866 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. гета T 
nd fruits, | sickly. In winter the flowers ар 
for decorative s, where everything depends|new or rare. бо als forced flowers an те iE 
икт 1 а just appreciation of those prindiplas of true art | although prized е а pisani des d without. leaves I shall h OWever em 
refined society have but a | would never meet with anything like that sei aris visi aurent's p 
ds erficial experience. A public competition in the|remunerative sale which has bes the main|Iam fold he force as them onav mA. 
arrangement ofa few aanle and definite materials in | cause of the great progress. the art has made in scale, p 
the иче of flowers such as Covent Garden would | Britain. There are a few individuals who ша 
afford, would thus become, in the truest sense, a schoo. lake tho sime pHde that we do in the bea auty o of 
of high art in which =$ beautiful would be taught to their collections, but the great majorit бы those 
atter is well d whó 4 тар 
be continued, ) 
L 
Haviwa grown the 
their cháteaux an ardens, Royal Horticultural Societ 
ja and 1 
ake st in 
atten tion of those who pum the ; + yy 
© к“ be perfectly horrified : n 
me rar would not only be working out | W [aeg гага ске stoves, & forein g Paper, I have hei the n. d 
refining taste i n whai is thoroughly a home question, houses, by country gentlemen pega noomes were Don : ; Вав ча шау enable others who 
but would add a feature of no common interest to|equal to or smaller than their own i is no Phioxesin potexnother season tops ma 
iheir programm terea then that the display of flowers at the than I have done with as fine h Mes 
Much of the аі ue in a general point of view of апу | Exhibitions of bos A ntral жрт s at Paris should m \ 
such competitive display would, however, NA he have improved but little, or even, judging from | opinion аге dwarfness, fine foliage, and rgs t, 
со орача дее go the M ъс ires that which is " taking place, "should in some | {оге rs; the individual blossoms should no Ве ай 
materials ^ оуеа. e competitors shou ошу be respeots h E pe nd Jecid 
ЕРШЕ do mse sich com aap ep cue dde iacit rendir been labouring under some difieulti ties. d ie hs are reply important. 
Purchasiblo in Filecineiuu. ,The several groups should, Гааге, rx сл Кб dë oft flo та] exh hib i: 1 epit firs yen 
Jy ihat Аша. fallad to advantage, and it has Ж ad по to erat e M. ere md oxes in E: әр 
ВЕРЕ о е MT {ог any display. I am told that dom. menle € select wholly 
made clearly and unmistakably evident. —— si year was miserable. Tt was kinds; I had no reliable information as 
tá (заа with a to Camellias, for whioh mat Bate i МЕНЧЕ va р айаш 
THE venil xe were offered, byt probably from fe аг! € XE c B te: ры ү s = 
LATE EXHIBITION OF THE IMPERIAL fi inj ury from the insufficiency of the exhibition the um iio tirio fho catalogues to get as muc 
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF PARIS. s, only 12 Camellias were sent ai ОШ, i 
£ Sooiety i is now че рго T It is established = out all the young p 
r 
катион Я Теона аца of Агапа M o 
square metres (of rather more than ^e I 
useful от | English yard each). Still an indoor exhibition үч т [T T 
ad f old | be visited by large numbers of people is 3 
Pid favourable and even injurious fo the specimens s; 
? y LA 5, independently of the limited space appended. "In July I found some m" 
t 1 The large vorum cour, handsome as it is, would be | flower at the sam time, às вош 
ietie ry filled the Azaleas alone of o f our | a fortnight, and rem such as Triom 
ring shows, da if, as they hope, these Parisian | Princess Alice, &c., were 
h exhibitions az e to acquire any extension, they will s. То obvi 
$ transfer them to the Palais |forward to within 2 or З inches of the, 
į | d'Industrie, and to limit those held in their own | soil, thinking that the 
to 
throw up some fine shoo 
eue и, when it is itis hoped Мы sent tho later kinds. In this ime | 
main objeots of this September Exhibition T lost about m 
e fruits, $e» in them it is a successful опе; |. 
бай нус urface 
TS 1 
Agha prev dbh base Т" Fayo атны I had pei we m might | av learned 
an advan = corresponding to what Н оеп. from the ‹ 4 Bouquets montés, Coiffures rod 
hd been нсы À Brita The two Horti p'an 
Societies, which were е dra. agging on a fr wich prizes were idi, ph the arrango- 
ring existence, нба + of which P arisians are wn to show 
laced under imperial patronage, | m e elegant taste. But of Tw feo inl then 18 
A considerable numberof new memb and “Ladies absolutely nothing, ei the few bouquets exhibited 
Patr were induced to jun it; a piece|are round heavy m of Ha ree flowers, |, Ab 
of pier opposite the main entrance of the|Such as are sold re soadalde in the outskirts | month before th ж тне {Ө weak pr P 
Palais d'Industrie was temporarily allotted to it ; | 0f London, without. ay, of MC graceful lightness Т I liberally чаре; the pots being completely 9 
intained for ` so often b ‚ French | with roots requiring additional support Tr ed 2 
i ^ soil "making some 
ез bu 
laying out the ground, ul la da e arrangement of | E or — and the greenhouse aud | 
О аге ges . | 
The ©“ Société 59 et Centrale d'Hortieul- 
ture," being no w firml Ту амы and fairly 
ne much towards the promotion | the 
nee, Several societies, with 
n b. 
is, however, a of у v Aer i 
great Кес of folia age, "d amongst | 
labelled 
ated-leaved plants а ы 
' led Sphæcostema marmora- men. 
ed very p ; also a 
inple ot cr fi 'eoonestion with tbe central оша, | P are good; г А heir. culture даь any ams 
whieh has usually sent delegate $ o attend their | Some fine varieties of Dianthus ) °- | undertake ; епа es there a s m э 
wigii laoiniata, &o); a cons deble T numb inds of dwarf habit the e tall P amsightly 
principal shows; and official reports, both of thes " 
shows and of the results of horticultural experi- Lantanas had a Lotes: effeot qn I pange Pare Mo not be grown for pot culture. Te 
ments in qu parts of France, have been pub- | expected; and there are Dahlia Roses, | however, I think, be grown їп pots, 28 tho m 
a in its monthly j Journa al, By these means, Gladioli, Petunias, P» and se "il pom between Nos. 1, 2, and 3 was PE 
li meetings| 8mongst which well-flowered pots of Nemesia | grown entirely in pots, and Nos. d 
of the беш Society, held usually twice in uh compacta were pretty. But of the whole } : i hant 
month, considerable encouragement s béen given, | flower-show, the only really interesting. object Mr "tho tier having ao pr Л ке " 
rui m f M. Lauren anch " 
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е bunch, which has an elegant ‚ Stoppin p ro eg 819, v gn 
ble are of the purest white 7 d RUE ETE - d n т 
respect superior to the naturally white | next year, but you wil only getla ateral hi penso 0? 
Itis in thi nd although ei have now been four days | your pla ill } at th ipal orà 
red t eir freshness and delicate | terminal dd, which I think ies prine! 
enIsaw 
vu side. 
the la ateral spikes look eme by on of thé. 
e foliage is rather too pale, but does not loo t captis x ud bo : vet med formed, | 
remarks will assist in 
CUN О ы ы С 
Gardener?! Chronicle, p. 1060, vol, 1860, believe that your 
