«30 “THR GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND —.— PURAL GAZETTE. 
divide mto from six to 12 pat * aee 'o-morrow I ( printed i 
down one of the three ae of my | ever, the 
h 
———— 
enactment of the kind suggested would soon pu ree an end : 
to this state of things here, andl dare say , with greater | purpose ing 
A there, e thatthe ressure * the evil is so | [iem —— — em, and by next Ve I hope 
event? felt and well understood. Of course pub ic or | any one a good specimen of a — alawn. 
-— must be n he | bed is 
men — I le at several Conta a 
= 
the Pane E im i the Steve s at nier Eu have seeded freely, and 2 
à LL fa by anet iron FH rsday, Oct. 19. In| the seed, because seedling plants — w 
1 ings. In 
Thu 
consequence of this "advertisement I travelled 
the sal t on 
j 8 
uld, k^ and attention. 
ed they are hardy enough, though tion 2 heyen growth. d 
ention paid them. | Peas on the 20th J uly, — ee. c 
lant of Groundsel from on the 28th September. 317 fo 
eed bed, and around it were about 40 2 Villas, Twickenham Common, Ovtober Age d 
28 
which the first sale was con ; the catalogues dis- a ha alf long, each with many rootlets; these ha 
tin rs m — vL " the sale would take powi ein hout a hand-glass and shaded, but they have Sorketles. 
any r the not Jet begun to —— though I have no doubt they : 
plants a pia A the names of some of the very Worms have apparently done 10 injury UDBURY CorTAGERS' poneret v 
nocked down at the first sale; iiec must to either those in the seed » those planted out. Tho —— Association for rewarding t k 
of cours have been — in Uo] or at least a priee trouble — first, and perhaps, as Mr. agricultural hi 
on them. For the fu e word reserve had Hibberd says, the thick pile may be a nidus for tl 1 with ite y 
— be omitted in the ibas ied ues. E. Bennett, | seed of —— — I doubt if even its own ssineté | matches, a Show t the vegetable produce 
Notting ire. seeds can penetrate through to the ground, for no gardens. The spectacle is one of 
Holly Lea. — Jour intelligent correspondent, Mr. | Turkey carpet is 80 vthiek a nd matted. On the whole, I Tach 57 
Forsyth, has said so much in favour of Holly Tea e expect fro all that et — Tota, Oct. 18. 
we may soon hope the subject t Leer the attentio Plants now — Flow ors.—l was greatly | 
i d. -|su ind i ei 
es Hy 
the — Forest in Germa ied o namental plants which usually flower i in autumn were | ti 
years ago by Hugo Von Mehl (eee "Donplandin 2 not likely to wem. their 
1855, p. i, bat whether they had come into use only the same time pla n this neight 
of late ya nce Maté has bonito nown, or as in — nt th of Au ugust. We have 
their e —— so": from a more ancient period. present in eut own — — highly interesting | in 
8 m 
p 0 
ascer supply us with showy Bro ile 
in order Ue pero their principle a simple but — — flowers, Am ongst others — weil middle was appropriated to 
infusion is is ud conside red sufficient, but they e, Gé Y de Batailles, — conspie Ab i 
Mohl, t species | few da I eut a good handful of . of — 
of sisi thinks Holly-tea not to be despised, Cloth of Go old fom a plant ha among — from 
superior to the Maté é he has tasted, and deserving of | neriana, both s being on brick e olumn 15 feet | attraction 
erthold hig 
crean e 
tüm» flowering Horse Chesnut.—A curious in- ing "in spring some seeds of Ageratum amon 
1 ts usual season eere Ó— me ter than plant t- | Potatoes, 
now be seen on Kew Green in front of the Coach an exe Agera rises al a foot above the | extremely fine; n inferior 
Horses Im. A common Horse ee which I — pose and having ove ve a "lischy bine e makes | and: the 2 readily sold a g 
poo dapes aoe ago is now |a pretty Kahest Variegated Fuchsias and Salvias are There yere also good out-of-door Ci 
producing large, “well-formed. bk blossoms. The Eo paie “A plant of Paulovnia imperialis, 18 feet igantic sti ae : 
or 
leaves of the the | h dded wi us downy flower 
summer, and pei a — has caused it to flower at buds; which T ex et SA fall with the — be pushed 
this season; the sap not having been conse by them | from their seats undeveloped by the first frost we get, | exc 
has had the effect of forcing the flower buds in . Plants of Pampas Grass are very effective, their silvery | 
mature action. Some adduce it as an instanc nce vot e | plumes associating well with evergreens and Conifers, 
mildness of the seasons. It tated A m l has 42 f flowers 
: > > onu g whic -veral of remar 
in the daily papers that in bears heavy rains much better than the female, which - particular, ades te a man 
France were then in flower. We have — grows by its side; the Heroni 2 5 former being of | fi — the parish of the b 
here in flower now, not an uncommon thing, and some | a more coarse and open textur n become. dry and = 
: urageme: — 
kinds of fruit trees often fi ower twice, but I never feathery ry, whereas the latter, with, p» delicate downy | coti — ing, a 
t een ly moistened, remains for days | posed of Crime 8 “Green Pets, Sae 
i Apples, Red C 2 2 Endive, ss! 
a 
: e 
aecounts of the last year lobserved a hay cnm arge for | wit] 
planting and digging up Potatoes, &c. I observed I thes sine > of Currants; s that half-ri d red and 
could-suve money by buying them, as they ack fruit. hit a highly | the P 
— expenses s0 much. He answered that Pota- "remeras plant — Apel = ganien — pd 
toes were never in the usual garden expenses, J. Moon, Gardener to K. Thomson, Esq., 
i aa Carrots, &e., but were considered extra, dde Hall, ae Cant Toit l have Lilacs and | hood. 
to be charged to the garden except when they | Strawberries now in full bloom in my garden on the|by one by the Rev. E 
north-west — a proof I send. you a few of | prizes, and the merits of each $ 
the blossoms. .4. Brown, Rose Villa, Hanger Hill, | tioned that one yo 
— — 25 nd | Ealing. nearly ll year 
25 jene vane m parto the ordinary work Flower Show ar ani the — at the Manehester from 50 years to 26 y. 
— , we recommend Potatoes to be | Botanical — — floral | conduet for per 
i dee dag s iem n — — i 
et new aspect at | that 
these —— The f [I — “he scheme that has | feeling be 
been successfully carried an oe 2 2 — — the also had rewards for hones 
it, it is worthy of rge families 
ignown. I —— 
inerarias, 
“Spergula pilifera.—Mr. Shirley Hibberd asks f ä — tastefully. 
‘or the 
experience of your readers as to the behaviour of th — in "md 
E is arranged by the i te i 
and lacconding. to M. “He er ners —— bitin 1 exibition dose thors — — vp a 3 
in a bed with very lit tle heat. h Dm — e — 66— "ihe. treat — have gandon azonni i 
1 me last st camo up thie ‘ik a am — charge being 6d. —— 1 attende 3 -— "1 I6 | Major Darker the K. 
eloth —— over idi to protect 7 8 “the el — — uni p iani em sel by | 
eme " M . " present. I cannot help thinkin ng tbat this |J. W P 
e 
but with free to the air. Asl t creating. 
= disease it made good progress, — dus mien raid M 7 — — read Esq 
the iline eo — 3 of w mini owing to — there have been likewise two — cottage gardener, 
Apul May early — m ta . er 
— — — Pm for = —— of the bed. Summer Transpla nting of Shrubs, 4c.—1In reference | do cm on their 
> is was not pers in; for by | to i ir lei 
aubsequ ent care what 8 were ‘planted out in ee: percer aie — il fem? 1 y rure en + many obser 
made ther appearance in e seed-bed. The former question iu consequence of the — — zeg dices whl — 
a fortnight after their removal, and | an or for an and 
thus made e that the, a i 
eir own voce, and visio wd patehes of ins were “covered with fine soil vef — with well ihe this happy si 
diam: ug apt side of | rotted manure and decayed leav: whereas it 2 and to the age 
they will / to have been manure or decayed e as it is rightly | Rev. E. Sidney also m 
mere watered ie 
‘then left to the 
