THE GARDENERS' MAGAZINE. 



rdening Year Book " extend. Garden 



lundred and twenty-four received dis- 



al cultivation for garden decoration 

 ^presented, and, as might be expected, 



vs. roses, and sweet peas are the 



hese include varieties which fas in the 

 >i Minerva, Hon. Mrs. GreviUe, and 



Briar, are specially adapted for the 

 etion of colour effects in the garden. 



reach the large number of twenty- 

 dl, with one exception, home raised, 

 if these nine have been awarded the 

 medal of the National Rose Society, 

 it of new orchids includes cne hundred 



specie 



hybri 



B cattleyas, of 

 here are twenty-five. While all are 

 rest and miich value Cattleya Iris' 

 dward VII., C. Mendeli Stuart Low, 

 :\fendeli Princess Victoria may be 



cultivated and^ exhibited' them with 



ties offered, ferns and stove plants 

 have received special attention. Of re- 

 cent years Mr. Lintott has taken special 

 interest in fruit cultivation, both in the 

 open and^ under glass, and it is probable 



dening art he has the most ^ hifhly 

 distinguished himself. Mr. Lintott has 



grapes, which is all the more interesting 

 from the fact that there are no specially 

 made vine borders at Marden Park. The 

 finest bunches from a private garden 

 of^ that debatable grape Prince of Wales 



grown at Marden Park. ^^^^ 

 " Gardeners' Magazine " 

 Almanack, 1911.— With our next issue 

 (January 7, 1911) we shall present a double- 

 page almanack, at once handsome and use- 

 ful, for 1911. The almanack will be em- 



he]\k 



with 



light 



purpk^ Polygala ch 



^ polyanthuses, a 



roses. The sprays of Skii 

 and S. japonica which act 



Presentation to Mr. E. Chari- 

 ton.— On the occasion of the annual 

 dinner of the Tunbridge Wells Chi 

 mum and Gardeners' Associat ' 

 bers presented Mr. E.Charlton with a hand- 

 some marble clock as a mark of apprecia- 

 tion of the services he had rendered the 

 society. Mr. S. Snashall, who made the 

 presentation, spoke in highly appreciative 

 terms of the services Mr. Charlton had ren- 

 dered in the cause of horticulture, and of 

 the help he had given the society of which 

 he had been chairman two years. 



Tlie Peppermint Industry.— In 

 a paper read at a recent meeting of the 

 Pharmaceutical Society Mr. J. C. I^ninov, 



of on 



Odo: 



with reference to the 



Mr. W. Lintott, 



ive Potato Culture. 



may P^^' 

 of some impor- 



Berries fr 



