence i in your Paper relative to S 
or — — 8 e To = a few months, I £t s petals tal 
I may m 
go — on the eun perceive that the TUE NE at te place where the | the laterals of numer i al seedlings. which. 
i 1. 8 i as begun to mens mew, he may | raised this — e t 
— e . bern god ipar of ulti neem If on the con- | which we feel mu 
North A especially on the east side of the Rocky | trar such a sign is p me gd "he "hide conclude | Macs md n con 
Moun ntains. (W helle under the auspices of the Secretary of that a tr ree is in a very dr. state, and a — | on — — inst. PA 
2. Pr. ihe Colonies) in Dr. Livingston pedition to the | long, T will be as dead as Julius Cæsar himself. e by eged. ‘The ma hi = 
Zambesi, and for making researches 7 8 5 the interior of | the “a tearing of the bark," ris portion of it ua EEA red and tl the 5 gui wie ene Ae Ded ade as 
— . me rn Africa, quite a terra incognita to us. (Lords of | been loo; osened by by the stroke, even in the slightest colour at once shows the car jn eisai 
8. Mr. Milne, botanist and collector in H.M.S. Herald, it's a; present e selection of ier E: . most i 
"Captain Denham, commander, or survey of tho Fiji and i pe it would be only loss of time in| most —— in shape and with colon hot 
other scarcely known islands in the South Pacific Ocean. | L. W. G.” to apply a “plastering over the parts.” A In justice to Sardinian growers we have ume 
er of ue Adis t mall potion oniy of, the aly | lator i V . 
., 10 1 * 3 
ded, . Milne has returned with his colle i All it can ever do is to prevent the rain from pene-| Cov M Market. "TThe specimens SU. 
espond with 
p : / p 
4. Dr. Lyall, R. N., botanist to the very important expe- | trating, and at last pA. rot in the tree. Should the | us ke very handsome, and quite corres 
J e bou itis] er, 
uppl 0 regar umns to 
— . — seretary of State for are 5 had an ornamental been led to ire hah the miasma arising 
ms ral Buttle, assistant N to pr all (Under Oak 80 fatale Aae in a ne niin that "t died | eae o vegetation in the ; 
ority. outright both in root and branch. Had W. all my family’s constant, attacks of ague, ^ v. 
jn. peers pi Mons 175 au um tee 1 here I could show bim divers trees which have been | gites it a great favour ll us from j 
China, &c. n have arrived from AT imd | vr riven by the M s TM but which are now Parkin will be rye . to tell us 
ti 
is abont to proceed LÀ Re sonst of in tha i3 jn. to them, and although I do ge consider ld, native or Se int this 
x g vessel, uni light of a tree cen worthy of a diploma, qe I} attack once in six ear 
des that what with my own simple nostrum and the — le- Hope, E: in 
Vota is ating powers of old Dame Nature together, all m my Monst vus Cardamine. —1 we n 
: teen the third, iit or 2 — " injured tres, either by lightning or by tempests, are | fusion, i pich i ; t 
per uh 8 vessel m mend a comfortable state of convalescence. I must a variety of Cardamine pratensis M. yous 
iue e, both 4 [^ii es strict justi E be described in 
d most success- 
; nnd the 
— the merit that may be due. N last week. It is thus otic 
Waterton, Walton Ball, = 28.— During these p. 54:—“A double variety 15 ? 
few years several 3 s on this estate having | which is remarkably pro 
de ois by lightni Subsequently eut co. new plants where they come 
yed [e 155 ve Sie tee = examining E extent of ground, and the flowers, as * 
dmiral m ; e h ey d sustained, although | stalked flower-bud from their 
uti prt e ae T ion of South Ie ot y way of not equal externally that di cen Strawberry.—1 
be det cun der, the ps es, ‘This er de * Lon res — ondent as carte ager to his tree, 5 5 ead Rod afta iv a very high 
taken, w holly a — * own Lei aud os oug! 8 whe n they were cut up, that the wood was rent asks if others cannot say e I 
5 iR 12 ^ et lo say 
CO EDU D - 1 pe than he ha done, r ira, 
iv 5 yeller h us En Papi nech re ia Equa dor E ow short tme d I Am ve therefore ite imer that if your | dish of it to the Roading ux kS: 
„ ree ua ctions may be ted. 3 
{The report concludes with alist 1 e contzibutars | injured tree, E» will icis it si omui Ne ic I have Po miram sient Bodety 7. 
£o the Gardens, Museum, and. Herbarium. deser: ibed. H, Petrie, E. dud, ie ered to be very "inferior 
— cement ea s just 
in prir an 
a Ho me Correspondenc * in your Paper as — the best means sion strong. ee v — — is m ns i14 
The entil.—In consequen uou — an . success " n 
to the so-called Pea Lentil in a [ais number of * my grea ming sci E te to — ^" s i 9 Slough = ^ j 
m 2 id n to communicate to Tn plan, e pots y out 4 inches bare iol many | kind last antumn from — mod s 
now about i our 3 upon it in sherds i th b ide of Re? 
January last induced me to write to Dr. Rauch, re- | very iin he bottom bu sA 2 pio ho of ag ofthe — rt n di . Blac Black Pri me 
1 per ee for further particulars «nd. a sample of it, eri sand in equal SM a ies sow the seeds 1 inch deep. soil Aneel o cay, but but vi 
Eg. affair rested | Let the earth be pretty moist at first, but never water I planted this new w and, said to 35 7 
"ah Place the in an to test its meri 
pe his re E po 
e party in Fr ejl not very m oist stove; and to kee} he earth flavour. — 
hr E under "that see hee sla each pot every morning for —— two ee with it Ser in er 
tit is a hybril be- | three hours in a saucer of water, They should have a size, and in flavour not cu we 
