790 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND EI GAZETTE. oem = 
an Would your correspondents who large, ‘The following are the weights of bwo or three hig aL E pes pom b. 
poses 5 Walingtonis say if — T "y 10 o ; Napo poleon, do on; a —— er em ‘lean ^ and me a m 
3 hd gt The Duche r. d'Angoulém as gat m vall, u icke s 5 wie EX x 
been noticed in their growth during e on the Quince e stock trained — a dos w € ets issue o the public mb 
J. Mi Gard fo R. E. Thom 6. The Na 8 Fe si 
£4} 
ng re — bas 
= - st egeo r? 
n, Esq. Ken- 
oon, Gardene i 
field Hall, near oor — abe In the report of the zi dr fee à is large, and for some yes r Dad E Narven os — deine 
Caselas iuge rape in e set ol, [mi ony hern Dat rie mos of which | patane e scienee, to give an eae ond oma 
roceedi i l c 
5. 778.1 fs stated that this Grape seldom or never | were — 5 ed Wwe ae which h keen gere es tion is devoted, is and means, — rn t nat — 
b fie à bricks — them; this | at all ti imes occupied the _metaphysi — 2 —— 
any of whic h Various ways, mi i 
p. 77 ^ 
: k t from too m at. ; M th 
— seat me; Ia — m crac cking to a were reg hl m: ier imp 
p artic ularly as > 
of drought. The same cause produces the same effect equal to the onie Mr owe —* “ithe ‘weight af this e to himself . f 8 mi 0 25 
ati mean 
on on other fruits, as "Greengages, s and Gooseberr - "et UT. T in eu was surprising. The —.— ee I know, — the — * 
the Grape are | of whi ch we e have any — weighed 21} 0 and w uman knowledge Hence, — 
both to the ir en, to dr The aviest ( f Chaumontel was — science; and all special Knowledge, if b ie : 
om Te -— t s D po ortola] warmth Greater weights FAE Tapa in its separate distinctiveness fro, a 
us eie ; rought 
e ht e csse I had a Chasselas Musqué in | then =k have 0 ye in $ lation 10 e 
a Vinery without heat. Its roots unfo rtunately w f Large uem —On Tuesday September 27, " sn for science—t that sto say, for the 8 
outsi e, and Ipl 
t eof my fields a& Loughton, 
hoards ove « the Dee irae A alit. ia fen | me a Mus OM ai in € in diameter, of venum circular are necessary “for ‘the ver ed of any l 
> m 1 J : J to dissect andy 
the Vine, and planted another inside the 2 y 
tort tl od e Vine Na Pr seen a single split Grape, | it “weighed 11b.10 oz. A similar one weighing 1 lb. | into its ser gran parts the object tobii 
as the roots are ye tient dry, but from the atmospheric | 5 o cut from the same eld a few days Rui. and to render an accurate account to 
moisture, which I am unable to control, the berries, v^ 10905 the nid were found excellent. John Hill, 3, nature and qualities of these parts by 
after rip eolour, often rot | — 17] the second, ompose 
know ledge, is scienti c knowledge. 
obs 
t-| Moss r cdit one of t arly Numbers in|stood parts n — mon in our consciousness, 
i i from Prof. answering to e obj of our in 
IK. S. ears’ experience in the growth of other your Vol. f 1841, page 36, kaian is a letter g 
Es 27 Vinery has led a to form an Hen slow, recomme ending theu se of sul Iphat ate of copper The la bou rs of the man of science are a 
f ing. I believe it v 
ri fn reducti ft the same volume, it is 1 oe for r preventing the | take. He edi. does what poi! little child inim 
its fi must do 
At pa t I have observed, th of Moss on soft sandstone. . — any on 
the Fro have — ripenisg, if € ift a E veers i to the | what proportions of water should e added to the of its existence; and yet heaims at the ved 
north With rain, they shank imme ust saturated solution of the mere An Original | m mation to divine € mes If, then, there 
suppose that the footstalks a are — € sensitive | Subscriber, Tonbridge Wells. difference betwee ork of the e man of 
during the ripening period, and the weaker the vitalit lity that of the =, child, what —— the . 
of the plant, the less is it able to resist delet eri Societt tinet io on? " 0 
influences. Hence, if a Hambur; gh or other hardy Socket etiez, 1 |Thechild observes what 
rape ed in an il dr r- neon: — forms v won. of it; the seal 
wise unhealthy border, the plant will be liable to| HORTICULTURAL : Sept. 22 2.—At a meeting of the ical man speci 
ffer from a reduction of ran rature — it could, | Floral Committee which was held on this occasion 
withstood. | se i 
BE 
ve 
I find that bunches of F. hinned | Messrs. Low, of Clapton. Among these, Gonatanthus, Sci 
are more liable to shank, da ably from cae of the — — —— — was Reena for its strikingly ws 
ute afforded by the berries. G. S. dsome bronzy-tinted leave! " and its dw: 2 - h r ob . eyes 
s.—Some months ago | . — growth. n species of Sphærostema, mb- | by — nor by an external cause, such 
ion in your paper as to the impossi- | ing plant witb fine grey mottled leaves, was do: very | mere connection with work to 
Wut; of drm Mushrooms on Loudon's plan of|ha bitte: Myrsine picta had —: serrated 
inoculating lawns with spawn. If done — as leaves, purplish, — central rib. These were gen 
directs i ways failed wit x i por ons from Bor 
At 
square i and a few inches of the soil veined Ange mils — — uei from A9 quite To arrange and 
removed, and old manure rammed down i in its place, | n new, was em exh ve by the who had, 
then the spawn put in pai ates. nd | ng were 
with the turf will, in ordinary sea: produ babl "Along | brought into y separat ! 
But I cannot recommend the plan o on a well- kept fan with these ame roup of dwarf. hybrid Siento and combining those elements in which we ha 
| Bes nias, jio "which the ser blood of B. enabled to — i 
afterw G. S. waitesii had been infused with d effect; Almighty has implant 
an Evergreens. —I can bear practical | of debe the varieties called Lowii, oti; and Zebra, all to — — - the boundlessness o 
timony to Mr. Groom’s statement respecting trans- | smaller growing than the now abundant varieties of with t ws which govern — mind and 
planting evergreens in summer. In the middle of last Rex, were particularly beautiful. Messrs. Parker & e — ion of science then ero cet 
uly aks fri of Holloway, also 
: ; s fro t 
4to 7 feet in height; these trees had grown without | Begonias, among which — was the most € — separate groups of subje 
ost king. Several | siderati i i 
g in v ; bei fferent and 
the young shoots drooped for a day or two, but with | seedling Dahlias were exhibited, but the only 2 The tendency to crea 
twice sprinkling and four times watering they got Boyce, shown Jy Mr. G. Raw- apparent in our present age, 
upright, and every plant su „ -— ^. dai lings, which had been Mee p ne of the early —.— — SO ra i e 
that this is one of the worst trees to mov d I|meetings of the season at, sturdy, horse- | in our days ; for the a 
believe that if — r had been performed at the ure cerise-scarlet ge een was shown pr at distinct arde n of] owledge enables 
usual time, scarc s r. Kinghorn, of Sheen Nursery, Richmond. he newly gained points of sight, to 
ions into which they divi 
i k im 
austriaca, la: large owes | in the latter end of p une. "These BRITISH ASSOCIATION AT ABERDEEN.—[ We condense | secutiveness and wi 7 
succeed: better — — * I ever had planted before, the following scraps of information likely to interest gaining new centres of light, from whi 
either in the autum the spring, mete some | our readers from the fulland admirable report in the | researches, and new and powerful means 
died, died, principally through t there not being any water to wm of the At heneum m.] ever-inereasing treasures, science 
with. om giving the peng a ARRANGEMENT. to the limits of its range, although 
- tial in nursery next sw int of de 
thi 
Dents mer. | on Wednesday September 2 at . — wee the | and further from its M 
rh Pos Hereford. immediate auspices of the inl quc whose | God's world is infinite; & 
Ast id Fish i shoot ba ely “on Qa footing rendered sti ^ pied the evening, a ose presence was | universe, whose confines 
e on the fo! lowin | sti i i i us no 
Points NS * basin. huldige abot T g | render ill more Agen Xm an im invitation of the our — — — ‘tars E d of hem 
LX an exposed si station con Pan eni — — the week. The old Scottish loyalty broke ont — — -— worlds revealed to 
hae t , gst counties be tee Aberdeenshire Kincardin —— telescope, ti 
to | Two thousand tickets w by Toes i to us in a 
E : arate moak in the Nae E Re worlds of life an 
rian deen QE eect On anle of asso remains of such as hav 
tan they es ter? Or if taken ye ite pega um Sg aa old ta uainted 
can they be kep scriber, Maidstone. 
The Acherontia Atropos, or Death's Head Moth. Weit Water Pot ibaa x cines — |merey expres i T the w 
This season has produced in this locality many speci-| were generally thrown "d to th san Dh s Rooms | bod: will bring 
mens of this very interesting insect, both in the la arva | Non- resident member £ the a d s visitors. — e 
€ pupa state, many of which are now forming th e e Nailin os t, wl ill 
stage of metamorphosis, the imago The place | without the f: d tl ] 
9. f A Th 
sought for them was a Potato field, havin iousl dm nda ion. e committees of | all 
: he iW there g ples d — Atheneum News s — of the News Rooms, 
v 
ect inse The ense act in their natural | t mes ens all members of | thi i 
history is a a faint — 9 dier make like unto a young | — UR eed ——— — ei ae — 
e 
mouse, if interfered with by oid them. The — their tickets, such as The Baldi of Historical — the — — 
T. F., near Newbury, &. p* — — ; 
dj 
opt. Buildings; the P 
Large ptm D T^ past summer has not | Hall Buildi i d 
- T- all Buildings; Collections illustrating the Geo of | him at least for se 
been — — ourable character for the growth the North of S tland, in the M. Marshal 
ew have b 857 Co 
this h er has been the exception. In point of fl i 
1 - In point of flavour | College, Marischal College, Free Church College, i er 
Homo Ma say such nennt s Peaches, Nectarines, Figs, | cates’ Hall, Medico. Ce gien eee dint Library d end re a fe, E int 
NS pubis. wes neighbours tell [us — | n — à rece onan considers itself the . 
we possess were likewise opened, 
88 s sprinkling; many are pretty | manufactories, — — XX dE — 
