LH 
NOVEMBER 21, 1874.]] 
GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
657 
erers, and, pomere gpn i have an immens 
who only stage what 
in the 
Murri stream, a tributary of the Atrato, at a lo 
distance from the locality of the first. This may no be 
well developed in 
í : 
jond fide property of the t be a for winni i 
= that is no obsta g of subjects | exhibitions, and gain $ e honouts for man aed 
quired py purchase or otherwise, consequently these f the collector. It has never been introduced 
fraiterers were quite within the law in staging their | alive to Europe. ey feet, and beats the 
shop comm Á lone d o two named plan strong texture, beautiful 
thirteen prizes, and Mr. G. Thomas eleven prizes, f colour, and high “in g arai Wallis, Botanical 
phe the lion’s share of the spoils. at occurs | Traveller, 
me that the Council would meet all t uire- 
Loo uk the —_ growers if they alk airi all Utricularia Endresii, — Gardeners! Chronicle 
but the act actual growers from the competition, unless | November 7, 1874, p „582, line 10: re, then, 
bey provided special Seles for fruit traders. e sheep Se This E most unfortunate dn 
since I w « Beware them of cheese” [anglicé, 
Sedum opan (p. 552).—There appears to 
be an error as regards the e period of its introduction to 
lish A hah peen it as having been 
‘troduced from North America in 1824. have 
known and cultivated it several years : it pame quite 
ts of 
Bambusa a the most secant a As = 
Bamboos, well known 
foliage and drooping reed-like stems to great advan- 
tage. other ith which I 
acquainted are stiff and ta parison, and for 
graceand beauty it is quite unapproachable by any 
shrub, Thi I believe, the variety that 
anglers with ing-rods, a ui 
likely that it t be grown in suitable situations in 
fi 
4 st. sh oe s H e ; t 
son make strong plants. F. Sheppard. 
if Sir W. C 
Moles as lah sapa think > 
kitchen 
n of the 
z ipy therefor eIthi 
i te justified in athibuting o th 
| Holliday, The Gardens, Castle Till, n hid. 
Coffee Disease in Fann aarti? me to cor- 
p 
-4 
B 
A 
Y 
> 
o 
cr 
letter 
it the report of the Scientific Committee. The repor 
estate superintendents are demon- 
~*~ the fecundity of the worst phase of the disease.” 
Ape have been A aman ao This, of course. 
% point of some consequen o have ascertained ; 
is the pme time of the enemy’ s attack, there 
Some chance ed. — W. T, 
Thiselton Dyer, oa 3 
of puandsia musaica.—The Gardeners’ Chronicle 
ao: 17 am : Rg Spaen have not yet been 
some Ia to give you 
ue emis a sangeet oiai plant, beca 
let them phann M of cheese], the herent ee aca 
for the voracity of those ated that 
may ho the to obtain 
manic idiom, the general meaning of the context, and 
the specific allusion to cnstuniiaoet DS. ] 
The Silphium.—In the Gardeners atia of 
ere is an interesting article n this 
oes not notice that "the late 
in the Mediter- 
supposed to 
useful in likely to be very 
rr ee k probably only one or two; The subject is 
well wi inntinii, G. S. 
dug the time 
it w owi ok It hrive on aada 
like. 
ke 
ms, cia and the Itisa 
imbing, leafless plant, with flowers similar to ae 
Sf the Lily of the Valley, Saf much smaller 
acrant. S. G. Rowberry, Newton Hall Garis 
plant Pelargonia 
Northumberla 
Veitch’s 
herewith send for your 
spit A Canigo ae 
head of our Self- 
pa ag we oe received fro 
orkshire, to whom we sent it 
it will prove a really — 
BE 
foliage sufficient to o protect 
size, so that its st-resisting q uali 
of the same 
ty ought to be great. 
The only ee is whether it is a too long 
] 
on the 
tall vase does not intercept the ete m all ; and u 
e determ 
table. At the same time it is undeniable that, on 
entering a Pecan Hg: in eo the table is covered 
ith ed tall vases it is difficult even for a 
mpulsory 
_ the judges should arrive at their coat as the 
French ey pre ais to shoot his partridges— 
sitting. Ha 
See gigantea.—I have measured a t 
here to-day w is 30 feet high, and 50 feet in des 
cumference of tue is ower branches, The bole is 7 feet 
fi 
b 
leader. R. Ogley, Chayterth Yall, a Notts. 
Anemone ars e Jobert.—This plant is not 
a garden hybri ween A, vitifolia yorye japonica. 
‘spo Sema originated at Vento 
ica, with 
duce the plant to commerce, under the original name 
giv r. Jo japonica Honorine Jobert., I 
ave seen r. Jobert’s vor original plant 
mes sene the white — was „a ore 
rantee the on. Otto 
exactness of m iere 
Froebel, The Nurseries, proa aian Zurich. 
Vellosia cærulescens.—I have just ascertained 
from Kew that the plant sent to me from Ghent as 
Vellosia coerulescens ( bou t which I sent you a 
s 
ing to a 
allied to the Ve 
Png ren = 
n Pax Magazine of Botany, vol. xii., 
alse! in = Hialal Magazine, vol, liv., 
Ge G 
p. 27, and 
tab. 2777. 
w to Prevent Rabbits a Se dea 
e 
Some put a pipe-dra tile over th 
ae the branches Botet it Bes see up. 
ther a few branches cut from Ash trees 
weet rabbits from thriving * Hollies, &c. ; they prefer 
barking ria, branches. Æ. O. Maynard, Layton Hail, 
Darlington 
e Soci ao stated that 
ae ied Her ‘Majesty the Queen as — ; two 
yal F 
ix hono Fellows who 
re British act trang and pasay a foreign ; 11$ 
o Fellows, with 
r lani 
Iwas the fst to Somes ot hae ae Chairs for the Judges.—Having lately partaken resident Fellows ; 356 non-resident ao 
ed me to bear this any longer without protest. | of = gree care sp of several of the City Com- | twelv lady Associates ; a i ey , 
Toora Tillandsia musaica n cem hose or good wine is bet than their os t 2 — i og the 5 are Fe er 647 
anot and sent i 868 sd it king, and whose taste in decorations ince that time the Socie os y 
The nl: visit in > Tsp ad Ria aa [aste at good eo a taste, Th very forcibly and one by resignation. | But, on the other pe ee 
T ; ' ata : tency (to use | hadan accession OLtwelby=hi* 
Very grows at 3000 feet elevation in a certam placed before me the fact of the pe a y1 deco- by ‘or the. pae poe” AE os as pind t es pe 
f the pe 
ir “ efforts of genius been resident Fellows. Them on one padre 
le ail sine 9 ary Fellow, twenty resident 
and one: Associate—thus. i 
wood reg to Teorama, at a small distance 
y professional table decoration 
one forth 
[i 
Profusion of Very often I found a 
Tipe in Deut. The es were not | any but flat decorati 
sand on stalks in January. The inflorescences | why it is that, w lunteer 
TES of the ~ai th to 2 fect length, The broad table, eae Se es 
seth : tain of a tall — nie pe 
ag 
j 
PiE 
B 
Ha 
Hip 
Unk 
Bil 
‘The.one was ood et Erna o e Bat a 
