Jory 7, 1860. ] THE GARDENERS’ CRRONLE AND AGRIGULID: 
RAL GAZETTE, 623 
E CINE RAR ILA 
SAVED FROM THE 
cHOIC RA Ae th Pls 
UCOMBE, PINCE, A D CO. ha ow eady fo 
sending out SEEDS of oa aperi CINERARIAS, Dich 
have vos carefully sa ved from fine selected flowers of all the 
rieties. 
ge cti hich their Cinerari 
me grent sa er ete has induced them 
for several successive years, pone 
EDS er felling. And it is perhap 
neon’ ‘that it has “Red pte 
in fav of w 
rinei val: on this 
h he 8 the Seas and the Royal 
t the area 
tha Roya 
herrer , whic 
to pay e 
ables a & Co. con- 
ala Aaa is at the prese ent day against the prac- 
e, though a higher price is still given for such | 
im De 
fr y post. 
nt time for siden ice their 
stock owing to its select qui ality is limited, early orders are 
$ apee er See = 
g Nuwery, Bxater, Feta ished ning consists in getting rid as Boise ro 
Sea 
as possible of such principles in the 
er, care bei eing taken to secure a thorough draught 
through the stack. Where wood has been cut up 
en and aaa in the open ron decay will some- 
ini take place in the e though the cies 
fi 
9s 
2 
ace a be per icy pret This 
the case some experiments inptttubad 
by Mr. Sov jamie when examining the Royal 
Charlotte, where almost every log after six years’ 
OICE ood as are| Under the system at present adopted in the dock- 
SSRS. risa 5 i AND ett ate, oie tole esery- | yards, we believe that’ so lon there is no fi 
BE Se stconsty secogrdtiended = P. packet—s. d. ing its strength Pe tenac The i jecting | admission of moisture from hout not a single 
JOCCOLI, Penzance White (Mitchinson’s) 16 materials which may i aig a different dal log fails, An comparison of the duration of 
Care Foreing, tho er cl gig eondition belong obviously to another category. timber so prepared with that submitted to 
CUMBERS, a all the best ie ae methods employed ma, various methods which have bee posed fi 
be, tas (ors ins) ee oiling or steaming ; 2, the mame aes = heat | prevention of decay, is so decided in its results 
mans, Moor ee Oe 0 -withoat moisture ; and 3, dual des at at present po seasoning is consid 
TOMATO, Early plage DS Rar oe : iling is practised on a large ae for oe | i most likely nethod to secure exemption fr 
seers 2. pec ate pe A IS Sanat ehdte eens tg 
‘onl f . . 
caf à Ba ee: 2: iy ree a a o the w per- | establish a proper ventilation 
Toe variety er e] manent; in peat it is ees) onl: rtain Teer ea 
CocKSCOMB, See xtra fine : : R It is obvious that the process of boiling, | Amone the good things sent from China b x 
SS hata es bbe if continued for a sufficient time = destroy any | Fortune were several Roses with entirely new 
LOBEL TA erinus he a (rue) - ` ’ rany E YLT ELY 
ANSY, from a), pee - < 4 spawn that may be prese sa w the and it is | features, the value of which in gardening is hardl 
ae aks ED PAR aavartolt that if a log of w to two, | yet sufficiently appreciated. -Among them was 
y LANUM m 10 ae tion and the oth d which, since it ted the fanciful properties 
a ee equal boiled, t i one when plas in a situation favour- | that Rose amateurs are pleased to insist has to 
j tbe preceding A as able to the growth of che ngi will soon be covered | this day remained almost unknown. It was d 7 
PRIOED and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of VEGE-| with spawn while the will never produce the ~~ colour and size, and would “dono ood 
TABLE olga containing DEEA mk too cultivation, smallest Fungus. Wheth er this be trae or not we | an exhibition tent; so said = who had the aë 
ap inspodton an dc omparison Path t the prices ‘of several | cannot assert from our ii ng . The boili ing of it. | Its merits indeed were of but an humble 
Firms advertising Seeds ca riage or ree is e ally solicited. | will doubtless get rid of much from | nature; it was merely be ery early, ever- 
aieie t > fadam Roads, Hollo- | the wood, and will promote the a o any | green, pretty, and a prodigious rambler, ee 
h may exist in the cells contend in a ze; with an hire or 
O a vegetable alb ae i which may , 3 
: h d so treated | Rose in creation. As for its flowers they were 
F HE se. OCU ETURAL SOCIETY |but we doubt greatly whether the wood so e y 
ABOUT TO RE HE den be hostile z the ahs of Fungi which | white it is true, Ginjed with pink on the outside, 
IMPORTATION or SEEDS ax PLANTS had ae from neighbouring timber sweet-seented, rew i s profusion in 
vy meaai at esorcicrs e e i otmen. SR eae regards the ai iar ion o hoat without | small clusters; but then -the~ petals would not 
dener, familia ta ian Plants, who is ready to engage Jaaa it must be remembered that irreparable | stand well up, and the flowers wer igger 
this ‘Salary p 5 
n a ga AN y coin, tation mischief may me to timber by too rapid|than some Noisette: -smaller even than those 
to the Be tary nn so 8, St. Martin's| drying, from which fearful cracking may be|of Joan = ee the Horticultural 
ie rehended, if n evil arises. Charring | Society had gi 
US ee sh o ot r 
is s undoubtedly an wearied process, but the heat | was nailed to pi wran, ett 
Kie Intl Chrentele. a scarcely be expected to penetrate the heart of| At last, on the 20th = Taly, 1859, we received 
TURDA e log, and as regards the. Peeti of Fungi, itis r, ROGERS, r Hill, near Seven Oaks, 
Y, JULY 7, 1860. aasa toe it that few conditions one of ibe mont e enthusi sities as he i the: 
ae ——_—. of ti le to the growth of |m mateur pet Mera he United 
G WEEK. Fungi, especially in + aig than partial ies paali, the fo following letter to an 
EAn: Viy 1of Mortcnltaral (Feat Commie) =a It eo 
at St. Martin’s Place 
a east a | answer to his inquiry as to what a Rose miraire 
minati 
Noon 
National Rose, at Ci vatal Palace Wat. ih localit 
Horticultural eeni in suo 
Tuvrspar, — b 
at St, Martin’s P]; 
e+ „pro 
hi a be no question is re be 
eople haye dis: — ome dispute 
parati’ of w 
te method | 
te was tr ried at Woolwich, but} 
cha negocio 
mainly ative placed i sa log, 
with “which the water “clot and ‘com 
externally 
| e 
agpi it had lost Hasb ributin 
distinct 
“ Thanks for your Se tA p ah the- 
. Although it pic not Die olin Rose fanciers- 
is a very fine “comer om oi 
rowing 10 to 12 fee season,” 
he | growin oe sia and conti 
ose I sent you were late 
| blooms, ae it} had been in flower near pa 
It is both good in form and sweet-sce nted, nd a 
profuse flowerer—flowering both in clusters at the 
ends and all alon; : 
weight, ‘appeared 
= aca divided it d = 
wood. The actual ‘quantity of. ferment 
op 
mater, or of wiater baloia ted to f fibres lined an. 
rdy o 
and know no Rose which has much ‘re- 
independent of the water, esaii v 
= different in either.case, ‘though its =e 
sistency. ö 
oe Tn apie =f we nov of nothing t to 
I 
te iene tee 
o 2 Aisti 7. 
Pe 
We ar — it = a point beyond dispu tel 
tt the presenco r in wood, where there is | 
To admissi 
ain disposer to deca ay ; F 
ae casiered t that the best Oak loses 
or cies the 
sed confident, from 
meapettonge, ‘that if Flm i is exposed ean 
e parates, ypt 
sap-wood is yh 
our 
FORTUNE asked for 
ion, The to ‘he pitt as 
limbing „Reose to -which 
your ponte Ba Ma RocERs-alludes is -well 
cnown to me. is cultivated in gardens about 
Lis held‘in high 
is one 
oe receipt of on is Mr. 
aS and Shanghae, ‘ait 
sa Chi 
dimination of water, ip Acamnense penetration of ee spawn into the wood. There 
e proc sm at one vident, s howe some difficulty e matter, 
ee 
ned, pih Oak appears to| Wi 
The roof of Temini : 
i 
the 
remai as the 
it was felled. "Bach a elon pn not sirens tone ie 
recommended in general, and when the logs are at 
once sawn up they cannot be placed toeo-soon under ' intera: 
i 
lar notion was 
nese ; indeed it»is 
pagan 
