43 TTE 
GARDENERS CHRONICEE. 
[JULY 11, k 
Now, facts being stubborn, with so many to back ‘him, 
ty 
3 
° 
He failed, thinking, to 2 
or cycles no lon hi in duration 
Are wholly inadequate ‘io 
And a thought I ma 
The key to Pom ger lies in Electri 
, change, not hing b but + hake 
my simplici ty, 
— We a woe the Builder the following 
details of the of transforming LEICESTER 
QUARE (see ge xi 15) :— 
Iron railing, gates, and lamps, executed b 
Coalbrook Dale amp hn ainted and ded 
by Messrs. Tho ay oak alice oxide 
paint ; cost Doat . £1,400 0 0 
The marble so execited by Messrs. Thorn & 
800 o o 
eke rb; abo out . 450 0 ò 
Asphalte pathway a nd ni w grani 
marble fi 
na, the dol] phins by Mr. Day- 
mond, and the pd gin Messrs. Easton 
& Anderson ; about 4,500 0 o 
The four estals for busts, executed by : 
ak arg Rave = about i Igo 0 0 
The four marble bus 
3E Me Gitso = Piantina of garden, executed by 
4,000 0 0 
‘ , executed 
by Messrs. eth $ ene about .. 5 250 0 
Laying on g d s about 7i. Fé ten S00. 0 6 
Sundries .. we y A i wt 
$14,250 0 o 
Cost of land, about Rese T oo 
a 
Tot 7,2 = o o 
The time yuman wi ax as has been very short 
—in some respect: ve no 
gegen a “The area, it may mbered, 
a little over one acre. We trust that in i the ensuing 
Pde 
o 
p 
a. 
z8 
ars 
ee 
= 
7 
) aca must 
c y be architectural i in its chatacter, but not to 
asa PE T 
Home Cocrespviene 
Potato Disease Artificially Produced.— 
gg protected from 
on all favourable 
| Date aad uit Temple whole ofthe pl ani 
did not find among nineteen tubers, obtained from the 
exists i helt we ue to SEA i 
herewith send 
you 
investigation, and sha 
heer By Soar reporting the result of the research. 
of 
ll feel greatly 
If it be the the porn disease, I 
think ample p ced of the 
effect being ey. a tcp to ete essive mois- 
inst ich : Fe ontaminated condition 
tac aie ma a e s x 
are unab end, 
hav 
same 
S 
of the tubers SA for se 
time in saiae ck 
do i aei 
ving ever witneséel, iss 
the first appeared ae 1845, such a 
splendid e red a  Potatos as is grow this year 
y garden 
case in 
ast w dug up, ae ripened, 
and free from any attack i in the haulm, a consider able 
ity of Glouc 
the long per riod of dry weather w ve 
little rain having fallen | here between April 9 gone ‘the 
30th ult. Althou ugh m of the c 
bourhood Sages Ki ured 
being so well ae Ite 
ed e th 
veral years i in cultivation. 
bee se writing 
the foregoing, on loo at the 
S. 
V ut, like ourselves, he was not 
able to detect the Peronospora, He writes :— e 
Potatos ighly di 
tion, with the TN su yea covered with 
threads (one set praga ‘een belonging to 
diverse fungi. We saw no f 
festans in a fethghienbic sondisiche: $ this Fagan, of 
seldom seen in fruit on the Potato itself, but 
owers, and y found it 
aborted, Ta evidently impotent. I G. S.”] 
Viola cornuta.—This hardy and beautiful aoei 
does zol I fear; hold e position in the flow 
ss the bed i 
as planted. This evil is s usually remedied 
by cutting all the young shoots r; but, thou 
wers are soon produced ine "the operation, a 
e time re f 
ow many plants nay bebt colours suitable for 
bed 
s in our flowi 
eye, 
other plant can rival that possessed by this hardy 
Violet. W. MCR. 
Climate of Central France.—I send you an ex- 
tract from a „letter from Mont Dore, 
Central F 
monopoly of bad climates :—‘‘ The peasan 
deiat at Mont Dore in winter. We have jusi 
pra ae et Sean are all iar oes 
y days wit 
perai T ame Fuly i. ome 
Rearing Larve of St no, mana =À 
want of success in rearing ca Coni uno up to 
mat apy a ie darana St 
t 
experi 
case y elicits a very 
- B.,” p. 13, on the pu 
dite, touent. did not lie in a simi- 
those accusto med to study the the 
ished the 
same tree on ey had been feeding, ares 
pined and came to nothing. The pupz also (when 
d oe interest in the m 
care 
the pupa change was et sa beri bela 
the exclusion of the m 
ase, and in some similar attempts 
ei biek" I watched, in m 
ere were no 
o effect natural surroundings; there shoul 
ilure. The only 
g the pupæ, was p 
also the cause of their déstrodion. 0. 
The Three Earliest Peaches.—The 
of pa ve ason confirms i 
for n the respective merits of Mr. Rivers 
eevibaat po s atter erns 
or the market, as well as E it is worth record 
E wy Beatrice, which I see others recomme 
t 
early, 5 cannot think so after six yea 
seh jeak tion, made on about a doz 
eso Seren ane exposed different iyo gh 
I mean. Itis a fine Peach ; carries a splendid colo} 
nd is oa ‘the but it is generally sm 
here. If others had mentioned the circumference 
might have compared notes. Early Rivers has so fi 
l 
n diagonal cordons, by June a ver. 
fine at of =a _ pcre Beroan prolifi 
and to be relied o All these ar 
cardinal viriai in the Poch oe the purposes of sale 
and it is for market growers that this notice is i 
tended. Bu 
ing posesge to insects. 
tenderness of habit, 
t the stone too often decays ieee aig 
„Skis defect is owing to 
some imper C 
ra tefe and gene eral vigour. § 
artificial eathy might be adopted ; 
form the subject of eo for the 
Louise is the third of th 
rly Peaches, an on the whole, 
now to give my vote for b being the best in its season 
It is of a great size here, well ‘coloured, and health 
flavour excellent, and "alto together a tellin e 
fruit. It is about a week later than Early Riversa al 
Early Beatrice. This is, of course, a disadva 
Had Early Rivers been of a constitution equal 
Ea i 
ears ; as 
ape is eaten l 
the foliage and rendait i 
wa 
fruit small, unless carefally watched and thinned 
Thomas Bréhaut, Guerns 
se 
The seeds should be Se 
October. G, Ferris, Nottingham 
i e 830). —A somewhat sim 
correspondent ir 
TA ice within the last 
bserved, 
it-is not piper = that the pne oat in the 
Bae A. Pryor, Hatfield, 
New agyi kirye spite of 
wax od asked for of the newest 
kinds of of E Potatos 
(9) 
on tables during the present 
thought it would prove interesting if 
ha 
note just a few of the haulm characteristi 
kinds, ly sati 
of th they ha true 
