SzrrEwsER 10, 1859.) THE 
DEATH OF E age — REY. 
melanch 
GARDENERS' NIU AND AGRICU 
rey | left to the mercy of the wea ather—the 
LTURA L 2 
PU - 
E $ 2 l'a | Marc 
ntil the middle - i we : 
get a liberal. supply of ' guano water; i 
bed ea early en agh 
continue to 2 A 
plants 4 
y. It consisted of 
wae ot fruit, out T the delet — shot up a long 
ass t ube filled w rith cut flowers nicely put me 
ery p etty. Exhibitions of this kin 
the 
Regs 
dese —— emen 
Of c collections of 8 dishes 5 bee t was contributed b 
Mr. Dawson, gr. to It contained two 
sort grown 
the wee House, Ina TI short time the rA te di 
n the plants as if by magic. Iam sorry I did 
of the quantity eut, bnt. it would 
sation n. The physio- 
ry t Course of 2 and 
tructure now 
Royal 
the laboure 
r 
very ms es e Apples, Grapes, Pea 
reely inferior 2 
lack : — White 
and Figs. 
that jus just van gre collection from Mr. Bailey 
qu bua it Hee of Black Hamburgh G 
bunches of which weighed 81bs, White M 
— Grapes, a Queen 
Noblesse "Peaches 
1 Me 
ve been thought incredible as 
rtr jaa buc a e — they were gi ven to 
rs by the half c I 
counted ov [eet ** plants at one Eid e and 
ssh. ost of them v straight fruit averaging from 8 to 12 
nches i in len Au ngust the 
sara 
and ge 
weather ig p» lon, Williams's B 
1 1 z, A 
eat! 
n 
Met — trn to those 
to think ex such subjects, 
fe endeared friends — the . 
ess of his manners and the genuine —— of his 
nature; while to his Rate his lon loss is irreparable, 
essor Henfi ellow of the Pe and Lin- 
ember of the Council of the Horti- 
r of Botany in Kin ng's Co ‘ollege, 
and Examiner i in Natural Science to the Royal 
Military Academy and t| — Societ Arts, He died 
in the 39th year of his 
BELGIAN — — 
No. pomu — of Baro 
ve Eu — 
or foreign; w d 
e»Man de Len- 
* — amateur 
i ind bear spontaneously | 
thriv 
ns, side by sido — the most beau 
Dm the productions 
with the truths ot 
— | 
I have not grown 
_ They die off vni when 
J 
ford Highworth W. ilts, contained 
good —— Ridge. 8 
ears, Cayenne nd Apple, 
, Bro u Tu rke 
ccessfully for s several y 
ae in the Vines Thorp K 
Tom Thumb Nasturtium, Bein 
ensingto: d Royal 
George ei Pitm range Nectarine, and 
Williams’s a Chrétien Pear. In gr. 
to J. J. Blan p 3 Reading, also 
were Royal 
exhibition, in wh oya 
Black Hambargh G 
e raiser of this 
uscadine and 
ines Cocoa-nut Melon, mot 
ton Peach and Elrage orello Cherries, Cor 
3 Dee Plum, and White Do Pear, 
y Pine Apples fine fruit = from Mr. Dawson, gr, 
| to Earl | Cowper, r, and Mr. Bai loy, ; the latter 
e maica, Me ess Page 
The ee QUA came from Mr. "Rattray, gr. to J. Back, 
ge re ^w A yo 4 Ibs. 10 ozs. The next in 
m Mr. Solomon's garden at 
EM 
Of ions in baskets of 12 Ibs. each, the best was 
contributed aus Mr. Solomon, and cons msisted —. Bu 
1, and M 
Messrs, Kay, ny Harrison, and Jackson — ex. 
ts hibited * f Black caos c Muscats 
lass of ne best 
— Larpenta. B end b: di % knew In the class o 2 dui 1es of Black were 
shape, and substa the good 
xd ein ＋ blooms well up above the foliage. 
n I plot of Cattell’s Dwarf Scarlet near m 
in Mrd - 
— 
weighi g5 Ibs. 
0, 
mously in favour of — 
ouse Far 
e 
e seen the two varieties growing side Z side * 
wr D I utl — mom * 
each, and can t Tom Them is 
to Cat ttell's. P. Barr, 
Asiatic, 
Africa 
sent by Mr. Hill, gr. to R. Sneyd, E consisted 
1 some of your readers whe e M . of Blac "Prince and Black IX beautiful 
— 
ings o 
r, Permit me also to inquire whether or not "E 
ould b the former. "The next best 
ed, um — —— well ? e especia ally he former. The next bes 
from rd and 
of it be s 
came 
good bunches also came from 
| [It will not do for T ont, in our opi 
m- 
Mess 
15 
n ay & £ 
se f bation! hite Grapes a first prize was awarded to Mr. 
Tor r W 
Drewitt gr. at Denbies, near Dorking, for ad- 
| ble bun chesof Vac me Halt Muscat. They indicated 
— vigour * no ev idence of bad setting 
| and each "m 
circum fer 
t in length, ‘They were, we understand, from Vines 
pis wn on a arte border heated with h ot: water 
pi. S.—A meeting of the Floral pipes. Bos 
Scolytus in Elm —Does the 
this vermin, and udi it bed 
lous locality ? C. R., Hampstead. 
Ar ern 1 
Societies. 
HORTICULTURAL 
rare 
—À Marattia, in the 
—— fronds 
above the smaller plants, which thus expand their 
flowers beneath the shadow that € above them 
rm hich inhabit hot regions and. Xs 
plante which inbabit ot regions and love 
n and a dam osphere. pue there — e mone | yu 
tages pome a n boxes w which des ——— 
esore 
. The — 
vith ae showy and beaut 
The | some 
sted chie y of Dahlias, most Grape fro A Mr. Prost, of — Hall. “The latter had 
her colum — o beautiful uscat of Alexand ir. 
Sep 
Committee of this ‘Society. took place this day. 
subjects of e xbibic tio efl 
2 org: 3 
hen Mr Wheeler, of Waraluster, NG 
mended us the Mt of double Bonered Vecietios wate sii pes = 
had come under the notice of the co aged badly coloured. 
cam 
e | Snow, gr. to Earl de 3 at Wrest E Park, and weighed 
4jlbs. Mr. Summers, gr. . Mon ngredien, = 
am Mn Ni. 
y Mr. Veitch js the best G 
e 
ificent eng 
x3 ms con- 
The 
n cd 
f York, 
variety of | Cattleya Sehilleriana. The sepals and petai Han roduced some 
- und colour, richly spotted and barred mens oei e i Grapes ve failed to dispel al 
The — m is purple, fringed cernin e great — cd of this 
- [s Bon ME. A. lei vt to Lard herons 
| buneh el 32 lbs., sud. the three DADA V igh 
9 Ibs. r bunches were shown by Mr. Es. of 
eet 
E 
rne. 
„„ CRYSTAL PALACE HORTICULTURAL EXHIBITIÓN.— 
fruits and vegetables 
n ids, an 
range and taii ner 
a of the E 
g 
1 
space of 12 yard in 
and od 
. — real others; but not so good as those just 
oned. This Grape may 1 now be ex 
et 
ctoa 
— 
last, an 
T A Vi ei Hat! 
lec- eaches and Nectarines were 4. in i abundance 
re | but for the most part small in size. 1 best in the 
cla: ass of 4 dishes came pr Mr. Hazell, of Denmark 
and p : 
tifal, ‘and of Fuchsias md Japan" Lilies there were "e a ‘tt, 
e ba pa 
Apples were scarce, but " 
"x rner, E eath 
s ped ens er Bell egarde and Grosse Mignonne 
uu See "Apples, and Pear 1 
| Grapes, "Ped — es and 8 Hátive and Murray Nectarines. 
r.t ha 
Pea 
re numero is part s the deni Mr. Little, A. Darby, M of SI Late 
th i | Gal 
co . s are red ced num- | was the most attractive, we wil begin wit 
bers of rare Orchids, now alternating with Tillandsias eee of fruit were tolerably aro BÉ The a 
and Ferns, Caladi pecies of Pot thos e from Mr. Frost, gr. to E. L. Betts, Esq. and | 
3 most especially was in every ftl h | Viol 
remarkable Cattleya and to- awarded it. It semi of a Queen Pine Apple 
glossum — , Peseatorei, and grande; e ecd Black Hamburgh and Muscat Grapes, Ick- | most 
— xc hii, Saccolabium vio nd worth Im and Coe’s Golden Dro —.— ums b e Nectari rat z 
— crispa and marginata; Huntleya | Kin i~ — m; orello Cherri Peaches. Da E Needs 
meleagri temanni, ium Laneeanum | rington Peache;, Elruge Nec es, and Wiliams lon well in this class. - d We 5 $ó rag 
and many —.— triking species. Two beautiful Heli- | pe tien Peat. The next dot | 8 id of merit came | and e ai Noble d r gr Necks: 
conias and a R Jonghii, ME high, furnished from Mr. P. to W. Leaf, Esq. Streatham. It Mau M oblesse Peaches a a Se 
—— yin. — he — be deu — a RA an Diskette M o card Ca: e | rines. —€— cramps it whey ruota wick Fig came from 
le, Green olden Perfection and 
mental ieee a beautiful an make of this ‘places a ae M lon, Harfoytón hes, and El Mr. iat 2 * d Me o 2 ura L. Terra 7d 4 Broome 
paradise. From the Journal d Horticulture. es, Muscat and Black Hamburgh Grapes, — dem T. Go pA of Figs. 
Brown’ Tech mx . e F 
Home Cor 'espondenc vs — and M a- Qnee Pin © Apple, T ine ah aye Beleride, Soom, an 
ss UL Met — Ne cu growin g is Improved Green net y cust, Williams's Bon Leslie; otic a nis , 
d tion rh pe d "s vay T woda ellitiph ie e — Figs, } TIRE ur. ya sn pump a from “the neighbourhood of 
a system -— vend Y^ with ve —.— e Noblesse Peaches, and Pi š 
cat: esults. I start gins three-light frame on a dung — — , Gaia Another collection arranged fi on | ntargate They consisted of Magnum Bonum, "— 
