. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. of DENDROBIUM NOBILE, including D. N. LINDENI, GLORIOSUM,MAXIMUM, GRANDIFLORUM SUPER-BUM, BELLATULUM, and other grand forms. A NEW HYBRID CATTLEYA, Probably a natural hybrid between Cattleyaaurea and gigas, or Hardyana. Lindens Famous Strain of CATTLEYA MENDELI, Fine Established Plants, all unflowered. VANDA SPECIES, Probably New, superb Established Plants,unflowered. CYPRIPEDIUM INSIGNE LINDENS CHINESE WONDERFUL VARIETIESTogether with seleoted plants of Odonto-glossum nebulosam album, Cattleya maxim


. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. of DENDROBIUM NOBILE, including D. N. LINDENI, GLORIOSUM,MAXIMUM, GRANDIFLORUM SUPER-BUM, BELLATULUM, and other grand forms. A NEW HYBRID CATTLEYA, Probably a natural hybrid between Cattleyaaurea and gigas, or Hardyana. Lindens Famous Strain of CATTLEYA MENDELI, Fine Established Plants, all unflowered. VANDA SPECIES, Probably New, superb Established Plants,unflowered. CYPRIPEDIUM INSIGNE LINDENS CHINESE WONDERFUL VARIETIESTogether with seleoted plants of Odonto-glossum nebulosam album, Cattleya maximafloribunda. C. m. gigantea, Pbajus Humbloti,the new Zygopetalum Jorisianum, CochliodaNbtzliana, Warscewiczella Wendlandi, Zygo-petalum rostratum, Oncidium varicosum Rogersi,Schomburgkia tibicinis, several fine plants andgrand varieties of Cattleya Rex, and many all Particulars of Sale, see Order ofMessrs. LINDEN, ^Horticulture Inter-nationale, Parc Leopold, Brussels, onTHURSDAY NEXT, NOV. 7, BV Mr. J. C. STEVENS, at his Great Rooms,SS, KING ST., COVENT GARDEN, THE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1895. IUEYBY, T>ROBABLY only a very few readers of the-*- Gardeners Chronicle have heard of thedelightful village of Turvey. It is one mile froma station on the Midland line between the townsof Bedford and Northampton. My intentionis to say something of the gardens of TurveyHouse, but I venture to preface my remarks bya brief sketch of the village, one of the mostpicturesque in England; and yet the greaterpart of it is not half a century old. The road tothe village, about 1 mile and a quarter, ischequered with the shadows of noble trees. Onthe left, separated from the road by a low stonewall, stretches a beautifully undulating park,studded with Elms, Chestnuts, Walnuts, Uaks,and clumps of Hawthorns. Footpaths cross thepark in several directions, and the further sideis bounded by belts of woodland. The visitorcannot fail to notice that almost every tree issurround


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecad, booksubjecthorticulture, bookyear1895