late Earl Spencer, kad most of the Novi ty and Gentry ;
at the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SocreTy’s House, Han over-
ily i
It is half eae price of any other description of Roofing, and
ects a great saving of Timber in the construction of Roofs.
Made to any length i. 82 inches wide,
PRI nak Penny PER SQUA
% Samples h Directions for its Use, and E O
of seven ears! experience, w ich references to Gen-
tlemen, Archite aud Builders, = free to any
town o 228 * ders by post executed.
The Public is cautioned that
or Great Britain 2 * the above F
. M*NEILL an
Patent Felt Au Lam
London, where roofs covered with
The per Vice. Chancellor's Pour
9 — 5
rig ng | is ma
*
o West-
tabout
b 7a-buildings, Buni
the Felt ven be seen
s, at the entrance t
orship of Dass. Barry, Esq.,
ds and Forests are
the en per in London | gags S
— box. Sold by — nw thor and by Chemists an
Perfuiner 8.
E anp SON’S LIST OF BEDDING, contain-
to make a Bedding, sent free by post, on application
to their Facto: mga 196 (opposite the Chapel), ‘Pottenham-cotrt-
| road, London
EW ZEALAND COMPANY.—
EMIGRATION. — The Court of Di-
Compe nyt 0 from
Further 3 and forms of
at the New Zealand Houte.
New Zealand House, 9, — Buildings,
London, June 7.
were
wo years ines, under th
Her Majes 155 "s Commissione
t
he Com-
oofed with
or direct to the “ima ean bes
o their R
very information afforde d on the construction of Roofs, or
any proposed particular application n of the Felt.
—.— * nae s NEW PAT ‘TOOTH-
. — A SPON GES, TE Tooth-Brush
BaL * hem
Es
2
gan
vith ts preserved valuable | tha
3
y
ntermedia
— secu 75 chin the luxury of a
at METCALFE, BINGLEY, an
— 75 Oxford- street, one door from
tive *
tine. Smyrna 8
get *
READFUL WOUNDS IN A LEG SOU! SOUN DLY
"D HOLLO 4 e 7 2 PILLS.
sed tae mont.exs
mos
‘which b 8
his leg in — b'o rit, and although he
lotions and ointments, yet all were found Derteotly a u: zeless.
was then recommended by a friend :
Ointment and Pills, * e did, and in six hours he was
n abou it eight days the wounds were
undly healed.— Sold by all Sn s eats at Professor Hou.
rowate Establishment, 244, Strand, L
LowaY’s Establishment, 244, Strand, London
Ds LOCOCK’S FEMALE WAFERS have no ge
“eo 5 i mmended t
He
aT
resembling these, m to m
there stri
also Sole A
PEHEE 8 4388
CAUTION.
110
a
adopted
Asthma, —— r and Colds, Price is. 28.
and lls, per box. Sold by all respectable Medicine Pilon.
1
GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
>
Ties
il Te
READS | NEW PATENT GARDEN ENGINES, Bens &e.—This
0 feet.
= cleansing Wa ll and Standard Tree
s from Insects, &c. *. Be
d to the Gard from dr ee and portability, it
of fi oe are 2 sot restricted Pra SYRINGES of Zar CIROUS, upon the 13 ee principle.
RICHARD 35, REG
eee ego WIRE ita NETTING.—
on 2 by READ,
per yard, 2 feet wide
8
ized. Iron.
2-inch dess; . — ee wide. d. per yd. 5d. per yd
2-in — 5 5 6$
in h » 2 strong » » eve 15 70
N t ove
i s > ong ae
— mi ened 14 11
All the above — Te whe any width at proportionate prices.
11
Japanned
If the upper ha If i s a coarse mesh, it
fourth.
per square foot. P atterns for war ded oe do
Wanufsetared by re free of and BISHOP, 1
Norwich, and delivered fre
boro borough, Hull, or Newcast
expense in Lon „Peter
WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT,
GALYANISED w me gah TWO. ZENER
—— ot eis e leh ction 4 it, It
was exhibited at the late Metropolitan Cattle Show, and was
highly eulogised both for its u and pretty appearance, and
ackno wey oe e cheapest and best article ever p
It forms a light and durable fence against the depredations of
—.— deters: and cats, and is peculi =, a ty di for Aviaries.
tries, and to secure po he galvanised
— — no 275 it answers ie for training all kinds
1 “ee ants. hes wide ay 2 Ne r n stock, of
—
— des
— a wide a 4 pe yn — inches iers — per yard
”
” 5
24 55 5
. do., Id. oa r foot
— HS yard; if galvanised, 23. every de 6px
ursery a and Fireguards, Wi — 8 anterns and
Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &c.; Window
Blinds, 1s. a per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho-
gany Bernini emim ae „ 6d, per running foot;
lo ers, from 3d rehes, 20s, each;
» for the use of paper-m
factory o f Tuomas Henry Fox "63, pee: hill, London.
7 — OW: 220
x
Extra a Imperial Wire Sheep 1 3 feet, ls. 6d. per
COTTAM AND HALLEN, 2, 2, Winsley street, Oxford-
The value of this 1 enhan
En 8 which eontains about 28 gallons,
It is applicable to all ee pu We particularly
—
t will be foun
r
T CIRCUS, PICCADIL
TAM & HALLEN Enancc, iz 3
OTTAM & HALLEN, ENGINEERS, IRON Founpers,
&c., No. 2, WINSLEY-STREET, OXFORD-STREET, LONDON,
Cor
erection of HOT
ron or of Iron and 7S
other buildings (of which t
3000), fixed at greatly fo 8
their Repository, 2, Winsle — ——
variety o
MENTS
TRO
8855
76, Oxford. 8
rau and HALLEN FE had 30 yearshexperience in the
HOUSES — CONSERVATORIES — s
od ¢ * ad), and from many impro
d ri me, can with —
BoA upwards of af
-
. 2 feet 6 inches,
—— = each.
A great variety of Cast- 1 Vases on’show at
Oxford. street, also a great
of the fo ollowing articles for gardens, &c., at greatl
uced prices, viz.
Garden Rollers, Han nd-glass Frames,
Garden Engines Flower Stakes,
Garden Syringes, Flower-borderin ng,
Watering Pots Flower Stands,
— ors, Garden rhes
Mowing Machin Ga 5 Ghat
Every 1 ‘of f Work, sca pua and "Oriental in
and cast iron, for Gar
5 TOOLS pay AGRICULTURAL IMPLE.
f a Inds.
G IRON HURDLES, strained Wire Fencin ng, &c.
es at — = AN za ACTORY, 2, Wissen tee and
me e Princess’ s Theatre,
Seea E eot the Princess's Theatre.
EWER
sioners
purpose "of
[Jung g.
NE 8
RAY, OKMSON, an AND
0
ve any infor
The also ber to the —.— ball by them
gi
past season, for the Worshivttl a 2 thec ar be
don, ry their Botanic Garden S Obaba Mr.
Curator, will kindly show the pn and answer any hed
They beg also to say the building only is referred to, 4
ae b
them,
Gray, Onmson, and Brown, have also the honour of
tomany of the nobility and gentry i in the country, and —
of Bg London Nurseries,
N.B. Plans and Estimates furnished
R ublished, Second Edition, price 27 êd,
HE GARDENERS’ RECEIPY BOOK, ‘conus
ing methods for a hone! on kinds of Vermin 4
injurious t to the Gard en ventatives and cures for ty
diffe
of 1 fruit trees, he.
Lon : GROOMBRIDGE and Sons
SUMME
Second Edition, much enlarged, with hinges po Ca pe Ar
i kerh BOOK OF SOUTH WALES, — ag Rion
ANN wg banca A THSHIRE, a |
B BLES FREDERICK CLir hres >
„An excellent cite to a romantic region very accessible ie
little known. a — one Ba to be 5 —8.
London N, Apaus, and Co. B tol: H, Outi,
ORTICULTURAL OCIETY’s 8 ‘SHOW. 4
CHISWICK, this m — be fully reported
TAGE GARDENER of Ju e lát
The COTTAGE GARD ENER is issued every Thursday,
rice 2d., or stamped for post 3d.
F Londo a: wee S. ORR and Co., 147,
ed in Gro
| and lithographed — PREA TWINING.
| four e Specimens
Now ready, in one volume, imperial 410, Il. 115 u.
pes Loney in three tints, and sli, 941 66775
To CITY AND SIEGE O OULTAN. -i i
ries of Sketches taken before, dur es and after
Siege. By Joun DUNLOP, M.D., Assistant-Surgeon 1 L
32d Regiment; with 8 Descriptions, giving a com
lete History of the Sie
N The Work —— contain Views of Moultan from various poiat
— and afte sins Seene vot the pre es ‘ot Vass
A or —— es's Troops
on Artiller of Moo a rm —
Magazine — the Great Batteries
Trenches,
Honea: Wu. 8. 355 1 Co., Amen-corner, Paternoster
e thick e, price is * lettered,
HE. HORTICULTURIST 5
arena 9 9 The Vi ie Garde dener, DT
Se th P £ e Villa Gardener,
Cott Š 5 and Villa 1 ” Kc. &.;
E avings
5 ui erous 5. Óna — Amen Corner, and 147, Strand
—
arly r ani for publication
LLUSTRATIONS OF THE Natl ORAL ORDES ORDERS
OF PLANTS, arra roups, wit Part arc —— |
ołoured p 3 folio, price 108. 6d.
may be now se
London : 3 ConpDatt, St. George
street ; and Davip = 86, Flee
HNST s rer ar Si |
Publishing in Monthly cae p . the
‘HE PHYSICAL ATLAS, yo n-
1 folio. y Kert
Edi eo n in n imperia oi at Edinbargh 1
to ae Majes
PP dea
si II 2 — in, are published, containing th?
I. Geological Structure of s Globe. of
8 of la Atlantic ries III. Mou
and A ier Systems g
N I. Pen pacer 0 of Volcanic — a“
r- 0
à aan the 3 ; aibo we wish, an a1 ber H
ge .
treated ot in it; but Mr. arias t 4
the publication of a ne w eado of e et d 5
reduced s ata lo
have ae; appeared, the project was aa rah
= ief that Mr. 4 — 0 —_ A :
le Illustrations to this work. L
N — — and Sons, Edinburgh an
Th is day is published, in 8vo, o Priel xe. By
SS irrigating arable — i ted mead now desirous ¢ fogs on by W. an na A. K. John nston,
receiving proposals from the ow wt T 2 —— of lands dred — wers 5 anston.
DPR Pireo — tien n say 50 miles of 1 who are willing in Seo, price a» Br
contract for a supply of the liquid Sewa; 5 = in Ntities iilustrations in ov:
acre if for ers 10 E irrigation INT TRODUGTION TO METEOROLOG wees
and at a of 18 irrigat om; at this rate of 5 D. Edin. A Systematic Tagge gre &
Š supply it Pigs Pa ate: at the Biog of the Metropolita ee y e rtant branch of Natural
se districts is fully equal to the + mpre of Mens 000 acres of water the e eee interesting fac facts, ™ methodies!
Meads ; it is proposed 3 give the prefer districts Plained by panei and London,
where (as in neighbourhood pied warning or the alley of the | und familiarly dese and Sons, Edinburzb ja w
n peach, in Boser, ot r *. — river Dar W la Kent WILLIAM BLACKWOOD =, of No, 13, Upper 224 2
or of that ; h P by w uet, 11477 Bye — sta
4 — acars, of the jatt éo — made Widely dispersed, and the — drainage, intern 8 Parish o of St t Pameran, e de ene a a in tbe 27 |
irae embracing latest improve- | falls into it below L n. Pa expl 5 — Precinct of . 2
deliv very “at ‘Corran and Barem, 5 y ae street, | “Oxtord. 8 may be ha by application to L. 0. p Sred . Lombar ae by u by thems at at the O! 222 e
street, London e street, — 1, e Soho, London, to whom | parias ol St, Paura, Covent garde, . Saaana
Sarvapax, Juns 9, 1899,
; GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
\GRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ed Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
SATURDAY, JUNE 16. [Price 6d.
NuEX, CEDRUS * 755 SIHVER CEDAR OF NEW SCARLET PELARGONIUM, “PERPETUAL
| Kohl Rabi, 15 som 3 E. UNT A SCARLE
om R. GLENDINNING bhava — in pring of GLENDINNING has plants s ready to send outa
1848, a number of seedlings of this new pied 8 . this new and splendid scarlet Pelargonium, of which he
‘ species of hardy CEDA N cones imported direct from | po It was awarded a Certificate of Merit
Meadow, ö oy Mount Atlas, offers them to the trade at the following reduced | last t January when exhibited before the Horticultural Society of
SR OLAV eris a T 381 7 | rices, Strong plants, in 60 siz ed pots, It stands forcing admirably, flowers in profusion
Melon house at ae = 25 for iss „„ — a 8 the whole winter; when grown in pots it is well
at 3 50 for ae oe - 11 6 adapted for the greenhouse, and itis ees a first-rate —
N 100 for 0 0 variety. R. i argonium win per-
n ax 3 ChiawickWarsery, near ‘London, June 10. fect satisfaction, 4 1 therefore can confidently 9 it.
. 375 ants 78. (d. each or every three
Roars. 373 4 — owt Whe AOS Eg OR CATTLE, at THOMAS | ordered. 3 Nursery. near af pienia
Plants diseases ot. 72 8, a er-street Gardens, near Godalmin iE
valtry di peepee ** 8S1 Surrey, at 4s. ag r 1000, crates included. Delivered to the NEW AND Se PLANTS.
Pumpkins, Amerika. +++ 373 € | Guildford statio Dane, ca Oo. are now sending out the under-
haa e i gee 575 d in strong healthy plants :
ee e e 3917 8 JO HNSON begs to announce that he has just NEW FUCISIA, THE. 47 ESIDENT.”—Youett and Co,
. 381 received z depict uantity of CINERARIA SEED, saved | have much pleasure in offering the above fine variety to the
5 ex from a first-ra . — ction grown by a private gentleman, notice of pone bey of this 5 tribe, being a flower of extra-
— which te can with confidence recommend. Is. per eee ordinary s uty, e tube and sepals are finely
76 e S.J. has also a quantity of Sweet William See d, saved from reflexed, aod oft a delicate transparent pink, contr; sted with a
a fine dwarf dark collection. 1s. per packet. ‘Aico & a rey deep rose-coloured corolla; the plant is of fine hat t and most
of first-ra git inum Seed, saved from named varieties, | profuse bloomer, 5 8 be pred rai recommen? ed as being
is. per packet. ore ne of each of the above, 2s. 6d., 2 — best o Pits clas 7s. 6d. per plant. 1 e newest
| postage stamps or on Dieu Nu Dover. 18s
r
LOWER SEEDS —Choiee Biennial and Pereanial -NE 42 SOF $49, at 12s, per dozen, ——
rp à
, fo
Mimulus 3 — sent post free, at the following prices: 12 Junius, Duchess of Northumberland, Eyebrich K
i of very jiona h 2 3 Leet high; ar 74 flowers of | varieties for 13. 2d., 30 ditto for 26. 6d., 70 ditto for 5s., on re- Isles, Mi-s Thorold, 8 Ven ay a
A pr atl “nerd — ponr d J, C. has no doubt | ceipt of the amount with the order, Also the best 3 s Vicomte de Sourval, wi oth
L ` a 25 i
the 5 Chronto es 19t » p. 592, | BENJAMIN W. Knicut, Florist, &e., 3 near St. 8 s- NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS. —Fine plants for autumnal-
folowing high terms: “ Your seedling has | on-Sea, Sussex. Catalogues may obtained on prepaid ap- | blooming of all the new and b:st varieties, per post free, 9s, to
d, — to = a very fine thing. It has by far plication, inclosing a postage sta 1 p. 12s. per dozen.
N fe . ERTFORDSHIRE ROSES.—On and after Jun PANSIES,—Finest first-class show flowers, including ali me
A remittance
e is respectfully re. LL the 18th, E. P. Faancrs’s extensive Collection of ROSES beg 0 the new kinds, 10s 3 R
wn correspondents. will be in bloom, and will continue for the season. An early includiug Teushleril Griffiaii carminata splendens, Fyfiana,
Phe ul 20 101 to the Trade. inspection is re- pectfully a Trains direct to Hertford. | alba sanguinea, rea ea elegans, rubra superba, Piatra. ‘
2 ENT INSTITUTION. | Hertford Nurseries, June oscar pu omy ia, 3 m a vai: varieties in strong flow-
_—Notice is hereby given on a SPECIAL GENERAL LEY’S EARLY ann CABBAGE ering pian S., 18s., and 248. per dozen
TING 1 . —: to this Institution will be | ‘DWARD TILEY b 1 = Rate ens major, Jayi, y ven A
g ate- hi
ESDAY
] 5 gentry en : and the public rally, that he
fee recipe of paren e out he PAREY MARON CABBAGE SEED, | culta
-which has proved th >. best yet in e and five Y
lecting TWO PENSIONERS | earlier than any other sort Bt f for table, and equal to young reer A ‘ret
om among th o following Can- Asparagus for tender — _ — “Th i equal to young of td So ae — rade E TEE sp incied is height, ta .
| een examined and approved this over ote i: abbe ges a 1 or wis 9 et Shae 0 LARPENTR, Ts. 6d. each ui
ie any ri is very suita 177 rocky or windy situations, T piy i 77
F = w LARI 7 Saren Application, as it is acy shor — the leg, and hag none of the i ab Dee a bee hire ig 1 hang
one oes oo í *
> 8 s sh |e
ejr al 52
outside leave A large n anmber of. the plants have beer Wie Fin ns p a i
E
33 spite in difere nt P eai Poi ag vè thoronghly proved the š * .
m character given of it, and'also given the err satisfaction toi) 95 AON SERD, saved 2 a is bow being
* arties who have grown it. hare . condition
— r Lp T. wai rrants the — not to run for a twelv Nia SUR 1 6d. — 1 —
5 [iai wil be. neten to ‘prove’ tothe; e fuperior cient to sow a bed of 12 or 24 yards. see —
$a” quality of bis Cabbage over all others. packets oa August it will afford a fine dis diepidpthpough the autumn and
winter months.
zee
34 pars ing 1 oz. 2s. 6d., 187. packets Is. 2 “The — will b.
postage free, on th — order, or Catalogues of the above, with an extensive 2 8
24 the 3 in Id. postage stam ena olana A bo hik
T sa y Kataas T, at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- sams. Great e Nb 6 ey seg wide
20 ad win rn en NE'S WARRANTED EN
oe on LUCUS E 3 AOHIENES, : 1 arden g pul,
st N SALTER (from Versai can furnish a fi are invited to examine EANE’S extensive Stock
— lst plants of che pa Yn Esculent ULLUCUS TUBE. GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London
Bi . Liga at 5s. each. Its cap — ities as an — of food, in | made Garden Engines and Syringes, Coal brookdale Garden
— —. ‘ — of the Pot ato, were parti * ris, Brussels s, ts
F
air:
8.
ugh ive experi Averuncators Garden Scrapers Pick Axes
s facies 2 aes ee
= commence at tak en a at hhaltpas t 11 deck. “the ballot are now in progress in yaaa parts of — Continues He can | Axes Grape Gatherers and a 1
Da Til be allowed to close at 2 3 4 selx. NO also supply the 1 e ee A. atrosanguinea, | Bagging Hooks Pn gd raning Bills
vote whose subseri s unpaid on 15. .; Baumannii, 5s, ; Bodmerii, 5s. ; Escherii, 5s.; Ghie * ravel Rakes and „ Knives; various
By orde: brechtii nova, 2s. 6d.; Knightii, 2s. 6d. ; Tonina ee Borders, various pat- eves » Saws
1819. T, Se R, PRN — 2 | grandiflora, 2s, 6d.; Longiflora superba, 18. 6d. Also the new gee ye Doors „ Scissors
$ . Farringdon- street. mpon and other Chrysanthemums of M. Bonamy, at 3s. each. Botanical Boxes d Frames „ Shears. [riety.
„ REGEN Sr PARK, His new Fuchsia “ Corymbiflora alba,” and_Heliotrope .“‘ Gri- apria of ee In- Hammers r | — akes in gress va.
of TS | 3 » are now in bloom, and those who may favour him wit i 2 a ass Frames | Reaping
e place on 8 5 isit will be convinced of their — — ee chait Engines Hoesater every R y
tained at the Gardens, by orders * a near Hammersm rnpik Daisy Rakes — Bans BAMA UMI.
1 ee! ee and Hare lende Se
EN JAMIN. R ohn-street ursery, Dock Spuds
in great pe agg tha B Colchester, begs to offer ‘the following select plante, at Barat 1 roe Ladies? Set of Tools Sa one Shoyels
P ORo ranyin 828 8 prices. Baer rons and Labels, ae pat- Switch Hooks
chimenes Kni N | Fuchsia 2 —4 78. 6d terns, in zine, por-
„ patens — n é Lobelia azurea Flower — celain, hana Lo
: chti ee in Wires 2 and Reels ne lanting Tools
v, begs to „ Ghiesbrechtii 1 ` a Marking Tak 170
soni = = mbago I LarpentW 1 ols . —. . ae coli ii
Calceolaria, new shru ox imbricata..
i zi embergia š ioe te ` species from Califor- Pentstemon cordifolium 1 GalvanioBurdersand — 1 Ta
le. ba. Per doz, on mia 2 . e chironia’s! glutin Valin T i 0 Salvia 3 nee cht en Chairs and Milton 1 Hatchets Weed Extractorsand
Cytisus filipes (strong o. per dozen... Seats Mole Trape | ooks
rafted), 1 „ Loops Mowing Machine Wheelbarrows
— Lou
a
ree
3
7
73
F
8
HF
E
ee
ERS
ss
3
A
E
7
F
a
elbe 3 e, 1
ane, 99 St. Helier, 8 japonica, Spiræa ——— pleno,
offer extraordinarily fine plants of the| strong plants, 1 ft high 3 6 | per 6
itul orange. coloured Do., per doz Tro peta spesiocum, ea 1
is a plant that re- | Cedrus africa 8 af 9
8 for a very long 3 — odorata Weigela prs ns per dozen,
toilette tables. Also a very rubra, strong. 1 6 63. and 9
* which has been in bloom PP ce dln ‘specio- e californica, ‘
larger in every respect than | sissimus. — — EOROE NEIG HBOURL ~~ SON respectfully
DESTRUCTIVE ANIMALCU anno — 4 that they have prepared for this season an ex-
eee BAD'S GARDEN ENGINES | AND ) MACHINES. | tensive supply of their various IMPROVED BEE HIVES,
inf =a and aaa egg te — of bn MORE eobootey—the T
in er their patrons tally 3 pleasing and profita . rural economy—the Hone:
thai maasi. varna Collec- sit as —.— ge to ee — “injury ee. The 2 consists of „ Nutt’s Collateral othe
in d ’ an
h hobe
Sin
Improved 8 Hive,” Ker, from * — su a
NE SE tan
R; ee, kp e
G. and J. DEANE are sole Agents for LINGHAM’S PERMA-
NENT. L45218, samples of which, with the Illustrated List
8 Tools, can be sent, post to any part of
7 1 —Deawe's Horticultural Tool Waretiouse,
pedian the Monument, 46, ma deene London-bridge,
*
8
8
E
a=]
5
£
— a
oe SS ‘asoecocoo
E
7
Rd
nF
—
*
7
ici
2
2
Ts
may be taken at any time without injur, o
be moa = with safety, — 2 = prot, pi the —
the Cambridge Line and pta — Garden „ that he has saan considerable | and unaccustomed to manipulation .
mile from the 2 improve sta ea ers, . and Machines, which are | with — and prices, will de forwarded o . of
3 from the Brox- | now so perfect that re will warrant the valves to keep in repair 1 S tamps,—GeEorcE Neicusour aud Son, 7}
hunt“ the trains at Waltham, during the term of the patent. Manufactured only at 35,
Herts, _ | Regent-circus, Piccadilly,—Established 25 years.
north cma da Boes ” (6th edition), now published,
or 12
8. 70 ‘Messrs . Paul, Chesh
25 ma — Gerrie, Gardeuarits E nA ohn Cathcart, Bart., F. H. S.,
e oes — ang: Cape
10. TaM Fendi Vei p Bregs foe the same.
11, To Mr. May, Ga ardenet o Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for 9 va-
eties
12. To Mr. Stanly, oo o H. Berens, Esq., F. H. S., for 6
ies of Cape 8
13, to Mr. 0 Cock, F. H. S., for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium, in
44. To Mr. 8 for the same.
15. To Mr. Parker, Gardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., Roehamp-
for 6 varieties of old Pelargonium, in 11-inch pots.
16, To Mr. Dobson, for the same.
17. “er bl — Battersea, for a collection of Fancy Pe-
onium:
18, T ome Faleo r, Gardener to A. Palmer, Esq., Cheam, for
Fali Cacti, in flower.
o Messrs. Veitch and Son, for Escallonia macrantha,
tal CERTIFICATE . a ih
1, To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to ler, Esq., Tooting, for
a collection of 6 Stove and —— Plau
2. To — Loddiges, Hackney, for 20 * — of Exotic
3. To Mr. Carson, for 10 Species of the same.
4. To Mr. Gerrie, for 6ispecies N the sa
8. To Mr. Dobson, for’ coll
6. To Mr. Francis, of Hertford,
7. To Messrs. Pamplin. oa — Lea-bridge-road, Essex, for
s aioe 15 var a H 3
. To Mr.
9. To Mr. Par 3 fur 6
10. a a Deos, F.H. 8.5 for a collection of Fancy Pelargo-
— of the same,
. To} Ar. Robinson, Gardener to J. Simpson, Esq., —
imlico, for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium in
. ated Gaines, for the same.
a Mr. Cock, F. H. S., for 6 varieties of Pelargonium, in 11-
14 10 5 , for the same.
15. To Mr. Green, for a collection of Greenhouse Azaleas, in 6
P be To Mr. Cole, for Aphelexis purpurea.
—
of Achim
for 12 watietios 6 of! Rosis, in pots. |
* of —.— enthes
essrs, —— h and Son, for Hoya be
Mr enson, Oxon, for a —— of Ranun-
cu
T: Bo > Mr, „Saa, Gardene: Esq., Stamford
o T. J. Lenox
k Lodge, New- at “for two Seedling Petunias, “ ez
— 4g “t Prince of —.—
ew Odon! —
= miis}
—
8. To Mr. My
10. To the same, for —.— nopsis —.—
3 the ane = y third best named 3 ae Plants
HORTICULTURAL L SOCIETY - OF LONDON,
EXHIBITION AT THE GARE GARDEN, ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 11.
The following FI shown on this occasion 8 ALC
The Exhibition of Flowers is not . 3
g the Rules to be o in the Exhibi : 5
1 rizes, of the respective value of Fifteen Pounds, Ten — 8 y Pounds, are offered for the
a ibitions of Fruits, delivered at the Garden, or in by noon ON THE PREVIOUS DAY.
io rules are f 3 A in,
In addition, the following prizes are ffered, for whi
in the DURE YN the Market, — Private .
FRUITERERS ARE NOT ALLOWED TO
ean be made in any case oe
O
a5
except in A, B, E, K,
be sufficiently
ete Meme WELL
cable; if the 7
a. No —
Guavas. Oranges, &
; B Pine aa in single
Epvilles
* _SK—S
r than SG ean be ven for Musas or
— ©
LS—SK-
es, 3 neee Trinidads, dro. 18
1. Pinch Saline Black Prince, &c.
2. White Museadines, 8 Sweetw .
a aters, Eo.
4. I Sane 1 SB
5. Other sorts, distinct from the foregoing. LS—SK—SB
LS—SK—8B
Market Gardeners, or Growers Nor FRUITERERS
exhibit independently 2 other. s
exoept iii. — — aa one
7
8 and PROPERLY NAMED by the Exhibitor. far i
it eee = 2
F Peaches, in six
G Nectarines, i in — B 0
H Apricots, in sixes. SK—SB—C
Figs, ins 83
sy in dishes of IIb. oe :
Black. 8 . White.
L R aaa in ta
N. B. They must se Bavo
g . aron, 22 SB—C
no one to show more than
Fruits is oo if gathered,
2 The one speci Re
2. The best flavou SK—SB—C
: Other —.—— of * exclusive of Apples and Pears of the
Pastry Sl
ments, Fis:
tion, Lam
Milk, 4 tubes
ters for Gr
Somerse
and kee
SHEET GLASS TIL
HARTLEY’S ‘PATENT R
Copy of a wes from the
tshire,
Mn. JAMES "defer Sir. —
ar e,
— seen any so goo
erandah 9 a it .
as
imes te most happy t o bear
— of your Glass. „
(Signed)
5
370 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [June 16,
4 HE ANEROID BAROMEP 15
HORTICULTU | y OF LONDON. T
ORT IC LT RAL SOCIET - - e | Pediment or Upright rometers, 1. 1 i str —
XHIBITION, JUNE 9, 1849 aromieter 4s decidedly!the best construction at Wi
. being less liable to error than any other, and is `
able. hermometers for Greenhouses, 2¢ 1 80 mirta
AWARD O F THE J U D G E:S. 3s. 6d. 3 4 Tanis 2 Hot Water, in Jag a
e e e eee, e s o7s Self-registeri
for Heat and oa | of the-best ey
ICATE OF HONOUR . To Mr. Bruce, forthe Kory 7 est constructign,
1. To Mr. Mar * Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for a col- 18. To Messrs. act an "Son, for Tistanthus pälcher, and 2 ake ; ornate br w !
, itto fo iT
lection of 39 Stove 95 915 1 > ME -yrn 1. To Messrs 9 5 or a collection of 15 Stove and Green- er * Sul hae mie ibs. an — ae 1 he
: Š Dartford, for house wing the qua — milk, with instructions, 3. ue ir
1 To apace, Or 43 Bey eerie hen Ro ae Clarke, Gardener to W. Esq., Muswell-hill, of superior r manufac ure, the lenses are — de 5s, —
å Nr Myl ardener t r, Esq., F. H. S., for oa nd ction of 6 Stove and Tomtom Prena. 1, 31, 12s. ; No. 2, "iss, No. 3, A achromatie,
m — — Exotic Or rchids. y To Mr. ardener t 805 Ri ao aine, Esq., Wallingford, | deseription’and prices of Microsc <, giring iy
ome THE G GOLD KNIGHTIAN N MEDAL. por sane AN of Exotic instruments, sent free by post ribet s: mo pag
1. To Mr. Gr Gardener to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart „ F. H. S., 4. To Mr. May, Gardener 10 E. raced heart, — 8 „Langley Park, Lc dering from the e country or may rely
. for a * of 15 Stove and Greenhouse Plants, Bec — fo 1 9 3 of Cape Hea ame care and attention b-ing paid as = E 0
2. To — and Son, of Exeter, for 20 species of 5. To Mr. any Se Garden r to Mrs. Lawrence, . H. S., for Erica prosent t to 7 for themselves. Were personaly
: e Orchi — : vesti ea. ustrument Manufacturer the Boag
3. ph Mr. Plant, Gardener to J. H. Schröder, Esq., F. H. S., for | 6. — Staines, — Middleser place, New.-road, for 6 spe- Kamivglty, 30, "Hatton. garden, London, 1
cies of the cies of Pelar FLOWER POTS AND GARDEN SEA
“Te ties aths. 7. To the same, for Ga — varieties of the same, in 8. Inch pots. TS,
A To CAE iy asha, Aim ren — 8. To Mr. Wiggins, Gardener to 8 — Esq., Staines, Jes MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford ist
THE D BANKSIAN MEDAL. for 6 varieties of the same, — nch pots, o 1 — he ehas a — 2 cits an eat
to J. Coster, Esq., of Streatham, | 9, To Mr. Gaines, F. for a collec of Calceolarias. , solicits äi —
** aes Taylor, Garder Sto and Gree — 5 * my Plants. ’ 10. To Mr. Robinson, for a collection of Fancy Pelargoniums. Every description of useful CHINA, G
2 To Mr. ams oo to C. B. r, Esq., F. H. S., 11. To Mr. Glendinning, .S., for a collection of Statices. . at the — . e price, — —
"for 30 — of Exotic Orchids. 12. To Messrs. Veitch and Son, for elia 0b, F. = ir Pii 250, Oxford-stree r Hyde-park, London.
3. bah Gordan id n, Garde: — aie ie: Beck, F. H. S., for 10 species | 13, "and jagrindifors. o to Mrs, Lawr rence. ‘or Port- OTHOUSES Ax oo) ATORTES waa |
t Berkhampstead, for 12 va- 14. To Mr. Ivi uma Rose i ned comp/ete in alt Parts Of the Fh
= * — of — ag —.— n 15. To Mr. Davis, Oa Min, East Barn — for Noblesse ha 8 á 1b. of at Bo a three. x ee-light Cucumber
i 1 k, fi in es. sizes
5. oe — varieties’ ‘Garner to to ms Quilter, Esq., Norwood, for 16. To J. a: 8175 G ee lAN Seon e-app iti sent . pen ne yea, Kiagzon e
6 10 Me s. Rollisson, Tooting, for the same. 1. To Mr. 5 mley, Kent, for a collection of 15 Poe al Sanaa of every description, at Janes Wis
7. To Mr. patina for Tall Cacti, in flowe — and Greenhouse Plants. othou A i yei en ace, Old Kent.
: Mand LARGE SILVER-GILT Bnin 2. ack, for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse | o — A nean: ility, Gentry, and the Trade, in
n, Gardener to oo Phen
* * N = 1s ela and Greetitionse aH ; 3. To Mr. [r Malyon, Gardener to T. Brandram, Esq., for the USV.
2. To Mr. Kinghorn e Earl of Kilmorey, “wick. sa aiki FREEMA N, ‘Homann Burner and He
a, enham, be denen 105 6 1 and Greenh e Plants. 4. To Mr. ke. Bruce r Oncidium flexu 4, F. k. s Apparatus Manufacturer, Triangle, p Hackney, me
3. sy ta — 9 8 J. Blandy, Esq., F-H. S. for | 5, To Mr. Knott, Gardener to the Rev. * ` Pritchar ¥ Binaon, — to call the attention of the gentry to
4. To Me Sm posit, om er to Mrs. Lawrence, F.H.S., for 10| 6. To Mr, Taylor, for 9 species of Cape — — . ide, * 17217 st oo N a
ies of t . To Mr. Staines, for a collection of Faney ary 10 wid a 11 Eiet of Conse —.— 124 fr
bag ane 2 species of the same 8. a — . Ak Gardener to E. Goodhe » for Erica | Pis wi * 3 * a — iron hie 0 48 DUA
E 20 aion Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North- | toa pa — as 5 ranch in e bonia
“ami — 5 “te a „ e of ob ee 9. o Mr. * * Echium frutico ato ih Wod 50 r iron, or for, ok
7. > — eed of Streatham, | 10, 70 Messrs. Veitch a nd — for Tetratheca verticillata, Lines
*. ba ce . 11. To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Mrs. e, F. I. S., for a ox AGRICULTUR AL an
o JOHN ory Salt e ph 10
London
e
12. To Messrs. derson, Pine Apple- place, for a collection pad Basil sa in
of iaaa 4 —
13. To Mr. zak, e ei longiflora. RD AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Bean
14. To Mr. Gra Gardener to Mrs. Smith, Bersted Lodge, DD road, Chelsea, by special appoiti ment to her M
Bognor, for r Violet Hative Nectarines. H.R.H. Prince Albert. — OR ENTAL ‘WATER FO!
15. To Mr. j — er to W. Herbert, Esq., Clapham- consisting of bl and white swans, Eg Canada,
common, for Black Hamburgh Grapes. ternie, — d 1 oms geese, sheildrakes, |
ł6. To Messrs, V — a Son, for the best-named collection of y idgeo and winter teal, all,
Plants (no error in 20), sho ovellers, ‘gold-eyod —— ‘een ogy Carolina
TAE eee _BANKESIAN MEDAL. domesticated and oned ; also Spanish, Cochin
1. To Mr. Glendi for a collection of 15 Stove and Malay, P Poland, —— aud Dor king fowls ; white J
Greenhouse Plan ea-fowl, and paro A pigs; and
< 17 r. Stanly, r : odiledtiðn of 6 Stove and Greenhouse pea er ta „Gra ceshurths street,
ants,
3. To A. Rowland, Esq., F. H. S., for 12 varieties of Roses, in wes Lass FOR CONSERVATORIES.
po A AND ” 9
4, To Mr. goo His for 9 varieties of Cape Heaths. J Without, have the phase to hand their New List of Prits
5. To — 1 , Pine-apple-place, for Pimelea Hen- | of SHEET GLASS for Cas
6. To Mr. 2 F. H. S., fo! on purpurea grandiflora. + TICULTURAL, LAs ‘SQUARES.
. . j r > UP TO 4 ARES.
s; — = a3 —— r — or a collection of Ranunculus, 8875 an * 8
o Mr. Glendinning, sf iali F per fi Under 6 by 4 sina yii
: To Mr. Cowell, Gardener to F. R: Bedwell, Esq., Waltham. 3 from 3 ae Pes ee 1 1 1
i ¢ Hamburgh Grapes. [Fi 26 5 3 7 3 f by 5 and 7 e
10. To Mr. 105 ener to was Marquis of Abercorn, * 0 8 by 6 and 10 by8 -nn aa
11, To Messrs, won Garde for the second best named collection "ROUGH PL cee GLASS for WINDOWS, ‘SKYLIGHTS,
** pee fini); and FLOORS, in sizes not exceeding 5 feet superficial. 4
ERTIFICATE OF MERIT. } thick Bi Fae 1s 94. h per foot 25.
1. To A. Rowla a F. II. S., for a collection of Roses, in e p h mne
25 varieties.
To Mr. Green, for 9 varieties of Cape Heath. 3
3. To Mr. Malyon, for — veutricosa superba.
„To Mr. Epps, F. H. S., for Erica 8
Tiles made of 8 Glass 8 5 i 1
sepik 20 i ses bereits 10d. me’ awe :
—
h en Pl ate and Wi —— 0
mp Shades, and Lactomete
Ts.
6d. ; 6 tubes, 108.
eenhouse 0
re, to James PHI
12
AS MILETN NGTON i
ES AND, Star.
CUCUMBER TUBE.
. Estimates and List of Prices
Warehouse, 87, Bishopsgate-street W.
GLASS
UGH derar
. — Londo jo 5
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE,
7371
VERBENAS OF
Larpentæ auschn and an exten
ofall the — penta PLANTS, — — and
—.— urn ing go for which, see our
d previous w
— — Establishment, Sud-
for imm
of last
BROWN,
* lowing for 28. each, or 2
price. E atx of Sh = — paid f in hamper — London.
~e seg Wyness’ Prine
1 Soa Napier mandy oung’s Royal —
i ó i Brilliant
2 — Epps's Eclipse
; ae — 1» _ Eppsii
18 Nun, Ivery's prone
3 3 ios
2 1 : Barnes’ Sguid
| = | eee
u
„ . Miss — eria Californ
|
;
AS — Psyche, Beau
Ne Burgundy, Da al, Queen of the French, —
perpek
—.— Captivation, Desir rable, Gem
bas, Gill's on wee, sang soa Defiance, Belt’
at 25 Joulsot’s 7 for 12s,; 12 for 9s.
ee 1 fer 13. 34 Free b by
MIMULUS, Pca ne 1s.; others low.
a, and A miration for 2s. 6d.
„low.
: larias, &c. Ca — will be sent on appli- | h
Sart, with prepayment, m eons at “erga
WX. — BOTTERILL, Tb.
begs „ to inform the public
true sorts of the ee parok be for-
i ‘that to order on receipt or postage stam r post- offiee
atthe undernamed prices, mat and package lalaa.
all the sorts of early Cabbage, Savoy, and Kale, including
: —— per :
no mat or package is requi
ad upwards delivered free of carriage to the Edenb: ridge
~ ORYPTOMERIA JAPONICA SEEDLING
. STANDISH anD aie LE having —
stock in Europe of the above s
strong — at — — Oe
I the
offer fir ——
38. 6d, ea ES y pacai 127. 174.64. 240 100;
„S. and N. — ig . 1
urrey, Jun
1UMS—The u —— —
„ HOTLE‚Ss CRUSADER,” e obtained of J. WROMESGU
r Als, cash, Fine strong plant, 1 last Ei pag „
2 pots, carrying a head of
Also . — iy ‘all ae gre —— esa out at
moderate prices.
the Horticult Society, has kindly dire
—— — re to be matte for the ee
Gardens at t — next Exhibition, on
85 the llth July, Ticke issued to the order
af Fellows of the Society only, at this — — price 5s., or t the
afternoon of ey altos July at 78. 6d. gaci, 5 then
orders signed no the 8 But
N in
Sasi ntry,
é 83 the Vice . —— 21, K.
Y, ent-street,
; “MONDAY. the n 0 Jukx, ma; e
on this occiiston, oficial
— —.— that day.
Yo Tickets will be issued in ne on the day
— O
5 Gardeners’ Chronicle.
| SATURDAY, JUNE Y6, 1849.
MEETINGS FOR THE EN THE ENSUING WEEK.
Romir, june {Chemical
in the daily papers of a
of the Metropolitan a il that
ON Sewace is about to be
the land within its
a upon ‘yond authority, that
to those to be put in force near the
4 e from —
ee e Mont
(u ³ AA (
5 ae aE N
a Sg eer aa : i
wars
en
report itself, but some remarks
de of it are now call on ac-
— e tn Public,
e e at a more t
3 i le. ar of wealth. The means
THIS SEASON, at 1
RYMAN, |
Es, Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor. |
‘town 4 75 source atli
2 for many years
and five minutos per ac
t these. th
e 2 Z ‘obj 5 — re
8 J i
London —_
démoaphere instead of the n
itati r, and —
3 would be or by the operation,
duum would b ass of material so — as not to
be pees its na aki
t has long aoe clear to those acquainted with
— peor. of manures’ that if sewage is to — —
t must be done — — it in — flui
that * it is a liqui
n
m of inealenlable
value, as all good liquid —
a state of growth,
it reaches the roots it is abs
the system; so that it is no exaggera ation pa sa
d manure, applied over-night, produc
effect by the succeeding noon.
s different, e soluble matter must w
ti 11 wee reach and dissolves it ; the gases
which it gen e are formed slow wly, and its
action 0 important, 5 time, during |,
which the * — season clips a
ait
if by natural evaporation, no 5 “ steam power
eii endure so prodigio us a nuisan e effect of v
which would necessarily be to poison the Londen
orbed and seinille i
lid {SO tects
Cultivators who know nothing o 4 manure except
from the mice z ve solid, = sometimes not very
useful, duced in farm- yards, cannot be-
lieve that dale crops a rass per annum
possible, heavier the preceding.
Nevertheless — crops are aitained A car re men,
and will one day be e quid m —
— the wonder it —— like’ — overflow o
the Nile or the Indas. Where such ‘periodic
oak the land wichen mre reach
ingredients 4 aer. or suspended in
except where liquid
antly a
begins to grow; it W ed uid man
-raez the crop, or the land, but rapidly irii
n abundan it is cut. Ins Dean
the ee A ism aire of liqui
made e good bya
ers | manure, whi 5 neoa fertility ae something more
up springs t ain ; again it yields ar, to che
8 S ae Pe antly than befor The
process of liquid manuring continues to be repeated
with the same results as long as the season permits
of feet ah and i myy, Bee for ever.
Cabbage ain 6 & Uy Pe
gus, and all kinds of garden stuff.
of economically securing the fert
to get so bulky and unmanageable an
e land at a price which could be cm apes! m
zappear
e that shes a ery
25
T
— pany
gous
ed with The high pe
hg fs agg of bs land itself, 2 on vegetation |;
one
rarely cee
is] Of th
Cuapwick |
by ire aiin it could never be sold for its “ pensive. Of the modes r yg 233 by pipe and
more her To confine them m-
92 ee
versant with ene t
7 distributing a top-dressing,
ia 5 of est torn of stab
ing of 15 loa iquid ma
1 “ (applied sist by jet and a. but by 5 wiles
art) ‘would cost between and 1 The
Sfeddagiion of the expense ‘ot distribution ad pa
«the an one-sixth of the nse any f
“method would -give mit “important Randes i
“ the application of manures on a large scale.
“still further reductions might be e
“ 1842 he had obtained. the results of some examina-
“ tions made then as stated in evidenee
“ that, with pipes cattiell into ‘the field, 5 properly
$ arranged, o e man might w of 20 acres
xpected. i
now reported a
“ pressure sufficient to produce a 5 to
nd with an —— spreading the water
“ like 0 ower, a m a boy could 1 an
aE ‘acre of land in about 45 th The qua
of liquid manure which they applied was Pott 16
a ilies and be ground was generally watered three
e times.
No — 11 the right principle of applying the
sewage is that whic Mr. Cua 2 10K recommends.
the cost of conveyance ; we canno a net doubt
that he must have satisfied himself upon that point
be fote” bringing the project forward officially, and
we shall look with we interest to the explanations
on that head which he promises hereafte
If the is car ried s out, the im ee in the
1 of much of che gro und near London,
when drained, will be incalculable. We are not dis-
sed even to ‘question the estimate made upon this
who believe that some land may
ome in mind, that this
3 Tti is, the fore, a question
i rable that
s to relievi
their districts of a terrible nuisance, even
a vg obliged to sell it at a loss, which is not
roba
A sunny day, cloudless and cool, enabled 8839
visitors frou among the higher classes of the London
world, to witness ¿ and enjoy the pa ECOND 3
t
or
e ney and delicate
characteristic of early ve 1 of
ododendrons in 3 tents filled wi
less profusion of the
together with a crow
nome 203 appy faces,
sgn tome witnessed in these gardens, a
e Exhibition, a st report will -be found dat
The circumstances which struck us
AL
4
Ha
manures x
“the town, and of distribution afterwards;
. 4 redaction of the — of the removal wed of the
must dep
tion of | gr
nse of removal out of
as most: satisfacto were “the es iety which
oa eB into t collections, cm
an
vators, and the ere
health of species which, 20 }
almost -uncultiva by pm
years ago, o, were sre out
Engine
z «the demand which might ar
and Mr. C, Jou
„ should be known
18 as
cc
present insu
“conve eer
T applicati
direct sso St to
offi , Donatpson stated
of the com
il that the 3 quantity supplied was 110 tuns
“per acre, and t
sen time Mn, one hour
e cost of lab
E its a
ication
Pe
ee
$
“ respects they must tie 8 by the direction of ei
Lo on | È
ild
vate
largoniums, in a new and better] — —
fu ae maintained their .
gained one
—
A
engin les
respect, howev the cost of | stain
er U ibution on the field, he would
kad — of trial works by the | w
our in | mani
as 18. 14, and — so of pump-|t
ere, exclneive it
“ing _ „making ajelis Is. 3
“of the cost of its conveya veyance |
“ was 2 present by barges, ne ce e ex-
F. SLADE
372 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [June 16
brown, pone 000 with 2 Was brought by Mr. rinni era varieties which might be introduced or bea or By A . r
igre” gargad eere grka li| Fig. 2 represents a porti ;
f ears cultivated extra double Ranunculi ig.2 rep portion of the
At the next on t the lth of July, p 4 e with my own hands. Some gardeners | the same scale as the plan), which shone Sra fy
Vision ve be made for the exhibition of fruit, , which |an e roots every year, as soon as the leaves in the front and back walis, and tom N
is then ted in considerable quantity, and wil — faded, aiino the flowering is over. Others 22 roofs, The span of the pediments is 6 fest irw
123 rm the great feature of the day. We take them up every alternate year. That was my cus- | to centre, and the rise forms an angle of 2249 5
venture Ae request the particula perms e those | tom — pais ears, gos mea Hyaci I. teieni their paag 5 3 5 are 2 feet 3 *
who o intend to enter into competition on that occa- | character with tolerable pe ut having subs 00 inches in the clear, and are
zion, to the rules which are advertised in another quently neglected this daat pe followed the more | centres, on the pivot and socket principle, —
column. These rules have been carefully made with | usual course of taking them up every year, they soon | communicating with the ventilators in the —
reference to the true interests of exhibitors, and will | degenerated into single ones. are 2 feet 9 inches long, by 1 foot in
not be departed from upon any pretence. It would] Let not amateurs rejoice at seeing their Roses show] Fig. 3 is a transverse section of the house in wig
if all were to deliver their fruit | symptoms of producing some proliferousness. If they | are shown the tanks, pipes, pathway, in, and
Mina A yg ibiti vel] | suffered so to do, they will perish, or at any rate that are vacuity for ventilaticn, in th ad the
fi he Exhibition, as well | sufere „they p , ny r: The
by noon on the day be ore the E 1 i for the part of the bush which i ected will be much | wall is 3 feet high to the top of the plating : kr
2 1 . . x injured by it. The gardener should therefore be care- | angle of the rafter is 32° to the i
ed to é
80.
*
„ again opened to the visitors in July, > 7
will add greatly to the interest of the scen of vicissitudes in the seasons, every pr a 22 5 85 lators in the back wall is as follows: in bay
5 be taken to eber, the plants te too h from roof there is a ventilator, raking at the top
DISEASES OF pS ta them. Thus in proliferousness some of — rer buds the pediments, and about 2 feet 9 inches wi
should be taken off, and some of the branches bent back, | feet in height. These ventilators, or openi
ny ity i ack al fo
v. Pes eee th that is, excess in 0
Paris deere eee calyx ; a single species. — 5 thx: Ore ‘eection), “aha A
calyx sometimes produces a num mber of leaflets forming) DESCRIPTION OF THE MELON-HOUSE AT openings shown ti the DA pies Tha venta
a series of i ttle calyces, an is tself oce. casi onally de- CH HATSWO RTH. E sinters 3 sina Gade to slide oad ian
balanced
ly occurs i pcm which 2 a double calyx, espe- to
cially where the outer calyx is in fact a collection of f pits
bracts. The variety of Joey is well Known, spicam fru- |°! Pits an
menti referens, described and figured e * E phawe- f x : k ll ke 8 10 7 :
ature Curioso: ront pits and front wall there is a vacuity of wi seen by the section e tank at the bak
3 a rf t 2 e year 715. pr inches, also to admit the free circulation of air from rt of in fa
pdeng K oe ale of 3 i: hada ant peed of luxurious | the ventilators shown in the front wall, and to make pis is in 525 r “sa pe pipes from the top of the
shoots which bo re at their extremity nothing but a long room for the hot-water pipes, shown in the section. | boiler may escend from the back tank, pass under the
ive ca YX,
?
ben ee it a resemblance of an ear of corn | Wil
This variety was
ha it
would induce me to conclude that it was originally | br! s = $ .
Se: ; built against a garden wall, 1 foot 10} inches thick. | face, gerne a small space between the surface and
a So, Winta The front and 1 are built of 9 hich brick, and | tank co nit Magazine of Gardening and
Gr re of th she Diseases Belonging to. the five preceding the pit walls of 43-inch brick on bed, plastered, with a | Botany, po June
ject of
MA
E ~
asa n and an 2 to his art.
Z ING)
SY
Kg 9
rr First he must remem- Fig. 2. Fig. 4.
that plants which present these Y if
anm WUN Num AN O pame
WÀ O A
A i
splendid eriam aag their existence some ti
the o rse of the life they would have
run.* He must in ope next place call to mind the
need he may be in of procuring seeds of a plant he
wise v or
A
*
cannot otherwise p If, moreover, his trad a
his pleasure make it i double We
flowers, for instance, he may, even then, derive fı i
these pages hints which may hi j
In as has mentioned, an over-rich soil i 2 Zp A
is one of the primary causes of these aberrati It is —
indeed very seldom that double or proliferous flowers N
occur in a wild state. By carefully avoiding the appli- Nige s =e W
cation of manures, the plants will generally resume \ W W W AN a
gradually their natural appearance. Prolifications are E
of themselves not constant, as far as hitherto observed, | Scuxx, 1 inch to 10 feet.
d occur but in few plants. These also will cease 5
put forth their a i ; working Mec AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. the plants are grou
them is neglected, and they are deprived of that super. THE egree of beauty whic e amateur | stakes all over the beds and shad
abundant nutriment which has probably been the cause —.— under considerable difficulties, can display in| piece of canvas. e moment the
of such productions, his little flower-garden very frequently depends on the from his occupation in the afternoon,
I am aware that no one wishes to deprive himself of | Success attending the planting out of his annuals and | have bee put on sho be em
juble flowers; but if hie that should be the case, ht other decorative plants. The failures, the blanks, and | must be repeated for a few days, ge
some ones of ind be placed amongst other disappointments hich mark his early progress, | planted plants shall have rooted in fil be
them, and the former will soon be seen to assimilate | often n him, and occasionally drive him from | Should a dull or moist day occur, this
themselves to the latter t Thus we see double Neapo- | his favourite pursuit, because he imagines that t they are | able opportunity of exposing
Titan Violets gradually degenerate into single ones by difficulties beyond his control; and that only unlimited | weather. Before any attempt,
the negligence of who allow the latter to means, presided over by reny professional gardeners, | move any plants which have been
indiserimi i the
The same chin The ee them. is is, however, not the case. they should have been previo
ag A — a — a ae may be — mi suc- the full action of weath
often happen where it is | cessful with the gent eman ener, pro harden them for the operation, an
desired = e seeds 5 flowers mhere the e sesses a hand- glass eo or a small frame and a a Tittle. is given them for a week or so then t
i ay obtain ee litter, which always abounds near large cities.| Such plants as Ve 2 hlox
the same On the latter let him * his glass or frame, and in tunias, Heliotropes, Anagallis, an
male organs are in flower, by gathering this way a great number of plants may be raised or pro- growing plants, should be pegged do
and Aer them to the double or semi-double | pagated. Having accomplished this, the next difficulty | being planted, and others of
flower in ion, This process, now common in some is to get them 5 with success to the various beds as Balsams and Lobelias,
countries, has ee of late years the of and borders to be decorated. will require stakes
Flora by many most beautiful productions; but with Not otbing i is 80 ee as to see newly moved plants, for if leſt to be blown about in
ns it is very seldom practised, and we are thus deprived amera. a watered, languishing and dying. This happens | collar of the plant gets bruised before
* This may be true in many cases, especially of proliterous in consequence of the her being in some aea i Aana strength, or has taken sufficient hold
— ee produce double flowers, instead of | Unfavourable for tio oyid ion of transplanting. If the this means an i deal
prolonged = 2 swam co ara lives rather — are moved gpm Seg se weather, arid this is ——— er mea ae
ra oa ten iheir necessary, ne in the evening, an iances are limited. in
pon e and ake the of of the d able ones 7 them be well Sab afterwards. On the Following difficulties of “ Amateur,” and others sin
Place empty pots over each little patch, or if | stanced. Pharo. 5
_THE GARDENERS’
5
373
and men seem
.
eet
i
emag
the wee — applications to to the rier
the disappointment of t
wee, sometimes,
more is
sei ; an
Hint
1
ayu
1
ee
8
E
11
H
cd
n do ts rules mus
ill to — attended with the rer
15 l is only acquired by experience.
al
*
8
ff
11
theory will do him little service. He will
will not bear liquid manure, but
may be applied to
receive only
3 himself ee st this subject,
= —
which h
easu
man who is becoming a gardener
nil desperandum. No plot of ground
can be considered an Utopia. To grow a
— is an operation of ma ga $
ei ted
4
if he
anagement, kee clearly the
Ye Fefe of his pursuit are set before
esponden
Sou o 5 — —That Mr, T Mundell’s
seth mbe is inco;
wall nine
"the n ines
d well be planted, the: N
ok the ground. e tree
is some years older: —
ted—so deep i
it in a srg manner
he present ti
r the other |
curl and basa some to such
inj ost
e
ing i
m a donti we to the colour a4 the old-fashioned pink
S; magnes me- pap:
e
— gota ont the right
th
ired
“Villa and Suburban Gardening ” = st | fo
men, 5 to mee
beer any one have the kindness to tell
ody Ege
hove
again, will keep rom my experience of w
ron tanks se ie 1 fear it will get to smell badly.
Will charcoal or any other substance tank
cistern tend to keep it sweet? Ca
the result of his experience in any adira case ?
Such information would be doing me the most essential
kindness. C. R. D.
The Hawthorn.—Although it — not uncommon for
common cote to ee a pinkish
s year
aripa
stono: Etoraoensi is, Doncaster
treating Larch for arg: is as follows. Cut down
July o roe ands e tree is full of —
Entirely 5 if in runnin,
e sawyers will
ond the hing proof of the
rving jui
observe that your correspondent “
arrangement of flowers in
ot thi e
mass
8 forward ma Py ucid argument, or very cogent
reasons in suppor his predilection. has bee
said, that “there is A accounting for tastes,”
practices 1 1 which hav
supported b of pro pnn
without Aaii a ait ient r
sofa “e 2 50 t, in which 15 colours are “ well
l he i o tell your readers
definitely Witt he aai the baki ideal of a
oes he mean that they should
explain what is to be
ferent-coloured flowers ne disposed?
3 *
e are many fine places
of water, and consequently
rs and a picture, by which I pres
Ar. | landscape painting. While I admit that the colours of
rpet adies
r = quarter of an 855
eee 23.
g Larch.—I\ believe "that. "the best mode E
esca
e been adopte
d 3 and ability,
“E.X.” da
s, or on the other side li
W., Jes 11
ders ss — ale
of the varieties of ae very much, especially Abies
A. morinda, which we find it
to fumigate several — . the summer.
enz t a
“J.H
are we to sug
for their destruction than the p
oe 0 think the best rt would be t to Pee, a a kind of
to throw over the tree
What a deal of — 5 is Lg
than a doze on "the
morning of the 4th of Ji une, though it isa 83
saying chat certain conditions of gs dhe =
tion, i ave been
ave the ee 3
use of by men of intelligence on other subjects ; but in
the 3 of cold N or swarms of visible insects,
receiv
the earth
n throughout the
als), looked
moke, seen through
a win 3 were of * 8 appearance
— indians a of electricity. The
temperature at 1 fe was 74° at half past 9 p.m thun-
17 T and the therm
and 2 in
E
8
0
der w was heard in the
in 2 65°. Between the morning we had
a very heavy th men, whieh lsesed OH @ pay
I cannot 5 say whether there was hail or not, bu
quantity of rain gaf ell was great for the ‘eae 2
lasted. I have been on the t
instead of being blighted vers appears 28
greatly invigorated. Perha of your scientific
to adopt colo
m, and | n
sho ald be governed by the same Apar og" of design as
a well arranged flower garden, to the distribution of
urs, 42 at a loss to trace the
a landscape painting and a flowe
Rept
er paper upon
a form
ject, I endeavoured to expla ain in| m
correspondents + will state whether deen 8 is in-
jurio vegetation in What way it
it. H. S.
what way true variety is produce
sequal PEA rity, "that it is a thing apart
n Mr. Alison a en ays on Taste,
from
rmity and v ow as
— * ebe; and convenience
e not less objects ood taste than pictu
”
I think
res
further and more potent arg
| authority, I res x giad “ to live and learn,” and to
join triumphan shout of iş
| tra ir axioms is by s means estab
| Henr reer | Nuneha
ma od Glas s 2 be cheaply imitated, and tb
ieee a the sun’s, rays y insured,
means of glaziers’ putty. Taking a a lump of weli-
ere A ogg he oor gently dabbing it against the glass,
l- be resembling 1
ear.
g Rhubarb.—Cut it into pieces about
*| effect : ” and as ear and not eT a > Ma:
bet
by the
u not require renewal | Pavet
ust be done when the ee 3
d inch ince — peeled (which spoils all good things aes
paring my weather table with
the one kept at Chiswick for last week, I find a differ-
an sagged n of a low tem-
perature at ave had during the
season,
week, I am sure g not " s uninteresting to 2 re,
Win
On 3
stood at 43° 5
å had 1.01 inches
Inst. T. L. C., Assington, Suffolk, June 14.
Sorieties,
CULTURAL, June 9 (GARDEN EXHIBITION.) —
or some account of sis kaiia features of this
rdening skill we canis refer our
ther
wi
bush of —— coronaria, a pogen riera
THE —
CHRONIC
LE.
-
374
bloomed and luxuriant Pimelea sema well-
and
managed specimens of Cle elias splenden
Dipladenia ep the Jatter be get 88 than 17
tivated plan h
Mr. Cole’s alete which o w
aps 3 the best of which
rpurea macrantha, also Pimelea
Clerodendron
remandra th la
aai of 15 2 8 arg PLANTS were
was produced by Mr. Green, gr.
It contained a or ee
o C. arne
| third, produced the clas is yén
A.
r, Esq., who was
fine
Mr. Williams, gr.
ides m, in
maculosum, insufficiently in bloom ;
ichi auch |
so
a splendid Dendrobium Wallichianum; the muc
mired Saccolabium guttatum ; the better
varieties of Cattleya Mossiæ; Lælia majalis; with two
the vera-
; nthe v
ces; Brassia verrucosa
major, the pretty Oncidium divaricatum, and ot
Oneids.— Mr. Rae, gr. to J. J. Blandy, Esq., se
among other things Aerides maculosum, a small ae
ociabhim premorsum, Dendrobi Devon nianum, Ca-
anthe ver atria, a
rye olabium gut
ood Phaius Wallichii “Vanda R
Cattleya Mossiæ.—A fifth
Messrs. Loddiges, of Hackne
was a utiful Brazilian
ain
n
oxburghii, eg a small
d was pro
2
Catt
d Comparettia falata, ee
m,Dalhonsian num, the c
ro
2
Azalea Minerva, and two o gene Sh
tion ; the by variety of Aphelexis purpure g mrs |
Rondeletia
SUILOW Ie
wo ne = n —
ha down, but in thi
t pright po sition, phage
moscha 3
H. ee Bourbon: Belle
ong Am
BRE ay
—
ae
a large ——— ele
coccinea, tricolor, Lee H —
Mr. Ger ate
flora, delecta, fl orida (
blossomed Cavendish ii, and a
“alin; —
saya
PY
super $
8
estphal
Collectio — of 9 CAPE
a,
ith cae a nice variety of ventricosa
Caren, ve
a ‘he tuleeflor ü
8, e me
— — |
llisson. sent well-managed sole of. ven
mall
HEaTHs. were
ramidal
roduced 3
lants ciety — cubica minor,
tricosa, slobo tricolor elegans, a pretty 2
4 9
Paul Per:
i : Louis Buona-
2 eri piuk ;
Vibert pasè it B 5 ee
n N ] ar | uvier, cherry |
iy Coupe d'Heébé, pink changing to silvery ei
tea Franeis clean looking, specimens
— = = Blairii,, No. 2; Flora. M‘Ivor; |
ustrian Briar :
—" China:
"ea: Devoniensis,
id Perpetual: Madame Laffay, Mrs. ing about as
Abbé
gr. to the
8
praamid — were Ming ta tam
tion was contribut to wa. by Un.
Farmer, Esq. This somewhat irregular. group co Mens a 0 Lawrence, Mr. Cole, Mr. May, gr. to E. ark,
r of Ste otis floribunda, Clero- | macrantha, with two open flowers; and Saccolabium » Mr. Taylor, Mr. Ros an ;
dend mpferi, a fine Allamanda cathartica, three | guttatum. Mr. Dobson’s 10 plants, which were in slate | Lawrence had a fine plant of the om
varieties. of Azalea, a beautiful Epacris ta, pots, consiste Barkeria spectabilis ; Cattleya red-flowered E. Be „ two. large specimens d
Mussænda: frondosa, covered with large white floral | Mossize ; a beautiful Aerides 9 e violet and | vestita coccinea, perspicua nana, ventricosa pregua
es and small yellow bl s; Leschenaultia | brown-flowered aa ndr ou beg: eum; a noble plant and Cavendishii. Mr. Cole sent specimens of
formosa, Polygala oppositifolia, Franeiscea acuminata, of the large va of Maes 3 „a mas =o splendens, eximia, tricolor rubra, and
and a neat plant not more than 18 inches high of Ixora | yellow ee ~ tes oth 9 ide 8, and Phaleenopsis r. May had vestita coccinea,
coccinea, ing l ge heads of scarlet flowers,— | amabilis.. Mrs. Lawrence’s lan 3 4 5 were all small, a distinet looking s flamm
The Nurserymen who exhibited in this class we ere Saccolabium Blumei, a beautiful species; two | pressa,- and at ni. Mr. Taylor sent Bere
Messrs, Pamplin, Pawley, endinning, to whom plants of Aerides sine. 8 Cattleyas, Phaleenopsis giana, translucens, retorta major, We
prizes were awarded in the order in which the names | amabilis and grandi Burlin gtonia candida. | elegans, and pulve lenta, e
8 Amo r. Pamplin's plants were Stephanotis Mr. * had a aie. g same pur rene asic te vestita coccinea, hybrid and odora rose ; and. Me,
fioribunda, two Vincas, Coleone m, Dillwynia 5 the — ng 85 ecolabiu 2 d lata tricolor,
ata, on ventricosa super d others: neidium yg pesa Aer Larpentæ, mres and its varieties, Wilsoni Leeana, and a. lange.
Pawleys m plants were Aphelexis. pur- — aag hasi deen bin bicolor, pies a Cavendishii. Of 3 Lawrence
Nr. 6 ee i and Stephanotis floribunda, In variety r Cattleya Mos produced a beautiful vestita coccinea.. Mr. May, gr.
Glendiunin ing’s group was BARG plant of the pretty Collections of 6 OR cis were contributed b E. Goodheart, Esq., a capitally, grown and
Fuchsia - like cage flori 1 so Erica splendens, Kingho: errie, gr. to Sir John Cathcart, ear „| ventricosa alba. Mr: Malyon, v. superba; and Mn
avendishii, and other p together with an On- and Mr. Jack. Mr. Kin nis plants were Saccola- Epps, of: Maidstone, a capital
cidium, the * 3 mall Pimelea Hen- | bium guttatum, Phalænopsis amabilis, a Stauh 7 and 81 ig E Spec E — The best were a, splendid:
Azalea ee, Wo Wee b r. Bruc e as a single speci- | Aphelexis purpurea, m Mr. Cole; n
EN LANTS were men, Onci: pe exuosum ll 1 bl : :Messrs. Veiteh;
by I, Mr. Kinghorn, gr to Lord Kilmorey, | soms, and Messrs. Frazer, Cat 8 age an Mr. Mylam ya 3 8 — = i old Echium
B. Miller, Esq.,| had a new Odontogl ossum, with a tall br 3 e ee of | fruticosum, f 1. n, gr. to the Duchess.
5 wel. ee ye pa — ad bal blossoms with iam en-tipped Pamase f berl ‘ : 5 verteiluan
j 3 — "i alænopsis rosea, ra t essrs, Veitch
. Malyon, gr. to T.B = — — = but not striking. Mr. Plant bal an Aer idbs phasis: eat a 2 — it — Hes of Pine
Berens „of not new. urea
; le- 3 grandifiors,
Some Pie clea 1 on 8 of tall Cacti. were exhibited, one suey E _ 2 men — Larrenm
endishii, Te- by Mr. Green, the other Mr. Faleoner, gr. to A. sent a la Sollya linearis; Mr. Epacrs d
4 Mielas i 5 — = : 2 ; Sq-5 0 22 These consisted for the most miniata; — — ra is humilis and the mÈ
arge nts, i i i ia: Rollisson,
us 2 ſorming a lit Mr. Green w, an Epiphyllum T 2 a — isl iflora; Mr. Malyon, Aphe
depressa, Pimelea 5 feet high; a Cereus 8 a „Similar . lexis ie hamihs; Na. U ay beautiful Pimelea a
nilis, — —.— jakais, hu- Epiphyllum rubrum uleum, a i; Mr. Me y;, ditto ; 5 Kempster, P. dees,
humilis’ and purp: 8 el 8 teen i wa pte Mr. Jack, Cyrtoeeras reflexum; Mr. rese
Humeana, Polygala acuminata, and Erica. Cavendishii. old s asy a large ; A Falco sa ner, variety than: th ‘the 3 3
Mr. Jack contributed. t Everlastings, Erica tricolor, | an 9 pale variety; C. W eraaas ee e . ong nae 1 e
a enap sa finely flowered Cereus speciosissi us, a Epiphyllum Jenkinso ‘ : — Pog = 1 p stalk flo
bushy. Clerodendron Ix croca } acran pre tty rosy p
. Malyon, came. the cil 1 ache = . nie en showed a.c 3 of Azarkas; but their 25 green leaves, from Pata gonia,
flow over. They had evidently suffered, from also Lisianthus t
ulitia, ea Cavendis lue Lesche- the the bright v weather: ews. 2 had in the early part of | 5 witha a few.
tricolor. Mr. 7 — 3 esa flowers at: its: tip.
mantis, a, Vives, Clea ere again exhibited in tolerable ating | flowered ai of P
kite Aunia tee — oe ed Aph nanum, a my, a lange > | notwithstanding the 2 ura eu Pap l A Mr. Jack. the. whi
and aama paini perspicua plants, which i k 70 e atep ese i sic ey car ntly = adde
ine as were the different 5 ; yy bre ss in flower. In. :
tise in ie Mig, the, plants produced on the presen 2 e rang 2 5 feet high, and 2 feet vide; were sg krmi the judges ſor p:
They far surpassed them, number foim — * Bourbon ram rs ebe 4 feet ree fest eh | le a 3
i i 8. hi
them, and eri d „ th h Teng 10 ins, wide; Great Western, 2 feet 10 | Hagel, ‘som Me, 8 a 2 were!
doa GP thier aih y always 5 e chief attrac- | high, and 3 feet wide; „2 fee 5 * 7 i
bition. Mylam’s plants were de- | 2 feet 6 ins. wide; Paul 3 4 feet high, and 2 3 feet.
: were some match. | 6 ins. wi ge f Queen, 5 feet 10 ins
tion ; his Saccolabium | high, and. Abed 6 ius. wide. Bourbon: Toi de la
a „ as w. Malmaison, 3 f igh, and 3 feet.4 i
e _— — : ina: Abbé Mi 6 ins. high, and 3 feet
; nguloa 2 ins. wide; Fabvier, gb, and 2 feet 9 i de: collection 0
zæ brown spotted yellow | Prinee C . ˙ A | Ste at ed ey
t 6 —
ae ee e — 3 Ginehes, wide. | c cifolium punctatum and album, Mr.
—Hybrid China: Madame. Plantier, pure other from Mr.
white; Belle Marie, rose; Blairii, 2, Th 8 6. Beck, the other fi Mr.
pink edges. Hybrid B rions Ravage t gg ‘Pritchard een of A
$ ine; Duchess ae
b; 3, Mr. n
and Rosette for Pericles, Norah, Miss Holford,
Pearl, and Chim borazo. Six varieties,
1, Mr. Par
to J. Saunder „Es — 2 Sta — for
N s, Rosamun
Centurion „Mr. Gaines, of Battersea
ib
and
— Dako of dlz bees, Forget. me- not,
Salamander, and Mar
an. Six varieties in
f Mr. aes Trentham — wenn were con- hibitors; persons are to be seen mo 5 * out in all
tribut ed by The is an oblong, — with choice specimens under and
- | yellow fruit, stated to we “of reren quali ty. |a multitude of gardeners, not exhibit aba Salki be
| id he diff t pl
3 Sopek Japon FLORICULTURAL.—The third 8 * eee ii that tiny ps 2
ting for the took place in tue Surrey oe ane e and keep out of the exhibitors’ way, It
i ES Gardens on = Tai st. The exhibition w. a | ig
TOE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. : 375
teresting sight to watch how all the con-
good one, as far as stove and greenhouse plants, Heaths, 4 fo fasion e bay ar, Nee assumes the most admirable
* er, Roehampton, for the latter, indeed, were numerous and eee ; 2 salad that the smallest difficulty exists. Each ex-
* Sir — Peel, Orion, A- paige “aba i orists’ flower show, it was a failure hibitor, as he gets his collection arranged, goes to a
M argaretta Cock, for e wing to the un avourableness of ns season, only one place appropriated to this purpose, where several clerks,
Hebe's Lip j once, mot, and Sylvia; ar two stands o s were produced, and these not of in answer to his application, supply him with cards
first-rate 1 The best 2 of the latter whieh the necessary letters are written, with which
I
came from Messrs. Norman and s, In Mr. Nor- returns to the tent, where a wh orms this
man’s stand were Beauty of Bath, ‘Captai n Tysson, duty tacks them down upon the stage in front of his col-
Hodge’s Mellona, Jenny Lin ardst er 's Albert, | lection, It is to be remembered that all the plants are
Reubens, King of Purples, Elise dher Be vid, <= secured for travelling safely, and consequently that, as
Turner’s rage Sa egg’s Prince y are ged, all extra supports have to be ree
the arranged, all
8 Mr. Ellis had Beauty of Bath, Bells s Benjamin, moved’: cotton-wool
niels e pén. King of N r Mary, Wi 2 oved ; cotton-wool, &e., that has been 41 to pre-
7
5
ct
—
2
i
oe
©
2
©
á
®©
a
—
—
®
—
*
d
D
—
Talisman, r. — 7 r Cru Star, mer's rr’s Harriett, Win Rival, | away, and everything that detracts from their beau
l, c 0 8 z d Cassandra ; 2 Ar. olmes’s Consnation, Hodge’s Mellona, Bells Henry, The litter bites, in dein th pt up and 3
‘or Milo, Negress, Miss Holford, Orion, Xarifa, and Jones’s Huntsman Nice stands of Ranunculuses | py persons appointed to the service ; and the exhibitor,
Dake of Corn aney varieties: 1, Mr _ | Were communicated by Messrs. Keynes and Betterid e. | after arranging all 72 Taste ing a look to see
‘ot ess, Anaias, Jenny Lind, | Among the blooms of the former were Henrietta, Cale- | all is oes in search of ‘the Doctor.
alle. Afrique, Queen Victo and Defiance; donia, Dion, Pri 0 , Delicata, Reliance, Or- Professor Lindl ey, Vice- Secretary P t
Mr, Gaines, for tatuiski, Lady pheus, Lord Eldon, Invineible, Hampden, Belmont, cultural Society, i a n ground, and, mo
: Pole, Man of War, Anti sant FY; Harold, Ellen, 3 pr in all directions, sees that everything is going on
i diffi.
‘and bicolor; 2, Mr. Barker, for- tricolor,
ö i i „aud ardens;
Seaton.
— Boautifal exhibitions of these in- | Fuchsia name
in some instanees hardly suffi-
2 j bl
mes of his seedling varieties named Vasant, En.
et, Emerald, Arbitrator, Pleaser, Delectus
ibitor, Deedalion, and Edwin; Lightbody’s |
Some of them were remarka ble ies size, others for
ofeolour ; of the former description may be
Beck's — Domo, and of the latter
one range and Beck's Rosa. 8
is 8 tnd Somer of 18 1 and ong ee s Maggi
fomi one of the best of 1848 shown; but we need
on this portion of the exhibition —
—— he acecordin
amg Stow at Upton Park, —— will be duly re-
à pe to decide the merits = seedlings: a
m The beat Calceolari
seedling were. Bar
g shown by Mr; Gaines, a dark seattle d —
pee colour, and a lively one by Mr. Henderson,
named“ Enchantress” and “ Prince of
again shown, and was considere
2 215 aibe Medal 3 Z 2
8
A 0 H. B
(spotted 8 cone 2 reniforme, | 2
elle tor, Patriot t, aud Captivation. Stove and Greenhouse properly; be is also 255 hand to refer to in cases of di
lants. were ree ed by Messrs, Cole, Bruce, Young ulty respecting the arrangement of plants. As the day
Mess
c
“ae Hook, and Pawl Cape Heaths by dene a Serke takes a place where he is readily
Fairbairn, Bruce, and Cole ; ; Orchids by Mr. Beck and found, The exhibitor goes to him and asks for tickets:
Mr. Bruce; and Roses in pots by Mr, Francis, of these are of two kinds,—the one for breakfast, the other
e ayh
] e ek. Regular and w
ibi ga ee 2 Gaines, n hibitors are ne with both forthwith ; * others the
portani
(fancy) ; to Mr, Ambrose, for “ Donna Inez; and to tickets are not granted. 4 m ime all iani > plants are
op, | Mr Hine, for “Striata coccinea’ 9 8 a Mr. | arranged, it is full half-p: and
ur a * ro and for a sweeping out all the tents hile in i together
'uchsi 4 Pale a large bold Sawai, with and 3 13 and Be eather ering oh. eee 1
violet corolla and bright crimson calyx ; and — r. have had a look at the general Siete of the wholes it
Gaines for a Calceolaria named “Ne Plus Ultra.” Mr. | is 10 Oclock, and a body of policemen, commencing
pe ag! also. showed the seedling Pansy “Mrs. Beck, the further extremity, courteously say as much, request-
a Pink named “ Forget-me-not. ing everybody to leave the grounds; and scarcely have
Miscellaneo . ano rection erfor
Horticultural Society’s Exhibit: If there is| But we will go outwith the party with which ween A
ne — of these great exhibitions s that is more | an in doing so, outside the g within the
e r
e bad effectsof the contrary gratiae at country shows.: | book, and then take their place at a long table, where
subjects admitted after the hour had pas sed for their they are at once maea Ta 7 or coffee and cold
reception; tents not — of ‘exhibitors at the time | provisions, all of the very best quality, and in great
appointed ; and everything thr into disorder, pozad abundance. The floo —— is pro 3 with Pan
want of carrying out, at every ty the printed laws for | soap, towels, and all “the other a nts for
their regulation. If the committees: would but act firmly chan anging A working face, han * ee T a holi
n every case; those exhibitors who, from indolence or day su we believe w sense of the
neglect, were properly excluded, would be more careful whole 33 of 75 exhibitors at Chiswick gina we 885,
for the future, and would make: their arrangements | that this part of the Society’s arrangements is valued in
i ut to our immedi ipti common de having very greatl
y. B te work,—a deseription | no e gree, as
of the pr . hed the Chiswick exhibition, The their comfort and enjoyme
’s Chiswick | si e have also
Gardens are he Duke of Devonshire’s sions, W pleasure in stating, that we
estate, and ¢ mg t of 33 acres; the portion occupied by | understand the Council 1 entirely satisfied with the
the exhibition, and laid down in Grass, planted with an | results of this arrangement, Let us not forget to record
extensive variety of plants and shrubs, is about 9 acres. that many of those 5 5 — this refreshment have been
t| Lo the Garden there are three entrances ga principal | travelling all night, after a cds hard day’s work,
T
one from the carriage-road, leading from Turnham pa acking and preparing 5 ; ind 8 me are come as far
4 ion ; ther from off the | as 2 ours
f| Green to the Duke's mansion rae er B * agin 7 Florist, a 8
d and a third, the carter’s entrance, by which alone all reine * June.
j i i we
the objects for exhibition are received. As en — — 4
-apples, | the, Council-room, we pass the great consery: atory, as Calendar of Operations.
bes lohan {ibs kozy lb * — in the right of the woodeut (vol. i. p. 180), (For the ensuing week.)
4 Ibe oe 3 OZ., an reach a — 173 feet long, and 33 feet wide; PLANT DEPARTMENT. : 55
3 Ibs. 12 125 0 — * in vai to Pe len of that another is erected, * 2 long and In addition to = 2 ary routine of watering,
r. Davis, of Oak Hill, for fine 3 wide; 3. aud immedia at the of this is | syringing, and giv it a point to enforce
Noblesse Peaches, Silver s the iron tent, 100 fest long — thoro ough cleanliness in pag e peg and amongst the
- Bersted Lodge, Sussex wide, runnin a part of its length, and then | plants. Nothing conduces more to a d p
* Dit : to Mr. vide, rinni atk a, pg ae 25 fee tradis, for the ex- a the machinery than. negleet of this point. The p
Herbert, Esq., Clapham, for well- | hibition of the large.co collections of mi pal operations will be tying and cleaving. In tying or
Grapes, Silver Banksian to | At: right angles with this is the ere, tent, 75 feet —— ene avoid formality 5 study in your “ mind’s
— E. Bedwell, Esq., WN Pan long, and 25 feet wide. All of them are divided down | eye” the form or habit which the plants would assume
amburgh G Ditto. to 1 middle high partition to eal in their wild state, and our train be directed to
is of Abercorn, for a dish of — e suitable back for the plants arranged on either side. | assist Nature by giving suppor and symmetry of shape;
g fruit, to which no prizes were usual tim being at the plod aes ut ee instance, the Passionflower e shows Paes: to
ited ; ueen e-apple, | 6 clock A. M., a e ente t such
one o from Mr. j BES ro From the different roads leading on ee Green, | graceful festoons from the roof of a lofty conservatoryy
3 pay 3 lbs. 10 oz., from Sir John | of various constructions, with as various coverings, are for 2 . A aie 4 — 5
g- P Prince” seen wending their way to the general rendezvous. | plant. The towerin 1 ay be
— p, whi — Pines Each are as he enters, signs a declaration of what retarded by pinching. off the earliest flowers, thereby
ileox, E n the Earl of Stam- | he is intending to exhibit, and in what class ; and until hashandine:t angi strength and inducing them to make —
Min the pardon. tated to have been | he does ae 72 productions gre epon or allowed è to a longer- sea h — * priis: ia 2 same result may
— considered —.— , Rochdale, Lan- to the of unloading. e a be eean q
enter ah Mr, T to be between i i was _— — — ſor a ee 3 bi eyi A a 1 8 y SHRU
des can B ir himse in wi stren $ 938 Pi 85
came f ane vile fair ; and of Elruge Necta- er 8 the lists accordingly. We will, e. afford full occupation just now lag a
— Dutch Sweetwa N leave the van takii foo rou advantage eae taken of the
oan from Mr. Davis, and part of the gardens containing the glass erections, we go
i im e Muscadine, and Muscat | reach the tents. Here are to be seen plants standing
| al in all directions; gardeners busy arranging them
in out by one of the Society’s o
p . a —
pointed to this duty; labourers with hand-barrows, Dahlias, Del
les | carrying the. contents of the vaus to the different ex- ex- | plants, must no
.
kd
376 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. (June 10
2, Iris variegata 3, Iris i ’
neatly tied up; by this is not meant bundling up like so This poinis out another advantage of mea gS over Grass 4 ata; 3, Iris sambucina; t, F
many faggots, but tying in such a manner as to sup- w, as the latter materials form harbours for rey wait for Pan agg we til ane the —
rt the shoots without Rr ate them of light and air. | insects, without affording the means of pan at them. | Qax-ap : 4 Sub. This may not 125 a
1 tying the Hollyhock, it is mon practice to bind gree —̃— fruit of the tree; it is a diseased — OF the the natong
up six or eight shoots to one stake, in hich e the State of the Weather near London, for the week ending June 14, 1849, pont. x the leaf. buds, and is caused —
flowers are nearly concealed 8 but if the — .. cram . — : H W: Itis the perennial on
stronges st shoots 0 p lant are selec and tied to Moon's | BAzomerer. | THERMOMETER. wala of our correspondents for bedding, T recommenda yy,
separate stakes, sufficiently distinct. to 7 light and] une. Age. Mar T II- Max. Min. Mean = me geet hg’ 1 1 * DAR, The reprint is
ES EELS eee . arties
air, the flowers are seen to advantage, and have a truly Friday.. $| 18 || 20950 e || oe | a2 | sin || NE. || 00 tribution among thelr to e § to ia ona |
app 10 19 29.918 29.792 65 | 43 |540 N-E. = of 25 copies for
29. : 51.0 || N.E. i À
NERI Con fin x ry ecb ae be few Tari of different Monday” J i 32 235 2923 || sr | ao | ase || New. 0 os pees BB Bey are, attacked to it cones
‘at 22 y 29.923 3.5 . e *. and had bett
= : Wea. “ne 30.118 | 29.92 6. 34 | 50.5 || N.E. -0 moved. All
aa as Pee a te oth for moving roche en CORTES Roe. gp i73 | ao:i || 72 | 40 886 NE. D very eu Hoty but well & care 8 * 2
— * * i nni ty 1 ren es D ó * Average... || 29.9594 29.973 || 615 | 39.7 | 562.1 0.01 beten en FT a dew, "F
t ‘ e following are
2 J ae, t throughout.
allow too many main on the larger plants, | e S- pine pur cold: fue; clear at night, odes Mig’: 4 Gronec ae ez 1 in rather her alates
for they injure each other’s progress and the swellin — 10—Overcast ; lear at night. lotte;3 Malta, S Neb ee ae
f the fruit; three should be left on an CCC F 3 Bellegarde, 2 e
of the fruit; n or n three sd — 12-Fine; 0 — ast. Czome situations. Admirable. Nectarines : 2 Violette Hative, 2 u
plant. Gills should always be removed from the fruit — iin: el pea * cog mnt old at night; frosty in| maston Orange, 1 Balgowan. Elrage, 1 fr
as soon as they can be detected, but ny ac Mean temperature of the week, 9 deg. below the average. Eas: F Z. To preserve green Peas for winter
ba’ bo mutilat If Pines be dried in a coo n, and hung up in p shoni
X COTR 85 wii ff ts f * State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the PELARGONIUM LEAVES : Sub 1 are unable to sa s
abundantly supplied with air in conjunction with heat ensuing week, ending June 23, 1849 matter with them. T 1920 k as if the been w
the fruit will swell with moderate sized tops; the! 8 It is not usual to syringe the plants before the ear
cabbage crowns are produced by a close damp atm 528 S24 38 | yenin | Greatest nt teenies 3 * will be gained by cuttin, g them down betas
a 2 a À :
here. VINER -— Late rop quire partial dom EE 2855 =e sae I Hain E Anne AND AZALEAS: Susan. They should
a tention in tying and thinning ; syringing should
8
+
ae
E
8
3
E
z
E
5
©
—
+
EZ
oO
2
—
a
>
o
.
Ig
25
pa
2
BS
>s
Qg
2
=
+
p
f]
B
4
=
EA
S
8
£
2
a
—
®©
E
*
et
pee
E.
a
a
©
E
©
5
—
E
2
E
e
a
—
$
5
E
il
á
e
3 8
8
Eg
75
ow
H
E
8 8
x
E
-P
8
a
o
2
4
gy
GJ
0 rich e n d d belie
expensive implement, he considered | this way to the buds. Neither a spade nor any other sh
ges nie y . i y Sharp | more beneficially applied to — land than in wet weather,
fally 2 em Ta — 1 22 f pe — srs he — > red in ae gs por The most | as soon as possible after the first crop of Grass is mown, that
implemen or the price he had sory eep the plants clean and free from ~ pan — —— oe finished sowing Swedish Turnips last
Phe ag his is — — — done if commenced in good time. ; thes after Tares — 1 fed off h
Farmer t mode of w at the plants the first year is by the psec pya siar giak s drilled on the e flat rows 2 feet apa
3 — The wee ding: an — * the hedges should | admit of horse-hoeing. The grou — cal once 7
wd ofthe Ms, Row D Martinson, of | obstacle to nt 8 — ‘be n e pruned — Ot mined 127 aber and in good condition, a th was
t 2
e Towneley estates), read a paper | the second year, in order that it may get thick and bushy. This laine Tarde Ge ana ck similar description oF — 1
a very easy operation — formed with a hedge-knife 1 2 ar description of deere
blen ry easy ope y per nife, | grown to r taen tage to Turnips, un
ch I shall call your attent on is one familiar, I dare say, to you all. I would — have mach hesita- — circumstances Jast men The v. p
cod ne reco llections of my 2 are asso, tion to perform this operation at any time of — * — I | Tares is by no means to! . Turnips, and,
ce, made with ba H one — in fact, mnan the pany to be . a an a * aed * likely to prevent
e prepa u
the height of about ri
4 fee ye —_
* its height is eat and’ to prevent the beginning of — — In fact I — follow — e of now being thinned out, and are doing well. The Mangolde
5 ake form and 1 into | ver intelligent and 3 able gardener and nurs an in Fee? also brairded very regularly, and promise remarkably
e When well and | Scotland, who, when asked this question, „ When is the best well at present. Carrots look well also, and have generally
look extremely well, time of che ie to prune Thorn hedges ?” answered, When- | received their second hoeiog. Ours have e 16s, per acre for
1 ever your knife is sharpest.” | It is of great importance to have | hoeing, and will require another looking ov „ at a cost of about
, Which | 4s. more per acre. Potatues are as yet freo reek — ge ao
must wat; be done by an . — ba the hand. I do f and at no corresponding period vta looked be Whea
h 8 es with shears. Barley, Peas, and Beans all promise well at ordeal A little
h] th fore more | rain would, however, be —— tor some of the crops,
h
Efe
70
1
if 15
SHUR
EE
FHR
8
F HHF
3 1125
ae
Í
SE
oe
3
p
5
a
->
o
.
2
P
+
Q
=
E
o
Lr |
©
wm
nal
©
5
®
n
fo
E
E
p
©
*
s
i=}
ig y ;
ann e reared w liable to thts poe d by wet; besices, witha switch | which have ather prematurely brown, We shall have
stones. are a. this ae dn z T sau seih, who is an expert workman, will Pm 3 e quantity poi << realy fe for E dating very so — B 5 to all ap
the most substantial ; And, besi n a day that he gon a. fond with the hedge shears. When two | the general Aron 1 cannot ce for five or six
> 3 time in switching the same hedge, | weeks, “We Dabo o ry — er, 1 which can be
Z., one on eac sid — he fence, 1 — t to begin at aif- | foreseen, so that nothing may interfere with the cutting and
—— rent e i and = z down 3 wi 2 corn. — here — are generally doubled
Aayer Api sa Tue Thorn hedges I would continue tọ prune year, after | in h t, so that whatever can be done previous! costs much
2 a E Seen x ention, or at least Fety Hitle’; waa they have attainéd the h sig ht aioe about 44 “ep . — Ido any 2 for ‘iabour, and is far — F of, R,
tor >
cident 3 h sity fi we
remain or misfortune fall d F 45
— een which epai on They ought to be pt feet pda at the nd base ‘finished sowing Turnips, pious filing yen
HH
77
z
ae
EPE
þa
528
®©
“4
2.
2
E
—
aS.
4 8.2
8.8
E
HEE
595
2
g
T
oe
8
D
E
H
Fe
i
elt
STE
w
em
i 75
E
E
pon genie
8 Ha
5488.
eo
S oe
828
8 =
LI
882
EPELE
SEPTO
8
88 8˙8
58 Fs
E
> 5 28
Soro
— 88
+
8888
8 5
g
4 . 4
Segre
Pre
p
5
a
or
+
[z]
a
bs
—
E
E
[=]
5
oO
Q
EI
*
bos
68
E
= .
A [za
B
z
E
8
+
8 8
—
2
8 8
=
8 8
*
38
=
z
N
27
*
m
Som
>
—
8
=
pa!
oe
p.
—
TE
E
+
to repair it. E oap
bee and prove or other rubbish h, whi — uch taper away to a point at the heise mas the height iter stated. and will finish hoeing to-morro — is dry; the
taz g Th 80 obnoxious t nq | Eor wa . of attention to the pruning and dressing of hedges, | Swedish and yellow Turnips are — — n: the White are
n "ide at the b Stone walls ought not to be — we are called upon repeatedly to look upon na aked tur ror later. We are busy ploughing, harrowing, and rollt ing the fal-
iy , OÁ feet ‘ottom, about t 15 inches s ‘at the to ob, open, — A fences. if some of those have got any | low land, to get it cleaned for Wheat; two men cleaning hedges,
2 Is dressing at a cutting Thistles, &c. We have had a gent! 3
i n
N
l
Middle ap more to j + Nothing in d t
A esaa e wall weli, ane ch and durability than fitrin AE ; À 3
is neglected „and throughiny i it effectually. When of scouring should be commenced about the third year likew Bere: — tiie ng the re seria r When at, and car tii
4, you Very soon see the walls bud shee Planting the hedge. This will be found requisite, as the | the sa — to market. Although we —— had several showt raot
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
[Jury 7, i
430
3 have made but little progress,
orb GARDEN, JULY
k, the cro —— i
= 2 in de rather 10 low 2 for the season during the] In cons pe uence — the 5 po . — w Pend paar Mond y has — to a fair cn but moderate fing
d. t — ly 0 € „ „ Vheat
ge oe BE 3 Farm, June 30.— We 1 ished the n * — ss a nereased during the last few days. Pine- other articles. mornin s market *
e a furrow with a plough, drawn by three | apples, too, are T aper. Strawbevries-and Cherries are very attended, and business limited, b but hga
— * ly do at this Ane cat 5 vear, plentiful. A f. Apricots 3 — 7 : pa ponia = Odessa, of which the late arrival eee
— the soil a little, which is o preas ll as ripe Gooseberries and Currants. uts in i uotation "a ma
for he perp aot dee ning 3 crops, until it comes | sufficient for the demand. Oranges and Lemons are plentiful. 1 oe pan! wa Tally 2 3 this quaii —
to be fallowed again, and we nsider this deep furrow costs Amongst Vegetables, young Turnips may be obtained at fro rn cheaper.— Barley is : —
little more than one given with a tw plough, as well- | 34, to 6d. a bunch. Car = the same. Cauliflowers are very ore mone eans eas are una after at
ors 11 nd t regui a driver, although yoked three plentiful. The season for Rhubarb and Asparagus is nearly Oats are held for a slight advanee ltered in
abreast, e than from the th required to get over. Green Peas — from ls. 6d.to 4s, per bu * Potatoes e fred F s is
reenn t p rarab N pen will nearly plough as much in à are cheaper. New Potatoes realise from 1d. ye et F y > even at 2 g decline
day at fallow Bot, with two ploughs drawn by three horses | Lettuces and other ale are sufficient for th emand, value o lour remains as last quoted.—§; a
— ig as you w ith three ploughs drawn by two mc ans ushroo g — — 18. 6d. to — e — 5 "Valley ultim re veral days of nee we
t i an saved; and plough! consist of Heaths, Pe —— enias, Lily of the Va 48. y 8 5
by — mare, — ribed, we have been employed grubbing | Cinerarias, Tropæolums, Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias pe gat but rain has been partial. The eropa —
th a heavy five or orse grubber across the ridges, and | dendrons, and Roses. rally are represented > the A
nds not on to bring a y weeds that are in the land to FRUITS. mplaints are fro 2 Prince
surface, but = th mixes the new soil — is turned * from pine per Ib., 53 to 8s — 3 . bsh., 48s to 8s must apparently be a late one. T the harvest 1
the deep farrows with the soil you had befor Grapes, 2 e, p. Ib. 28 to 6s | Orang er doz., 1s to 2s sau on h . e Wheat trade bag 3
vantage. W. J Peaches, — aie. 6s to 208 — ee 100, 68 to 16s y 9 ough not large; the dee ;
ussEx FARM, "July 2. The dry weather So late has been fa- — 3, pel er doz., 6s to 20s L. — Per doz., Is to 28 supplies has neverthel bl e holders d 3
vourable for hay making ; ; and we have now got all our seed | Straw — p. pun., 9d to 0, 7s to = rkets to obtain ls. per qr. advance. in some j
hay into stack in excellent order. We are — ‘Suan engaged on ttle, 4d to 1s Aimonds, lag peck nidri annaed ks . w
— g dow in general is good, and our Cherries, wall, per Ib., 28 to — r Ib., * to 3s 8 y ed rather more money, also a
teams are ploughing and preparing the land for, and sowing, dy — Ib., Ad to ea Walnuts, * 100, 1s 6d to 28 80 stances Oats Peas; inst, 4
T ps, and in horse-hoeing and carrying hay. The men are eee p. hf. sieve, — p. bush., 16s to 248 r is con to one or two markets, N how $
gaged in thinning Swedes, makin g hay, Siew ops Wheat, a 3s 6d to 58 Nuts, Bar., p. bush, , 20s —— & moinen occurred id ie O alteration —
cleaning hedge mae we have some rain we shall plant | Currants, do., 5sto 88 — Brazil, p. beh., 128 to Io; ed m French. Dateh, @
out Mangold and Marl Cabbage e — 22 ts rope > VE GETA BLES. — . — pte nar last mentioned "4
but the later sown are very weather will * ry oe 4 co es, p. doz., 6d to Is Carrots, per bun., 4d to6d inable Is. per qr. below the extreme rates lately p -e
kinds look well, but the dry de wil make Oats set. ID — p. doz., 6d to 3s | Spinach p. Powe" is = Is Ay te i
ead per bush., 6d to 48 Onions, p. bunch. to 6 POOL, FRIDAY, Jux 6.—W:
Notices to Corresponden ans, p. bush., 15 6d to 2s — Spanish, p . doz., = 6d to 4s | mand p> Wheat, e 1 Mediterane ind 5 ko
Prax: . our co oe gn some in- Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 6d to 9d Shallots, per ib, o 8d were fully 2d. per bushel dearer ; prime white was scarce
formation about dew retting? When and how on is e Potatoes, per ton, 18 cante F ego o 1s es ey ok ~ | :
to be laid on the Grass land for that pro — per cwt., 5s to P. — s 6d to 3s | bush, higher. Flour. at 6d. per barrel advance, didnot
k upon the land? Is dew retting a complet i * 1b — per bush., 4s “ese M arrows, Poke 6dtols | Oats were firm at Tuesday’s rates, and there was no
for, or only an auxiliary t steeping? Is hae Iter tppred rnips, per bunch, 3d to 6d Lettuce, Cab., p. sc., 4d to 9d good Oat declined Tuesday
before or after dew retting? Does it require king and | Red Beet, per r doz., 2s to — Cos, do., 6d to ls Is. 6d. per qua was nearly recovered te >
seutching earlier than Flax which has been . — 2 Horse Radish, — bdl. er rit = 6s Mushro: . 13 pot., ik sd to3s | Yellow being * — off at 34s., White not
‘Horse KEEP Po ou cannot make 700 square yards | Asparagus, p. 1 Small ds, p. pun., 2d to 3d | bought at 338. 9d. to 34s, 6d. for good.
of ground port a horse: unless it by ng more va- | I thubarb, p. Fandze, sa 10 4d Pad | — bunch, 2d to 3d
articles than horse keep upon it, and selling them to | ] ‘rench Beans, p.100, 6d to 1s Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d IMPFRIAL WHEAT. (BARLEY.| OATS. }
buy Oats, hay, Clove arro If this will not do, you | Cucumbers, each, 4d to Is Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d AVERAGES.
had lay it down to —— = farm it well. This Leeks, per bunch, 4d to 6d Parsley, p. doz. bun., 3s to 43 ay 19 ; 44s 9d 28s Od\l7s 8d
wilt keep your horse during summ a great measure, and elery, p. bundle, 1s ae Roots, p. bdle., Is to Is at G 2 Sur aa
you Oats and winter food Radishes, per 12 hands, Ma joram,green, pban. oe „ 9 27 10 7. F
ORNAMENTAL AND Dom 0 POULTE TRY, by the Rev. E. S. Wate — per doz. daes Mint, greeu, per 44 6 286 11 17 7
Dixon, price 5s. 6d., is now ready, and 8 be had at the 4d to Basil, green, p. — id tosa 44 2| 26 5 18 0
Office of this Paper, and of all Sorn — 44 626 5 18 9
RELATIONS BETWEEN Foop AND Constant — 9
We have little experience — — ae ewes or cows, Monpay, JULY 2.—The 8 of English — Bete o 3 44 6 27 3 17 11
nd cannot s er th more rapi attening — . 23 utie 0- 3
tes for the — quantity of food they eat. by land carriage — — b this morniog 3 reign Grain 0 olro
s.c s reaching town after Wednesday, cannot exe small ; the prices of this day se — wore tü hettie last sie ,
red before the following week, exceeded in very few instances. was hel Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Av
firmly at 3 k to retail PRToxs. Mar 19. Mar 26. -| TONE 2. June. 9. ee
quantities. Some descriptions of Barley realised an ad- tis 92— .
vance of Is. A 2 3 ~
SMITHFIELD, Mopar, July 2. — pa ede gy apes Ye Bee oF 41 6 +
The number of is much larger, and trade m : at 44 8 }
‘ingly dull; prices are not much lower, but the r| is steady, and for fine — a slight improvement in| 44 : 5
makes buyers cautious. The supply of Sheep is shorter; — is obtained. a 2 5
trade * — — * in some — ather more 2
money tained. e of Lamb is very inferior ; r
— Mim whole: is worse, 5s, A Uoi ak: — London. Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. 2
fd Germany there are 3 1 — no deare —— ollan s r i
* ere are 30 asts, — Sheep, an alves; " j
Northampton 1700 Beasts ; aud fon Set., CURRENT. Jun. 25 July 2.“ June 26: July 3. Jun. 22 Jun. 29 Jun. 27 July 4. June 28. a ;
qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. e . | qr 62 Ib. „ A
8. i. Gd, hig. do &. Gils 8.58. 8 5. 4. 3. 8. d. 4 de. d K
. 40 fo4 4 42 to446 9 7 O16 9 7 0044 to50 44 to50 43 to49 45 to50 5 10 6 855 II oi
— 473047507 2 7 67 2 7 644—5244—5246—52 4836 3 6 H6 46
44846, 10 7 2% 10 7 24345434 — — f 9 6 45m BO
= e 67 7 6 Z Ma), 52) 2 — | 2 . „
Pigs 36—58036—58 4 6 8 64 6 8 6ʃ43—53 40—53 — — 5 2 :
9 — — 30 — “Calves, 515 Pigs, 746. 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. f
RIDAY,
The supply of Beasts is by Piin coe , yet 0 Rye—New eos 22—2422—24 — sin . . saat pa | er
quite sufficient for the dem nit is — ly diffi- c soe 22—2322— 23 == — — — — — = 1
M a Pie jegai Monday’s quotations. The improved rates of Foreign meal |6/,—7/|61.—7/ — ree si 8 jul E —
y last have much increased our supply of Sheep, and the Barley „
weather being warm, trade is dingly heavy, especially for “td GE- qr. „
Sheep. Prices a lower for all ki on — Grinding soe 21—24221—24 — — 22—2322—2324—2624—26 23—25 | -
are pl ae 8 Pome — of very indifferent ; Malting x. —. 22—27 22—27 30s—32s | 30s—32s — —30 2830 at k
Calves ; trade is very dull, at late rates. E — „ OT — 24 —282—2 2 =.
> 9 e rates. From Holland and 6 bush.|6 bush a
10 B. ? 710 Sheep, and 232 Calves; 1 6 bush. 6 bus
— — 300; and 125 Milch Cows from Malt— Ship ... — — — 39—4 —
Best Scots, Her Whi 45 lbs. 5 Ibs.
fords, e. . 3460 3 10 nern e. b - Nh. |1924)19-—24)2610¢ 3s 20s 10d 36 2 — | — |14—20)14—21
Bet pero mar 2 Ewes & 2dquality ... — ... 3 15—2015—22 2 5 2 8 2 5 2 — — —
oa ae —3 2 pas 2 3 2 oreign (14—21 14—212 4 2 6 2 42 6 sages = ape
= Downs i DODE o inks —5 i "R A = >
Ditto Shorn. . 3 6— 10 ene 2 8—3 10| Peas—Boilers |25—30|25—30 k 3 bes ao Ab all .
Beasts, 893; She „„ a ag ee dom 28—3228 —
+ ; Calves;.647 ; Pigs, 213. 2
— — Grinding „ 192. 94192. _or N Z
ENGLISH TIMBER AND B — [23—25/23—25| 29 —31s | 29—S3Is | — — — —
ROUND TIMBER, Paa a eee es Foreign . . |25—32|25—32| 32—34 | 32 „ | on oe
Per Foot Cube. Per Foot Superf. | New x
Od. to 5s, Od. % GOON | 6 „small . . |22—32|23—33| 30 —33 | 30-33 29—33029—33 =
9 —2 6 Uer — 2—34 | 32—34 (35—36|35—36/34—36|34—36
8 21—3621—36 24 —32 1 —32 (26—29/26—29, == | — |}
6 —2 6
— 1 Seat da 40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40 — —
ann AD ý
for coppice, but is fast declining in gp aces mai 22 — pry — — an
from 130. . per
— 79/91. 7s | 71. 128 | 7% 126 — fw '
l 7
— 36 Trusses. F — — — — —
July 5. J
x s 30- 34 30. 34 35 6s | 33s 35 — J
„ * 8—3 —358 ae —
— eed p. sack! p. sack} 280lbs. | 280 Ibs. iP. sack |
4 oe. 36—44/3 44 34—36 5 i 56—40 36 40 ö
Straw .., July 3. Impts. Averages. | Imports, | Aver. Impts Aver. | Aver.
- July & — rs. d.
patie han : qrs. 8. qrs. 8. qrs. 6. d. xs.
Inferior ditto... % 50 4 [11130 | 44 6 | 17557 4 4 10950 % 6 | 1667
„ 25 0 1550 27 3 5 w f t= — =
* 19 7 4660 — a 1356 is 6 700 14 11 376
ia — a u 00 tee pee — —
Messrs. PATTENDEN — Sete 6. a 6
activity in the market m osim — 6956 33 4 655 31 3 156
: sing. The Pk Wi — 57 ß—ß | fo
Been done as low as hymen ee 6
: KINGSFORD SEGAR and 8 ; kas
(ANDARS |
= and LAY. TUNNICLIFFE. and DUNNS,| _ WRIGHT.
sened
97-1849. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 431
CCT Ly. NEW SOCIETY or PAINTERS IN WATER
f years, and entered upon at
yy BE LET . the Farm maw WOTTON, in the Parish
present i r. Sho oeni,
of SE 409 acres of Meadow, "Pasture, “and. A
It
rable
ad is m
Farm
14. —+ and Meadow land is of the richest fatten.
A F arm.bulldings are large and a
d for fatte — ala
— fie -houses, stalls, — „and yards,
feeding
sos bet —— four — from Hailsham pee Eustbou
modious
3
rze
market town, and one mile from the Pais:
i miles from Lewon we wes be mg peor Railw ay. * eee
10 TS, AND O
BE DISPOSED ch abou t 200 2 — orn of
RNATIONS — * PICOTEES, by e of the lea —
ge comi Vair k iculars, apply ti
R Paseet, — — road, Dalst
Wirt ine TO RENT.—A — an, with a
income, oe torent A GOOD FAMILY RE.
id
southern
parres — — n of —.— woul upon the highest
4 dane indispensable.— Address to B.
LIGHT. CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING,
Ti
Z
Ca 1 3 ROOFING
BLT is * s to rain, snow, and frost, and
siv
i b
quired e la
oo with — arm-servants, or unpractised persons,
foot. CROGGON’S PATENT NON- es
by post on ap
square
Perrine VELP, for Steam Boilers and Pipes, saves 25
Sampl Testi
333 and Co., 2, ——— Londo:
PORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials recived fom
all
coms, fg the severe this CEMENT to possess the
frost, and to 2
meng — urposes, such as b
ee om Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, shee h-ponds, &
of
—His Royal Highness PRINCE ALBERT.
PATRON: AL
PRESIDENT OF THE Bement Right Hon. Parl or —
Vice PREsIDENT —Right Hon. EARL D
en paL—John Wilson, F. R. S. E., F
BAA and First MASTER—
infi tetp are — rch more and — extensively ackn
— . pert er vegetates, and 1 carry from three
nor paint.
times its own body of sand.
g — J. B. Ware and Sons, Milbank-street, W
2 boars of its application to th alls, and by the us
whieh
F
roms may be rendered habitable Before the materials
est-
eot
ako Enc i
SS of 3 mek be end at t the To
ES FRANCIS a ms, ondon.
CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING.
PATENT.
ROYAL UES ERAR.
MNEILL anp co, of y Lam 3 B ee
* row, London, the Manufactur 2 8
. THE ASPHALTED FELT FO 2
due Farm Buildings, Shedd i
=
Felt SOLELY patr: saam jaar a by
i Staged AN.
DNA
AST tanta CoMPANY,
F WIGHT,
a i E eais —
— the of the Dukes of Suth Norfo Rut
„Workshops, miey pe Garden
ro
st.
reat cultural Shows, it is this Fel
— bas ud teen exhibited 4 obtained Two SILVER MED
Tk,
» Northumberia * Buccleuch (at ‘Richmond,
— Spencer, and most of the Nobili 4 Gentry,
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL — IETY’S ag — a Hanover.
eed, it can be obtained at all w t for th
COND MAsTER—J. D. Pemberton, C.E.
RESIDENT Paorassons Agric iar ts Wilson, F. R. S. E. „&c.
Chemis: ‘aah
Natural History Botany a — Buckman, F. G. S., & c.
the maties and ‘Natural "Philoso phy — ——
Karisa t : Joh n Robinson, M. R. C. V.S.
Surveying and 23 Pembe ype C.E,
The object ot this 1 kuren is 2 * rov vide such a course of
instruction as w 1 be sefa l t to = Agriculturist. The
nefits lieation of scientific
ledged, while the means of obtaining 7 information, if, in
ithou
a due attention to the practical operations of husbandry, a
ca tte red and costly as to be wi ithin the each of very few.
ner 3 hi 12088 4 3 111 ae: 1 2 21 p
science, it
and ex xplaine d. and their gb errr A i 4 as fi
possible in the sp racine of the Co Pra ege farm. The —
the whole is
— practical instruction go hand in ha nd, and
mbined with the adva ntages of collegiate discipline,
order of the Council, PaILip Bowes, Secretary.
London Office, 26, King William-s treet, West Strand.
— will shortly close, badd Fifteenth Annual Ex-
Society is now ope *
k till dus — — u
— — r ee — et RS ck
PAzes bi LIFE PILLS are acknowledged to be the
best Medic ahs the world. This Medicine has been
wea eae British publio ae afew years, and A pan in the
ual th
recommenda-
tion; hundreds had soon to —— that PARR”,
PILLS had saved them, and w o load in mir
ise,
y brought bef re the public
at once removed a any prejudice which some may — felt ; the
continual 28 whi ney en esulted from their use spread their
t es, whatev ight be
8 ina, have had i he United States, Canada, india, and even
mere ave ha immense quantities ‘shi pped to their respective
es, England amis il good,
ntrie — g
* Lorne pre Bhgi of 23 Lire PILLS amounts to to upw ele ne
boxes weekly, more than all other paten t medicines | Pat togeth
This simple fact needs no fu rther comment; i lis Piati
that the Pills of Old Parr are the best medicine — — world.
RIO y
t a
Red a, on the Government stamp, pasted round each
box so, so, the fac- On, ten of the signature of the ocean
EIGHT. HUNDRED Pou NDS PREMIUMS,
WO HUNDRED ee FOR IMPLEMENTS
are offered by the Y hire oe i al Society at
— e en
applicatiou to Marruzw M. — Secretary, Sow: —
ire,
Thirsk, Yorksh
WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT.
On
f 1 Hi 410 0% hi
hi 0 80 10 4
t 17355 $ Hh 5 uth K K
1 610
ones,
1 5 1
. oo
228225
* ‘Howes and C aue: court, F leet-street, London,
CCT boxes at Is, — 2s. 9d., and family packets at 113.
each, by all —— table — nang throughout the world.
res | Full
ETCALFE anD Co.’s NEW 22 TOOTH-
as BRUSH and SM SPONGES. —The Tooth-Brush
| divisions of the teeth, es, come im the most extra-
td Á manner, and i amous for the here a 22
loose An — Brush, that e
of 4. capable of inju e the Anket: nap,
Rus.
Clots B
time, and in
Penetrating Hair- brushes, . e dur —.— cag eg
— bristles, ' which | do n — like hair. Flesh
du e friction. Velvet
brates ; which act in the most surprising and successful man-
nge, with Fus
— es of absorption . and durability, by means of
direct importations, —— with all intermediate parties“
Profits “oO ee ive bleaching, and securing the — bee a
genuine 8 ge. — at — Bixorkr, and
Co.’s Sole — 130 B, Oxford- street, one —
Halles. street.
FER E TE W
ds Es adopted
a some 2
rs, millers, &e.—
2
T FPOOTHACHE PERMANENTLY CURED BY
using BRAN ENAMEL for filling decaying Teeth
sound i ice ls, g
s Lowden. | it siars ll, ont
Witz FENCING, les thaw Two-ineh, mesh, / Y
is Balf the price of any oth ion of Roofing, and
a great saving Tir y be
¢ ts U. na” Te
wren 1 An
— experience, with refere
stimonial
Noblemen, Gen-
made from Iron n painted ; to exclude
and Rabbits, g „Sheep, „ &e.; I5 inches
high, 3d. per yard; 2 feet, 41d. ; 3 feet, d.; 4 feet, 9d.;
6 feet, Is, or any width required at id. square foo
ing Pheasants, &c.—Rosert
Fow
21, Tonbridge- sinha 3 London.
s
aron nd builders, sen sent ry es to any part of the
emt and orders by post executed. hs
of The Public is “re that the only Works in London
Where roofs
ry, Lamb’s.buildings, a
covered with the Felt may be see
— Hail, 3 Courts, at the entrance t te West- |
[FISHING NETS, SHEEP NETS, axp RABBIT
ETS and Tra
Nets, Casting Nets, —— we and other — for Finbing. of
ver Sheep Nets of New Zen * cord
nearly 4 feet high, 44d. per yard, Rabbit Nete
fibre,
on Cords nd 100 yards long. R. RI — 21, Ton-
br hes anak asa London.
or
pay
"7 proposed afforded on th oofs,
| Todos ——" nded-on the of — zog a
| ATENT PROTOXIDE PAINT ata very
the Princi of price. This article is extensively |
a 24 hens ia Pang Ses ee
nry fr
Mannfactured by HABLES FRAN
nit,
1 EAL ine orks, Nine Elms, London
H ie — 8
wig
* Purchasers any te ts, Sizes, and pri
van à good set o ar Bea abled to ge the articles. —
2
trike
tlenham. e
75
J
I
Wi
140
1
Git
%
H f
TA
H E
11 z
ag EKA SHIRTS. —« A
appearance and com
T
z
S
2
if
FF
775 27
27
it Detailed Catal gu
— OF BEDDING, —
ing st treo b.
$ 196 (opposite the iy ten on application
Celebrated Establishment. — Musical
for 303, ; also all the new Patterns |
gues, with |
free,
l
es, by
8
roofed with F. M. NEI bout | 4
since, under th ry, |
oh e Surveyorship of Chas, Barry, Es +s
We satiated 9 Co sioners of W and Forests are | R
ordere 0
inch mesh, 24d. Wasp Net, to * coe of — e
ripe fi — fram wasps and flies, 6d. per yard, mu —
71 1 N. 21, Tonbridge- place, Newer“, ad.
ICK E CLOTËS, TENTS, — s of
ck Ti th
us sizes, 30 f-et by 30 fect, suitable to cover 30 tons
pat hay, 5“. complete, with side lines; larger or smaller sizes n
roportion. Tents for Lawns, Gardens, or Cricket Clubs,
t round, te gay lowest part, 5l. ; larger and —
— pro Em 9 Tents, of very thick c
= feet square, ber Rone T Rıcħarpson, 21, Tonbri ———
w. road, Lon
X B. Tents — Marquees on hire for Fêtes, &c., at a very
mod rate charge
An experienced Surgeon is appointed by the 3 — —
Medicines, Medical Comtorts, and an ample — — ae
St e provide
for each Class of Passengers: teerage-Cabins
for Persons paying in full for their own Passage in — teerage.
For — — er i — apply at THE
New Zea House ; SFPA Stayner, Broker,
110. — — — London, 127 —— — — Court.
as CUDBERT HARINGTON,
New Zealand House, 9, 3 —
London, July 7, 1849.
R. LOCOCK’S. FEMALE WAFERS have ne taste
of Medicine, and are the only remedy recommended to
Females, Price 18. * 28. 9d., and Ils, per box BEWARE or
ImitatTions.—Unprincipled persons — this Medicine
in ie — * corer &. Purehas
uin
— Wafers, „ are box. ÖBSERVE.
The counterfeit Medicines: have words on the stamp so —
resembling: these, as to mislead the unwary. Purchasers mus
haee strictly 8 the above caution. Agen =
T
88
2
8.
$i
11
— Medicine Vendors,
EST REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION,
oRTON'S CAMOMILE PILLS are confidently
. mended as a sim i
asthma, beg yg ve s P" hs, and Colds. Price 1s. 1)d., 2s. adn
and 1
= ee LADIES. 5 Le influence of
*
tue
on the skin at this e year calls fur he
n in preserving 3 e alieaey an — i beauty. The
5 — specific for this des
most ed attentio and effectual — ect is
deserved],
R WLAND’S merce! te so edly Aloo x rae in —
and public favour and estimation. Its — carion neu
tral
the effects of the atmos eae induces that healthy action
uty ure so essentially promo: reckles,
vessels of the skin, by which its . =
—
sen lh aud Discolorations fiy before the application o oft
— ö of comp Ladies travelling or taking ou
lexion
perio will find it to diffase a grateful and refreshing —
—— ases of N or Stings of Insects its virtues —
f yery
us KALYDORS for sale, conta’ 5
3 of sp rio
mineral 8 utterly ruinous to the complexion, a
ng
their repellent action ring hea — The w “te 3 RO w
— KALY —
” are also engrared on the — —— mp affix
Sa — bottle. Price 30. Gd. and 8s 6d, Sold by the proprie-
tors and by Chemists ‘erfumers,
and P
— Sick — ge Bilious and Liver com-
— they act as a powerful to e and gentle aperient,
parting stre to the stomach 3
5 — Honey in 1 at = Lid. or 28. 9d. e ach, by A. Wine
LOUGHB d Co, B. ind 8 61, Bishoprgate-strect
Without, and — all Modioine Vendors k for
cee "S PILLS, and do not be pers * 853 an
imita
A »! DANGEROUS LIVER COMPLAINT EFFEC-
w
i iy cured, at plea-u ing publicity to
reg re ‘Sold t by all druggists, and and at Professor Houtowaw'
Establishment, 244, Strand, London
432
Just published, Part XIX., price 1
THE FLORIST, AND GARDEN MISCELLANY;
Con ED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF E. BECK, or IsLEwortH
outa A kr COLOURED D TE OF CINERARIAS AND TWO WOODCUTS.
—1. 2. On the Philosophy of Florist 1 —3. jana Tulip Society.—4. Fancy n
. * „ il Storm and r — f Ive. Beart Mills.—8. The crag Page.—9. Reviews.—10. Ro
8
London Floricultural Society.—14. Calendar o of Ope erations we r aly. a > correspondents
Advertisements for this work, which has now 4 ent to the Publishers by the
22d of every 2
4 — —
London: Cnaruax and Hatt, 186, Strand ; and to be had of all Country Booksellers.
is popu EDITI 8
* ‘FOURTEEN 1 0 ED
N SEVEN, WITH GILT EDGES SN
la me Seve 4 "(comprising V olumes 1 by.
separately, uniformly heads price 16s 10
Orr E, 85, Fleet. str reet,
oya
The Se edling Pelargonium Exhibition. —12. Open Tulip 5 — —13. Royal —.— Tür 1E EDINBURG REVIEW, No
publi — THURSDAY 105 SUXXXL, vil
CONT.
1. TRANSPORTATION AS S IT
SHAKSPEARTAN CRITICS
3. DE TOO QUEVILLE’S LO an e eran,
4. DENNIS’S ET
ZE
Messrs. BARRETT, EX ALL, AND AND REWE S FH
PATENT SAFETY HORSE GEAR.
7. SIR E. L. BULWER LYTTON’S KING
8. TYNDALE’S SARDINIA— ARTH arate,
15. AUSTRIA AND HUNGA RT. HOUSE OF savor,
. MACAULAY’S HISTORY OF 7
London: Loneman and Co. Edin 1 8
HE COTTAGE GARDENE
hi Guide to Out-door G —
tivation. — ucted by Groner W. EE
the Ply n r's Almanack,” Modern
ry,”
The COT "AGE GARDENER has been ENLAR t
TEEN PAGES, without increase of ra .
The COTTAGE GARDENER now forms the a
BLAS. age e on Wood
H. & hc ans hi
ner 1 e writer happily og with bis
er flow of narrati
CRIES
Cur, OF C CREGAN, 28
E and Steel, .
8 eas
m familiarity, br a yet more offensive unti does 2
us than we find in Con. Cregan.”—Atheneum.
— ready, Volume T 7s, 6d. cloth,
0 and i „ Amen-corner,
London M. S. ORR an
PROF. LINDLEY 8 „ TO BOTAN,
E ton as me MONTHS’ trial of “ap above REALLY VALUABLE ie ig hated a suuni it a standard | Just published, K 2 955 ols. with Six Copper-plates mi
2 — = — = — a and * e oF mei A eye extant, Upwa En 160 8 ravings, pied Wi 0
ow been so e most flattering Testimonia 88 of their hi 3 and — A ‘hi u, 1
be obtained on application by post, or at the NORWICH MEETING *. number of then, X over — rary rete * 1 ps RO 55 v C'T pi pfni BOTAN,
exhibited at S 8, together with a large assortment of Pasii and — THRESHING MACHIN S; CHAFF CUTTE . Fourth Edition e Ge weed t £ ari a wa H us A
GRAIN MIL LLS, "a KATESGROVE IRON WORKS, READING, JULY It — bee 5 every s
> — 7
rs. STRATTON, HUGHES,
d its
MEss AND Organs—3. Of the Epidermis — ofa
Compound Organs—5. Oft se K Se e Stem
Respectfully invite the attention of Agriculturists to their Stan 3, AGR ICULTUR , Inn? pade—-8- the 3 Of Food an Secretion,
NORWICH ee the AL SOCIETY S SHOW-YARD, b a th Jower-Bud-1 ©
CARTS, WAGGONS, woo TRON a exhibiting a Large Collection of 10. T — Motions 5 of K „ e tt Of
Of the best st construction, and and at prices — the 2 nt depres —— — EGIAN HARROWS, &c. Mal O nea th OF he Disk—16. Of th on 3 Gi Fe
—— 2 n especially invite 17. Of the Receptacle of Torus—18, Of Seed—22. of Gerais»
t
the high — on of the Judges at York. The Weight is only 54 cw t., and the Pri
ART for distributing Liguia ore os (as shown above), which received | tilisation—20. Of the Fruit—21. Of the
on—23.
ditions,
that be
has introduce down, as ne Rah 2 II.
os Ax, Brown, GREEN,
BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY,
1.
CHOOL BO OTAN Ei or, the Rudim ents of Botanica
Science. New Edition. * Illustrations. Price 5s, 6d.
HE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; ; or the Structar,
Classification, and Uses of Plants; ‘ntustrated — upo Ae
Natural System. Second Len 500 Illustrations.
30s. in clot —
“No re important to the student in boting ee
appeared "for to — 2 ee ne in that branch of study it cot;
nimm of useful information.” London Sosa
-i
, No. 52.
of Bata 5 e of Students and others, the st
Work is issued also in 12 3 Monthly Parts, price 2s, 64.
HE ELEMENTS OF Nona Poy
siological, and Medical
Methods of Classification, an nd a @ Technical Ten
er „Glos be h 2
— ssary may be ha )
8 will complete the series * 25 * si
TE 4 ö
Pan 3 L denen al Attributes, ofthe 01 ài
S. H. ;
i „ Leet nt —— CATALOGUE may be had at thei r Stand, gratis, or wili be forwarded to any address ti —— gk — e. sexual Systen ,
= a Method—3. The Manner of Stud me ossary. i
„The Elements of Medical a ta, is now resif
R W. J. HOOKER’
1 Naw Edition, in 16m o, th mam ies, PROFESSOR SCHLEIDEN’S BOTANY
e nd
. tra x street,
Just published, in 1 vol. war with Co London: Brapsony and Evans 11, Boot is
pper-plates and Wood | London: BRADBURY and EVANS, bo
Engravi e 21s. 3 or free), in. ono small wi y,
50
EW : cloth, 6d. ;
a om a Pop ular Guide to the RINCIPLES OE SCIENTIFIC ‘BOTANY As | et Patient Re Cn ee 7
K. H., D. O. L., F. R. A., and L. S., & e Director. BNE lee E DUOTIV CIEN y . J. SCHLEIDEN, By Epwarp SOLLY, Esq. F. e
London: Lonamay, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS "| Extraordinary Pro piem fonsor of Botany i 5. oth 1 2874. Jena. | Experimental Chemist to the Menue boo ee, 45
wil . ESTE ec- Parties not in communication apo”
DOMESTIC EC turer on Botany 55 is St. George’s Scho al f Medi s 4s, 6d. on remitting ran
HE FAMILY ECONOMIST; i a Paora 1 Pp the Publisher, Ion
A PENNY MONTHLY M OWNERS 2551 FARES. Upper Wellington-street, Covent-garten. =;
To promote the Moral, Physical and AGAZINE, croment N 18 ty ‘will be published, in 8vo., price 2s. 6d., = E T — 5s. 6d., cloth, 10 Poul.
Was commenced in Figl ig pus Classes . SSAY ON THE RELATION OF LAND-| ()RNAME DOMEST te Ror gor, Ba?
pendent periodical, flattering pă and iess er 2 an inde- 3 „ ate A — of —— cir- O their History 9 e bee 4 ra eh Keswick 155
1 ices, and fostering no ate Agricultura ent to the a ii
— ea has encouragingly proved that what is good for 3 Basset; a t Tehidy Park, now rentin fariner of her apn a eke . rous Subscribers, the Pete
besides an issue of 30,000 = md vol ae, pepe fe es ers, yship’s 12 — eat Woolston, near ane ornwall. 8 rar ra is — from 48. 64. 1 — 6d. (e. for is
dence that i 1 evi. ap and Sons, Boseamen. street. sie i ns oat
by immorality dat SOME M ment, and utility, untainted TEE aons E—NEW ED — HE TREE RO = Pra — by 200 Fos
titude of readers; but hind Gane, 0 AA e oy mul- | Just published, in 8vo, price 88. cloth, ath a peg rompan — Formation and Cu 8 + QOHRONICLE; with utd?
sands to whom this work mr gon he tens of thou W. C. Spooner, "heal ned to advance the work to the pre Reprinted from the GARDEN jetribution am
toil shop, factory, or field. . useful, who state of Nr Knowledge, Price 3d., or or 25 copies for dis London, on t
ilin worksh it * he 81 y 5s. f. here in
that great good yet remains to be done possible not to feel T HE nes ; its HISTORY, BREEDS, and Tenantry, (delivered anya plisher, JAMES mare PY
i 3 made
enlarged s 11
EMENT. B
MIST 3 for future and The Supplement may be ved y Wintam 3
1 R
pigs ie deaa 0 * ‘
gn abt: London: ROBERT riadh , Paternoster-row.
ener? Chron
5 office, at Saad: London DAR OF gab):
g for co-operat ci to bia — had 85
e | it tere hear Sat om, es emma, | HE CORTASE™ apa aa
3 ch are closely printed, com- is Grace
— = 2 the public | —— — and highly illustrated, comprise every in- | By JoserH PAXTON, 3 r 1 9
Y Economist consists of Original Articles by the ormation which can be required on their respective subjects, yr, ayoni. AbT werken,
nomiy, fadbaaie os on = — departments of Domestic Eco. 10 AGRICULTUR AL IMPROVEMENTS. Reprints from the Gardener: as wih se veral wo
Household Maus uae E 1 511 Dress = Clothing, | 11 By ta Wm. Jonson, Esq a mi be J. Mart meer ns Us r Welli A
à Ne m N 4
and Farming and anaes 7 amily Seerets, O Cottage Gardenin ity = TEL 20 3 io oa he W Paternoster ze a we 77
j eful s. This work, fall of interes t * ont, of BS 7 0
t and util Printed by W nen Baapao d Viner
Bount. ts. UA p monthly number, ONE PENNY; of the Volume, for't ihe purpose of bringing DAIS cea reren 3 Hat rT peta i z ete
$: tish Husbandr ublished i ta Dagon det, in the Preci 55 all
toad „ P ed in the Farmer's Series of fi Lombard-street, where
by all Sukie Ta and Sons, Paternoster- row, and sold added t 8 1 A= Useful Knowledge. It should be procured and London; and published D7, shea imt ae a
g Z —— ¶ who would | Eats md commas
copies complete, Saroapay, Joxy 7, 1849
a
$
oe a
+
K
i
‘AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
[Price 6d.
a stamped
No, 28—1849.] SATURDAY, JULY 14.
A — 3 ROSEE.
of England . Heating, new plan ol. . 436 D 3 OLE has much pleasu ouncing to his
agi oie and Prince Aibert i Herbariums . 440 e Friends and ta Public en ‘bis pe collection of
e of Edinburgh 43 page soe oe Society’ s Show.. * ROSES is now in — — and will continue till the end of |
Capes. . ͥ at 3 d Clavencon’s eter a July, after which t saan will — e in bloom till |
3 44 ee ret November. Ru pes kshire, July 1
L stee — lk
p S08 e treads oa = AND PICOTE
0 earth UD . . ere Nebe Park Gosia TURNER'S Extensive Collection oft chem interest-
Geet, Stilton, to Was . . . . 4% Pergo pre ° ing flowers, includi: 2 some ana utiful seedlings raised by
— * the Rev. J. Burroughe es, J. L . Pux y, Esq. Morgan Ma . „
esas eee eane
e
and other successful g
reg? a visit ; ursery being wi
e Slo ough Station on the Great Western 1— te
the Datchet Station the
Wall trees, studs for.
——-
OYAL SOUTH T LONDON FLORICULTURAL |
OCIETY
"Under the Patronage of HER UREN., GRACIOUS MAJESTY,
e Society, wil
L GARDENS,
hibitors, when
viz. :—
‘ourth Exhibi a Ai season abov
aer HOY 1 ooLoaieal
25th, 1819, open to all ex
Eine: Me d Mr. E. Denyer,
Roses; Mr. W. YBa asc for Fa 5 Mr. T.
Pawsey, em age Or ved J, Chapman, — * ss * Antirrhi-
eedling:
Cc
€ | above, bg “established in in
orist,
1| render any further comments unnecess
Po i gg plas South Western line.
een, rate of growth of. Royal Nur 00 Slough, July 1
. PELARG N1U M— T OQUETI’S MAGNIY Nl.
Villa gardening — „9 E aiser intends sending out plante ts of t
Post-
Chr
ary.— 3 Maian
WLLIAM FoguerrT, Shide House, near Newport, Isle of Wight.
Eon ane SEEDLING popes pet dy rf of 4.
4 — p CATALOGU
a be had on mia
paid application, — a sing — 3 stamp.
Worton Cottage Islewor orth, J July 1
ARDY ant
p SON, SeeD- GROWERS, s, Ma ildon, Essex,
* 1 Ag! and August sowing, A NEW YE E
of Esq. ” Hon. Sec. , Jephso
4-inch pots, in the middle ot betover i
next, e A. 28. each, ne Seg package included. |
prep: ; and a s the is limited, no discoun * *
WV ARWICKSHIRE E HORTICULTURAL EXHI-
TION.—THE S egi aaeei gt fe,
210 fixed to 1
“Gat Flowers
Gree e Pla
Specimen “Plants, Ver Roses,
* plri pinke subjects, Melons, Pines, 1
wers, and
a pintat fruits. Full particulars in the Horticultural M
zine” for July, and Schedules to Mag 5 ned fro tirs Wane,
* d Parade.
Rebe WII IBLEY mae ‘supply any more Plants
of . be de each o n at 7s. 6d. each, For the
Ken rae ed Londo
C UM.
OUELL à anp CO. are now prepared to execute
orders from their extensive aad very select collection of the
above, varie!
the following prices.
en * sorts
425
‘ He
Well catablished i in — pots, or per post free, with all orders
— 3 ap tpi — * sent for a successful and easy
of eultu r exhibi
AME ELLIAS,
8 the finest — well set with flower buds, 30s.
8. r
NEMONE. NE ‘SEED, saved from selected sorts, w being
— a by TourLL and — yr the finest ‘conditions and can
„ 6d. and 5s. per p
of 12
aised froma erg ‘suppl ni Soure |
L. it n
and Cut indigenes Plants, by by a friend in Van 9 and, 1848, w
N. T. I. 5 1 —.— and Regulations for Exhibiting to run, nor to eat strong, in = Leg “and “oe ng-cont —
may m Joux Ferg NEVILLE, Secretary, Ebe- d fthat country It roved so with us;
nezer H Surrey. Thomas Langford, of *philberd’s ‘louse, “Maidenhead, ~ Berks,
| who received a portion of the stock fro N
pe OTANICAL SOCIETY: — The tried your Turnip against six Gihar — at the end of
second EXHIBITION will be held at the Garden, on August, and none is to 12 compared to it in excellence for
Thursday, July 19th. All specimens for Exhibitio winter 712 alf. or postage stam
at the Garden before half. past 9 a.m. on the day of Exhibition, N. best varieties of Cabbages, large catia each, Is.
The oe Nor at 2 o’clock, 3 2 5 TN A ie u oe
Bagbaston, choice biennial ss Yaa net a
te 3 Kwownes, = scr = — Scarlet Giant Stoet, superior ai . 6d.
AT y ATION AND PICOTEE' EXHI-
ON (origin ed fi
pas, Haste 8 of July x — * — om postponed to TUES-
pope Peference’ to this Ann Si Meeting of the Prov
25 Metropolitan growers, may be had of C. TURNER, Royal
„Slougb.
E DENYER,” e Loughboroug
three miles from London, N
7 ont and A 8 morn ot
tolled 0 e. 0 * ES in 1 porns pia _that his
re
8, is — gr
1 r pap.
* to the 1 of all sietina” 7 et. | “=
rs taken for plants now in bloom, and executed bing
ko e
us of inf
eed shop in London, orming his customers that he has no
Ips’ JAPONICA SEEDLINGS
NDISH
did tree
es:
Se,
deliver genes Ar *
— ee to the
E>.
wma
1
Packages of 1000 and .
e Edenbridge station of the South-
val EARLY MARROW CABBAGE.
LEY begs r ully to inform the
5 nnd the public generally, that he is now
na. MARROW CABBAGE SEED,
best ion, and tive
AT
mic har
e 8 Satisfaction to
t,
not to run for a twelvemonth. One
to prove to the pee the superior
Over all o Sold in packets con-
ioc packets Is. 6d Verbe * will be
the remittance of a post-offic
e order, or
stamps.
Y, at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul-
ules of Prizes, and any |
TET
| tipped
an triped 9 spotted wi
free, “
ety s CHOICE PLANTS.
URE LLa D Co. have the
plea: n te announce
Forte received from the ishme:
„ M. og MIELLEZ, of vod poe. D
a highly desirab ts. The
lied upon as being 8 to any yet a at
| great — y, invaluable to any collection.
PERFECTION (Miellez). —The largest bloom
perfec
t, very habit; inside of hg calyx
y red, corolla 2 and lilac $
1 (Miel 3 and perfect bloom ; * of a fine
lez
white, orange scarlet Price 7s.
CHATEAUBRIAND ee 3 om and perfect
bloom e tipped with yellow,
orange Pan: t 3 Pri — . —
GENERAL 8 a 2 — 2 and perfect
bloom ; outside calyx ro th white, inside
orange, Pri ice 7 78
GAZELLE (ale -Large bloom; tube rosy lilac, outside |
of the sepals — ee the inside rosy lilac, lilac ‘corolla ;
e5
JULIA GRISI (Mielle eZ).— bloom ; ae blush, sepals
ed with green, rosy scarlet e rolla. Price 5:
When the set is taken, — will be charged Bie,
CHRYSANTHEMUMS.,
MADAME D rose, la a petals, very fall and
large bloom, extra fine. Prie
SATURNE,—Bronze yell ow, perfe
yello
h: goo
oF crimson 1 eu habit, Mairin
hape, v. full bloo Price 3s. 6d.
When the set 1 taken, they will be charged 15s,
TUNIAS.
-LOUIS NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, — Very large bloom,
perfect and habit, blue lilac sy y and tipped with
black ; the tinest 7 575 nown, e 2s.
ECTA.—Very oe bloom, perfect shape
ottied with violet and rose, bee
and habit, lilac teed =
and black throat. Price
LAM ARTINE.—Very jarge 2 and porot biose;
c striped an: Pri
BERR ER.— Very large and perfect — fine habit, rose
striped 1 75 motile d with red, uan throat. Pri
AMEN te | large and perfect bloo
sped and mo U Large bioom: perfect 22 pe and habit,
00 ee a 3
carmine, Price 2s
1 they will be as 10s.
oe mottled
When the set is
N FORMOSUS.— Crim
Mac Euwerni, large bloom, light scarlet, the inside blush
white, robust and dwarf habit. Eyo
LOUIS —— BONAPARTE. a dark crim-
S
above can sent
Kingdom. Post-office orders — egg 5 3
unknown Nursery, Great Y
nt of ne |
ber
be, confidently
and, from
known, q) ;
x crimson, Ort. iet
1 —
be forw N = post tree, suffi-
4 yards. Sown — — ab —
A e afford a „ fine display through the autumn and winter
"Catalogues of the above, with an extensive variety of highly
ental plants, kirl — 3 by en enclosing two postage
kamang s,—Great Yarm
HE LONDO (DON ASSOCIATION] FOR R THE J IE PRO-
TECTION OF TRADE, John-street, |
BLAKEMAN, Secretary.
HE COLLEGE, 1
joann Pte TS the ARCHBISHOP of — UBY.
President.—The e Rt. Hon. the — of
— application to the Hea
amare 2 NG
DRUMMOND anp SON beg to il the attention
Le es ere,
laying the the swathe so
that it can be easily garnered into evenly sheaves and without
Price 9s. Gd. each, three or more
fine habit, | —4
|
cues. on — for carriage to menr
throug hout the kingdom will not
of the railway stations
more than from 1s. to 1s. 64.
without a
Stirling, N.B.
PRACTICAL RESULTS OF REGISTERED INVENTIONS.
n OBERTS — een TIL sg ate og
Morning Post,
12th
= ate SOCIETY’S EXHIBITION, Chiswick GARDENS.
great deal was excited at the exhibition, held
Elay, about a yery novel, Tile, which the Council of
— ve caused to be adopted in their
the
Messrs. Myatt and Sons,
ish of this fruit, also
Tite, Me Melon
the attention
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE, i
HORTICULTURAL
EXHIBITION
THE CERTIFICATE OF HONOUR.
1 To Mr. May, Gardener to . Lawrence, F.H. S., for a col-
lection of 30 hog a Greenhouse Si
THE LARGE GOLD MEDAL,
1 To Mr. Cole, ain 5 to H. Colyer, Esg Daere for a
collection of 30 Stove and Greenhouse P
r, Mylam, Gardener to S. Rucker, Esq., T F. H. S., for
20 § ies of Exotic Orchids
3 To Mr. "Dobson, Gardener to Mr. e ys 4 H. S., for 6 new
po
GOLD | KNIGHTIAN MEDAL.
to Sir E. Antrobus, ag bo EN. S.,
©
BANKSIAN MEDAL,
SOCIETY
AT THE GARDEN, JULY II,
AWARD OF THE JUDGES.
. May, Gardener to Mrs, Lawrence, F.H.S., for
uchsia “ Corallina”
7 To Messrs. Paul, Cheshunt, for a collection of Rosesin 50
varieties
8 To Mr. Parsons, 8 to A. George, Esq., Enfield, for
the same, in 25 varie
9 To Mr. May, Gardener os E. iaai Esq., of Beckenham,
for 9 ee of Cape H
10 To Mr. hl H.S.,
in 8
11 To Mr. Robison, Gardener to J. Simpson, Esa., for 6 fancy
Pelargoniums
12 To Mr. Glendinnin ng, F. H. S., for a collection of Statices
13 To Mt vote ay, Gardener to E. Goodha rt, Esq., for Roella
„Wüna s, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq, F. H. S.,
for a 5 of Ferns
fo ve 6 3 varieties of Pelargonium,
THE GOLD M
1 wae Mr. e lag Gardener to J. —— ä for a
k, F. H. S., for 10 species |
3 To * Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., Norwood, for
5 varieties of es ee
4 To . 1 lapham, for the
E LARGE 8 MEDAL.
1 To oon hata Bromley. a ent, for a collection of 15 Stove
Greenhouse Plan
2 To Mr. Jack, 3 R. G. Loraine, Esq., of Walling-
ton, > Surrey, for a collection of é Stove and Greenhouse
3 To e Rollisson, of Tooting, for 10 species of Exotic
Orchids
4 To Mr. Jack, for 6 varieties of Exotie Orchids
5 To Mr 21 “oe Gardener to H. Colyer, Esq., for 15 varieties of
6 To Mr. 2 — Gardener to ae E. Antrobus, Bart., F.H.S.,
for 9 varieties of the sam
7 To Mr. Stanly, Gardener to n Been s, Esq., F. H. S., f.
6 di seve _species of Pelargonium, "exhibiting —
cultiv
8 To the pores * Tall Cacti in
9 To yoo — Middlesex. mae New-road, for 6 new vari-
f Pelargoni um, in 8-inch
16 To Mr. Parker er, Gardener to J. H. Sugnton, Esq., sees sgt
ton, 6 varieti: ium, in 11-inch pots
11 To Mr. Gaines, F. H. S., for the same
— e same, for e
. Veitch, Exeter, for hes barbatum
14 To = Ivison, —— to the echoes Dowager of North-
mberland, F. H. S., for a collection of Uncommon Tropi-
a Fruits
THE ace OF EXCELLENCE,
wee d a Seon Tooting for a
nd Greenhouse —
2 To the sam
ie nids
3 To Mr. - Dobson, Gard 3 to Mr. Beck, F. H. S., for a collec-
of A
and Son, Great Berkhampstead, for a col-
Roses, in 50 varieties
5 8 Taylor, Gardener to J Coster, Esq., for 9 varieties
4 To Messrs,
1849,
OF LONDON.
o Mr. Hamp, Gard
j n Speri for 2 — sa eF to J. A. Thorne, Esq, i
o Mr. Foster, Bdge
varieties ‘ geware, for a collection of
To Mr. Woods, 23 to F. Wigg Esg., St.
, bs i
the same, in 25 y
Wiguelin, Esq., of
23
Simpson,
of Yellow
to J.
N
same
Hs * 5 Francis, Hertford, for a
Robinson, Gardener
° Fuchsia „Sir Robert Peel“
r. E. G. Henderson, F.
. dae exhibitin
To = W. Ambrose, of
ms
To Mr. ee
H.S Six distine:
g su foe l Speedas g |
Ba Tas rc 1
11 To Mr. Ward, of t
15 To Messrs. 3 and Bon Exeter, for a variety of Cypri- | 12 To Mr. Norman, the —— a a
pedium barbatum 13 To Mr. Wooley, G.
16 To the same, for a collection of Conifers for Daa N N H. B. Ker, *
17 To Mr. 3 Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart., F. H. S., 14 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. An
for a Queen Pine-apple for Aerides odoratum trobas, Bar, Ft,
18 To} 8 Gardener to hi Graes iha ak of S 88 15 To Messrs. Lane, for a collection of of Achimenes
or a Providence Pine- apple, weighing 16 To Mr. Ivison Garden e
10 Ibs. 4 umberland, LS., for “te ng the Duchess Dowager Sarg.
19 To Ar. Smit a Meses r to S. Ricardo, Esq., Titness-park, | 17 To the s et
Sunning-hill, for 8 in pots 18 To Mr.
20 To Mr. G. Hayward, G ae G. Goodman, Esq., aod ro aon anak ce — for 3 specimemgy,,
mn , neal 1 for Black Hamburgh A 19 To Messrs. Veitch Son, for a new C tomeria
21 To ng Oa, South Lambeth, for the same 20 Mr. Masters, H:S., for a collection of Ferns
22 To! Ar. Fleming, for Muscat Gra 21 To Mr#Smith, Gardener to Mrs. L nee, FAS.
23 To Mr. Toy, Oatlands Palace Gardens, Weybridge, for the 2 0 N named collection of Fash (no
22 To Mr Garde:
THE SILVER KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. Queen San 225 R
1 To Messrs, Pamplin, „of Walthamstow, 3 a collection of | 23 To Mr. Jones, Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart, PR
ants + Providence Pn 8 7 11 1%
2 To Mr. Stanly, a — to H. Berens, Esq., F. H. S., for 24 To Mr. Dytch, * James Taylor, Esq, F. 0
the — Black Ham h Gra
3 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for 10 25 To Mr. Lus — 55 E to J. i Esq,,
species sof Exotic Orchids Black Prince Grape 0
4 To — om of Hertford, for a collection of Roses, in 50 26 To Mr. Turnbull, Gardener to the Duke of
H. S., for Muscat Grapes mee
5 To Me, ‘Ten , Gardener to Lady Puller, Youngsbury, Herts,|27 To Mr. Spencer, Gard nis of Lanse.
ome sath, 1 in 25 varieties à T F. H. S. gy Beathes e =
To e, for a — of Yellow Roses 28 To Mr Ferguso 4 — prone, A for the same
7 To — . for the same 29 To Mr. Turnbull,
8 85 Messrs. ons —_ — for 15 varieties of Cape Heath 30 To Mr. Ferguson, of W — ort same
9 T eee sq., F. H. S., for a Fuchsia grafted with 15 3 Sno — — e
ack Tar
10 To = . — Serdar to E. Antrobus, Bart., F. H. S., for me
a naultia formosa
Messrs. Veitch and Son, for Nepenthes sanguinea
1 To
12 To br a Gardener to J. Coster, Esq., for a collection
13 To sang“ Veitch and Son, for a new species of Ruellia
14 To Mr. —.— Gardener to = * Dowager of North-
umberland, for Oncidium 1
15 To Messrs, Henderson, for Kalosanthes nitida
16 To 7 — eren, 1 for a — of Carnations
f the
17 T , for a 2 — of
18 To * Ridael, 7 a F. Ashby, Esq., of Staines, for
ection of Achim
19 To ES — Gardener
0 H. Colyer, Esq., for the best
ection of Plants (no error in 15)
20 To Mr, Spencer, Gardener on wmi e Marquis of Lansdowne,
F. H. S., for a Queen Pine.
21 Tothe same, for a Providence | e weighing 9 lbs. 9 oz.
22 To Mr. =, bull, Gardener to —— n ier the Duke of Marl-
cn ugh P H's S., for a bu West's St. Peter's Grapes,
eighi ort
7 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart, F. H. 8.
for Tall Cacti,
8 To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North-
umberland, F. H. S., for Leschenaultia splendens
9 To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. — Esq., —
bank, Pimlico, for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium
pots
Bragg, Slough, for the same
11 To Mr Riddell, Gardener to 2 — „ Staines, for 6
arieties of Pelargonium,
12 To Mr. Stains, for 6 cy 5
13 To Messrs. ooting, deros polymorpha
14 To Mr. Gardener to J. B. Boothby, Esq., F. H. S., for
a of the Musa Cavendishii
THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL.
1 To Mr. Glendinning, F, H.S., for a collection of 6 Stove and
2 To Messrs, H lace, E
5 pop ine Pine-apple-place, Edgware-road, for
3 To Mr, Knott, Gardener to The Rev. C. Pritchard, F. H. S.,
E.
*,* A prize of the value of 107. was awarded to Mr. Fleming, Gardener to the Duke
!— ᷑ ee a A AT MEADE ̃ ̃7˙˖ ͤñꝓ—ꝛ—y— —— ——t —
HORTICULTURAL, N AND HEATING
ATER.
102
23 To = Beret 2 Oatlands Palace Gardens, Weybridge, for
9 Muscat of Alexandria Grapes, weighing
1 lb. 6
t To — Holmes, Gardener to S. Garrard, Esq., Putney Heath,
Black Hamburgh Grapes
— To Mr. Toy, for the same
6 To Mr. Rust, Gardener to J. Maclaren, Esq., F. H. S., for
Muse — Gra Wr
— To Mr. ull, for West's St. Peter's Grapes
8 To Mr. — ( Gardener a rto the Earl de Grey, F. H. S., for
es
29 To Mr, Parker, Gardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., Roehamp-
ton, ectarines
To Mr. ro, Gardener to Mrs. Oddie, for the heaviest
Melon, ee G ” weighing 7} lbs,
To Mr. Betchworth j for the second
Melon, “ Cantaionp,” weigh 33 Ibs.
32 "e Band Dynevor, for the best
d Melon, as romhall”
nT HE SILVER phloem ig MEDAL,
1 To Mr. Williams, Gard B. Warner, Esq., F.H.S,, |
To the same, for "Elton Cherri
— —
33 — Mr. of Brentford, for Black Orea Obes
34 To thes for igarreau
35 To Mr. Elphinstone, Gardener to the! the
for British 8 nd Eleanor
To Mr. Lydiard, of Batheaston, for 2 83
To Mr, Bruce, Gardener 0
2 be voured Melon $
HE CERTIFICATE OF MERIT.
for a collection of Boss,
in 50 varieties
maes, L j ardoare ty W. R. Baker, Ban, FAS
es
weg for a collection of ia
er Garad to se Esq, oT
Eri
To — Fave ree ca Cephalotus
To Messrs. Henderson or Achimenes 6
To Mr, Glendinning, F. H.S —
are nd So
To Mr. Salter, F. H. S., *
* Epps, rie for
lants — error
15 To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to a me: Esq. we
o Mr. Gardener to the Duke
ming,
H. S., for the same
17 To Mr. Bassett, Gardener to T. B, Herring, Esq, HI
18 To Mr. Ta Turnb an, 8 to the pareot aes
23 — Whiting, for the best-flavoured |
for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse Plants
eee IMPLEMENTS will —
ted at the w, Stand 16. A prospectu:
fea oe. 1
1
to be obtained from
bridge-
ALSO THE cULTIVATION op 5 — CHOICEST PLANTS,
, Me Wines
Log Fo . aL
A
.
L
air aki
TERN H f 115 Aj 822 1 I 7 . —
a | 1287 ; 5 K GATER 1 332
ee eee
WEEKS anp Co., „Aaga cont, Chelsea, Horticut-
quantities that they are
enormous
at LESS ¥
I THAN —y 4 ile
of Sutherland, F. Il. S., for “the finest collection lection of rr. :
N Kno ole-park, Frant, Tun. avoiding re
° 5 eee OTHOUSE Bor.oens, and and HOT-WATER hea
from 151.
— E ps i ly-invented P. -i
p soma AND ag
HETLAND i , quantity ©
direct from Shetland, > 373 ands,
reen-fleshed.”
ROVED rLO WEE st
SE 3 STICKS are of heh
1
i
M aka and sold Wholesale, 20 K. Monis, f
ee Ser,
PROVED HYD RAUL pei
Freeman Ros, F
ed
THEIN IM
281849.
THE 66
58
435
5 . TURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON...
sees ON HORTICULTUR
15 ay, Jory 17th, t 3 P.m.— “The em n
* are liable, and 50 mode of alleviating 23 80
— wledge offers the means of
o the Meeting Room except Hono
be admitted t rary
sn Fellows —— the oie ae — wives or sisters, and
d by r the Foreign and Cor-
The Gardeners’ Chronicle.
1 JULY 14, 1849.
oo EN yi 0 ky EEK.
1 3 tura — — 7 S
3 tHe nd Thursday, July 18 and 19: Noriolx and
Tas Loxvon Horticutturat Season having now
closed with the ge En on at Chiswick on
Thale last, th e has come for making a
Ei in — of e years.
than has — before;
ant is the fact that
80 lit tle. appeared of inferior quality.
7 song as rare ae, ap eee. plants in
i as was to
20 years
ashe of now.
i alteration adm ted to be immense
pin; ros hat be 88 may in som
wrt it is
vigorous an on
Nor can 1 now fall } hack In the onward flow of
bb
be eddies, and rapids, and bars, and
es may for a moment force back the
but such e are soon onan and the
glides on with a force that accumu-
me
employers o
whi — the publi nging ;
as well to point out what direction the
55 os large collections of plants have
Admirable as have been the [E
ee e een no
the
ees lost Wier interak: The reasons
little or no to be several. In the first place the
forming any a
n | the Horticaltkrál Socie
upon the whole in But
advancing
0
h
ms on to think u
Was admirable.
es,
oni n of the — is 18 a that a
ignorant of their nature mi
len: of the clipped hedges af our Pabedan In fact
a row of finely-grown * Heaths is like a in
of Hottentot Kraals.
plants exciting naik t emotions in a e, of
* on
use they are so entirely the reverse ai
this e the Orchids are everybody.
they are, and where Roses are, the crowd is eee
it is thither a the e visitors eee
resort, and there they linger r find
the tent i Orchids deserted. Men 100 chat it
is because of thei Meg Sg form: their
e believe that. the ex-
o give sameness to
f Orchids as it is to throw oars into a line of Cape
New lants are becoming less numerous. The
. y
s scarcely appe, "E except from the great house
of the Ver of Exeter or from the Garden of
But, on the other hand,
there is z ibaba. of ee every now and
then the reappearance of s oe p as pe as
new. Let us hope that
such cases. When, at the si oft the eee century ma
beginning of this, the pogon 2475 egan to
tell upon the Englis peo n the
rege all the trees beg eu
yt eed themselves
oppa
Branches gourmandes.
drawing the nonrishm
have only met with —
may: „
rom the weak
on but I 8 they
pew upon herbs, or at ome 3 on a
a Ronn care-
hon A injure the N by withe
r parts,
em n me,
hivae none is more
ia
WCQ PIPE
a
ex- course would see
y | ous,
ain their whole e length, . sige coppery red | i
the ex ence of | retain
~
RETURN
others do, who, o, seeing these
hagar 1 Mss gr that te
--
3 FT-
2 to the great injury of the plant
It is best yof *
4
On the contrary; i
The on spared t time
8 hare cutting off three or four of
Fina al] yi third portion mi
fr the lowest of
he fall of the leaves will
the hole, by means of the handles E a
peers A e
‘ 1 the top bo Ala re of | to them than the Peach, it has o curred to me to derive 4 culture of fruit trees we
(Aja ‘inch Ale © 10 Cast with the The nee the cheng: this first us remind- | much to e
n 8 with Ramsay's firo plate. and ing the eultivator that precious tree is often liable Second es RoBBERS OF re
covered over — top with 9-ineh ian, mn h from the e of these shoots. This times these branches will shoot. out i
— — — hollow is = of 1inch larger diameter be owing to two causes. Aa the first place to the over- | This is an onen u l s
bet inn p not set in — In the enclosures, where Peac to that part
round its edge is enn of vigorous gro cou e
to the top of the fillet, so that 80 much to favour the al sched of the pie that of | the moment they first appear. oe:
tpl bela nny sn as op otc the more lucrative crops cultivated, with | been suffered to shoot, the „
without the danger of them. The Peach, abe * rng rern 2 eee that they may
When the fire is mig rapar Wa placed stimulated, v such vigour, that i
n the furnace-bars, and Bpis a filled with |, Both these words 1 — eee
W. may — — aterm
cle By means of à dampar in ef and svat Fer et nea nnn Sie es Boe a
.
9g—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 437
De deners, n ay be advantageously) 1 never use liquid manure until tue fr on 0 — Pelurgouiums.— Have any of ‘thei
ö market a ; — any of your readers lost their
í — by e E gardener, Coleworts, which con- | I then give “aeee applications of soot, and so es | Pelargoniums in a most unaccountable manner this
| t article in Covent-garden, are | a — * e but I discontinue the. quid | season? Mine are * grown and healthy, but a few,
f
.
|
a el found elsewhere as they deserve to be, | m as I see the fruit changing colour. By | both in pots and planted out, die off most 8
l one of the most profitable crops grown. All the following t the a — method of 3 eee, , I | In some of them the stem, above nd, looks dark, as
var market gardeners grow t eir 24 variety, the | have e as fine fruit as I have n. John if decaying. They really appear as if they had a similar
fwhichis saved with great care.“ Atkins's Match- Middlomiss, — Hill, Tunbridge Wells. disease to the Potato ; others, in the same house, and in
8
the very rr ͤſ—
* Coleworts, ought by this time to be coming Home Correspondence Erica Cavendishii.—It may be interesting to know
+ put unless the bed is kept constantly moist and Garden Gossip,—I beg to second Mr, Duncan’s that our noble, and now well known, Erica Cavendishii
poled d ring the dry season, there will be but a poor recommendation of the gay sprin g flow wering shrub has produced 15,915 perfect blossoms, which we have
success, especially if we have a continuance Cytisus canariensis (vide the — rs’ Chronicle of | gathered, and I am happy to say that it is now in the
of soch excessive dryness as we have had, and are now May 12), though my experience of its beauty is as a most robust health, promising yet to do valiant service,
Ei y i
plant, b lived and | J, and J. Fai n.
should be well watered after — dug, and the e for years, and is now 6 or 7 feet high; it grows Newby Park Gardens.—These do much
seed sown thinly when the ground is moist possible, | under the partial shade of some Larch trees, a situation | Mr. Paxton, who planned and executed them. Fiv
letit be otherwise until the plants are sufficiently — unsuited to half-hardy shrubs, for oak it in the | acres are walled in with a 14 feet wall, the latter weli
strong to plant out. same border are equally vigorous Australian plants, | covered with trees bearing c of
Ground which has been cropped with early Potatoes | a great number of which can be successfully cultivated | young Peach-trees are each producing from < 4 to a 3
sad Peas, comes in well fee Coleworts. All the Cab- in the open air of South Devon. I ee, an extra fruit. The garden, though 6 made about two years
bage tribe requires the soil to be in good heart; in fact, prize for more than a 2 thus grown, at the May and four months, i is well cro pped. The on nati eberry
ss abundant supply of manure is requisite, which exhibition of the Devon and Cornwall Horticatarl trees are rendered both useful and ornamental by being
gould be well aug in; and take advantage, if possible, | Society, including — bulbous plants. &c., among trained as standards and summer pruned, and in this
of showery weather to plant out the crop. This opera. them, the old, but shy flowering Iris susiana. My | way they bear abundantly. Four ranges of glass stand
fon being so simple and so well understood, I shall Banksia Roses n were also thought wor thy of a prize ; | in the centre of the garden, one before the other, and in
y state that as much soil ought to be retained at ut alas! the plants front a half circular wall runs from one end of the
the roots of the plants as possible. The distance from pees and the Fighting green fly, which is absolutely i in range to the other, inclosing a yard for compost. The
plant to plant should be about 9 inches, This may formidable abundance this year, so that my poor trees | gardener’s house also stands in front, and commands a
appear to some rather close, but as soon as Het, bagin are necessarily pruned closer than ever Midsummer saw view of the whole garden. The Pine-apples are strong,
y be them before, as th i h m appearan e
there of Cab her g a
period of growth the grouud nes be ee al rein brillantis its hue. William Jesse is with me unusually | on the ‘ik pee and are . oak I rs seen
weeds, and well worked with the “ pick large this year, but strange to say, I can never get| nothing equal to them in orkshire or Dur! The
Where early Cabbages are desired, * should be La Reine or Souvenir de la Malmaison to perfect one Melons and Cucumbers, traiued on wire trellis, 5 5 inches
treated in a similar manner, but of course worsen at a of their multitude of flowers, the petals of each huge | from 1 * are very healthy; many of the leaves
er iuches bud being there is fruit
e
required, The first ing shou made the told is a very fine one, “ Pourpre de Tyre, is in the | with excellent wood and fruit. ‘The Vines, two years
— — will N . Coleworts same condition. Among spring shrubs, I mast com- | planted, are very strong ; many of the leaves measuring
the second sowing in September, which may remain mend the beauty of Ceanothus divaricatus, which, | from 15 to 18 inches across, and I counted from 12 to
the seed bed wot Febr —.— or wye ay Faty out the when 9 or 10 feet high, and bushy in proportion, is 14 bunches on each Vin e — bunches from 1
same season a third s may b Thes e | highly ornamental, when cack with its thyrses of | 2} lbs. each, well coloured. All are trained 5 inches.
. vith the Coleworts, will ome a god flowers of a hue so rare among plants; against a wall | from the glass, and no s ades are used; on the con-
Ta of Cabba and one variety it s4 * my opinion, almost worthless. As a late | trary, they receive p the light and sun they can get,
el he p purposes — Vie table 3 flowering shrab nothing can be more striking than a and there is no appe rance of Lubre or burning;
a good These remarks w afford | large specimen of Ozothamnus gs ant hs which, when d well. James Wood, Stockton-
— * Villa ee ” Phar in flower, looks as if covered with the finest particles of upon- -Tees, Durham, July 5.
ete — snow, which gently bend its branches; against a wall Rate of Growth of 22. —It may not be uninter-
STRAWBERRIES FOR FORCING. this is also valueless. Weigela rosea deserves all the | esting to your readers to know the yearly sh ce of a
Ptants iatended to be forced next season should be praise that has been bestowed on it, proviog, when the | common black Poplar, in a favourable situation. It
strong, well-rooted, sa well-ripened before — am plant gets large and bushv, pre-eminently lovely. | was measured rou va Fro at 4 feet from the ground,
notime should be lost in 88 ~ ruaners. No i he icu i
à month hence would do, but I prefer the present per China and 8 and the introductions of the ; feet, inches,
or say within the next fortnight, The best runners on! Messrs. Veitch fro atagonia and Chiloe, wit — nnn neta | 12
pan ou year and not permitted to fruit | ness their new Esca lonia, the beauty of which can 9 1 —
should be selected. The plant produced at only be shells sopra ated by seeing the flowers oe » »
Mitra: a, wi to
—
©
p
B
—
©
NI
et
E
2
©
5
G
©
rh
—
So
5
faz
Q
5
S
—
wm
e
2
8
“<
F
=|
ES
et
7 5
®
T
—
i=)
oe
8 7
©
až
8
3 > A u- tee É
succeeding Joints should be pinched off about a growing, a amirini in a few years—would that| The tree is 12 2 or 13 years old, and stands in a moist
into the ter potting. My practice is to pot at once all revolutions produced such results! Now that the situation at Rochford. George Wood, dae. July 10.
pots in which they are to remain; I use 6-inch | beauty of the American beds is over, it woald have| Plants hardy in Devonshire.— Perhaps you will have
i I all g i o i me how far 3
er d, spring, aud 8-inch for late wo f| been well had all growers of l lowed the ad- | the = t Frer i
could be given to waterin ay 2 5 y oye Ss asi’ Kal Manchester, and plan - | fasciculatus is consi 2 t is hardy
8 for = ly and 1 an z bat the f the ‘ varieties of | near I have two i which have
the 5 145 more an g- inch pots, and I disli hybrid, zielen whioh are rapidly advancing in beauty | only stood unprotected through the last two winters
h vines | flower-pans under the e pes. value ; min n fall bloom, and render the beds|in an open shady situation, but are now
kong, they were ot 3 since, with oe cer- | with bloom; her
re as 75 oe
‘ preferring stones to pegs, ‘as the former prevent tainty of a prolonged diio play of colour, if the late | failed to throw t them into flower. Against a south v
7 evaporation, If the stones be lifted u up in the varieties of f Gandavensis flower well. Lilium lanci- | Tacsonia a mollissima not mags stood unp
fi d in
d wi r, a ni but = which set in the
> ce moisture will be fou ium, I conclude, would succeed equally well a the last — r, but
4 a The soil which I use is three barrowſuls similar situation. In making preparations for the en- autumn has stood the win er also avd 3 on
dag. M one of leaf mould, and one of good rotten | suing winter and spring I would recommend a large | mediately i in — of this i is st ve ee
time, —4 practice is to have it prepared in the winter quantity of Wallflowers being aised for filling the | high, ich has been pla al ct tid
frosty two or three ti to sweeten ; in he Geraniums, Verben: OSSO s constantly, but has not ye i 3
Weather I remove the erust, and thus lay bare snare Ea are 3 and injured 1 * * A | sameřvicinity Capparis spinosa stood at =e 5 a
Puta handé, I always flow under m m | wall, flowering most freely for many years, n it was
the ul of soot in the b pot over windows hough e gay enough t 0 * cold ae the destroyed by accident. F. H. * es
his an excellent plan, upants, y blank app pe Bulbs.—Per og yo will
6 wg out insects an he i i ii winter and oady — till I filled many of who have had experience iu culti — Cape 1
man in a I never pot more than one the beds with Aucuba japonica in , and stro so good as to state her they 5
N R Ip quality to q y: ts of German Wallflowers, which answered ad- ent menti: in ie
| aad removed o plants are rooted I have them cut off, | mirably, rendering the the d ronicle for 1847. Having received a large number
| Plants will bear y p and as e , and and deliciously fragrant till it became of bulbs from the Ca) Tri
ina: the sun without flagging, I place them | time to plant out the gayer exotics, when the plants | Spa manthus, Hesperantha, Ixia, sa —
0 1 | — were n away; my gardener, however, has struck Vallota, An yan Gaon Pen 1
never ting on the sides of I a vast number of cuttings, for many of the new varieties | no room in juse ung
tem ber hm fer for the = =h 1 8 and k; 28 art ore all = of odd colours of mixtures, which | them in a es asadvised rt magn othe mai-
proaches 1 ftom weeds an ap-|are worth preserving. Next winter I trast to see no | correspond *
ö the Pots a them = temporary pis end p ung e | more bars aee and paralle elograms. For the present ject will be highly acceptabl ee a of potatoes" Ras 3 3
is Purpose their ri its ts for I conclude my gossip, trusting that other amateurs will Cutting off the y epik of the a praeis tis
l eee esis be made wa Pees * record their . e . which means we shall all ne ang existed i in ae
at outline of a pit, eae ates: 2 feet wae benefit.
| Adi denl 8 18 inches at front. To these, slabs or Natural Seele dee, the instances of what
l With turf op a nailed, and the latter banked round may call ese” union in trees, a case of ee
Ae across 10 U any description, Rafters should be by me, you noticed in
l de shape of joe? , which might be made in Chronicle, are Tess rare than 1 had supposed, At al |
du the cea and ith painted canvas, | events, I have one in Holly, not 20 yards from my own
Aber. ee always be removed in fine door, and of which I was ignorant till I was shown it
eng quarters, ds tun i removed to their | quite recently by my children. e |
Se ee pis wil be found very hardy for reason to think, of about 70 years’ growth (T can re-
dun in that mn zumner stuff, or to — half. hardy member them above 50), and from one, about 2 feet
1 Wan this me. 7 be re he greenhouse | from off a branch 4 inches in circum. | but invariabl
A heie forcing The nearer the vino ado tae ference, diminishing to 3} inches, and again increasing |
Stand swell quarters the to 5 inches near its juuction with er
. i fer allja from the ground. junction is as | Hi al
gee hem ‘oni houses for forcing them in, and I | perfect as possible, and the branch, which is without | think two)
| Me keep in viene worthy of a pit for themselves. If or one or has gone off,
Wut an air, an that Strawberries delight in plenty of | two some time), is 6 feet curvatures. | peal
i aux one may construct a pit suited to them, | IV., Tamworth, July 8 | Th
1
:
3
i
5
i
438
$
THE GARDENERS’
lightning, which was the cause of many an prone —
but the Potatoes looked beau
ue to do so still. J. B. Warren, Warren s Gres
pursue
layer "e der over the surface, a practi
ii re remove
value.
firs 9 ce of B
3 I have N
I am satisfied
atte: 4 d to no
or print * he oor so
can see
es in this par
rring to the
ll in Jun
tiful next
off my e
e disease
. oa
t of the county 385 e south of
at present a very healthy appearance,
ter of my rain ga
848, wh soa in June
50 1 el
1849. there was only 1'5 inch; added’
10 d
and mine consists in putting a
ce ia * 1
the hau u the
n the undersides — the
auge, 1
were exhibite = ear Wood and er Each
d specimen h a six b bunches on it; although
tolerably well rs the black Lade — not well
aulm coloured.
|
sorts, a
1 experience, that if “this i is strie'ly si
= ar t either in
Wandeworth Com-
wet
auses of
the
the
we
disease,
aneieties
: (GARDEN Fae ie cas
1 July
Bite prizes of the
Pine-apples, w
value of 15
. nad . and a dish of ripe teks o
Aeris, — Amon
these
AR eie
certai
wa 5
f Alexan:
there were some good
Mr. Jone
11502
es,
0 rn
Mr siete gen
ail well colour Then, Mr.
H Spe lane had fin e of Roya ee rge and No-
hey w omewhat spoiled in the aaka
good spec cimens of Early Purple
Ir. Ferguson,
o did Mr.
all well cultivated fruit.
The heaviest
j gri * Mrs. Oddie; it
weighed 74 lbs., and was called Hatfield Green flesh
Mr. Carson, gr. to had
Oliver’s Hybrid, 6 lbs., and Mr. G add, a Cantaloup.
eig The best flavour cages was * 8 —— ”
d Dyne
by Mr. Bundy, gr. to Lor an
| mev best 3 proved ea fleshed, from Ur.
ruce B. Miller, Esq.
N gr. i Mr. Whiting, of the
ene, had an . green- heals which ranked
iof hia in regard to flavour.
G. Rushout,
RRIES.— The _best were Black Tartarian, from
ne. Perhaps the
oduced was the
r, which
r.
ish of E
avelling. D
m Mr. Whitin ng, and Keens’ Were.
r. Monr Mr. Smith showed six pots
British OR
Of Tropica, Fruits, Mr. 12 er. to the
Dowager of Nar humberland,
25 oves. Papa w, Allspice, and Vanilla,
to J. ree Boothby, Esq., Musa Cavendishii, in fruit,
ripe.
There were two 1 w 30 Stove and GREEN-
on . Lawrence, of Ealin
m m M
showed a good .
Gars. e eee
of both
93 oZ, and 7 Ibs. 123 02. Mr. Mrs Torapa! “also
small
black and white!
upon the eee the former
ee were numerous,
Tie tae —— ameo! the Muse
* Ham to J. Tho E
we 2238 3
st
a
f en in i a
condition ; two nice Ixoras, Aphelexis purpure
been shown „ rantha, about which too much could hardly be said,
— beet so finely was it grown and flowered; two plants of
re also —_ by Allamanda—Schottii and e pretty
oe 1 Taylor, Esq., Æchmea fulgens formerly exhibited, the brilliant Kalo-
The best Black Ham. Santhes inea , together with
These ere very Sollya linearis, and 5 varieties ies of Cape Heath.
next best were fro Collections Pe 15 Stove fe GREENHOUSE eee
and good specimens | contribu Mr. G: 5 Antrobus
Messrs, Dytch, Taylor, Bart. ; Mr. 1 aylor, gr. ys . Coster, bot and a Mr,
gr. to J. ill, Esq., awley, of Bromley. . Green’s group 0 of
In the Dipladenia atropurp lamanda cat
in pots | two 22 8 florib
linifolia,
Pawley had fo Heaths,
fonr Capo lenin
CHRONICLE.
D, — it was stated that}!
our.
They | flowered B
Duchess les
— guloa — a good A
e.
o Achim a Genista, 9 Vines;
collections
HO
PEACHES De best dish of six, and a most excellent aine, Es
o Earl de | ca
e Aerides
w
r, Esq., first ; and b liams, p, to a
arner, Esg, sheds Mr. Mylam 11
high,i
cos at 12 }
Odontoglossum grande, the gram
flowered Ganis chlorochilon, pars cas Vand,
u sof 10
nob
of Miltonia spectabilis, ene.
the variety of tigrina
S.
Collections * 6 8 nis
ruce, former sen
“99-1849. a
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONI
CLE. 439
| es were also sent by Mr. Smith ha Mr. Cole.
Ps s Class Mr. Epps
usual,
SINGLE — — The bes
very well bloomed, from
Irs
son had Pini ge tg and Achimenes sc
„ hybrids,
by Ur Williams an d M
2 og fo
growers, ni
— of 1
r. Taylor.
ticed a
wn. They co
— 5 io xi sal nots
i
mare did not ea reg ora
essrs, Veit
seh Pin | Winchesterian, I Fs
Taxodium
BS,
y were
Ceanothus
Californian E
1 olesofolius
even and — eatery than
coccinea,
specimens of a new variety of Cry ptomeria, fev Mess
; Mitraria co me nurse
ere Produced i in —— ty, and the
sisted of the k
with the enen perhaps, of Back-
8 his
ae Premed
‘this season
1
were *
Mr. Ivi
agnifi
cote.
8 3 ted
ea
panicle covered
of ae ‘managed F Ferns were shown
e sorts did not
m those oe . Ahr
ecim
y Siion tie . —. 5 Se
Co
ta
a| of England, es in, Dia —
urner
Mr. ee ae of Si. John’s- wood,
8 5
we cann
with nearly the same sorts; 3, Mr. Parker ; and 4,
own, bu nnot say |f
specimens of cultivation. |
h ry |
The insects found were the small workers and the
0. temales, which latter would adele establi
resh clone, so that their destruction at the present
ae esirable. e also read a note from
; the
lant 2 with 15 different eo snail ia ten
iddling
re em ing a good co
luxuriant h brid i in 2 — way of folgane. Of white kinds,
n,
we oe: for amateurs bein vo:e paged,
n somewhat “ backwa ing fi
: Ist, Mr. Ward, of pate — 4 — ig
Rainbow, Martin
d with ery
8
Hero,
oe — Pau i. Regulas Millwood’s
neer, King o ý Brutus,
Vilage Tiid, Se H, we th, Barre
£ Woo
Wales, "Sin mi e Freder
New-
n, Wm:
„Mr. Ward, Mar Albert, Sarah,
Pagi Perfection, eae auty, Lady Chesterfield,
Agitator, Desborough, —— Mrs.
Norwich Rival, Ward's 156, Mrs, Barnard, — of
N
fees best was a Pane about
ood
| Michael exhibited a a fine variety y of Deilephila Galii, cap-
e
The same —— had also a |a
ard,” ani
Lydia, | tio
correspondent relative toa swarm of two-winzed flies,
Atherix Ibis, and extracts from bega received from
w f the station at
r. F. Bond exh pia of the
wehi sed: perloe Chrysomela kee Which had de-
troyed many acres of Tare ambridges Mr.
read, containing an account of iioa on the tor-
pidity of Vinsa Urticæ and Io, as affected by changes
mperature.
Boraxical, or EDINBURGH, June I4.— Professor
BALFOUR, ge in the chair. * ® following papers
were read: — Messrs.
ontin ee of a former
sete
Rem
n of 525 nts and Toe Physical and Geo graphical
Distribut of Species. By the * Fleming.
ap eae 1 that it had been assumed as a first
with an extensive series of 2
any ret ol gy, 51 n had s had
the
and tha indi vidu rod
a species eould be tra a single
D 4 1 two, according as . sade ae
Na r distin ct,” an d hence the o ie
ae n opposition to this Poor
it was as stated, 2 bem history of the * race traced
to their origin in a single pair,
analogical argument of any val hil
of the carnivorous — on
ong with gave
unds to con . that many “individuale, of
from single centre
ra fro
wih
farnish an
* ae pendence
n
d
thor, furnish a demonstration of its y
Hooker, while admitting the identity of the species of
's Prince Albert, Princess A
Young’s X
(not for competition) — oy
certainly a very desirable variety. It was raised
Rev. J. Burroug It is a fall a 3 white,
with a well- defined light red ed may me
nd the same grower also ede
amed “ Madame Beauazod,” a French trasi
| pale — with a rosy eye.
veral ral Prruxlas were shown by Messrs. Henderson,
ter some
chy, a medium-sized variety,
7
ati
inds
ning had a da jasat 8 of — among
u had a group con-
Gordo ae Thuja
rsfieldii,
Plum
mistake
wed as such 8 8 whieh
in consequ dis- series
Z Six i in 8-inch nee 5 Mr. —.—
having a white centre dune by 3 oe m
This came from the rsery of Mes enderso
S Splendens” was also a grees flower paar 8 sho
Xquisite, „ ways
arge rich violet,
ENTOMOLOGICAL, Bas 1.—G. R. WATERHOUSE,
n the chair.
7
ee al ca
De ess of Sutherland; Simi
by the
Henderson up con: |
aga gh but better;
e Carm
inata
— a great —— on rubra; and Passing- of
ham
pa plante, even
he ablest a a is
r the identity, not as indicating a
ies,
for identical with
e comparison and with ti
uelined to ) consider
non ge of which must be sought for “in some
ofessor E. Forbes disposes of the
Pr E.
|
je
1 A very extensive colleetion
the
ted ocie i
S. sets a exhibited a fine
at St, Osyth
ies of Lesen
prese
Somme 5 F. NS. Mr.
ol Microlepidotera recently =
on x coast, inclu
Glyphipteryx,
— tor the e- pas
which the enclosed
nd
— *
Dobson,
* Seedling 1848, Painter; Princess
| species of El
me “sembling ” habits
ood, exhibi
MS,- jsi
Mr. Stanly, with tricolor, |
er pi, itn
of 3 not mi — seen.
Ect
coast of
2, Lauriston-terrace, was elected a Fellow.
e GRA
by Illustrations — Natural Gators of e, arranged
een with Desoriptions. By eee
Part I. * coloured
ra
stone with tas nd ex
show that the diiieoltis Vee
553 table, where’
e
THE
8
CHRONICLE.
440 (Jury l4,
TEOSA ooseberr: d other busk Notices to Co
E suen, ces ot moisture, they ar are lll a rr.
ethan from a want of it it; ; therefore sphagnum | fruity or as eee et oy ry sides of leret, the Buss: JW 5. Yon are not Gia iy oud et aes “á
rough fibry peat should be i Bs a * swarming by, allowing them more bees may —
3 placed about the roots in the centre of the baskets, be gathered ut g “off Us iks. Budding o on ae We have fm
order to retain sufficient moisture when the it should Ne immediately performed, and d neither being the primary e, eats 9 bees to swarm, be
1 i; The blocks on which the | attention ara ld be paid to netting Cherries, Straw-| in Bs phere statement. In your case, } —
Wee grown should be those kinds like the Apple | berries, Currants, and son fruits which it is wished to akan SAE colony haa o
or Pear, with a smooth , and in a fresh state | preserve from the ra ravages * of wwe ©. followed their owa we
w 5 plan fastened upon them. The fasten-| 5 ORISTS’ FLOWERS. if 2 ener ae rel. e 8 Bi od Ing for Toii
y ‘a F d NUNCULUSES ler Will Tender eners — eeswin y. e io Bee,—
ings should 5 aare T 8 pte bad, | these roots in a 3 by remove e e Aud whether Fh doen word se at R ay
Das wek roug — ee dry particularly the collection is v —— or otherwise, they should be 8 ir 1 opposite ete But W. em f 6.
om eren air canily blade he , rbs | taken u uyut rain, or — will inevitably make another settle it between you, arrels among Gt you had bene
N "jie mendje em especially in wth, and should the Dee 2 ah fibres, seriou inj ury are always fo henna) oide a
pa 4 baskets igen dare Ee oien. in the "e will be the town Take of the seed, T ere destroyed 5 bh ne 8 dern 8 dat do net
f cases, best for true Epi i ris 1 Orchids, fea st s impregr “Cat t ith a hurt Vines by standing under them; but Vines her camna
jority o „ DE “! Pip yta ne ois- | Small portion of the stalk attached, put a dozen or two Camellias by hanging over them, aolen Hage leaves i 2
these they require more attention, $ Stan. | together, tying them in bunches ; these may be inserted | fined to rafters or vertical trellises, The laa 1 2 2
ture, n n grown in pots. se 0 n- á d graved, and waits only for an hapaa Ea $
hopeas, however, it is absolutely requisite to grow in thin paper bags, and hung up in a dry airy room or Jike it, inserting k
opeas, , thei we downwards dfor a week ys, they e stored Danas: JJO. Do not water with liquid suai
them upon were * 4 all poe air plants having away in a place of safety, till the period of sowing | | are coming into bloom, Unt thy
hi sal coat ts nee = place th CaRNAT Picotrrs,—These, if intended gr ae Har ea a sonden faves is fit t for r
= in baskets, and to suspend them from for exhibition, should be carefully covered with hand perience rot this tn ee early Vin
* * thad thoit Boots e grow freely , and the — round the pod should be Gzapes: J 4 C. They are attacked b —
siege an ere, for if rf der the soil E examined occasionally, to see that all is right; as the mildew, the nature of which was fully explained in Ur
atmosphere, for if confined under the soi Af A columns for 1848, p. 523. Sulphur, applied early
perish moss, or sphagnum, when | flowers open they must be shaded with muslin caps ora certain remedy. y angh, ig
e i * ts. i 4 i ar at this time excessively mis- | Hrrsanium: G L. By all means use half sheets, loose:
chievous, getting into the pod of — — and eating can be * bad as a krim d bo
pv edie
s;
a small qpa ot moss, forms — — trap for —
arauders. Some people place tobacco pipe heads
the te e top of “the stick, Put if they have been used, the
insects will go anyw — than odes i in so unsa-
ke chef rst opportunity of planting
ok, unless yo hn
enough o hold all known plants when 5 an
then it 15 exceedingly i „ Conii f 2
(13 inches by 8) is large enough for British plants,
want to economise peng you may put on the
different rome of the $ x same half det
Insrcts: E e Miesen from F Fig trees in Sir ©, Litte
rde raved females of Coccus
have e de Soe third AT in >
summer, k in winter, to see if they want out roo 3 5 pipings and Pansy cuttings ; after rain E Ne us e. ra
watering. This must ne independently of syringing will be ad en GARD ing ot ut at Does the tops in tobaces
it. ave OOd e —.
por Fart aly 1 ha esate igen ba 1 Some time since we 1 all the fine ——_ very young laden alia Pat ee *
3 ig l L 28 mnot remove Plantains except
Gordon’s Paper in the Journal of the Hort. Society. coal saben from the furnaces sho uld be carefully pre- 3 a you cars soars | 105 2 hp
Cale 5 we ti of the erop wil now need “this attention, we fulfil the pate th ogy ie the je wound. aon salon oe eg 2
8 0 pera ons.
he ensuing week. )
pt G DEPAR
P ESs.— Give every enco! o those plants
which are now i d mai, ee means o
moist high day hee P good om es
gis 1
ing “this excessively war
2 "of fruit which has already
l
winter, ‘restrict the supp T ke 2
G
requirements
for a short time to a portion of those plan
made to recur to the subject. Owing
ure of the material, it popra
t also
he appr aa of
eee it answers the
isfiguring th
e **
ut ** the use 0 es or 1
ch clean stems are produced that it is never necessary
to remove more than the smallest outside leaves. Our
thod of proceeding is as follows. Of our earliest
es page ens a A eee in single rows, we tie the leaves
atting, and s
straight with b und the plants
a zinc * ae eee calibre to 8 a cavit
k y0
So as to ensure a free ula of air inch ro between it and the stem ; this is packed
berries, that their skin and footstalks may be better fall o of finely ‘sifted ashes, and after the common so il is
matured, and less liable to decay during —_ way, the
; 3 oe =I ny prevail în i oh ed drawn out and moved forward in the row. But
Strict the late crops, which are planted i ` anage b
partment, by muing, sweeping, mowing, &e., and — commeneing at one end, and after tying the leaves of the
tying or Pegging d own half-hardy plants as they advance | plants, we int h side SS TO
in ot allow ay of these toextendth hemselves | ;
so farin a lateral
whe
berry plantations are destroyed e every
order
e —
diately prepared,
plants, which should be yh
1994- therm. , deg ad the
a kp sheet of iron ; the space between these is packed
of ashes m ed against
n placed round oe plants. pii use
of ashes is not 3 when the soil is very light
or sandy.
for the week ending July 12, 1849,
tural Gardens, Chiswick.
State “™ Weather near i
as observed at the kti
THERMOMETER,
Min, an
July.
Max.
|
eel :
2 e
BP pas" 2
io
2
is
|
Ver — thoes t; r
fine; vay th aze; —
11— —Exceedingly fine througho
J2—Very fine; pas at nigh
Mean temperature of th ree
State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for th
ensuing week, ending July 2i, 1849. . 8
4| Prevailing Winds,
ddai i 8
3
which it
2 85
£
Ae | Rained
p
be | ANTIRRHINUMS :
P pene OF Prants: P B. Phytolacca, and probably in
dra.—A M M. Arrhenatherum peoe Fe 50 aa
ceria aitans, i ts Poa FHS,
—H B.
PaxTon’s 8 s CALENDAR. The reprint is now ready,
price 2d. each copy. Parties wishing to have copies fords.
— sme tg tenantry, can be supplied at the me
. Remove all the Larch and 2
n our seedling
ake from its size aaa appearance, is Barei: ie
bie tes :0 TE. Your pena is 8 *
sists in 5
rem If
you can save it, you had | better cut its branches i
or cloth, = hich
pase p
ry might miak buds begin to a ppear o
8 — must have ys ay and, 2 the Cor
should substitate » hagnum, tied over
ri ane Sipho is the most —
a where you
Thalis
de sna —
cakes placed in aà
E
TSA. A very
larly Nos. 3, 5, 16, 19, 18, 24, 25, 25 aL 4
bat weg
8 t
ticularly Nos. 5 and 42. No. a very the
serow, and 36 is og nie me lar ifferet
3 e Tare fe 38 . chance; for 1 uate
the:
run a one kind to another, and are
seasons, soils, and situations.
from dotted
Se.
cen W HH, 20, shad
yellow or "ie size, shape, a
shape, and texture
T 5 r stained with
centre; texture and shape toleral
pei h rim and
1 ; , tolerably good, size large,
1 5 1. oye pet
showy ; a nice variety. 2, aud it
oes overt mode a e
novel in colour, by Roe
=
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ie BY HER
MAJESTY’S Sep rg
E DENCH oer 1 Tor ea
* rege h he Mie
155 SODA AND POTASH.
F YPSU SULPHATE © )
5 MAGHT.SOIL.
MMIC ACID AND COPROLITE, |
PATENT,
HU
SODA EW YER
— 4 E OF LIME (made — bone only).
SOP ERPHOSPHAT y r sale
1
NO OTHER MANURE a PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, for i ua eS
hee a 3. A the finest quality, direct
ROYAL LETTERS
os
. u HOTHOUSES, 2
in every
of
sy ase! A om r
ns senso
ing to t
And 2 agrees with our aggregate experience of
= pect ; viz. 1 8 = he
Fork kn $ g 014, Upper Thames-street, L 401. ; ean.to, 28 aer ins. long, 16 fee t 61 ins. wide, 50L.,
on ane Superphosphate of Lime, 3 ‘i wil be | best’ Too and 16-oun
A Treatise receipt of 8 postage stamps, Free to purchasers bien Ma — &e,, reqnirii o paint, Td., 8d.,
reared on Per
eq
cial foot, according Hoe 5 Ee.
of Guano, Kc. ATI
—— TURNIP SOW
HEATING BY HOT WATER.
LONDON MANURE “COMPAN xs maxing P4RIAN CEMENT, f far internal St tuceo, „instead o
. RAT re partic cularly for Turnips a
n pla painted and 3
— 4 Crops, can, recommend it w ye Aa payne e confines 20 hours of its parme mian -ar rs the Bare walls, and by th
whe in which rooms may enti 15 — table
AGRE ee SALT, and all other Manures of known
—
uld
is worked wi
ppl —.— Gua pe ano, in $
cargoes, 1 they will deliver direct from the ship or 4
. stores 5 Corn Manure, Nitrate of Soda, hp nd the Faten
Agricultural Salt, and every other Artificial Man on the
jowest terms for a genuine article,
ARD PURSER, Secre: ioia 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars,
IAN AND eeh ee ee ON SALE
By THE ONLY Imp
ing, í
which may be seen at tthe Wor
ES Fel and Sons, Nine Elms, Lo
ESSRS. NEDE CHEMI
RAL SCHOOL, 38, pa nn amare
A sou SY bbl knowledge of Analytical a
88 Geolo
may be obta
ar r — to a good modern educa —
ined in Messrs. NEsBrt’s Academy,
any ore es, delivering it from the Import
0 THE LOVERS OF FLOWERS. MEETINGS von ara TWO Fí
WEEKS.
O ec fl ANIMAL MANURE.—If any-| Prnzgeger 2 eee 5
thing will make your seed ants grow, display a Tuuxsps
of foliage, and blossom in perfection, this Manure Taken, — W gcgen Im p. Society of Ireland,
Tuxspar, 4—Agricultural 1 le e i
assuredly will, To be had of H. Cotes, Seedsman, & c. THURSDAY, 26—Agricultural Limp, Šo of Ireland.
for the sale by special appointment), 32, Cranbourne-street, Farmers’ Chun. un. —July 27: Market.
cient application oi = acre vod ee
each canister and
THE PATENT ALKALI COMPAN Y’S METAL.
4 SAC CK mer talai PLE-BROWN ene Bt ap-
and ie 2 a Farm other
and are pre na — superior to
eben of white or red lead, or so-
ec y.
2
ull directions for use ap
can be A ee e, 1 .
Fifeshire, ” says
“Its bond — dee
rae
ndon; Messrs. Mat-
Lo
bod Leonard, — . Evans aud 8
i Mr, Samuel J. Fill, Yarmouth, Norfolk; Mr. D.
Glasgow; Mr. G. San ndeman, Dundee; Mr, R.
. ford, Yorkshire ; Mr. R. S. Parr, Edinburgh; Mr.
h Wolverbampt ton ; g rike Bryant and May, Tool
; Messrs, Vint and Co,
t Oxland, Plym
m
to the average wei a of
Sunderland; — Mr. — 5 if ho valuo i 1
— Falmouth. To be mt or i also, with cop
„on a to the ert di
Jou es
s of the crop for e is to —
ee ompany, "20, rees foni
Secretary.
EIGHT HUNDRED 1 PREMI lou
La sega POUNDS FO
u ), Linseed, Beans, saat 1 sae Aeir DE AO ei
Chiswick Coals, cooking Linseed .. Reasi 1 2
observations Attendan 0 16 0
us ultra” fi — 3 17 0
ra“ for warming la ant
ue 125 Dish Kopi Deduct ...... 210 0
and one ee of
ving a loss * per head, of £0 | 70
peri
— 28 feet 6 ins. “long, 13 feet 6 ins, wide,
mee of large size. Patent Ligita for | | about 4
and 9d., per s
wi thin amounts to a
before the materials
wta |
ICAL AND AGRI.
London
4
Surveying, Levelling Railway seo hs
in
Plots, ke. at 12s, per cwt, ; and pr , iff - | has cog dissed 5 * length lately Es our
cess, for Agriculture, to suit any kind of r soil, at 67. 8 ri?
ial aton 3L 10, ve „ ; the a it has received differ as
extra), Six owt. is an amply sufi, nothing but fa ag experience 8 Sut The ollowing |
of the matter as
B. D.
| stand have 2
de
Leavy
Or, as each beast 8 er we bee of Turnips, 3
yellow, and partly Swedes, urn of minus Is,
Wel E obtained he pin season, how.
ver, viz. 8s. per Dutch stone as A instead of of Gs. 7d.,
creased ret
7° 0 ORCHIDEA GROW
— — 130, — respect- | €
à, have method of so ae I wo uld have had an in s. per head,
N oe — honour of warming the Orchide the averaging fully 50 1 rr a profit of
fen additions to the House. the Turnips, a return of 11s. 53d. per ton. Mr. Take will
Houses of the following à
ting elass of plants, according to the state of the markets, and that 127 is
Malina. EE Vaie: hardly justified in reckoning so many stones of beef | ©
e her, » Hoddesdon, d as so much money, as the markets may fall even
| Semasa erson, Pine-appie Place. r than his animals make ere-
i R N Tel. 5 ar W. fore how a satisf: answer ean be obtained to the
ip Leg, —— ee original query, from the results of cattle feeding. I
q STEPHENS think the better way would be to from
foe r years, for which we can vouch, involving
expenditure of about 60007. and the consumption of
| tons of green * r * jey of which
u | there appeared at the
rer ge: of ane ag , after the Heere, d bou ht
es of ag, fuel, &c.
6d. per ton of the food
re with
food, and ex
would forward to us their
names and addresses, ve ‘ould A gig na a series of
questions, the ich, thus obtained,
hit oad no doubt be ‘held ‘ince of the whole
ANTONY ged —.— SONS, 1 DON Mr. Nrsnrr's works on leit Mensuration, Gauging, | n Irisa AGRICULTURAL krak oii
WILLIAN JOSEPH rie -= 5 ax 60, LIVERPOOL Land § 8 English Pars ming Ee oo by Lona- | as. 5 ere of prey: differe int
MAN an 0 may Ad ota — Tsellers. er from t. e ear 0. Ww p 1
GHT, T 40 a Mang Pp 2 BRISTOL; 8 | ay Je n
CEO e POWELL anp PRYOR. LONDON. 3 n eee oe e k pia to fa this 33 at the time. This
protect themselves 5 against "the inju 1 consequences o of and e courages . while that —
and spurious ano, purchasers — 5 = * d py i 2 For thi
— ye oniy to í i ert of established charact T ope we g5 e ive of e is n
the — moe who will supply the article 1 ng he „Agri icultural Gazet tte. + 1 to vindicate urge e attack on
er 2 14,
in
r things e
n such opposition to the well-
and patriotism of Lo
eeg Pip is now e Pegas
ee
e extravagant rents that a
to cultivation and the reckless 2
pree
n fact, the whole social system of Ireland has
11 Sided Pass the tenet and the failure of that
y
onar} ; it must go from bad t
the means of improvement are al
and the national resources gradually
anc evoh K Ma tato w e n *
lasses a hope), i
Ane under cs the
that 1 hang
a ics ete c e of
e tenure of land,
phew onl bine back t
untry peed been so long la
0 It is manifest, then,
s
— 10 tons
ut chiefly yellow, g
gives a return of s. 6d., and adding ls.
ure I rec — eos aes ae alent to the
market value of the hay and straw consumed, its excellence |
bring attributable rather to the ae ofthe Linseed, &c., than to
consumption of the Turnips,
nated
unn
dee
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
psn eg Estates = is s passed, that T re
ma; into the
is ir reg ea 1 Be "ee unde i * i
litical e ent is at an en
outrage, consequent a he competitio
e, and xiety of the peopl
grari
t
e eri anxiet) e peo
means of emigrating.
„agrar sti
n for land,
e people
rt
e latter, ey, should | pou
I rule—not w
sale 925 * unless at a price which will not re
of grow
to caution the
leaving for rent and profit, 4291, 0s. 3d. The items of |
varying ow, 1 beg
from believing th
may be divided into two rem es, one class
of 1 the other
o the same
m
—
=
stronger, and, as
125 — would
8 14 takes place in aekting bee?
in former ti ng the occupa
or four acres of land to become a — for money
J may add to that, on
adhere to their old ys vicious system of — —
but are eager to learn ar teful for uc-
In short, from a concurrence of . ——
in the wor
1 of their
ould produce “contentment and confide ence,
aes rector that these opinions will exert far
wider influence a body as the
is likely soon to dp into the market
THE FARMERS’ PROSPECTS.
ie owe a debt of gratitude to your cor
for valuable letter on “ Far
ly add
a rey Stale: spell teh ; h
present prides are as follo
—— dressed — fom 985 to 401,
. N 3
—
= *
P Let me endeavour “aie pre acai
ng, mor uen i
eap applia nees, let me these people who — at random, and of n n
hat Ke cosy a6 a é pose of, whom fi È
nage Be a
a
n ee | Messrs. E, B &
and Atkin nson, d John "izes debe y
af do Bolto
zenyon and Co., ‘Ryland, & Sons, .
Houldsworth - 72 do. an Paana
sobbey an „do.
Latham 2 Walked.
i. Walke
8
ger por
animal to co old or wet, the portion so lost will b
e remainder of the food Jonii me
hen iss wrenceSpenoat Mi di,
„ In. Dewhurst & Co., do,
John Buley . 1
J. Cawood a
J. Morfatt, da, & Oo., d as
Ww. 3 and — do,
0 spinners <7 Flax i in Knar
piar a
3 Sage
be done
¿ 870 when
w ane pe more an
purs in the wae at the more it is drawn upon
ARRS i beco.
The farm
in his power to shelter them from bat
aes his is buildings, puttin gh
—— of on a ridge, allow 2 all urine to flow on to i oe interes
i gre eara returning it | could
pope r |
arryi ag i
n to
n crops; setting is 257 een ally, when
average
oat S 2 as as the capi
of 350 acres, deseribed in
letter op ad correspondent 4 F. se ing
i instead of 107.
capital was employed.
* farmer’s 8 2 hi te h
ene his fixed ex na
divisi co
years, w.
methin power
Will he 2 us how apes ma;
eee 25 ä i ran
in
the pe gol HO ti Sl to
the hor. How
—_ a te Wi wou aid n
ent. ! And now is
purpose the
tres farms where attention to
Dain: B
ease the returns
and t
ee shouldbe
the | chi
| Spreading it ** his root
me, in conelusion, to observe =
should bt be content to cover his mi
liquid manures with la;
on a small o
or the
the farmer 12 ig how, let me ask,
and e he beef, mutton,
not a earth ; ia him w venture the 1
in Londo:
utlay in —— which, in
most counties
ch ton of gypsum
rming 24 cwt. of sulphate of ammonia,
a manure, upwards of 20/.
PLAX CULTURE AND THE FLAX TRAD
siens himself „Verax.
gross produce, on 11
Epor 3s. bales a avenge ot 16134 2s. 11
PONDENT of the Hereford Journal, 5
rax,” says:
28—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
jerash in i giving encouragement to the chem e= ba the Bean-land is I have an ome importance may be drawn from this ve —
. ie Mos purposes. Wha Wee of sowing * ue — Barley after Turni practice of General Wemyss. The growing of Turnip
a Verax” could Messrs. Cobden and Bright — — on pared and burnt lands, where the seed is sown on the
the other © 170 don pa s as the old women Hom e Correspondence.
in Manchester if be pe won 4 e old wheels and Siesn v. I ban Land.—It is not much a matter for | renni
ig require a de i i it, i
weave it by hand ; vl 4 ma On no dti in surprise that your correspondent, “ Agricola,” in last 3 or . — — eee —— ae
machinery kad- thie = eam po wer. owever, week’s Gazette, should not succeed in convincing his which the plant receives at-thie'sarfaes of thee
Pant ade o farmer so green as to risk 100“. Yorkshire farmer friends, by mere argument alone, that induce the downward progress. Hence, if clay lands be
om a al,” Eaten ately for the agri deia pro- they could not grow more corn on the long slope of a pulverised at the top, and the manure Gian applied, the
pest there are in my opinion too many farmers like eg hill, than they could on the space occupied by the | tap. root will go downwards, and the bulb will be formed.
Apen, if not young still „ green,“ and too many | base of such a hill, which to their eyes appeared to be Clay lands may be wrought in the usual way as finely as
| ids, all of which would be greatly benefited by so much more limited in extent when compared with the possible, say to the middle of June; the dung may be
sound instruction and proper pulverising. The follow- | Very long line visible in the slope. Some people require | laid down and spread in broadcast. ‘aed the land then
ing details refer to Lapa Tile of my invention connected | to be taught, not by elaborate, ea by easy lessons, like | gathered up by one ploughing into ridges of 6 feet. The
with the prepara tion of Flax * ildren, a and even hen se lesson must be visibly proved | surface may then be harrowed fine by means of harrows,
By the six Fose mill I e erected in Skinner- | tore t er eyes by som e familiar amare or t ey | attached to a maintree stretching over the ridge, and
exi i rrows. The Turni
p
sieet, Bishops London, six men have redressed Yorkshi 1 a 0 l
Egyptian h —— ee Win nate a 10 stones can A a4 olds good also in this county, and numbers seed may then be sown in three rows, by means of a
unti
n si i
sold it for 38“. per ton, the tow and 34, Suggest is to request them to examine the staircase, | usua way ; and as these wet lands do not N sheep
pan paid the expense 5 5 leaving at the whi 3
ch they descend | to feed on the ground in winter, and being soft to
week e 1 this fact can be in the morning. | allow carts to carry away the Turnips, horses with creels
—— by my manager, Mr J. Greame, as he weighed and ascend in the on their backs may walk in the furrows,
the Flax before and after it was — This then is eveniag 5 the roots in ampers, or into carts
my answer to*Verax’s ” insuperable“ objections to Flax th sug- | This me may prove very useful, after clay lands are
cultivation.” I consider his ideas of Flax culture as gestion to examine | drained. Every vegetable is be uality that is raised
green as Flax is at this m t and unripe. sım case | on clay soils ; any farmer is of this
It is vaia for any one to attempt to write Flax into may effect some have observed elsewhere,“
disrepute, when it . 80 eroen * has much, nay
everything to learn on the t. J. Hill Dickson,
23
se 3 me process
good, if it only exist than the present Mon hare laborious — pire ajoi
ubjec SJD
Phenix Hotel, D’ Olier. hen Dublin, June
induces or leads to of raising the fruits of the
a habit of think- Practice — Science. 1 — —— review of some of
— — ing, the only down- the mos
A STIRLINGSHIRE CARSE FA right requisite that . . riety in ict ee —
a. The exten: m is 110 acres, e pea is needed by farm- giving a slight insight into their modes of operation.
b. .—It is situated within f a ver ers to make them Some remarks on their principles and may not be
good market town for the sale of grain, where plenty men 125 meen | devoid of interest. Pre-eminent for its celebrity and
of labourers can readily be had. The climate is pretty again usefulness stands the drill machine, distinguished by
good, and lime can be laid down by water carriage on ing 5 0 that vail the efficiency of its movements; and its complicated
the make the farmer| machinery seeming, as it were, Save = y the regu-
now-a-days, not larity of its practice. Mr. Steph éns says that the
money. The golden o original invention of it is due S the Hindoos, and that
age has passed with | a model of it may be seen in the museum of the High-
¢, The character of the soil is good, consisting of red.
| dah and blue clay for the most part, and some parts of
-fields are more earthy, inclining. to ene but it is ali
| Ops.
t g all kinds of grain er em, never to re. land Agricultural Society in Edinburgh. Be this as it
d, Itisall regularly cropped, exe 2 a small slice on turn! Sterling mo- may, y clear it mus become obsolete
A afiverside, which runs round the one side of the farm, ney will — sade | like the compass attributed to the Chinese, and i to
— . and kept for a ag milk cows for i return Tu may be assi the merit of originality
| pas Wi rid Yoho ae 0) BA, ok CELE] temid thought in this country (“ New Husbandry,” p. 167). Jethro
e. It is eropped with hay each 6th year, aud the e will, invariably. Tull tells us that, for the purpose of saving seed and
tl ely th there is a good after-growth, in value sertion to a nicety, more especially if the poate compared
> per acre, from which a large quantity of j ave a balustrade, or railing such as i is
mde, by cutting and giving it to the work-horses, | Sketched. Suppose there are one or two rails (whieh
i l
rop
runs not far from 200 stones per Scotch acre ; | This staircase will prove your corresponden ats as- | depositing it wi greater regularity, he examined and
all the ideas that had ever entered
into nation, and at last pitched upon a groove-
tongue — spring in the sound board of the organ. It
amed a 3 used to sow
and some young stock kept in the straw-yard. atter number I have represented) resting upon each | was n 2 when farmers to
F of cropping consists of a six course step of the staircase. These rails may be taken, or sup- Beans and Peas into channels or furrows in land, they
pr fallow or Turnips ; 2d, Wheat; 3d, Beaus ;| posed to represent two 3 or rows of Wheat. If they called that action 2 ee Alt! i i
| ide ; 5th, Hay; Gch, Oats. Wheat about 40 measure each step (supp to contain 2 drills of was invented so far back a as by“ Tult iu —— and an
Eo per acre, all sold e wha’ sed for seed. | Wheat f 5 and then counting the his own i p
8 per acre, all sold except seed for the number of steps composing the whole | of staircase, | fully established, not only for ne a ioe 2
| Baste £9 bore and a few quarters for meal and horses. let them mark on the base or horizontal line, the exact | the quantity o sown, but also cilitating most
| 1 bushels per acre, all sol xcept what ept number of widths or steps, and they will find the base essentially the quent ae tillage, yet it does
y afew bushels for pot Barley, | line will ee ount = bya (alias drills of | not appear i
30 ushels per acre, all used on the farm except Wheat may by a more sit ce.
acres Turni hod
; ar in feeding stock for the butcher, and | on a hg oe line, could be also grown on a muc
feeding eo seo in the 3 ard, and a shorter horizontal line; let them e a ruler and the Tull
pent é 3 8
orses and 5 cil, and on this ving continue the lines, indi-
17 * as urchased in 1845 was eating the rails or drills of Wheat down to the principal cause of t
dung, 1500 bushels of lime, 60 ewt. ee, lines. The line of ascent in the staircase looks infinitely | progress been th
* bruised bones, but I find bones a | longer, and is much longer, than the horizontal base line, | ment. In the “ Book of the Farm” there is one men
carse as for a dry-field s oe Thie | but neve rtheless, however anoma alous or — it tioned, “ the common o thian drill
made on the farm, which would might appear (at first i Á n drawn b
— me n a long ascendiog line (like that of the side to 1
lan nd manual labour on the of a hill) t a mu er lineiaa or | Another, called
flat position. B., yore 4 rows, varying from 10/. to 184
Raising Turnips y Lands,—The alumipous | kind of
base of clay imbibes 15 times its own weight of wa depth in every coulter, and either al
té particles of the soil, and denies the admission
f water, b
and retains it with great obstinacy. The cold cements | pod with equal facility. These
of | the seed i ner
‘caloric ;” which would dissever th | effected by broadcast aee but
i ich science has ma
—— nd porous and _ permeable. The viscous tenacity | implements in whic
that is thus p and de fies | as in the
the reduetion of the soil to the tilth | not only sow — ——
| for the growing of Turnips. The land lies in clods that deposit differen manure along wi e
| are beyond the power of bei netrated by the tender 2 New S p- 173). F For effecting these objects,
tars en grain is dear, as it N by roots of young plants, the 9 between the the machine of Messrs. Garrett ugh ex-
I : s are open to the drought, hich kills e vegeta- — is a most complete implement, and is thus
motel ata that t all the lime, guano, and bones tion. During my frequent visits to the Royal Farms, at | described by him. It will drill corn or A wi
e put on the Turnip crop, Windsor, that are under the management of Major- | t manure, in any required 3 at any
vith ag À queries were pu
ag. carts to the acre of farm-mad e dung, the General Wemyss, I was much struck with the methods distance apart. may be conducted do :
i in of raising Turnips on these farms. Sowing on the flat conductors the man or ipes.
y | beef nee is preferred to the drill s system, as it does not so Asa Turnip — manure — it may be used to suit all
in w i . i
ma
and reversed | The of it, thus complete, with 11 coulters, is
in this the processes of being formed into ridgelots rev price — * 5 ers,
not so sure of its paying well, ari to cover the dung, and the flat surface keeps moisture 471. 7s. 6d., carriage pai
In the — is a good better than the raised drills, be abe e Wind- | generally made use of is guano, mixed either with some
MTOP, owing to the expense it takes to sor are wrought by ar : ie other ingredients, such as soot or salt, or .
a fine tilth, early enough for in the usual way; ross, te aid down and spread | substance like sawdust, for the purpose of reducing the
2d. The land is often cut con- broadeast, and the laud is p r . into "izes of 12 or | maybe i wi so 18 a 3 — * it
off, which is very injurious to 14 feet. On these ri t ps are toe bas d + .
we often get a bed dd for by the corn drill. vat paira laiii pah and e arid st ate, or there will be a danger its not being
While I state these things, I do not | hoeing of g^ done in the usual fe On th z 15 i e —. a crop
give over growin rnips ; stiff lands on which Turnips are grown, but which are rnips cone A men-
an . ot — w shift the not — lana as fi be used, it shou be equally d sted $ cap —
alittle. And one who writes | possible in the usual way, and the dung spread it haps it may be from the want of
er would point out a cheap and | in broadeast. It then gathered up into ridges of 6 or | ia sarine 5
Cestroying - 8 harrowed, and th eran eee | extraordinary, a whose ave:
i district to * eee e This method 1 pasee — i being 9 inches 2
ald do a Now that | to drought and the loss of moisture. A corollary of some | drills 27 asunder, will give 25 tons
THE 6 GAZETTE.
4 seems an 1 jow 2 i
1 r that a Turni y be
and spears we ery ey 2 St
Where guano is ees. i it |
il
experiments which h
valuable manure can be readil
rE cl
made for cove ring the manure ge
n of the seed), by merely eh ac 3
and
Hav 1 rough . arrived at the
ce of his lordship's steward, an
op
comfort, a
corres esponding, bounded with neat trimmed rma
rops,
in aahigh state of — likewive bonatifal A
ull stocked with flocks of sheep, grazing a
n spate assing
of ma any of the t
3 ewt, per acre, an
horse power, and it "y costs about 3/, instead of nearly
204. ie Row 11 wstorn
Hi be, 8 1 ane ee Syasi
Braid Society? s
favoured by Mr. p aes ofi Daziington Y — a ee — a
a correspondent of his on the ubject, from which |
we make the following e “ Feeling z se ee —
re we are depen
mare —
TE that the presence of 2 a been patron
iculture amongst us must have had a .
of . present e
e we eae
naturally look for 2
mnarativa sori
ere must be something wrong. as the soil appeared
o be the same in nature and quality as the steward's
s in winter.
oa. ‘the phe trees = 8 eee
the — to be equally genial and mild, a use-
and equally Wee of groning “al ce
as | Bart, M. P., Sir Robert Fiat kan iS
Raym
Sir M. W. Ridley, Bat, Sr Toba V ENEE
ines
mond Barker,
B
. Law
Milward, Mr. C. E Gece ae 1 si
(Lond.), Prof. a Mr. 4 . 5 1 — A
2 ob onas veh eb 8 Whi 5 r
wu, of Rostingtoa,
Ai
We a sf Res Bes of ‘the Society,
ane ap mg tes. naw embers
Simm hn, Messer, Killigan
Blomfield, Hear 0610s, Necton 1 He
Sandby, Rev. George, Denton L
6
8, Beighton R orwich
kappie, William, », Jen tee ne
Stark, prea Norwich
Co oke, Joh , Fle mston Hail, Bury St, Edmund's
Ives, Noone Norwic
aot tou, Purefoy, Norton, Woolpit, Suffolk
heale, Al exander r, jan , Uckfield, Sussex
on 3 Hall. orwich
M. P., Underly Hal -Lontialy
ar 55 D. , Norwich 4 A aly
roughton-Astley, Lutterw Lae
Hales, Pity — rt, Hillington, Cas tle-Rising, 8 10
Sayer, David, Norwich
Burcham, William, Booton Hall, e. Norfolk
Dalton, Rev. W., helat 1am, Norfol
eae 4 Lynn,
didates — — at the neri
e knew
sarie of croppi
two years in
noticed, he om were 8 the second = r’s seeds,
In re aa query this course of
cor gh a fe gone on, he could not state the number
of years, but aa that è was e in the late lord's
time, and it then so well that he h
in hi
la
may be in 3 pare tase yet with
ing, it
will stg y completely ebene nd ads guy i in
this case o must have
diffie calty i in ae i, 3 . Bg a
ess they have their farms very c
d my surprise that his. lordship aid not
error, in not allowing pres changes in
reen crops, so that the land ae a e kept in con-
at
—
perco
r a produce
experienc of ou
mers. kosi are now
established or ching (or. I look ss agricultural
associations as cultural schools), will 1
be one means of attaining this desirable end;
these may be said to be of three classes, the royal, the
farmers, th
Albert, an
by ihe majority Sa the nobility of 4 Brit
ire, we look f. the t of
e W
practice, without which our best practical farmers
at fauit, 4 agian napad professors in uncertainty.
To the third l farmer we must look for the
general e. of all all inf with th
ds of cul
he that he mey be see
uce full e —_ of seeds: ie hen 1
2 f table
pended
informant said that h
lordship had some reason to complain, oat 8 he left
; | the management of his e to his steward, who con-
sidered he was doing his duty in continuing the rales
aid that he cou
i cality mainly i
on a
ara ply
ir ‘bit his reply was in the negative, and so the
conversation ended. i I
circu
as ance o
one moment clashed
seen riding ove: tates, an
in to his steward to ie proper 9 whole-
| some chan raed in the course of cropping, or in eee
cases = {tg Be ei hpi tenant to us
ing this
it t had 8
was forcibly pororiving tiat of an incident that pee’,
to me me whilst travelling betwixt Thirsk and i Sear
aa siog bans Mati
d | judgment in schem
has And I have no 5 Shee these beneficia
my | developed,
tification when he rides
t rest of 2
of moor land to pass over.
me of management
come into full operation, and their meri
that it will greatly add
over his
3 as
he will then see his te improving their farm
e | comfortably, and ee eee
ing at the great aud e isg i
we
a | his asphaltine 1 ze e Sik
; fron
to | Bouse,
In my | i
e had understood of a, N 5 his
- | improvemen
and | of
iving
— from Mr. D
factured art
>| experimonte, ¢ on he Forty-day Main,
with mg rape “4 a growing Plants; and Mr. Woie
oe int
and from Me.. Hillyar
breed of Sheep mi
cester. The Bisho
10
mati n in ever
t de 6 ney, a 115 ie his
i Mr. Nest,
tural Chemistry ;
on the — of
Bullen, a copy of t h Number of the “ Agricultural
and Industri 2 0 for all which the usual hanis
of >a Council were ordere
SPECIAL the transaction of te
3 business e Society, was then held, the
Earl of CHICHESTER. ‘Paula being in the chair,
arde en Memoranda.
Lorp 1 S STATE aT sain
STAFPORD-
res rom the appl
il aan- 1 no matter of
Having
simplicity and a aan.
upon Lord Hath s farm
the eg a of
ts,
masuara
A large pro cone: Teddesley
manor extending over 2586 acres
Hay,
of land en
aes — and compri
I a pie e, = the peri ie a
port of which we hav to thank his Royal Highnets
Prince Albert, as a pues and advocate, as well as fo:
na pee culture to = proper
| national prosperity so much de pends,” 15
to Individual Interest and the Public Good, near Thirsk.
ROYAL AGRICU Sot i
R LTURAL SOCIETY OF E
k A WreLY oe was held at the Boelie Hons,
A ees the 10th July:
the Karl 5 chene P we „July;
2125 Bridport, Hon. R. H. Clive, . B., Hon.
A Well Wisher| i
589, the other 200 acres:
pin hagas — Hatherton’s
Gaia Hon
Dyke Acland, Bart., M.P., |
|
ö
T
H
E
A
G
R
IC
[CU
UR
A
L
G
A
Z
E
T
T
E
—
Te
Ape the
the first * sub-so
4 flo e il be
. eye ured
u ed in
* A dioan ch
th ders ee
71 e cocoa TE.
10 wm em ish 15 mal p ea
* ns W. es 1 on 8 dra
. m inche n and fr ding
* land, be ced o 5 1 nin an
a Het eat the e Sal wi in diam om whie e
how nt manne, det, eee fo _ ae siei
See fe di ti TE s
i ig , an ils a re ees ve the Quan l se i
stat po ly ten df rivanco we ens sou titi E in
ca t hi b or a se oa t es. Valu the
wai vd this syai ee Ze ie N
Fina —— nd in aah 2 — $: 870 aun
. nage 22 erwa ei 8 jet in 19 1 ÈR —.— ual
— ut e Si — in a rds ined 0 = 3 „ ray | val
entire g as 2 th — bes get ter A 30 i 10 | son e. | ue
of 2 on, in t co tin in the e — F 2 | p
ine iht € aa of e e — gr th 3 Å — iss emoun rod
n 3 n ki e in i e 6 2 6 3 £ u
gece — g Bae = ich id of an 3 1 H 4 d. pended ced
1 “meg es 3 1 0 1 a Val b
to b 8 f 1 w e m t e 0 8 6 : value y
the 4 sda — ha oe ab va see 1 1 8 6 £ z
whe ea san by pozie a _ 5 — j Prong 5 3 22 7 5 262 1 P of the L 8
rt o mill, , by wh e ae 3 r 21 í : — r 8 74 31 he "at 1
raga — aufe e 3 e pores of 15 01 wi 8 1 0 — 9 = | 8 thou
* f water pa low the e, t pe w ne of 9 1 15 H H 121 1 4 4 if. 3 * —
em lato Fy ec en th 0 a ston y paie { 1 16 — 6 27 Va tot
== 15 0 —— 35 sanal will r
R for th a 2 g d 9 — ‘Rn Ls 15 1 8 2 p 16 40 105 weight, prizes,
nt ce of some he It th 7 ge Under. ry 14 16 ae 0 8 30 05 1 d ht, 9 M ate
sig r hi r a ft u h ro el Fo e S 11 3 0 90 5 85 76 : 8 berlar ee
a su 8 any aes i he PP of ck Set a A v x 22 iss * ae bat
bee ihe as el * — vate, fen gat potin i 29 6 5 41 9 0 — eg oe Geis
eg ne mappi e tu ow: 1 d om e to ar mr 3 0 66 26 89 Ne *
ual p ve ex ted 8 j yards, perfor om t w a 14 ro 9 8 59 42 7 down to ie l 1 — mi
5 as niga e ormed otk a ater ‘wh 3 z 13 | o #1 Seer ast as o
* i c 8 ioe
isall nå abled t n 2 an ttom * peer 855 um z k | 33 26 15 driver w or a ei ush —
us hi rde th er th f dt to 25 ee * oel len e 9 | 30 | 131 = ‘ ar work uden it
8 3 5 3b 7 hr c 5 . ‘| Tne = npa dm pr 5 27 | 24 1 t ata D a apa pei — at y
obtained for A ut ill ou ent r d ae val 1 vs dd — : | 32 . aoe t ut I the n s it i —
. gard no C er ad to ugh m 18 inated ue N T chi 3 23 . . — nf oy — t — may be. le =
e w om di a ou ex se of ne R ot ne HA 1 — — = he n os rts s
ia vs pu a f ioe tth te F th 1 al ry ~ Rs Bancr a o. cae — .
Scour worthy rive š ional x ms Res Pi e 4 ou = Fan r Canna — — grou — ts pov
had eae OS iv ati al e ga tae | ment oi a sam 1 tla, aes nea —— easy nes a =s
e 1 af a ma h Ni t ti a e syst y Pai EID — 5 the t
8 — with e of h wa athe ol le E of d arin la E 7 sll No 6 5 9 d might step ov presenti Cum
; nta ofn 3 1 f r er 1k heel | ar drain ng wat under 1724 Í . N ledge has a In s construc.
fet thi co og 0 1 call 0 l an drain w z by th 5 20 0 a z —— eine pi charro enting th -
day poor he shat bong ‘at 1, il el it! nu th th th * 224 . You on ew M: 8 apok — nk quite
H 1 h ’ b es t l þu p 18 alan peal al ei 3 wae e mi E £ ~ 5 2 a 5 Sow It cad . soins
which 2 “gee xte ‘ena ional an eing jon of f ver for — 5 EE 1 1 — — if noth ton 1 — —+
_ oe u 0 ns e d 8 * ns, of ea te ‘or pr st N ge Aa ae 14 ° ii —— n li tt chi Fi mee ve til
aed et * re peen Jof up 80 ii me ted nt at ns — 9 tai — — chet of peli ng —— are
were rm oo Ey et ply ft, is cs ares t gri th of 52 te ws... ‘ me ntiti =e th ea ith, The
Berin pen 0 y i T ee of mil er . p n wh 3 t Th
8 = i aie 1 ee ponn = re ws nama 7 ma
1 sorted ie ss inthe Hee n eth i at wre ali as, of — nue 550 6 belie ae er — — * — 4.
Tes, lrie sm 0 ed ea a5: e of 3 n ror Ww tees t ve a f f land, a Mik nm Pias e IL e II 8 10 tu * tn ty
whieh ds, oron ai Th 1 — ce: urf: i tl ate th le 3 ar jap up to nd £1 227 L: — nd — — timed * —
2 g 0 aa ‘par 8 el è el centre instan bo she ot — i pose e = — a ther Si nk, os w ath.
Pin bri dern nt * t ag 4 ca ws ca n of 0 ft ei as 8 e n peia t a ai 1 8 od ani e; epost
e : 4 à wih of “ae f mie re the ce, ink he gh b i 1 4 on the — 82 2 gis il ps Co., edus Whether
: dep wil e ail ed o gravel oi BEA il ew mie re ‘deck = os at e betes ami , of Ply eter, how.
pre 1e de adap der aeli the t w eisir farm se 5 “ln The pi th ti “piymon 2
bed Up th ioe si ale h te fab ri 0 me oS ager aoe
i the e e la j pt ed, im 0g od Se t er ig th ec}, olds d x coile bed f . * “ ae f “ere left er ”
A T ESN 8 elow E E evel as 15 is wh a , it il Sete y k: 8 T 42 th,
Se e f 8 p e d 1 wh b e ildi e a z ip il = : = infia a each, a 5 . h, sell ia
' i we ro th c Wie n siros in wate e ro 2 in ‘a le l l fae M farther ot wi
a dy w e tly và e, pee vee d er n es 5 igs in wn a ad his ER Prat 2 ey r. Mi 5 W —
still [gravel es $ E 3 5 oi themse th 125 — a fr stand 5 — sa ng Sr —— ha * r r . fie med iy comer
8 lower l at r peli 15 h vot ma ya ground u — ser TET to rerain th oore, ofi =S
pick t di ou . EE psa — PILON € . rien n
b h ist ugh r in e had n n cti ak th ie = u th b vo e tare ar 0 Ta 3 at ity 2 ly red, we
one do ayy ar ti p. eac ha d 15 ink iy in er p ntil fesas Heren ir bien hi pein Sey or sortable
beast, the 3 ere — 5 p Tiig ve 5 me of vert di t he fo ‘ — sev thei, ae their t hill *
= of a5" 53 ri aN 5 r g us ‘apts 5 se hie is 10 tl they a for th eae wula sie tails i y pon to
e which See ; pire: f 11 rai Pad 5 255 N bene is ch rf mud rvo e eee Sy oa og in the ap ** k
Se rst c n 5 Drala of | me apitalists nt t e ge sara Ne o i ich i 11 on =a, you pe
. arle E a gi Nii rd pi i ine ort
wae l i d an th or * f | nti ‘yin o Seas Lords : * into rer ere int Aad i va mast 8 h
i sou pele b oe mant 0} and quite wi ras i and dis- th eee Ah l of t 5
the n . ot 3 s e sts and an e it oe Sine: ach — y w upaa ett tt .
N ca _ tee tom ood monet x aa uis w a land ore ie with w toal : fen s 141 ody, er not a th = Y 10
ee rw aly i ; low i. the 95 ith ei 1 nta ag: Kga Api betore pu * — a way. is wi — f the tai,
. he ddi a 1 a? im e w t og Ww m gaasis ges oo 20 uts 0 er es on: 3 9 la 5, ina ate —
. e or he ti — hi pro nts 8 2 2 v een g N ye? -pinte tea If you
i ni impassible lan n shis su th tren am ts at ferred. bj 2 a Seve ma uffici wef 4 Lem onl a ae 5 N
— Py 1 577 a 5 bj nt of view a tin on 2 to . ent ik ese nder, Wc.
po ry 6 houn ply lu h rained, a h e t sires view. nara I snake this ti b pe or mir Aek — ilk (t p ys he; so ufi
mer, w sk rs per aed a et r a ee onal kenia — e inte pas
3 il = pe d aa ho lo nereas ‘or ted i en 8 k as w milk o ne full 4 ba e
bi =e man or ym pa veg ia om to ta | eae a et, =" 4 w , havit hes
Kore = 21 75 ter 0 f. im en hg 5 the far 7 nts th a fat in and hen lk canno A 4101 heranne
} int d if 2 u r * ad aci apro tf 2 oro 1 re * at squa = jo it in the. — lo —
u an 0 holes ee can be m th ti into —— or e h Bre :
ms _ judge 0 . pr unera ng boen ae he efi
po al 9 — * us age * e vel idl * ir —.— ang ately ea oe a th is
gs uP ua ‘th di —— i 2 hema ő 0 top 3 tely ; th tis ut 4 pu
ee 99 1 Kaj atomen seg Arg - shade en e to p er 1
io Eh 8 u ae reas 1 isis oo ned eam
* 8 hee “i t ee mre the
“on h 2 ry e U aie thi as 1 8 2 grea 10 roved i le, = r aon pat i p *
it h 55 à z “the pom * ng 3 * yl E ut 1
ml, bo Go as aia rt ar — ie * ter “fi 22 :
tan ite easy tate ci ip’ oe d = 9 ef 2. th ut a t pu ú . K — her è placed n wh ts
ivane fae ted re 1 reg z original: e far ili Ss lso r e yee aa Xp in, when it
; seh fo it wi 1 * w ul en eg ere . r, er o e 8 om tu 3 “ty ie :
25 88 e to tht re ul ? omen, ar pl y T e u p n] mu . it to e 5
‘ba pe = its d a prod ly 3 ver emt — e z 55 è — on ne vat i ind
x he: B equa uc men, total eñi i aes ng viding — ee ie
gonen “pte nee dpe ar w 4 p een from nine g elon t until Ee :
1 ` ex i ntel concern n gr tla e Mg vious lo eir 44 — 7 se * h pig an
y * y a0 li 5 — waits — m th e —.— reachin it — 2 2
tl w 2 e E mr total ere A Rea A
— a ie k 5 B i and ent and val — Er ú 484 pon fal f of meg e eee og th —
ö ve tock bted es p age . ad th e105 im the eh lúg taken, e is. ber of Beas wn rach os e va
88 — o bk k ay Ti AF Siege —— 5 pro ehe eee å con: 2 isr abet wreg — . ly vat three
ow kind wi pie wa 1s : digs f gnif 1e prop ve er - ra den 2 . —
state ab fy se super: TA No riga — ponte 3 ther . TE 5 aoe
555 ta os mune. tic aa e grea or ise — be aoe. 1 — aan a hag — A 5
eit ran seg es alain entip ie 25 oe 2 5 LTE —
5 oe ed. al Š 5 . Te you 175 ioe 0 is ataned. Basa — yn =e — es * Ca a anit 2 e
= —— : . e e = E ae ale 5
of 1 wil sora eth an ee wi y an d Di : Down et hiii d 500 1. mall 2
the th th B us U ace t t n n ith Psst B R l Sh F nd ee in
by caer 3 pee a hada d on ea! 8 ee 0 e ‘money 7
—— them, a hs R st pe ahaa a i asta, 308 41 p, an Bes le Scots,
— 7 oe 5 rain wi n 3 e ts, 2 6 d „ H deir fone
ei px ha plan , a 8. Sia 11 j nd er, many of then Boos it
ipl | . a quarter o ‘i 8 in 8 in é 2 2 0 ure 20 14 a ice
of e in 1 Eri pon 5 . sh HB —— 9 of es are
— —— can ia 3 2 * w —
b cer 5 alee Sie : att E
cultural € e es ee ns pani 8
z mee 5 5 1 =e 2 F
shel uus. ane, bs, aan bie with } ' N —
N * * the it 1 7 of ~ rnd this i yp ted there Š f
be 4 E Iri poe w. üh z as
ne si e Cumberiaa es SEER oo x ies de To a yea
sta ee — a pase chr oa pS 2 7 75
. oe maa = ee = on 71
: : the“ TEn eek Ti Ep
ount carts deseribed seat a Ger Pee er
chao prs = and 13 105 i . — -r :
oT ; ws 15 pio torn 8 a ss et zs
t 3 pos y b m N
3 3 os airg” ~ E y * £ 1 5 a 4 e
of 8 Prim 3; She a ows from 5 “as rally
sar oe = 8 ‘ae
C th t ado SS va 2 gain
was — b e
as | Od oe oe 30 =k iE, 1 5 bt >
Now H e ig g Ta 3
W “aa K 85 * Gave ae
sy . i, es H 7... a 6
toe as 725 New C = „725; a
aes 50 to a ses. hy EE- 2
a 1 ov Pig 1 0
95 s — 85 s í
155 e 5 200,
E ge
j sk te a
oe
= AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
COVENT GARDEN, Jcty1
week’s rates, but
re difficulty was experi-
PSLEY | PELLATT > Cotan a
A r aup Co. ;
J. and C. STURGE,
of Hothouse Gra Peaches, and Nectarine
is — up. — — exces, an A large — need in disposing of the ayn —Barley is inquired a ca — a |
portation of vp. India Pines has just arrived. They | after, and com $s an advance of ls. per qr.—Beans | have always on band, Bee Glasses, 1s.24. per Ran
tolerably wberries and Cherries are very and Peas sell more freely.—The e Oat trade is firm, and | each; P 13. êd. per Ib. ; Milk Rags te Liu. Per R.
— A few — 1 — made 8 er as ices 6d. to ls. per qr. higher. s do. e adenine, 3d — reeg white, 1a, n ate glam, RO
as ripe berries u general are . „ . ; Shada oe
safiicient — ae and — ve lentiful. RIDAY, Jury 13.—The —, of foreign Wheat Sor boa a" . r che ad and —
22 spr * _— ch — — ained at from | since Monday amount to 9680 ; those of all other | may be preserved from n (oberes certain — 9
fal, ‘The season for Rhubarb and Asparagus is nearly re small, That day’s pot Sen for Wheat are CONSE 9 a
— — —— Is. 6d “as pit boak, n fully supported, but t t the trade is not large.—Barley is in Hurt, i CO. vod ch ee ee pny
per. d. to demand, and fully 1s. per qr. Beans are held British Manufact 4
Lettuces and other salading are sufficient for the ‘anand, firm! aP. einen I fi ‘pris at prices varyin Sheet Glass a i
Must from 1s. 6d. to 38. per pottle. Cut Flowers firm eas are unaltered in value.—Oats improved | per Sauer. ah for the usual sizes required” from 24. toy
consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, Gardenias, Lily of the Valley, in price Is. .—The quotations of Flour gel un- Lists of Prices are re enha — y packed for — aii
Cinerarias, Tropzolums, Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias, and | altered, and there is little business PAT estimates forwarded, on
Ing. ATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK ©
"FRUITS. may be said of Indian Corn. —The ipy since e the — oe and apee WA TER- PIPES, pt l
Pine-apples, pert w., 53 to 8s | Apples ber gr bsh., 4s to 88 , GLASS MILK PANS, PATEN AGATIK —
5 rapet, hothouse, p. Ib., 1b. me sia Orang 3 cams Is s to 2s and the crops are consequently 8 i poes 8 BET i MIE A 9 , ae 7
eaches, pe 8 — — . 3 pp epei ae towards maturity. Taken whole throughout 8 See the Gardeners’ Chronicle, ae 5
r un., 9d to 28 — per 100, 78 to 148 kingdom, they mead be represen nted as eS e me — |
~ a ee: 2 | Almonds, per peck, 6s although complaints as usual are not want ing, par E
Cherries, ean — — oh : 4 ee 7 * 4 larly as regards the Wi — d Barley, it is yet too
Gooseberris, irene. ‘hf. sieve, È bush., 16s to 248 y to place mue 1 upon Continued
38 6d to uts, Bar., p. bush., 20s to 228 shortness of supplies has enabled the holders in Scot-
Currants, 4 5s to 88 VEGETABLES. p. bsh., 12s to 16s : 4 gn any 1 inl markets to establish a
‘urther advance of ls. to 28. per qr. upon Wheat
— p: doz., 6d to 1s rrots, per bun., 4d to 6d Barley has also anced Ap i and p value of
Peas, p wee 5 doz, heen og 15 . sieve, 1s hy ls 6d Oats has sa upward tendeney. Disease in the Potatoes
p. bush. 1s 6d to2s6d | — Spanish, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4s appea occurrence, but the yield of the
Sorel, p. hf. sieve, 9845 | sg 9 z m to 8d arly a Wh is v small, In the near Continental GLASS MILE PAN,
„ Arlie, 7 to
Pe 88 Meee ie | Sanip, pee ry ai 2 sari 2 he . mes is to 2s. per qr. con 3 MILLINGTON is supplyi
— per bush., 4s to 7s | VegetableMarrows, do., id tols as been sold at 42s. per q t, 77 ve
Turnips, per ch, 3d to 6d | Lettuce, Cab., p.se., 4d to 9d frei y — 1 eet k 603 lbs. white is | in 100-ft. and 200. f. f large dimensions, 1
Red aha Be to — Cos, do., 6d to 1s at 46s. per qr., Belgium 62 lb per f ft., or cut to size » poney — ere N nn per
Horse als, „ bdl., 28 to s | Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s 6d to 3s mee has b ht 46 00 8 1 ot. British Plate Glass for Winda a * vind
i 8 ENG 1s to 4s Small Salads, p. pun., Əd to 3d Rott od 8. ee Nr., f. 0. b.; ; and 1 lbs. wean purposes, from 1s. 2d. to 2s. per 1 7 3
Rhubarb, p. bundle, 3d to 4 Fennel, per 2d to 3d in erdam at 458. per b p — 1 this great additional improvement w E
French Beans, p.100, 6d to 1s avory, per bunch, 2d 8 resid
Cucumbers, each, 4d to „per bunch, 2d to 3d AVERAGES, DATE BEB. PRAMS | FEA:
Galore aa f bn mane S 1 * wont at BAY 178 9d a Od} 31s 3d
p · „ 31 2
eee, eee, . e
7 . rene 15 26 5 18 0 26 3 30 3 30 4 cocons w
Prag. 26 5 18 9 25 9| 20 10 31 5 | peti oat font ee ee 15
ee ee Sak e 25 11 nn 28 1| 82 1 [8310 | warehouse, 87, = beste attest e
Fntpax, July 1 shpi
A . 26
. 9 — oe eee ITH report that th the 338 Duties on Fo. sib as ROTO ee (eased Velie GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES.
from the pi araea na te Soest rae and worse with bi 1.011 an 6! 1. E 0 aan PHILLIPS ax» Os i, Bishopegate-stret
SS tions intel si ene? Cor Ave osha ee
Pa — 26. JoxR 2. June 9. duns 16. re 22 i — 3, on on HORTICULTURAL GLASS, `
K LANE. 5 | IZE ii E SHEET SQUARES.
Monpay Jury 9 =the su ia of Wheat * = w | oe — 2 INCHES LON p HEET SQUARES
y — 55 \ ly o — — 25.85 -J * TA 85 * oz, from = to 34d. per foot. —_ Rs Wia 1
Kent, and and Suff. 3 vs is 5 5 6 ic
2 i rhe — rey at fully 1 pees of — 4 4 “a 8 > rye eae 70
ay se nnight. 5 best qualities of foreign a 44 2 ele — PLATE GLASS for In BO WS S fia
"London. ee Wakefield. Boston. alae =m , in sizes not exceeding 5 añ
ee e irmingham. 2 thick Per foot is, ch per foot A. d.
PRICES —ä — . i 2 „ 30
4-inch ieee
i 7 — 2. ae 9. es — aa 29 * 6. July 4. July 11 5 mit fg July 12. 4 thick a ogo a PLATE aidr ee
. — A qr. qr. x 62 Tbs. EMOR en ds. M T ee a m
Jö; VM e Be . Ba [Bs Re . Finch e 1 at
New, red . 42 444 (44% 9 7 0/6 10 7 2/44 t050 Se 0 ir e te 77 e AND, —
18 = 47307 2 7 6% 3 7 8432455304653 46—53 6 4 6 86 6 6 10] gine 20 lug. by 10. . ‘sa. Ihde
24644 10 7 2 11 7 21434544446) — | — [510 6 56 0 1e ee ear ae ime i
petite + 5o—5450—547 6 7 107 7 s ee ee lg ene apie ee 746 5 in stodi ti ua 2
ve ..- (36—58i36—58/4 6 8 614 8 8 6/40—53/41—54) — o a o a UN GLASS MILK-PANS, PR ROP AONE pa a si
480 lbs. 480 lbs, Pastry 323 cg h Glasses and Dishes
Rye—New ... |22—24|22—24 3 aa . ments, Fish Globes, Plate and Window assot ee
Foreign... 22—2322—23 8 as — — — — tion, Lamp Shades, and Lacto fi
Foreign meal (6/.—7/|61.—7! m * * 2 sde areal r
* — — ‘ial ie R ers for Greenhouses. i
Barley— qr. qr a ; ne Ha tere er nove PAROH
Grinding . -g -, | — | 2n oe ae 5 2s | FLABTLEYS PATENT ROUGH — 22
r — soe 22— 30s—3 Os— ng CONSERVATORIES.— The
Foreign... . 18—2718—27 RÈ ia 98/24 22 0/28— =30 29—32 9—32 81 5 i terms in 1 of 1 93 7 x
r 6 sary. ewe have — xe p : N
Male—Ship EE tock 55 = = 39—4239—42 — 2 in ee a with ie the ee
. : ati ention 0 obility ig
Oate—White.. jig—24}19—25 2810238 22810036 % — — Ui -l 20-28 | 20-28 der 10 by 8... 1 by 8
Bee ee oe es ee . a ee
Peas—Boilers zea Bde 34 282 28—322——
Grinding... |2325|23—2 29 —31s | 29 28 2 g 196 lbs. | 196 lbs.
gn ... |25—32/25—32| 32 —34 | 32—34 . 11—12 11—
—3
77 eet eee E er |
ae — 15—16 15—16
40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40 — ae in — eee pencon s and p
71. 128 71. 128 — — — on reo
338—358s | 33s—34s | — — 13.
en — — 14
280 lbs. 280 Ibs
. p. sack p. sack per
: 35—36 35—36 — — |36—40/36—40| 36—38
; pene FRE FREEMAN, Hom T Hornocer
Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts.| Aver. | Aver. Gloucester. tinted? weld Lag call th tion ofthe g
2 gr rs. s. d. qrs.|s. d. rs. ie i ea tages
= ne 7 49 11 | 824 | 48 43 2295
17 1 m 65
27 9 19 97 2
31 9 E 3149
31 5 Tet 15
THE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 447
= GOLLBOTION oF oF ORCHIDS S OF THE LATE CHARLES
q.
H STEVENS i is instructed to announce for |
Boss.
n of Phalaenopsis, A Aerides, Vandas, Saccolabiums,
On view at the Auction Room the day before
* ogues had.
. EGHAM, zE: ia
of fne OLD PORT and SHERRY WI) NES, from 15
oe in boule part of the Household FURNITURE,
* — Broadw ood and Tomkinson, a 12-feet Bil-
Tabl n 4 “In-calf ALDERNEY cows,
hard and ane ones 4 capital 6-light Pine and Melon
Deity © ‘with Hot-water Apparatus and Lining Walls with Iron
Pits, with a Greenhouse, Garden Implements, Box and Hand-
Gard arden-engine. Poy t Dung-cart, Pony Water-cart on
‘wheels, and other
ann will sell by Auction, on TUES-
M = ans — lu She by. the premi wo ta Engle-
of T ard, Esq. (leaving his re.
zen ot fine old — — Sherry Wines, 22 15 to
— — 5 0 dozen of Gooseberry and Orange Wines;
„ i Parsi i
** in Alde
young Sow and Pigs 5 — new r Pine — A er
d and Iron Patpa. Dairy and — wing
Utensils, Co e Hand Corn-mill, Dressing-
he
— oo ha e mo of ia “vont logues sadly be had
— the premises; * Barley isis Maghani green; 1 of
25. ong — and Land and Timber Surveyor,
one ** of A outh ; with 24. The lan anta-
ng the Dore ester ans , roa The la d-tax is
— 3 264 years’ S
0
modern-built VILLA, with Stabling, Walled
rte Tau and about two acres of Rich Pasture Land
— — yea — . — Further particulars to
de had of Messrs, F Henmo =~ 8, Solicitors, „Weymouth,
al
3 His 2 n is particularly fine, his s disposition
gentle, and he is the property o n * an w s been
Mxssks. BARRETT, EXALL, ann ANDRE WES
PATENT SAFETY HORSE GEAR.
J !GHTEEN MONTHS’ trial of the above REALLY VALUABLE INVENTION, has secured it
— as the safest, easiest and moest economical HORSE WORKS e U 8
8 r i i ; ex pwards of One H
now been sold g Testimonials receiv ved of their high charac'er and 7 which aoe —— —
be obtained o — by post, or CH MEETING, where a , of every 5 will be
mber
exhibited at Stand 58, T with a large assortment of Patent and La! THRESHING MAC R
a INES, CHA ©
GRAIN | MILLS, &e. KATESGROVE IRON WORKS, 5 2
|
i
E
l
making e efor, for 8 last — 2 to improve his ae
of dena Por fa ee 8 5 to . of
—
ine MARKET GARDENERS, & OTHERS.
MO SÈ BE DISPOSED OF, —4 preies] Term of 24
—— of a very desirable FA „ bounded by the high
Dover-road, — — —.— Bare olw ich, — ‘rom Greenwich,
aod nine from Li ing 50 a of rich arable
ae Us pap p — Ra Fruit marble ein in 12 bearing),
low rent. The land is in high cultivation and fully
There is a substantial and
JF
E
i=]
uf
nee
FE È
AE
4 2 8
©
5
in
2
2
8
E 4 7
+ .
9 —
E
*
Boe
oO
p
ar
E
=
f-o]
E
a
"j
1
*
p
T
i 00
tiewlars apply to Messrs, Dickson and BELL, Surveyors and
Land Agents, 22, Buckle re ary, Sandon i
er, Nor wic
TING OF THE THE 1 AGRICULTURAL |
d OF
that „and DEAN E ce
Arrr HG Number their Stand in the —— Yard is
turists wi x
town Articl th of DEANE, DRAY,
| Stake Daar 3 and of various lara fap d
Makers , and DEANE, Agricul b
: Bridge, Swan-lane, Upper Thames-street, near Londo
i ENOR ALKALINE TOOTH-POWDER
3 Sout rener yet been
S. STRATTON, HUGHES,
MESSR CO.
Respectfully invite the ee gf 1 to their Stand, No. 3, ROYAL A AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S sitow-yarp
WICH, where they purpose . a Large Collection ot e
aiii CARTS, WAGGONS, WOOD AND IRON W HEELS, NORWEGLEN HARROW
f the best constru ation, f the markets, Th y would avite
attention to their Night-soil í Cart, and to their PATENT Sar: for e iquid Manure (as — avd Nee pecially invite s
t York. The Soon gt my o¢ cwrt., and the Price 14l. 108.
Michaelmas next, the Par f WOTTON, in the Pari 11 3, M and Co.'s had at their Stand, gratis, or will be forwarded to any address
at tin the 80 of Mr. h ith. 5 receipt == postage — :
a. of t 409 acres of w, Pasture, and Arabl ee —— — — —
— — laad is most productive of Beans and Wheat H™ YDRAULIC ENGINES, WA WATER RAMS, Ser 7 ‘PORTLAND CEMENT. aani
ing — sap piki land is — the richest fatten- d Principles; Engines worked or quarters, prove = CEM to possess the rare pro-
— T. excelent rarm- e, * n- | Hy 3 — to raise from 1 gallon to 1000 per — Gad perty of 22 the severest frost, aud — —
por pacers 4 arm-bui s are e an » |a height of 500 feet, and from a depth of 900 feet. Douche, | superior to every other for h birk aulic purposes, such as building
mmber of beas tted up and arranged for fattening a large | Vapour, Hot-air, and all otber kinds of Baths, wos and lining. of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, Kc. For
The Parm is en feeding-houses, stalls, sheds, and yards 1 &c., heated by Steam, Air, or Water. Bori ex ther
alles gaa four 3 from Hailsham and bourne, Sinking, and ecting of May &c. Towns supplied. i colour nor paint, It never vegetates, and wui carry from three
station aeg rA arket oy n, and ret mile mee the Pole- | to JouN Pies poe am Í to four times its own body of sand.
apply to Mr, Jonn Morton, Whittel , Berkeley, loucos. FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER HOSE, KIRSS, ano TUBIRG. I J. B. Ware and Soxs, Milbank-street, West.
šire. -A person at Folkingto ce will show the Farm. AMES A ole Lice and —
raff ae Manufacturer of the PATENT VULCANISED 13 INDIA- WIRE. WORK, nom WATER APPARATUS,
TOBE Ler, for a term nq — —— 7 — are made all sizes, from USES, &c.
Tental, with i 8 Finch bore and upwards, t injured by hot liquors and | QP, -THOM IAS BAKER, MANOR- HOUSE, MANOR.
MANSION’ kno poss ent FAMILY | acids, are permanently flexible in all temperatures, and are PLACE, KING’S-ROAD, CHELSE
Within 2 * at 8 Stanfield Hall, Wymondham, Norfolk, | well adapted for Watering Gardens, Breweries, Liquid Manure INVISIBLE WIRE FENCE. tó resist Grazing Stock, — bane
Contains, on the ay tion, 0 It Pumps, Gas, and Chemical Purpo : uire no applica- dered Rabbit-proof WIRE. WORK in Tra Arches for
tooma, consisting of Li floor, a noble entrance hall, and a suite | tion of oil or dress ing, and do not become leaky from — Walks Plower Rtands Saiar oi Ke. BOR-
i of library, ng-room Wing. out of use — — them — suitable * Fire Engines Bordering IG: 4 a
Man iting with each other by double doors, housekeeper’s ' g — TICULTURAL BUILDINGS, Green and Ho |, Conser-
. servant” hall, store‘room, Z ere by HOT-WATER APPARATUS
Éva principal deb renn, 0 » and brewhouse ; on the first floor, „i ULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted *. improved food on in e dss
e water closet’ on the n — * 1 WW Estim rates ree. Work for the Trade as usuals
aal aat two large he offices comprise two umpa, ard’s Cases, or Domestic Greenbe 3
Toom, vi torr ao double co chor e, hay houso, and harness- Ai re agr alpat l'and the Tai a es communication | ALVAN ISED WIRE GAME NETTING —
pasture i acid toa ne if ro. B, the Box, for conta tools required. G e e eee
er particulars apply to W. 4
28 5 Tight, 24-inch 2 a ae. 3
- * *
4 ‘saline strong 4 * » 3
light o 6 o y
3 inc s — „ ee. s ” 8
card xtra strong ,, 1 ss
3 —— ait long lengths | E can be! — ate prices.
5 coez begs the . SELF. sore gt |, lee u upper h half is paa peah ie wl —̃
PIPE REEL, which is found a t convenit hine for same, dri —
winding up — e ing away the * creep bat of — per square foot, one a BISHOP, ele
‘arehouse, Goswell-mews, Goswell-road, | Man BARN an Marketplace,
— — — Fa ers addressed 26 above will receive ay delivered fre pense in London, ret
immediate | boroughs | 3
ka A
ROYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY,
EXTRA GOLD MEDAL.
1 To Mr. May, 3 to Mrs. Lawrence, Ealing Park, for
30 Stove and Greenhouse Plan ts
2 To Mr. eee, Gardener to S. Rucker, Esq., Wandsworth,
for 25 Orchids
THE LARGE GOLD MEDAL.
1 To 4 3 Gardener to H. Coya r, Esq., Dartford, for 30
and Greenhouse Pla
HE MEDI Jorg MEDAL.
ardener to Sir Edmund — 2 Bart.,
eenhouse Plan
r. Mylam, ea
bebe a a to C. B. Warner, Esq., Hoddes-
hi
Schröder, Esq., Stratford-
LD MEDA
1 To Mr. Taylor, o to J. — . . Streatham, for
Stove and Greenhouse Plan
2 To Mr, Cole, Dartford, for 15 Heaths
3 To Mr. Epps, Nurseryman, Maidstone, 44 12 Heaths
4 To Mr. Black, Gardener to E. Foster, Esq., Clewer Manor,
for 12 Pelargoniums, — 8. inch pots
5 To Mr. eee kopra
Pelargonium.:
THE asap SILVER-GUUE MEDAL.
1 To Mr. T. Williams, Gardene to Miss Traill, Hayes-place,
Kent, for 10 Kova 8 Plants
or 0⁰ Mrs. Lawrence, Ealing Park, for
3 ae Dobson, Gardener to Mr, Beck, Isleworth, for 6
hids
4 To Mr. T. Bray, Gardener to E. B. Lousada, Esq., Peak
House, Sidmouth, for 6 Pine- app
5 To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the 3 Dowager of North-
r yon ogee for a collection m Tropical
Feu
E LARGE SILVER MEDAL,
r to Mr. Beck, Isleworth, for 12
ron 21
EXHIBITION, “JULY 4, 4, 1849.
AWARD OF THE JUDGES.
6 To Mr. Stains, New-road, for 12 — h in 8-inch pots | 4 To Messrs. Rollisson and
7 To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. Sim ., Pimlico, for | 5 To Mr, Turner, —— 5 ue Pia
ney Pelargon 6 To Mr. E. G. He 3 for Plants
8 To Mr. Ambrose, Battersea, ae $ Fancy Pelargoniums 7 To Mr. —— for 6 He eat pe Pelargoniums
9 To Mr. Gaines, for 6 Calceo lari 8 To Mr. arden
0 To Mr. Bray, Gardener to Haron de Goldsmid, St. John’s Holme, Requars Park. Pret Basia Pe 1 En, &
Lodge, Regent’s Park, sage Fuchsias 9 To Mr. ee rv Woolwi ich, fer 1
11 To Messrs. Lane and So on, Great Berkhompstead, for 100 10 To Mr. Edw: phy aed 2
Rr. Terry, Gardener to Lady Puller, Youngsbury, for 50 12 To i Gaines, for 6 Fuchsias
12 2 ir. Terry, ener to er, Youngsbury, for 2 To Mr. Francis, Randi
Roses 13 To A. Rowlan sq., Zaren , for 100 Roses
13 To —— — 2 — Gardener to the Marquis of Lansdowne, | 14 To Messrs. Paul and we for 12 new Roses —
Bo 15 To the same, for 12 Roses (single bl )
14 To it Spencer, a an Old Queen Pine-apple. 16 mmond, for a Ripley Queen P. j
15 To s, Gardener to Sir J, J. Guest, Bart, fora Ripley | 17 To Mr. Jones, for a Ripley weg Pin Ine. ape
0 — sen Pinea pple 18 To N 2 ‘Spencer, for a Ripiey Quee:
6 sind lr. ond, Gardener to C. H. Leigh, Esq., for a 5 3
ayenne ie PENE am e — or a Ripley Queen Pine. app
17 To. Ir. Lushey, Gardener to James Hill, Esq., kery, | 20 To Me Fie tor nhy brad gree fae
Streatham, for a dish o black Grapes ( 3 5 21 To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to er, Esq,,
8 To . Bast Oak hi a dish of white Grapes (Muscat 1 1 Maor (Cuthill > ete —
ria) 2 To Mr. Henderson, Gardener t
19 To: r. Northcote, Gardener to Miss Wigram, Wanstead, of Black Hambur — poi PeR Beaumont, toast
prenin of | d Mrs, Oddie, Col H fi 24 To Me Ti e et: 7 — „
20 To Mr. Monro, Bar ener to Mrs. e, Colney House, for o Mr, Taylor, peeta to J.
four dishes of Peaches and Nectarines 25 ad 8 Pie ld, 2 to . Walen Ber
To S Parker, Gar 0 J. a bn te Esq., for two h Hall, A
dishes of Peaches and Nectari 26 To] = 21 5 f sng the 6 pe A ae
22 To. + Bassett, Gardener — R. 8. Ho Hand, Esq., ston- 27 To Mr. 1 N to S. Gurney, Esq, *
hire a splendid plant of Camarotis purpurea, over- Park, fi :
d at the first lten, 0 n May 16t 28 to. lr. ‘thomson, — to Mrs, Byng, Wrotham | 5
or t.
THE a SILVER MEDAL.
1 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. 3 Bart., for a = a . — — ot, Gardener to T. B. I 1
specimen | ages of Rondeletia e spec: for ae errin, Esq, Fi f
2 3 Mylam, for a specimen — of Epidendrum eru- |31 To Mr. Collins, Gardener to E. H. Chapm an, Beg Ba 155
esce ala
3 To ope Rollisson and Sons, Tooting, for Barringtonia | 32 To = 3 5 ae ea ges i =
racemosa a ae
4 To Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, for Elwocarpus | 33 To. Me “thompson, Wro p sie etre soat of Alexandria) .
TH
1 To Moart. paars, Nurserymen Clapham, for 12 Heaths 3 Frontignan Gra ,
2 To Mr. , Gardener to R. G. Loraine, Esq., Wallington 5 To ne Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for Ly- | 34 To Mr. gy - {rods of Peaches and Neato
hii ee ' 6 Orchi ium sp. from India 35 To Mr. T. Bray, Sidmouth, for a dish of Cnerries
: To Mr. me, . for 12 Pelargoniums, in 8. inch pots 6 — Mr. beeps Morton for 12 = Alpines 36 To Mr, P. Lydiar Bach, for four dishes of ae
1 es, Nurseryma n, Battersea, for 12 Pelargoniums, 7 To a: 3 ardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., for 6 Cape 37 To k A Esq., Pine-apple-place, for 6 1
oi
5 To Mr. Parker, _ H. Oughton, Esq., Roe-| 8 To Mr. Green, for 6 Heaths 38 To Mr. 4 Variegated Plants
hampton, for 6 teat in 11 inch pots S 9 To Me. roa Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for 12 | 39 To Mr. Green, Pi F 1 g ;
36 3 Thomson. Gardener to Mrs. Byng, rotham-park, 10 To the satis, r30 40 To John M 58 Yoga, Esq., Albert-terrace, Ri 1 T
ey of Grapes (distinet varieties) 1 To Mr. Robinson fort 1² 8 ums, in 8. inch pot iT z yi ig He,
E SILVER-GILT MEDAL. ’ „ i 41 To Mr ole, 25 1 Labels (Ist elass) tg
1 . _Narseryien, andes ond, for 20 a = 15 "Moseley y, Esq., Piue-apple-place, for 6 Fancy "Pelar- | 42 To Mr. ern e stone, 5 coe Lab . aa
2 To a J. B Pare ardeuer to Bese. Miller, * Collyer’s- à eos 6 3 5 R road, St. John's. wood, 1 To Messrs. Rollisson an ped for Garten d tet
„ sack, Wail Stents sinia a 14 To Mr. Turner, Slough, for 12 Carnations 2 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Jose
. gion 8 or tove and Green- 15 To Mr. Edwards, Holloway, for 12 Picotees Alpine Plants
An . 3 a for 6 Cape Pel 16 To Mr. Norman, Woolwich, for 12 Pin 3 To Mr. Stanly, Gardener to H. Berens, Esq, Siem fe’
5 To M sing ùi ew-road, for 6 Cape Pelargoniums f 17 To Mr, Robinson, for 6 sias Cape Pelargouiums hg
a D n and Sons, Nurserymen, Tooting, for 18 To Messrs. Paul and Son, Cheshuat, for 100 Roses 22 SS —
e , o . Gaines, for a Seedling Pan
ia ree Wi ii ieee 70 Mins. Un 2 Bee 19 To Mr ob loses” Gardener to A. George, Esq., Ponder’s-end, „„ n
7 BR dora ey s, Batterson, for6 Pelarzontoms, n-ne ra 20 To Messrs. Lan and Son, for 12 new Roses 6 To po Hoyle, Reading, for a deep
; 33 — arom a 5 1 21 To the same, for 12 Roses (single blooms) . um named Gem” *
10 70 Messrs . He > 4 r ancy — "zona T 6 22 To Mr. rte a 50 Providence Pine-apple 7 TO Ar. Epps, for a seedling H
erson and Co., Pine-apple-place, for 6 Cal- | 93 To Mr, Fleming, Gardener to the Duke of Sutherland, for 5 — — om Keynes, 5 for 24 oe
1 Old Quee: n Pine. pple. r. Thompson, lv er, for 24 Pa
11 To M Mr. Turnbull, Gardener to the Duke of Marlborough, | 24 T 8 fi “Ri 51 10 To Mr. Francis, Hertford, for 12 n
Blenheim, for a Aiie — Pine-apple 25 To Mr „ Riphinst F 11 To Mr. 1 rancis, for 12 Roses (si ngle 5 blooms)
12 To Mr. T. Bray y, 6 ard S E. B. Louseda, Beg. for an pr Ne ser instone, Heckfield Place, for an Antigua Queen 12 To} ate, W 10 ods, Gardener to P. P. Wiss, Esq, St. alo |
26 To Mr. Elliott, Gardener to J. B. Boothby, Esq., Twyford a Persian graen- AAN i
13 To 5 5 Jone — Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart., Dowlais 7 bbey A for a green-fleshed Melon (Fleming's Meid 13 To Mr. Dickinson, Gardener 3 . Sutton, —
es pe ee © r Tydvil, Glamorganshire, for a Ripley 1 near Great Berkhampstead, for a 220 T 26. :
ueen ine-apple 14 To Mr. Stewart, Gardener to R. Durant, Esdo
14 Ey Ee Bray, iat ching to E. B. Louŝada, Esq., for an ai gs à “Drumm "fo a box of Grapes Melon fleshed Mok 0
ville Pine- : 15 To Mr. Henderson, Gardener to Sir Beaumont,
15 . eoa Sir den e Bt., | 3 Ae 1 1 nen. eee a e ok albaran oy gO 4 ra 8 He ph 0,
istinet 7 white Grapes teas oe of f Alexandri ria) 16 To ae 2 Oakhill, for the same 125
16 To — 3 ball, Gardencr taining not less than 1 Ibe y 3i To Mr. e aad dishes es of Peaches vig Nectarines | 17 To fani 3 to E. Lyon, Bede Terma
3 o eet „Lydia ath, for four dis pee of Strawberri Oddie, for two
15 * ie 5 „ipren e of Su as — To Mr. Bray, Sanos, for a dish of 2 To Mr. J; ene 8 to Mrs. i
1 — fora —— dish « of Black Bambang "Gre 34 To an Gri Peaches and N dish ato
o Mr. mete f white Grapes (uscat 35 To = one 8 H. Colyer, Esq., for a Peach tree 19 To a gc nsford, Brentford, 25
in ae
19 To — — Barker, 3 to J. H. Oughton, Esq., for four 36 To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to J. Coster, Esq, for correct 20 To Mr. mper for four dishes of St í
“THe SILVER MEDAL. Labels (lat glass) : 31 To Me, Koroan, Gardener wo A MED
37 To Mr. Plant, Gardener to J. H. Schröder, Esq. dishes of Strambe
JJ E eee Tints Wee Ge)” Labela (ad aan er Henan g at et rea
23 To urn fo
2 To L for a specimen plant of Epidendrum sp. 1 rb R BENRA ye MEDAL. 24 To Me. Collins, Gardener es 5
o Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, for a specimen dish of Violette Hative
3 Yee Henderson and Co., for a specimen plant of plant ot Kalosanthes grandiflora miniata * 25 To Mr. P. aha rd, for British Queen 8
anhopea ti 2 To Mr. Cole, for a pombe) plant of Achmea fulgens 6 To Mr. Monro, for eight ki Stra
4 To Messrs. Pamplin, Lea- ridge. road, for 12 peg?
5 To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to Boyd Miller, Esq., for 6
LIGHT. CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING.
ROGGON’S PATENT ASPHALTE ROOF ING
ee n to rain, snow, and
ee sare a fo eal ta timber
e or unpractised persons.
CROGGON’S PATENT NON-CON.
EI. „tor Steam Bollers and Pipes, sa
fuel. Samples and Testimonials sent by post on eded
e e 821105 Tondon.
3 en Jack, eae to R. G. Loraine, Esq., for hank:
pass extensive exper . in all cli- |
quired for slates; can be laid | Do
2
27 To Mr. Taylor,
28 To Messrs. Pamplin, for
for 8 Labels dete 6
—
HOOL FOR e ecg AND SCIENTIFIC
pecially
Suffolk, ae th
RENDLESHAM, M. P.; y
ssical and Mathematical — ae in-
uate of Cambridge; m-
be known on application
et, Suffolk.
A CLEAR COMPLE
G ODFREY’S EX’
rape 5 POP BL DER cent ei 2 The First-Class Passenger Ship
epg, and preserving tae Ski, an fa ging bing il be e er the Compost’
fume esd deli ats fair f a Settlements, from the pei of London,
sunburn, delight c., and 3 ee ee. Monday the 6th August nex 122
qualities er the skin soft, pliable, and free from dryness, ates of Passage, Provisions ae: —
_scurf, ., clear it from ev „ pimple, eruption; i
and. ad, by mrinuing its use oniy © sheet Sys Tm, akin will be- ‘or each Person. atin, cabin. Steerage,
fectly a apd beaut pone yee coth, and the complexion fer- | 14 years old, and upwards = 8
r Dan 9d., with 7 years old, and under 14 2 36 Ñ
= ing it, by all medisine TETTE ee zee oi, sod unii 7 E O eee
8 Berar ey durable and eh oon REN An experienced Surgeon is appointed by the Company, ond —.
3 feet wide e 8 vu feet 6 . edicines, Medical Comforts, and an ample Dietary provided
12 213 fi Are 0 | for each Class of Passen e-Cabins are provided
di pie one” . . 310 : so ons o Passage, or farther Ini assage in the .
nch Mattress on it, is a most excel l nformation, apply at THE
re Peer and SON'S LIST of BEDDING, with Naw estano House or to iy order ote Starner, Broker
ev
of Bedding, sent ig post.—Heat and Sox, Bi Ni A pee a ETON.
(opposite ew Zealand
Se C a Demin duly 1, 1840.
b ebnen 18
IR Ts.—.
Foe etter sram long wish
HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
~ \GRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
I stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
SATURDAY, JULY 21.
No. 99—1849.]
— on
X.
| Nets, C
2
Peat wes conversion of, into
1 ede 455 a
Pigs hag om rds
Plants, perfect n afis
diseases oft..
Plumbago 22 oe
Poly podium
sn Lagoa
Potatoes, cut ting — 0
Potato disease, cause of
e ape
rons
7
8 (Mr.) Nursery, noticed pH
Roses, climbing —
9 453
Scale, to ki l
new, for ithododeadrous =
453
5
seseseseossses
Bo il,
Sparrow nuisan
inea ows
ee
— sin 15
453 6
| Peat, — wood a substit ute
whee besdecccenas —
42 6
22222 . 454 e
ff. 3 a
EL seb NIU M—“ aaen MAGNIFI-
[Price 6d.
lants of os
GREENHOU
a FREEMAN, Hons aeii Buriper and Hot-
ter Apparatus Manufac cturer, Triangle, Hackney, near
rende ar
LL m Feats
Me 9 wa
ngdom.
AND H.
Yellow,
Noisette and other Climbing
dozen
rar SOUTH LONDON FLORICULTURAL
00
Tal the Patronage of HER Most GRACIOUS MAJESTY,
Peco tion sA Cenk above Society, wil
ROYAL SURREY ZOOLOGICAL enp y iSe
00
en Plants, Cape Heaths, Fuchsias, Roses
* — “epg 9 sw Grapes, Pines, —
es 0) ri
rs will also be awarded,
d Picotees
s. J. and J. Fatsbair, 9 ‘Of ‘Clapham, to Class the First,
for 6 Cape Heath:
s, Large Sprer 1 Medal.
50. 58., for white-
HAH
hibitors, when
viz.:
s Pl
of Prizes and aie na ca “for Exhibiting
Joun TAYLOR NEVILLE, Secretary, Ebe-
urrey.
12 Achimenes, best v
Cam se „ fin
24 Choice “Evléea, one of as
eraniums, 1
0 6 best
Ditto
Soh
Ery a Fulgentissime 5
their Fortunii
Clerodendron microphyl-
lum 5
Balsamina repens H
New — Rhododen-
Rhodbdendron E avani-
ic]
285
hoice Geranium, C ji
rb + — doe ree encomiums pass oo
Florist,” = hone ao pe apy * „
any furt un
„ Shide | rad near
BROWN will forward the fi
and CHOICE PLANTS to any part of t
12 “Ten scented Roses, superior sorts, one of ea So
evoniensis —— Noisette Roses, per * en
aud C
New ahd Choice Chrysanthemum
Fine New Perennial Phloxes, Belgian varietal, per
The newest and most approved Pe tunias, Verbenas,
and Fuchsias, psn — a by post, per doz,
est — wall set with flower bude, per
2 superb variation for
fancy varieties, fi
new perpetual scarlet, ea
` 8
O ao 882
1
wpor * a of en
this
t- 42 ft. long, 43 wide, 90 l.;
necessary. 23 ‘Mas
London, begs to eall the 9 of the gentry to his bir prices
as ial- 4 pr reenhouses, fi pe
ood Substan rye
` 21 13 wide, 5 50L ;
A large —— 0 Conservatories, 3
Iro 3 lights, Summer-
h in the above line,
10 wide, 501.
Pits, Mel
houses, peor an
Newport, Isle of Wight.
yl-
n —
YMEN AND 3
OLD, 14 order of the T
Deed of Assignment, in one lot, wae Stoc!
. e SWANSEA NURSERY,
Wales, lately 3
an
rustee,
in Tr ad
arean Sou!
rimson,
in Pots, suitable for
_
per dozen
nce in p $s
8, per doz
, 6s.and
2050 Ae oO AACO
— 222
E
S aa Vie
ach
Viola lutea
Lili — speciosum ru-
bru “A
Phiox 8
White Salvia — Azurea
compacta, e
Thunbergias of | sorts; Is.
to
Gloxinias, new sorts,
2
e
3
„ a AR S CSO 8
e — — e e
d cal ceolari:
18. per packet.
&c., by post.
7 ATI
He
(original
day of July, 1849, Ax che dul
ion in reference t
n
Y FAIR AND FLA
id
nt tho Infirm
10
F
1
171
i
for
for all Plants sent pa EXHI
for — Hene as
— —
10
best collec
— deel exclusive
collection of Ten Plauts, ys
Six Plants, * Third . 8,
be ll Exhibition being
zA will be empowered to
merits of an 7 collection
seem to dese:
send whatever may be in their power,
t importance, for the
plants — — for this
k — Tuesday evening, the 7th instan
he following mor: To $
the Sale Tent.—All ants sent to this
to v.
should ax) delivered at the
intended f ie Tent No.
T FLOWERS. — 3 of Pines
a distance may fbe sent, K
AL REGULATES
Will be NS.—Judges will
the purpose
Superintending
by each e
The 9
Sa
—
AMES Mawpsze.
to the Gurduiars, and an nad.
on application to the . — or Secre-
WDSLEY and THOMAS WHALLEY, Secretaries.
ON AND PICOTEE EXHI-
lly fixed for the ee is postponed to TUES-
of Prizes, and any
ual Meeting of the Provin-
prow ers, a 2 had of C. TURNER, pami ia
JWER SHOW, in b
rmary and the
e 8th, 9th, and 10th of
RTICULTURAL mies | I
ted tha atmany P byte d
4
that their plants are not sufficien tly y good | to
Tent should
t,
the
„ spine utions, — fn Ste sold yan —
&c., and a fresh s
— 1y i of 7 Flowers each
te is pp e o.
o th
ot be Exhibitors.
ion Tick etsfor the Gar-
ster Toe Atal a before 9 o’clock in
‘eke: plant in order to avoid
e mistakes in the return of plants, it is
should onan del elivered ontributor, to
tee will a
0 TILE:
amount in penn;
his general Seed-
ry large double Em
Sock, Red
w White Giant Winter do.
0.5
nches, 10s. 6d. oy and upw
The e presen
every plant sent ou
g | Well-grow wn spene ens.—Bagsh
ON, SEE
— of that country.
Thomas os of Ph f
0
ved a the
i
d none is to be
tata QA
Also List o of 2 Plants, Roses,
Albion N a, Stoke Neri London, J 1 5
ROW CABB
om
3 po ve
Be Sy Bs —
Shru bs,
further’ particulars, apply
Office. Swans
o Mr, Jonx WilIiaus, Cambria
0 ee dese Boned a 2 20 1
of t t kinds, in bs, 5
5 to 7 Sg ‘neh 1 fro m 8 to 54 eet caves the
fine healthy condition, 2 4 covered with bloom 8 a oni
parsculare may be had of F. J. Boo or, Manor Nursery, Shackle-
8
TAT TUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDEN
ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARMS, an ——
mperisha by
or 5
ree TO „„
EGISTERED a ot rath oo TILES, for
increasing the productiveness of Strawberries, Melons,
ines, 2 Seakale, and to ensure chee IA ection, at
earlier seas * N usual,
The Gar aie Jaly pt — * _contains an edi-
torial article “ne chase 5 — ous,
marks are e extracted: be principle of ii
3
1 A
1
or
By such
appliances, and by the aid of such means, vast — apl.
results may 2 be looked for. As connected l;
with the culture trawberries and Melons, the use of s
ar would andere pa cet hom te eng 8 s and flavour
ll repeat, that the E Al
that we ask, on the part of Mr. Roberts, is thot 3 of horti
— for poupre them in a prominent manner ¢
calu which, so far
* N d
for Flowering next Season, Very nrntons of H
mperor Ve
oh 8
Hol liyhoes, 12 sorts, mixed
Ne
Carnation and Picotee (mixed) | Auricula, finest mixed
— pink
d white
better cann — 5 Leiceste
het been receivedfrom Germany, and | can con
Borough.
YPTOMERIA JAPONICA 3
STANDISH anp NOBLE
handsome,
t is the most N time for fae | out, and
by Messrs. S. and
fectio
ABD 4 with t
is appended
to J.
0 AGRICULTORISTS,
CA voMPOU ND 3 aera
uitable for
per ton, g easy - cach peculiar
. to Sl, per t delive tH
results, bo
2 ‘Ror the s is re aped, besides a materi
the ~ the
dine crop
Surrey, July 42
D-GROWERS, Maldon, Essex“
ing
| or mor e o of stable manure,
rp porti pape prs thereto he — ensuing
spring, to make it as sagt s as + with the applies of 10 tons
ture
philbers ‘louse, "Maidenhead, Berks,
agp describes it.
postage s
ä 55224460
mp!
N. B. 4 best varieties of Cabbages, ‘ares 1 ss Is.
”
26.
84d.
v
— awn 5 ethan fh m is,
S emo
from u k wn correspondents te iiio
»”
a who have already given the manure a fair
m bd one
r 2
This assertion isn
of p Of discernment,
practical trial in
FOR E FLOW WERS AND cei, by a te IN GARDENS = POTS,
t M pared expressly,
— s abiy adapted and — in tin
in
derable saving is X
rious y arrr rene of dhe fa Ait ses, Circulars
de anure, 3
of ie v aie quisite information, y be had upon applying to
—— —-— &c.—H. Cores takes
COLE:
TULIPS, HYACINTHS, RANUNCULUSES, ANEMONES,
0 6 ae net 10 H AURICULAS, GERANIUMS, anp LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM.
+ 15 0 | Sparkler, Hoyle’s 10 6 OOM, PHAM oudon, by ap-
0 6 Book's 206-404 30 6 piara FLORIST TO HER MAJESTY THE 1 an
6 oyle’s . 7 6 to a AJESTY THE KiNG oF rea cg respeott y informs
or a selection of any 12 for 5l. 5s.— | the Nobility, Gentry, and Amateurs, that he ny a fine be.
aniums to the amount of 50. 5s, will have a lection of the above Flowers, which he can offer at the geese
lies ies ome Field Marshal sent gratis on the lot.— | very moderate prices : i
can be had on prepaid application. 100 TULIPS, i in 100 fine sorts, named 7 7 0
— a. eren 5 5 0
TEXAN Mixtures, per 100, 5 aT 7s. 6d. to 21s.
ose LAING, Nurseryman, Beverley, 95 AHT ACN TH. in 25 superfine sorts, named arp
S the public that he will send Atkinson’s Ditto, fine kinds, per doz „
oe a —— out the second week in | 100 RANUNCULUSES, in 100 superfine s sorts, named 210 0
t discount, but one plant will uperfine Mixtures, per 100, fi m 5s. to 21s.
odere d. A. L. to refer to ex- 100 . rery ANEMONES, in 50 aparand sorts, aa
Ci also t new collection 2
tures (double), p: 100, 75. 6d. and 10s. 6d. b
RICULAS, in 25 superfine sorts, — ai — — i
4 a oy. much . in the lobes of the varieties, per doz ope ice |
on that accoun 1 st others; colours 25 GERANIU S, in 28 upertine sorts, named — wise
sg ag LANCIPOLIUM att, D 157 0 — or 10s. p. doz.
for
ed * anded, the same tint as the
‘sto creda f ipe a shade or two deeper on
oie olla peenaa describing half a circle.
hu action of this flower consists in each petal of
erag beautifully and distinctly margined with
ally pale blush ground, the inner portion
nted with ider this a
decidediy is
ting
selon 15. 26. to 10 8
Ditto Ditto, punctatum each from 5 )
Ditto Date rabini or a from sad : —
ts — 4 —.— - 1
A ew COLLECTION 0 an " SEEDLING
crores: six sorts . . ee 0
H. G to say that this Catalogue „e., is
ready, — ‘will b orwarded by post on 313
* The usu al discount to the Trade,
K
individual flowers will freque fly vel six anic 25
very free h he and growth, and well suited for Lake See alis b i formosum
„Sept. 15, 1849.—“ W. „ pumila azurea | „ levis „ ternatum —
rose, 5 to pint =- remarkably fine variety, wi „ ditto alb; „ lanceolata 5 oppositifolia
largest flow . Plants, the a of April, p poll „ hirta „ Ewersii
1850, — — ais Pheer’ three ater rdered four will be sent. alpina „ Stellaris „ stellatum
Norwich Nur reery, Octobe „ ditto rubra „ Sternbergii „ rosen
3 pe Cardamine trifoliata] „ as ae „ hyoridum
5 “temas EMPEROR PEAS. —These 9 * R elegan a. Opi
Peas, being large croppers and fine in flavour, well merit | Dian hysso’ io 5 „ Sie
the attention of Podders and Farmers who are growers of early ulata
Peas; they are decidedly much earlier a pamer than cæsius
= generality of early Peas, as a proof of which they were Draba —
thered at Win ner on the one of Meno ay be oy inc
9 RICK Wan sman, Wholesale and Retail, | Bgllobiumlatifotium
Cornhill, and 3, en ö — lane, Cannon-st., Lanzen. van) ts
pi
1a r tolius
Linaria alpina Bucklandii | Thymus azurea
„ hepaticefolia ogee Tussilago
j balaria Thalictrum a
„ Gitto alba v a vulgaris
j variegata] „ Ainoa pleno o
„ pilosa Silene 3 Veronica montana
Lychnis alpina leno „ taurica
„ Viscaria „ alpestris „ alpestris
„ ditto alba „ quadridentata | ,, fruticulosa
Linnea borealis — „ saxatilis
Mitella diphyll o excarpa
Chilwell Nurseries, e e
ARMOUTH BLOATE ERS—GENUINE AND OF
THE FINEST QUALITY.
Yarmouth has for cen
known Yarmo:
1 for its
oj *
part ot the k or for expo (on reocipt of a post.
| Sse order), at 3 per 6 100, — ing included Ja orders to
be addressed to Mr. ap JK BROUGHTON
uare, Great Tamos
626 THE
GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE,
— = ant AN IS STINT a
ARNOLD'S VIRGIN QUEEN E is the
„It seedling of 184
Mf sila E ai all of which 1
time ;
whic
magnieenty last season, more than 350 — 14 | orde
SOM
3
give the greatest satisfaction. ea
including a e of that excellent jon, r s Cnv-
SADER,
eee WLan E. RENDLE & Co., Union- road, Plymou
Our Dutch Bulbs have — 1 arrived i in excellent =.
Catalogue on application, grati
D'orses, ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR-
_CISSUS, 45. “yar doz zen. i abo ove ate the former o 8
teeme ssi
ee; 1 Cat
logues of which A w. be axe
— GEORGE, HENDERSON, 8
ohn's Wood, London a to offer
Fe — 5 WITH FLOWER BU
DELICIEUSE STRAWBERRY
2 J. FAIRBAIR N regret to inform the 127
t other, We fei ye so libera
the
— e very mitad — they — ps a
G n compe
ROSES he ak Catalogue of H. LA E
an N, Great Berkhampstead, with a a Rapplompatary | a
List ot those best sui for acpi , Grouping, ining on
Trellis, Weeping, &e., is no
rea ady, and applicants will be
upplied with a copy by * · two postage stamp
9 8 Horsphallii, King, Monarch h cia tis,
ee striata, oblissima, Pendula, Thomson's
Susa rdii, Juliana, Eliza, — Victoria, Sieboldii,
rthy of cu
eat Yarmouth Nur Eeg
TULIPS, 755 ANE XEMONES, HYACINTHS,
CA „e.
S0, F PICOTEES,
LO
— — . Peautitul and very distinct new fancy —.— sive collection of FLORISTS’ FLOWE a8, oul hare to
pg ig ME Re A ~~, vo en ir ap m 1 inform them that n Priced Catalogues will be sent to
on = aa A light edging of — wil ine 2 a t y any add tee: on 5 of two postage — a.
purpl +
white and sometimes biote The flower and truss large, HE RANUNCULUS : yg TO GROW IT, may be had
a most profuse Coenen — retains its lowers as long as
the sar peng Victoria Geranium. A drawing of the flower (by
Holden) may be
8. taw 45 strongly recommend the above Geranium, —
of any Bookseller, wee >
closing Sept po
r direct, on application, en-
tage
ranunculus Seed 5s, per packet, post free,
BN! IN R. CANT „ St. gen! s-street Nursery,
. no doubt it will prove one of the greatest favourites ev
— ont, as it ia iisa s in one sheet of bloom for ok 4 „ has now — 4 for delivery, strong well-
— thened peri e ion nts of the followi
N.B. The usual allowance n ihe 3 and for every three | GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CRUS ows WB. 6d. ine
lants ordered four will be g ERRIRE, 8 BRILLIANT `. 11 7 2
Pp FUCHSIA SPECTAB LIS Ts.
DWARD GEORGE HENDERSO ON, Wellin
Tn
1 es e and pac kage free to London,
rence, requested from unknown c
The She discount to the trade.
aya n’s Wood, London, Wee on 1 *
comm: sending o = the following new Seedling
CINERARIAS, — by him would advise intending pur- OSEPH 1 NurseryMan, G Bel-
asers to 1 time in — their orders, as thi * um, begs to inform his friends and the public in general,
a be sent off first, and all orders executed in strict | that his New CATALOGUE of PLANTS is just published, and
ad gratis, o Kevin be t-free on application to
gin all its points
r 108. 6d.
ANGEL Ligue, carmine, white disc, distinct and novel
om aati and Shipping Agent, Cox and
BESSY, ~~ rich plum, a ‘beautiful, distinct, and age stam
striking e 5 35 FRUITS for * 3 Page 8 e stamps.
W ier, a clear white, ‘slightly tipped with EES ae RUBS, r the present
ht blue, fine form 6 8 Eng t-free 7 rsi —— —
DELIGHT, rosy 5 distinct and new colour, a THE MINIATURE FRUIT GARDEN, or Culture of 22
neat dwarf flower 5 0 | midal Fruit Trees, * for Root-pruni ing, ao sent post
EMPEROR,
FLORA ie ‘IVOR, rich 1
rosy crimson, large bold flower, and very
mm 3 —— hames- street, London
Db CATAUOGUNS, BY TH *
VERS: OF r 1849, In s only the most
rted. 5 on receipt of — —
free for 24 3
Nurseri “nen ome Herts,
best of its colour, of free wth, 3 — 7 6 | TALL, HANDSOME EVERGREENS, & 8.
LADY GERTRU DE, bright — 1 blue, large flow well r ooted in an adhesive yei — 1 Ane effect,
Senta 0 J. FOSTER, of the Edgware Nurseries, an
NINTH, ‘ cles white, violet-purple disc, form good, 0 pos fine Stock the ee at 9 low prices,
T cupped, . 5 0 which e delivere don, free. They ist
PA LINE, a violet plum, shaded with crimson, fine rincipally of Portugal Laurels, Gree urels, Arbor Vitæ,
broad petals, — ite shape ee Je Kem. Hollies, Spruce, Scotch Fir, eymouth * —.—
8 I 4 tals divided with white and orim- Laburnums, Maples, Limes, Horse Chesnu nae rnbeam
thelat 4 ating, fine dark disc, Beech, &c., with a quantity of — Spruce, evergreen
—— — 2 of fin 3 a os. — — 5 0 hedges. Roses, also, and Fru of the — kinds, are
WELLINGTON, ‘peta equally divided with white grown mnibuses alan the Old Bell, and Black
and ish crimson, maroon dise, flower of z> Ball, H and pass the aih — five times a day; fares,
form, large, and beautifully cupped warded on application to
the price ‘will ‘be V. 10s.,
given, or three plants
AN. THE QUEEN OF SUMMER,”
RD. R n Mtge a ae
Nursery, St, John’s- wood, London, is now receivin
— the above “beautiful SCARLET GERANIUM, whic — 1 einde be
sent eùt on after the 8. each,
—
ol born,
15.5 inside os _ Prices
outside te are Nurseri
— ATO —
ron Walden, Oet. 6, 1849.
SUPERB DOUBLE "HOLLY HOO CKS,
LASS FOR co
Jass, PHILLIPS A m
e Topa New a or a of
16 oz. from 2d. to oi per a
21 ab,
ay : 4
5 *
m Und In boxes of |
26 5 3} 5 er
3
32 4
Ni feet paa | 200 feet ences
at 24d, foot. rite
fact, according to size
A
of la
Plate Gt
a
6} by a.
6 by kant
8 by n» 8t by 6
; Wasp Traps, 39, 6d,
Slabs, see eo Glasses. and D
Fish Globes, Plate **
stimates and List of Pri fi
Warehouse, 116, Bisho pratesi Vat laia
67 ASS FOR ONSERY
GREENH 100 ane PIT FR Kane
R AND 8 are ‘supplying 16-07, Sheet Gi
Manu r ek Containing
square feet radia at poss “ollowing REDUGLS
4 reduction made 00 feet,
Si nches
1
PRICES for cad
From 6
7
8
10
rger sizes, not exceed 40 inches
16 oz, fsa 3d, to a rel acos
2loz. ,, 33d,
260z. „„ 34d. 734
1 ROUGH PLATE, THIC 2 sia te 4
Hortieultural
r Rough Plate Glass.
R 3 er Glasses, Cucumber T
ee Pans, Glass Wat ipes, and various other
nerto ma — gi in glass.
PATENT PLATE GLASS.—The Tr
—
uperior i
alteration ¢ connected with the sash 05 required
GLASS SHADES, as ornam
of
apptiostion to James ——— and bo, 35. .
AND dee 2 —
by 8 feet, glass ends » 1 door, a :
with 16 oz a
of best oil colour, W to any r —.— London, —
for 151, 10s.; a do, do, 15 by 10, Hi iy; as IS :
. 10s.; a do, do. aL y 12, 32. 10s., ig a plan for
ick 12-inch $ I. coe 4
sheet glass, painted t! as * per ony 2inch de, i
per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse orks, Stauford-bill,
Middlesex were ee
AKERS PHEASANTRY, *
d, Chelsea, b; ial appoi ber Majesty and
H. R. H. Prince Aibe rt, ORNAMENTAL wars _
consisting of black and white swans,
bernacle, — and 3 geese, pr beren
II LIAM CHATER is n w sending out strong
mts. of his unequalled co — eks, cor
. isi ‘new and choice seedlings of 1848 1849, which
1 “= ee gad ae ich Horticultural
rever shown
TO C. has also the entire ‘eae de of the late Mr,
C. Baron,
1 dereriptbe and priced list m:
e at Saffron Walden.
tisa gy SEBENDID N) Jey GERANIU UM.
e „and quite orna- ae Ba MARSHAL”
mental in itself. I: blooms most trusses of 1 is a Striking oad Noble Flower, with a remark-
dark scarlet flowers, thrown well — from the foliage; and ably fine habit, great freedom of and substance of
with all its g qualities, will certainly prove one of the most | petal, The trass is thrown well above the foliage, on
a ane — os “3 and wi etout. | ‘stout erect foot-stalks ; the colour of upper petals is a deep
E. The usual allowance e; an en th ` 1 2 :
plants are ordered, four pi given .
gS 3 GROWERS. admirable show variety, Its only faultis an occasions l umeven- |
ROGE S UTTOXETER HERO. a in the u 1 — — exhibited at the Seedling &
: _ | nium ibition at Upton —— une J wh
pone ge ROGERS, bey ay’ and FLORIST, has it was one of the that ived prizes, See — ‘of the’
great pleasure = 5 inet and first-class | genome and description of flower, in No. 19 of the “ Florist.”
22 assur „ luable l Te essrs. VEITCH and Son are re now prepared to send out strong
. the 2 twa — 4 ne ag on of nery — ae tors * i plants of usual
ardeners’ Journal, tural ae.
Cabinet. and Midland Florist. 6. considers y ‘the j Miscouss to she irea eon acter, Out. he
pd 1 FoR SALE.—Soine o of the finest IVY į grown in
fa . good, Feen eg ee ef at a very moderate rate, as the
or eines bree Wane, Carpent nten pagg — earit rot? his grounds, Apply to CHARLES
e and exquisitely — A 2
etl raised and
2 erage.’
Brot 7 Viite, sno pic pe The usual discount to
the trade es are ordered at once. The above may be
bicolor,
i meee d Wee e
la rosen. 3 of) 1
p.... eae ON REN ae
HEEL BARON ATES, al Sines and Eaa | pean
| shovellers, 3 and dun LEE — 0
y be had, on lica
aa mp. application, by |
mca is requested on very of Plants, Post office orders
domesticated and pinioned ;
oland, Surrey, 4 Borkin
—.— bee and pure — 2
moo e, Grac
COREE ; BUILDING AND Tamm
BY HOT WATER.
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF rue GHOICEST PLANTS,
VINES, FERNS, &e.
12
EE
ue N
Co., King Cina ia
H
will attest 9 0 ae
PE WEEKS anp
2
— ee which
os now in progress, ©
3
Sa OR UPRIGHT : BARONETERS, Il. 1s. to 61. 6s. houses, Conserv.
BAROM 5s.
05.
fe for the pocket, 1
‘showin g the degree o
9 te 156. and A. 100.
the qu ali ity of Milk, 5s. Drawing
iis. to 4}, 48 Magie ‘La
Dissoly ing View
PIS,
nterns, with 12 er from
out for the evening,
t warranted and
wisiiing for an acne,
„ m
— hae faker io to the Buard of A
m Garten, Lun don,
r H net approved 2
‘by writing to that J yd ‘
Admiralty, |
s Feal at
2
avery cellent stock
which ch will be ready the first week in O
selection of TWENTY, from the
Lip, Pluto,
pes —.— bella, Standard of Perfection
“ti CRUSADER and ARNOLD’S VIRGIN QUEEN,
y to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Union-road, Plymouth.
— Ca py
és now ready, and
OSEA W
on = ene
ANTS,
ERICA f
IRER be
CAN ano Pirate tes PLANTS, ee m may be had
25
; Hoo Ps 3 *
Paris ; Princess Royal, 7s
Cuthill's Black i Prince
ay il *
tT, Manor F — Oct.
Lisianthus,”
on 3 fe CUTHILL,
— , ne ee ee ae
aT SEASON.
LFRED BALSTON | to inform planters he has
still a large proporti his Stock to di 2 e
2 in consequence of. 4 — ige shed the trade, he
at Page ver ced prices. The Stock comprises every
MENTAL, FRUIT, and FOREST TREES.
sal be the bost t kinds 85 SHEUE ultiv
5 T to feet, 1 1775 c 3 4 0 6
b Portugal L 2 feet, 10s. per m,
1 to 2 feet, a . 3 to 4 feet, Gg.; $
maller ditto, 6s.
1
Bc il a ped aai 7 5 k
tandard epai of all the finest sorts, 12s, per
— 4 of r Oak in pots and trans-
m,
drs
4 2 moc
i į also Beech, Birch, Berberis,
f Priv veh he
ccc
to . err free. — Poole Nursery, Dors:
write Y’s ghee near
LEY ounce to Strawbe
—.— the Public pit 3 that he has now ready
strong ee È a of = above —
4l. per hun a and fe
tat ou viz., the British Quee
lavour—if ior, is equal with the above-named
though sgl
e Queen.
th 1
the Queen
* F
and very much resembling the Queen,
j which it is raised, E a oy oy Be th,
Heer i. pit the Winer much 4 than
*
e ie Sin Gera-
following list, | ford
PHOYLES en CRUSADER, ARNOLD'S VIRGIN for an h
» | Or ons
Brilliant, 0 Fg Victory.
he
. orders are desired, as some of the sorts are 3
p Hyacinths and other bulbs
w announce he has just
published a + ew and Complete Catalogue of his ANDRI- *
oth,
1.5 Kee Seedling, Bs. 6a.
7
s maie eee to
trong Ee
a
ponticum g
feet, * Fod 2.100. n Azaleas of all the fin — Phinds, i
„ 28. 6d.
ae must be maotinpasial by — — . amount. |
bling that of the Pine-apple.* | it ao
PEL T R GO NIU M Ms,
OTHER RAISEES’ FLOWERS.
Now ready for selection a d going ow Twelve of th
fol . Variation includi 2 es carriage to Lo
will 2 arvan dine ozohango for Font office Onder ron Bren
ey are well roote inch pots, and 7
Ep K, Worton
2 f Vanill
ide m e Extract of Vanilla. 1
we big ae er. £02,
» Ambergris .., 3 pints,
* ree
2
at least three month
1 perfamer’s s trade this fine odour
— known by name; the small demands for the
article induce the Parisian perfumers to i the
With Orange flowers and Rose,
eDsA.—But for the fine
as a weed. eet as it is in
gris and d prolific in odour, we are not able, however, to
e
10
l
i
8 8
Fé
eel!
ai
f
d
Her
ery
ignonette 8
£
7
rth the ? adition “of i “drach of ns" of
e storax. The fi
2 pints. api torre
a spoonful of magnesia and filter if 25 quite “eke.
s before u
0
odour tim
known . the élite
exportation it should be done at the lowest la
I observed for some su ive y
some amongs trees which after havi ed
om oro and passed the
very rance of ro
yellow, ia bý the m
d a d
following spring, and again eve
season, b
was repeated. The co
in different individuals,
very year
of them had perished, although some of them
what we call the 3 Bak an
d
a eee The plants removed to the fields in circum-
stances where they can no 3 receive the same
PO Bg ts to v r to a certain degree, but
taking yina oa of the — ious matter, of which
more or less 2 on the aer of ‘the —
continue to grow sf u e jyan
to extend below that, i 18 psi oa a
the amk pr 5 of P debility to: which they
is results the necessity of 228 the
and to be careful in
diffieult, and
ill be to him
found to ae n |
e system of organic |
13.
th Pipa 271 ee is a list of officers and
e
enced e
e years a considerable ae |
in their natural robus It is this morbid sta tate
in which the t annot ney the full powers of its
vegetating faculties duri ary perio
term lan
| this phenomenon i is very
of cultivation, Zhi ry adh 10 the soil more s Eai
The grea which
nveyed — plant Ff its roots, may someti
3 pos either rains or
medy.
ano! cause Fh languor, vee. e
originally the fault of “the cultivator. This happens
any rate pre-
e
med | BRITISH ASSOCIATION - FOR T THE ADVANCE-
h NT OF —
2 ‘ontinued Paana P. 6
tion D, NATURAL "Holes:
2
e in this 6 resident :
8 2
F. L. S.; R. A
: — (Rotterdam);
onald, 5 Prof. on ops
J. W. Gutch ; R. Ball, M. R. I. A eae as oe
It has appeared to o that t ibe "principal ea cause of Serves
lady i is the ore of nutriment, ful
vation of the a convi
The Smera in 3 is in a
s soon as the roots
er | penetrate into this, gi find n in a soil which
supplies but a ve anty on which becomes
more imperceptible as the drought increases in a sandy
soil. The winter rains and the overflowings of the
t in spring bring dori
tage of 5 water rising fro
tthe i e thing
modifications as y the diversity
ears they do not appear to have increased in
size beyond what * did i 2 first three. This
m badness of soi pens Bee be ascribed to
=e ara rietor. This is 5 praca
Possible, to p
i
1 00
ES
11
4
3
ul
3
=
simple
odour from the leaves by | absolute
It is not used, but is imitated.
~. DISEASES OF
| Sometimes th
point, which, from what I have N some places, cen
to the in the country as to
9 some anal quantity — of — 5
tinue to vegetate, althou do not grow sensibly.
e bad — Dor pian planted
F.LS. — Royle, F.R.S. The first comm
ne of | read i begs Bn
yF
y|in coal beds. ithe Spparaton used in these
constructed
being Pe e every year, | P
caused b
ion.
soil is er looked to before | 4
m
88 8 ‘whilst the 5 being in gravel, which i is 5 per
absolutely ad to their the | Dr.
ere
at present 8 the action of “that gas on ant more more
cular]:
p
uantity — eet
during the than exists at
Auen did not think the theory of =.
carbonic acid in in the atmosphere during the
and has had no ati
„1 Hard Hoope.
630 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 0
A i CT. 6, |
period. It was not | take advance of them. Has + a been | information. as to the method of =< a
Sian N of certainty tht 1 * de mass ea that — Hed the pira ess of — which m its be aze di ‘Fee ang ihe rody
— n ti ally consis kern He ha ti- not ject of mere luxury, but has cradle ede to used for the repairing of tea chests, Pr, et those,
vated Ferns extensively, a and wund that they Were apply it to all the ordinary purposes of gardetiing, Wi | year and age to cu the 1 wat
gréatly influenced e kind of soil in which they | we have had onl Cueu lig rly | splitting, &e. F. FER: bm *
were A 1 — heen supposed that the tempera- | C cate being an essential in English gardening, and| The Grape Mildew.—Havin rd of the di á
Ye of teed rópið thé d uring | nearly the only one i get into the ine- | which Grapes Have been so much affected of vith
the period of the — deposit ara at présent, but he did —+ gardens, — then come bark beds, 1 pits have been using sweet oil remedy, and in late, Į
not as the As à confirmation e. A * r 400/. a year garden esta- house in which I have an abundance of ee
of this view he might state * the Ferns of the coal bisher How t that we cannot produe as cheap urgh), I find it to most effectis
ds we er seen in a etification, he as the Duieh, now the glass in this country is e eap, er them every day and saturate the à
d found, in the cultivation of Ferns, that those which | a ind timber is cheap, with labour at least as cheap as large camel’s-hair brush, dipped in the äi Pml
ordinarily bore spores in w mates would not doso| Holland? You must feel mortified at the little success satisfied hat it isan effectual cure for the dics quite
when éxposed to a lower temperature. e believed the | your exhortations have Ar with regard to the use | every bunch in our house was pi 101 æ
chief growth of Ferns in the coal period arose from the eap glass as soon as the duty was taken off. I they are looking most healthy, and are wo"
pro lu of sucker ANKESTER stated that always thought that your act us were praiseworthy beautifully. I have always used the oil when 1 iw as
Broogniart’s theory accounted for ore than the v eta- gre ; try again. As regards Apricot cul- unhealthy ap éaranéé on the Vin , and Î have any
tion of the co: riod. It accounted for the deposition | ture (the least satisfactory fruit tree we ), I have had any ill consequence arising f bit a de
of the peroxide of iron in the old andstone, and the heard that Lor ill has the lat chere’s | contrary I have alwaysa most lovely erop of fing Gia
deposition of onaté of lime in — tain lime- Dutch gardener, and that he yearly forces fine crops of Mary Andrews, Leyton, September Grapes,
Stone, both of which must have eld in solution by | Apricots in small frames, and i any spect I a Poiatoe. ept in a l and dy 4
carbonie aci rder to account Tor the great increase | continues the Dute mode of culture of W + house during 184 1849, and they were turned
of vegetables and anim e su — of th ,| ticularly as regards salading. Is this Can any of | over frequently, so as to prevent their either heating *
e mist have — supplies of mineral carbonic | your correspondent us any Aeboü bt af this ? Why rowing, and covered with just sufficient to keep the
id. 3 Daubeny had shown, this was abundantly does not th . e Society send Mr. Thompson | frost from 1 em. I reco ced Planting in Peru
supplied from wiese * ces. periods when | this autumn to Hol s they did last year to France! 1849, i stiff soil, previously prepared by deep
volednie action was greatest, this gas would be in larger | I think he would ieee more than aris, urge | digging, "td attest W ith a compost of rotten farm
quantities in th ae e én there was no proof at | your readers to ma xperiment protected dung, road dirt, a es. The rows were 20 inches
all that its presence in t bore a fixed relation | trellis with different fruits, especially Apricots ; but I| apart. The ground was kept well hoed, atid the Pota-
throughout all time to the oxy aiid nitrogen there nk the main point will be btaining some slight toes were earthed as soon as they were ready, ig
With re to Dr. Daubeny’s experiments, it would be | bottom-heat on some plan similar to what Mr. Fleming | order to protect them from the weather. The
interesting to know the relation between the growth of | has so well e néd i ur ns. One advantage | cultivated were Early Purples, Oxford Kidneys,
plants and the soil in which they were planted when | of the trellis is that not having the tree nailed on a Manleys. I had my crop housed about the fist .
in earbonie acid. It appeared to him that south wall the blossoms do not appear quite so quick as in September, and there was not one bad one;
il, as a physical agent, capable of absorbing | those brought into premature bloom by the heat of the the whole lot—20 sacks. A 1 day or two ago 1 ak ie
earbonic acid and gase more to do with the | wall in the early spring, and thus the roots and the | all sorted over, not a faulty one was discovered, Ire
nourishment of plants than had been hitherto supposed. | bloom are in harmony. are say moveable | commend the following rules to be observed; Is
Pro E Epwa : t with regard | houses like those mentioned by Mr. Bailey will be better | Never put ici 15 or eating Potatoes in À
to the theory which 1 e deposition of moun- n the fixed trellis, and be made applicable to m smothered with s o heat. Never
tain lim abi by the —9 held in solution by carbonic | varied purposes ; but recollect that even the fixed trellis | sets to grow before Planting ye etideavour to fitish
acid, that it was oppo fact that zoophytes | is very useful as * for half-hardy plants wanting | by the end of Febru use
generally died very rapidly Í water t ith caf- | protection from rain, &e., such as the potted Straw- | from the stable or 2458 der ralber look to the well.
boni —Several instances were related by various | berries, Hydrangeas, aa dne, & c. Dodman. rned heaps. 4th. Have all the ground in which yo
members of the Power plants — o of purifyi otatoes in decayed Tan free from Disease. —Having | place the tubers well turned, to catch the frost
water so as to w marine and fresh-water animals to plenty of old tan in which s were gr last receive the full benefit of the 1 Where
live in it, 7 pitied 22 would rie ily died. autumn, I determined to use it in planting my Potatoes, | Potatoes are pa nted early in the year, they must be
soe fora property of purifying sea Shaws an d Regents. InN r t 5 h — deeper than usual, compared with the old custom of
te Was po the nieht fettiaikable degree b wet loam—thrown up in ridges — feet April and Tam jnelined to believe that tio kinds
— sea-weeds, The olive-coloured and red sea-weeds | apart, in ben that they night Fe Pidie the benefit of | of Potatoes should be set cn ie s The erop from
were not so effectual. t er. In February I had the sides of the Hayes which I saved my seed was much much 30
slightly chopped down, and a quantity of tan laid | that 15 lost one-third of the * in 1848. Falon,
VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING, __ | bet em commenced planting the last week i ants: Grubs i
Arter the operation of propagating for the following | the month, each set being planted whole, about priek the plants out in beds dredged with slacked
flowe den decoration is over, prepare the | 16 inches apart, rolled up in à lump of rotten manure, | In so s if any plants are attacked, the de-
plants to withstand 5 winter by exp vat 17 de d with on a quart of old tan; a slight | predators W ought for lestroyed, whereas if
sun a dually withholding water, with a sprinkling of mould r io aN tops of 5 finally planted from the seed bed on a large space, ing
ripen and harden the stems and foliage ; for “fleshy rid ges, 8 from their firs t appearance above ground | tender state, they are subjected to hosts of destroyers,
2 28 plants, wher pge artificial heat ¢an be up to the present time they 1 5 tot had the slightest By the period the plants are large, and have nice *
supplied d * damp Sebi are e of disease. They were the admiration of 7 roots, the o grua ason is over, and the lants are aiik
very liable to die. Young shocks largely charged with | who saw them while growing, and also since they have | safely re prevent grubs, a pert 4
watery matter are hardly capable of resisting frost or | been — ae ne re * ant e 2 ve z large puts atochtiigs on the plants wy winding i ba
mp. An excellent contrivance for ripening off plants | an 5 were or needleful of worsted round their legs *
f this pi p vibe eilg re. dily Ge in any odd though ‘i 1050 been was a Neary 60 Frode were them; Ls ie ttied this plan with sucess. *
corner of the g t might consist of a few comm wn on the plan just allude . C. Benneit, gr. to P. Son,
ds set upon bricks or empty pots, one rising above Novel li, Esq. Pi $> d-house, Dishwieh, Oc 4:
the other in the form of a stage, and pl in full sun-| Gaulthe iy ae —I am surprised that few if an ocieties.
light. In such a place, garden stuff well-rooted might of our great game preservers have planted this ver ry} HonricurxunzL, Oct. 2.—J. R. Gowen,
be dried off for winter quarters very successfully : this beautifu ol evergreen to the extent that its excellence in tary, in the chair. M. Jean Pierre Peseato
temporary stage should also have so mpor: affording both food and shelter for pheasants deserves. | St. Georges, Paris, was elected a Fellow. 1
covering, ra a protection from wet than frost. In my 8 garden 1 o game, except a stray sion a large nu of interesting subjects was
Should any ion be entertained of severe | partri and then, o be seen, its fruit forms | together. . Lawrence's garden at
weather, a susp nd ends the food o of Ri bi 25 vind mice from this period till ee came a nice ce specimen of Aphelandra il
would p: the * 55 from frost. tehed late in winter. the grontid i is covered with snow, | some six or = — s of bloom on it ; . o New
urdle also forms g protection. A few large 5 their “ prickings” phut: ing towards various en u ce puberula, the ever-b! 3
could be employed with facility, or a 1 old | el „show i at vourite it is 8 them. Holland ion C beer yer a :
oil-cloth ; but 3 the readiest and cheapes e g Not only is the pans one of the most beautiful of our | of Cr with pretty pit ö
would be a few yards of patent felt. The la latter would | evergreens, but its flowers, whether foreed or or gathered various “Orchids, |
require little trouble or ingenuity in application ; | from the open 2205 orm one of the prettiest bou- ei
for a few tile-laths would be sufficient for its sup quets ; whilst at this season the i érable strops of
A tem se of à would be found ex- | ripe fruit give the plant a purple hue. Its produce is
tremely useful for plants that dislike wet. Auri enormous, for on taking the average of the weight it
and Phe 1 575 e pri and gente of | bears in my ithout any attention, I find the
amateur gardeners, might be wintered in such quarters ; | lated crop would weigh at least sonal r acre,
for, like most damp ei ved plants, these are much In spite of its various merits, the plant appears to b
. 8 9 eir . traceable more either 8 or neg r for on noticing a large
Square of the plan e nurse Finne
i R” 1 wintering | dea, ing 2 y Aega aid Co., of Gee, I asked if they sold much of ie
litt Tr Cae ing t well | Th reply It is never asked for, and we shall be
9 5 — : yo yee off, mer this i is pte ay ty in with- | glad to sell it very Ten or twenty acres of it
she — hees gece ore ng i them to the 1 5 Wege of as rgro th l wood, l òuld conce the
15 Should ies e gro wih is inimical to t ir well- | pheasants of a district, and it spreads so ws
— * aad Tr, kene AA wnish tinge, 2 aeons so t that in a few years the be would become a
they teas 1 uring 5 . maturati n, | dense mass of evergreen. An Old ci
y lose a portion of their it will do n Soil 9 1 5 S yn piled peat a m -4
harm, šo long as the stems are sound and the roots | terial to grow Dahlia L ask, because this Something in
healthy. It must not, , be supposed that they after I 1 planted 50 the le of ar stock, 4 filled * wich r rich purple flowers barden
Sou. ilowed to for want of moisture, that p my usua ich I keep fo s0
a kind of workho n sao dt * e © ta . 81 which I take T del of Sead nk with), I ), I planted
2 ‘Gon k n-
— shake and
oad leav
= — A orl pares called 9 lh
Pa
i)
8 8
1
Z
ilo
nusta, a gaa oi N colour ; the
ha; Mr. Fortu
i those of the Japan Anemone,
Panis Horticutturat Show. The revolution of last
H
THE GARDENERS’
a lean-to greenhouse, without the | and third-ra
; f Meri
re B
- | Angevine, Royale "d'Angleterre,
a frame, | Dah
id A u {Introducti on — the stu
ddiges? weber ; THE
broa
specimens “of Souven
— atetla, Jacques Lafit
Ami, Géa
e Seine
* Dah
me
the Grapes, which were not even ripe.
Jami were splendi
Angleterre, Doyenné d'hiver,
motte Crassane, 1 Colmar d’Arem-
Lecle D
Colville blanc, and Ca nada Pi
mens of eg ssful cultur
M. Marest, ay Jamin, for Rete
Soutif, ers ereau, oy, and Vinee or
i amin and Durant, e PO 3
ne, . to cqu ue
pas Guenot for seedling Dahlias ; and M. Marest
ling Rose.
itw.
b
. By ge les Woodwar
Svo
ard, F.R.S. London :
sen iene a familiar 8 of
the ‘phenomenon of polarised light, and — a vantages |
3
other — sub
Those who have
by mean —
a polaina apparatus ‘ies — to
‘a do not understand its use, will
find i in the little book now — cessary
—.— them re only to employ the apparatus in
eae croscopical researches, but also to understand
the peren on which it its use depends.
Curtiss Beauties of the Rose. Part I. Ato.
roombri
Tux author of this — periodical i is Mr. Henry |
aoe of the nurse oorend, near Bristol.
p
ted, but
present at the show wandered about
Persons who
8 more like spectres than gay Parisians,
to such
in the world ; —.— ugh order is restored, con-
does not re seem to be agreed that
— cannot A be 2 v duration, but what may
due next is mere matter of
Tp
p:
a, E
wer
i
25
T
E
&
H
of fine circular form, |t
petals, high centre, and distinet
superior to A I have ever seen
of the Roses were good, but tiga gene-
1
Zz
a
ESSR
a
pi
j
H
$ api
Aes
Rg È
8.5
fas
1
1
RE
ed
Bourbon, — ok the
and Géant des Batailles,
r 3 id
e
of any known
AI orm, such as most | w
eaten would N found but
in Ade ed it necessar
culars
I
execu
peered por ill serve to guide amen’ in their
selections, as far as i new eee —
any quality, where florists’ flowers are concerne
Miscellaneo
Note respecting the mee . ‘Alban’s” Grape.
—A n peep s, rga or gd to iety by pæd
edling raised by him, and named J
ling’ s St. ‘Alban’ s, was onblished in vol. i., p. 296, of this
Journal, The bunches sent 178 not the usual character
rape; and, u
how it was raised, it was
uality excellent in two
git, I
to when and
distinct. Having found its
seasons in which I had an opportuni we of tastin
The matter, howe
doubt j and if I could not — ay Aer it up. 1
obtain and state all the we
.
under
Safi circumstances and by what “mode 10 of culture the
CHRONICLE.
af wm Th medium size, double, and tolerably good | ascribed
e
r seasons, more penay
of the d
peci-
had — 8 b
M.
the
dy of Po 2
wa
ng
as | during the day, s mo 8 1 clean, o or the
Vine under Mr Josling’s care
from a liability
to which is .
631
to the Chasselas ast The ig is Lg tens
in the ge of A. M. Tim 83 i
near St.
ing’s
P, and 0
outside. The
house is 80 feet in length, but is divided i in the middle,
the widt
es, the arrangeme
which is not the best that might "have been ad
he house, — — along
e upper surface ‘of the
test her
side of the middle partition, —4 in a similarly ee
manner heats the other apartment. It will b
n the notice of it in a he en — it
which was r —
een. i
4 Josling’ s St.
ué
had cut par the crop; som
unches, with berries free * 828 — tr
and the quality = exce nehes,
had wes a ¥ ry long 8 as —
great in 1846, probably in conse-
hausted of that
cannot be disputed;
whether it is more visa
ve, some gen-
the expense of building a house, or
large pit, expressly for the purpose of i
kind of Grapes, should other means fai
moisture, either at root or in the atmosphere, and
2 Aia a
own the red spider is ‘not so necessary. R
| Thompson, i in the Journal of the Horticultural "Society.
ee: of r of Operations.
( For the
FORCING ————
of daylight is now 80
e different
ean
coveri
—Take great
eare of an Sore la Pines Shaye are now coat
or flowering. as they will be 3 in bedi i
2 bottom and 4 hea aed and
1 attentio
will soon be as
a pid to D S Let t
admitted
| the
have ail the light — opena while they + in
h t liberali
flower,
THE
GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE.
to surface the beds with dry sand, to keep
If any Gra
base
ed. Cold pet
t from oun prune back to the most |
an
ttin
promising eye aa the
GARDE
Very little can g gree
ence to this de
to 1 Calenda rs in wal |
nearly as large as they will be, and taking ating up is
about the best ns ethod of preventing them from bei
spoiled and destroyed by wo The smallest of the
3 not planted in Wii lights should be planted
ra
to xub seeds out, rope Onion t ba 1 for
Cardoons ; and ‘let the 28 U men help forward
with the work i in the other departmen
ble spring, from their greate
amount of bloom than young lees go generally 2 Weather near London, for the 1849,
ing, it is not the fortune of more th a tenth observed at the Horticultural See
them to live, owing 1 ss manner in which they 3 NMoon's Baromzrzr. || Tuenmomsren. .
4 Ase. —-—
are taken up and after ly survive, M Min-. M. Min. nean
such as are less roughly, and find themselves Friday.. 23} 11 || 29.825 | 29.730 || 63 | 51 | 595 || s.w. || .07
placed, more by accident than skill, in favo r E GS FOES |) BW, 45
tan This proves that by taking a little more | Monday’ ] 14 || 29.598 29. || 57 | 45 | 51.0 || NE. || 02
ins, and exercising more judicious management, any ft.: f, , 20 || 33 | 33 as] NE | i
quantity might be oa nie The plants should be | Thurs... 4| 17 29. 479 | 29.027 || 58 ] 33_| 43.0 |] W. 07
taken up with their roots as perfect as popes: an Average 20.577 | 29.394 || cos | 45.3 | 52.9 2.12
with as much soil as will 1 to them. takin Son ears: very fina overenst's vali
get all plants ae with a ball that will admit of it. ng he — 29—Overeaat Lanes ; rain at night.
— ain throu
soil in which th potted should be light and sandy, Oct biene oe ge i R fine: overcast:
d of such a wn as is likely to encourage the root a I to: . cloudy; partially overeast, and cold at night,
without stimulating the tops. Unless very large bushes — UAean ken rain: showery ; rain at night,
are wanted for next year, let the sides of the plants b PCC
pruned i at the pots may stand elose together. stat : during for the
All flowers sh removed ; but, with the exceptio se cin: week, ending 665 13, 1949.
of side pruning, every healthy leaf should be eserved et. lee. | ce t Prevailing Winds,
un e plants are established in the new soil, after] oe, | 222| 222! 22 a —
i 1 H es | 2 a which | i en 2
which they may be cut d to any convenient height. ŽAS | 588 | AS | Rained | of Rain. di
If the soil is moist at the time of potting, Geraniums,
Crassulas, bryanthemum other succulente ama a tee e E a $|-
should have no water till they have commence sj Tues 10 600 | 43 23 1 0.52 4} 1
it se il the ha f this agent ` undreds o 5 s Thurs, n . n aa +s
riday 32| €04 | 43.0 | 51.7 1,00
i 8 ter 5 the p 3 should be paoa = aon sans Lee is 7
sina mo 1 ‘a 8 a Lets stagnant e
sphere.
FLORISTS’ her hit vie
be a better ti
ce of air, bu
plants are more har and the ey are
extremely impatient of being kept oan = smothered
up in frames ; and, if cl when the foliage
canker and b)
eparatory to planting. We
ours in atin ridges, which — be levelled
Nit Y FRUIT GARDEN.
Let the different varieties of
cE
d
be kept perfectly sweet by allowing a free current of air
to enter Peh and
within the roo ma
injure the keeping qualities of the fruit. In pag te
: in the drawers, all he! or ones
Ha Fejed aid ep for immediate es if this be not
‘attended to, such fruit will soon beji n be Sey, — h
not immediately detected will be liable
‘the pe to their neighbours. The ab deen 0
> oN a
1 e -aaa or
windows ; when it is euficiently n
r fi hous 1 ich
a small hot water Pipe |
be carried ro
be | | e end of 1 If any new —
are wanted th advisable to order
them i Spee may be amongst the earliest
KITCHEN GARDEN.
sais end avan a e weeds flourish }
883 every should be
„ and
and „and variations of the temperature
should be carefully avoided ; it should be perean with | FILBERTS : In
+ i t
The highest temperature during the above period — on on the
1834—therm. 74 deg.; and the lowest on the 13th, 1838—therm, 28 deg.
3
=
Notices to Correspond den
ANALYSIS ori Sons C A. Apply to the — — 4 ‘Chemistry, in
Oxford-st
BEES: Troed. Tu strong oaran are plundering the weak
ones, therefore close the door of the whole of 525 liven
in the evening, but keep bus tittle hale open for air, a few
ill r. B.
Boo Z. Donn’s ‘ Hi ortu Ca ntabrigiensis,” published in
1845; or Paxton's “Botanical ny g "wit th Supplem ment,
just published. LBS. Mo “ch 's work on F d
ood. Newman’s " much h r, better printed, and de: a
For Misiones y = mu K. 5 oorr e. = eogi
Your booksellers will give 7 prices. H. School eim ps
will suit you perfectly. F M. Loudon’s “ a Gar-
dener,” the ‘* Manse Garden,” or M‘Intosh’s Practical Gar-
=
Goan ore oe Edinensis says we might gratify some of om aeo,
who are admirers of Coniferæ, by e them kn
in a continental trip, say in France, Belgium, or ——
ar — ns of Coniferæ may be found in Pinetums or nur-
Covent FOR VINE BORDERS: John Patterson. The best and
cheapest covering for a Vine bo eer is eet consisting of
one part lime and eight of unscreened gravel, mixed with
sufficient water to give it the consistency of stift mortar, A
portion of ¢ charcoal dust, or coal fete s, ma
; this will
ead of | lime, with 6 or 7
cover your border (56 square yards), e expense of
mixing and laying it on will not exceed 1d. per square e
Tou will be best able to tell what the gravel and lime will
f you think it necessary to — it
at any time, the old — 4 — shou Id be preserved, as they
may be worked u h lime. tarpauling
is more easily appli — or removed, but it will not last more
t e—2s,
e, it might
Wheat straw, provide: e an 4 f
pearance is not peste gene see border of the s
— — would require about 1 of straw, and will —
n labour about hy
Disrases : tF dt. ape Rose leaves are blotched in consequence
of the attack of some fungus—probably an Erysiphe. Do not
yon ta the aeg threads? Burn the infested leaves
w, and when the fungus again first appears, attack it with
flowers of sulphur,
Drains: JH. Roots usually afford no a than ne
2 ce of the plants to which they belon,
have —
of a pea. w ihis will ee All 2 5 fo size
will perish wich — Dec Snead of the size just
menti still less etain their vege-
ation and ripen next peel a ies ok protect them from frost,
and for this purpose 3 Ms fmt best material.
. Thes d be kept with a 178 stem,
may all be
ofa pea
m suckers, and sparred Te Currant trees.
| FrRuIT TREES: Peach, Pear, and Cherry wens
nted 20 feet apart poner a walls. ||
GARDENERS’ ADVERTISEMENTS: An Advertising Gardener’s
plaints are just enough ; but we know that Pen. 2 cannot be
removed by our interference. We cann pel people to
act wisely = well; on the contrary, interference only makes
t he wages they de-
I * ertisements to be
rs will not state,
ope their
hem worse, If f gardene
mand, 7 have no right i toh
su ae
Gra . Patent nig plate will suit you perfectly.¢
Oii Aera Q. Whyh ‚e 2 pips it to —_ res 7
Get rid of it * sulphur 32 ont of
‘goede’ Kee eep them —
e harm
and dry well thes — in which th ch they g ge
GREENHOUSE : The f your lean-to green-
house, having a monies es 6 — should 1 12 feet high.?
Insects: JS. 5 know no more effec! ode of destroying
than by placing hand- asins o a ra mem at night-
fall, with some crumbs of bread in ses at
the side, to enable the insects to pnk n, t — polished sur-
face of the inside preventing their esc will be N
rapped by soares a ——1 must be — te e
a W.—JG. You had beter employ children immediately to
catch the dad The surface of the Grass
54
[Ocr. 6,
be swept with an angler’s bag-net at the end of
the oo being formed of lawn sich must
onally, w
D-
Mg to
—M G. The i
Haltica .
onsid
e
flea-beetle, er
Y. Th
lon ag ps at species of the ante “beast
rane), 2 are reared in deca:
1
sects: ( Podu
i
Myr — domestica, waich h
infiabitants of the
publish a paper, wi ith a figure and
series 1 entomological articles, W,
MULCHIN e know that loose
te in 5. climate. They not
ration, ut ten ondense moi enever
than th nos te ye they
or 3 N once in every 2 *
happen on your estate in the West In
8 is much less Be ag am between the
night. In o nswer your
satisfactorily, $ sme 2 ch ing ents require to be question
lim flints are probably useful rather tha À
The 6 is partly N of flint. otherwise,
UHH
: 1i
i
$
5
a A
2
FH
iH
0
êi
—
a
NAMEs OF Fruits: ur Grape decidedly i
PURI wba og you have, E 0 Mot the
—W T. Appe s to be the Worm msley Pippin, | —
NAMES oF PLA ži : MB. Itis impossible to name F
from such an imperfect specimen ; all we can 8
is anormal leaf of some co n free-veined Fem. I —
nothing to do with Lonchitis, a genus is Avie
by anastomosing ve m your plant is of age to
duce perfect fronds then send a specimen. S.—M B. ——
dilatata. S. Mathe It is Heracleum sibi also called
— ee 8 5 nip, It m ad of some of ths
F
may
dsmen, never recommend dealers,—( Rag,
Stanhope 3 some . of Wardii, pon
8. raveolens. 0 Sta 0 f
k variety ; the colour is e th: |
da
Alihæa. Gomphocarpus fruticosus, —J F C.
Datura! We see „nothing to distinguish the
from F mula, -J R M. The leaf seems
to belong to some Solanum, an immense genus, the
of ende pot only be de 2 ame by the
in flower.—3, fil. You
perfect specimens
quote anather authority so bad as that of Mr. bdo
3 Ipomeea tuberculata ; a well-known species. — Erze
t, OF chis latifolia.— T E B, Eucalyptus pulverulenta,
Physalis’ 2 and Castor ba plant,
P Ei ta : W D. No; the over luxu
oniums was no doubt the cause of thei
Atriplex hortensis ; 5 itchen garden grown |
instead ot Spinach. —P R FV. Nicandra mee! ervey
;
sary. It was probably that which did the mischief; me
would advise you to be more sparing o it tnext year, Tobacco
smoke erates | destroys green fiy, and s ur will KI i
8 ae —. appe ed pe enough—that is e a
ENS: ou mistake
anatase, 8 mth strictly confined to tager? preted
about which there is no di
TuE Cuerstow SHOW: We 1 received from
Saul another letter on this 3 but we must
further consideration of it.
been exp.
in aa hy 8 ö
9 : in 5 eters have no idea where the Garten à
not at all near London.— 1 i
bably
of 110 of the Valley will go out to New Zealand very well if
gathered N arida in the Pict in a dry sie i
berry, pla ants —
trees in mid-w
paini FLOWERS. i
Danuta: W and AB ange scarlet : size, 282
good; petals broad — well formed, but a . —
eye a little sunk and crowded; a good showy flower
great depth of petals.*
Fucustas: J Veitch and Son. Duplex: tube short, right re
corolla dark violet and double ; good mages 2
and singular on account of its double corolla, Unique
short and thick, 4 5 waas ani large, Pape
violet purple, wel hapa „and ample; a very j
sized flower, goodi in texture and colours. 8 r
rather short, Enar bright red, lobes very cabins:
corolla well shap ple, a and of a deep striata:
pe
its carnation-strip:
middling in
respects. Multifida: wia thort Er. e
mone and pointed, and w
Bo Lon D — hem er rather “iong, nape
ou e — meariy tnise
i
5 the Tank System to Pineries, ‘Houses,
— Soe regal drt „„
— N aa
Be now o niich the.cost fs reduced.: T ors, which |
Rmo iae not get tient e e wl
may be seen ne as reference a AT
E eS ee hen Le, ETSE T CATAE, E EN
40—1849.]
THE AGRICULTURAL SALETTE
633
WEST OF ENGLAND AND
Establish a 2 — — 3
Lament. is Company Bias to
for Aara nes dg > —— Irrigation, or r Improve:
Qwners of Settled Estates in
DRAIN, INCLOSE, Bens — or 3 their i, and |
Ruge the Inheritance -wi the permanent *
ay, S
ONDON MANURE ‘COMPANY beg to offer
as under, and pledge themselves that ure sent
them shall be free from the atat 9
0
hosphate
te of Lime, Gypsum Nitrat f Soda, Bone Saw.
— 2 n race F “| RURBIDGE anp HEALY ’S NEW BUILER.—The |!
ARD Purser, Secre a Blac A a Sopr Te 1 — er (before *
z = elled express : e Conservato 8
AUTUMN S WING. —POTTER’S GUANO. eng where eis now at large From — — a
R. POTTER particularly recommends n 5. . have been able to make, they are warranted in
for using his Guano, as, if now — os sy 8 h, stating it to pe FP “Ne plus ultra” for 5 — large plant
itis better 1 when the spring return the | structures, a proof, one charge of 8 * been kept
growing crops the food they require in a fit pasts rk 1 | burning for 40 “hours with out miy addition, one boiler of
assimilation. Thei — — od ge knowledge, as applied al to w 1500 feet of e “ine h pipe. They
90 ture, — 5 nabled to make some important | are also extensive ely pu put tup at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew,
ents in th —— of his Guano, which he — Smaller boilers upon 24 same plan.
most confidently 2 to the use of all who wish to grow
ex
neipled persons, once acting
DETS METALLIC , 2 me
55, Lionel-stree r, Mr. THOMA
CLARK; ; M
Lies eful thanks to the Nobility an
ge ot — oon Establishment
wat — „ d begs to state that the
isin J of ag duty — Glass enables him to to offer ‘his METALLIC
an | discussion in your colum
condemn, without trial, r implement merely because | estate on the shore of Lough Derg, where two or three
w and strange to them. Give it a trial, and | years ago, it was stated, wo a one could hire another
ght, | cleaned with a brus n. 80 tended to.
n to have him regularly and propeti a
t e barrows full of good 1
A been and still am very particular
go | noting down all the cost d ;
whatever the truth on this point may be, I have m
doubt that the letter of “A. B. C” about it, write,
ost imagine, in fear for rp
5 for the spirit of his com .
e of probable benefit to our “dam if not com |
emned by some 7 testimony, as I believe the abore
to be, of the general pig
bor
Bor. feeding. I am "perfectly satisfied that
feeding is a very admirable plan for bringing forvard
x
you g e
sapere J followed by farmers. To test the value of
w
—
2
a
5
y
3
Qu
E
3 5
=]
a
H
sE
a
. EA An T A O
e en | the method, I had bought for me ata bouring fair,
erary) where half the | b a fri end of
I gave the |
mine, a yearling, for wile
sum the . 6s. For the first month the mi a |
Gra s from a small 111 cut 1 ~
— effluvia; he was
4
08
=
2
oO
j
7
i 8 be :
> 5
te 15 712271
E
tee
a oa a T eee enii 14
aned ou a eng 1 16 1 4
The valiant manner
very b 3 ve not at that time | good eut Pere ane on Oet 1st, and T do not despair
e ously the
of one on the Is
itho
7
>
on this subject,
without weed. Can you match my farming by an
similar example within your . — : Another :
says, I saw
the same kind in in Lombardy, viz., the fourth erop of
Great Southern and Wester Lief Ratina as you . f. Lucerne ont in July ; e the bugbear of the |
1849.
into a blessing.
* 1 of “ turning all weathers to
illed in 8 anshi
pening
Belame eT T a though sk
an
Dr THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Saming evil into a blessing, „ They have much to learn varieties of Wheat demanded much of the farmer's and folded at night upon the poorest jand, preparatory fo
| 1
n many
meie introduced into the bp are pe ote About 40 a year
| Wheat, The fattin;
flock have
| crops, en wet the flock are not
e * | 8 over the y yah
teamed Potatoes, boiled Rye,
. ee
a
season, may n unacceptable
peer to have my thority on on ti om of a
harvest, I give it in tw 2 1
: “ Toulouse, 1, 20th, e and 22d Jul
Gar e found
emposed ther side * d
aide.” * J e 29th July. cg
ve found the hary ted i
ree lege.“ The
e informed, ‘slaps, that the
a late one in England ia 1
Farmers’ Clubs.
Norta CoxxwaLI. e Crun: Culture of
Mr. ones said, the first care was the pes-
paration, and here he oct t
ed, in
ann — on 8 entalled on the 5 by
so much eedin
lnd to 4 re; i ix years ren-
itn o make and burn pea 2 3
ably d the value of their onan oe ring i ran
t their skill and capital would allow, and |
; l be the best
belief that this object w
by a constant succession
tw
nd
d | that the vigour of the ne 5 was y mii:
823. R. T., near
fo
the stack-yard, per the
|
Whos
and will for some time rie ye the chief occupation, dem
| msd on heavy soils.
he
t;s the colour
few
clined ger in fester mt —
white e of imported from Spain, called the Talavera
ield very largely,
ually de- 55s. per ton.
Bey. Then came a
and Barley. otatoes
are o selling for from 8d, to 10d. per bushel of 60 lbs., in this
uch less dis sease Be sve
n, and the yield of flour, from
ts thin oi ata, fine in Batts. It was considered superior
te 50
to be
id, 1 me 2 if sown aan it _—
be ripe in Augus be just the sort to sow
erami bolera: had failed, ee grain was sown = *
few years befo
2 , and * — sls nued. During this
me the prin aut ee ere the old red, and a
— ak white W Wheat; ‘then came the red straw
Whe * eee * ared to a auswer we almost all
soils ; ite Whea
Devon bul
smallest compass. Lately there had been several
The only one he was acquainte
ratin
te change of soil, Before Wheat 2 ye its root
n the spring, a: principal ram is
progres s of the worm, —
tion sie — with a Jl the 5 — — an —
rolling with a very heavy ees or clod crusher were
o save the crop ; and the greater
next approached that
a
= afte 2 aja sega
shoul i
Pro 8 nad blest 2 with vate es
abundant crop, and their care should
well. The first st
erable loss both in the field and in
grain did not produce so white
our as when cut in proper season. Cornwall Gazette,
5
Tah Sery the — of Pipes, or Tiles, and the
rof Ro 2 hen i in Agricultural Drain-
pit ‘By ward Pon
e Brom inches a: of cartridge p 2 strengthen
calico patch, containing useful information St
doubs—bat which any e could calculate in half
hour ; an red to purchasers for at least 12 U times
the real cost of ihe all
Calendar of Operations.
BEDFORDSHIRE Far ow 82
most attention on all arable farm
has bee
The daem aan slugs are
—— after so mo an ate pea asm 3
a ed agai A slacked lime spread upon
"e plougbing. is in
Tor
eneral a safe oom? tative against then
wed
an a g
conga ina 8 to plough the
soils, he co
pl
Mr.
e last agricultural
= 1 prize was awarded for it. It is a shift-
b with a skim coulter. These eae a — waa
he — co in hilly 8 turn
unde: the furrow. ‘The usual
oth Sto w as it would
a
h
nsidered |
actice of sowing lime kas igh, atter the vermin
Two 8 or
ap Ar am aya
Dr. Newington’s
3
85
$
ultur: ri employed
men at present, — as labour well directed fs reproductive, it
hoped t ose who are — e Sis willing to
give all the employment in their power, R. V.
Notices to > Correspondents,
Sub. See“ Gas-t
uc
ood
blood. Ordinary farm manure contai
early 4 per cent. of nitrogen, liquid blood contains 3 per cen
of nitrogen,
BonE-pust IN Cos : Novice. Nothing can be better. Add
about 12 bushels to "the eg of earth and lime which you
intend 2 cap on an a
Buck wHEA ransom It ie worth less than wre dig
We — Bot know at the price of it may be * per
you may buy it 1 of any corn
per sane We do not happen to — how
at presen
Cnark R N. chalky stratum will be excellen
dressing for the pee top soil, ema it 2 all the —
above it are of diluvial origin, ed from oe
uarters according to the direction of thet *
brought them
Con Cuina Four : J K. Mr. Nolan, of Dublin, can, no doubt,
supply you, We know nothing of prices. See our advertising
columns,
Cows : H T. They are Settar — re, turned out into an adjo
ing yard for an — ae 9 bay and straw,
Lins us eed, and grai food, We. have a.
tity. Of 3 we would not give more aay 13 lb. “ally
to a cow, ane that should be potted toa mucilage, and thrown
over the e
Gas Tak, on PRE FLOOR : 4 says, a these. sifte
such as is used for topping walks, and al-gas tar ; leved
the ground perfectly; mix — nd — * quarts of the
latter to each 4 of me former, till sae A gig cleo pare xd
is saturated hin his is best don
stone floor; sp * wr, about one ish t ick; rol i hard
with a hea avy — ‘fener, When dry,
inches ge according to the purpose for white h he 4507 is
9 * s soon as laid, and 2 until it is quite
„ at the fol-
* Poet
merchant for — to 32s,
the price rules
are. * eek
dgravel,
16 inches deep, 9d. per
looting high prices 13 rang per bushel; gus tar, 44a. per
gallon; * esp
HORSE CHESNU . t aware that the poison they
8 — ae use as nied for cattle. — find it *
n the Gardeners’ Chronicle fo Hg ten shat in ieee d they.
n the morning
and evening.
— ON oona. Scotia. What
tops y of the 6} per cent. interest
its loan invested in dräi
Int sá 7 tenant
Shik Government charges
. is not,
vestment
call
» you
may be a ‘quantity
„ Comm 3 . town after Wednesday cannot be
* answered till the following week.
Markets.
SMITHFIELD, Monpay, Oct. 1.
The supply of Beasts is again large, but the choicest
3 nn t very 8 — demand is ee nor.
dibble | 18 Bodine is its
be more rene ap
from 4 — 6 pecks Bg acre,
sufficien of o
plied. Our usual — as been
but this year we think . 3 be
Som oe still continue
from 2 to 9 bushels of seed er acre, and to reap tet AAN
20 to 25 bushels per acr Por several years past we have
a 2 an eusy method of testing the 4 of the Wheat crops
est, The 5 foun
“= ae a pag Een ae
= shock. “ed wor
rs are carried, w —— e im
—— eshed out or aaa y= 2 fora 3 * —
The —— = at jn measured corn is then multiplied by
30, which gives the gross produce of the whole field, and that
have to
the bottom to the top of the hill again
With = these — the skim coulter-
made about 1
a Wheat stubble for Tares.
Pred ‘Our r sheep have for sume time
EEG nun mber
acrea We conceive such a test, so early in the season,
yield,
ble
8 and frequently important, not only as regards the |
* 3 8 to 3 1 fee ron ati 955
ben ert horns 3 4—3 6 wes & 2d quality 2 8—3 2
2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 2 Ditto Shorn .,. .., a
Best Downs ; Lambs an
8 Calves se ssi
Ditto Sborn
.. sss
— 2 2
s | Beasts, 4700; Sheep and Lambs, 28,080 ; „ Calves, Lr; Pigs, 190.
2 Oet. 5.
We have not so pply of Beasts as of late, and
sequently ase is m ** 2 Owing t to the *
eee tolerable 1 ro age ed, and pres the choicest kinds
time
the number wf
Sheep is a fair average; the demand has
ave advanced about 2d. per 8 — ba have but few Dres on
— They are readily sold al 8 lbs. more money,
It is now full time
with food, which are intended fi
ald eo.
upon Gives,
From Holland and Germ on a 6 Beasts, 2
as certainly m e» cheapest ; an ole erop, ngle fields, which can seldom be stacked | ang 105 ee — — . eep,
ee i nothing "further but to = rately, so lasts know the roii of any shines ote vg ohare 4105 Mien Cows from fia konii Nanaia, 00 Beasts;
ith regar e have tied fattin 8, n „ 5
with one et bio — 4 meal, and hay chaff. Nine Yi steers nase =~ Norge 1 2 Soots, Here 3 wii Best Long-wools . 3 18 8
i ove No 3 Ditto
objection he o, deilling on their thriy 3 ell upo & mach less 7 oe of land than they would | Best 2885 3 en 2 ez 4
i | i th f the pastures j
is was that it . soil 1 have done if pe 8 inn ee ee etal oy the
638 |
6 | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE
Hothouse Grapes — cms nial. "Peaches and N byt dav hd Load
gearce ee geer, Pine-apples have 8 petarinas i of 36 Trusses.
berts an: ys our ac- THFIELD, Oct. 4
re are also somes 1 ren ata "Oranges aro s and en ge tonas] C Clover 60s to90
ns erate ntiful. Amo e scarce. | R nee . Clover a bag s| TOG
ma be $ . ng Vegeta les. Fe 6 „e % e e ENTLEMEN,
2 r paei at f at from ay o to 6d. ® a 33 Zi . — Str 0 85 28 — ne
about 4s. per reen Peas fetch 2, HOOPER.
pe bushel, 2 satoa Beva not altered since our | Prime Meadow v Hay 7 to The Tad Oct. 4, MES by
and, Mus fetch from 1 ading are sufficient for the | Inferior ditto. a s inrer vee „ one G58 to 848 road, on TUESDA premises, N 1
Flowers consist of Heaths, Pela: 8. to ls. 6d. per pottle. Cut New Har shi New Gloved’... cighasts ae Mr. HOWCROFT, ret t. 9, 1849 r 1 5754 Nursery, >i
venusta, Tropeolums » Fuchsias Peeaigns, Gardeniin Hignonis r NURSERY 170 the’ business fer by x
i , sistin. mess, the Zi
FRUITS OSHUA BAKER, ruit and Forest Trees ; g of Ey Whole
i s * MARK LA Flower Seed ; America: ergreens ; 12 3
Grapes. pee Ta 194 * Lemons, per doz., Is to 3s an Mo eupay, Oer. 1.—The supply 3 capital — oe e Nn a quantity fee
= Pp 1 Ib., 94 tols Almon al 3 — 8s 4 4p 8 t br land carriage samples was 25 N Essex $ this fol 2 51 Harness e rickwork, Box-edzing ; a
j 8 od ; rmer was d ate, from he Sale, and 4 ung, &c,— f
Nectarinee per per dng, 88 fo 13a tes | sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s this day se’nnight, but in 1 a about th e same terms as cipal we Facey i talogues had ns 80 Ma) by vent a :
fam, per hf, Sa s Walnuts p. 100, 1s 6d to 2 was submitted to. era — of Leyton ` of the A e i :
per i ere 4s to 68 es fab. “és to 24a 8 —— 1 ety ee ver met a fair inquiry pafi wl A “ ytonstone, Ess Uctioneers, Of the
a 4s ey, bot slight American
Aber half sieve, 48 to 6s | gabe per 100 lbs., 45s to 60s per gr. cheaper. For Ep Sciith aa Bae ae a free NTLEMEN, PLO te
Apples,kitchen,p. beh., 2s to 4s — Br aul N n r n ESSRS. ENE Pout, AND OTE
Oranges, per doz., 4s to 6s P. ip tolés Floating © and pri es ôd. per qr. low n value.—The Oat 11175 ted ubmit As HORRIS am
VEGETABLES Dae Steer of indian Dorn Ace Weld with i qualities | x he Lion and Lewy Lege e
Cabbages, p. doz., 6d tols 1 np ‘ead: ti ith increased October 11 iit, 1849, at 11 0 Tamb, Lom
— ers, p. doz., 28 to 68 — 8 Ae eek have 5 —— arrivals of English corn d and co A MEADE yop h 0 ‘the 1 5 ’
3 dog band to “10s s t0125 — per To. 34 70 6a m3 large, Toph Wheat — Wheat ane Barley also icone ES us KS E EARTSEA ae CARNATION
Siara si arlic, Ib., 8 he treme Plants; a? ELL 33
Faber eb todd Artichokes, p. a * he te ines be no 821 118. per . dearer, but it is Ben n sere. of han ` ‘antes 140 sorer : 9 Ä and n ge otk
. per cwt., 3s . La 16d fols Semen, Beane antzic.— We observe 2 = 2 t oe 3 Carnation Sta k se Carat irrer Ink
7 per b oe b 0d fe teta ae a or Peas.—The Oat trade is rather re aay di Weichts arpenters’ Benches j N ett a
e p. doz. — n Endi prides — Itai lour is in fair request, and h eavy, but | ce s, Ladder, Barrow, ag |
Red Beet, per doz., is to 2s Fading ee sin En 3 aay D 2 Mar he a s iyor Hares ce and
orse Radish, p. sieve, 43 to 6s een excessivel i ; ating cargoes, on th i or to the Sa
= Beans, ve £ — N a n, p. pot., 1s to 18 6d 2 22 rather an inerensed inquiry fo re 1 Lon —— and of the Tae. ises, of the disch d
€ : Sal Bade ahs So toa obta a slig W which enabled f: sa om Pp gn Wheat, | tene. Essex, oneers, American 3 in
ucumbers, 5 ate 10 Fennel, per 88 $a 3d | sent the ha vest a = need prices, Letters = from Scotland repre — etn |
Celery, p. t bunch, 2 i Savory, nn Ja OE OY favourable conclus MESSRS. PROTHERO E
* es, p. bunches 1s is to 28 * par D do buas a fe hel dealers 2 this my Dee b= Chere was a fair attendance of ZE 2 8. S 1 7 hag sig have . |
er ches s 3 | new Whea an e demand and followi ie A
4d to Roots, p. bdle., 1s to 1s eat at Tuesday’s prices ; th and took off all ie oad, Chelsea, o Migs day, on the
garmon per bun tate, l f. bunch 34 E E a E A 0 AI |
3 r in a
Spi p. sieve, Is to ls 2 1 — KEAT very dull. Few . in ited supply 5 3 but N pa E f ge Mal r buildi: e * 2
OTATOES.—Sovtuwark, Oct 1 IMPERIAL |W ons ta Barley, Beans, and Fes and varied collection arts ane and 80 —
Potatoes up to the „ P e Pur. Baxxr. Oats.) RTR. B P illar Roses; oseberries; ale sen, dl
ay we om hardly say the > ae ae . so z ** m 7 | | BANS. | Peas, | Camellias, and — eons and Pi Flowerin g Shrubs, Cami, — i
á hose from the Continent h enced at the KT. m s — 4d am oe 26s 5d prior to the Sal, pis Plants, &e. . —
— 8 selling at a low figure 1 ery free pi x — 2 27 0 32 x 28 * Nava on the yon aer us pas ot the . pripa —
yr anika Aa 2 quantity o of Potatoes in 3 43 0 227 9 8 H 2511 31 2 29 7 Nursery, Leytonstone. 3 of the Auctioneers, America :
5 1 “following sre ony Eat got mgs ate 41 9 27 1 (IT 30% 1 29 9 [0 0 ASHFORD, KENT THR
ts, 708. to 80s. per ton; Scotch, Pand ’s prices :—York 42 4 97 41/1711 25 2 9 30 0 ESS RS. PROTHEROE 2 1 F
whites, 60s. to 65s. to 70s.; foreign Fg | or 29 5 31 3 ceived instructions from the A ORNIS h »
26 10 18 2 rupt, t gnees James (w
begegne Sm AY, Oct. 5. 10 | | s 2 : * cord, mey the Railway Station on WEDMES e
trade 1 , Í
for the new growth, at „ at there is a steady . Sas” | 1 0 1 o| 1 1 © | Forest 2 NURSERY STOCK Gele of ar
— ars ale, ox for 2 finest sorts ey te Nearlings s ae Se the last six weeks’ Corn Avera — e Household ee nd. Americ ms 4 %
id J — od `. EPT. es. ur li gin f
1 9 80,0001, emand, s — — PT. 1,|Sepr, 8. SEPT] EPT 22, Srrr 929 Pony 8 e Rustic een . e i
4 and Eas’ we aise and 1 ;
Kents . p. cwt, 130s to 2103 Fe ams, p. cwt. 210s — 231s 6 poii : ee oo 8 pig eee May be viewed, a ae iron 2 E: ge fa Bp
Weald of Kents .. er — 168 Year arn pg Kents... 70 — 110 tes ee EM n id Si — =e Premises ; 9 che e pri Sa ack BE
Sussex... ... ... 126 —147 4 Sussex. 58 —110 . os 5 he Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, ot yaad 3
- 20 — 80 — 225 oo ‘in TO NOBLEMEN, GEN : —
“ 5 it i subordinate to the main point to of course could never — headway. The
pe so bad, that we should make allowances, In held in view, that i y well be ed with alto- | were very superior to those done by drilling, but I
Suffolk things look better, though sti y wet; but gether. Will a fiscal regulation lighten or a pasa t as to exact yield — a I think
ibis, believe, was owing to at quantity of rain labour of production, or will it ea two of | every effort ought to be made to bring th into
hich fell yesterday, for wherever there was a level eat to grow where but one grew 2 Will * gene practice ts ad v es must ry bagi to
of ground it was covered with water. Their lopping and topping of . ever grow a coomb of every i telligent, flecting „ vi e employ-
— lands in Suffolk have a very pretty appearance, | corn cheaper, additional perth from the ment of a vast amount of Ja in this , which
gi done up into 4-furrow which looks seil! [Itm might t the one, "bat not the other, certainly.] | cannot find a market ; and the payment of that labour
fie a rib silk stoeking, for it is done up| What would your friend “ Q.” do with the corn-feeding, doubly over, or more, by the seed which would be saved.
@ mat and straight, t in whole fiel * mouths 10 years hence n hope to has made that the amount of seed
amot see a bit of earth in a furrow, or a drop of water | fatten a bullock on a ewt. o Parliament! No | which would be saved by the general adoption of dibbling
standing ; the coachman told hey always do up doubt “ Q feels the pinch at present, like the rest of would be equal to the annual importation of corn into
their wet lands so, but lay their dry lands in broad us, but ideas are all past and present, never looking coun Lam om the
sien and by this means they manage to get Wheat | to — — — Is the future to re of itself! experiments I have made, and others have made, that
pen wet land. Very shortly, I have reasons for 9 I shall be the crops would very much exceed those under the
Jon 6.—Leaving Norwich I walked out to Bexley, Maid amongst the enthusiasts ; would that we could nt system o i are
i land
ged found my Lord and Lady Roseberry —5 well. In
ge evening I was introduced to Mr. „ W
temy guide and preceptor, so te? as I — to fol
In. He is a good-looki olly man, very —
hope we will do well together.
ils me that they plough four,
heir Turnips, — g the fi 0
hey begin so sowing at 8 old s
inte so wing till re end of July or later, and they give
lung to all they can—they hoe twice ch costs
IEEE
w
vided they had plenty of meat y Id do in the
house. Not at al? a ‘he, t ‘they will feed twice as
fist in a house as
Jan, 8.— and I resolved last night that
we should have a walk ‘this is morning, let the weather be
what it w ould, and a ow set ta pri 8 in the
see rni —.—
re is
— it was not for z
would not
style, and con-| take a
«| factu
q | important — in this co
6
—
me, | of
infuse a little of the so-called ait Bi sot into the hearts
of the e desponding lay- -upon-your-oar class. i
cultural has that odious word “ — — N
it — as curious a word as any in our language, and ver
ca t
da
at higher gong + that of repairing the pEi
fabrie f Parliament. What should be the
main A Ay subject of —— Why, 22
the — be capable of profitable improvement 52
usiness. fs it capable r Tt is, and the fi
portant item is its mechanical de —
with the sister arts. e —
to pay for, and from which every other
and 2 im
30, — — for — r.
um to put e farmers
prone 20, 000,0007. What pater be de profs Ha Ne
mines, collieries, travelling, — —
pottery manufactures ; what w expens e —
Plymouth, 12 and Deptford 9 if all
re labours were execute
en it was not wor
e distamees, n measuri “hel
have o machines, very
fond of the regular use of the line to dibble 1 v; and
therefore thought it best, after r setting out the first rows
by a Er E e side of the piece or field to
leave all the rest to the operator's eye, by way
t | making straight lines or rows. requires a A. deal
of practice, however, a person can accomp
this well, and eroo ooked lines look badly. Thef 4 0 Tate
simple contriva ae a 7 2 5 is all that is needed to ful
the Take two pieces
we done, to
er
in front of the machine like two arms, .
— In . me should be. made (previous to
faste them on ine pacati holes at inch
tħe first being 7 sgae Bun the cen
be
single d These cost me, iame But “ Q.” will Diin &e., they would esa to be
mas * a year (1774). 8l. a ae T gave | plished ; wall wit he 22 * it onght nit to i ne wilt these two s fasten a lath, or piece at Nn by
them straw and the refuse of the Turnip the first winter; he venture to. say 5 t litarian“ times such screws to the holes in we. arms, rding to the
they got plenty of Grass all summer, and now the ey are thi ? I thin an w —— distance you h to ve yo ws, $, s 9,
the best of Turnips, and n I come to sell profit to himself —. ee emplo that mind and those or 12 inches. The lath need not be stouter than
I will not get above 127. 108. a head; nor do I think talents I see he possesses, in endeavou ing to assist a person’s litile may project out beyond
they have th: badly 0 5 but n make no these worthy tiers improved mechanical ends of achine 3 or 4 feet, ing to
tof i d are much better to sell our p to cheapen produetion, — > studying | the ends. Thas you will need ine or marks at all,
Lhave done a field this year, at 2d. 10s. per aa unble books on high farm arming, se fis diving a if you have a straight side to begin at; the lath will
— eaten on the field.“ ittle 92 en he may help to. in roduc- | set on at first, an re, by
: What study has ever prov ved i tself’ 80 useless, so | altering the screw whe 9
set oat correctly, the 333 by extending over them,
* Correspondence.
orse Carts, ea your. — — —
at 2e sP, neta 6 A. B.C.” criti
on the subject of the light eee
t
ce — — . Rans and] May, gentlemen
— epee unacquainted 1 and who, Id dare
rn to receive
ake better, lighter,
the ate ud ea setei
do i it 1
3 of ood
carts, do
— r, > that your correspondent or any good m
of the wonderful 9 cwt. carts, and ton Weight
ich he says last half a no one
„and cheaper |
„ whose | ou
“prize neither their makers — €
Ger e . eredit. My only =
century pa
er, but all going off at once, like the |
a candle, which for so 2 and — an TEN
ou | the exce one was. Wheat n in the
ples and vexatious, as * political ? Tell. me of |
of
bygon ne 8 the
$ wish the natural soil — one- half as
of corn. Continue to address your P
p
cannot err, excep
to pri the political upon us as the prineipal, whereas i
ut be a — — to an 1 = «
— no art, pra itio on,
even tive 8 88 when it eannot and
its — own merit; in eon
soil by the same or simila:
means to pe ag employed in 3 Dockyard, then 1
aroun’ ection, 3
ben the cu — aps an acre urni
ings instead 100 ore the thermometer of
rise (and “Q's p so, I
w
mproved practice, and no he resuscitation of | will keep you
itieal soil is indeed fertile | with
fertile, and could be made to produce as many * stretehed fro
assert ass 15
ê
Sie speakers. Th
— ae
not till 8
ps | of
f anything interfered
could be
and expeditious, and
if the first rows be correct!
Sorieties,
R ASHIRE.—The annual meeting
and show of this See took place last week at Preston.
ean only give the remar
The Chairman, T. Cureton, Esq., of L
2 who will have the kindness to
best method of preparing and
But this is a point of —
is m
fection never ned, and perhaps more diffiealt: of
—: in a humid — such as the climate
| triet, in other — 3
Heacham,
terial to cogitate
— wer — mage sw happy days : ee! id od old times
a George the Third was king.” j
ewington’s Patent Dibble.—A piece of Wheat
im portance in the gr the land of
everyting we wi wish to clear it of, an if ie in een —
to put A init, itis 2 1
Dr.
e the latter part of last October, has yielded
n’s
.
; dibble ; of Wheat, „and
ve been highly satisfactory, with
put in
autumn br. Fig at at I peek per acre), and unfor
mice were very numerous
and got part of the seed;
d to Grass;
—
— in
=
— — — they are
ticularl er. At first
n, | pen to of ac oia ture, and we r N —
wh —— — * e land, are the p Lampe mm
the soit, to — an detrime of thore wi
— ‘ 1 2 the — which I shall
now have to mak laying ¢ the i &
Grass, I take it — — — the land is
by ng ng—by hoemg and clean-
ing, and by getting rid of the pernicious roots and weeds, —.—
is the — ry towards
land he first object is then to prepare the for
.
*
652
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
h he seed; the next to y select the kind of se seeds |
most iikely to succeed, and the —— — to pert — in which
oni are he ich the ——
wn.
p
iv
After the
ception of
— ehai way, and at what season, isit best sheep? “should | be
sown
of corn in the sowing of land to Grass ; but yet, if the lan na
intended to rem main permanently in Grass, and if considerable
“ Penny-wise. aud pound-foolish,”
1 — resent
1 w land to
is being, I think,
the permanent goo od of the pasture
erefore it is eo in such a case I shou
object, it
to sacrifice
the
e grow affords — to ‘the ae
witbout bev he Goel of the nourishmen — t
the autumn ords food to the sheep, which oth 1
benefit is also Abeita to this
e consuming the
i 0
oots of Clover and other Grasses.
the land through
u Sonn
moist and warm, a second 8 will. soon appear, aad it vill be
e t
| several yok of Oats, the crop of the off going tenant, when
bg Foer tor pi — 25s. the statute acre,
per acre—one of the
fields of this farm, equally pile steer ‘tor not one yard of
d well manured for 3 “tip
m, an
(I believe the leafy kin
Stickney), 23 William Stickney, a celebrated a agriculturist in
Holder he 1 5 — it “Old Hold army 3 —.— its be ving
select “a old pasture in that d ppg
combined with white Cloves I turne wing T considered a
extraordinary n r of pep. into this field in spring, Tah —
—— r Boon addition after another was
made; but the Grass pew! “gaining, 0
65 ewes of the large Lei r bree ae
double) apon rather — maa tat
1 J am not sure if the field on eps after
year, but I know it produced re ploughed — een
five Pex six loads of meal per statute ac It ery rarely
rict,
remarks,
subject more rie eea under disc
— sata provided the elevation be snitabie, if properly drained,
capa able of growing profitably the v: yer ove crops of
Turipa. Potatoes, Mangold Wurzel sy ah ht to be 7
and va manured, ane 1 horse- hoed, a kept fr
If the land be tenacious , the —— — 525
eeds,
shba 1 transported to the yard, either a t To — = ten
by a wooden moveable railway. If it be ‘ight land, a 1 rows
alternately may be removed to the yard ; the rema inde er be left
tne sheep
affording to sheep convenient | lying ground, At the latter end
June, it exhibits nothing but
then nearly over. It is £, infe Poni in sire nutritive
The follow gal kd Picks
pee Foxtail, ayo eadow Fescue,
ave got from Graminea Woburnensis,® ng remarks
a Sel the l
heag
A
er to os Duke of Bedfor
made many very valuable’ 2
it hi
the nu tritive m atter contained in iy min de :
also states — given quantity of N r Grasses,
classes, 2 5 ghee cee of flo 9 à their
sayd, Me. th Stick, a very Sa l — ted ena de ent erh
hon ebrate
introduced into pra at An in Hol has
a varie
great merit, and w ichs pie under bis Said to
ore inclined to be leafy, and run less into e.. This Grass iş
metas a Mea oxtail thrives fee adhe than other
loa n light siliceous soil, Tt does not mat bunny
| fullest productive pomaci till 8 years, hence it i to ity
for alternate husbandry, but is one of the best not suitable
untae 1 Grasses for per.
The herbage pred a
than that of canes, B though the wil d matritive matter
in one season is co ably less, It thrives hel rary
gation, and is permanent and constitutes tes part of ths irri.
of many of the best pastures. Mi
Grass, is of great value, mixed with yes 2 imothy
manent pasture or alternate 1 sine 8 epee
Grain, at ene N the seed i i more nutritive
matte other spec cies s of 1 It olen
ire tof 25 hates in spring, in the prop 2
to eight. Its valuable early folia
of 1 = 11 d Ne, isk ‘ho Barley be sown by th
drill, at 9 or 10 e bet w i the la fh if
e
wi —
appearance.
horse-hoe to ne * through the rows. If th
with the horse-hoe.
ed and pul-
d again w
i found to sustain. Ith
he effect, and in fact pk aor must have
he
— — without the | withou t delay. It is strange that oe machine should not be in
g 1 h di it with perfect 5
f: +} Iih *
r fails among his haan, even
n
ow that many o of m
hunting say that fox oe is
4
L
t
friends who are addicted to fox
i _
the w that ¢ a pe
ason is often missed owing to 1 1 high sor rebut the wind
does not prevent this machine from being used. “Tf bate seed be
good, it must vegetate and prosper under this management,
f great ree to the fields, ‘and I have seen their r arks and the ret will og 85 ame better for the 8 In
orne out 1 agree that oncerned in, enant is re-
own by the h horses’ feet, and which the next year oe ve — een | stricted yn turning dette, = horses TA hi K own Grass
found to produce the best pe of een This does not, how- till the month of March or April. This sagen is un-
ever, carry ou ie of re peg cof treading down th necessary in wal cultivated dist the contrary,
ng
e ricts,
| in Lancashire, where it is all bute an 3 rule to turn
heavy cattle and lr ge into the seed Grass all winter, and
pas kor e, W th te UM It is un.
eee Re alternate husbandry, oh the cultivated red Clover
uch m abundant roduce
vous il (Alop urus pratensis
. escue, Per Crested
805 Monat stalked Meadow Grassi gery Creo
rnate husband Rough Cocksfoot, Meadow
Clover, white Clover or Mow
Rye-grass.. Man T ‘have — doubt, by L. o e e
and expense of oer
| be in part obviated mo Se cent are We s ordinary ea
vation; but the far
auanei, and quality ra “the roduce, I
de pide ghing through a fi ric and leaving a pox of allow them to tread the land into holes, destroying many wise an — E principle than that of scantily
water where ‘their feet have trodden upo e very and | of the plants, and which holes in heavy land — Gis water | — the lahi with 3 seeds. bi is the 3 5
most successful system of sowing iai t to Grass is by ciate a winter, some restriction, o say, is 1 between doing it well pi — gly nd
the seed with one pound o 2 75 Rape seed and grow * wale very important consideration is the kind of Grass to be | difference in * = net ¢ There pig no better ber a
inthe autumn. With eet d to the description of seed to be print Hs As I before a * land 5 — 5 oe instead of | farmers to bec ted with the best Gras * 101
sown, I — not think I can enter on the subject minutely here, | being sown with a ra ind of Grass, is o Nat I was } adapted to the 100 per — than for them to ta ohe
because the diff e not far from proc bel — ging to from the best part of their meadows o or pastures, oriona
upon the quality and quantity of Grass which land must pro- | a large landed ee and as I 1 along through me their neighbour (if superior to their own), and to plant iti
duce. On a d soie intended — Ren 8 white Clover, farm writing down the state of each field, I came a re | garden and allow the Lire seed; they 4 se]
Cocksfoot, Timothy Grass, differen and those kinds | I found nothing but a bad miserable iprinkting of ! ‘the. what their best pastures and 2 rÀ deren —
of upon w ich sheep thri 8 . sOWD on this Lee 1 2 £ Agrostis, mixed — Carex and a small kind of may venture to order * m from 2 ad
description ¥ land—they will be found to produce best, On 5 what to call it; it was not worth the time a more intimate „ of t to be the
colder soils I would recommend red Clover and other kinds of of pacer * ‘haa. 1 5 the tenant what he called it. | valuable and peculiar qualities of the Green ene ve if cut
Grasses “fs stronger character. In the management of farms er replied ™ — we let it * that i — he let it lie after several study 3 farmer. Some Grasses are more n *
it is sarees sp arya ranpa posre of Grass should be eaten 3 — ae any seeds, that kind Nature might have the | when in flow —others when in seed. For instent®,
down sm ofthe year. Itis the habjt in the
best 28 counties ik “England, 8 ee
shire, Lincolnshire, &c,, to fill the pastures as full as possible
ry thi i
9
modes of treating it,
land. There are gentle.
say in conclusion that |
be extremely glad $ be questioned, and to give
answers such as I am enabled t
opport > afr a few pain to bestow a covering of Grass. In
passing g through many . on = gga tae I noted down
Let Lig“ as the most e t term, ehas a gro
of rubbish “that will 3 ih * — paying a rent, putting
money into his own pocket, or providing food for
population, It is no wonder, then, we require the as
of foreign nations to support the Ere
before mentioned which would grow or rather exist u
‘Jet lig” fields, for I will not designate it by the — of
pasture, is, though very deficient in 6 1 still more
hefo aey in qu oor gh he 9 with the
recommending ety of — ey we shall simplify the
question materially, if we take it for grante ed that the land is in
culti n, and tha has been
be 1 of me.— Mr. Brians, Lancaste er, said:
N pay Le but of the kingdom at large, might
creased, by superior cultivation, to 8 thet Achar *
with very little r — of capital; the d be better
ee, pol ee oer ea larger profit, the 1 3 nt,
fully
heavy and light soils, ere the
ee
n
ccurred to
me that it could not mt S.i; The
lands been exbausted by a succession of
— — ge = they a no — r to such extrava-
reasona emands, b
Spgratefal hand of m 8 en the grasping and
re, they 2 — ft to her
less generosity, that w a been so — and —
Proridentl * this sco g process
r any mde. being so.
whi e may be obse
y ex
they piam then left without oe.
The blue tint of these lands,
of Care
— — ally
h all an pes refuse t to eas, t
= unger, „These worthless plants, combi nif not o compelled | th
— — ouch
toad 1 s, have fo à
tt * even when in E * 2 ‘hel
of | la and I
convinced that the e Produce, not omy of the ‘soila of
| or 1 — — 155 3 — to exceed that when the | |
ok attempte b vea eo y aere m of their
d whe
ripe;
wth at the time of flowering ; s the case wW! permanent
and Meadow Fescue. Some are fala gag come do not
the increased | pasture—others for alternate husban ie a sears oes
The kinds of Grass > one year. Grasses are more produc 155 a e de
n these | requires a knowledge of the. ae ture of 7 * kind of
mix them in the most profitable man eee with a stiff
viek Grasses are sown is important, @ 1 down and
t Grasses. In straw, that will admit the sun and air an 85 with
2 the seeds, is durable, It has bo 5 of this
some to sow the seeds without grain, but und ‘to lay
made suf- | plan is sping except in cases where foe way, inde-
the | down a piec ermanent Grass in 1 pethe Iate Lard
pe Eg Ae pris nse, It was recommend * piece of excel.
cester to transplant good turf—that pad it on the land
lent turf, chop it into small P roll . One impor
er the follow wing, intended — — or o'be mentione net as to ed
uestion remains t 7 *
Ete — Fg he should continu deers being be grst year
re the land is vie ee „ bes, and ene
ly stocked, its foliage, which in many cases is
K aion 755 Tò distinguished by an experienc ced ‘eye from some of
he finer leaved Grasses with which it is combined ; but when
i
52 h nae
more than — third, and that w: 25 would be a
wa, ance
č
É
ma
| roots be d to — read
bona ride of "the question,
land, because vata
ts are — and penetrat
g
w
88
is]
=
e's
88
ae
8 8
on
we
—
E p
E
up
ei
©
>
e
2
as]
a
Ss
2
S
2
.
=
©
n
or
Py
oe
os
re is ——
"ts A at at het
the pey 2 N
ex Dogs oo
opinion with regard to this Grass, ripe
and afterwards, it is provineally called Windlestraws, from
e white and wiry nature of the culms; it does not furnish
ao! early a bite in — ng Sy many other Graces, I
is inferior for Byes ve husbandry, t for permanent
n. These unprofitable | pasture a 5 ——5 a close turf of nutritive baban, e, an
— tures t, in my opinion, to ge again pl and is little affected te ex —. of oppo It is Juby Ge chante
— rex: 4 delay, a course of fallowing and manuring, 5 sheep ee and constitutes a considera on of
pan 3 2 tion. 7 . land, herbage in the best pastures. een Nye. grass. Much
e. tation described, is gly difficult Wess of opinion has ate ag amongst farmers the
ARa the co pre expense, chased Ploughing anà value of f Rye-gra grass. Not ny ye zix go it was coe by
1 Pats y ese rporating the manni wit Some said it was —
— 3 2 of pasturage, upon being properly | but Couch Grass; 5 —— that 3 it 1 only windlestraws
eve eich ye i = 4 — 3 of suitable seeds, — — 2 wou N ah it. This arose from Air of under-
Bei. re x . — and, could not be believed by standing — 7 — to the old slow-
pol pa pes hola Upon = e farm that gro z . oy rapidity of k the farmers by
pe g A most s tenant and exhausting | surprise, ‘ore they had sufficient time to consider how to
system of cropping—as proof of which I need only mention that flower and „„
the mau ,
M D
that
proper manner. 1
t of food and prost
ense amoun jess Grass. Mr. Blacker,
n
land Engla et |
unnecessary bar to their tenants 1 y
lands in rotation, provided they
opel
8 auper labo description
te land—
| workmen may be employed to
which are of widely different meaning. Eleven vere
4j—1849.]
pegotiati as early last year opened with Mr. Eller-
pe eae: to the Duke of Norfolk, the result of which
ee tbat a trac f moor-land, acres in extent, the
some |
west of a and on the road >
sere.
ven miles
N aspeet ol the
ah tag
. The an
* imagined, * — is ical. of
considering also its
ere ted
bodied paupers, 8 sent to the farm
of — 5 any entire
rred to the —. grinding a and oakum pick-
f the
yar farm b
general conduct w
— aie! is no —
ing = EC advanced so far
part of the plan.
> th
} +
farm is i d on one pa by a good stone wall, upon the merit of that or any other performance by th : pom as any other soft carbonate of lime. J.
which an immense amou labour has been bestowed. | metical accuracy with which its author may have per- Ta he eee ode 7 ater 1 it will rot
Itis 880 yards in lenge, 5 feet high, and about 14 ss formed the various “sums” in addition or subtraction . 2 the sa pth: a — 2 —
in thiekness. The e of the stone was bared an that have come in his way : we are not ine yari — 1 the 2 * ght fur ish. 5 A
quarried b ‘the pauper . s, and by them conveyed | mate the value of a lesson applying to all agriculture by | Fon rer. Indian corn, ye, are goo
to 2 ape ired, the 5 labour having the = dard of lar development in any one case, under prs beets it yon eile henson as
to be paid being the dry walling. The opposite or south | any one set of e g” to confine our discus- | Grain: Mowbray, We sh and to poor fo
side of the area is bounded by the adasi road, which | sions fegarditg i a farm e exact 3 pounds 05 eding, as blanks are not to be expected when individual
previously was walled on oe Pint A shillings, and pence} of 3 profit derived from it. plants parts.
pa Shiva: Aide kiio face , Pleats o Wes * e n eher n 54% ar C may obtain an answer if he will send us his
stone on the Jand * ere 1 tio i tter than that which our contemporary, | Machixks: T. We know of no machines used in farming to
To 133 the conveyan the stone from the already alluded to, bas lately offered. Let our land-“ wind up and set to work as a watch ; morning cases where
ne * been aid, palong w yia the stones | ow w that of Lord Kinnaird—advise with their e ain jaa i ple: 1.8 podem oie — i
the 3 of the hou yed, having | tenantry, setting (by example as las precept) the] meter, or in the revolving of an e think
deen got bytho m e themselves, — 1 on . building best methods of cultivation before , and encou- Ihh * ae — direct the attention of machine
site ready for They have in a similar | raging the 2 oe 8 Sess hods by ample security eee 75 atasak 1 1 for hgn 3
1 to 3 erection of a spacious shed, for invested let our cultivators follow that of gradually ake it all oF ‘nearly all ower, hh wg it compost
way between the ho e quarry, 8 Mr. M:Culloch, — the tru . fra me and intelli- 7 —or ch ng t for use pnp agra en pnie aad
to be occupied during inclement weather by the | gent! g upon it, according to their circum- arte —— — on the ol
men in th 8 of st the id us —— energetic 5 and let our writers follow that ~ eis Boos: A Subscriber. The subject has already been
mtbuildi yet 1 ared. Another important of Mr. Cai BEEP : Chechire, Xen letter has been forwarded to our vi
van perform by oe lou rers is the construction | of incompetent critics, make known to en grill | -inary anihority ; ut it is Hor he pamiii be con be of use to you you
the dan a line of pipes having been laid 3 to deserve th | 2 you
inder ground to the house from a fine spring of pure | or adoption ; and we shall yet see 1 — pape 2 — 457 It is a good top-dressing
Water, i ‘Bos f several hun ards. The for any length of time, she has never been yet, a pros- for Wheat; 20 20 bushels With 3 owt. por pore, d in March.
work of clearing has been accomplished upon about | perous profession in this coun stent t Mits: E EMG should apply to Parkes, Bir-
2 acres adjacent to the homestead. The superficial| Lord Kinnaird’ pamphlet contains, besides the letter | -Fer v. LEVEL L L. Thanks, bot we must not épen
Sone, which is only too abundant, ot Sen in the to his lo ge * on 3 ane question = ata
formation of deep underdrains. s having | chemistry by Mr. White, and the speech on agricul- | Wimewoam: W Barlo oio and A Constan mt — — not
deen well broken -A by the hagl thoroughly rites | tural chemistry —— ons “i by Me. Fin ee Swanston, 5 5 3 of quickiine ana 5 owt. of eait
md efficiently drain e first time under to which we have already allu n thes e pages We per a — ean: the land, open water furrows, and
taltivation, With = shemales of a pa plot, the | hope the work will have the vate protest it deserves leave it for the winte
= cropped with Potatoes, Oats, Wheat, Barley, i 5
bay old Wurzel. The tillage used Looe tear em e 1t,
the unio: establishment at Sheffield, mingham and Midland A Exhibition of N i
— of these ee 1 er to be Fat “Cattle, Sheep, Pigs, and Poultry.—The first ex-
tion i 1 The „as they | hibition will take place on Tue esday, co
iu certain p 0 to a well- | Thursday, and — the — Asay d, 15 ea
in the best cultivated part of England. a — Tn ral
t broken ow rend, aa — ne “hd, Sux the —
n
, Scarcely any bem Seca pene pr gs those
orthy o ard
used |
bere on applioatio
e | Birmingham.
of
must co nfess, hitherto
tal. rd Kinnaird’s
et however, farm eg very fairly orem of
being rer for this purpose. It appears
e of 3 rial acres, paying ı a rent of 600/., or)
tie a a ala the amount 0 —.— is not very
inteliigibly sta stated to have varied —. n 11002. and
2 om loving sums salve been a liani, after pay-
ment urchased pry of fi
2 x tes stock, and rent, draining, and
other improvemenis, &c.
In the year 1837. aa £130 185. 10d.
5 : 21 19
n i 100 202 19
11 254 16 9
„ 106 17 8
. 112 0 6
333 228 11
„ | 304 7
5 ; 523 7 8
5 242 8
a 285 18
In 1 ove ves 225 one £2413
owen ing 2197. 8s. 73d. annually, or more than 10
per cent. on the 1 ip 3 taking that at che
| N Tano si su -F aet to be fully above
the average exper f fa rmers employing any an
Se te in a their busines, “though we know
well it is not near the e experience of men
hats 8 . i other t trades:
I sin of Lord Kivnaird's pamphlet,
e sha 1
m
e Aanby its energies: we do not mean to measure
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
e | duri
o very mensen illustrated "the z
profitable investment of ea In Lo
they will cost 25s. an acre . The weeding
uring the summer two or th over, is usually taken at
etween gl. and 41. per a or they are sown, cleaned, and
cleared for half the crop, the tenant receiving half for use
of his land. Complaint i wee mil among the early
sown Swedes, though ex of Turnips and Rape
Ly plenty of Eoi” for yo winter and spring. ae ewes
t crops
m the breeding flock have their teeth cut, and
j 33 —— the tops are abundant and growin 51 they
do the land as uch good as if a — 2 ted of Col
— — d in f
be carted off 1 and
the —— ploughed
abe urers, now 108. per week. J. W.
Sussex Fan RN, We have had some ve
— — dere have now put a stop to 2 =i
hen
e Turnips
stored = cm a a
Mood Wheat, Wages, for ordinary
ggo
y preparing for
shall tie — 7 — to fatten en
threshing Wheat for seed and Oats for horses, mowin
cleaning and cutting hedges, &c. cut our &
seed, but at present have no prospect of getting it in. J,
oned by your correspondent
— 9 be rb solr = 72 — rom springs charged with
bicarbonate o 3 2 it te be covered by peat is
not surprising ; how it became cover ed with the yellow sand
s anoth yer 3 I would not, wit es- t seeing the
be “warp
drift, ight ; of a calcareo
tafe full of labels of f species now heei g the v
strata, and ae by 8 to
oe a hollow in the “ Eocen
of brown sandy loam, which I call warp of the drift,
es. others will not —— it to be wo The tufa is more
2 12 feet — and toa marl with seams
of peaty clay an 2 Diab Water shells There is a layer
of — 4 — 1 it and th tertiaries.
should like to know the depth and ex
ioe
to the Honorary Secretary, at wif
hi t
and. Mus
year’s rent of the whole 50 acres. a o aa aed Flowers consist of Heki
clearing Need land, Calendar of Oper = venusta, Tropeolums, ap hg and Roses,
prepared, is at | SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER. TS. .
8 of labo Fen Far, Sept. 29.— The main tu mn is to pine anpi AD sae is e E, Bs to 168
“tom half. past six in the | clear the land of weeds and rubbish, and prepare for Wheat | Graj r 2485 Almonds, per
— seeding. ‘The first operation ed . pert = during dry : 3 wr T os to 8s
ent? ded 8 The week’s | weather, when, after skimming euffling the stubbles, the | Peaches, per-doz., atto 10 Walnuts p. 100, 1s 8d to
Sea r —_— to a ay, | roots = Nettles, oper 5 Twitch, shai be picked off, > coral 6 prin A nah., 168 to 243
after partaking o 7 ‘din ner, returns to 4.4 s dry enough, wel would strongly advise Pave’ P 20g gg re Fil ib eris, per 100 tbe. 45a to 60a
Sty and f at rnt, ‘and wos as frequently recommended,’ see t half sieve, tto 6s Nuts, Bar., p. bush,, 20s to 228
; 3 with whom he is at liberty to « compost heaps,” Paea ae of 3 . seeds and hungry | — pe r Lt — a . beh., 128 to 16s
N Sabbath, th, but he must return to . farm by | offsets, that multi tiply on a rich tilt, o baffle S n “tt
Saturday . When we visited the last | or ae ation. 3 a are 0 ve ny gan 24 te a N 8 ABLES, i
oon the men had left off work ; we had | the side er we dake snare. ‘They must be band © pat to” for Cabbages, p. doz, Gå ach p. sieve, 1s tols
the advan of g whether or | muck, to poison diated chee ste such u filth. „ane in | Caulifiowers, p. a — 75 eo es, p. ni jae UA
cheerf en Of this, | his excellent Book of the Ferm” Kiga, „ PP- ik pia having —— e ba pape ih ore see ery eat
. 2 reen: N 0
oTe assured, that while ener — re ‘of mal alle wee of mand — making what 1 Brussels Spee „ u. sieve, Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 771
N parish, they greatly prefer being at conceived should be good manure, T per . . „ Enr:
l a 3 9 —.— aia Loon at it was no child's play to to collect together | Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 6d to 9d Lettuce, Cab., p. se., 4d to 9d
l ; ret un Ar 10 se materials into one or two places, and 2 ge Potatoes, per ~~ = 100s — e.
0 most ev th ende ‘ — ewt. , 38 to ês e, per
| y healthy and ros ee put eget te he materini iia = be nat 4 — bs dt 140 enn
i times wi e greates! ps, p.doz,bun., ’ j
n care; Poe bat wan notwithstanding iea favourable appearance, unless Sas Beet, per doz., Is to 28 per — » 38 to ~ ie aa
X very large quantities w m benefit was derived rse Radish, p. 2s to 46 Small ds, p. pun.,
Rebiew. frota Sh tO CANE comedians 44 loads to the ge French Beans, P. hf. sieve,1s 64 | Fennel, ya bunch, = it
y 12 cart amg > bunch,
Investment it 11 years’ Practical are aid ne es pruduce so good a an eects %». bunch, 24.9934
pital, or 11 y uck.” He farther on relates how, with o
ie vo iu ef a from Lord of Turni e covered em Thiet — 4 By . —. g „P. = 5
i all re use material, a good quantity of a 0 g
; es for Turnips or P s are good in
to understand the 4d. per 5 not yield so well as pro rh id to
4 n Ad. per sack di : are great 2 i
tive, the . of | growa sat 5 and they are generally very ne 4
654
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
SMITHFIELD, Monpar,
1 of — > large, arti — average a quality is very |
the — make 45.
. ready * ; indeed, 21 kinds a —.— — — = demand
8 2 of Sheep i is ao quite so large as
last * pierde for fat Sheep. The tra P — hon
2d. 8 lbs. advance on hype des: The de for
Calves is slow, but
tained. * 3 pat Germ
i
So FOO
1 —
Ditto Shorn
seripti —
uota: iene are pretty key main-
we have 1203 Beasts,
D Shorn . hin
Ewes & 2dquality 2 8—3 4
pee Pere: . am
Lam
2
Pigs
Beasts, 4620; Sheep and N 27, ard "Calves, 384 Pigs, 1 180
emand has d
rate are e rather lerer. f
be ite tava in pa price
ave fallen —— for
outside on for
nase
eat Calves
ome
middling deseriptions, iat —— 44. 2 the
the choicest. From H tand G asts,
780 Sheep, 61 — and 13 Pigs; ; from Leicester and ——
ampton, 400 Beasts; and 109 Milch Cows from
counties,
1 Scots, — Long-wools. 3 6 to 3 8
fords, &. 3 10 to 4 0 Ditto Shorn
Best Short-horns 3 6—3 8 Ewes & 2d qualiiy 2 E 2
2d quality Beasts 2 8 — 3 4 Ditto
and | “eg à
. 3 10 — 4 2 Calves . 2 o-
a
6
POTATOES.—Sovutawark, Oct
e Committee report that there are still v — few arrivals
‘loa Yorkshir eor the Continent, but they are at present quite
e following are this day’s prices :—Y ork
| Re egents, 70s. to 295 per ton; Scotch, 65s, to Toss; foreign
| whites, 55s, to 65s.
AN
y of Wheat from Essex this
T 4 su
morning was again small, — E from Kent; the former
the latter were disposed of on rather lowe eign m
a moderate retail i sete te at — rates — Friday 1 ist, Barley i is
a free sale at our — e Peas e 1s. e
| cheaper. —Beans are fully E ii e obser no alterat
in the value of old oan, * 8 *. are
turn lower
FRIDAY, “Oor. — The arrivals of grain this week, both
— 1 a and atone have been moderate, — Wheat of either
ort is a rably free sale at the prices of sig fa eign
grinding aaa; superior English malting Barley is in demand at
— quotations.— ee and Peas bes unaltered in 88 — Old
mai eir ifficult of disposal.— Barrel
— The weather during the
— part of the N was cold and — 1 i ~ has kept the
w Wheat in better condition t e been expected
romh excessive wer’ of last — ae Tave undergone
little variation, and the general tone ai the market is firm,
In Dantzic fine W very scarce, which enables
holders — N ns a high price in proportion to our quotations ;
f. o. b., has been again p age = Konigsber:
lies are yet small, but may
In the 2 * 62 Ibs. Wheat is
obtainable at 36s. per qr., f. o. b., but some abatement may 1
expected ere long. In Rotterdam prices of new Wheat a
again Is. per qr. lower.
LIVERPOOL, FRIDAY, Ocr. 12.—At this day’s market we had
a fair demand for all good Wheats ; the better kinds of foreign
were ld. per bushel veg and prime qualities of Irish were
ey,
was cleared at ‘Sep sacks priees, but — inferior ae es of | ve
Ditto Shorn Pigs
Beast, 3218; Sheep and à Lambs, — 260; Calves, 155: Pigs, 240. sn gg ——— mod b — a — 1 — Cern which |e
—Fxripay, Oct. es was, however, checked by the rates oben yy bae sold
Pa: and SMITH report t the trade con- | steadily at former prices.
tinues firm at late prices, and the market barely — with
new Hops, planters — for higher pri as the IMPERIAL WREAT. BaRLET. OATS. | RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS
feeling seems more against the Avy adha 80, “Gk we | _ AVERAGES,
think them justitied in so eg earling and old Hops: mere | Sept. 1..,...... 443 8d) 26s 34198 3d 278 Od] 32s 3d 288 6d
8 .. 43 ol 27 adis ele th 30 8 fo
„„ ‘ 0 0
ö 25. | L 1 nnen 29 9j% 0
SMITHF FVV 2 21 47 11 25 2 29 531 3
— — S — 5 4 5 Nen Boi e eee e ee 42 4 27 7 17 5 21 9 29 0 39 5
pene hes a come * J. Corn, | Aggreg. Aver. | 43 1 27 0 18 3 28 11 30 5 29 11
2 ie brisk. OOF ER. Duties on Fo-
c sa dare ek 1k reign Grain 2 9 FOIA ay t 1
1 705 0 745 Interior „ 35 to Bis Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Gorn Averages.
. 50 65 New Clo . m PRICES. Sxrr. 1. SEPT. 8. SRE 15 | Serr SEPT 29, | Oct. 6.
= — — . Sr
Old Clover. 90 95 Josgua BARER. 448 8d — 1 — in be ih ag
; wW CH: 11. 44 6 we * +d “ *
Fine Old Hay ... 65 to 68s New Clover. ... —sto—s{ 43 0 À sie L oe ca 5
— 5 55 | Inferiorditto... . 50 60 = : ` soe = | wes ee EA EFS
ew 9 65 83 2842 — =F 25 * eal
Old — i N 41 9 M wi yah aad E 5 | one
London. Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham
PRICES 3
CURRENT. (Oct. 1. Oct. Sept. t. 8. Sept 28 Oet. 5. Oct. 3. 2 Oet. 4. Oct. 11.
qr. qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. 62 Ibs, 62 Ibs.
Seat er? . . det. Gite fhe OAS 6. „ iiss . . d adjud d
New, red... 338t0435 © 6 66 © 6 bee rie S6 0% 36 toal 5 4.5 98.0.5 8
„ White. 42—482—486 4 7 06 2 6 9/43—49/4 40 40—45% 6 6 05 6 6 1
red «+ 38—4438—446 4 6 96 4 6 8/40—44 — a — — § 3 5 85 © 5 9
„ white ... 41—4341—37 © 7 67 © 7 6 —48| —47 — — 5 8 6 25 8 6 2
Foreign. —. |36—50/36—50/4 3 7 24 3 7 233—47 32—46 — — 4 8 6 24 8 6 2
| 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. |
Rye—Old | 26 23—26 bei anti — — — —
Foreign... 20—22 20 — 22 — — — . — — —
Foreigu ee ee Aż m Kg cal bs a
Barley gr. qr. r.
Grinding... 2426242 — — 220—22 21—23 2123 22—24 2224
Maing.. — |26—28/26—28) 30—31s | 30s—31s |27—33/27—33 29—3 29—33
„ e T8— 218-45, oae 5 . N |) 90
K 6 bush. 6 bush.
Malt—Ship ... e 40 none ei ss
Oats—White... | — | — 419013 —18 19-27 | 19—27
oe wired — — 0 — 18. —
i ; a 2
Peas — Boilers 26—30/26-—30| — ae a
2 196 Ibs. 196 Ibs.
— 25—30/25—30 | hee ee Pe | oe | Ti dS tS
orelgu ... 24—3224—32 29 —32 29 —30 5 aks 3 oe all sae
1 ees |23—39/23—29 32—3332—2332—34 32—34 12—13 12—13
— 11—13 11—13
— 12—13 12—13
k p. saek per sac per sack
8 32—38 31—34 31—34
Averages. Imports.
Ars.
Oer. 13,
Sales ELET
MESSRS. 1 PROTHEROE a 2
pe
Fi
rm
iewed, and
— sale, on the 1
Auctioneers, Ameri
Catal
of the
n Nurs
UILDERS, e
ESSRS. PROTHEROE 4
by Auction, on the Premi
Fulbam. Sona Brompton, on FRIDAY
following Omi at II o’elock ea
NURSERY STOCK, conalating of es
fine ln, Roses, Fruft Az „ of
also a quantity of Poplars, Limes, Acacias, Plants,
2 ee Cart. be viewed Prior to
ad on the premises; of the 1 Seedsmen- P
Auctioneers, American Nursery, Las W — ths
DALSTON . nes
ESSRS. PROTHEROEs anp MO
M wi — — Mr. J. Smith 1
the premi
OND DAY, “October 2 2 dpe
y ones
e London and Birminghan West 182 TN — —
ray Company, the —— NURSE RY Btn J
4 very superior 2
Pants, Ornamen al Trees, cect ‘Sana 1
Forest see > 2
* From the adhesive peni of the soil, Pirs 5
move — and from their — . “ie.
, and —
pp h
principal Sajne prior
ursery, Leytonstone, Pee ; and
AND
® MORRIS wit ea
m in Lon an Auctioneers, American
Leytonstone, Essex.
AMERICAN NURSERY, LEYTONSTONE.
re: inhale AVD MORRIS
ully a their Friends and the Public that they
aing i- submi; to abe etian tition by Auction, on the M
NDAY, October 29, ane i op following
rom this extensi
and 7 — ican Plants, of ever riety, in „
tities. P. and M. ree i Invite an early inspection of the
varied lots, suited to Gentle — wo to the Trade,
a
agai a personal 3 *
of appreciation € rf ‘this — 3
with 7 which its stock c
before the Sele, ee Catalogues wed of ofthe ee ae
in London
stone, Es —
WOKING
125,000 Shrub, Forest. an nd 8
oor ao g Quick; Ros
rR WA r will sell by Auetion, on
Oct. 22, 1849, at 10 o’clock, at Hook ET
the Woking Station (by order of Mr. — .
declining
dodendrons, Kalmias, and — Tins Suie
Hollies, from 1 to 3 feet ; 2000 Laures! van em,
1000 Chinese Prive ts, from 2 to 4 feet; 10,
d
0:0 Transplanted
— ̃
SURREY.—VALUABLE. 93
8 pen = aluable Nursery
Y,
on MONDA
Tery 20
sare; WD
3 ur postage
Ag ent, Chertsey, Surrey.
— iffee-house,
w, avent- N Mee
rr ³˙ÄA ̃cP!ßiee
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
—
Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged, price 4s. 6d.,
RURAL CHEMISTRY:
an lementary Lntropuction to the Study of the Sciente in its
Relation to Agriculture.
SOLLY,
Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural Society of,England, Professor of Chemistry t 8 the Horticultural 2
Com
pany’s Military
PREFACE TO THE SECOND er.
tot
Seminar
R. S, FL. 8
yat t Addiscombe, &
F. G.
In n contained
F ren loos ok e ah been . — as the pis. state of knowledge. — — In particular, the Tables 5 Pye te —
plants principal substances employed as
of the
DONTENI. OF THE TOPAR,
1
The whole has been
reatly ex ended,
n on 8 in the Honorable East India
carefully revised, and
by the addition of the
Acetate of lead — Ss by sul- a. Changing Fibre, K o rou Mercury, e — Phosphate of lime | Salt, spirit of Sulphate of iron
‘Aveta phu | Fibri 2 — aea Metall — oxides o 1 ot mag- Salt, rock Sulphate of lime
d Blood matters Fibrin, ve etable ron in plant n Salt, sea Sulphate of be
ghee 4 Blubber $ Colours vegetable | Fir. 1 £ Iron, oxides of i — — ps ll — acid S Salt, solution in — *
es 1 as ide | Metallic salts ‘hosphoric acid water Sulphate of
a er nic Bones, boiled | Com Fire-dam Iron, protoxide Metals ms lts — of potas `
Acid, carbo of. l Gonitiin Fish, 4 Iron pyrite Milk oric in Salts, Eps hd lum — e
i calves i ation, 7 É » Epsom
2 2 — — produced | Fixed Iran rust Minium water Salts, Glauber's r soda
Acid, lactic of Combining number lane ammonia in mpare — ia," Sulphates
‘ ini | ron ca | iron Sulph
a na! muriatic Bones of pigs — — Iron, sulphate of ar | Pine-apples Salts of magnesia —— in plants
Acid, ni Bones — — ion, results Flint : 2 sulphuret — . composition | Salts — the metals | Sulpburets
aii Bones and s rrigat pón i ash uret of iron
1 sen pha ia Common salt Flowers Isinglas Mouldering ö Plants, de death of Salts of —— — — of —
Acid, pyroligneous | Bran ‘Composition of ani- | Flowers,theiraffect| Ivory Mouidiness | Pian | Sand —.— of silver
' silicic Brass malmatter | om the air KELP ; Mucilage car — ac Sapphire uret of tin
Acid, sulphuric ad ' or- Fluorides Lacrie Lar — of ammo- | or ag effect on the — Sade hy-
Acid, — Brimstone | composition o — 3 Latent heat 8 — tater — exere- 3 . 1
British gum plan Food of L — of magae- | Plants, growth of — acid
organic Bromide of magne- Composition ofsoils | Formation eed | Lea Plants, — 2 — of untlower
Acids, test for | sium 2 — ee in of Formation of — — 5 ee Mariate — Plants, their se — of Suntio lower-seed
Action of plants on ee — smells u ot ments germination
ong 5 com — nds, binary — effects o aves Muriates Plaster stone of iper- phosphate of
Active principles Haas AA AAE T PEHEE A Freezing of — Leaves, office of — acid — — subsoil ee by plants e
Adlulteration of Buel 8 straw Compounds, saline- | Frnit 2 ine a] r-tartrate of
ano Spat Burni ompounds, ter- Fruit, ripe 2 — black Shell san tash
3 „chemical | Burni ing u nary and quater- | Fruit, ripening of i Mustard, white Silex
— ae in eats aea aS nar, Fruit, unripe Lenti ai 'ETHA, coal tar Siliea Tapioca
mines Compounds, their | Fumigating by Lettu Nascent Silica, chloride Tarnish on
Air — composition eblorine Light, effects of ture of the s Silica in plants Tartaric n
contains car- CABBAGE Contagion Fumigation by sul- Light, influence on 3 ee —— in soil, use of | Tartra
aci | Cabbage, red Contagious matter hur P Aightsoi ilicates —
Air — water Palestine Copper — i Lighting a fire ightsoil, Silicate of Ternarycompounds
Air, inflammable Calcium Copper, oxide ur trom water Lignin fected Silicate of lim Tests, vegetable
Air necessary to life 28 chloride Copper, pyrites AS pipe Nitrate of lime Silicate of magnesia | Thermometer
Air, its composition | Calomel Copper, sulphate tas me, action on soil | Nitrate of potash Silicate of Tiles
Arx resists compres- Candle, or of | Copp das, mmable e and salt Nitrate of soda Silicate of sod. Tin
sion Can ae 0 Gas, manufacture of — — Nitrate of silver Tin, oxide
Alabaster Corrosive peng per Gas liquor , burnin Nitrates Silicon Tin plate
‘Albumen — in plauts Cream as liquor, strength | Lime, carbonate Nitre Silver Tin, sulphuret
‘Ale contains car- Carbonate of am- Cream oftartar | of Lime, caustic Nitre be || Silver, oxide Tobacco
bonie acid rops, rotationof || Gas works e, hydrate Nitre, cubic | Silver, nitrate Toasted cheese
Alkali, test for 98 of iron Cubie nitre || Gelatine e in plants N urid acid į Silver, salts of Treacle
Alkali, volatile Carbonate of lead | Cultivated land ermination „ muriate Nitric acid, action of | Silver, sulphuret Tropical
Carb of li EATH of plants eee acce- 2 e 8 — 7 in ma- 8 ei milk ar
Alkalies, vegetable | Carbonate of mag- cay | erat ime, oxala 4 f-ashes
Alloys = — . 3 influence of | Glauber salts , phosphate Nitrogen Slaking of lime Turnips
Almonds | Carbonate of potash | Glass ime, Silicate of Nut l Slugs urpeutine
Alum Carbonate of soda | —— — burning Gliadine estone | Oax ashes Smelis, foul Turpentise, oil of
Alumina tes decom- | Decay of bumas Glue Limestoue, magne- Oat Smelting Usare of ammonia
Alumina ‘by acids Decay, resuits of Glue, si _ | Oats Soap Urea
Alumina, silieate of Carbonic acid gus Decay, under water | Gluten Lime, à Oil Soap-boiling Uric acid
Aluminain soil, use Carbonic acid ne- | Decomposition | Gold Lime, super-phos- ap, deeomposi- | Urine
of eessary to plants — Ferres of Gold, chloride phate Oil, ca uon of Urine, cows’
Aluminum Carbonic: oxide i} ras a 33 Lime, when useful | Oil, cloves Putrefaction, infiu-'| Soapmaker’s ash | Urine, ‘horses?
Aluminum, oxide 3 hydro- — Lime, when mot 10 Vil, coco Soda | Urine, human
Ammonia | Dew rain of wheat de used Od. drying Seda, carbenate | Urine, putrid
Ammonia absorbed — Dextrine rapes Limes, juice of Oil. fixed Sı da in rocks | Urine, pigs
by charcoal, &c. | Carrot iiamond Linseed Oil of lave Soda in plants Urine, sheep
Ammonia, carbon- | Caseine Diastase Grape sugar Liquid manure ot lemons muriate oee leaves
e of Caseine, vegetable Diseases of plants Liguid 4 re Uil, dinseed oda, nitr Var of planta
Ammonia, fixing of | Castor oil stillation 2 —.— 0 l, 1 —.— in soils reo condensed
ch i Diten i reen manures Litharge olive a, 8 é
amon „ 2 3 4 Mern i Dou 8 T vitrio Liver Oil, poppy Soda, sui) Vapour in the air
een tout asta’ | Dom haf Taser 2 apan üi Sodium ve ble
S Chalk Drai u ii of turpen Sodium, chloride
er ; Drai = water um arabic —— rot 5 Oil, volatile Soft water Ve
urate of Changes, chemical ainage v
il auer Charcoal rang Gum, cherry-tree | Maces Ou of vi | Verh
` Charcoal absorbs Dung, cow um, resin — carbon. | Oil dregs colour of Vetch straw
heat ammonia Dung, farm-yard uano ave Qil seeds Soils, analysis of Vinegar
manures | Charring Dung, horse | Gunpowder Magnesia in plants | Oily matter ls, | Vitriel, bine
l principles, | Cheese Dung, pig | Gypsum Magnesia, muriate | Ores, roasted 2 Dre
i i —— —4 Dung, sheep | Har Magnesia, phos- | Organic acids phe gi
tances 1 rabbit | Hard water prate | Organic 8 Sous, formation of viewed, white
thing TAPAE — — Ma Dutch rushes artshorn Magnesia, silicate of | Organised Soils, mixture 5 —
Magnesia, sulphate Organic Soils, | Volatile oil
Chloride of ma — | Maguesian ‘Ji Organic substanc i | Volatile substances
seas lire 2 tae *. — | Weer
Jerusa- Chloride of potas- eat, influence on ——— — eicisetaslt Water, air in
— Hein em ride | Oxatis ‘Spirit of wine pory action on
Chloride of sodium Heat, sensi oxide | Oxide, ‘Spring water
i — — aed Maize ‘Oxide of copper Springs j Water, its composi.
Maize straw ide ot ir ‘Starch
‘ch "en Mal Oxide of lead | Steam
t ;
Hora Malting Oxide of manganese Stili
Malic acid Oxide of &raw
: E .
2 i anganese
Cireulation of the sence rest mee Oxides, metallie | Rocks, disintegra- Straw of back
i 5 Manganese, oxide of | Oxygen 0
4 eee, ; — Ne a M eo Wurzel Parer bleached by | Roman vitriol Straw = maize
He drogen Manure a 4
drogen, carbu- | Manures,animal | Paring Straw of rye
a Manure, tarm-yard | Parsnip Straw of vetch
Hydrogen, its light- | Manures, green —— Straw of wheat
3 Manures, morganie | Pearlash trong manures
Hydrogen, sulphu- lossof Peas Sub-salts
retted Manure, liquid Pea-straw | Subsoil
Ice Manures, organic | Peat ashes SaccHARINE matter Subsoil ploughing
Iudian corn Mamure,” ; — — | Suffocation from
‘Indigo Manure, saline Petre charcoal
air „strong Petre, salt Sugar
1 in | Manure, vegetable Pewter Sugar of lead
matter ure, $
I ‚manures Phosphates, earthy Salt and lime f waste
ke Phosphate of alu- Sulphate of alumina
Iodine Mechanical division Phosphate of am- Salt in sea water 1 ma
Š monia f Sulphate of copper
| PUBLISHED AT THE OFPICE OF rest F THE GARDENERS’ ee plea UPPER reas ames eeoa STEMT, STRAND, LONDON ;
D MAY BE HAD BY ORD. .
656
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT,
Portable Steam Engine And Threshing he)
EN AT WO RED BY
R. GARRETT AND SON, LEISTON. WORKS, SAXMUNDHAM, SUFFOLK.
The principal Prize of 50/. for the best Portable Steam Engine, for Threshing and other Agricult
RRETT anp rie of Leiston Works,
ee eee to their PORTABLE STEAM 8 and
9
Machine, were both awarded to R. GA
a
have T undergone co:
labour. R. GARRETT an ying
containing drawings and —.—— of their Patent 17 for
GARREIT and fora s Patent H d for Wheat
z Rakes, Clo!
o horse pow
d the apn 15 * simple
oe, improvements, — have 3 Patented, whereby a pode larger quantity map 4 e eshed
every information connected with the above, oni applica
game Corn or Seeds
tural p
at the Royal Agricultural Society’s
hing and Dressing oe Sern age
rses Sook ork coi to re it, m
y be understoo
arm, su
three hor
- re
n, by po
Barley, Turnips, Mangold W ursel and any other N *
d Crashers, ton Field Rollers, and Ploughs of every dee
witl
e te London, Hull, or Newcastle-on-Tyne, by water; and to any Station on the line of the East r
urposes, and the Prize of 251. 7 7 the
d and pane eB — any pe lhe farm
_—
best Threshing
Meeting, at Norwich, July, 184
HHN MATHA The
and Linseed Crushers,
yis takèt from place to
labourer,
e
s
nape yqu
; Patent Chaff Cutters, Dressing and 1 1 Machine
also Patent Wrought Iron Corn Rick Frames, Read’s Subs
e GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN, & Others
W
R. B. AN 8 orem to the late Mr, Jonx
Kine) will sell by Auction (wit reserve, the ‘ground
a a uired for other purposes), on the m ses of
r.
s Grove-road, 3 xton, on WE Y, October ur,
1849. at 11 o’clock (in consequence of t — number of lots), th
mhole o hyo Ho ye NURSERY Stock, ponistiti be Orna-
7 ruit, and Fore
sin
t Trees, Decid ‘green
Arbor. itz, a nus, “Hollies,
2 ; and a quantity of Seakale,
, a Welsh Cow, two useful Ponies,
s, a 500-brick Cart, a small brick Cart, a light spring
ewed prior to the sale. Catalogues
Messrs, CLARKE and Co., Seeds-
Wu. CLARK, Seedsman, ames re e-
2 ; and of the Finit Miko South Grove, Peckham rrey, |
NURSERYMEN, SEEDSMEN, AND OT
0. BE DISPOSED OF, by PRIVATE CON TRACT,
able
whole of the very valuab
th
may er
et at the office "Of Francis Cruso,
— 1 Assignees.—Leek, Oct.
T, within 16 16 miles of London, a useful
th g Farm Buildi ings and
TO Be ue
—
cottages e isin bi h
122 igh
G had upon
Agent, Bi
ont ae
me y be a and
3 ts W. Troms, state
„Surrey.
hood
20 acres of deep,
are also req: by
$ Towar. osii Westminster-
Price 7s. 6d., cloth,
* 85 F FRANCE, from the Earliest
sendy Jou, ero ae Market 8 4
> ing, Kc. A Dwelling
to'a, B No
of the
i of by the Minister of Pattie
through five
of Fleet street,
TO FLORICULTURISTS, NURSERYMEN, &c.—- MOST
ELIGIBLE AND OLD . BUSINESS.
O BE DISPOSED OF, onsequence of
death of the late proprietor, Mr. Jonn Cutts, a
RANELAGH GARDENS, ROYAL LEAMINGTON SPA. The
on the south side of the Royal
Spa, where they have enjoyed an extensive and
3 and patronage for a great numbe
posi tio:
he
8, presenting an
e posses: * of a first-rate bona — concern
vii me! it
ries, — Hot-
to
houses, and Pi ts are ‘on an extensive <_< constructed o n the
. ity |
r. WILLIAM . Auctioneer and
9 Leamington.
5 WIRE — NETTING.—
yard, 2 feet wide
2 erat,
22 2
.
222
ens. —
TA
885 os
2225 ese
222 22
2225 7255 8
25 2225 Sete 222525257
222 25 se 2722285 .
Galvan- ee | te
ised,
— nch 2 Are am 24-inch wide 2 * 5d. 2533
75 ss
2- —— 77 2 Svog 55 és 1 w S 47
lj-inch ,, light á 75 H #
nch strong owe 10 75 8
lj-inch „ „ extra stron ng. 1 — me se 5
All the above can be made any! width a tep z
he upper it wi ne — — price one-
urth, Galvanized sparrow. pro of netting for oF cope gre. 3d,
per square foots. tterns forwarded post-
De NEWINGTON’S AGRICU ann ae
MENTS.—It has been the study of the Inven
Implements to in ce a mo
2 and cultivating the land, e as in a mea
esent time, The sav
ew inven-
gh as eariy as
persons wis
ôt in Lon
— oe apply to 1 8 Agent,
of thes
re scientific and saving method of 5
n Counti d Eastern Union Railways,
URBIDGE anD HEAL rS inform
their Friends and the aie ther path bag
wnat arming of Hot! og ep upon .
par v
superior system of Hot Water 3 ‘They refer 2 2
under. mentioned pmo where they have erected most
tens sre orks. is 2
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
2 Gardens, Chiswick; particularly
boilers applied to the large Conservatory.
CYLIND
friends ey are now asta ng the
Ye oppor; by N - cost is a
ell kno’
es, &
cronan | designs. a Eirne conies,
0.
L
eo its 5 qualities, e
His m actory t 4, Lea
Cornhill, "Balanced 3 sets of 50
1 ber
. 2
t sharpeners, , cases mak
Siete — ‘ous, vee e. 1 peal
trop a pers pasto have given
ATE
— meets
— pe Ws and the
unequalled.
oat
ny, of
Baap e
a “WILLIAM
e of St, Pancras,
?
London, and 17, New Park-street, 2 |
and } 53 of the Improved CONICAL .
RICAL BOILERS, respectfi solicit
System to Pi
AGRICULTUR
<<
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE
AL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
No. 42—1849.]
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20.
[Price 6d.
EX,
2 value
FORD NURSERIES.
IND
education . . . . 655 a affected b = YF —
rena gts | Magn cw tet go! A), P, ERANCISS New Deseripiva Catalogue ot| I hates ny nena al ore
Bread. price Land 12 vem, artist eee e e RO RES for — a — season is now ready, — res Wane, Ca inte a to clear it off his grounds.— Appl 0
forwarded Fg n applicaton. 2E, Carpent r, Sutton, — 5 ee ere ies
2075 85 LOWE ER RING BULBOU s R ROOTS, &.— HVA. 1 CHOICE GERANI UMS.
} ADIOLUS, IRIS. NARCISSUS, AND CO 1 to o Twel th
475 Onis . ; „ be fer Twelve of the
— 6 Oxide Seas leaves iirc — — JONQUILS, CROCUS, RANUNCULUS, ANEMONES, LI. | A following varieties, — nts 80s. Armida superb
2 650 a Plant half hardy ti ED 25 go, m — paas 7 ie und quality, ‘from WM. HA AMIE. Aurora, Belle o s Village, Ariel, Ondine, Sylvia, Meleager,
ai san 2 = en. | Alonz o, Marian, Norah, Jenny Lind, Lalla Rookh, Phylii
— iù CEUTE 4 od 637 b . = Se 642 Pana superi varieties (named), 9s., 12s., and 185. Minna, Ter hore e ern Cramer" aad
Bieta, terial 25 125 7 Z Mr. Lomba plan of saving 662 — doz en common (ns med 6s. per dozen ; 52410 3s. per Vietory.— mas ery, Bedford „ Clapham, Surrey.
Praia, ‘tie Ache, cor a | pich Mosen Chas bai A er 100. SNOW ROPS, 2 — pes “ó. in osiowa, 2e 68, respondents.
seres —Vattlie e
parani + vs 5 Pakete . 12657 b — — * — each, A Priced — may be had Garis on LANGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, Jersey, be be egs
121 . 850 8 2 . . t that his DESCRIPTIVE j
Eman: Kher r 7 eco e| 25 varieties of Hardy Annuals, or = — or early spring PEARS with — . iptions of each peerage sige — dl
; t Shrubs for fences., cg sowing, 5e. ; 12 varieties, 28. 6d. ; fre ost, 6d, extra. lished by Messrs, ae R, Paternoster. row w, London, , price
4 — eee GALOROLARLA, GERANIUM, * PRIMULA SINENSIS | Is. 64. It will be h andy for Amateure as descriptions are
n saved = the be ‘Minds, Gast and warranted given in in fu 1, it as well as the stock — 5
ne. egi eeds o arden * ill
Bird Seeds, f 1
os u. Haren takes this opportunity of recommendin — BROMHAM HALL GREEN FLESH MELON
1 . IMPROVED T FLOWER SUPPORTER for Hyacinths, t| RD WARD TILEY begs most respectfull to inform
9 Garden 663 a | Wilson's (Mr.) ferm at Newton 669 5 — ae: ‘ — nn 4 ‘an orist’s Directory” rem: the Nobility, Ganis, &c., that he has been favoured with
. _| simple, usefu and cheaper su fo th hole Stock of $ of th b tifully-
J)OUBLE ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR. de. whether grown in Pts Grates, ea, poor ELOR, San Me, Dunis, ariane, DIAA Castle MAUN bes
CISSUS, 4s. per dozen, —The above Bulbs, the former of 1 6s. per dozen.— Address, A 23 eae obtained such bigh repute at the ' London great exhibitions
whichis so justly esteemed for woh 3 an = 1 A Post-office Order requisite — during the ner. and has obtained two medals during the
legance, have t n sent to nd twice
3 at A. CoknErr's Italian and Foreign — — AUS: 3 GEERT, 9 Ghent, Belgium — others eg be the A — flay sine Melan th
Pall-mall, Waterloo-place. Also Dutch Hyacinths, offers the 8 5 1 fas pecimens of CONIFEROUS tasted, Every particular will be given in future N
Crocus, Tulips, emones, unculus ; pri a ERANTS at — oderate pric 8. d. nts, Sold in packets of six seeds, 2s. 1 peg pickets
logues of which may be 7 9 feet high, sacks 4 1 O 0 of 15 seeds, 5, postage aud package free to any pa
OSEPH BAUMANN, NURSERY YMAN, Ghen „Be ` 2 Damara an tralis, 9 2 — a : i 4 he ga e ee 2 gy nta ‘PAYOU ITE.“
begs to inform his friends and the public in 9 ee eee eee eee
bal Hew ee of PLANTS in jane published, and i PE E er Y 10 rte nee 22 0 0 Mar It is a very handsome fruit, good bearer, free setter,
miy be had g or willbe den ostfre a on apptloation’ to g * 2 0 0 and never shanks off. Sold in packets, 28, Cd. cach., postage
Mr. Jons . M, e gnaw and © hipping Agent, Cox and A. V. G. also begs to inform his s, and the e public — | and panaan Erne toang par
Hammond’s Quays, Lower Thames-street, 1050 eneral, he has still a goa 28 i Dae s, with flow old by Epwarp TILEY, Narseryman and Florist, 16,
n T NOES buds, of the best sorts. ts from 3 to 5 feet, from 7s, 6d. to Pulteney aridge: Bak > A Snes as NOREN the
ASS anD BROWN have still fine strong plants of 7 ae 8 fom . ˙⁰l,, dak an an ais — am —
the following new varieties, last sent out, ready for im- 1 B. Ta printo Catalogue will be sent free, on 1 PELARGONIUMS “' GIrey BRIDE,” . ARE Ke.
ee Beck into larger pots. o Mr, M, Shipping and 5 N Agent, W BRAGG to inform atrons and Culti-
; 32 ry Prometheus, on ge 558. Od Cox aha Ham vee d's Quay, 1 ower Thames-street, ow sending
ý arkler, do 5 0
. 5 0 | Mont Blane, No. 5 0 y SPLENDID NEW GERANIUM.
2 eee Oe oven ‘Gate, Whomes 5 0 MONS FIELD MARSHAL”
| ise . 5 $ © |.Queen Victoria... Et HI 81 isa Striking and Noble Flower, witha remark.
Or the 12 055 ably fine nant, great freedom jarna
2 other frst cic ee for 21. 2s. petal. The truss is large and thrown . foliag
| eg sorts of our own selection #1 $ o hat sat foot-stalks ; the colo — N p
è collection of older varieties at 6s. and 9s. ‘per do zen. A et, Aylesbury, — t f ingha m i ; first
bad to Londen 0. — 5 -n piate seat gratis with orders pee ee A iu class showing» at the Mon Floriva: ural Soc twice,
8 i D $
| ý nese fiu thi tal a first prizes in mone 8 South pied T
Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. — Bahibidon | oe Upo i 7 sas Slough, will : ary ros, should there
‘report $
= LITTLE, King’s- 7 Chelsea, NURSERY-
. * to the Quee: n, begs to to offer the
yacinths 3 — at 6s. per dozen.
” 1 rene Yellow, Bite, Striped, White,
i at 28. per 100
RSA ü (ae can showy), at 28. 6d. ed. Per
— gone mixed Dutch tales es a 2s. per 40
ed Tulips for borders ( 9 ñ at 5 qet 100.
‘ olium album (fine render 4i `
t is
of the mos eat showy pe an
Dr. LinDLEY’s — 5 — : No, 1, tube pale blush,
* — 8 S oe OF ¥* owers, which a — Standard and half- standard TIRA ane saat aes and 15
in gr profusion, the utmost advantage. It has Moss Roses, per A* 25
long been considered that a ai — — th uli w Crimson Moss per doz.
rties of Venus Victrix, of la d be a great Bourbon Roses, superior sorts, Ba La Reine and Per-
eratum, and 15 this fine 3 pn have th this desirable re- petual Queen, per doz 3
realised. pr. LINDLEY’s Empat “ No. 2, tube and tng 3 Greenhouse 1 one of a sort, blooming plants. . 25
white, stained wi orolla dee olet 2 Choice Camellias, by name, ditt 0 .. 30
2 size, and — 4 a nice variety, with ae colours a Choice Greenhouse Plants, one of a — byname .. 45
of | Victrix ; the best of 3 your seedlings.” 10s. 6d. each. 4 Choi pice Meie as, om ofa 8 8 r 5
ae ysa ums of newest an st kin 8, per ozen .. 6
ni s AA let pga = nore wa Ditto 6 New Dwarf China varieties for 4 10
distin and e
rosy tg the sepals —
Ala expanding, with live violet ges corolla, e excellent
an 28 ig 5 has been gre =. Peg red b ——
DLEY’s opinion
pate cot ges etl ee Jiga lobes and 3 short
corolla, a neat aad 1 staged. * flower, with bright
: Well contrasted colou 7s. . ©
—.—
be given, when a remi .
or post- O — iicn ram payable at Richmond, will be required prior
to the plants = sent out.—Gillingy Riehmond, Yorkshire.
HOICE FLOWER ROO
ASS ane. BR OWN’S reeds ae ve Price d Cat —
of the above, embracing their Super rh Dollestions of SEED
1 RANUNCULUS, Me wei EARLY TULIPS, IRIS,
[POR TE D D UTCH HYACINT d o
The ‘ol
RANUNCULUS, free by post, wa n —
100 nh ndid gre varieti
tto
in 50 Sne v varieties k
N HS, imported wi
— fine Vars., 8.
tructions for pl
£3 10
”
oS ee
9 oo
ditto
with instroctions r pots, glas
12 ditto, 5s. ; 20 ditto, 3 roots of each vile wee
DOUBLE TULIPS, 10 15 s —
hf of each
IRIS, 12 splendid named Evglish, to
Fine mined ditto, per doz.. 2s. .
12 Salter’s superb German varieties 285 he
2
8
Q
CQ
g
—
—
S
g
8
.
2
©
—
$ s
00
ANEMONES, 1 db —
t mixe — — — 23. ; pee mix doz,
Fine single, per Ib. ua
GLADIOLUS, 12 splendid ‘named early: varieties
t
12 fine selected early hybrids, 65. {
Fine mixed ditto, per 35. 6d, kunha
Sandavensis, 7s, “ea. yer .;splendens, each... ¢
1 * mag new Cape 0
— thes each
pi — = arcissus, 3 o la
“NEW —— — 5
12 ee Paes gas EE Piian po
* O bo Or
— SS hm
Sooo
p —
p NGO
E
2
also comprises lists of Select seta
Shrubs and Ciia Clima —— anda
neces requested fro correspondents,
to be made * Bass and Brows, = =
Pe Resda nd Horticultural Es abli-hment, Sud.
Kent.
bates — CATALOGUE may still be obtained, GRATIS
on applic
Wocdlands N ursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex,
S . AND H. BROWN have to offer the fol-
lowing, which they will forward to any part of the Unka
Kingdom or the Continent,
Fine Dwarf and Standard Trained Peaches, Nectarines
Apricots, Plums, Pears, and Cherries ; the best pe
pp f these respective kinds, true to
e, 2s. 6d. each, or, per doz .. 24
Vatrained or maiden ditto, 18. 6 3 or, per dozen „ 15
— * Currants, and Raspberries, per one 3
Str Vines, Figs, and les, p Sü
Filber te new, thin shell and red 8 per p doz, os
mrep
Androm 8 l fine established plants weil set
with bl
25 Azaleas, new hardy Belgian varieties, on their own
roots, with 8 3 one = a sort, „n «20
25 American he „ 15
6 Andromedas of vee inglading ad 8
6 Kalmi 9 of a LEE 2 a .
6 Ledum:
oe 6
3 Hardy poe ‘Shrubs, ante ofa sort, by name ve 10
8 3 ee including — white, and rose,
S222
E
New 8 Yellow Rhododendrons, | ‘each Ts, 6d. to 10
6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one of a sort, 3 na 10
50 Dwarf Roses, on their own roots, by n
12 8 Roses, one of a sort, by . — in pots
Fine New Yellow Picotees and Carnations, of best sorts
er pair
—
N do ©
Cm S888 8888 2882 o
Y do
Aar new choice varieties, per ‘doze . to
6 of the following beautiful Lilies, 5 i ’ Lancifolium
album, punctatuin, rum speciosum, interme-
dium, venustum, sanguineum, eximium superbum,
coe TD n longiflorum, and japoni-
0 yptomeria aponica a 6 Choice Har dy Pinus, for 10
Fiete of reenhouse, / Ore and Orchidaceous Plants, —
Garden Seeds of all kinds by post.
Albion . — il se 108 r Wong
HE DEN OS AR,
DESCRIPTIVE “CATALOGUE. of ie 300 of
THE BEST ROSES in cultivation, propagated for sale
by ROBERT See Ate BIRCHAM, and will be forwarded
by prepaid applic
M. B. = = FOR oman the ae SUPERB pt iy oe e
Col Prie ce per p plant—s. d
1
Salmon ‘ 3
ů—U—7 —E eee eneee
sporessosssocseses ries pink, largs eri fall” seres
—7—b * -Delicate }
NOOR eee ete eneseeee
Clar:
s Dark shining crims. n
ark maroo
Wel White, — chocolate ground... 5
ae
jj 797˙.U33353633ů3
ä — 2
=
©
&
5
a
g
Grey purp
bight parple í 1
Beautiful i gir blush .
.
=
*
2
sesers
ä H ꝓ —2**r*ĩ *
TEFEN
t Gl
5 Perfecta Pine sali hur :
Sulpburea Palmata ......Light yellow . pa omer
ine org E e a RA
ark lil
OO Go bO t tS C bo Crs
41115 Ba dozen,
flow:
TICES OF r ün P
ted by Mr
. Biro
superior Melden ce,”
ext e for th = York
erald, 8.
-N ot omi iea rong —— tion of a m of beautiful
‘oe — Hede ary, Norfolk. These flowers
were far superior to anything = * Kind ever before scen in
1 3 — — ee. f Hol
MIN pad Snow. w genera of Hollyhocks, from
Hedenham Rosary, B Nec — unusual 5 on, as far
xhibited.'
ary,
exceeding any specimens of this Hower hitherto e
— Leamington Courier,
CHRONICLE.
l
Janes PH ILLIPS 4
LASS FOR ee
=
a
aa
r
—
Under
55 a ” ne a 7 by 5
* feet ca 200 E t da
eet cases of large Sheet Glass, for
at 2 A 5 — * E
fect, ace bs fin sin Plat Gis from ie
HARTLEY: A TATAN ROUGH eee
=
ace ee
8 by 6 83 by 64 “a
wate
—
>
g
72
D
nol
a?
asp Tra
ea
h Glasses and De O
rape 8
dow Glass
ass of every
meters fo
, 108 ‘Sele kae .
ubes, 7s. Gd, ;
meters for Greenhou
Wilimates aud List of ‘ices forwarded on
Pr
Warehouse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Wi — tto thelr
GLASS FOR CON lr 18 de,
1 ply
N CO. — Bae. 02. Sheet Glass of
ufact s varying
per square foot, for thie isk from 24, ty a4,
feet of which are 12 ma e acked or 2
Lists of Prices and esti s forwarded, on delieg,
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THIOR ORONG ¢ =
TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES bend
7 PROPAGATING
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE GT
OW GLASS,
e
e Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in each month,
5 PIPES.
y=. COATHUPE ES anp
Co., Gass
of Bristol, and of Nailsea, $ mere,
Engineers and others, that they are 2 5 beg tolnfoem
PIPES A from 1 = kapes bore, in 1 of euS
the I hs bei as the diameters of the bores 2
5 FOR 55 AND HORTICU
PURPOSES, &c. ue
MILK PANS
PASTRY PINS
25 > 1
PROPAGATING&BEE CUCUMBER GLASSES
T.: MILLINGE ON, S SHEET fm e eskae
e feet cases of
1 —
Plate Glass, from ls, 2d, to 2s. per to
Patent Rough Plate Glass, from 105 to 1 inch jn in thickness, from
1d. per foot upwards, Glass and T Milk Pans from
>: to 24 5 — diameter, from 25. e len 5
rom 12 to 24 inches long, at Id. per
Was — opus bad on —
each. asp Traps.— Lists m
warehouse, 87, Bishopigate- prc Without, same — as the
Eastern Counties Railway.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HES
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHORES nan
VINES, FERNS, &
WEEKS anp Co., King's-road,
© TURAL ARCHITECTS, HoTHOUSE BUILDERS,
4 20 an
tion By mean
Stove, Greenhouse, gre
pme that aig sse
ns des! trous of entering iuto t ens nove 08 by!
Modal, ieh is: is’ Sow i Lond
security é eing given ; this e tion be
Piracy. — Get. 20.
e
{wba wish fe a 4
. Soldin
rti
q and ¢ Co., U mouth,
i e adjo oining the Plymouth h Station
est Devon Railway, b sales of Guano have ex-
i 2 yt tons during the last five yea
if 73 NEW STRAWBERRY, OR?
* NS are prepared to send —
AND
MYATT the — 3 at the price
ertilised Hautbois,
N 38, 6d, ; oe
ce,
orders are 9 100 to be made more to
a Myatt, Manor Farm, Deptford, — —Oct. 20.
AMERICAN PLAN
OSEA WATERER begs to — nee he has just
EN a New and Complete eer of his — —
cas fat CONIFEROUS PLANTS, which may be had o;
inclosing two stamps for ——.—
TRER, Knap Hill Nursery, Wolini ng, T w
——
8
has published a Descriptive Catalogue of his pe
„ iion of RHODODENDRONS and other American
&c., which will
M“FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.”
Strong ach; an pel bpp in TOE pots, now ready,
A. 2s, each ; ock has been realised than
——— 2 be given for every thre
nr by roe Me Trado. ani to Aa WILLIAM FOQUETT,
Shide ort, Isle of Wight
N AND AMERICAN PLANT S.
Advertiser having an extensive tract of Heath Lan
, has always on hand an unlimited
scale of price
—
e this highly i im pena subject
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. _
St. John's-street N
> R. garay
y delivery, strong wel
established lanta of the fol foll oria ng:
GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CRUSADER . Ts, Gd. each.
TOPPING’S BRILLIANT |. y Te 8 5
FUCHSIA al tn gig 8 =
The Three for 18s., carria ge and p shige fe ndon.
Post-office or tee + or reference, 3 om unknown cor-
respondents. The usual discount to the trade.
„able security nst the introduetio
-| the water Aan
shear’ Gardeners Chronicle.
TURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1849.
Ir is reported ned > = garden in es the
er Hea or t has bee ed 15° b
1 47 feet deep. This i if true is a
ay 992 Se beyond 9 that we coul
it Sg er ell a permanent result—eyen in
inter is of course ad Pier: the
9 Circumstances prevent our ini
the 2 ad 8 1 alluded to; but, van
0 an be no doubt or s
result affen approaching it to be of
greatest larger is attain
It is r em the frst time, that publi c atten-
n in the 4 dene
tion
On the contrary we
ous occasions pointed out the
undoubted fac t that a an increased temperature is ry
of the most “valuable results of deep drainage ;
more probable cause of gi immediate sirs velhsiit |
have on severa
ers’ emi tonne to a
g at
all considerable at such an iss 2 font ; it
must be admi o positi
evidence — the su biet 5 i — — therefore,
sugges friends that it would be hi y
desirable 5 — s the subject in such a way as
to le
It is of no consequence, for ins
thermometers to 8 employed —
exact in their indications as those ys Obeervate
at Greenwich ; the —.— point mata be that all
the thermometers in experiment should
with each other, any little error that may exist in
their aes being common to them all; for it
ari sizes, and at th *
— in L — it — 8 of the health of crops than the mere removal of ig no al 1 of soil that
* water, or introduction of air Cis the soil. The wala. 0 haber nf a ehi: We
obne ponticum, 165 45 ‘moog {3 3 5 per 1000 nature of deep draining i is 7 „ such re $ render | %, ve want to of different — We say this in
„ ” additional of air to the roots of plants too 1
gi 4 1 2 fit some ot inconsiderable 2 spyirecinbles It is only when order that observers wer pe * dete by the
: 14 foot, 20s. per 100; 2 feet, 405. peř cop draining and hep: tremely’ SOC paij odok aris : micht be farms for bye pa 5 Of
” 1 ; fit for pl dine out other that any great access of air to roots beyond ok ti
1 eres 1 rior EEG , what is customa anticipated. Where both 1 however, the. more ¢xach the
„ fine e 7 06 feet, 30s. to
s d 00. pet dos ee 2 the effect is certainly m Four r SAER A should form a set. In each
to 6 fect, standard, single stents, fit axe sty before Bes piece CF lena Which in| | oaa tharmonictes should hivo its bulb 1 foot
1 ng the fine 11 — and’ 5 semi-hardy 1845 was trenched and drained to the utmost -= Dalan A mper eih y thi
gate Tres Rhododendrons” m us become ag gen. which the nature of the — would 1 + fan „Each h d a —
ReopoDENDRON ponticum, white, Gao The trenc was through London clay an to a . “7 it m fom t
eee 40s. per 100, vel to about 34 feet ; the draining was the t with metal (tin or copper) a4 — =
ps ze 15 15 3 to 4 feet, 3 er 16454 11 — 5 the ground, the space e betw n the
scarlet (3 or 4 varieties), 1 to 2 feet, 188. per
dozen, on —
243, per doz
new silver pne ea 2 fet 1E 183. oer do: —4
RE polaran * rbore d catawbiense,
ndsome
i 2 which may be ha
F. Rose Stocks, fit for working, 8s. per 100, or 2s. 6d.
‘Wx. Rogers, sen., ——— and Contracting Planter, Red
| Lodge, near Southampton,
WORK ISLEW
8
13
1 .
T of f hues,
mi ‘ey 45 mus, b, Jlac, an and ses of lovers of various hus, Ashes, 11 to 13 wae wr tne
Jagme of the "gardenen. 7 of some cee f
the apparatus every afternoon at
4 feet.
22
2 feet. 3 feet,
* 1, 1849. cy 22 5 : aa ;
2,
n
laity, 2
comparison of ih oe ‘registers would give e ha
reall . i
some public-spirite a
different pref — will — He yn
pomaka earnest. eag
cost,
not a. thought mere :
Hmpertance of the results to which it must ara ig
660 THE
idered. The experiment would determine,
not a mere point of abstract 5 28 75 but a question
more intimately connected with the cultivation of
than . The dis-
e relative value of dee
fo adjust their differences in a manner satisfactory
Zo the public. Ford the present we vote for the deepest |
draining ; the proposed trial show whether we | i
Fag
ers will probably remember that w
published a — since some figures of 7 —
EAVES which appeared to have been BORED FULL
wots by insects, and which 7
produced in the late trial conce ing the lton
alkali works would of course haye sworn hea s0
pi iend, whose attention was dra
fri a
the subject by the remarks then made, has jus vi
us some leaves in exactly the same state, pierced |3
with holes iy the oride of Toad om a refining d
eins i ew hundred yards from their
lea Sa
Be wil fe power, and ort . the
e of
This is no doubt a circumstan
— occurrence in the neighbourhood of all | s
works from whose chimneys acrid vapour is allowed
do escape.
VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING.
ndre
The gardener described it as falling | nella Z
GARDENERS’
June. In the species which feeds on the —
(Yponomeuta Padelia; the larva also feeding on Prunu
padus), the cocoon
apres the enclosed chrysalis to he se seen ; and the wings
of the mo
ntil very recently several of the species of the genus
o which these ong have been confounded
together, and it h n ag “age that the hee cows
ag a tr: on
gs (Mr.
in
rs (changed by Zeller
TeaM. which feeds on ‘the Sloe and Whitethorn ;
Malivorella, which feeds on the Apple ; Cognatells
eeds
n Eu ropeeus ; and
authors Padi of “Balle. Mey feeds on Prunus pa-
; Mr. Stainton adding the following note, “I fully be
fied in naming it as a
minute black dots, whilst the cocoon is equally 3
e villa
i grante r that the
preparatory advice which I have deemed it judicious to
offer has been acted upon. bet re 4 — 7 ortunate |
enough dee e ay ep other glass structures
have the means of sec i in their own hands, not so
chrysalis ; — side within the
masses of web a lea
in our woodeut, which also exhibits the caterpi
moth of the natural size, as well as the caterpillar mag-
Bhose who possess neither; an — Tf fear is the mos
numerous class. To them, therefore, I will devote this
„which may be 3 a chapter of expedients,
not become down e winter is
at hand, and your er * ts very night appa-
rently doomed to d tion. Let your cellars an
rooms be routed out. Old empty casks and boxes
are not to be 5 if prop y
m ; and it is not less astoni
thousands of the flowering plants whieh 8 year
adorn the stalls in Coventgarden ouse
winter. Let these 1 or — be 12 od upon their
si mo of soil from underneath
them. Then place them close 2 nd heap soil
all and around the sides 3 can be
procured this will be more readily applied. Whatever
material is employed let it be - naged as to carry
of the rains. stow e plants away in their It is lamentable, in certain seasons, to observe the be
winter q ke all in a per- | devastation caused by this insect to the foliage of some
fectly dry state—i condition which I have varieties of the Apple. Not only have we observed the
insi on with much urgency. Some coal- j| whole of the leaves of trees devoured, but the trunk
ashes or dry sand will n required, in ich the = ee well e small twigs, covered with a
pots are to be fally plunged to their ri when | strong, shining white web, om the caterpillars have
this is the mouths oe these receptacles must rising hit festoons of the same 8 from
be kept open so ap ja as rw e, when there is no the branches. Of course, it will be at once perceived
danger from fros — over the mouth of that this strong coating of web over the young shoots
the boxes at night, will rs ‘lr that is required in ordi- | must render it cult, if not impossible, for young
mary weather, ere frosts set in, of long | leaves to develope themselves. Our friend, M. Guérin
duration, greater a thick ering e | Méneville, who is n occupied in ce, under
necessary. It ldom that we have frosts of longer Government commission, in investigating the habits of
duration a fo ; therefore these boxes may | insects injurious to cultivators, has just pu — . — ey
remain shut up without much inj r that period ; | notes on a insect (which he, however, still confounds
on plants to sanlight, if they are i , which are well worthy attention as
3 ntrary, let ually thaw in their practical utili ty. “The inhabitants of the depart-
the dark, and only expose them by degrees. By these ments where this malady appears have no Tera
being strictly attended to, Pelargoniums that the caterpillars are the first state of the ś
and all the principal flower- lants may be pre- | merable sasi white moths which fiy about the fields
wich the months with suecess—of | towards the end of summer, and, being ignorant of the
course not the same op omg foliage as in a green- ich caterpillars undergo in order to become
house, but in a po or planting in the open perfect insects, they regard the e
ground next summer. s, and as having no 3 with the Apple trees.
e
LL ERMINE APPLE
THERE are no species of insects spe injurious to the
the
foliage of vario an the e
of their four 1 d by numerous — ota OF
jet Black.
Nothing is more co in the early summer
months than to observe the Whitethorn hedges covered |
with what is generally termed blight, or, in other words, |
exhibiti ainoo Of Ges 'atincts sof insect | |
belonging to the order and consequently
Ie
necessity ] meas
stricter force the law
ts lándlords, with their
the period |
t they remain in
ry webs itih ad to the branches.
em
bla
ever, and experimen
nches
by the more careful grower ; and hen
of genera measures s, such 8 the putting into
of échénillage, compelling
| Persons to destroy the caterpillars.” (Anuales Soc, Ent, | ¢
de France, 1848, p. Ixvii.
p.
Ita ppears to us also by no 3 A to destroy
or the perfect insects as soon * ave made their
in 1 and before a Sire oe their eggs,
ultaneous appearance the whole
he 3 sim
in the eee 3 de with ‘the very con-
moths, will render
CHRONICLE.
m the former tree |
wh
so opaque that it is impossible to perceive the inclo — He
A sheet may be laid benea
s | time, whieh should then
e oths, which
by a very minute rous pamai P in ea
the genus Encyrtus, such numbers of which ane ES
the body of a single caterpillar, that its gl n 7 ià
shrivelling up, is distended and drie ed, 80 ated of
proper form. J. O. W. 5o a to Petia ig
. ——
e OF er
GENTS eie 3 one 5 ü —
It is not uncommon to find in the middle of
trees p — of dead alburnum, with in em
bark, entirely covered over by wood, This dried- p
g
8 K ;
1 %
rf
F
BERG
F
E
Poplar wood.
E
2 8 K
£
yet matured was more likely to suffer,
rinti, iah,
—On the stems of various: tar aag oy
pesan trees but on those e
e country, may
seaihd or striæ, which follow the di direction
reason, resinous trees are th
Genus XVIII.; CARCINOMA,* 2 e
— It is certain that pe owing marshy
f the jat, are —
peculiar maladi Suchi
sent one.
from whi ch exu
d which are placed in aquatic
often soe ed to the “ht extremity by ae
n called ca
SUPERFICIAL Canonova Ta tis a8 :
—
t only is the exerescence extern rnal, but the
not only is
of this
cem n the occasion of explai ee
— . I shall enter into
important process
Gossip ABOUT GRAPES.
Rust.—In some remarks in a form . s
-| Gardener Chronicle upon a
tube Greek word for à
108
vital functions precisely in that part which by not bern
And as Nat ;
such Carcinoma.
nker, I distiogys
bee f= e- found scattered — |
various causes ; by an ,
the proper development of the epidermis of the
„ In that opinion I quite concur, and by way o
corroboration I wi
42—1849.]
which I once ~ ich I once sent at for yo our inspection n, you ou observe that
& the disease kno
dently caused the
wn by the name of € rust,’ which evi-
8
$
a
B
2
8g
=
f
will mention some instances which have
wn practice, of the rust being pro-
occurred in m
duced by different ere
I ha
tensive Graperies, ae of = arly 200 feet
addition to a Vin 3 rafter, there
the back wall, an also what might be
and rub the young fruit very much, and the conse-
was, that all the Grapes thinned by that person
d
sweaty hands is the sole cause of the evil, which is re
wrong, as the following case will show.
There are at thi
several sorts of Grape
— in cold, heavy +d pro in 3 only the
su
f
some that e
l di rng in
ose
is place two Vineries, each containing
"1847 all the Grapes in this Sans e,
he eens
Now, rough handling could not in this case have
ced this excessive state of the disease, ae
b
giana $ after th - were fairly started,
they received very li little fire heat. During the summer
house along with various duplicate
th
xi with a
t
eat | m
re they
ed;
on the
heavy burden upon their w
come down a halfpenny in the ma they first ask.
Bs Burnett, Gardener, ee li,
Roots in Dra — chat I have
ade, I am induced to believe, that when it is desired to
roots in 2 aree a tolerably copious
ains.—
If, a
n, w
this remedy would be inapplicable where it is desirable
— water sboul te e sides
I have had choked
re therefore how
ject
osso p
sion ever since, the white flow
on the slender stalks iu = “of the closely- set foliage !
the extreme height more
There are still a considerable n * . of bio — 8 be
n grown in re, and
ida may be classed in the
its eee pro-
ru
Van Houtte’s “ vie? w
ngland, ct unknown. ]
e effec
raising the erature of the soil, even ae extent
stated in the Le article of your last N eaten, is by | pro
no means incredible, The withdrawing so pow werful
conduetor of calorie as water, is no doubt the principal
mass, therefore
e cool system, ‘mk a litle z more heat at the | man,
y mendat
1 in lowin
may have looked
ing z with you that the higher temperature occasions the |
in any cropped tev or} ; therefore re your recom
tion of“ ped ping the lan
e a certain preventive in open fields.
ashes
with compost or sowing over cr estroy
. The larger ashes are sold *
paths, roads, or to — fold-yards, These ashes, but
678 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.
— the a aE generally iy strongly . maintain the character it has so justly merited for skill 3 the former with fain
salt. laying drains, therefor 2 where and enterprise. There is perhaps no eity in Europe — but agers nd n
danger — be e han roots and fibr a able to compete with it in collections of Palms, Cycads, | leaves in the style of fulgen i:
if from 4 to 5 inches of these ashes were to be first | Ferns, and Pandanus, to say nothing of Orchids, Ca- | folia, with * aas heads of reddi h 1 a
put on the tiles no fibres would dare to approach | mellias, and Azaleas, which are here propagated on a — lata area edulis, 8 e miè
0 * m e i om
E
touch t rain, for a — ta
at their 8 or take a er direction ; the England alone are gst to ave rage between 10,000 —— was not equal t
extreme saltness of the ashes Wr, not suit t thei ir taste. and 20,000 pla ome we um. On this occasion every | at the — ey: 3 saw two
These ashes peste also be an excellent covering for the | one seemed to fı t his — to uphold the reputation fact of Brussels being an open — have vere
ing sufficiently porous to allow the water to of his country, — the y had the satisfaction * seeing | fined to the province of West W, while =
em in ot only the no i Fruit: uders,
*
pere
ciently 5 stop any earthy sediment; they also with plants and fruit, but numerous collections of Ca- Pears, Apples 0
possess —— 1 reed which is that of dura- | mellias, Conifers, Oranges, — 5 ivergreens, and | and 8 . st eee and —
bility, — when exposed to atmospheric changes. | flowering plants, tastefully arranged in the front and | fine — * Ded in which were
These ashes are sold e at the works, as they accu- back of the bu uilding while the — in the rear | Rambour d' ste, Reinette d'Es * Calville
mulate fast; perhaps the price may be stated at about | was saisie set apart for agricultural produce. The and d’Ameri me's Peas: Ree de
e . r ue to i
Fit
P
©
2
et
LT
“t
8
*
85
ae
0
eo
8
as
5
[>]
a`
2 S
D
fou
Oo
Ru
a Es
ga
828
2.
8 8
=,
pu
3
—
Ea
O 4
p
H
ag
8
e+
=
E
—
E
E
er
8 8
Q
2
m
.
eS
eee
Sa
— 8
pS
8.
O +
Po
5a
. g.
7
9
ot
ad
o>]
S
2
Sep”
bt
2a
by 2
o>
y 3588
8
>
2
oO
oe
8
8
a
2,
a
i
J
E
Me
a
®
D
85
D
m
S
=
7
—
p
—
“ce
2
©
©
mn
N
—
©
E
E
©
=
©
Hy
E
>
5
Q
2
B
T
a]
=)
©
mJ
Or
&
E
—
=
k
8
te
oe
=
2
B
oe
8
—
0
.
S
mn
oe
©
5
8
ey
©
d
a
m
vn
=
©
E
88
8
9 4
E
.
Ege
s
“0
ou
h
—
i
de
ad
. 3
E
E
+
E
ES
E 8
2
5 4 5
a
gee
F
28 8
2
T
3 6
8 88
8
* S
>>
go?
20
E
wae 2
5 3. 8
& .-
4
De
8
`~ œ
£
E
ify
eff
E
®
a=]
2
5
D
5
B
etr
4
p
4
—
oO
o
mm
f=]
o
8
2
f=}
5
E
ka
85
th
Ss
oO
8
—
5
8 Eg
D
E
8
=|
B
a
8
E
=
oO
2
=
—
©
na
8
kq
i
—_—
=
r 0 gi
My Balsams being very tall, I cut the tops off a | confine myself to some few of the finest plants which at- in it was perhaps the |
; 5 t P
3 of them, put each in a pot singly, and a . most attention, and for which mat had been | Belle pa msy hu ale Paan —
i offer yt Araliads: Ist prize, Mr. A. I will n t d
— pn aos a shift in A y ta large peni filled with Verschaffelt, for very fine — a vs pe = — —„—-— we —.— — of the agricu
ich soil, a ve now a fine display of flowers and | crassifolia, Guatemalensis i foli i to be h
nice dwarf plants, which I once believed would prove | other species ; 2d, Mr. — ate s — i — Be — ten ily e to “o a
good for nothing. H. M., Gardener, Priory, Ireland. plants of crass ifolia, diversifolia, elliptica, eee
— of aoe the — g Ba oiae by trifoliata, pulchra, p AE a and palm Br * Bebiew.
es 0 ted, in meliads: Ist, Mr. T Ver schaffelt, for = artea | A
of 32 8 a sandy soil, a janen, gracilis, gracilis as juncea pendula, Me Ebene — e — * — i
2d, Mr. Van Geert, for large plan H
sets weighed 3 ounces each or rather less; they of Bonapartea gracilis, hystrix, juncea, pen —— —— — — ros — pree Sabine, ie
= e rs oe: about half a pound | serratifolia, Cacti: ist, Mr. A. Verschaffelt. In| AN excellent translation introduces the English render
w are usually cut into Aa sets. They this lot were = eplendid Cereus senilis, C. mon- to one of those amusing and instructive works, which
were planted rather more than a apart every strosus, 3 3 E. aulacogonus. Mammil c the ex — .
2 and 8 — aes occupied fl x a Som laria niv d M. dædalea ; 2d, Mr. A. Van Geert, philosopher, and few except the brilliant Humbel
8 Ich oa and Hours: ie i uxuriantly, | w 3 ‘splendid ——— cometes, Echinocactus | could write. His sketches of nature are those of
Segui Rae ae — every hill exhibited the piliferus, and E. Pfeifferii. Conifers: Ist, Mr. A. great master. Like those uf un accomplished artist, they
pet on eayes, and occasionally a brown stain 1 2 large plants of Araucaria Cunning- throw off the most admirable likenesses by half a dozen
a . excels rae = 4
3
„
.
E
3
=
a
-
>
~
8
2
&
>
a
a
x3
S
S
~™
8
=
©
*
4
Oo
È
—
2.
{=|
TQ
8
S
oO
8
H
x
.
8 8
Go
ot
m
eos
mM
—
O
F
—
ae
| =}
aa
4E
F:
Oo
ao
Ps
©
g
ae
oS
of
E
D
&
oO
b
j=]
Qu
th
[=]
oO
oO
D.
f
[=]
£,
E
1
8
*
er
2
4
8 x
>
Ss
E
.
B
8
.
©
0
©
©
fu
2
©
=
©
4
2
a
*
it
ae J
aie
Hie
A
$
Fi
HF
*
8 5
D
E
8
October 19th, = > hills y du a is: day, Dammara orientalis, — cupressinum and ex- | like Humboldt wio know how to represent te reat
e five nacre produc uce! = i of of Potato celsum, Cryptomeria japonica, Podocarpus longifolius | outlines of nature by a few clever 2
oo i — n : mae 3} Ws, r. | and Totarra, Araucaria brasiliana, Taxodium Horsfieldii, | however, nothing that is essential is neg
oT ayaa : — ae a er 7 — another Cupressus Lamberti, and Phyllocladus trichomanoides. It is in works like these that a student should
a than » and the | Conifers (hardy): Ist, sa De Spae; 2d, Mr. Vers- search for the important facts of physical geograp
* y S z =.
sized. Five hills day, where the | for two m —
agnificent pl f Cycas revoluta ; Ist pri i ths, but he knows that he may
— — ie off, ae 7 21 of e e r. e elt, for splendid spec a of 15 place all but implicit faith in the * of his
2 whee . weight, and there edule, Zamia species nova, Z. pungens, Z, deb is, Z. | teacher. He as maste
o amongst them. The horrida, Cycas circinalis, C. revoluta, and Ceratozamia | “ A Aspects” aay — much to learn, but t he vil
but
untouched fve hil and hay —— . ai mexicana ; 2d, Mr. De Saeger, for Zamia debilis, little to unlearn, A paragraph like —
suppose that there Be any in onasiga 5 tuber | elongata, and mexicana, Dion edule and aculeatum, and | hurries along the vender as the traveller is forced om
in those hills from * the haulm had ees z — preas revoluta, Laurels: special — Mr. Van | ward in the rapids of some mighty transatlantiestream:
Sn Daiane & intona to leave dic haulin ¢ t ; and | Houtte, for Laurus ager lst pri Mr. Vers-| These African plains occupy an ex thre
take every other care I can. “John cover oF not, — gg hane naj — a l 2 — — iyo — See, | ansa piot ora
House, Weybridge, —— Oct. 19. for Geatamata : specia „prize, Mr. Th Z y „and |
r phyllum multiflorum; lst prize, Ghent | vicinity of the tropics ; and on =f >>
— Belgian Mode of by Me P po — e trie 3 Botanie Garden; in this collection were fine specimens — charaeter dopada) In the eastern part of the
out of my usual quantity FEEBS 36.40 BB —— oe of Stanhopea tigrina and oculata and Aerides odoratum; | old continent, the same geognostic q
P I have never exceeded 20 tubers dis — n | 2d, Mr. Henderix, for Phaius Tanker villa, Stanhopea | in the temperate zone. On the plateaux
TS diseased in Peares and oculata, 8 granulosa and Harrisonii, Asia, between the gold mountains or the Altai and the
K beyond the Cale
m ter crop of
and hav r. Verschaffelt, for capital -lun, from the Chinese wall to
wi 14 aa 8 3 0 iy poy — bad, pian nts of Sabal stellata, arem longifolia, —— — towards the sea of Aral, there exten
chee — 1 , — rotundifolia, Chamzerops lutea, Sa- through a length of many thousand miles, hector
; this — in 1846, Ch d i z ysel
mama amædorea mexicana, &c.; 2d, Mr. De Sae f i ve myself the
snd “eae to do so the other two . — My Thrinax 3 Sabal s Adansonii and stellata, 5 — — South American journey, —
I always — aa * — — — — arge. Chameerops excelsa and lutea, Phoenix daetylifera, a portion of them ; namely, the Calmuck 4
N * er Patin Cory pha rotundifolia, and Latania borbonica; special pv sin ‘between the Don, the Volga, the of
ches i — ake Dsaisang, being an extent
f
it
ak te = 5 an Mr. al m
1 eger, for P. longifolius atin, 5 Candelor, -| “These Asiatic s Burts
— hes oroughly decayed stable dung and flexus, as, gelogen, latifolius erns : — and sometimes intera pted by 7i
Storing Potatoes.—I fear that our P ee Lt tine, ik Van Houtte, for a large Balantior (dispersed ove
os otatoes will not 3 1 * that — e Ll Lane
V.
1
i
in e. Ist, Mr. De Kirklowe. Proteads: Ist, Mr. tati tha
: ee has coal ashes, a try Van Geert, Camellias: lst, Mr. A. Verschaffelt ; 24. 2 an
uxing them throu anaker ; es i d
Ford, 1 answer. R. Musgrave, Co. Water- pr Finest 3 in bloom: Ist, De 8 — adorned with
Large —The f. is the or Di ovata; 2d, Mr. Verschaffelt, for | Rosacese, and with
ot ir —— —— Ther ve —— — Erica retorta major. Finest new plant in bloom: “As the —— zon
am info there were
0
i
F
=.
5
3
S
-g
8 8
* oO
28
5
1
zi
8.8.
ie?
4
28 8 8
172 2 2
Tig
Ht
i
5
l
ii
8
8
z
*
z
.
F
aT
z
a
8
$
2
5
a
z}
8. 2
. 8
8
Bs
1
and I flowering
aue — — tn Finest new Palm: r. De Sae e Asiatic ste oa it
called — tree of _ same eed me Ones mærops fenestrata. Finest collection of — — some of the 2 by the 2 en 2. —
deseribed in the Hortieultural Society’s Catalo — bloom: Prize, Mr. — r for Echites . herbaceous plants, Saussureas and of species
that name. They resemble Shepherd's F. — Y | Miltonia Clowesiana, an eristeria with orange and Papilionacese, especially a portions of thes
but are more like the Em ‘Al coed ving orm, 3 Finest collection én ew plants — Astragalus, In traversing pathless Tartar carte
33 s an eror Alexander in a o Belgium from their native localities: Ist, Mr, steppes, the traveller, seated in — beneath
1 Weight ARAE 1 % | Circumference .. io. Dalle, for Lycopodium umbrosum, Erythrina mex-| sees the thickly crowded — Took around f
Eor e 1 = 1 i — —— rg wee vittatus, Eranthe- wheels, 9 —— wee m4 he is moving: Some —
monic — um, and Serjania Brasiliensis, &e.; 2 di aor
"George Wood, "Rochford Cue "6. Mr. Versehaffelt, for a — Aechynanthus, a — the Asiatic ste — are grassy plains dea *
ied Brugmansia and Spathodea, Bignonia (Brazil) and covered with succulent, evergreen, e with fakes i
Societies. Aristolochia (St. Catherine), Hard- wooded Cape piants: plants: many glisten from a — unlike
Pe. F SoLTORAL AND AGRicuiTéRan Suow Ist, — fortwo. splendid - Prize Mr. Louis Vers-| exuded salt w artes T inter
gium has long been cel — os ge chaffelt, or two splen plants, 10 feet high, of | appearance to fresh fallen artarian steppes „
its extensive | Y. gloriosa varie . Van Houtte exhibited a * These — 2 N features, its
nurseries and numerous botani ; —
its cities, es, Ghent stands eral gah? — — l large general collection, — ng of some splendid — frequently by ™ wi 1
tion, which was held on the 16th Sagas > Gloxinias, Achimenes, Orchids, 2 Ges- | very ancient civilisation of of Thibet ane
Casino, gave ample proof of ite at | neras, &e. Mr. Linden had also several ne plants, the vate nations of northe rn influence on
to among which E noticed two new —— and various ways exercised an imp «
renn
43—1849. ]
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE
em ve compressed the
4 po have tended, more
destinies of man. They ha d
towards the south caci
the — 2 or than the snowy mountains of
d Ghorka, to impede the intercourse of L
bey to placè permanent limits to the extension
of milder manners, Cen = artistic and intėllectual
norther
ë Bat, — the “history of ‘the past, it is ** alone as an
the plains of
central A ee e proved the
from — ; 8 over distant
finds. The 3 nations bas these steppes— Moguls,
s d aken the world.
to the Chinese po
driven back into — Asia.
from
From thence Huns, Avari, Ghazarés, and various
tures of Asiatic races, broke forth. Armies of
d ively on the Volga, in Pannonia,
on the Marne, an the Po, home ga. those fair and
fertile fields which, since the time of gm civilised
man had adorne — a r monu
Thus went forth fro e Mongolian et a deadly
blast, whieh withered on Cisalpine ground the tender
rished flower of Art.’
r
this the * en — 4 of 2 e =
sesse
rn erstood ;
— da will appear the most
Eg parr 3 Welk value is undeniable.
Take the followin tips as an example
“The northern Mau — boundaries of — widely
extended low region o its
southern
wn,
we
of several de
the Sahar as
imits towards the fertile 2 are e still but | margined with white
I
*
gay at this season; and near them, small plants is oppo
sort,
The different species of
a e floral
g bright ae — Coronilla
— Though
out in a
whi ch . — a — winter flo owering *
deep crimson Aischynanthus pulcher, — — fi uchsioides,
which also blossoms we
the — little blue-flowered Ruellia elegans,
trodue d there of the red. leav
Cuphea eye though small,
nded much to enliven this hou
roweas, more especially C. stricta, whose fi
darker Pensa than those of C.
whic associated with it
in only in thre
ts an oad os the’ sis was
the U
e main s
rar ek 8 oblong,
with 10 scales, the larger
. six-sided. Seed:
or less ang
1} E= and 1 in l a
be very distinct from an
e 2 of Lambertiana *
in complim ent to Mr. poe
it was
that name. ing, h
cerning the country han wh
two or three years a
isiting Mr. Low's nurse at Clapton,
had ‘received fro
Hartweg, w
eg and finding it had very
of C. macrocarpa, w.
the — s Journal, takes
precedence of the eaten, thoug!
Lambe
grow most any
not very poor.” Sauna of the
Hortioulturel poe an Oot TA v:
TIRE of Operations.
5
TAKE advantage
more easily removed,
oy 88 * be managed by
eyringing the plants with wa ture of
about 120° or #3 0°, which will ‘aso destroy any living
ch more
insects which may be lurking a
— done by carefully cleaning plants in this way,
this man aware of. any
cessary pruning, especially amongs be
done before the cleaning commences, as 5 is ae
ing n
meter of che route between Insalah an Timbuctoo, and | spikes of delicate pink flowers; some of these spikes | to waste time in cleaning shoots whi
‘from Fezzan, to Bilma, Tirtuma, and | measure inches im le This is certainly one to be cut away. Have ail dirty —
Lake Tscha is now generally affirmed that the | of the most useful greenhouse plants we z for it | surface soil loosened, and examine carefully any of which
Aud covers only the smaller portion of the great lowland. | is n ys in bloom. A good plant of Miltonia | the surface has a green or sodden appearance, which is
Å similar o; —.— 5 propounded by di in the Orchid-house, together an evident sign that water has been too liberally
the acutely observant Ehrenberg, my Siberian travelling ver-flowering Phaleenopsis ama ; Cattleya that the inage is inefficient; if the latter,
companion, from what he h had himself seen (Exploration | bicolor, with its purple lip an ish green sepals | i üld be immediately e and i
Scientifique de Algérie, Hist. e . i 1 332). handsome variety of the same, with a as considerable i done at this season,
Of larger wild imals, only gazelles, wild „ and | much -r lip; 3 several Oneids, t the best of which was | when the soil gets > nhealthy . Many
ostriches are t et with. Le lion du désert, says | O of the nhou eraniums, and plants
M. Carette Explor. de PAlg. t. ii. p. 126-129 ; ii, | and — ni Mae plants, In the open Loony we remarked of sim xture, in of prepara-
Pp 94 and 97), ‘est un mythe popularisé par les artistes that a small tree of Aralia japonica had been going to tion for next spring and summer, will require 1
et les poè II n’existe que dans leur imagination. tome — but its blossoms had been killed by the In this do not allow the gant of year to be any
Cet animal ne sort pas de sa monta ù il trouve de recent fros r as * in — agp bees of aad
i se loger, ir. arl C pla e during
Sune vt 80 à re es bétes — ‘ate lés ne ra growth, ‘than shifting | them into larger p — “belare their
Europé:ns leur donnent Nou — ils repondent Cupressus macrocarpa.— Leaves ovate, imbrieated much m eater care in
at un inpertartabl sang froid, il y a done chez vous in four rows, bright iris green, aed closely set upon watering ts nec y after repotting at this season,
des lions qui boivent de Pair et broutent des feuilles ! In the Heatuerr the plants must be eare:
Chez nons il il faut aux lions de l'eau nte et de la 1 * at * aa upon
i i i paraisse ns le rst a ew. these
que Nen G a — x 1 au. — us Plants as hardy as possible by a free eireula.
aon que la vipére (lefa) et d’innombrables | n ee by removing the aray
ea am hc hel a gard to these every one must be guided by
* Whereas oo Oudney, in thé course of the long the particular requir i
— from poli 9 Tschad, estimated the even here ts. gmc be * —
rn Sahara at 1637 English feet, ga 2 - oe ar dee — Pag
i whisk rAd — have even ventured a ghia inte oo vee
add an additional thousand feet the Ingenieur Fournel d ö
has, by careful barometric on under his gay — ae
correspondin observations, mite i it t tolerably probable on their nat = wig sages „te ge
iata part part of the northern desert is below the level of S ee nt o raine A
Sea.” points he 0
55 Such a book as this should be in the hands of every with their own garden, and he himself will be
due desirous of valued accordingly.
natural — 55 be acquainted with the great ORCING DEPART MENT.
Peadin ena of our globe. To schools and EA —We now look *
8 rooms it is indispensable. diy ay dawning duller an er than its
Garden Memoranda. 80 o also. must our artificial —.—.— be
ende. HENvERSon’s Nursery, PINE-APPLE PLACE. rd
in — observed in the sho “ts with the latter must the amount of moisture
Which of Myosoti $ iti — than be regulated. Till our 1 a fur-
rt, to be m —— cultiva! nished with hyg s of a simple con-
so It is ea ily managed, and a good sized struction, this matter must still b managed
tich oi gas plants in a pot), covered with — dl our judgment, aided
p. ms, has a rA : ractical experien ke care that the
perl x i ‘on the night of the T A uantity of moisture ìs 2
ouse, on the right of the show- house, A-shaped, sharp , condense upon the glass, &c , close up or
: some fi ered Lilies, | the old plants ; they are et apa aw y 8I tlie pi T EA the
Whtee Vivid pink blosisaah sender -o so | pointed, and thickly set the young ‘plants. | down into the hearts of the plants. To prevent this,
ting trough should be more sparingly filled, and
the pen tanks closed with moveable a giving you
>
the power to E the = ape or perm escape.
n fine a greater nntity of air
can be admitted, t 5 Ae of moisture should also be
slightly inereased. Watering should be done with great
care, 32 a 4 yeu admisib ade on the mornin
of v. e days. hould be ith a very fi
‘ose, Ta 2 Se po the ee but into the at-
r *
mosphere of the house or pit with such force that they
y receive it in the shape of fine very dew. RIES.
In the anxiety to keep those houses containing fruit
sufficiently dry, be careful to avoid the extreme, even
in that direction.
s eas dw
not an arid . but
regulate it cety requires more care and
jada t than is 3 found, except in a very ex-
perienced pen
it —
trees, where
tance, in
©
4 . 8.
very shor
season of repose, e move abate, especially
if assisted by a little mulching on „the „surfac of the
groun
19—Stight fog; exceedingly fine; clear at night.
20—Fine; very fine; rain at night.
— Hazy clouds; rain; clear.
3 Fog ery fine; ‘overcast.
23—Clo a A! and fine; overcast ; slightly clouded at night.
24—Overcaast ; cloudy and fine.
25— bigest andi five; showery; rain at night
Mean tem of the w. 5% deg. above the a erage.
State of the Woon at ee —— thea last 23 years, for the
Oct
ensuing week, ending Nov, 3, 1849,
8 34 è P P £ oe f Ja Aa Prevailing Winds.
Oct. 88 8 ES Hin ; : sE
22 2 © į which it Pb sth! le e
and Nor. AE | ZSS aa Rained, | of Rain. EE
Sunday 28 532 | 375 | 331 10 1.08 in, —5 247203
| Mon. 29 53.9 0.0 46.9 10 0.43 213) 3| 1) 6] 7| 1| 1
Tues 30| 54.6 39.3 46.9 10 0.50 3? 3f 1} 3) 2] 9) 1 1
Wed. 3) 53.1 39.2 45.1 13 0.88 — 2) 2| 2.— 9| 5) 3
Thurs. 1 54.2 38 46.4 13 0.38 21114 3) 4) 7) 2
Friday 2} 63.1 [ 39-4 463 10 9.49 242 2080203
Satur. 3] 53.3 } 38.8 $ 45.9 12 0.82 —! 2! 6) 1! 5] 4! 6l-
The highest temperature during the above period occurrad on the ath
* 30th, 1833—therm. 67 deg. ; and the lowest on 8d Nov., 1845 - therm. 20 deg
tices to Correspondents.
e is no di ference eres virgin honey a
fi fre bs that never 7
. It is only from . — that pure honey ed be
had, on whatever Fate bees are kept. 1V.—S V. You may
take ney fro om mon hive without 9 the bees,
by turning i mbs fro h
side, bat N to We operat ion a fev ew Pwi ff
smoke should be introduced amongst the bees.
tion should be danad in the 8 but it
form it now; it should hav e been done
bee es mi ight
full one, which
of both hives
round —
from esca
be es to rise into the t — — one.
t+
The opera-
is oe late to per-
uly, in order that
Js
the ground ; the mouths
should fit ose together, then tie a 1
where they meet, in order to prevent the bee
e, in order to cause the
of € activity. Baers regard to soil the most common
make it too deep or too good. For
pai jes. eat ‘ sand l stone fruits, good ixe
with sand or burned clay, if too tenacious, is all that —
at leas
etter. When | any additional
a pos of it, so aoe y
a supplied in the shape o
mulus
the soil to exceed bottom if
not naturally i 8 rvious ce made so by artificial means.
here the situation is mp, let the border for
the choice uit ees, ir eri Peaches, and Nee
p ines, b = tirely = the ordin evel,
is well w h while to ifice a foot at the bettom
of the gags if by s0 ae the utility of the remaining
port
FLOR ISTS’ FLOW
Tutirs.— Take the first opportunity of planting the
Pirie or best 25 Be: by means advocate a dib
— on coal ashes (if 80 not on — en
all possi
ery
will often
they
wa ben should they get pee Tead
Z g them to stand und 285 shed
for a few days, we ‘have found — *
EN
IT
Let oe under — have all the air
possible, prot em only from frost, rain, and
very = vinds; = 8 oe ety be quite closed
he tops should be tilted in
r| — GARDENS:
wet, but fine mil eae they should be lifted
to keep them
an on clean. Watch
closely for slugs, ir ravages by a timely
lication of soot. little finely sif coa
is an excellent thing to cover ace of the
il with between er Koms of any kind our
slimy friends have an insuperable objection to crawl
i 3 — will apply to the Endive
‘or winter u Let dead or Fg
by no s a
arlick and ay in
autum 3 — ir commencing to root
immediately, and to peg cor growing below ground in
all favoura! e winter, while their tops
State of the Weather near London, for the week ending
e observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, 2 1649.
Kew GARDEN; GS, The wisegcre who wrote to the Daily News
“Then put the robbed colony
ith afresh swarm. This
we Theat countries, where bees nar
uch
itable
Ks hè s bad Kingdom ” ean
aceon * ar * uses = > Whio — ipa ts are ied,
t also fully explana
_ an
and of the source of kno products.
atoral System, 1291 ` * ima agin
very book y you want. SA — Jam = 8 3 ng” is re old
e uncertai Yo ot London book-
will easily procure it for se, 2 a 8 search. Dub-
lin is an unlikely place. 2 “Encyclopædia of Gar-
dening ” pei ap works also contain 4 few plans; but
=
©
Ù
—
m
a
oo
=
s
on Z mi eco uh 8 oe rrespcndents to inform
him what is eates ve ha ef is the sea — =
British 1 * which ihe cholera nee ascended. He means
— Z SY been virulent and fat
DE0D y herbaceous — you may propagate it
upon n the Cedar of f Lebanon, But why take the trouble when
DisE : Z. Your Sweet William leaves — attacked by the
— called N Lychnidearum cause «nd cure un-
known. Plant Gla oe us roots now if an can kidi soot
th 8 If not, stow them away in dry loam, and plan
An Ori
rough
d of you tas
| Pont T N STA You will gain ee if any advantage by
iron rafters in 80 short a pan.“ u had be tter Ant —.—
—
in such a house as y
circumstances, 3 in the em ce cond © of hot erig
Pn CS. Nothing else will answer — Creed. w of
tobacco, Perhaps your Celery was sown too e
it is a bad sort; Pager it at starved
erloaded with m od s
Gast: Wemble
King” of
Greening Bre Cou
br
4
B
4
E
5
955
5
French brat
‘ton
bright scarlet, 10 not kno own, e
t
Acidiu
no proper r En
= Hart's per Bog mam
ota ies” isa ae t
Hopethe seed-vessel of a Species of Men
the Caper aet
e tim
Genes were swelling,
burst. . course
*
p 11
ip
Loudon's Hortus Lignosus Lo nsis,
the Longan, and nothing eljas see Lindley’s
economical Bonon” p. 101, f
preferred to fam
II.
yY, Physalis
o. 1, Ch rysanthemum n prn 2, Chr.
Alystum maritim lott. Yo
rabosus? Ho
— =
8 5
oor
answer questions privat
ANTATIONS =
ely,
Pra
these rules,
den. In making 1
4 Kanes ANA:
h, you had better throw
it away, procure a 187 healthy o one, m treat it as aboa.
It is a plant that tig beh Se ttom-heat, plenty of
— during the growi * son, and ae mekeni
sh be kept r t soon
iel if e su Hen with 7 in a low te — Me
y 7 suppl 2
SALVIA SPLENDENS : rrespondent suggests
useful if the * at: the Priory, Ireland, would
our readers with his mode of cultivating this plant,
Tacson “nag cot tt 8 MD. Tes; probably its frait
can be eaten wit 2
To pik 5 t s. Voir eS ee
eal, and — will procure jae if he can. We realy f
San — recommend tradesmen ;
Viotets: R S, Bath. — think je irar to defer ah i
till we have had s — with 3 4
will be grown in Sa co e in the 3
describe, r. We can only say for
present that the Russian Superb looks 8 .
Mise: Much hg ge but —— 3 2
resent. —Be inner, You
plasterer 1 h with vane yellow gh ondon Re 4 ; lime is
had
mix the zg
Cut your gre hard in, and th
tioned in the Calendar of Operation
that will clear it of scale. — —
Physianthus — Beaumon
floribunda are stove plants. —
Th
en apply hot water, as
ons for
ions cara
o upon whether it — — — a room or ot ‘geld,
We should be sorry t any minu K- Viner
— 5 by “green” —.— nae “No doubt it r 5 good ma-
o is night-soil ; = we men justified in carting that
8 their neighbours’ no
GERANI LP, The leaves wid ge tops Should be A gers
off beih before’ they are ite Be part
shaken from their roote.
They n a not be quite dry when
— but
ey should. not be 2 we ss as to cause them
pring, encourage them to grow previously to
INA: PLC. Your plant has suffered from the
eat — moisture, either at its roots or a the —
ul mark
8
tate, has caused the
. Rough plate is not stronger than other glass,
tombs roofs have no advantage over
ere is a very long bearin Rough
s best for seas, undoubtedly, We
5 8
GREENHOUSES: F. An angle of 45° is enough for the roof, As
much more steep as yon ike, not flatter than 35°, Cover it
with rough horticultural plate glass, Heat it with hot-
water pipes,
aera 74 C. Double Reds: Bouquet Royal, Triumph
Blandina, Sans Souci. Double Blues: Alfred the Gre eat,
Grand 8 EY uet 8 Double Wh hites : La Vestal,
hg plus Ultr met
never recommend
e, Her Single Whites: :
Grand Blanche Imperiale, Queen viene. Catherine, Single
lues: Ose ti d
Blue ar, Quentin Durward, imrod. Single Reds:
ars, Monsieur de Taesch, L’Ami du Cœur.
Insects: C H. The flies which have rred in such numbers
occu
on the ceilings of your rooms are Chloro
larvee from — they are bred, — at —
cereal . W.— r Ciner: 23 are infested
with apb e The plants should 15 washed with tobacco-
water or fumigated beneath a cover with burnt tobacco, and
water,
w t 1 —— gz
tum cannot be 5 in Englands
u had better thatch 125 W. ree epe, z t
fectly hardy. ł}—A H. You can apply ha
that will prevent the wen
38 — m withou the same time ele ae
Try Ee effort of fencing them in ee
sticks stuck into the d.t 5
BEDLI ING FLOWERS. dear yellow
Al — ne large flower
“centre and pha A a shaded with my
part; large. but a little eh ea
2 erik H B. Colour
in depth, and nicely a —
over large. wü palo, x
; lobes road and ra
well shaped, and eq
pe
waxy white, rather short
corolla
= sizeof
alin
1 flower, wall "i contrasted is to 1, bat
8 py 5 ery similar in act ws 1 ou
little longer in the tube, and patted very i
corolla. 3, tube pale b er ch rather i
tipped with green; gore: pa ct ar a aet |
flowers too small a pide! tinc Ct iall flower and i
white ; — pale a 4
very dist
e ae
from what re E 22
Received in bad 1
a pas p —
very
shape, and e „ i
— — Althea, 2 271 pe 1 n
exception; but ler you nen 12 which are an
flowers, we can
the deep reds — rote colored on ones.
thea. Thi
— NIA A
* s have
: 1, man; communication
5 12 a and oiie 80 unavoidably detained tor
= n be made.
i
:
MISEFIELD CLUB, 1849. 8 Annual Show of GEED 1 WIEAT.— For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good ,
FAT STOCK wi Wednes- uine seed of the RED-STRAW WHITE and
day the 12th, Thursday te oo and) Friday the vat of Guen, HOPETO N gy Samples of grain and ear will be sent
ber. 1849, at the — — reet. on receip ps to cov the expense of postage ers
A tes, for — Stock tna 1 mplements — hed —— — — — can be executed; — rom 1
obtained — m the Hon tt Dan ary, and r him
filed up and 1 * or = betore Saterday the 17th of Novem-
ber, 1849. B. T. BRANDRETH — Hon. Sec., Corner of Half
on Street, Piccadilly, Lond
23 AND > OTHER MANURES
gasno of
Sulphuric
eake, Salt, — allo
R.
D under his immediate superintendence, The attention of
— well-kno * Fer-
ased u uon careful
examination of the requirements of the ep and the condition
for using
. The u e Manures, which are
S enairely of rich animal matters, havo received numerous it — better n a ee the spring 82 fi pra a —
ials to pran 5 l to the best Guano. waa eet edited aga ae
— — WALAN Mark lma Lace — tion T of chemical knowledge, as applied
—0RGI » Mark-lane, London. | to agriculture, has enabled Mr. Porren to make important
improvements in — potura aa Guano, which he now
- BY HER ROYAL LETTERS — confidently reco — e of all who wish to grow
“ia riant crops at small e
n consequence o — — persons, once acting
MAJESTY’S PATENT. OTTER’s agents, substituting their own co p unds foi
PATENT nor noben WORKS, KI IN G'S ROAD, CHELSEA.
E DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen os
* to pe Hothouses, &c., to the vast “Cages ty in e
which Sia ‘will
Good Glass
c Horticulturists to their h impro method of
the Tank System to ia * Pro oo ng Houses,
éc., * r c heat well a ttom-heat 15
m-h:
zegi red degree, without 8 PTY 8 piper or -_
8. and Co. ne also to state see request of n
are no akin
at their Manufactory,
icle —— for the construction
ef Horticultural Buil ings, as r ree for eee them, may be
aoe
the ae 1 sop
Wooden — upon the most
à a Tiaoa. Palisading, Field ard Garden
T C.
ISH PEAT CHARCOAL,
THE I AMELIORATION SOCI ETY,
Established by a Royal — of naibilite of Subs dated
which limits nsibility ate ubscribers
ef Engine
9, Water! — London.
4 divided into Shares of 101. each, to
eer in Ben gal),
any pre s Call.
all 225 to be ee p each
e First Call was
N was Septemb for the purpose of beneficially
S the an yor | nthe manufacture et Peak Fuel
from the Peat Bogs of 4 d, and, in the
anent, We of the Bog * .
ine r iey —— thus aon of considerable
as been shown
oubts
p
— r operations have proved, that, cd
Sad nde by t * they will be able to employ con
bag and we aom penedcisily thousands of the half-starved and
peasan
1 5 adopted and proposed to be sored — be —
oyment of eee e work, wi
ia mo pag d the Directors —
they hava biel 2 to ¢
ey want to make
TS earnes the public c for support.
men the 3 welfare of oat
in that coun ew field of us
. . .
in bebe n removing from the densely popu-
torna of Englan d the cause of pestilence and death, may
at th only
y, by anten
of A Siriese
Society
mas Annually of manure, now worse 1
though this Society w: n philanthropic
1 reial principles, the Director voy 3
' inclined ts invest 2 Da Misik of tbis * that
will —— a quick a — pinn urn for any
may so By —— he cour,
„R. 1 Hon. See,
may be made,
— —
8 E
Er
100 1
a 3
7
4
EH
8
1285
F
z
amy
8
r
| sive than
| 0
The
m general consent, ivided into two e 5
y other e grain
3 not icons my: after another, because the firt
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
be accompanied by
2s. each. IR INTE R BEANS, fo ‘or seed, — 2 — Ap at *
per busbel. Yous Moston. 55 meea, Gloucestershire,
Tee LONDON MANURE € COMPANY beg to offer
selves that ry Manure sent
e —— — aang
m th
—— Warehouses, London
74 Manure and tent te, Sulphate of Am-
ate “of Ammonia, or Ammoniacal rote ge —
of Soda, Bone
x Manure, oo Blackfriars
AUTUMN SOWING.—POTTER’S GUANO.
R. POTTER particularly recommends this season
h
his Guano, as, if now committ
0
equate, an arrangement, be made to the
— — yik of the r r.
150 eur UM, in
e, at the Fron y Bs — Please direct your orders,
ors the quantity taken is
carriage, will 0
state peculiarly adapted for the annuall
farm
per post, to, ** NN address
HAM RO AD ‘PLACE, LONDON.
DARIAN “CEMENT — monn Stucco, instead of |}
on plastering, may inted and Ay red within
20 ae ot an 4 4 5 on to = bare walls, a yt
— — a. be rendered to ary. Before the peee
t
alee paa
whatever,
— — would begin
che e slightest difficulty, ag —
with an other
repare d for Orn
ing, & c., & c., ä of which ma
the Pa tentees, CHARLES Francis and
Che Agricultural ame
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1849,
MEETINGS — THE TWO Fe TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS,
Tuunspar, Nor. —— — Imp. — —
Tauespay, Agricultural Imp. Society land.
Dun
zpen
r quality is
* a Plastering, for mne . 1
t the Work
con j Nine Elma; —
NG the Bare, s een there are no mate-
to deal that should engage
——— or those substances
7 —
Although it is of grea a to have the
land in a proper me * . e for the crop in-
nded to 1 ke that is, vell a, Wee
arrowed, &c.—although it equal moment to
85 onf obtain a
food for the papie p is-raising ; that is, he .
use the
be thi — however Po a condition, in
a mechanical point of view, land m unless it
0
ha ~ land of England
than in any other.
ae that f or & lon,
is more deficient in this
ed.
aang consumed by horses and cattle in Oats,
Straw, Hay, Beans, Mangold Wu
x returned to the land, for every
ow.
ood, 8
the Whea
m
the
material, which, if —
lied, is beyond
he fo 1 wing e era which may be tried by
for the v nn
artshorn
sed to bre
177 2 4 ra settle at the — of bi Emmy
In the urse of events the Barle
Farm- 2 manure is, doubtless, a most 1
substance as a food for plants We know of no
t con
necessary fo for the
Lof t e different crops ra sed by farmers ; but
still it i a fault, that is, a want of strength i 2 two
of its most important ingredients, in phosphate an
in ammonia; if it 8 more of t
—
ai t
will arrive at matu urity, muc
ess be “ fruitful asd multiply,” as every farmer
The best manure for a plant is that which con-
tains, or Late by its Ri aay iy 9 2
substances which it r as food ;
inqui mah and such a ne
the noe comp
pigeon o bear in mind that no on
rial can afford food for a sah by itself, any more tei
r an animal, which, we know, if fe du upon a single
material for a e torah of time, eventually
ore form its different organs
grea
me,
hai air, bone, muscle, 3 nerve, from such a
as arrow- root. The m complex or the pam
tances that are mixed to form
ore likely is it to contain
those ma an |
animals,
o | exhausting crops go fallow crops; all grain and
wed ne are classed with the former, and = green
e la Now. ‘the reason w
sengien fallow
is si is: "requi uires a much
ingredients which
mall quantity in ** oil kagat the latter.
urs | The pf morera, gm instance, requi
by ee plant, are used to a much renter extent 20
of the land as
for the second crop.
abstract aoe the soil,
ess, the most important,
ui ad much of these
o lea eee:
01 the matters Pies,
the “ phosphates ” are.
2 5
ment which w
kta
the above
e co m — * i wht
bones, guano, and - sveg sewers.
should not the farme t the efforts now 5
to ae om sewage gir of cities ?
s of the grates 2 collected,
1 of the streets are the sources of an e
reven All these matters will yield by ae k
omposition what the plants most 7 which ever
should be taken that it is well mixed
with nig a and as much sta as the 1 muck will
soak up; nitrate nd 1 a, su
te, yS in 1
e farm if put on the land ~ hg
, | themselves, for Cu ‘hey a 2 not so liable to waste.
Tun Mark Lane Express in “speaking
"lof — — truth — that there is
ch a thing as editorial truth; and that when
* encouragin _ those who would
Camp if 5 ‘goa
we m “ utterly at
” with every thing it had Guiles upon the
ing
it with
subjec
Si it appears that we have na ae along under
an nie misa s object
has not d silence
Mr. Cam. this,” he
him. Well; this
those who alone oan have. —
tl
.
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
readily admit, no longer open to variety of
0 pre Sh : ‘bat our cotemporary errs if he thinks that
e
re-assert ou
a frien
belief that the Mark Lane Express, ——
its — to defend Mr. Camp, has unfortunately |
ose who would silence him if the
AA collection of extracts from hi is columns
would, we believe, ful
mld.”
be to apply to the gentlem
the controversy on this —
ess object to receive their judgment of his
arbitration d thei ponen
hea e perfectly ready to appeal to those on
the = side—will they say that they have n
been encouraged—that the editor 1 * Paper is | t
-= obviously with them and against their -e i
We are perfectly wendy to — to thei
Peeri on our st or, as our cotemporary will
e it, on our ve
3 the ge = the ‘difference between us may | 7°
reasons — his opinion; first, that Irish farmers
emigrate to America and the colonies, Were .
e not ae 3 meh had e age ae remain at
e; and secondly, bec: th
t farmers of
may Ca ios held a 9 recently, and and resolved that r rent
’
res sident
u
5 its proximity to the
it at the leaseholders of a je iod when agricultural
— igh, a a e fee of the oil sold for 28
d rs’ pure e acquisition of
30 eins and w
land bell by lease er “desirablo, 1 from 3 causes
—that land, moreover, being situated in one of the
of 5 “Those who 8 by B hed pe i titi
— — ce a Uk if kiy sere = not which 3 ly 5 in 1 1 oe 4 —5 ped ts
encouraged 80 the Mark: Lane Express : the | ceased, within at least the geographical limits to which
CAIRD
ur ipasa antos that he
Mr.
It is ede: our rae A = silence Mr.
says our cotem
ins silent.” Now cr
Carp — ray com
argumen
did
ments — facts of his dyponén
the Mark Lane Express, w
ev
y prepared ; but
f one * “thou ugh de ad
uttered loud “enough, ec
edly—living 1 ong =
volume of its o
quency of the repellent — with which it came
; d that
re-ec!
proportio n, — te
ns
a pamphlet whose y tation has orn extended
by every fresh re e turn its
their author
are not accurately — — in these 1 tee
as we have heard a — 2 voice,
repeat- |
not the |
nce, but also to the fre- |
ave, in my previous pesg FA my observations,
and east of Ireland,
a lease
all the i Fp at
ep ural
made by h it i
3 ee that this ie shoud now feel pa the de-
f their holdings, occasioned by a ——
cate cause, lowness in ‘the price of produce, and increas
of local taxation.
might
tas the western highlands b
E
a Oe tee i ~ the t test of value. Land tes
and for
—was scarce in Ireland, it was therefore
ra
1
which he can let at an — *
tunatel
1 the it here ; but in so far as
wens proper o and and duties of
cultaral j we make n ogy for oc — 75
ing our space with Wa — upon the bitter:
ä ——ʒ᷑ eee
AGRICULTURE, IN TRELAND.—No. III.
Ir remains for me
e
— and fe He seed Belägen
t Davi
recommend nd craton io to Ire! d (the t rm has a the 0
se Beiter — a Sh ae ‘portion of
y an
ulent
PY- corded adjace
| harbours and bays, with abundant f facilities of obtaining
eed and fish —salm riv
ris, varying
260 acres, principally grazing land (three
only being under 1000), and from
leave no
but employment i is wanting to set
as Mr. George R. C an
t to > ood
man
m of 1200 acres, grazing
`
can
the most
as to rent an nd tenure
to an improving tenant but. T ‘ook to ve
esults fro
us recent
Ireland are not
The — in the — real —5 —
rhaps sufficiently unders
England, aud yet mer i —— knowledge of this —
ject gad require
of tenure in Treland was
each lii expi iy ew 8 was added to the lease
another payment of a fine. This ies of re led
several | frequent litigation ; as a ma ourse it never could
zing in ascertained either when the lives dropped or what
to | should be the amount of fine paid. Neglect to rene
acted led to attem — itures on the part of —
these again led to a suit in Chancery on the part of
that he has farmers the tenant. The ten al — — an
nathe he address of this gentleman is George R, Crampton,
is therefore not surprising | Thes
d — in riyeg and taken before | and becom:
In England, after the war had ceased i in 1815, — 8
Sper
as well be alleged th ‘that
wh
th
a truth in political economy,
ted by the | enhanced
befo
- | the Courts of Equ
8 — the efforts a have made
rage By an act of
ch
the purchase
s Act I conclude for
e pure se s must in
creditors upon the estate;
th the following m
e e ái
many instances be ar
; thus where be :
gaged 10 years ago for
15,0007. The creditor (and thi
case), must ei make up
ment to regen if that can be accom
and a long lea:
But s
suppo creditor not to purchase:
— will 3 a oe okvi valent ee
s either ic or in
2 “tek matter which ; he has an article to
which is rather a drug, ‘and the Br Tarner a
S at
rom patriot
is own terms.
a a reidet — yet 3
have their antages.
British ened bana
estates would be tre
real p of ben a they prot do
that the whole rental of Ireland ;
their Nee
that rental is in Muns
acre of it, so soon as a rece 3
8 between landlord ins tenant is is severed.
urt of Cha 2 = age power to improve!
grant a term of 2 nit
ferant s pa peer and taus *
— Chaticery estates have become a
rable themse elves, they
umane
rings which many of that
hat class is exempt oie
| aya of their calamity, I — only rec
and generous —
A
tinction of the other. ‘The returns pu :
Larcom prove that the number of farms
acres has increased,
y — w
Belmullet, Mayo,
_ 431849. ] THE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
683
Erer desire desirable the removal of the race of small farmers
cannot witness a tremendous loss of human |
ot a hardy population without the deepest com-
miseration. Whilst I unaffectedly deplore the miseries
I must
ciety
—— with capital whic
rate rent = favourable tenure.
y thes several counties
2 21
it wi ri — §
course be consider
estimating a
we
k-rented a andlord.
i why should not districts in Bas west of Treland be
en the
ct with his landlord
g agreement, the
e rate upon a the landlord. In an
s are redeemed
excesses do
He is like the rest
exemplary
It is true that crowds of mn ower
ered Turnips and Pota 2 nfessed
rocure transportation — and in
n born to su But Be man
hua not pilfer nor foi — yet who died of utter want !
turing this period of ut
ar; but I fear the arguments addue
re further to puzzle and perplex them, as: 1 listened to,
istaken confid
e
stituents of ri —
caprice nfo fashion Aae B y the manu- | g
question, and with bold
there —
Ta we been — ee — no jacqueri
=
wants
1
~ able to adduce, is
nt is a un er
upon our land than any — country has done; bese: E
ee has been but filth and ra would 1
mend isolated instances of settlement * pon eng
e oft
N : bal
who would treat
his likes
though he should keep a firm han
ure from acts of se A violence in the wilds of Con-
— as in land.
e the reasons me a venture to suggest as
hich the west of r
n quiet
nd for the wild and bolder scenery of a mountainous
e | country. i
q
©
y envelope), he will be enabled
o defy all w vor and Luͤr be 8 for an
bli
Piney. [Th
at p. 619,
6
allusion to the g proprietors of
accidentally omitted Lord —— “pets e]
he
ENGLISH FARMER versus FOREIGN FARMER,
N the Aal tural Gazette of the 8th September,
hind is an article with
juccess,
“To des ae. pee ae — would be | rath
especially welco could the n be r
that E e held ey are at all likely t to be realise
re only calcula —
o induce a totall
quite
atly dependant on .
pram it may s of our nation a
deal of what it iy deem — by the comparative
eee, bet another, bears no increase of the
real, in opposit
terchange de — on the
at best,
tition from e and ‘still.
to competition with the whole 3 * forei
rich soil and beautiful climates, wert rers who
coaxi
also, would be as a
to
— simple as would annuall gedan
d
n to pe merely representative con-
es, | free trade or low prices- and x no
just as much the price received for an article as its cost
of production, which determines the amount of gain or
loes to the ucer ; and to make his
ace, and in England to be under the
same geet ares. the value Bs a quarter of Wheat in the
ote oll 30s., then the 22 would be
120s. =~ ‘the expenses 60s. In „suppose
at 60s. owing to a ty o on norm "then the
prod ir will be 240s. and the e
ow,
8 in theo
be done o$ ses ring U aa
and reducing him from his comfortable clothing, wheaten
loaves, and ore to the black Rye bread and al
n do.
se views,
numbers are anxiously waiting in 5 aes en that.
n will be done before
N lost. I think these ought to
= noble mi inds, to make farmers | alive to their
try is
cu the Bs ava |
aber
1
*
indiffere rence, hi
try in the world at the present can bear a
i fo eving the 3 And. t. to will do
shing farmers to! know heir posi
T have * vaes expres ts, which 1
am persu are generally entertained, an which
I humbly claim a place in your valuable journal. T. M.
er E ae
and
should an En obtain equal —
for it is obvious shat tih = rs opting the Scotch system,
we could afford to pay the — h rents, and yet con-
tinue to pay our own, there ald need ase no grumbling
to the Government for renewed pro-
as t, o
tecti tion. I read ts beg
the favour of some farmer
holding one of these high rented farms, or some one
we nversant with every to inform
farmers
harvestin separately
pare the results and cost with our own. The
raise a 3 quantity from it, — ti in
vegetable or an ae
He — re
British agriculture k
that we are. But unfortunately the * proo:
ev one, that we have
f| done it before, forgetting that it was under very dif-
i| ferent cireumstances ; and he asserts that this requires
o other demonstration than the fact of our having
these e aid much heavier expenses
culiar sort o t he assumes that we m
have produced — r ute than they, as we have
paid than they ; over that it is
I-A, CS 5 Are we able to do this! | giv
in farming, besides savou: ring of vanity in the Scotch
speaker, and not being over — o D to the
lish hearer, are useless, because
a i ~~ > py = that of it pionii
t al
never one equal to the gegm rents of 3/. 10s. to it per
rom
us
8 Grey's pamphlet. From this it seems
high rent per acre is not owing to the
684 THE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
can larger than the English, because he obs “the
han farm — * of from 200 to 500 Scotch pitta
Ne è re economical and
0
5 ere sich
arge towns where all the green cro’
rents, except o
prices o
n equ
radox “to me, Which I I 450 ahah “like to
d
earful e which has been
country clearly points out
h
tainted kinos here
The gaol returns show that a large majority inf pier ror
trace their first rar against the laws to drink.
Agriculturists 70 ae well to ponder over these
authority and influence
ve
recollect that “ water, page dropping, will wear
se the hardest stone.” Falco
6 Challenge.—1 was no little amused,
and at t
ately appe: eared in
. Huxtab avi
find thers was sO zo odly a mber o
farmers rea e advocato their thks B
t the improving f 3 of
and fro 57 t wledge of tli e
in the Venda of Saint
*
till all propre
d the human bei 15
oung w thus
a profligate 4 te habits of “ite
is corru
E
fue
—— profit dates from the
8 years of ag d th — of = 25
e an e ee
“Masters should have the power dl
and spoil the chüd is
ere in
2 construction,
ginal eos
most effective in its application. I mean 15 s Can
must | accom
e in the
pivo
hitherto been t
the above, a joiner tell
widths and 18 ckness 9
was referred t
4 J. V. R” 0 dmg time since by our
Renis, — Some sho
n
tolerably correct,
t price 48s. per quarter,
he poi
requi
ort time
$i A back I was
rapes!
gai
on
far
= occupiers 2 Wha n et ea
rect. The o
hat I have
instead of 60s, e malede
en
A Scale for
AVE
14
22
16/18 2022 2426283032034
— — 1—— | — J — J ST
19022 25 2801 337
7 | 20) 23/26| 29/321 85)3
as. g +} Average Trin f
Wheat
PER Acri,
RAGE PRODUCE oF WHEAT
IN BUSHELS,
24/27/30/33 36 394
E
40 43 10
38
36 | Ol 013
6/19/22
1
1
1
1401
12
10
8
6 9 (12, 15“18 21
ect A
tn
= ils A brags 18 boards, d 2 inches thick, and
overlap each other, a elevating | one of
their digi 2 inches above the one on which it is laid,
= along each of these angles, the Peachy length a piece
oop iron is nailed, to prevent the angles
this being done, the imple E ie Gini ished, Iti
by two chains, one from
the slo
| arms are covere
som
t | to exclude the milk from hái
, | mitting the air to p okay ers
all at once filled w
gricu
orses exhib’ bited
To Cor
of talkoa. halk,
02 — 1 bes
n Churn,—The enquiry you were so obliging.
as to icone in No. 28 of
of an American churn, has a to nase ial 4
urnin
F hiladelphie Courier”
unless indeed the rapidity o of
cidity in Beer or Cider,—Take Te de
and put it intoa fs ais
r will have become mild and pleasani
your Paper for a description
uest 0 bet e
communicate more
the 0
th milk, to the
ith air.
a ‘their al 2
horse
e Ag
rom his „r oe
yele aan pei should by the
and care shown
ee
—
was impossible that the
ial e could be
7 ey manufacturing and
men got rich, e must take place
0 asses of soci
t f poor pers standing idle,
day afer diy doing 9 nothing.
e
oor man obtaine
id the wide brown waste of he.
oe ally? SE = eee a
hers ady to pur
regulations of that country forbade the bargain.
ont reclaimed and cu
food
N
wide ease i to alluded,
it would 0 0 3 where 8 a a
ness It would ‘have produced foo
untry
way inta their 1 rivers 2
ditches,
th
FLTeare;
again—
brought b
A
Ii would see
a 1 Die
animals into newly created forests,
— 2 state of thing i
Hate
8 8 8
Hi
r
f
8
Fs
E
—
55
E
pp
2
‘oe
ERR
SE
271
invested in P
in rendering fertile land tilled by others,
were y wealt
1
E
Hd
a S
115
8
res, induce what is
farming (cheers), Bogland wer "Scotland
Present time, an enormous — of the 7
prosperity. bour,
offered and refused
- | the ina ilit ty of farmers to employ laboure
y
The ence,
If
or two of land, you saw the green fertile spot as a eh me
t
es, 8
generally prejudi apes by the n
a- tion, and that
| 8 not in that conditi
the of application, to
tively insignificant portion of their funds to
u- | refi
chase | th
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
foto we brought together,
regu
lations, for the good of the country.”
poe gira
who are terme
paper, 2 weekly . teem w
chall ; Ph
p for the most part, whether as
n, the Tritons
to co operate under wise generally in a
ry forward state. The horses
loyed chiefiy in "Araning —— for Wheat an —
Nag ellos —
—
on of our "Wheat, and although it
secure
1
——— *
good, from 40 to
will ry formard sate
bourers, which
of farm
ne w price
otatoet for some 1 — = t,
showed but little
the crop, is
of all 9 very early
m are come
* — well, 5 2 the root —.—
222
aught wit ety to every class.
especially à or a the resolute application of all the
nergies, moral and physical, hy those interested in the
cultivation Pr the soil. Of the i
impro
reen pe ops— —the s
ves Carr,
principles which are not only indispensable as
ary — to every experiment, but invariably
prove, whilst the t at hand and tl t
to be the soundest econ omy > the
All those means by which the results of im
rf
ns and crops which test directly and immediately the
ee aaa of the sci
ose who
prac rey, a
de veloped pa thes 3 bav
scientific minds, Ife
po
ployed, and and ge & urge the disadv:
who adopt only half measures labour,
—.— upon * n. he broad , of
probable results of past er i can at this x
nor im wer;
ans 5
Á Boxes: sian Nine feet t hy eight give the sm
| have not altered since our last accoun
conseq our you
— yom and Oat
pt continuall
— ny ord wel
— ces eo ys
o lam abing fas
9 — fallen — the» —
—— ht;
— 1 more free za
a
a bn — — and
of Agriculture,” and Blacker's
t size that can
Bo :
“ Eesay on Small Far:
be rec ended. may be excavated 1 2
dwarf ‘walls being built found — sides * pon
—+ . ach from 9 Scariot abrar è
t hi urface of the ground. The division
Bovis, A moderately good cow on modera
be expected to m 4
tel
ake 200 Ibs. of M. a the
nds not only
i eve,
unde
— why pigs it same food.
Lanp DRAINING : pee book on on "ihe subject,
yep Blac “i a
e really cannot answer legal
1 e
sre: F K, They are free of toll, and the charge is an im.
ig y% 1
t eo
- | Paice rok Dicot¥o: B. Fr ree working land 14 be ö 9 bem a4
0
K to 2d, a perch, and the m
3, a day.
torther. We believe it has rather
a tendency to prevent than to cause orib biag.
Sex or Ecos: A Fi 8 — m the Bc A method referred toin
bers, of ju eggs, is at t as o!
as the time of Horace, 0 teria:
3 factes ovis erit, ill a memento
8 1 — arip et ut magis — rotundis)
no would be cohibent callosa vitellam
bin: where to
fords five-acre farm — by the Labourers’ Friend
ety.
a For“ Mr. Wm. Gibson, of Eydon, near Daventry,”
at page 651, col. b, rend Mr. Wm. Griffin, of Eydon,” Ge.
Markets.
PIA skier Pa guns a a HO d the suppl
* ntinue to y entiful, an 8
ie well pt up; 1 — oreign W *
ranges ape
be 050 tained at or
wers are less plentiful.
3 are sufficient for the deman a. Nos Mushroome fetch from =
to 1s, 6d. per pottle. 8 Flowers consist 1 —
pasi ums, Gardenias, Bignonia venusta,
Primulas, Camellias, an
e- apples, per Ib., 33 Lemor
Ga „hoth Sates —
rapes 0 gal 4 9 to 1s
dom, 8a 1o 12 Wain
Filber
Nuts,
to 6s
VEGETABLES,
p. 6d to 1s
rs, p. s to ds
og ak K.
„dog. bundi, a Lenny to 8d
receive neither a satisfactory no!
ates 3 plaints of aay not proved
be i eer t inciples of truth, will
entitled to, te lt sympathy. 4 "Sub-
i ber of the R
n the Mark ta p a
Calendar ur of f Operations.
2 T go
8 MERSE FAR
yriculiural Socieiy, 8
r doz., 1s 6d to2 86d
— „ P. hf. siev
to
— ls 144 to 4s
Cos,
Endive score, Ist “panel
— Ot there, 3 ops
Kast p. pot., Is tols 2
Tarnipe, bah wy nedto’séa bush., 3s to 68
1
Horse rb, l, 2a to 48
— 3
seed, an
sheep. TB.
-fi s urposes ral
or the p of 3 im-
= add, waste land, waste labour, waste
waste capital—I wish to see these elements of 7.
Soura Hampsnme Farm, Oct. 20,—Since our last report, t
weather we have e: enced has proved highly 8
for agricultural operations, and in consequence farm labour is
. 24
t ae „ p. buna, 8a to I 34
Wateroreds, per
Leeks, per heme
2 to 28
doz, bunches,
4d
0 bun., 4d to 6d
Carrot por bun. Isto ls 6d
and Northampton, 2400 W
Per st. of 8 IDs. -s d
Best Scots
THE AGRI CULTURAL GAZETTE,
ITHF IELD, poig —
fords, &c. 3 6to3 10| Ditto Sho
Best Short-horn g Prd 6
2d ty Be —
Seat Do and
H * 3 8—4 0 Calves paat
Ditto Shorn
Pig
Beasts, 5283 ; Sheep and Lambs, 29, 20
freel; Dough,
Mon
small, but ther
day.
bh
al
BIDAY, Oct.
e demand.
but trade is very oral
perea oro 2 rel, supported. ‘The ane
and re than can be
eee
eee tte
66 Calves ; and 136 Milch Cows fom th
Bast p S, Here- Best han
fords, 3 6 to 3 10 Ditto
Best Short-horns 3 1 —3 6
2d qua asts 2 6—3 0 Dit oat Shor
Best Downs AESA
Half- 3 8—4 0 alta jae sae
Ditto Shorn _...
we have
„ 64 y Aaa and 36 Pigs; N ased Leicester
and from Lincolnshire, 300.
Per st. of 8 lbs.—s d
est Long-wools. 3 4
Sl lel gaa 8—3 2
to 3 6
60; ; Calves, ido; b 521.
Ewes & 2d quail 2 “s—3 2
T —
a Pigs
Beasts, 882; Sheep and a Lambs, 43 380: Calves, ity, ae 288.
HAT. —Per Load of 36 Trusses.
SMITHFIELD, Oct. 25,
HOPS —Fripay, Oct
. PATTENDEN and SMITH — Sis the market con-
tinues very firm. Duty estimated at 78,0001. to 80,0002.
MARK LANE,
. — supply of English
Mowpay, Oct.
Wheat by land c mple rning was moderate,
it 8 47 oniy be disposed “of by submitting to a deslino od Is. to
28. Fore a slow retail inquiry, but was held
firmly fo E omona glish malting Barley — be
. En
written “yi per qr. po ei Foner Pid is in goa de
mand and the turn dearer.—Beans and Peas are sc
command full prices,—Oats are a aan sale but fine’ ae Snan
and ams are not lower,
FRIDAY, Oct. 26.—The arrivals of English and foreign grain
since — — — — been narran aaa Wheat has been dis-
osed of on barely so good term demand for foreign is
very limited, but prices of old are ' nominally unaltered. Fine
er ia malting
and Pen
5
h
5 5
3
A Dw
ree
» No, er- street wes
10 THE ‘con aa 75 “ote ERS vo :
TH Aak NNEC
ED, Wa of the 11 9 8.
and other MANUREN Ag
— in the
* — Address, for 4
* street, Doe
MINGHAM =
HE BIRMINGHAM an 1
d o of fe.
and F FRIDAY, the llth, 12th, = 5 ..
oF comman nd fully former rates.—Flour is a aul — and —
d a trifle,
the general qualities.
emel, ee and . 2 ae Pomeranian and Meck-
| lenburg ss toy supplies of new Wheat continue to be very small,
and some dec n prices was anticipated. In Ro tterdam
Whe at i is 2 “tha turn dearer. In Antwerp business is
inactive; 62 lbs. new Louvain Wheat is still quoted 388. 6d. to
39s, per qr. ote ab
RPOOL, TUESDAY, Oct, 23,—At this day's market there
and fully 1d. o
Barley, Beans, and Peas went very slowly. Oats were
tolerable 3 5 at previous — but T was dull,
3d. per load cheaper. We make no change in Indian Corn.
Flour was rather cheaper.
on foreign
tained, together
All tne ind must be made o
of eeu: n or nil
— wee Oct. on
ND DURABLE
ES
S PATENT ASP HATE
1 ROGGON’
perfectly impe
ious to rai
has Poon — by a long and extensi
mates. Sav a half the umb e
on with great facility by farm-
Price ld. per square foot. CR
— ts G FELT, for Stea
nt. of fuel,
a Samples and
— * to CRoGGoN and Co., 2, Dow:
TATUE FO
8 S, VASES, FOUNTAIN
ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARM
TURAE EMBELLISHMENTS in Im
Prime Meadow Hay 66sto74s; Clover 60s to90s
——— * nee New Clover 3 2 IMPERIAL | WHEAT. BA nLET. OATS.) RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS:
les” ink Sg 25 =. Goce | Bape Tt EAEE mar apr aA TAE MILK T
ew n COOP ept, 15. 3 8 8 s
T oe RS 41 9| 27 1 |17 10 [2511 | 29 930 0 Te SY NOW ¢ 455 0 NORTHWES
Rees Mendon Hay 70s to76e Inferior ... ... . . 70sto 80s | = 29... ... 42 4 27 4 17 11 25 2 29 5 31 3 AYLE 5 MILK feom RUGBI,
Inferior di 65. | Hew Clover... .. — Oct. 6... .. 42 4 27 7/17 5 [24 9 29 0 129 5 | AMP YLESBURY, and Intermediate
pg gas Sree Geet ae WWW 41 4 28 0 17 2 24 528 10 31 8 | LONDON, "by Passenger Trains, at the unde
Ok Geter: o . 3 41 1 28 2 17 424 9 5 30 3 come n, e
5 bas ey,
Fine Old Hay .., 65s to TOs) Rew Sires oo os —StO—s — à Fo. 22 Wen een ie ela Harrow, bates
fone ze s 2 1 eg * mia bey 5 oye ü | 0 | 1 Under Nine Gallons, 9d. ; ‘above, ld.
81 Glover So ee = w Ag last six weeks’ Corn Ave Wia. R
e en 8 eri. SEPT 22. „SEPT T29.| Ocr. 6, or. 11 ‘Oor. 20° ghton, pene hig.
— TH ta 7 m 3
The Committee report that fica Mem have 8 but few arrivals 43s 0d— Tie 102 ek 1 s Bletchley, Bedford, :
ew om 8 the 1 d only a 3 — 2 9 | 1 e Aaa d 2 a = and Nine 6 tex PA [1
from the tinent, w uence o 12 on — ose oa T AIDE SA ons, 2. 5
weather, — selling heavily at the iome prices :—York | 41 9 ac 3 RA 8 H Bit The following are the ondion bors ge
Resents, 7 70s. to 85s. per ton p Wisbeach, 658. to 70s, ; Scotch, | 41 4 A E D 5 — conveyance of Mi
70s. ; foreign whites, 50s. to 1 ta å 5 . z p Eech BLEED | Can will be subjected to the usual
or booking ; th j
London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. *
PRICES
CURRENT. Oct. 15. Oet. 22. = 16. 23. Oet. 12 ae 19. Oet. 17 loct 24. Oct. 18 Oct. 25.
ka N 70 Ibs. 70 Ibs. qr. qr. ha D 62 lbs. 62 lbs,
CV fy Gt dia d; d .
New, red 38 to45 36 to43 6 0 6 46 0 6 439045 39—45 36 16042 34 t 40 5 1 5 85 0 5 8
„ White. 44—5042—48 6 0 6 10/6 0 6 10424642 40—46 38—45/5 6 6 15 6 6 0
Old, red -- |38—43/38—43/6 4 6 86 4 6 8/39—40/39—43) — — 3 3 5 915: 3 5 9
» White ... [43—454 707 67 0 7 6 —47 —47 a a A A
Foreign... eee 136—52136—524 i a 8 4 Pi a 3 an cae — —— „ Gon Fe io Manager’s Office,
Rye— Old. (2396/2392, vie cag 2 Tard aad A ae
Foreign... gs rp me 22 — — — — — es cs z3 INDUST
Foreign meal |5/,—6//5/.—6/) — * V = hants, Bankers, Man
Sar * =| q . bans tne ansion Hous of te Gy of Zot
ding . (2426/2426 — — 2220—2221—2321—23 22—24 22—24 n tl M. P.
Malting... ... 26—2826—26 30s—31s | 30s—31s 2734273 — | — | 2933 | 29—33 i ne, Hon Sir J sn pee
Foreign... ... |18—26|18—26 — — —26/21—26} — — — of England, 33 by Joh
h. 6 b nimously,
Malt Ship. 2 — . 0037 is pnts
: 451 5 Ibs. ee eie
8 18—24 te sa 225 3d . 24i 3a — | — |13—18|13 -18| 19—27 | 19—27 ness to” r
ee 22 5 — — a 8 18.— 8—2 same
Foreign 15 2020 1414333 Sa aa
a r. r. x r
Peas—Boilers | > 339% 263026300 — | — 33—40 | 3 —
Grint 196 Ibs, | 196 Ibs, =
rinding... |25— JJ 1l—12 | 11—12 | and to give
. Foreign ... (2439/2 29 29 —30 . Ba oe ae nat ? mrad i
Beans— t was
New, small . 23292329 Pe 32— 333233323 34
a nS at 2 99923382 34 32 34 12—13 11—1]2
Old — — par ae eee — 14—15 14—15
—35 VY Oo 2 no 11219 11413 The Lor
um * — — —ͤ— — — — The $
F bs] Fe ae a a tie Per
res — — 2 iii ues geste oe Bank of 1
he © n
28s—29s | 28s—30s | — — — — 1213 1213 vine, — 1
280 171 280 lbs. p. sack p. sack per per sack yeast india C 8
a are: * sq. M. P. i
30—32 | 30—32 32—38032—38 31—34 | 31—34 Baron e e — se
to add to their number; fp p. W
Averages. | Imports. Aver. | Impts.| Aver. Aver. Gloucester, stephen hed Cattle, fo of eu Toin
onorary
3 ac ly 8 e Be ee — tee be instructed to cooper
4l. 4 | 11920 ( 5 8103 |39 1/4727 | si un} 1760
7 ` d 27 3006 |24 6| 433 — 1942 opeland
“a9 deg 18 9 132815 5 | 1585 18 4 -= ad ved by Win, Tooke, 2 y
i — — — — — — 1
28 10 875 2% 6| 249 31 2| 89 | 32 103 50 . kwan mored Dilke, Esq, and
3l 8 E Bi sis sar 180 | the cordial and sincerer Ea M
noting the objec f the u
SEGAR and SANDARS THOMAS and C. STURGE. bourtesy with which he has p À
TUNN. : g s 1 i i )
UNNICLIFFE. and DUNNS.| WRIGHT. 9, 8.6 — Lombard-strett
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
er, Sales
P. — K. respect
The
great
before the
is London,
Essex.
EV ENS will ell by Auction, at
2 — ff
.
Me. l
38, King-str
TE cig
ot gy
eq
fully invite a an —— — of the
a — to ik — — to the Tra — e,
agg jo will be
by Au Auction.
i re grat — g than any
baten “Plants 8
Hye! *
ok ys me
Sale, and Catalogues had of the e E
at the Auction Mart, aud on the Premises, Leyton-
his
AY,
ck, — e of 1a 900
CAMELLIAS, cultivated 3 Mons. Souchet, -s of Versailles ;
Ie
ieties and m of the old and |
10 GENTLEMEN, FLORI
1878. SEEDSMEN, AND OTHERS,
th Anr
| A gn * . by Auction, at the Au
7 a amn 2
2 uble ae — 8
*
— —— g De —— Crown eae
and a select Assortment 8 other choice Bulbs
on the morning of S
ty,
ction
w-lane, Bank, on MONDAY, — 1 —
ne assorted DUTCH B BULBS, e
eg and single n —.—
med Van Thol Tulips, 1200
“canal § prian a Gladiolus
Anem
May t y
ale, and Catalogues had at the
Mart, and of Mr. Izop, Sheriffs’ Sale Rooms, 46, Watling-
| sree City, London.
FOR SALE WITHOUT RES
R
8
mile from the W
all his
es, on
Upwards of Two, Millions o
er a several
Larch,
87
Fe irs; Hem! 1
| Aivis 55 5 — R ig upon
8
dvertisements, a
By on pra rra by itten, hae four postage stamps,
SE. nl , Auctioneer, Cher
ACOCK is 5
e Premises, on M
| gen o'clock, —— pies eo SERY STOCK, s
acres of land, being a det — = Mr.
great
and Shrubbery Plants, nedeo and exotic;
four
he has re-
ey 8 . CHAPMAN to sell by
Y, Nov. 6th, 1849, and
— Premises, situate one
Station on the South Western Railway,
URS E STOCK,
ity of variegated Hollies of the best
Evergreen, Flowering, and Foo Shrubs, fro: feet
leas, Aucubas other
and
arf Ey Standard Fruit 5 Breas 10,000
er large — —— ba fae 2 which
aeina — moving condition, and well
8 aed other Pl
m for
— "Further — — cay ll
a Reni will be for-
rrey.
ENTLEMEN, CONTRACTORS, A3 AND OTHERS,
ERY S
Se it by Auction, on
AY, Nov. 12, 1849, and followin ng
tandin — —
WII.
cries, Milfor * Godalm —
ate of Health e ——— and
ar g aud
r ye eedlin
Dee of twie aapa, u feet |
ce, bile ng SA easter, Austrian,
ra,
P
sempervire ns,
0
m. ‘The above plants are of the most healthy description,
f aad will be sold, without reserve, in suitable lots for the con-
f of urchasers, 5 22 nd is wanted to be cleared for
iter use, ‘The Stock m main till the first week in March,
oe r pa A eetos and printed 99 to be
Ü days before ‘the sale; at the Mart; the principal Inns
| it the ad acent County ns; at Mr, 8 Nursery; and
i . s Agency-office, Godalming. viewed two
Previous to the sale.—The Chichester aad Portsmouth
pass the Nursery, which is re bin 14 mile of the South
and South Eastern Railw
| Eastern Counties Railw
1 NURSE —.— AND OTHERS, G: — pe
| 155 %%%
N a mer which they have had the honour of referring so long, sti
l Py y Veloek omo on a MONDAY, N ia, 3100, 8 f 0 te day day, * “i zive work and give any to Mr. 3 will be —
. ms ‘giv any information.
Nad s very arge quantity of fine Evergreens, Sta ne 27 Suits byki uns
2 warf Roses, Fruit Thee. American Plants, ò the houses y
— ogues had
— Poplars, Limes,
1 c
of it country Nurseryman.—M¢
of the principal Seedsmen, and on
&e. ;
es, Acacias, ber ae
hes, Nectarines, &c.
ay be viewed . to the
. . . OPPOSITE CREMORNE GARDENS,
R. D. A. RA
NI.
of 2000
ices of
2
es,
oag. day, at 12 Welock,
all the une eared lots ot
Aucubas, Laurestinus
"GRA PE v
8
without reserve, by order of
NURSER
e
ismen ; 3
Brompton N ursery, Fulham. road, Brompton, near
e., grown from
the” attention of
‘ res Private “Cont Ne
ccession and FRUITING 3 125 T S,
inuka ety © clean and healthy, and o e choicest
bitten many of the fruiting plants witt
anten c cation to be made t r. Kennan, 4, Great Rus-
Went Garden, Lond
SS —————=_E
Toir A LET, within 16 miles of London, a useful
arm Buildings and
= land is in high — nda a very considerable
E gp oer Bie eg May
app n to Mr. W. BUTCHER,
three —
— ts aa
| particulars cong
» | Agent, Eps
Estate
—
n gre
— 0, te Ne oy dat —— — the
e Patentees, age too
d. 1} foot under 3 Te — Sd,
d. et ~ eet.,
14 by 10 ma > ny foo...
3 fee ; eet
5 —
135.
oGs. each, Metal H Hand- trames, Tiles, and
Bee Glasses from y ach; Cuc umber
; Wasp
Di
— Window Glass
n, and Lamp — — — for trying
the pind “of — 4 tubes, 78. ara 6 tubes, 10s, Self-register-
— "for Greenhous , Hori ticultural Glass, &.
3 and CO., ‘Tis, — Wich-
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES A e
HX ELORE anD CO. supply 16-0. Sheet Glass of
Manufac rom 2d, to 3d
uired, an = thousa d
— immedi delivery.
ists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on application, —
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THIOK © CROWN GLASS 15
TILES a SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROPAG TING
GLASSES, GLASS MILK NS, PATENT PLATE- GLASS.
M AL game SS, and GLASS SHA ADES,
Co., 3
HETLEY 5, Soho-square, London.
the Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in each month,
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTICULTURAL
PURPOSES, &e.
MILK PANS
PASTRY PINS
FISH CLOBES
„„ > GYACINTH FLOWER DISES
TINC@BEE CUCUMBER CLASSES
PROPAGA
1 N GLASS, which is of
* as
— . hss +g cutting, up, at 21d. per foot. tish
Plate Glass, fi to 2s, per foot, accordi i
Patent Rough Plate —— from ġ to 1 inch in thickness, from
pren Tu
Wee 4 inchee Jeng, a ** d. per inch. meters, 7s, 6d,
act y be had on “application at the
oe toy 57, ele- e Without, same side as the
he
past tm for the Worshipful 9 ge i of
don, in their Botanic Garden Chelse . Moo oore, the
kindly
g also to say th
a Apparatus was not ——
GRAY, OBM and Brown, have also othe honour of ——
to aon of the ARY syi gentry in the country, and tose
viewed, and |
687
WALTHAMSTOW,
T° BE LET, ON
GARDEN GROUND,
er Acres, wi
TO carver 8
regeme of
BY HER
MAJESTY’S PATENT.
M. e AND ee Lam 2 -buildings, Bunhill-
`
F
* row, Lo 2 facturers and only Patentees of
TH ED FELT FOR ING
Houses, Far m Buildings, Shedding, Wor Ae and for Garden
purposes, to protect Plants from Fros
At the Great Nation = Agricultural Shows, it is this Felt
which has been exhi and obtained Two SILVER MEDAL
Prizes, and is the Felt soLELY patronised and adopted by
Her Masesty’s Woops AND Fon
Honounasis Bo F ORDNANCE,
Honovnasre E INDIA COMPANY.
HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTO b
Her Masesrr’s ESTATE, ISLE o WıcnT,
RoYaL Boraxie Garpens, REGENT'S
And on the Estates of the Dukes of — d, Norfolk, Rut.
1 Newcastle, Northumberland, Buecleu h (at Richmond)
he late Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility * Gen try,
end at the RoyaL AcnricunruraL Socimry’s Hovs , Hanover.
are,
It is half the price of any other description of Roofing, and
effects a great saving of T fs.
Timber in the construction of
Made to * — gth by 82 inches wide,
NN
part of the
t execute
the only Works — London
paag. is made, a
AN
ry, ry, ando ers b 8
ga The Public is 1 that
or Great Britain —
Patent Felt
=
E
b’s- buildings,
nien,
h the Felt may be seen,
that they
Rooms at the — of the, Mec
to
their Felt, *
| thori rities w
| Publish hed 00 JOSEPH GREENBILL,
ow — mep used, 24,000 fi
OTE.— ct to th Facto
plied in len gts best t suit Roots, 60 tater bly a
they requi
very information afforded on the construction of Roofs, or
any proposed particular application of the Felt.
C ARSON’S —— prais — oean
PAINT, specially patronised by the
Governments, the
oc
4
r
„ Brick, Compo, Cement,
s has upwards
rh — pos b, merous ween d 500) testi-
monials in its favour, and whic m the rank and station in
ar of those wi ave them, have yet been
equalled by a — of the kind hitherto brought before the
public notice. of — rs and Prices, 11 — a —
the — i vil fig
R OAR
15, Tokenhouse Yard, on of the Bank of Bngland.— No
ents le ms are partione arly requested to be sent direct,
SHIONS OF STARTLING NOVELTY, in the
D AZ heg oF ASHION for Nov ember,
and d Fifty New Winter Fashions
n any sng work.
rosses, 35 —
super G
> tog 198 238 a po a —— ure of the
amily Ball ane ‘ther splendid Plates, Descriptions, e.,
nt post free for six s extra.
ondon : G. — 3 Strand; and all
G YS SGARDEN
w flow plants,
qer ooga 5 information,
„King William-stre „Strand.
.
Ton don: . Cox, 1
OHNSON’S GARDENERS ALMAN he
GARDENER’S ALMANACK for 1850 will coe Published in
i ber, with the otber 3 ationers’ Com-
any. e new n
predecessors, kay on!
occasional use of
amongst * ‘a
Company, at their Hail, in rg the haigne
2 o IMPORTANT Ty ADVERTISERS —TuIRD YEAR,
Gn WIRE GANE NETTING.— HE HORTI ICULTU URAL ALM LMANAC ond GAR-
r yard, 2 feet and FARMERS’ Loner — 1850.—
5 GARDENING. DEPARTMENT Practical * ;
ZEF 222225 N 2228 3 TURAS D DELAR 2 — M TEN, Seere-
2 5 22 22255 . e Lor ** Society thor of Prize
322572 222 2222222 8 2 Essays,” . &e. age aserat practical character of —
2225 222 8222 8 Almanac secures it a most en ensive sale, and there
pee 2222 222 renders it a medium particulary suitable for advertising, while
38222722 2 2822 its cheapness is a great recommendation. All — — —
BRR 255 will appear, as did last year, in each se edition,
2228 . — without any extra s arge,
12 22222225 225 London: Gsaoompripcr and Sows, Trs and
i 8 see spose 25 all Bookseller
222228282 222225 22 5 Mane ALKALINE. ‘YOOTH-POWDER
’ as yet u $
teed ids, no thing that can injure ena.
Kalvan- Ja ey horoughly removes — tartar and all im pro
gg duces that — white appeara 238 re . 1
i d. | andits — ae tends to sweeten P the breath,
8 EE os ie a wide y per yd 3 pery we — on. o many years — have bren ior dehen
TE roca hes by —— have had opportun (that occur to few)
0 inch, — » 2 ” of testing the relative merits of those powders that have been
1 23 X n ae ai 1 1 brought before the c. They have now succeeded in pro-
1 peers aeons T ae a ring the receipt f o's the above — er is prepared
at at proportions pri confidently recommen universal adoption. Whole
rte op bove can be Barren 2 will reduce the rad a one | sale und retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, & Co.’s, Brush-makers
s Galy 2 2 for pheasantries, 3d. to H. R. H. Prince 41 25. x. Caution.— Ihe ne
ge ob in Dg ie pa wader man vt er, = 10 70 he bun ee —
155 p sa BISHOP, Market la R. H. 2 r ame id o the sig nat
e me ng 8 in Lond be als 2 em : TCALFE, BINGLEE, and Co.,
ugh, Hull, or 9
0 R., pas frat
688 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
MMENSE SA
THE FLORIST, AND GARDEN MISCELLANY; I NAMED BULBS, STAND
ovem 2 97
CONDUCTED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF E. Beck, or IsLEWoRTH. phe of Nie. B. Lon P:
ESEE E artnership. The Lots, 2
It is particularly requested that any Papers intended for the December Number may be forwarded as early as possible. This named f 3 cultivators, con
will greatly oblige the Editor, as he is desirous of having the Volume for 1849 8 gisa Index, &c., early in that month. and late Tulips. D arge quan
The forthcoming No. (XXIII) will be embellished with a coloured plate of Seedling P: s,and a Woodcut, The letter- | including hs Wen Scotch
press will contain a variety of original matter, interesting to the lovers of Gardening ; a 8 of Operations, & e. Single Jonquils, Nareissus is; =
p Beck, Isleworth. in sorts, 1000 of the best Sta
Shaw’s, Dancer’s Kidne ndani
1 J. and other $
THE FLORIST AND GARDEN MISCELLANY Onions, Garden Implements, and other effean ta Pa
until th or effects. —May he
Appears regularly on the First of each month, pri F don. ee 2 had had ot 2 Suter, 85
London: CHAN and HALL, 186, Strand; and to be had a oa Bakin addresse me teva
N.B. The Volume for 1849 will form a t iful fi Ch t, well suited for d tabl GUBSTITUTE Thick 8 MATS, T
* 2 N, ‘lie C.
NEW WOR CHARLES DICKENS. NEW Bray Pe PROFESSOR JOHNSTON. sition, admitting light to plan — A dressed with
3 . Faik YOUNGER Or XPERIMENTAL PAGHICULTURE ; being the | mended for covering e e ane Mie or |
ERFIE q 0 e the covering greenhouses, wa
NDERSTONE ROOKERY. By CHARLES Dickens, sults of Past, and Suggestions for Future 9 8 blossom of fruit and also — i
With 2 — by Hastor K. Browne. To be completed | in Scientific hong Practi = _— icultur light, which is outlast two mats, keep out i
in Twenty Monthly Numbers By James F. W. 2 Rts. L. 1 5 E. 5 &e. &c. t Alen Sere i More et
London : BRADBURY and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. ely published, ‘by the sam the lh Voce auling, two yards wide, Is, per yun ee
a LECTURES “ON AGRICULTURAL ‘CHEMISTRY AND | pe ol (C per yard. —Rosert Ricua *
NEW wort, BY THE AUTHOR OF “JANE EYRE.” | GEOLOGY. Second Edition. 8vo. 24s. . 21, Tonbridge. plac erig ent, and
178 in three vols., post Svo, ELEMENTS of Ditto. Foolscap Svo, Fifth edition. 63 „ ndon Pec Capes, for bowen oe. i
S HI R L E Y. By Currer BELL, Author of! CATECHISM of Ditto. Twenty-fourth edition, 1s. ES f de ben le
r ge ge FFF SOILS. re Wi 01 N G, 1 than É
MITH, ELDER, and Co., Cornhill. LT Fcp. 8vo. a n Wire, oe :
a OF JOHNSTON'S PHYSICAL ATLAS. ATLAS CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE, and Rabbit, Can? ‘Dog 8. Deer 3 ted ; to ord j
QUARTO EDITION. parse eR - high, 3d. per yard; 2 feet, 44; 3 tet ee) U iia
On the 31st o tot — —— will be published, in one Volume imperial Witttam Brace woop and Sons, Edinburgh and London. 6 feet, Pv , 5 any width required "at Ta . |
quarto, handsomely bound, ha!f-morocco, price 2. 12s. 6d. Price — he 5s. for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cott ell adapted for enclosing Fowls, Ph asante, &¢.—Raue 4
er don ip imperial olo. r * educed ee the Fensnt try , delivered a anyer reia 2 on 4 P A ffice FISHING | , Tonbridge-place, New. poy London,
ition in erial folio. For the use of Colleges, order ing sent to the Publisher, James akoe at the 1 N A
gopeng and Fam = Office of the Gardeners’ Chronicle. ETS h 7 Ane 4
* on derten F.R, — r G. S., Wer e at 18 corr TAGERS’ CALENDAR OF GARDEN | Nets, ‘Casting Nets, Drum i and other Netw fer P i
s onorary M OPERATIONS. very Shee 3
ig heh bls Edition contains 15 Maps, 8 Palæontolo a By Josxrn FNR Gardener to His Grace the Duke of Devon- coco t fibre, nearly 4 feet high, e 4
igt e aeih of A ark, eee iy aged Edition * . Mes in the Reprinted from the . Above 51,000 — e Ries — a3, ee long., Rio i
, e or ion ew. a
and $. 2 dernen aud” deni paida 7 teas, W. already been sold. er eee with several woodcuts RO OUSES and various
ee) with Descriptive Letterpress, and a very African Lilies Gilias Plum in this 8 Twel elve feet square, 201, ; Ditto, if o
On the same day will be published, Part VITI. (price 8s, 6d.) ee Gooseberries Polyanthus . inches from te side when olor eae
Copio 5 bbedsteads,
ofthis Work, and the Parts will continue to be issued as her „ paat fy privet oa par kepr ith nuts and hgh any one Gin
b ‘ce tae apt 8 . hole is completed Apples Heartsease k; packs — mpass very
For E 3 n a a Soa 8ih of February. | Apricot Herbs Propagate by cut- 8 21, Tonbridgorplacey News, London. |
‘to the Atlas as fe jeppeared from meath to month, and | Beans Herbaceous * ee eee
wis : nth, and | Beans rar i
may w e ìt in a complete fi befi Py ~ RONCHITIS AND INFLUEN —
ical publication shail have terminated, aii che pe an — 1 1 io ir into Badishes by BRANDE’S BRONCHIAL seat
D borot reat Be 5 ae 17 0 N Ranunculus iai
arts wi y, and may ad on hehe lst of December. Plae ack! Haroto Medicinal . 5 to two of any
peed e Sons, Edinburgh and Lond tora? we dint pt, eas Influenza, Asthma, and all Pul „
Books Dr Cottagers Horse radish Rhubarb 14 a rs, baring
PRICE FOURPENCE, OF ANY BOOK Hyacinths Rockets formed oe when all other means had failed, by:
CONTENTS oF mute NUMBER FoR SATURDAY Horeca Hydrangeas Roses 24. agree Papert Fear 5
ox edgings 880 5
LAST, $ Bice a Indian Cress kaniri 24, East Te maple G chambers, Pleet-street, London, a
30 AL OF 'HE ATHEN UM, Brussels sprouts age be sent, free, by
URN. AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, Budding Kidney Beans Salvias NPRINCIPLED SHOPKEEPERS, for th
MEERE, AND THE FINE 6 ig Bulbs Luvender “| Say
Twenty-four Large Qua Cabbage Layering Saxifrage FE n the form et Pills. of Pills. Pu
Reviews or, witn aca = ity 3 Cactus Leeks Searlet Runner therefore observe that all Pills under i
Calceolarias Leptosiphons - 2 counterfeit, and that no m pee Pin is genuine but “War
Policy of a Separate Grant for the eee Exchange, By J. | CalifornianAnnuals | Lettuce 3 See K“ MAL WAFERS the n
Education i in — y i Da. LOCOCK’S FEMALE are the only.
dered, & Tib: W 8 Capana lias Sea Daisy ár Thrift recommended to be taken by Ladies., They fortify
— § DD. By owns- Anthologia Po Polsglotta, By H. een 7 oe — ga ale tion at all periods of life. They remove 7
| Carrots unis, e ect Flowers Heaviness, Palpitation of the Heart, Lowness of
“Bynopsia of the typ — a. The Ogilvies. A Nora a hatte. es ; poau . ness, and, all ale, create Appetite, and r
h Societ. Seven Dead: 2 : } Marjoram ruit Headaches; Giddiness, &. -diret
N itaux: | Cherries Manures Snails and S1 j : sant taste.
2 2 By de “tar Dy Bede Sus. | China Asters Marvel of Peta Sanders Propricits Agent Da kr asd Coy,
= e irt le Tro Trouveur, By Paul de mas — Mesembryanthe- Spinach treet, London, who ars also Agents for“
rysanthemume, mums Spruce Fir PULMONIC WAFERS, r for Asthma, mies
TH SHORTER Notices or Chinese Mignonette Spur pruning and Colds.—Sold by all respectable ae
Book ot English tata By , Universal Grammar, By J chives Mustard See ls. 11d., 28. 9d., and i ie pr bo 60601 22
ermyn. am "| Clemati Narci
8 2 qe. =n French Grammar, By Dr. Collinsias Nemophtied Sweet Williass Henker artig P PATIENTS, Dist
Chronological Tables of Greek | Le Gayi a oh peas Seeley Bo tea fag e of eA YLOR Sh
rat — — E reek | Le Gefylsta : an Anglo-Saxon | Cress Onions Thyme commended to use TAYLOR J
by W. Smith, L. L. B. dited | Delectus. By Rev. N. Barnet. Creepers Pzeonies Tigridia Pavonia | COCOA, as being very superior ‘article is man
x A* wr mg fie raha By J agg 4 aret 8 8 chin og ape Parsnip —— Nut — a ik a partions
* tolica tings. | Crown Im 8 Parsley peculiar principle, by whic e ue
cg ys Translated from the 1 Cucumbe Peaches Tu ii p * neutralised, at the same time its flavour, purity,
T lb one Aristophanes, By W. J. Etheridge, M. A Cultivation of or 8 -hauim i — praon are maintained. Itis en essentia ®
4 eren loge Or Oa 5 = Plata 8 on the Chris. ers in Window Veget table Cookery under Homæopathic 3 he
rnold’ ‘ s +
Erne by T. W. Serjeant, tron T Bene yag Per. Currants Daisies —.— * —— baten, . ay proves a t the sam? same time METTE
H. Hughes, M.A, i Dog’s-tooth Violets | Perennials Verbenas and refreshing. at their l
Reviews of Medical Wor orks.—Change of Air. By J Exhibitions, pre- — Iris Vines Sold wholesale w TAYLOR 3 yib. 10 fib
fF ggio, Esq. — Catarrh, Influenza Bronchitis d aing articles for | Petunias Virginian Stocks | fields, London, and retail, in a oeni
As B T. —— M.D.—Half. yearly Abstract of Ferns, lox packets, at 1s. 4d. per ot by most PE
3 W. H. Ranking, M.D.—Synopsis Bratt 10 . Phan tad —.— ah bor SOLUBLE COCOA (only í
iseases uman Harvey— uchsias “ote 2
ments eee e planer lereet | Gentianella Pee e
Life. By ©: E Da, en Prac LION POUNDS per annum—a vas, which,
reg Po 2 y Dr. Graves — ——— 8 A cE Ls FO R THE avs post — — sr manufacture f are totally de"
ngrene. By J, Boggie, M.D. n 0 y — — ks ARI UM, somewhat resembEng the original at
3 gy of Croup. By H. Green, M. 5. — On Infantile NSISTIN 2 zar. = eee aguinst were counterfeits
oo: AZAN kasten, OA 1 Pana SED. Classes, Riltances, orders, and Bibidi 4 recommend the purchase of thelt s their 1 =
x a. By T. B. Peacock name, with di ee
ginal Fapers.—Monioir of P, Tec, ot} PROFESSOR LINDLEY’S VEGETABLE en ee a
reen ospi ting of Spec ve: Dy 7 reale, NGDOM,
> EST T REMEDY
1 — aa Pixies, Superstitions | So printed, in large type, that they ean be cut out and pasted | ORTON’S CH AMOMILE PILL 7 ILIS are e.
Foreign Correspon 3 5 end sin Bilon
Vi it to the Buddhi Published James MATTHEWS, at the Office of th 10 i
pene am of Koo-Shan, near Foo-ch boriso * — © Buddhist , — es and Agricultural Gazette, 5, Upper — suffer 7 — a Tndigestion, Sick H e
3 5 ip.—Industrial Exhibition of all Na. Street, Covent-garden ; vane may be ordered of all Booksellers, rere sae bp to the ach ery c y 3
1111.0 bund ih, wiht Wood Eoraviogs, | ß
many—Publication of in’ A i LOUGHBY a at endors. Be su
7VVWTT..T.T.T.v.b.'.!.v.. AND CON- | Wihoat sndgeans Matos geal ©
tropolis—Usefulness of the Omnibus Pacha of Beypt's FIRMAT ei OF SACRED HI STOR tY, f rom the Monu. | NORTON’S PILLS, an an |
Challenge tothe English Turf—Obituaries of Dr Co daca, |= ments of Egypt. By M. ©. Tre — TUA CON ye
Dr. Carl M. Raphael, U. U. Massard, snd is Lasur, Prom the ish Magazine e This is an elegant and well- HEUMATISM EFFECTUA Ms | one of be
cleties.—Mi 3 p — gd book Fo na aak 2535 esting R LLOWAY’S PILLS.—A Serjeant” nad bee
aë Cholera): g g he irming! ain Horaid—" A vilantie Mad indispons- ; son duty at Hobart der the ca ca
ace Gonna ti able accession to the library of every Biblical student.” inente doing gar matsi Hen was der pent
3 e ee — Decorations of the Chapter House of From the Rev. Thomas Hartwell Horne’s Introduction to the | mental surgeons, but deriving ot the to Hote?
P — bbey— Panorama of the Nile—Ancient Mural | Critical Study of sg bo nee —‘‘Nearly 300 texts of Scrip- | treatment, in despair od a dle teipe as l
o ure are more or less explained in this elegant! -executed | | iracle, this in“ e now enjoy
Music D bee ee TSN * volume, and in a manner caval curious and interes — ting.” and or rfectly curing him, and he neins së
- Sacred H Bociaty Likas GADE MT :
Lises Masical eal Compositions — . in Paris M, HE HISTORY OF THE UNITED 3 OF
Mozart Vande s Dramatic Re — reatment of AMERICA, By Joun Faost, of Philade
— Price Tå.
gularions Capture of a Whale ofa the Fhamee the ie | [HE HISTORY OF FRANCE, from the Earliest
Gos al The e of Beria Telegraphs—A Boat for a Bridge By EMILE DE Bonnrcsose, The two volumes o
Exhi lin Manufactured Articles—Impor- the 3 edition compri in m one of the 988
ustralian Geography. This work is the history approved of by the Minister of Public
egies er The sig Education in France, where it ay 86, Fleck passed through five ted Cont
— A editions, London: D, BOGUE, t-street, SarumDax, OCTOBER 2, 184%
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
| ae KITLEY ET be 0 Tor the lovers of this
at 2l. per Also, show ties,
‘ats 6d, each. 2 mbe Vale ov
RICA
OSEA WATE! LER be
i published a —— and — ait ‘Catalogue of his — ge
uN ina CONIFEROUS 5 —.— may be had o
ion, inclosing tw e to
Hosta WATERER, Kpa IN — — Wo king, Surrey.
prantine. For Sale at Brenchley, Kent, 24 miles
from Paddock Wood Station, South Eastern Railway,
out 400 Spani h Chestnut ee 12 fe NN
their treatment, to move well; the lot at 41. per a les
ls. ot — a lot off Horse aeons Plants, about 12
et high,—A Mr. LINF ardener, Broad O
— 5 NI War CONTRACTORS,
; AND OTHERS.
OHN 1 has ai Hundred Thousand of
ng WHITETHOR UICKS for
1 transplanted, me h * W at the
} Lon ngham
way, from whence they can go to any oan ‘of ae kingdom.
Steric articulars direct to Jonn PARTRIDGE, Leighton
Se
per SHAILER, ‘Chapel Fee, Battersea-
on the site of the ar —— Elms,
— with great eee in ig Pres of his
ae — — — of ai Ta kaving ive: ‘general
a superior collection
er ans 184
pair.
FLOWERING BULBOUS ROOTS, FF
b _CINTHS, hone GLADIOLUS, IRIS, N
INQUILS, CROCUS, RANUNCULUS,
; ie, ar be had of sound quality, from WAI.
SEEDSMAN and FLORIST, :
ACINTHS, en va arieties (named); as, Lspand 18s.
dozen 12 (na 5 35. ge
TULIPS, 188 7850 Garg, 51 À NARGIS S,
per 0 Mixed CROCU ours, 28. 6d.
SNOWDROPS, 2s. 64. oa w. ERNSEY
— each, A Priced Catalogue may be had RATIS on
of Hardy Annuals, for autumn or early spring
wg 12 varieties, 2s, 6d. ; free by post, 6d. extra.
PIMBR LARIA, 'GERANIUN, 14 nd PRIMULA, 3
TMBRIAT A, « varieties ted
* Vegetable eens Yall ‘kinds, Garden Implements,
his
3 ar-
arks—“ A more
favourite flower that he has a quantity of fine double varie-
|
hundre 0 lect
No. 44—1849.] SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3.
INDEX. MYATT’S NEW STRAWBERRY, “ELEA. ANOR”
r ; Gardeners and masters, . Tr MYATT anp SONS prepared 4
at ee polities 4. 808 5 e plants of this and the following varieties at the prices
. okt . 697 ò Gas li * annexed : Ne: att's — „ 8.3 Fer 8 —
812 are maia to prune, 2 . —— Quse 3 1 a obe, sy morh,
Main cit iite Ta... jcc WOE © | Grape, Rew 5.505205 eceuasetars s. 6d. ; Hoope s Seedlin 3s. ch. Koe "Be. 6d. ;
Biscayan isss s, „ 695 ò | Graveyardr, overcrowded ..... Pelva ain’s sash . 7s. 6d. ; — Snark: 75. 6d. ; :
ait =e — e N cause of disess 2 —— "Prince, 15s. per 100.
eee ee. are re —— to be — ayable to
r Leet (Mere Kariery Sours 2 rr, Mano Man or Fa on De ptford. Ken Be
— ` | Maie sissssscsindidosisv :
—... „ nA è | Mare anh JACKSON’S IMPROVED KIDNEY, THE 5 PROLIFIC
Ee cou buys sss... 693 4 | Marine glue OF EARLY POTATOES,
eee dee | | Mealy bu HOMAS JACKSON anp SON have much pleas
N ssociation, ... Udours of p n announcing that in consequence of their having a sae
sibiopica, hardy, . hea v, 5 prog of their IMPROVED KIDNEY POTATO, they
Horticult 3 have reduced its price from 15s, to 10s. per bushel. All orders
n Politics end agriculture bushel or more d red free in London, or at any
of plant a—6 Potato disease station on the South Western Railway.
oe 100 6 10 K ite i meg Foy EAA Nursery, Kingston, Burre Surrey, Nov: $.
pena A bi V r e e e e pepe. ’s-road, Chelsea, NURSERY-
6 dy aké as food 2 n, "is now se elling the very
Treen, ful to pet prune « bs. ` oi : eee e. ar Epor donei f Taosi mroes,
ICtOria Regia ,
Villa gardening ......... Lilium lancifolium album (flow aan roots), at 6s. per doz
pi
To —— The true Hautbois Strawberry, at 2s, 6d. per 100; 4
Hen t sow! ing, experiment with ia a tandarā Wall- 2 — Peach, 2 Sn, and Nectarine Trees, a
— 8. * ditto Dwarf- agers wed fine, at 30s. per —
ry large Ficus ia sticus for
[Price 6d.
2ENDLE'S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE should
used by all wed haman — a oom of Hyacinths,
Tulips, and other oun Sold in — — 74 at 28,
ated eac Por ENA rther r particu
‘= 'RENDLE and Oo., Unio ae, une uth.
Our 42 premises are adjoinin the Plymouth Station
of Guano have ex-
ve the 3 Devon in ay, and our sales
eded e us the last five e years,
2 88 85 ST “OF SEEDLING AND TRANS-
—— LANTED LARCHES, of the Finest Quality, at reduced
7 M. WOOD anp SON beg to solicit attention to their
very e xtensive stock of the above, prices of which will be
Ni
, Maresfield, near Uckfield,
Sussex.
paige OF WA, 005 AND D SUNS? New
ve ROSE CA
9 ation.
owe odlands iiy, Maresfleld, near Uckfield, Sussex.
EORGE JACKMAN, NURSERYMAN, wos ing,
Surrey, 1} mile from Woking Station, South-western
Railway, be egs to announce he — — published a — and
complete CATALOGUE of bis O ntal mee “ig be and
F.owering Shrubs, Standard “ie ‘Dwarf Rose and
Fores tTr rees, &e., which may be had on ademas — 4 —
w Deserip-
ALOGUE may still be obtained, GRATIS,
ny
Tage LARGE aD MONTHLY RASP-
RY.. — This fine autumnal sare a erry has been 1 sow
ment loade
an
ce he has just
0
with Fruit — as the werp, and of fine flavour. It differs
fr
om the 3 —
n AM GREG RY begs most respectfully to
offer the — NEW GERANIUMS an
FUCHSIAS.
prt ar SEEDLING 9
on and after the 10th of November
NT.—Of very dw TE 2 e
‘To be se 7
LU CILLE BEL
upper potne, blotched with dark — . j r petals striped
with the colour; good for —— ep be pehy culture. Price
7s. 6d. eac che
55 ROSEA COMPACTA,.—A seedling from Lucia rosea
ement upon its parent, being a very free bloo oomer,
abit 3 a, well adapted for bedding or pot
Rose-coloured Geranium, not surpassed,
PLENDID NEW Alea
be t out the first week in May
DIANA.—The a pares est White age oP lo 3 a pure
white tube, of wax-like consisten and well Proportio ned,
ee sli ghtly penis with ate Winch, tipped with a pretty
ade of gre 5 bri aT a flushed vith crimson
20 the 5 Price 10s, ach.
ACTZON,— e flower, t =
corol
the peantifal bared shape, so desirable ; a very free
A excellent habit ; confidently recommended. Price 10s, 6d.
M.—A well-shaped dark flower, tube and Sepals
A-
Sus,
ANEMONES, LI-
HAMI
RINIU
brigh t crimson, of desirable consistency ;
< a free bloomer, and of rather dwarf habit. Price 7s, 6d.
Th +t. h a
Royal e e ey. 8.
URROUGHES’S TWO UNE RIVALLED PICOTEES “LO.
RINA” and E Senge — OF „ being by
far the best the abo iser has pro
NHARLE RNER È
owing dy for delivery.—PICOTEE
BUR UGE “DUCHESS OF SUTHERLAND,” light
red edge; the finest in its class, took first-class certificates at
Slough, Royal So don, and Met ropolitan Shawi. and the
premier prize at Slough, as tbe bes 1 f the 2 * a
grower and ve mstant, being q ite we Maca 3. 6d.
BURROUGIES’S “ LORINA ” (light purple edge), Pou
white, * a delicate margin, which ot extend the least
into ; too ss certificates at Slough, Royal
South h London, and Derby, six blooms at the latter = — 10s
ADY HARRIETT MOORE (Tox wEn).—Medi
h of C TuUrNER’s winning
"CARNATION.
CLARK'S REV. J. ger eg Pees „Purple flake, full,
smooth, and finely marked. 10s.
re
8 ty 2 MONTEZ. „Purple, of the finest
frm . We F
l tion Si ee
Se ORNER „ “sf “eo aai y- formed petal, long
onstan
Be at
s *
— shown in all C. ee 5 winni ng stan D
out the season. Figure 2 e e for — p 1849. e
h 0
rae ES — 1 aah ass certiticate at — Royal South
of | Beauty of Uttoxeter Lard Joho Raseell
Crimson Perfection
— J wishes to remind his friends and the public the 9 of
Nursery Stock on the 2?d inst. = t his brother’s, Mr. W
Seckiaah, who has decli ned bu “ine
THE SUBSCRIBER begs = offer the following listy
and 5 aaa — ok in the kingdom, and will —.— yrs
— s in urse of ihe season,
Haidak or HEATHS.
Ampullacea vittata ;Eximea Perspicua nana
Aristata ditto Ferrugi |i Propendens
Andromedeeflora Florida campan etorta major
Beaumontia rtnelli (lake a lnubes calyx
Bergiana Hiemalis Splendens
owieana brid Szudrians
Ba liana Lricolor dumosa
— mbertiana rose „ rubra
Cun —2 mii Luc iflora Wilsonii
— Licopodioides Veu utrieosa, sorts
Depressa 1 = 1 Westcottii
Fe abilis Willmorcana
Elegans arpa flora
And many other e to 218. per dozen,
AZ ALEAS.
Alba aoe Loved oa Devonshire |Murrayana
magua [su undula
Apollo Ex conde yptima
Ardens A lora pieno rubra Obtusa
Aurora ormo |Verryana
Broughtonii Heere ee lt perba nova
Heb i [Metulgens
Coronata 181 Var iega a
Coceinea superba Laveritia enden.
128. to 21s. per dozen.
‘sails.
— —— e Flaming Nora
Agri Forget-me-not Ondine
amt 5 Gustavus Oriou
Bacchus Gulielme coca
* Gazelle | Plutarch
of Clapham |Hebe’s Lip Prometheus
Black "Knight Jenny Li (Que ae Victoria
~_ of tie Village King Hudson IRo
arinda nartine ja ra
andre a Rockh Spur ler
Cavalier iss Berens | e
Centurion inna yivia
Chimbor Mrs. Cavendish | 1 Lerpricbore
Cupid |Miss Holford W ladsor Castle
1 er dozen.
CINERARIAS.
ttila Cerito
Alboni — Marittima
5 ere Maid of Artois
rand Mas —— eg Beauty
— Vor Peckham Lady Tamworth .
Beauty of St. Jolin’s Shep- ttespiendezs
—
125. to a per dozen.
a TA in packets, 2s, 6d. each, or]
OPHILA 33 pac
anne z plants 15. each or 9s. per dozen.—A fine collection of
impor —Catalogues on application,
Royal Fase „ Slough
STOVE PLANTS
Eschz nauthus palche A Ga Hoya Cunningham .. 23 6d
me apectowus irung) 3 6 | mper .
10 Le) Inipatiens or © balsamia
Allamanda cathartica . 1 0
„ grandiflora oe ee | teen coccinea, a, sro,
„ Schottii Se | osé
himenes Loudonii... 2 6 e 5 2 6
„ ocellata 2 6 mæ, per
Br — Jamerouii, | 4 821 1
per 0 o | Roudctetia spei ae es
Francisca hydrangactur- | jor 2
3 6 | Stephanotis foribunda,
2 6 „
d ide 2 0
Select Greenhouse Plante, 123 . to 215. dozen,
Select Ej acrises, 12s, to 21s. per doze Select —— ee
mums, inclusive r e nd — 6s. to 1. Olea ; 4
New Verbeuas, 0 123. per Zau-chneria
1 doz.
he selection, the 8
— “nil be ear vas belts to be accompanied — 42 a
— 2 85 of With iam James EPPS, Bower
Sareea, Matas
THE
ARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 4
[Noy.
CHINA = rr 2 for re
Ç by — 1 e of Mr. Mac Lachlan, 6,
npa e dite, s widan
SON T ERY, GSHÖT, SURREY
oHN WA TERER Bae — Ln asure in ann ouncing
he published a Descriptiv: talogue of his exten-
ae collection a RHODODENDRONS „ana hese American
plants, &., whic be forwarded on applica
B K CANT, St. Jade. street Tn,
ready for delivery, strong well-
AD ER pot 3 6d. each,
TOPPI 5 BRILLIANT | — 15
FUCHSIA SPECTAB LIS 2 ie
„The _Thre d carria age a aud pac ekage free to N
reference, requested from unknown cor-
Suppo Th ual discount to the trade.
ELARGON IUM “FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.”
eee —.— well * — heg, in 4-inch pots, now ready,
price 21. 28. and a 72 has been — * than
was en — — 8 llt given for every three
ordered by keyi — — b e to Major Waan FOQUETT,
Shide House, n
NÆUS R
can confidently eee
his et as the best in cultivat satis-
this assertion is the fact a ae, Market
an:
than any other r variety.
It ho extraordinarily productive, and about a fortnight earlier
n the Victoria ; added er ee it — ~~ in iodo oionn
for: “preserving aud all c ary purposes. One-year plante
roots, ls. ; ditto, Bitobell’s Royal ‘Albert 40. 6a. ; ak g
erh he a ual Trade allowance—Pos -office orders are re-
Sti dy Nov be os 8 to JOSEPH Mr YATT, Manor Farm,
Deptfor
R. ree NGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, Jersey, begs
say that his DESCRIPTIVE 1 —
EARS. (with true descriptions of each poor sate
lis hed x7 Messrs. FIRR — Pateruoster- row, — . *
will be ha for Am ateurs, as 12887 555 are
s. 6d.
=n full, with „as well as the stock which
will suit each sort Saß
RON WA
SUPERB COLLECTION OF DOUBLE HOLLYHOCKS,
oes CHATER has a lar, ze — of =
W. C. en a coll 21 grower of Hollyhocks for 25
years, has devoted a great 1 of time expense to
i late Mr. C. Baron pur.
wW
some of maen are of the most brilliant colour and very
fine in for Their merits have been 225 re K pon of the
principal — in a kingdom in 1818 and 1849, where
they have obtained the first pr — . at the . Sonth
London Floricultural 8 open to all England, and at Nor
wich, Durham, Darlington, &c,
N
and the trate that
EN 82 SEDS 945 now being s
a prepaid e They give ihe
ich the
g
may be favoured
a p 3 nod remittance is
requested from unknown paanan nS ents. riem, Nov, 3.
—Haa
00 ;
14 foot, 95. oe 1000; gr
—— 13 foot, 6s. — 1105 Broad-leaved Irish Ivy, 2s. 6d. per
100; Furnished Rhod
tooth ; dius Reels, ony Se each;
Garden Line, and S. |, Od.
B. Free to oars wok or iat
“We do not pay Freight
for Forest Trees, Haze hs „ nor Laurels, Five per cent, for cas sh,
or th n by naming any respectabie Seed M
chant in 8 —Coler ine, Nov. 2.
NEW GERANIUMS, STRONG PLANTS NOW
vat oUr Af VE W piesa
BRO large, sirong, and
a: weii established in 4-inch
immediate shift, and wi
The
ae = > song ties ‘to, our own sele ction
di $ pr. tion
AME, CoL
Attraction.. one poskan veined 8 and 4
A
d ULPUrE? arne tank Sab
Atrosanguinea rich dark crimson
T mon
Black Prince
Bine bene dark ground, white edzed.....,......
ä urple e and TTV
ee eae i ght
0
1 —
F i
Mag onum ., 2
Mulberry Superb rich d
Model 01 Perfection — white, 3 1
Napolo paaris rs
5 — elegans fe 2 she — 8
„„ bea utiful 3 F
Ro deep pin
122 grandior". - light pink
Virgin Queen
Venosa rubra
Wellington red
If the 3 be left to W. C.:
ara rats varietas Lof the above
dit:
THe 4 een eer „*
8 3
12 border ditt
Scarlet, ne, eee hite, purple, dark claret,
, and olka sorts, 1l. 10s. per 100.
ND CHOICE SEEDLINGS OF 1848.9,
ceo (Chater, bright ruby red, very full npin
ne substance and form well
abit; it has Se —
o have seen it to be the finest
ollyho
3 at s silvery shaded puce, which has
g effect, fine form and very
Bag it i s), ogi deep pink, centre
9 71 (batera), pa e
ä —ͤ—ů—ͤ7 * ***
—Lͤ— 2
aud
Surprise (hater 2% deep r
0
6
6
6
6
6
0
6
0
Elegans 8 s), delicat Zye lg 550 apes
sent out in the tls 8 - oo
ants.— Warranted tru
W. Ki 1 a fine selection of Pansies, — Kt
dit arnations and . =
— — A R zE,
dit Dwarf ditto, 4s, to 125. ditto.
A remittance” requested Walden we of Plants.—Post-office
A
$. per doz.
Is pars per ee
oses, 5. per doz
E PRE
IRR outh N dernen en Sho
Mr. W. Chater, Saffron Wal
flowers, forming a
ge
at the prices ‘att.
s than ched.
Tories Baliani ark d Story’s * Mont Blane No.
vee
a
„ Sparkler 2s
Whomes Slog pes —
neh) 3 Wind 8 5
ous from the ct il àe fir, Betis e varieties,
a OË our own selee 0
Symmetry
Hara ‘ua (Fan
Se eve
ee *
poly di:to
12. : Armada, contr ong oe i s Black Prince, Blanch e,
Superb
— Scarlet a Racks 3
ARG = benennen 0 OF Ahah — ted VARIET IES,
ozen, our uch
s. per di
Josephus; 1 Rosy Circle, orien, i
m, Desd.mona, — Mustee,
z NEW W CHRIS. SANTHI
; ük and bushy pla —— —
owers,
Dey rv 2 to art than
and we were p
=
55
gton Ho
ea of Hollyhocks e exhibited by Mr.
= Florist, — Saffron
iven to under:
* a att at th
S the first prize at the pratt ee of t — Royal i Florie : sultur: 2 |
Society, at the i on W
Bea that |
to — 5 them, e benefit
flow who may Ps 8 able to
b- | Stand i in 2 of additions. ea
igh character given of hich
2 assert, mr = whi — bap
nd Garden
And
g.
ers and Ae ,
de deners’ . ae 26; 1 5575
W SENDIN BY Y a
THE FINEST CARNATIONS, 2 .
OUELL Ax CO. si —— > r
er Wege of — above ** — 3 —
ealthy, and are now r ready f or sending o — 2 Y strong any
1 fine
—— fe hon. 8 of the United Kingdom, or, or for it
25 dad Pio! of — first-rate — A ‘Of Carnations
12 pai do: d „„
35 pairs of very fine show Varieties of do, danas Med *
do. 8
Fine mixed border eae erd 1 1 61 f
True old Clove—per — ozen mi ” * ri i
PINKS, Anot firs jee sho fie ? 2
dozen pairs. : be ower, in, —
3 8, do. do., 10s, to 18s, per
AMELLIAS of the newest and — j
30s. per dozen, Bice s with medal
CINERARIA do., 128. to 18s, Pro pen
S, do.
ICAS, comprising Fino best
kinds, 12s, to 18s. per
ROS
at 68., ae $
of the very best sorta,
3 Red, Blue, White,
HERB BACEOUS PLANTS (hardy),
1 Surrey Zoological Garden adie and
they attr: our ten i i eNe — we nesday, and
names and colours.“ — Darlington and Stock Times, Sept, 15.
he gr. Floral aod Musical Fete at osfield-place,—Mr,
. of Saffron Walden, Holly hocks: Sum: of most
exquisitely beautiful spikes we have ever seen; we are glad to
hear that this noble flower is comi into favour again. The
lov rs of good flowers owe much to Mr, successful
skill. Among his co we observe many choice e e
We advise tho who 57 3 it to buy them. — ESS x
“Co of Durham al and — | Society.—The |
most — ating fe: cent
collection of Hollyhocks ha p
f Mr. a
eauty and bn of gro
finitely surpassed anything ever s oll, — —— ——
for flow rate Varieties of r season, is part of the country, I+ “pene needless to say they
“lla ie f incl he iio - £0 15 0j were a great so of attracti — ; ; and W ~ are sure,
ane Bs. ; 1 ding ane te 1 5 e 5 by — =: had an o roel ry t's ing them,
$ n we etate that t ub. eati —
2 e tree to romen or 775 station on tie London Chater for thus showing —— what se mith h proper clear,
y line, an atis with orders mo 1 55 — can be brought.“ — Durham Adve
tiser, Úi
-colle Ramu — snow ond, Kg ioe N ri id Es 10 Y good assortment, some of them very 2
$ 8 Tull ber ne * h a Patek bet s and other i ‘gan be ealted terior ep ng "ihe flowers sent.
22 j us plants, & c. &. 5 "a ;
Reute : ; Saffron Walden.—if our duties at this season
ome orders Hake et uukuowa rao ft a — r Post- | fatizu ng, they are not unmixed with pieasures, as in r aoar
beed aud Hortieultüral Bg aver, md raw now, , your basket of flowers we fully experienced, W Were delighted
y | to inspect such assemblage of elegant loose. We proceed
of D 8 eee
Agents for the sale of Kitley’s Goliah Stra
large, and of delicious APS a flavour, at
Fine ang ye 3 a
33. 6d.
RAHUI
rare occurrence, and o
Lex, Arbu
nolia, Uratægus, S ulus, large English E
und 3 e. Busnes, &e., all of 3 it would be
2 en advertisement,
r 8 and will shortly be
Thes oil of this Nursery being of such a na'u
p f
tus, Daphne,
, Ase
bted, , if they think fit, m
sale a the liquidation . their
ee e n a
< LATE
Edging, Hot Water Tank Cor ers,
She elv es titted to hold pape tor O.
ork sh
of
as
pecifi 3 A — “stoke
thicknesses, aps Oe OOM: o aaa
YUCUMBER AND MELON BOXES
dred 1, 2, and I + ae
— One hur
parts of the kingdom, References given 3
and Lep Trte) in tro, ‘tious the Penra
5
ats
es y
Cos, T Domai e 5
on opplication.
seen at CHOGGON a aud
e
THE GARDENERS’
URSERY, PLYMOUTH.
| RENDLE'S NU LISHED 1786 178
QUICKS.—10, 000 FINE TRANS-
m 12 to 15 inches for 31, 10,000
old Seedlings for 208.
N old Seedling 2 wv, oe
ICTAR cae warf Tree
er ai from 245 —
selected Dwa — at 8 per dozen.
ia cultivation true to name,
de — 1 E AL Ende This has been
We have more
and wellestabished roots, a nt 208. pe
abundantly
ozen: small 7
en.
a stag VICTORIA, an strong roots, 15s.
8, 98. per do ze 3
ES, greia ra LAR a Thie is a
varie ty, very — 3 1adellelon 2 and
mplete satisfaction. Stro .
— . “YOUVELL’S FASTOLF ans 10s pir
s. per
—We hav
ANON.
= 3 125. i“ dozen ; “yor 36s
mie e Plants in Pots, 4 to 6 feet, 5s,
"price usually charged. We havea
| ance RUSSIAN MATS l. per 100.
BLACK NAPLES CURRANTS.—Very superior
d
i BERRIES.—Some of the very best varieties in culti-
"P = LAURELS.—An immense stock will be sold
«nwally low. Fine plants, 18-inch, ior a 205 per 100; 3 feet,
fad 4 feet, 40s. per 100.
f or MAHONIA AQUIFOLIA.—A very 1
ty, 18 3 , 16s. per 100. This is a fine py for
rosea, strong plants, 12 inches, 6s. per dozen;
— ata and floribunda, 6s. per dozen; —.—
and albidum, strong plants, 18 inches, 9s. per doz
and ASPARAGUS. In large ade, fron
to 20s, per
wil be sent, gratis, to any applicati
orders above 51, will be Pang se d Bars tor oe
+ the stations n the
& or Great Western ali
iis port to London, Dublin,
1 three times a week.
— Devon Railway is now oe 6 Bear,
= re 0
1 ae : 8
p —.— — Co., Union- road, Plymouth.
ESTABLISHED 1786.
RES NURSERIES.— The Subscribers beg ©
intimate that they have for sale an extensive s
of FOREST, lah Lage and e ee nates TREES,
adapted the climate of Scotland. As great
bestowed in — 1 the different kinds from the pave 2
Varieties of their species, the plants are healthy and of
—— have scr ng honour to receive the numerous
g of their age, givin 4
er trees in the climate of
of Lea
— Pie 2-year, por s. d.
sus torulosa, 1 to „
J foot, per 100
of Fores Trees of the finest qualities. tke
lied at apes wholes e Goods x are ee
0 poe Sarwar ants, &c., every infi
a
rg ed * “On Forest Pruning * “On
of Scotland ;” Pa ere within e
DING SPLENDID 2 GERANIUMS,
STAS, CARNATIONS PINKS, PAN
WALTON offer 12 of the following
ANIUMS last sent out for 21. 2s., with a plant of his
Seedling “ Antagon 8 now — out at 15s. each.
carriage, The plants are l established 5
„ d
W bug Rookh ... 8
. 7 6 Plutarch (Whomes's) . 5
nee — Lind (Foster’s) . 23
8 (Beck 3) 3
Virgin Queen ( Arnold’s) .
ta
am
0
0
6
0
6
6
an ee
rene
eee]
pre and made payable
e| structure are exposed to the gaze of ‘the
red.
ands 8 a 6 feet high, well
Th
to the old
at
“Our new Autumnal Catalogue i is . published, and vs
„or reference in 8 from unknown 2
t
c
Cork, e 8 |
-| the v
"r F OV ee —
ro
S
== „ “oo?
g, re two Home
| two Tiems two E
| he Kew
1 by — 5 thither ga acer of eg botanical
CHRONICLE;
691
M ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB
aintains its supremacy over gee other kind,
being the earliest, finest-flavoured, and best coloured ever
grown; a most prolific bearer, an ad free ae For Pad
3 it far surpasses every other — * frp planted in a wine-
cellar, or any place light are kept from it,
it will produce large stalks, of a magnificent 7 Popes: in five
week 8. ach ; also
s Li innæus, 1s. êd., and Vic the a bah oc AB
Myat
to the trade, Post-office order — amends to W. —
Enfield Highway, Middlesex, will meet with every attention.
4
The Gardeners’ Chronicle.
TURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1849.
MEETINGS — — — WEEK.
Nov. He pads 2 r. u
— Sir M.
TUESDAY,
SATURDAY,
Rumour says Ke Pn 3 8 at the
British Museum are awakening from their gentle
t- | slumbers ; and that one of the — st a proceede
to Paris to ask questions concerning the manner in
which f ve ge etable
profa
mig A of > ganas 9 ait in the Pe city.
f th
vulgus in the a
W nch
m
nations l wealth in botany is * —
ust ourselves
o hav
confess
resisted gine
whose whole hive ‘at hive been s
appropriate to their personal advanta
have been devoted to public science, are not the | ê
kind of people to be PRY attacked by a fit of
Pippa tga the pa interests as well a
a public purs We are o faith in them
™ But heap oath advice in the formation of a a publio
tan museum ug aris? Ample in-
5 might be ae, for a shilling np to
them than belong | ™
ailing T destined
15 the humble office of a fruit room. e principle
on which the botanical museum
is capable of . extension, but of no aac im-
provement. A journey to Paris was super
And why have a 1 9 . — museum came ‘all i in i dirty
even an
n
t degre
objects of natural history, an
cially of articles so perishable as ina supplied by
vegetable kingdom. We e it impossible
to keep them in a 110 fit for — ii. The
attempt will entail ontos mn wal an
expense
d struction as w
sou
num he
b British Museum, as is evi
m at Kew is arranged | P' iggle
se ly a
45 labelled. Ne a — there — — int the ca
n be iden
— to ees the public with confidence in
ng ter ran be * — fave
omplain for
shells, which ‘a oredit to the diligence and science
= the officers in char arge But, with such ex-
ional
itable to all concerned,
If oe gr a establishment i is to be looked u
g e; the public
as a upon a gigantic
oils 8 nothing — rp lain of. But
intended as
p if it is
e. public may find in-
ment, where —
may be s 0
we are bou
to say that the intentions of its founders ad sup-
r e are not fulfilled by the executiy
A useum is a place 3 everything is
talogues a
£
intended to speak to the eye. mere
supplemental aids, — Wha nabio — d etailed in-
formation which cannot be co by written —
a bels. Eve en he in a muse
— thing, ther
ould be distinctly, though vate e ian and
a soon — pei sed to If this
have no —
‘i — iboli of its
ep which t ed
is was once the opinion of the authorities of the
ident fro 3
memoranda attached to parts of — Antiq
collection. That opinion seems, ever, 8 ite
changed, if we are to igs from the present higgledy-
dy oer in which many of the objects
are now exhi
Take, for part what is called in the Catal
“Room 1 of the Gallery of Antiquities.” In
lace are — — AE a =
200
by which objects can tified. There are
| numbers indeed — ee . a objects; 3
civil attendants tell you t eer num
o the Townley Collection, me need not be d d
10 this room ae would also ae? according to
the catalogue, to be five com pir tments, but in
re i fae so that one has not been even
by at all a
The question will
for a
Supposing that set difficulties should appear not
we know them
verbial, why, us
sudden Two publie collection, for the sa
mg witaj nin a few miles h oS og
vo, Where non
no — but
ums of e
farnis 25 funds for two
not ley
e
That at Kew exists, is admirably — ee is capable
ma pen favourable fe for as
ion to
s of th
TY | collections in
Nor is the 8 condition of the British Museum
— who has lived in * Not
e paid Sa by the public r
its 3
sia the catalogue
worse
f Greek hn rey de ws taking
bu
| un-na
he vaulted room, in which are
. wegen us discoveries at "Ni mroud.
ord is vouchsafed by the keeper of the
ieiti es in explanation either of the interesting
his 4 = this collection or of any one object which
it contain
Fs veces
same.
the most part
l anywhere am among the antiquities, it is Just
and there explanatory notices; for
no information whatever. The state
m” in particular calls for stron
of most curious and
interesting remains are found there, with mysterious —
number attached, and not a syllable of detailed ex-
Perhaps ith j
auctioneer’s iian that of a national collection. Case
escri
93 is thus
Case 93. Part of a lyre, and two flutes of wood,
found in a tomb fo N gilt my rile crown of lead
m the same place; glass mosaic
par en of the F when a
of Athens by the
5 jon suppose
0 that this the
scientific description of the curious — neous
set of things which that case really contains. The
8 3 97, filled with 1 le objects, is
sei nientioned in me Catalogue.
departments are re in the same condition,
The e cases contain whole
birds without names ; the minerals, thousands of
(Case 33 has but 1 t 16 natpesamong
specimens), and so
tate of things, in a
about 140
a any one compare this s
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.
maintained, and almost a century | are therefore but imperfectly represented in the ears of points to 10 inches in
Maize, and it will we observed that when the seed is |i
abortive _ are dev i
museum prodigally mai
old, with the — museum at Kew, which has been
There everything is
years in exist
well and usefully labelled; no catalogue is necessary, with a crop of four varieties of America pper buds of the cutting will
ae —— sees at once wha e history of — er =s ro of u e —— ll and 1200 api- n 5
e presented to his notice. The higgledy- A e irei] repa naked stem ;
Ply tom he conncaned; Jabali aro nat |ie of Wheat tne” pty os D i dete, die den ke Tt te
2 ?
a for t is presented a nu = of heads of n grain. This med i off wisest ye
mad 10 suiii for twenty others, different from it, | change has been noticed, but instances may not have | whatever length of cutting © plants are
but packed i short, there is no | come within the observation of English botanists. M. i iabl Pi Pally
g 8 riably to be removed from th
confusion, but it is the sea of order, method, an urpin, as quote Tandon, thus describes it: inserted in the soil; for, if
exactness. We are told N it is — intended “ Where the transformation of stamens into pistils takes most probably make their u k
to propose t stees t a rival s be | place, t is mes a single s ary e i form of suckers "ie
lished, in Great Russell-street What sort of | Which is usually situated near the summit of the princi- | prickles ; but this is of lesa conden
tival we may jose by what is there now; showy, | = axis 1 50 eee in z in this each branch | dead subs they rot o pen
confused, costly, and uninstructive. W. submit bears i is is a true description of the appear- After the plants have formed sh
that eny 04 —_ — to be granted for any jouer eee 3 3 exhibit ; Taha in the | shortened according to the ;
such purpos N e ear that the grain is wanting in Aaa to about 6 inches, Tk shorteni
idik be kepi ‘inh us and in next year's yini Wh wheat prnl ia 75 situations or in cold seasons. taken to cut to u inting mg,
1 e co of stamens into pistils in the ter- direction which the brauch should follo
hie: panicle, th ere 4 frequently 5 — suppression o of the | complete the form in which the plants aie
he us are mostl kept. Th i
25 mae drew attention to the insanity of cbc or sub- Strobist: a in the l N Š n the i die, und a cde oe
ing into a Vinery kon foetid “ * ue mpage em have an example of 2 hard ety dista > ix, eight, or ten b
nees,
— obtained from Gas works. The we then Zea, taking the character of the 3 are likely eee too W ihe yf
took of the pernicious quality of this substance of the Grasses of the temperate and farete zones, | must b o buds pointing in ee on irection
having been question y one or two correspo ENFREY said that monoecious flowers arose | thus, in the accompanying figure, su iro .
mn, who find y e tremely useful o n their Grass fom either = opaan or dev may = the | were 5 ded to be prolonged eat. — Fe: W.
„it seems desirable to draw attention to the resent organs i aracterised the then the young shoot is properly cut,
description oft lately given by Dr. Uns, in a letter . the | fho uppermost bu a 1o proceed in ht dn 0t
0 a morn ing i ead to such a | the con ef if the uppermost bud
4. Gas lime.” he says, p? LAN and ein affords change in the flowers as had taken place in the Maize | inside of a s ‘ hoot, f which ould latig T
io ach af a cyanic compounds that an eminent 2 for d by Austen. This might be the that the direction should b outwards, towards >
38 chemist V ae cause of cod not . fruit so bells in this | right, then it would have been entirely wrong to cut at s
f ier par R. | that bud.
3 1 — ing 8 — er ue n + e | LANKESTER stated his — iea Sa the reason of the| Observing thus to cutat proper buds, each leading
8 nly o o the profit- failure of the e in this c ae — 3 stein branch may be made to diverge outwards,
able working of this patent is the accompanying sul- of temperature at the time ile ning. | Side, to a biia nt suficien t Tor ont P raint CAMA
Frag which discharge a great deal of sulphuretted Maize had, however, ese 3 clivated i in v Indians The pamat of on 5 ee. 10 ci |
ates along with the vapour of prussic and sul- for the pu a" - 5 ning s ` > hw — detailed from it ‘ene |
c acids; an aerial mixture of the most |Procured b 3 ija ne 505 m- | early part of vinter, “the pae, ou pares heats. eal
N N to breathing animals. And he probable that it N ne sugar in this sine ine but 2 5 extent, bea g in mind chat ge erally Oa ip
goes on to say that: “That vile refuse ahodid be whether profitably, was yet to be proved. buds immediately 1 the section will break
buried many fathoms deep in some barren region shoots ; therefore, it will be advisable to cut wher
for when spread on the farmer’s field, after dis- another leader in required tH orate 7a
g e gaseous poison for 1 time, its Tan Goosuseanr.—Left to its natural growth, the first winter pruning. second will consist in shorten-
sulphur gets oxygenated into sulphurous acid, two | Gooseberry becomes an almost impenetrable thicket, | the leading shoot about one-third ; and alto ihe
le Se at 1 X 8 not a apted for pro- other shoot intended for an adjoining leader. If there
we fo the minato: chemistry of ihe ducin such fine fruit as Should be another young shoot ing strongly w
ny obvious that frech sex En 2 is p ed by plants not iene it may be cut off close ; and others, weaker, `
is a ayni dangerous agent ; nit. for an Ñi 5 sega Sine ta is hat, ee the e
in confined 1 that the gardener who latel > h he dat aan sh ng an 485 Kal, hace
ee Ii ely habit of the Goosebery is | 5 — de Eberts tet to one a oe | .
— ahs it in ae inery may 3 himself À át a bush, with a Wise three or four eyes may be n these, some of
Pon is gaa a coroner’s inquest. ong tendency to reno- | Which will a break into —.— and others will
A must not ae be therefore inferred that vate itself by suckers, and form frui The other branches will require a
gas-lime is worthles erous when pro rly N a je re vigorous these similar meins E + Young shoots should be be trained up
3 roar deleterious, qualities disappear anon V) are, fie more, liable: ave (© to supply the place of any branch exhibiting symptoms
; sulphurette * x e t |
hurets are spee dily * 0 y ee — iota W 3 w In the midland and northern counties an cup
air and moisture; and an i arion | To vent this form of bush is generally aimed at in pruning; on the
which it may originally contain disappear or ent confusion, arising from a | Contrary, in some case he suth, although te
into harmless combinations. Gas-lime is theref E superabundance of shoots branches are pruned and thinned, yet some are left ia
when old, a good calcareous manure, fit fo all 3 and suckers, the pruning- 3 for the purpose of shade, otherwise. et
poses in which lime is re and . knife must be employed be scorched.” , ; |
p fee the thie and something and that, too, at an rly eee we height on trellises, arbours, &c. ; et
themsel t phur-compounds which it contains stage of the individual ex- eho such is proposed to be doney free, upright growing
ems re ac ble manures, as soon a | oe the plant. orts should be selected. In places tt
intensity is destroyed by diffusion through A the N g ae „ by means of hoked pieces of d n
masses of earth. h at least appears to be 7 Ly 8 it will be seen for pulling d d forked pieces for pushing Be
general opinion of practical gardeners: if there “that the wood buds, branches up toa cane jodi nece
any evidence to the contrary, we venture to ask for a, a, a, a, are on the las n again referring to the engraving, it eat
formation concerning it. summer’s shoot, whils served that the me mu are on the ing Priz i
g1 9 t the
wen — fruit b, 6, b, b, are = ood ; and on wood o : > 35 „ *
ITI H ASSOCTATIO F b on two years old wood. fruit is produced. Bat uit. uds or spurs
ENT OF SCIENCE 1 8 `a, The buds marked a, are much older. Strong young shoots occasion
called wood buds, because 8 out from old wood, and if they are shore" 8
On some Changes in . . ae’ Male Fiir of Forty from them young shoots keep them within bounds short aera ,
Day Maize. fetes exhibited wens tuke. are produced, but usually | ma) am be . from them. R. T.
not from all of them; —r5r—!A⁊ n ——-„——
on
at an elevation of 3000 to 4000 “feet,
was as more likely to s
in thi
je observed that for the antiquaria
— a keeper at
roel than a
vi for 8 .
corolla, as in —— ts &e. —— envelopes
the
and ae "aie
As
ms Crass ; the
from Nineveh!
he
e two years si
ROSES.
THE PRACTICE OF FERTILISATION, ARTIF
L AND ;
wood, which, a twelv ried on b
À 2 A month back, were similar THE re a the as been carie on by
I to those now many of the great raisers of ings to 3 beautiful
Ar three had produced shoots, extent, and to cross fertilisation we owe many ? ae
b Se? e, c, ¢, and the others varieties, which the nurserymen call hy ae is in
a formed the fruit pada, not subseribe to the propriety of the term, Partaka of
è „ ö, ma eral use to distinguish those s which p 3
Bu rries are usu- the nature of two distinct parents; RE and
WN l wa “Propagated by cut. hybrid China, bybrid Bourbon, hybrid Pe Chins, }
Say, may be taken u means a cross n ean i
ae as ws as the young | Bourbon, or the Pe al, and e other i
Ifi has acquired a may be effected artificially, that is, by hand; o
77 tolerable degree of firm- by placing together such as possess
5 ness, whilst the fruit is on | pistil, the natural organs of generation,
= the tree, and planted with | mix by the agency of fli 10 aud bees.
success, roper shade tilisation is a very sim e operation, an
be afford Bat, gene- m the yellow 2 fiom the stamens 0
rally, the cuttings are Se and placing it in contact WI
2 taken off srai s — in ae centre of another Rose. To dee
— autumn, win r spring ; | you should select the plant you intend ae
a, ont Wood buds but Sage in suum is s the the instant a flower opens, ve all their
ere » b, ee ma buds. ik best time. of | they may not shed the yellow powder on
13 8 cut back. almost any 85 peo then take td pene rom the Rose 7
struck; but where there is choice, those that are some respects Jou w ieh to impart to
moderately vigorous and firm-wooded are 8 ;| shed this salt on the pistil whic is
— if off close by ‘their bases, 80 it, and which, in all probability, bu
better. They may be ‘shortened by cutting off the | terference wou! ould have received its o eo,
Means
etme before
i
— but a — texture, and it
another which has nothing ring 4 in
may p
$ k
— i sped texture, the cross m
a Pant
* roduce
e Rose is
a white, the — —
2 the — between white and red,
so of
ose. If on
any — ities ena
vo are perfect, an
hich have or but petals, or are so
destroy them if there were any.
our fr ice 7 be
tion must
the 2 it is labour in vain. If, how wever,
e powder 0 to it, there is no
se
other equally striking
rather 5 of the very best Roses in
ees ts other, and leave the rest to chance
i sne very y distint 3 quality, and plant all these
. he Mosses, the best of the China,
Smooth -bar * inds, that were con ntinual bloomers,
‘the most —— of th riars, and so diversify the
slurs as to ! mething new. we
ers would avoid placing in this group any variety
tat flims e think there is nothing
‘compensate for that deficiency, pai therefore ———
ann avoid oi nici g from eed ae riety
with that drawback se — spor e
isre had many colours fro om the seed of a thin white
“matiety called the Globe Hip, and Bates pci none of
sport, and in
e garden where we gathered the hips.
that where a dozen good Roses
* *
rem
as poss: r contrive a gauze covering 560
‘gi the 2 — but a hive of bees under it 5 $ but
THE GARDENERS’
such as when fully expanded show | j
he
paid to
of opera ting, for unless — brie be i in tio
d | in flo — 1 hoe — emis! earthing
pamos and shall never — am Be-
sides that, term fungus se to give ‘ better
malady of — Maize — ‘the word golpe
— Barelli defines
scence of various
r
use roport
emain ikr af 1 he biat —
The learned Professor having followed the course of th
disorder from its o
Pp
f the Professor, by 22 choice of the best ret,
i paea Š thos ere grow at the summit of the s
y avoi b the plants in weeding them whilst
them up without in-
a. the ts too m — be ny ind the
field, in — not to — too mu uid sap, and
finally, if the soil is 2 si aer ths ridges high
and well raised i in the m
Te > 44
o a chemical analysis, an 5 which it would have
9 desirable to have made at an earli
i one is m
oxygeno aruas diseases, and
cl santo p . kind w
the vi
the ve — — the a
to the mineral e 9g
e relation to he laws of chem
his ais e has never been 3 on an oth
Plant ‘than “the > Maize, and I
low
u!
*
even if t
n by artificial fertilisation, unless we
observed, a distinct object in view.
DISEASES OF 5
(Continued from page 676.)
CREPITUDE ns Plait as well
and more in cool years than in hot
a, however, that I ha
meee
mili iace ave eee it.
CHRONICLE:
—
7 — per lly on certain varieties of Hyacinth,
have seen something like it, but I have not sufficient
ata to affirm it positively.
n a e er aeee aeaee
a ON THE ODOURS OF PLANTS 1 9 THE MODES
Dy OF OBT TH
AINING
Go, crop the gay Rose’s ve fete, —
Aud — me spoils, a sweet fo
cen 3 to the skies. ”— OGIL A
SPEARE:
Rosk.— This Queen of the pron loses not ite diadem
in the 5 world. The rr 4 as it is
commonly called, the otto s, is
eg tracted by various 8 s from ie Cab bage Rose
n Turkey, Persia, and = ia; the finest is imported
or obtaining it,
—— Ghazepore in =
their own mode of ope-
coun
the procurers at each place ie
ration, the best method however i is to strati ify the flowers line
il of Roses, and swell a good Meal if the fowls are
atedly. are then pressed an
ma
it is headache
kpk: vertigo in thia state ; when diluted however there is
nothin in odour, 4 ik mixed in soap,
ae re spirit to * Esprit de
The Daae p
e to evaporate very fast, we are no
the smell as in. ‘the 2
e is diffieu
th
yields E
t to account
hoots, by whi ch the tree is
must confess that a thi
only leads us
f = XXI.; one species. Foxavs OF THE MAIZE.
ee abel by Si the nature of this disease
i is never pire the perfumer,
into ridiculous
are
for perfumers’ use
English flower is not strong enough to
purpose, oug e drie e Teaves are us
| ane bags, ibe e ak little of their native fra poa
In the season
spoil
are ninis pickled, , for this. “E bushel of flowers
m the stalk, and to every 2
ste ghee hg . ome of common salt i
ual to poun 5
7 | ih, ai ty rubbed in, the whole becomes y sage mass, y
is finally stowed away in casks, In this way they
will — almost any — of time without seriously
injuring their For Rose r, which is
S. 8.
in
re reparation not allow ae the re
The sigg
693
best prepared from time to time, take 12 52 ~ pickled
— and +, gallons of water, p a still,
d draw off 2 gallons, this product will bed the“ double
dis stilled Rose water ” = the shops.
Ruopr 5 —A fine
odour is
wn * distillation. “and the
of this plant ; it is
"ad Na S ex
e rere
P
ROSEMARY oe. officinalis).—The odour is
more aromatic than sweet, it is procured from the
leaves by distillation, Fap consumed
largel in combina-
tion with other scents for perfumin i
Ros
ANDA
. The 8. Sandal tree perfumes, when riven,
The axe that laid it low.”
This is an old ee with — lovers as a it is
the — that poss the odo the
3
mes 1 the Island of Time r and China, and on
of its fra pan is — fashioned into —
toilette. at and jewel cases, &e. any pe
Sa havin —— seent · bags for drawers,
gs
When distilled the oil of Sandal is cally obta
wonderfully strongand — the oilof sandal mixed
e
Santa ra 12 1 yxy —
it for 8 hief use; it mixes well — soap, and
en forms what they call Sandal - wood soap, and with
to chareoal aA a little nitre it forms Sandal tilles for
=
—
2
ably; Sandal wood, an its derivations, is one of the
most ancient perfumes,
bod AND SUBURBAN GARDENING,
of no plant so easy to cultivate, and at the
same — so difficult to keep from year to year, as th
P be raised from seeds and bloomed
yei t
5
and we
teur's as this, or one that puzzles
cultivate more, The following hints may
own in autumn in pans, or even in the open
eeks. Th
covered too deep s
set of leaves, they should be planted out in s, in
from 8 10 inches asund If seed has
carefully saved from g an interesting
8 will be the ; and of new
varieties is a labour of peculiar interest. spring
adv , the treated will commence flowering.
The next point will be to select those which possess
good qu — „with ea to perpetuate them. There
are m ingular pleasing varieties that do not
come within the arbitrary rules by sy florists’ flowers
erthe retaining
. tir possessing other
— sally discarded. The eye
uttings taken
rac- | voot readily, 3 behind a hedge or 5 wall on the
ithout any protection whatever. Insert them
“sp id apart, and 1 inch — in soil of a —
dy texture, and they will root in a few
— afer damp leaves are removed as — —
. a bed of choice Pansies, select a north
with a cool bottom ; 2 ot ie —
oul be pref
ay
wireworm. If the plants are put ou in Sep-
i before — * 1
t through
E for it is onir foll
this up that 8 kinds t
tained ; seed is readil
+ This is the same word as volpe (fox), the common Italian |
name for the smut in corn, 4
while saving that from
Pharo.
694 THE
GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE,
pi
$
Home Correspondence
_ Vietoria regia at Chatsw
th American Water iy, ae occupies a
5 tank, built for the purpose, in on
r three days.
r in the course of two
When
that the Appie Pear, a
ree:
nevertheless, I
to root ou
n Januar
were old, having been planted in 1794;
was unwilling, at “one fell * *
spring of I had t
in the same way as the others, and the last season’s
orth,—This very extraor-
of the stoves at
coming into psc and will probably |
kpr Rees to extend their fruit-spurs
en| The rem
s — 16 one of my — —
r 18.
e vanes
3 Land News, Mr.
e Grapes
forms a good pendant to the es a 8 8
notieed in the r * ee eek or two since
W. Masters. [Nos. 5 nat seated in * pro-
liferous state which we * often see, but the
which we cannot explain. The best analogy to this case
is in — 1 ee on].
ous Ex upa t with Bees.— About t
sinee, — 0 — . friends in Birmipgham wrote
erer languid and inactive ap-
to and one
led bees were afte
W. Wa, Exeter,
2
ter from 1 to the II.
rt Smith states that
n a lett
som
azaar, were “really an
off the previons year, Being aware that the soil in the
order, and that the roots
cut carefully away by opening a trench rou
at the distance of 4 or 5 feet from
to the sizes and age, &c., of the trees.
the ends s = attached — with a
trenches were filled in again,
next the —
supply of sap to the demand. During th he second year
After dre
the stem, according
ressing
knife, the
ting a litle leaf- mould
This had the — of 9 the
eggs.” They are called chow. cosh, ~ at least the name
i a Grape would be an acquisition
r of the Gardeners
e it might easily nih intr
— graveyard be well stocked with ants; they delight
dry residence, but t — descend to the store. rooms
— orm their work, have sa ee the guano
pe VES euere
, which, being from young vigorous bads, and
were of large
in close contact with the wall,
ze and
a fair d
2 ger that this ean ge
—.
* produce to be offensive, I —
Potato Disease.— Almos
— confirms the opinion Seres
ase, dryness of the soil should be carefully
— — A Stine by | a
gro wing the crops o or elev y
wn experience Mig the utility of — Etter of these
nothing respeeting the beautiful
it and foliage = a runed
a ilker, a oe
Bug.—Has any gar ayer pd ee
forki kiling the mealy bug on ine which was 5 vert
a ago
=e ground 4 often sound tube
aa methods,
soil, and diseased on the ee but
rule had — gining cases of ex — One of the
sou ps was on heavy land in — a second
having a = part ene and the third — which only
n the lightest land of the farm.
ith — e of dun
ith — ewt. of
wW — ured w
taken from the tc mS the —
ir
to the
e
g re-
ter for escaping the
ity, having in
pecina ar then
500 r with an
gar f the Rege nt in its —
y in attaining matur
ar 3
eavy low soil = really
riest position, and thus eseaped t Two
observed that Potatoes sevidentaly ‘left in
in the mi
ing grain I fancied that the
— pre apres = might be partly the cause of
exemption. my subsequent a
is hypothesis,
Fee 8
totali y 8 variance with th
to Dan
S observation: , the — amount of
evaporation for the year exceeds that of th
by 4.569 ins. These — may be
presumed, past ö a whenes is the supply deri
wd — — — tity earried off in
ich the perennial supply of
ens 1 3
or u upwards i in length, 1 but they — no — — or
cause of last
en days
dis
any neve
ra 5 at seach R
oduced. ot
d E araeo 0
ese
otato
r of your
in with
crop in = district had
that is the case, though te a
— dir — general and less des
year. In its pro
r
2
1 15
table compost, the ne of the
prs of blight a the end of Jul
ers ad to artially diseased al ts
miat y sound, and with
en
up about a
Of the tele
of the sorts
est snch as the Trish
Potatoes,
it has been phe a
f the disorder. I have iad a
Fit though on a small seale, Last
year the tubers ie from the sets
u m th
and ies = tubers 2
ectly so I., Aberdeen, O
Tena siki of Pagelalls Liſe.— There is
Wingham, Ken
Is 8 75 Cause 4. the Potato Di
flirm that the Potato his and oi o
ar I
3 with 3 dng
red with farm-y
ad d healthy, we those to which guano
re di in the
of 5 85 i
a supply e of itin a liquid
necessary quantity,
io
floods is — course of a week or two i
— at the end of and no ind ing or
n bi and supposin 5 — to be v.
e the size of the — body, I do not see — he —
comes out again, except by out, n any one
me b me oll or wherefore, these holes are what vegetables
seratched out ? mostly on banks, not on the | hou 5
E = = and fruit
+h Potatoes in Aberdeenshire. —I had hoped to be able
taken vegetables
„
4 10 o'clock ; in a sh
— —
a Violet blue! A. Because the surface
CHRONICLE.
The Pear trees which occupied the sides of the
hav
long walk up the centre of the n e been
8 vs rege e and we believe Roses are 2 be planted in
ya cause they | their places, se Pear trees w
— 4 the day before 3 about the | absorb all — e Tays of light ate Saale none. á | lastet new system of „ e
spea ing to the cook about it, I gene- e things e? A. hey | to 1 4 an upright stem, and all the side branches
impertinent answer to walk off with, By- ga 1 01 of the: —— of ight, bat reflect them all. from this, as they appeared, were regularly tied down and
bles and fi got scarce, oving to the e leaves of plants - | shortened in to about 2 feet in length, or rather
in the house. My ter came to me to | cause a hae —— Sak w called chlorophyll is and managed in this way they ormed fruit-buds in
as that e was not sufficient vege- | formed 7 sai cells, which — e. Trees treated after this fashion oce occupy
and fruits for the use of the famil reasoned | absorbing th s and of Pore B the blue and —4 room, which is not the least advantage of the plan
gave him a full explanation, which satis- | yellow, “hich (eing —— pro We believe wes were slightly root-pruned. The plan
I used sometimes to get sharply told of ith two — . must leave the | of budding instead of grafting Apples Pears is
at the same time I wa fault. ave | subject to the piran s Sarh iet of your largely — 1 here. Many of these buds, put in
by the servants themselves, who Q. What is the cause of wind? A. The sun heats | early in July 1848, have this seasor oots 7 fi
were supplied with very few vegetables, | the 5 — — . earth odidi the air resting upon it; in length, and thick in proportion By this plan time
e time there had been plenty in the | as warm air cends, the void is filled up by a rush | is saved in the production of these fi
but 2 have been too idle to cook them. If | of cold air to the. place, and this rush of air we call All fi and more recently intro
rrespondents would give a good plan of | win a l hoice kinds of
for iho gardener 5 — Pst “= ay signed
receive
by. I believe that if such a
ied out, it use gardener
i employers to be better friends, and set aside
tness among servants. Hortulan. [A
1 ; unpleasan
— form of list will be found at p. 723 of our
lume 46.
—1 veter no doubt that many
ve had occasion to com-
y greatly diminishes
r
so increases the p
he fires
other cases, very great.
ut this, my gardener suggested that a plain i —
| made to run the length of the hothouse and back 0
in introduced the sanay about 2
taken.
at with this pipe we
the temperature of the house — much
few e from the lighting of the fires; and the
ny è f fuel that e necessary to make
ater boil will keep up chen mi o temperat — for
i — ; and a saving of coal is effected of nearly
quite three-fourths, é thus maintain a m re
rith less fire = ‘ee bati to even warm
Tater pipes; a case of very
wed the sy — (ene of 30 feet and the other
h
re thus warmed br k
been rae. for the
2 that a
Rebtel
Dr, „Brewers 8 to Scienc
be interestin
—.—
little book, containing ert simple
would puzzle eno ee r heads
answers to. A might ‘place a
in the hands of his — 33 leas
er upon the merits of a
wers
ar some things — one colour and some of
every ray of nye is enpi e of all
rainbow, e things reflect
e p
rays of light and
8 wat
liquid i is a — condu 1 2 ey but yet water is a
n
y mber
— . et all the pec ino "of the rays * f light, and ae
as we wish, | the
d x D
of which there
ure | full flower
Le
1 to have the
© ge
are Sw
e
- | flow
that, a quantity
one of | ga
the | L. have turned th
Q. Why does the ee skin of a . onie scorch
or blister — the h Because the black
the 2 conveys it — siks surface
of the skin, — converts it into sensible heat and per-
spiration.
Q. Why does the white European skin —— and
scorch when exposed to the hot sun! et
hite will — absorb the heat, therefore th 1 hot sun
rests on the surface of ry -> and scorches i
Q. at are clouds? A. Moisture —— ted from
the earth and age ain 2 condensed in the upper
Er of zas
oper conductor of heat? A. No;
conductor t
enst winds i in * generally dry ?
e over the vast continents of
Asia — Europe) hoya absorb very little water.
sai is — white! — Snow is — tet Be an
very m crys
uch better
758 =~
these colours uniting before they meet the eye, ca
snow to appear white. W. Brown, Merevale Hall, Oct.
Garden Memoranda.
Messrs. tare al HauuxnsurrE.—In one of
the houses here, Lantana aurantiac
s a
russer,
been gay all through the summer and autumn with the
Shrubland Scar ri im which is still “are up
blosso The plants from w th
diately above — were pinched o
more than
bright and clear a blue that they were very
in flower, and a useful autumn-
Iso the
ec
aken together with Acacia 83
— „Salvia azurea, and a pretty — of
rummondi called Leopoldi. Among. ee
llection here in
ru
ora; *
ng house were sia of Lee’s varie-
a but a
A ple ores and others.
ropagati
gat: ted —— Geranium, a desirable
nd associated with it a
t maap ie arp.
way —
found that a quantity of w
very | partment, givin the li
longer stan The ad walk ght
e 2 poh 5 to ee hye are lined w
Cupre , Cryptomerias, Pinus
Webbiana, Douglas T Fire. Ji 5 The} 8 3 m
mpervire ews, an dars o The
latter sate the form ‘of pillars come Fed feet —
o hard are pad shag in; but his is — 4 to impro
their appearance in after years. the Am Rar 8
border we maar d some 1 — standard Rhododendrons,
and in another part of the grounds a beautiful pyra-
midal specimen of Minorca Holly, some 13 or 14 feet
| bleh his is stated to thrive here better than in the
pure air of Hounslow, thengh other kinds of Hollies
thrive better there than at Hammersmith,
Mi scellaneous.
eran in Reans,— A short time — Se Du
of Caen, se the Academ Paris
— I specimens of Harieot Beans attacked bs by a disease
| previously unknown to n we
and which. was supposed r some snalog t
to murrain. “ The disen ays M. Durand, “ has
only attacked some of the fruit-bearing branches of
nt. The Haricot is, however, so important an
ticle of fi with us, that anything which is likel
Tm its cultivation ae fail attracting public notice,
ve therefore taken the libert | jon
of the academy to the fist symptoms of the nt
ase, in order that it may, if the re oye 3
su — conseqnence, — some of i
n | endea
ur to ascertain the best way in 2 8
—— may be prevented. pi M e sed Rendus, Sept. 184g.
this country
ese moar buzzing eA my tent. Of men a fly as.
n
as a small bee, of a rich green
22 being a Hie. ere a win, 1 pei 2
me with a hur l as the tones of an
" Bat — habits of the — ther
e least remarkable, judging from a oi
ce that occurr
in the barrel, and — in the hollow part of the
lay beside nor honey was found
in either of - ae e bee, coon 1 —
observed abo ent, was as large as the Eugli
bee, and ha a . — ” Mitchell's — Australia,
vol. i, p. 5
Calendar of f Operations.’
6
allowed la
they were then kept dry e
where they now are.
h pip being as lar
One or pe fruit are 2 —.— to colour, and
wellin
As an poemi of the way in which the seprei of
owering of some plants may be altered, we ap i
plan
ust done flowering.
en
orth in
ve —
essrs. cultivat es pretty
planted by the side of the epic road, t
sight to passers by 4p season;
the
elx, and bein
ve been a
ensure bee to
bloomers, — — now —— p
pomi our er.
ffeet the end. This
| on | heat during tho d the — — render it ne
ae ag — thereb
md to be inju rions very ari
irreconcileable with the 3 *
ter had they not
lanted, M
formation — pillar f |
ds, maake have many nice spe- |
Roses of -ags kinda, 2 ae Fae
ciently
—— of _
ues
—. 24 free the | house and its
moisture, un if the
calls .
dens cannot fail to have a good effect.,
696 THE
GARDENERS’ CHRONIC
=
3 3,
UIT Trees: H B. The Gansel’ amot succeed -E
Pest aspect. Now is the beet time 8
ut
ich, d summer,
Ep pe The bottom: eey produced
is turned on ode
ie of the 3
ese three e is mulched over with som
ecayed litter
LORIS STS’ cf 5
e n. t At this se of the year
t to look 9 bait well ; Bito
ill de! bare and Ithe W 3 . It — ll therefore } be
eee cing a up the © pianis ad tho
oe
uantities
ently ttle! improvement, This,
ything
N sgh cont
of this class of plants
> air pa
2 apparen
then ‘ought thence sla for assu
would be
i d
them
all thi see
ive, This may
e
j bse
Y M. Roberts on the Vine will possibly suit you.t—
Beia book you ask about is sent to you by 7 post; with
mpliments, Mr, n
Loudon’s intentions
Ban Jos kn: J B will thank Mr. Leac
of the article on Brunsyi igia, at p. 663,
what depth the bulbs should be pla
stoned — ri Woes sta
CARR
h, the wri
if he will ran k nie
lanted, that 5 been
r
use; but
spr’ ore are breaking into bud, and when
eaf.
8 In their present state your Log wood chi =
are value! Tr you can a them = will be as A Sit
any — tharos The sulphate of iron would do n
—— can have no difficulty in converting the — a into —
vou have a kene and the command o turves
for the sides of the
CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA :
„See p. 471 of our vol. for 1848.
Darang 5 75 RTUNI: A H. 17 is
perfectly hardy. It likes a dry
EMIGRANTS: A Sub. Take out 8 Kind
8 — ‘bar a warm climate:
2 m mra a para things Vines.
igs, &c. mmon
ye eee Gourds, Melons,
cums will thrive,
of seed and plant
enhouse eie will all
— one Peaches,
suit. Any good
omatoes, Capsi-
l require- | very easily be ascertained by an occasional examination
= temperature according to their natural req 3 y
ents. If their wood is properly matured they will of the soil, Torirs should be got in directly; every he south wall, you state yous mane, 10 remove .
pr uninjured in a very cool 5 ature. ay after they have protruded a green spike is detri ig. andone Pear. They may be the Pe two Peaches,
FLOWER GARD mental, SY an NK beds uld be gone over and} Noblesse Peaches, the rown Turkey Pig Ag the
Where the immediate presence of the family does not | +o dressed, if the soil is of a hard and sour nature. Diston Fig 57 olka st aspect, Knight’s Hona Pana
ist up atnesss, it is quite — * 1 at this season, after N rains, it will be the May ae Charts; — and Court of Wiek, ami
w the leaves which are falling so ran es | necessary to stir — a rt ; and this may now be obably succeed ; at all events, if the — Currants 1
till all or nearl down, as one cleaning up will ous with good effec 7 stand 35 N poe r may, || former shouid |
ut the place in perfect order, as — as 5 is con LASS: o glass, whether t thic k or thin, can be
— rned. It st, however, be born n min d, that a State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Nov. 1, 1849, . 3 . fs without bein Previously curved f . Í
> t, as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, Sass works, unless in short lengths. As curvili: 8
flower-garden with empty beds, however i chen and nea are generally very flat, 9-inch panes may b. e
has a very bleak, chilling appeara alls far sho: Oct, | Moon’ s|} BanomarteR, | THERMOMETER. | | ‘wan. laa 8 We believe that the advantages of ¢ used without 1
of the idea of a pleasure- ground, according to an English- and Nov, Age. N Min. || Min. Mean bach ty 3 . — Ts ` — he timber, strains i
n’s taste. h a state of thin pS Friday.. 26) 10 || 29.800 | 29780 |} 60 f 42 | 51.0 || Sw. || or n application to the parties would p — :
where there is the advantage o garden, as | Sat e ened BAZ. || Ot | armo ca B. ad better use 4-inch pipes with i
sufficient shrubs kept, in a very small space of | $u Ses N A ETE 8." || ‘00 | fire. What do you mean by 500 square feet of air? asak
ake the landscape during winter cheerful, | Tues. . 30) 11 20.315 | 99.990 || 6 39 50. 8. 00 wardens. The heated air should have been let into Church a
ground, to ma rng, . 5 Med. .. 3I) © |} 29.802 | 29.495 || 54 | 34 | 440 || SW. || 100 | immediately after quitting the cock; the church
if not spree beautiful. Weadverted to this su bject * 3| 16 |} 29.605 | 29.439 || 57 | 35 | 460 || S. B. 0 used by underground drains, in the mannef u ied Pack when i
me tim k, but not so fully as it deserved ; and — verage. 894 || 59.8 | $9.0 49.4 0.05 the air into the church next the furnace, de }
hope that — who have not already done what is Oct. 24. Sight flying « 6 z tings except the on most remote from the furnace, This
ecess 2 e no time in accomplishing it. It iss, — 2 Hazy with slight rain; ace 8 ee 9 gA — ght, Make the aperture for al.
— — r at ni air
not of e expected that the beds canali be Z %—poens* exceedingly fin fine iba ret very high; clear. aportares rnae be too large n Conveniently esa, Sack
2 rent =i e; 8
fil ed with, towne plants; but they may with nic 55 . Nen HN if 3 iron roofing hes been
dwarf bushy plants of handsom e Evergreens II pos- | Nor. platine throughout: clear at 3 . for Dilko in which it is advisable to exclude the
sible 8 1 — er Mis taken of the w flowerin mm Stat wie heat at — during the last 23 years, for the ligh eka above, s —— — 5 Can some corre.
shrubs we ha 1 Would een n pasta e
. Pan Mensiesia, &e., and these ay he Prevailing Winds. consequent consu 70 and the
be helped judicious selection of plants wea | wea 15 3 Greatest | _________| Manure: 5 — of the various woods you mention
— variega ted 8 gold and silver tints off Ne. Ss | S28 FSE | which ic | Quantity Sluse] | will form ou must take care not to mel
i AE Rained. zl fel lal is —— “otherwise you wil run the risk of burning the
which contrast prettily with the dark green, and at — ees eee crops with which it may come in contact. Better mix it
a t distan ay be easily k or flowe Sunday 4| 50.6 | 365 f 435 1l 0.44 in. 2) 3} 3| 2] 3] 5| 3 2 arth and turn it once or twice befi te
We have at times mentioned early flowering herbaceous Ge ye ie HOME Ea 2 ere is — ga 5 the appearance 3
„ Which may be planted nearer the edges of the | Wed. a oy | ara | des] as 102 =] 1/3) 3/4 pas) ae — ey 55 5 — e Bat
ds, and outside of thes all patches of Crocuses, | Pudar 3 Bs 29] 10 9.4 111046304 ae
Snowdrops, Hyacinths, &c., may be introduced. T s | Satur. 10 507 | 380 | 2 a 5 . 3 sea — 25 the Miaa "Ther et 8
last should be plante d pretty near the edge of th PM ng Waa gorge po iie “th, isis; Pia Isis Sue wat | too fine to produce much mechanical effect unless usd i
as they will thereby be less in danger of being disturbed isi8—therm. 22 dex, _ oe eed ta bara . ake
when the shrubs are removed, and the beds filled w eae ee SEn AMES OF FRUITS ymer 2, No 1 4
n 3 . in; 4, Old Nonp areil ;
half-hardy plants in May. Tue shrubs we generally — tices to 8 ents eae 6, Cou et panda E Plat; 9, Riketon Pi W Po
addition to the above, are small bus lants of | To ovr 3 o be understood that | Ingestrie j= LEM. ,Catillac; 2, Winter Nelis; To wn Beurré;
A P we cannot answer ing pe Aid. Mout the White Do oyen 1. Urine Queen + 2, 2 d :
Rhododendron ponticum, Pernetty mucronata, Gaul- | re ady to give veabonable information through Far N a basch. 1 etta hate nada 6, 5 80 of Wine
theria, Tree Box, &e, These are removed with but we cannot consent to the labour of writing lette e 17, Fa mon Pippin; 12, 13, Dutch Mignonne : 15,
balls of earth, and in spring are returned to their places | ASPARAGUS: 4 B. The Biscayan mode of cultivating it; ] Minchall Grab; 17, Franklin’s Golden 'Pippia; 18, old Golden
in the res rde In addition e take ca recorded by Captain u aa at p. 147, 1846, 8 to form Pippin; 20, Vexande r; ravenstein; 2
; 8 k 7 n idth, an any convenient length, an x ? : ; 20, Adams's
have a constant succession Aegean on 8 various size w the n March in two drills, 2 inches in depth, and DARN 7S te mie SS ae ines Golden Golden
so that when any of them are grown too large for ye 18 inches irom t the 8 fete leavin a nee of 2 feet b Pippin nil
tween the drills, en the seedlings are about 6 inches in the fruit of Pas-
P * finally planted out in appropriate height, they are thinned to something more t a foot apart. — 8 3 8 ee Errerm.
ump Water is act — — — day among the alleys and over 465, Saponaria a, 334, Saponaria vaccaria.—Mark
FORCING DEPARTHEN = ese seedlings an abundant and Newton. Cassia levigata, a common g enhouse shrub.—L M.
ERIES.— Do not allow the cold weather to sea lup constant 3 of fluid during the sone of their growth. | 4“ wretched e 1 Kobl gi Turnip-rooted d.
the Fontaine of these hoùses; the admission of air| This is 25 San belt orog 8 Pa . int cimess bage, ~ ates cultivated alt éver Germany and Holland—
must of cou gr ally Pike Gi d my accordane year, In Mar S are covere Or 4 inches in t ic 5 AF. The Bladde der-nut, Staphylea trifoliata. ;
2 : e! with town sewerage, which remains on them ring t he seed in March. Sod wad br s
with the advancing se t this is a very different summer, and which is lightly dug in during ee succeeding Phaseolus Caracalla. the Snail-flower.—P K C. i
matter to almost discontinuing it ery few nights pas autumn ; the irrigation being continued as du e first | is the common Lentil, and may be purchased of all dealers in
without our plants having at least some portion of air, Season. In the third Ci n Asparagus = agricultural seeds.—Sarah. 1, British (?); 2, Deschampsia
. m 8 ? fit for cutting, all its A e 1 aah izant: 2): 4, Avena 35,
dependent of t obtains ingress by means of i cxspitosa; 3, Festuca gigantea (%); 4,
pende gress by means anure being du 1 ‘te autu econd yea Brachypodium sylvaticum ; 7, Agrostis vulgaris; 8, Festuca
Let wat y sparingly used this dull and when it does begin to sprout, i fin ds cits Toots in contact docs 9, Agrostis vulgaris; 10, Bromus asper (); 0,
weather, but have an eye to those plants whieh stand 120 PLA $ aa ed ear 8 Mui 5 5 Agrostis alba; 12, Holeus lanatus ; 13, Agro * i
i i mus arve
BERE 300 UNEB OF hot er Piper, AB they are liable to dead leaves, to the mg of about 8 inches. The cutting does bint ee lis glomerata ; de as Gs are notina state for exact ö
et d fore their neighbours. VI ꝶRIEs — All the not commence till t he plants peep jaroh this covering, | P Beth 4
1 woe 3 7 determination. March.?
houses from which the fruit is cut l this time þe when it is sarean removed from the stems, in order that New ZEALAND SEEDS: A HC. Sow them in 1 l
ted int + th ire to b the finest only may be cut, which are rendered white by the j
converted into ouses ; the Vines require to be soil? & overing, an 11 succulent by the excessive richness of the | PaxTon’s CoTTAGER’s CALEND aers t ee oe osie 10 tor dit-
kept cool and dry, and the plants want very nearly the] soil, In the autumn of the ae d year, after the first cutting, | Price 3d. each copy. Parties pa, e supp the rate
same treatment; frost, however, must be carefully ex- th a, a, and th e beds are again dressed with Yt con ce for on tenantry, ca
1 oper: annu ally. ies . tl rough about
a: ma Fail 125751 pianis vidi 5 ta aA tempora ry ty etA 85 “nts, the aoe ragus ground is so situated that PRUNING, Ee. B. Breaking bran f laterals X below the
dormitor oy the beds are half u sale water at nioe} tides August will 8 cer production d ae ae
perfectly clean and free hoe insects sof all deserip iptions, Insects : John Pe 5 is American blight, and may be wound; that is all you — rip phir permost, but up
or these latter will leave broods behind 1 8 78 15 killed op wore spirit, 3 S deep Pe: you can ue
85 very 8 sanp ther season, If possible, avo te . c how Ge 2 3 —
putting plants into those houses in which the ruit i is still able to 3 en ace wb — 1 dP entity, that 20
hanging ; hat. if 158 ted to do so, let them be of Th rk dependa ieee the ther aun Sanaa
such kin: e th all F price can be given, not bate the m hich it is quite in
4 Pat Aea Cr: smallest quantity « of water price, or they will heat you in the work, w
uring win such as Crassulas e iums their power to lo. summer
or other tant Udalen plants. As the leaves of the =< 2 65 aaar Aot wit in ensuing sass,
1 + event you ir . PRN..
Vines ripen, let them be r removed ; pinching t Sulphur will kill mildew, if it be applied the moment üs
at the apex of the leaf, and leaving thè foot-stalk to fall mildew appears. That is the ptained the
off when its oe pe comes. Forcin Insure Rožat Borio G. We pipt eared in
a sufficient supply of Rhubarb, Seakale, and sparagus, last year’s accounts. to hare, the account
by introducing successions at regular intervals, accord- Angust 1o the ie re necessary tö do soe
ing to the supply required and the quantity of plants to make things pleasant,” t og —— 3 hare Bie i n0t
eet it. In selecting Seakale pl: th t . of the year.
which showed the earliest indicati f ri by for us to explain this reluctance o ap rab 1
' a
TRICHOSANTHES : Amicus, We don
7 ; £ you hang
Warts wi WITH GLAZED SASHES IN dier, — If you barg
sashes in front of a Peach = to: reach tow tow, bat
as to have the means 5 e 7 arh 5 — eae
Ara th i
were found to be retarded rath into jou
Misc.: J Abell. The driving a few sn 2
will not harm it; par the; 3 ae A
ult a 9 8
n "justices to — “0”; what may be 5 y
P. 4 5 — In our weekly tab F weathe ich
AAE mum 2 — p that of the day Lare 1s that we
it is placed, and inimum í of
ogg | day pian fer
d to the barome e m 7. M. are
suse Suny ot observations 8 A. M., 1 P. ree Lad oeality, ” 2
The account, occas y, of rain
very acceptable. ||
SEEDLING FLOWERS. 19 0 pebi mil
MELLIA! J Hand Co. eo —— ar paper Le
— Soa ponparen fet; t dere 275 s
t i A 1
Abe than the eld 7 . = dsrk
nearly round, Boom her ar Are A l
n; a 1 i
shining green i a T oar white ze leg 1a .
e have been
d eine communications
A 9 — ‘others are unavoidably aiso beg P
nquiries can can be made. We mus
and prety
w
ROYAL LETTERS |
PATENT,
PATENT HOTHOUSE | “WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA.
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about
t Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in eve
E aid by his PATENT HOUSES, ee he will
sespect P uperzor in every respect to any others Glass
were to to 21 oz. per foot, 1 foot wide, i 3 feet 12 furnished,
7 g=: Houses ‘when completed charged from 1 3d.
i 255 foot
cordin
5
oa
roof — rmed w wood or ro Ale ped the
— le be
racks e
requiring no paint, from 7d. t er ft.
ING BY HOT WATER,
BIT’S y Paes AGRI.
i n-lane, London,
— ———
—— Surveying, Levelli D Railway Engineer-
&e., may be obtaine d it Messrs, NESBIT's Academy, in
EsBIT’S works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging,
> Surveying, English 1 oo are publishe a by Lo. ae.
Ax and 4 and may be had o e
. of 1 2 ool aa — Bad on . either
is prepa
Scotland.
Brid e-street, Blackfriars.
, GUANO, AND OTHER MANURES.—
a ieas on sale;
mproved me 0
the Tank 88 to 8 8 Houses,
which atmospheric heat as well as bottom-heat is
to any re degree, without ie 1d of piyes or ——
so to state that at the request of ae a
apap their Boilers of Iron, a
peration prospec s will
3 as well as ienris of the highest conver; ; or
may be seen at most s the TORT s seats and principal
throughout the
er Par inform
beg to
Ss geet every article required for the construction
‘Obtained >
ural Buildings
Wood e upon the most
HOT WATER APPARATUS,
„o.
LSE A, Manufacturer of from
and ren-
g. Flower 2 Pheasantries &e,
BUILDINGS, Green and Hot thouses, Conser-
€. The ps heated by eee APPARATUS
p may ged ad 17
<
N AFIELD CLUB, 1
849. 0 = 7 — Show of
STOCK will take i
a
— on Tuesday the 1 Wednes-
th, and re _ th oh Decem-
Baker-street. Printed Forms =
of the RED-STRAW WHITE and
0 0
remittance. Sacks
be supplied at 5s.
mpani y
itfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershir
_ WINTER 9
Jons Morton, Wh
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3,
man Bo FOR
THE — FOLLOWING EKS.
e — ltural Imp. Society of —
Sricultural Imp. Society of Ire
were re-
a
ood rants "sh the “re put in with | j
o 9d. p a
WEST OF ENGLAND ANB 4
an 3 a
ingdo
the Trade that at their Manufactory, ih
= conies, Palisading, Field and Garden |
WHEAT er Sais at 50s. per quarter, good | and adver
Agricultural Gazette, pi
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
present autumn has
W ree which, if at a
hl
lar one in
he neigtioartio od of Hereford
in a variety nearly allied to the Bristol or Spalding |
Red, if not a 1 identical with it, and w
precisely the s
e appearances in Wheat of the
n
e
e of the parien is found
be —— . unaffected; the layer of vertical
— . me ing — generally 3 glutinife-
ss dera ed and stained, as in
the dener par oi inh — w ith some brown
matter, which tinges more ess ae 3
he fecular cells however, as far as
remain perfe af and colourless. It is salable ‘that ir in
p gra the
of any p a
me x of aas L e aiB] derange-
Tus time is rapidly approaching when the agri
cu aitia history of the first half a in nineteenth
i d
fina
m openly exhibited in a —.— of all
others the 10 vexatious -$ the feelings of mankind
—namely, that of its victim
It is not an uncommon thin ng in social life to s
an individual Leg . resisting and rese nting
the advi pen the aes of enem
pu 1 95 in solitary se self- 1 the ever 8
e e, of his fatuity throughout a long care
e
roduced a singu
— 1 will taken
*. — mples. The firs
f| burst of na
w ole, the
and the re he
tactics of procedure. N
politics or L N of gen a each p these
The Trader may hav warm
wer * — — prodace a
‘free trade’ doctrines—
away upon their respective line of marc totally
opposite directions. non curat’ is
the unavoidable motto of parties who do not make
“Foreign Com mpeti ition”
it loomed ever in 2 dista
was! port
nce, more or les f formidable
‘the older
city, however, severe
erg the coming shock
ching more, no
rest a the world.
a drage” Sias one ofp und W i is—
ask
When the n body falls to the ground from
1 artificial eee in obedience to the eternal
of natural gravity, do we blame the E Earth it falls
on a for not bei
=~
D.
e false Ne it accepted, a
false se seb: its accredited! we
de
b
l the ma
main how
e who have been its 3 remain its ee
a long as the faintest, the e 1
resuscitation getos, op other the —
tural expression. In "the we mber - the
recent — the . — is still stifled into w
rency.
that did not drag him, instead of 5 eng him,
his too late discovered e uch will one
in the
guage, n armer, not of
the Far
of the ee alone, but of every individe
nected with the soil mre the — of ‘this
country, when the —— eventful series of years,
dating from the commencement to the middle of the
rE he century, comes 80 fit for its picture to that
unflattering 8 es takes posthumous portraits—
to si ow Hist
vil remain
friendship | the de
A struggle, of fifty years
e
one is yet unrealised,
elieved. But ane .
Rule of mortal ity
t may be, is ended; and
e will not look any in the face—why it stares in
EN ins
It is
1 Lak
The 5 — n the 1 not the — bat
. be the st sufferer, stares bewildered at ihe
tofa 1 for Corn, long ner common
o all the world beyo e narrow limits o fe
Brith is, ce further depressed by :
fter
ti wever, clear
ons arising fom constitutional disorder
which deper
o those
a er various
opposite principle of Competition, and of Cheapness,
d unde
3
| upon the former.
ent of u ee, per
ears’ cere eee e se e prosperity of
ar and 5 ty, and term zarm | in the struggles
of Peace and Plenty | In plainer and
more ssc pt es phrase—the declension of the price
of a Bushel of Wheat r Fiftee lli “ae we Win
Such, without one iota of exaggeration, withou the pense t
5 of mere rhetorical paradox, will be the curious ee ex . — pani impression 7 —
„tale he will have to tell, and, what will be more bim, oi ba 3 4 peer Sad
' | troublesome, to account for. ut, troublesome as it eshte dies Pacliamen
ay be this will be a small part, a mere outline, of of ks Wirt ears trying with all thewealof
his task ; for if he venture t his eye a little | Oit 3 vain—to And i out.
wider, over the other arts and industrious pursuits) Then he makes a blund ring | against the
of the nation during the cotemporary P. he Tithes’ Alas! the Commutation Act points sig-
have to meet t = et ate el “i icantly tos En „ has ted the
simultaneously Dril th every other branch of 3 eg, . ee. Clergy.’
rade and industry. Whilst laws are made 2 = Foiled here again of a butt for natural wrath to
— to, and fortunes staked upon the faith of, the renik tuela turns, s after a moment of des-
psa dii perate Goap —upon ree sok “landlord — a
ment, he om see in 125 her nae . is too high —Who mode What
698 THE AGRICULTURAL wien
—— ancy and payments of them that receive it. debts under 20s. or 30s. - still — worth —
expense of getting in. He is a fort . who can | give me the enquiring mind, not oe
— es ut factors — the sp ae — =- made the — * in — 108. in the 3 = his debts ; ~~ of science. What hoy is th
c: 7
fact, a more general system of ready money payments what power of maintenance
Competition that made the Rents? — wise 8 in ired ; and amongst Plage few of my cus- | whirl of life, of a set of men
have lamented it, whether owners or occupiers : ‘and tomers who 3 3 the principle it has been . their “ plodding ” state and dlncosny N 8
few of either class have — 5 nent or solid to answer the purpose both of the baker and the con- |“ Bill” is to affect them? How their dear!
benefit from a system which encouraged the fright- | sumer. hen you further consider that from 5s. to 6s. | experience is to tell upon the aristocrati .
ful mischief of large holdinge with small capitals, per sack is the extent of a baker’s profit when all | hitherto have awed the shrinkin i
the natural and baneful — of competition. | deductions are made, and the number of sacks worked | echo, a vehicle, and too often as a victim? One of the
Wh h i
he Competition? up by the country trade does not exceed five or six, I | first effects of free-trade will be to rescue the i
How many of those who in 1815, in 1823, in think few persons will eat their loaf. — acknow- | of the country from political slavery, and pe; —
1828, itn essed and took part in the inauguration —— that what pro ofit there is on it is fairly earned. first effort of their eufranchisement will be — i
and continuance of that System, under whose fall w that the price of bread is a subject of i inquiry, of the multifarious and contradictory customs
to that far 3 oe wish to offer a fact for the consideration of to outgoing and incoming tenants into a unifi —
we r — 5 we —— — ye T samti he present | well-defined system of valuation, that 8
founders of the National Debt. Spare your anger, P 0 ed
EN
8
ou
8
a
— a
5
2 &
be =|
8
a
—
—
©
5
5
71
er,
markets, a price at which it is well known that any “rights of pr i. e., proper
the sea i = z large tracts of land cannot pay for farming, and much | having been employed in permanent unexhausted
wind that vexed it died yesterday. “The parents | even of the best districts is scarcely. worth holding. | improvem
have eaten sour s and the children’s teeth are Now, if Wheat were to advance 10s. per quarter, it Polities have terrified people because forced
set on edge.’ The mischief of five-shillings-a-bushel | would only cause a rise of Id. on the 4-Ib. loaf or 4d. | them at an election, when party strife, family ambition,
is born ei the mischief of fifteen. ost ve It needless — say that that would be an or dirty jobbing have alternately supplied the motive
But it be replied, and with truth, that the im e boon to the farmer, and that he would be for a contest, but if such practices continued to
mischief at present existing, and complained of, is highly “delighted to pay ihe xtra 4d. per Ib. for his | the world we should get from bad to worse, and honest
not the whole esi of this fall—z. e. the eclen- bre The caleulation, — a man rows 100 acres men would despair of reformation. Surely with 3
— of a ve lf century in the > ice of corn from 120 | of Whea at, is easily made, and the result is certain ; but | liberal education the modern farmer will imbibe more
to 40 shillings per quarter in England, but the — — not 3 ey conid a who —_ 3 5 =e 3 2 pn re to
; i extra price if t ops | respect him also, i propositions before
ove venom O poeti — — = frer uented — of old, in —— ad of —— eee as gia eyes as a national assessment, in i trial emplo erg
t fall of h smaller nt, wit from | ‘Ted 3 g ‘ U ment of
Fifty shillings ta tei: "The tes val Taxes and now are; no sale for their wana stock, and the. greatest | prisoners, pauper farms, statistics of agriculture, emigra.
year.
y to pro very n e, for the evil. 3 of bread, can never make the difference | ment of leasehold tenures, the consolidation of hi
It was r ‘ventilated — Wheat s suddenly between a good and bad trade. Then, again, ask the | acts, &c., affecting the weal or woe of all classes, of i
fell from 80s. to 70s., steadily and warmly sug- | labourer who now receives from 2s. to 3s. per week less | sexes, lightening the burthens of one parish, heaping
ested when the 70s. gradually sunk to 60s., and | himself, besides losing from 3s. to 1s. each for those two | them on another—all such matters will exercise the
Foot quietly but prominently ae during the great boys, whose appetite is by no means diminished, pr ag ig and, to a variable extent, affect the
gentler evolution which saw the Os. dissolving into e he would not rather pay the 4d. per lb. extra of the farmers, and therefore demand o
t
r aS A
8 ut what
meanwhile ? Does it afford a very practical evidence
of the application of the ora suggested ? er
they r —— ree 8 A as! practical reality | .
seg the o Rowo ner hei the student of
a and until
habits and their consequences excepted. —— again, thing tangible shall appear, without reproach, as the
to mind the state of the union-houses last year ; politics of agriculture
— full — were of men willing to work, but unable to cience cannot alone ae for the exigencies of the
t fifty- Sore 8 N one glance down its ob and let any one imagine what will | unprepared ican ven energy itself cannot aeaa i
statistical columns, than he is heard muttering, with e ence the troubles consequent eh famine and low prices i
astonished look, something about ‘inverse ratio’—| we still continue to refuse to Pay this extra farthing. | pauperiem rime depress industry and inteligens; |
puzzle of puzzles both in —— and meaning, | Surely when the extra difference in the amount of the | eaution ghd 6 a acl of endu saa will help to
those who tried to protect their own bargain by poor- rates is added to the feat dil, but a poor balance the dawn of a mor 12 8 period, with ‘onal
enhancing the number of bidder. Fo it. will remain to compensate = so much distress to all — ent and survi irengih to avail him in be
To his 9 eye the pania of the half-cen- | parties Foams And, lastly, when the — rds market. Look at tho great fail in prices of store stock
tury is the — of an, € Inve e Ratio, —of a receive urgent requests 8 their tenants for an abate- of all kinds during the past month, as contrasted with
Remedy, for a growing m schief, continually pro- ment of rent, which the present price of corn a — ck the unexpected steadiness spe upward — |
posed, and as continually contra ned dy its pro- must almost enforce, let them ask the —— for Wheat at 40s., and Barley at 288. per quarter, and enn |
2
@
8
B
8.
A
8
=
5
4
a
*
ir Whose benefit they make the sacrifices, I am sure I | any one with corn to thresh and stock to sell disregard
eee its Sh rth, and f it it, again, bilit certain d if speak the anne of the farmers when I — “the ey | the aspect of affairs a eee, If a disastrous war ensues,
poss » and its prac icability; or in er a would rather No abatement | prices will leap with elastic force. Under any cireum-
*
oa
*
O
things, and in the bosom of the Future, there exist pensate for the loss they have sustained. But, must it | drawn to agricultural produce, even peace
indeed an Alternative. not be followed as soon as granted by a curtailment of steadiness, and general ae ent increase the con-
— ———— and necessarie
ICES OF BREAD AND FLOUR. servants and other dependants must be reduced both in | stuffs, J. W., Peterborou
In 2 1 7 aper of last week I saw an article on the | number and salary, and many of those emjoyments and ä
prices of — and flour, 8 written by a person pleasures given up; and for what? To support a THE FARMERS’ “PROSPECTS.
who has no idea of wha at he is writing about ; and as he | reduction in the price of bread of one farthing per Ix the article which appeared in the Agricultural
wishes for ry e on bs subject, I can only say | pound, which is not of any consequence the con- Gazette of the 20th inst., signed “ P.,“ and headed as
asa miller I shall be most happy to give it. Had there sumer, generally speaking, when put in comparison | above, it is admitted that the 2 free-trade
e profit on a sack of flour ones ich he speaks of, | with the serious loss in the value of farming 1 and | « has — — the tenant farmer in difficulty
4
E
|
$ v e- stated how deep a a And .
was with gratitu le to the public, and have recom- quent demoralisation of the lower classes, It is only d of full 20 t. below former averages.”
mended my connection to the tender conscience of my the more wonderful that so many Pome of severe 2 of that article it is aseerted ’
Successor, and retired with an ample fortune. The price | politieal contest should have elapsed to gain so small a that, “In truth the tenant had no interest in
of Wheat from 3 that quality of bread is — reduetion in the price o z bread as one farthing per pound. n. i „ l é
which constitu itutes three-fourths of the consumption of A Miller and Farmer same article, will certainly not reconcile the farmer to
; . i * look his position
i
:
POLITICS, wit od heart. Alen
selling t to the baker wholesale. for 30s. sack. Eight Boon
bushels of the above weight will make 25 stones of flour, | beneits lasting” PRG Ao we recom Se ile vim an | For how many laras aro there whereon
offals, after 2 the waste in 0 Sa. 8 such knowledge as the paiz 1 — “bet one For h .
er n other ir
ng — ressing, (omer a profit of 4s, per ———— no Edinburgh Fa Review, No. 182, p. 3 e other erops and
1 deference to “C, sr ~ „ love “of “ prac- makes as much, it appears, as by all his he
st 8 l in
wear ving a great distaste for party politics, I stock together, fel manner i
bts, | am still of opinion, that the acts of ae legislature have | employs upon these, and the very skilful b
o momentous an influence on the i 2 haaati of which he carries out the excellent eno growir al
state | property invested in land, and the | umber of | adopted. If he should be obliged to limit the groma srg
* ns and other — people dependent upon its application t ie a journal | Potatoes, as probably he will shortly, to à will be
The 2 Some difference in those expenses. professing to advance the inte: ests of farmers — quantity for his own use, his marketable produce will be
‘hea a for the 1 the profit on grinding. altogether D the o inions of public = ei, or a reduced in value ope- foui and bis p a Sn,
s tb, fore: ae en ~ of good flour will make survey of the a tendency of public measures small indeed for a person of his intelligence an
ee A ements evance i ws:
is no an TE 123 it follows that if the baker may admit of remedy, and so — obstacle to In round numbers, one-third of his farm 3 d
gi ves flour, t 10s. improving the position, present esta oar or — — year ‘been cropped wi 2 — „
e must prospects of —— men. 5 ear per ens
-opped with grain, Turnips,
f; i ‘ar ex ‘on cattle, &c. a
general management of. — goa ; he “eschews| rasa, do. ; value thereof, pr pire ra IS ag)
poe, I know such a man, and man like him, who | , 10s. per poss ou
in only the common os of the sging is little better otal amount of incom
book. | than a goose; his own labourers are a reflection of Deduct, ‘if the 18 bo” $ iliona und 725 ;
| himself, sober, e and contented men, but he Po the tee aon — 9 — difference between 281 9 0
cannot deal wich refra ractory ones, and unless they were Sz, 10s. and 17l., or one-fourth of the wholeince 5 .
. — by — spirited ” farmers than himself, the gh p 25
surplus bour, in the shape of cunning invalids or Expe interest € on capital, ‘2
— eee reprobates, 8 e the constable, harass * diaro o, (cluding least See :
| the relieving officer, and defraud the pari He vote: i
un eee yi with his landlord ; he would not ——— course a — Pett; sement, meet — Warte a -g9
even Permission, for the Indies. Is this Pests Be. T
ll | the soil *C, B” expects to work with advantage in
44—1849. ]
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 699
| — at
i — ditto, at
e a Farmer,” writing
Coun’ rmer,” writing in | support of
g FE Coanty Dora —— in a letter to the Editor
Mr. the Mark Lane Expre ae = Ta income for the
. 42920 0 0
oes — — 0
uu his estimate he ‘values the Potato crop ‘at 75 k ‘tien,
gi. per ton, which is
worth Tae Wheat ] he
nly low for a good
gaquestionably high at current prices. Profit on cattle
| tep at 6l. 10s. each, which is
H
—
Q
2.2
S 8
“oO
=
i
3
0
P
8
nor e ee
eee —
ET
An Ray Ban of this
.
,
1711
n goo
also high, and cca
e this, however, as it
e considered impartially
e can fail, I think, to see
e
A : w Scotlan
that it not an agricultural truth that h high farming, I,and so are hundreds of English farmers who, at
sere Beg so for
e bee
s for having made us 1 therewith.
he attempt which has been eto make out a
n support of the e woe! is neither su
on
this account that
Jaird i is e — by 80 many, ; think, deservedly,
s
or diss en 8 whole
cannot be regarded as
ea. I beg to state that I shall be glad to oe
see your columns exclusively devoted to the ae and
of agriculture, or open to full, fre rank fai ey
— of all political questions beai ii
And with respect to the former, a pie di 2 * this
it i
h those of London, a calculation must be made of tbe
The sea “ makes so
manure.”
blame to him for this !
pages prices, find it
third or even le
staggering to a eg
superiority of d
eep over m y
Till very lately 1 always advocated a 23 feet drain, as
it hasa tendency to mislead and do mischief va a ry o
tha:
an annual present of 500 loads of
es it and no questions asked ; small
! I wish I had a similar chance.
no easy matter to make ends meet,
ss, of the
Southrons, I agree with “ W.“ i
that the whole thing is
ion.—Dr. Lin ey has completely converted me to t
vator and the harrows will give — the command of
opportunities for ridging up, manuring, and sowing,
No cleaning 2 a 4 isite. As soon as the plants
are up, Garrett’ ith one i
each row, to stir the soil 3 or 4 inches deep, ra bya
light horse or a stout pony, We have already double
e
9 inches — 5 and put the hoe over it prior to sowing
che Clovers. We recommend th roceedings with
nominal Seotch rents; confidence, having, with the — peg of yen last, put
bat even here r. M‘Culloch 15 ſavoured above his t i ion i
e sma
eposited near the surface, we ee a the
ili th
|
experimental seale, with fi ms thermome ters inserted | an
cation, — very effective Sichel; though I take for
grante
re is some
at foot, — rein the tem
u z be 29° — 1 4 feet —. inet in the teeth ‘of his
i
wn argum that te
depth at which the
2 marks will be ſound useful
were 3 rolled down, and not Samael in, The
result is the most perfect covering of the soil I have
were sown in the spring. C. L., Cirencester, Oct. 29.
Small Farms.—I take the liberty of as sn
nother article on this su ‘by many 1 ia that you
mistake in the — —— seribing properly, I will Kis to you my exact case, I
mperature at 1 foot dee
the |
m a clergyman, with a small living and an increasi
| family, My income is about 3002. per annum, 461.
which has been hitherto derived from the rental of 16
— — ter is inserted in the acres of glebe attached to the living, but which my
ou to i i he
gr Perhaps the figures ht been | tenan now given me notice ll quit un-
algo e suggest that it is most im- versed, and the temperature at 1 foot 22° and 4 feet | less I subm t reduction in the ren
tant that we should have none other than standard | 99 ; thcugh I cannot understand ither ; seeing | may well suppose that what with rates and taxes, sub-
measures used in effecting sales of a me kind. t 0 s a very improbable degree of cold at ptions to schools and ! charities, and the nu-
nt there is, ae | uniform practice, Rh ights | 4 feet below the ‘surface, even in on st | merous other calls upon the house of a clergy
us winters. e ——— of Mr. Bernays, of Derby, it is an objeet with me to tu 16 of glebe
to the best account. The soil is rich but sa ex
hi
por
Wei
At
Mh
a prices can “bee compared with ekk i other, or
dif
erence in the weights ra =y Such ought 0
case
ng resolution, paint coed at a meeting of
ronmasters fro ies i
depressed state
_ Wontrade: “ the present depressed state of the
igin and is entirely caused by the
ow rate of duty at which English iron is admitted into
his er the tariff law of 1846, and its i
0
country, we, in the United States, can never compete
vith the English iron masters, except by a reduction of
to the pauper rates of that cou ntry, or protection
a ti
„8g
2
i
.
that i
5
J
0
f
EE
S
ER
SE
8
z
5g
5
Pu
may requi
25
2
$
4
F
E
ge
Ragland owes 2 on
Which greatne
she has =
enjoy 5
erish her n3
in Eng
he will 3 rather ant to
ss to the wise
enjoy —— — * — which she
is not the wish of any of
.
og
our exertions to procure
= which can only be secured by a duty
I cannot, however, wa
es
d o
a = 8
*
F,
©
re
E
©
22
=}
.
a
o
8 4
8
E
e
ire, or the community at
— ol eannot—she will not—adopt | 4
; — I will not say our, but the policy which
e policy | e
protective laws
to co e great, and
what
done so
are also very interes resting, as confirming the advantages |
f d na
f
viso that deep draining s should always
whieh
e system ; but — this pro- . it. It is situated about four miles from a city con:
mpanied | taining 20,000 inhabitants, and oe is mm aman intely
with proportionately deep stirring of the — without poaten ous t
4 pa , — a naught.— Mr. Martin | barn and capital sheds, capable of — pede into
e ay areas till he is black in the face before he | stalls for 10 cows, es ling for or three horses.
persuades Englishmen who have any value for their might perhap be able to in addition a four
in esa i k 2 —— adjoining arable or pasture ! glebe is
on this v er je ss
offered farms there on 3 sara tempting terms—th ree | eminen
I asked myself this —.— question,
— renewable, pod
Will one life (my own) be renewa ble in the event of
3
o
œ
p
8 5
8 8
g
—
a
©
ecisi
of which I pried never repented. Samuel Taylor, Barn-
wood, ae
Mai
at — seen no mention of the results of
as
ts w
rich soil, in the most sheltered part of 2 pon near |
the sea shore in the neighbourhood of h. The p
erop grew very irre
F
s E
da
England, and um mor rt a garden than a —
espon
crop corr
eeii the fact of
can
— a new
1
1 in your paper, some Pres. ago, |
H Taize and | ©
its wane a new M
this statement enable you to judge whether, Aa kiren
a dairy farm
ise,
2
ps, not than an ;
I do not expect extraordinary profits, but I wish to
know whether with such care and attention as I can
a some
tenant, Should you think I may — nture to farm
these 16 or 20 acres, would you oblige me by giving or
referring me to some scheme b resent
spa — ZOA
stabling, pigsties, &e., valued at . clear rent of, say 461. ;
rates, 31. 10s, ; wages are 88. a wich liquor, say
8. 3 b
e gall. ; Wheat, say 5s. per k
bushels per acre. A.
M.
been Ireland asa field for the Investment of Capital.—
* j of your correspondents ste ares this subject, but I was sorry
of “ Cad hich appeared in your im-
| — 4. Oet. = — he seems still to adhere to
ihe now antiquated notion that avy gee r on the part
0
of an
it and some of the old | by rae of life and property ; but I am happy to say
varieties, Perhaps it may grate out to be somethi
2
l conversa’ “ wi A of
rish in saying that ins of any attem
of the English to assist them by ov capital
and embarking it il 8 y such base
| ingratitude as “ Cadvan to suppose;
they would be received with a “ cead mille fealthe, that
to which the in their native
1 9 —— country. But I 8 I have just 1 hei —
i aga ploughing, 3 — by ge ene ee w 3 ine 2 their inclinatie i do
m 6 to y g 10 are civ.
first pea tyon ich e next furrow slice is 2 —.— the — the reporta —
turned as and ee possible. In this state ee. nid i. — of the land has gone a great
rie
best
winter frost, till
‘ray to de be 13 jes upon se pen
ploughed 35 out of 50 acres in course — — ear’s
| roots, an e Wheat sown upon this year’s Clover
lea is up and looking beautifu e e found
700
ve able,
happen to take in, and who ei — a r do
not choose, to take se — opi tot n for
themselves ; but 1 e ask nthe “admitting these
reports to be — thi is s bores objection 2 We all of
us are well a ust support our poor by |e
giving them relief out of
see that they bes prefer
the canno they are apal to
they will see ecreasing faster than th
would imagine possible. In conclusion, let
those who have been misled We thousand tongues
of per reports, com er and j for
themselves rz Iam e in snorting that there
is in Irelan present mom
the pirine of — 8 skill, and industry than in
any other coun —
Malt v. Bar ee — dent “ P,” says,
the power to m 12 feeding — see s has „peen
no value.” If
be won by 5 — — —.—
would be so kind as to state when and — sie: —
experiments have been
ee that he would — oblige — 25 cok 9 — of
the Agricultural Gazette, and nu
would show the folly of
arguing ang epee — ae , positive proof ; and, it would
— — t n at rest, as it is clear —
the Govern — r — been convinced b
abundant — — to proof. G. P. re
2 e
Wheat
han
impossible ; let him
t ae
t a better field for
t
t ird
Sowing on the “en of the
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
a tit bit oct is for each of you, if you did but know how to
get it. fellows, don’t you see the only thing you
ave to do i is 10 o sell your horses an a steam kettle
E u will save all hose
mals are ho c ming ?
All that you will want in lieu of such 8 beasts
will be a small heap of coke, a few gallons of oil, a bit
a tow, a poker, and a —— sam . steam kettle will
be ready for the ‘field a any t — as fo
of this all- —— — why i
not to Now e
his eye on the steam
l bring him 3 whether the furrow — vo
ors shallow, broad or narrow. o matter, all
is to keep up the rn to the right pars and beit
ever fail, and so long as England can produce —
aleve er heads to sande and eo = — sa e
80 big with future glory and renown, what an
the i so unpatriotic — not to 5 the — of ‘his
birth, and to laud the name that has raised our common
country from a state af ruin to that of indescribable
reatness and — ity? Q.
Sotieties.
E: Drains.— At a late te monthly | w}
to
ivided na
indeed, there were springs in those
deeper drains were. He ot reat harn ie
— The subsoil was pretty unten
retentive throughout the field; and the u 4 ‘uniformly
not perceptibly more open re 2 2 t eyed soil was
far erefi his
ried in East Lothian b a 0 9
opposite Anpan f n no el à 4 oy
experiment ; but if corre N reported to him, it *
lessen his . in rn A sais obtain by hiie
and would be an additi al inducement to
ith his ee on i in order to obtain data
for coming to a right conclusion. Probably in another
year, more correct data obtained, as in a few
months only after the drains were made the soil could
not ha n ly.
about 20 bushels of Oats (equal to about 20, per acre
had been obtained. This result was in conformity with
what been obtained from other fields previously
drained by him. But on the general benefits of drait-
g it was unnecessary to dwell. The great question
now was: What is the — of draina ich could
be done most efficiently, a
iage wh
at the least expense! To
E point enquiries ought N be speciall y directed,
he
Rev. . — Rn at Little Bardfield, Essex, as | The furrow drains in each break led into a large drain
iled at a meeting of the ron Walden Agricultural at the ends ; at the mouth of e large drain, a . — . wah r kopor
Association, Oct. 19. , a sandy loam, 35s, an ; | Water meter an placed. The field was dr 1 8 in 1 your inquiry as to th eee of the ex pikih made
a Clover lea, clean and in good heart; ploughed in winter of 184 t had been 14 years in Gra by n nnd with tiles = > ffere ? t depths and
October ; dibbled November 1 Two stetches last corn crop k „in 1834) was Wheat, of which the distances, I may preis that 0 . on ma
adjoini other were marked out in the middle of land produe 8 33 bels per acre. In be describe rather a fre Toki but u na ey
the field, each measuri etly one-sixth of an the spring of 1848, the field was partly sown with sandy | stiff retentive claye subsoil, mixed wit 1
One of was thin sown, the othe the rest of the | Oats, and partly with b poss orn ° — ite free fro he Bie r. The ridges were 18 feet
field ; both treated y alike, and neither suffe: ater meters were se Jun and were in width, and were gathered up from the stubble, lea
from in or di Seed, Smoo red. removed in 4 au dh 49. At harvest of 188, the stoks anay furrow pent to save fat labour. Into aa
Seed. Produce. | Straw, | Veight of Remarks a moro ~ contiguous furrows, each upwards of 330 yards in
rain. š On a Steet and 15 feet drains, = stooks — acre, pe — + was put a drain — 3 feet in depth below i
N bushels 593 Ib 352 Ibs, or The thin itd Sete tid e
ae ‘ "3 y babe 64 Ibs. per rja little later. It w was On 3 feet and 15 feet — — —— 562 —— eee Another eee |
1 pin s pe aT bushel. deen ith great > — ter that followed two furrows au vA
are—two seedsin| These crops, on bein thr she a, Ided asfoll : rains, thus leading a ridge which may be said to be un-
| e tole: Ps, 4 e s yielded as follows Wr es The H the field was done with drains |
1 bus ashe 1 6} 5 650 bs, or 400 Ibs. or The thick sown was — s feet and 5 feet 3 4 bushels per acre, 1 foot 8 2 in depth below the ponet m
per acre, bable a, 5 8. Pood een anni better " Weight i Jos. „per Shaver ” land si n having been ploughed fiat, ri
> 3 feet 1 15 fi t 1 825 d th onside ie * io ex 12 rer 0 5705 drains
n 3 fe eet drai Me 75 epths cut wit e Spade e 0
Fre Trade: Agriculture : The new 3 — ars 33 3 55 d. per rood, or 40. p teh acre; the 2
Gazetta the capital “ Q.” struck me as being on ETEA Pr —.— 3 — were, however tood, : 1 perio was
t prominent features in a column b axing th the initials ecessary, „in regard to the black Oats, in consequence ing tha whole Seld; whick sonet eee i
4 0. B., Heach ? of one of the breaks on which i i —— ay ops Ban |
, Heacham, Norfolk.“ The very approving an ch it gre aving been, on h T he dri ing across the
congratulatory tone of your correspondent’s | 8 one-half of it, shaded by tr That the hisy 8 8 e siat nde oe Globe, the other
letter would almost lead one to suppose he was ‘ pulling | the effect of con siderably lessening the produce, aire 1 ne N made . being — |
an oar” in the same boat with yoursel ; at any rate he partionlariy of grain, is evident from the following 1 ER oe: dust and the eanta oi 1 5 Jud de
| resolved “ Q.” shall no longer | i
6 C. Bs” ogatories, or a) — ples — — Brack Oar an5 aat 1 15 5 porti — i
: ide the subject d in cr G. a” lei —+ Break shaded, sð, produced i ait ‘stooks = acre, weighed on the lach "December, and the prod » |
they seem the ——— of a highly fertile 8 ah edea , Se ee White Turnips. —
ination, that can doubtless easier idealise than » 1 reo Se
realise the multiplied produce of the soil, which he is If the sed brenk is thrown out of view, t the result, Ga 1 foot d inches do 15 fect apart ` a 1 ut
3 of agriculture, u ided and unpro- | °S * . ack ae tran — 12 —— 8 taai 36 feet a ae vis 29 14 — 15 A
& bit A ie ains, — stoo s per acre. On po undrained * 1 2 ;
1 anid = 704 bush. , = te was only after’ i the white 4 5 be a pw
ld be sai e :
tiès F 8850 sown for both Kinds of Oats was aian nie 2 the 1 _ The subsoil, J
| at the rate >of 5 bushels r discharged n |
8 s per arged from the deep drains, appeare where
ing of from the bse sets of drains was as fo . Turnips; but the Swedish were much larger ö
3 ft. and 15 ft. drains, 35, — pall pad acre, th at it the same time they
ie wait 65 e — > at eat t wit he 4. About "o
In this — ation, the quantit of. water which fell Were Obviously thinner o sown vin
on the few ac es shaded with . was thrown out of middle of February, 1842, the — wot seed might
view, vie results it would app that rather | Wheat, drilled across, Thre 3 per acre
more had been discharged by the 34 ft. drains than r t portions were
by the 3 feet drains, though the latter were twice as the eee 1 d the following
nume the er. parts of the field, cut, stacked, and threshed separately, igh of all being
therefore, drained by the 3 feet drains, there was more is the result, per Scotch acre, th t
ity, of a return for such | water lett in the land, or went off by evaporation ; and the same, 62 Ibs. per bushe. Wheat. .
su there —_ — oe of soil for the roots. This fa oe arg “ER g
ed to explain the produce obtained. If the number | On 3 feet drains, 18 feet apart 1E
of stooks afforded a correct criterion of the q ntity of ie b . ap art | om i 3
aits her — st — 8 3 feet drains, and On port — n eee ed N 0 antil be
grain on the 33 feet drains; from which he would di WAS sown
infer, that a damp soil, though favourable to large Fro soe rel nin ho hd re moisture ` 4
ine | produce in straw, was un nfav vourable to a large produce ary jik cher as requisite for the th of ‘or 10
in corn. The 3} feet drains probably produced with The field was grazed in 1843 and 1844. Little „
greater dryness, greater warmth he larger quantity | difference was observed pasture during vat 4
| of rain which they carried off, would impart to the soil year, though, in the second, eg, ea paerd 1945,
a greater amount of heat. hy 34 drains, though | the portion with deep drains, In the spring Angus
one-half as numerous as the 3 feet drains, should carry | the 8 le was ploughed up and sown with grey were
e as e or a 1 quantity of „was a sep Oats. Before harvest effects of the perar tieer
0 the deeper drains would very obvious. The erop on the ground wai it va
— ii greater core t surface; but he had not being much heavier and bulkiest ; at ing
ani pe that a 34 fee t drain would have drawn off laid when the erop on the deep drains
double, or rather more than d le, the quantity of | On the la d on
a e | water that a3 feet drain draws. The water was sooner ripe, field was all
t | however, showed that this had been the ; This accounts, in part, for the wei
į
o ee
:
-cake
ton. The Ai cake,
44—1849.]
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE:
- those portions; indeed, the quality improves
gs the quantity “oa omen „The following table aa e
the result, per Seote
Weig!
ts p. bush. §
18 feet apart. To 17 * 40˙ 2 8108
ins, eet apart.
get fe 5 im. drains, 18 — feet > ARER 12 1 2 3 217 96
— 3 feet drains, apart 4 40 2 4 2%
On portion undr: ER e eee 9.0 40) 2 4 40
On the rem oft there was a m d differ-
oval of th ri arke
ence in the eye of the land, the deep drained por-
full of vapeh e while the part with the
.
en end
of the field on the undrained furrows, for even the deep
ins had lit no eff h drained furrow
ixt them. 1 e rope a in spring
Wheat n agnificent erop
and was
ed, over the 9 l 7 8. 6 bushels
Scotch acre, ind weighed 63 Ibs. per b
ast year, and i
.
He
Miscellaneous.
poor cake as Food.—Two ‘kinds of oileake,
t N ers, are used i nile, gew
e of Flax-seed, Linsee
Etha other, a less expensive article,
ed, as a manure for Wheat.
n with oil-
ahs, in the proportion z kra 8 a 2 for the pine
e, 1 she ow the j
about Dya ands cabot a shee 57. Per
se. The
have no enemies as yet.
cultiva.. |
d-cake, fur |P
bi 2 500 sheep of my own, I hope that a one
is disposed to give it a trial, will Eye 50 gradually
—— DTA 9 any unforesee be the
usey, a 1 — Fü the Royal
e Seley: of Eng
ppage of Pipe Tiles. an e farm is drain
with horseshoe tiles and slate soles, ti the latter | n the
refuse of the Welsh quarries. I was informed by the
farm _ who kindly t ook me — e farm in the
absence „ that pipes had been tried; but
they do —— answer in that neighbourhood, inasmuch as
the crevices become choked up with a kind d or
the roots of plants eonsequently their u n
abandoned. The s are laid at a depth of 2 feet
6 inches or 3 feet 6 inches, and the mains, where there
is fall, 4 feet, the space betw a a — 5 r
9 yards. 7 04 Pes pat is light, a
stratum ot ne ndstone. P. N of th the Royal
Agricultural Society y 12 Englan
Calendar of Operations.
OCTOBE
BEDFORDSHIRE FARM,
rat — has been Wheat
A cio:
: 0.— chief occupation of the
t sowing, which t is “soe nony — to
— sown has come up nicely, appears to
We have tried a 1
large field of Cloy
in various
w
per acre,
eld was abai p ha — 9 and the
— + esi land was twice rolled
The egos ce of the
prese
—
=
2 8
®©
*
85
>
ree ater — in all oe cases; at the s:
time, every experimenter is wise in using due santion be fore
oing to th seeding „ by cons —.— the state
and condition of the land, and also * time wea nature of the
m 8s
its of the on
tw e ke ystem. e, therefore, —
advocate the 2 m py reba vat the whole 2 the
i quently hoe under every cir-
We hay ve dibbled about 10 acres of — — 3
after ‘Wheat, at the rate of 3 bushels — ented The Beans are
I , which were drawn out * the
vail of horse-hoein g. Som H — r have een
free — ed Green merope 'generaliy succeed — on 2
dunged chong! ı the winter n when the manure is immed
ate 7 applied Petike the . my sow ** u The growth of the bulb
is ene more and aad We less when the 3 of the plant
is properly disseminated through — soil. It d s no t answer,
however, , to wint 8 dirty la th
— ans commence getting = and
Weeds
ica gold — d Carrots, All roots requi o be
well vontilaced when ‘first put together in E *
y Mangold Wurzels, one Turnips also, lost ‘rum close
oroia with earth. Our ing Sheep are now u rnips,
and the stores run over eae. — and pastures, try fold —
Notices to Corresponden
A — or —— — A Turner.
beten the
better
ielded 50 or 60 bushels
t e
HEFE
+
7 3
Z
ion, is a 0 —— in brew malt
ind hops lied in due pro; eos "it the = be insuf.
ficiently malted the glaten will superabound, an a due propor-
tion of alcohol cannot be formed. — ~~ tter principle of
the Hop be deficient the beer will not k ~ * =
wort be at the time of boiled, the —
ing ; wit agge ye as — i tae
solution of t ccharine 2 he malt an
alkaloid extract of — Hops, boiled
aflord the only eans of obtaining a — m beer 85 for
table use atm — p temperate y alw ging
7 48° to 559 is an —— ee vison oe
IRMINGHAM mar Fart —— — The Seoretary
see that wer red 4 the matter at p, 653, m
Cannaacrs neman, Try vat ng the cows a little nitre in
water over thelr soo immediately after milki ; or add a
yw nitre in hot water to the milk when 7811 the pans,
f that will not do, oy some chloride of lime—a very little in
— milk-pan.
5 — have a little more confidence
desire to act with f fairnees.
type imme.
y Land Farmer, If will forward your
name and a —ů 4 G.“ will Sa with you directly,
= Rapuits : FS. See p. 537, v 8. 4
EDGES :
ring; but
biag Tagin aa
with on tek
ept in
t is aliviek
pe in l winter they, kagiat ought to
4.) We canno ts ich is the — that makes the
r from ; the Ayrshire breed has
a good Agap aa (5. Swedish turnips,
Mangold Smee on loamy s ar
e best green — vou can
it em, „ cook them
au says
superfluo us portion
t Wheat land, The mi ileh cows Teceive a
15 431
w
T | their minds o — — ect.
The 8 cattle consume about a bushel of Turni ips, 5 lbs. of
oe and 20 lbs. of chaff * er —_ in a prepared state, by
teaming apparatus. The system 5 3 — well last
eason; certainly muc bes er than the non-coo 32 plan,
although some of ae early paren appear re have changed
Practically we must, as yet, fully
agree with it as we
be more of the fattening re, of
forready assimilatio the animal,
given in a pe cont 15 si we ula
we K non E
4 he t,
than 8 the food is
ot our 8
It reaches the
n
bserve no differe 0
e fit for eadi | analysis an
ias referred by me = Ms, Way, w whose answer w
1 *
P 2
5.23 per cent,
11.63
itrogen
‘hen ith Ol or fat
3 a
—
ards
=" I have examined 11 speeimens, 5 on an
v. — see .60 per cent,
1.90
oil isin ge general — t _ 15 to 14 age cent.”
eee
d e amou repari
I will ar pie that though
as food has =e quen
r, in
ben Mangold: Ware a kd . — straw, vas mas a a
05 t yen: Sir Robe t Dri
rt Pee:'s farm
nless the p Rl
, improve, 1 I should
coured 8 it must, i£ 8
think, eee
printer now on Friday mornit g]
Dorser Farm, Oct. 20.—8 —.— last report we have been em-
2 a _ part of which is after Turnips,
o finish sowing for ~~ — hd
riy expre
e best reasons for k — that our pm
coincides “wich the bir — of the re ve shal
f you will favour us your n vag we
endeavour 55 obtain an rege explanation for
STALL tee DING : Amateur, character of the — ola
tributions on bis subject Se this Gazette must be
by thelr We must refer to this subject in a
be cero, A
raat . The clear white Wheat is the Chidham—the
oarse red Wi e paini variety.
at th
%, : „ —.— = after Wednesday cannot be
answered tiil the following
a 1S.
4. — v. 3.
plentif ul, — the supply of Pine-
ry off 3 more than half of th
the sheep are folded on — land, t eat the re.
n Turnips a aud day * will
maining Part.
have soon a little. Linseed or oil cake (I penn
be fatted this season) ; the pan ng
will be for berop as there is a
for them to eat cif, pa e if et would be hu
Grass, We have not yet given our sheep 3925 ad
plenty of Grass; but now that th 2 will noe —
colder Miey will get a little. We reshed some of the
ee which ae out very ar a every way, and
> _ as it is eat — a
We 4 — now e ot. ou
za
ag
whic
Our em Lane for som
to ve vom for Wheat, and ‘pious
— Op. The fin weather
us to get off a s many of
have destroyed by fire, and will find the ashes very useful o
drilling in with various crops. We intend to plant —
tatoes in = ee for which we are now å
W part,
no
ing the
days, which
rie
Wurzel 22 Tor — fields, for the ewes
pasture
weather has been ve
ba
w pp ri nig
sleari 4 storin
2558 the pits pith alayar otra
t them et and
— and
and draining 3 fee
cieauiog hedge ct crop te das, wh eh is very good, . B.
take up our
ed
the weeds from the land, which wej
to6d
to eats 6d
COVEN
Hothouse Grapes are
les of excellent quality 10 ‘well vap: Foe oe and Walnuts
re 3 Chestuuts Eman scarce, Lemons
gg plen = Pom 5
ach. Am
— per 100, 88 to
Cabbages, p. doz.,
wers, 2 s to 5 —
r
VEGETABLES,
——
P. 3
isd | Garlic, pet Ibu 4a to 8d
r | Gree „16 6d to 286 ar d G SO
ge sieve, } V. i 8, per doz.,
to
— Sprout, p. hf,
ls 6d to
Sorre, p- he — 2888
to 1008
izi
fa p. doz., 1s6d to 3s |
702
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. |
FIELD, MONDAY, — — “off, POTATOES. Sipe gg er 3 i 3
of — has considerably fallen and ommittee report that the market has been supplie TSS PATENT
is consequen —— brisk, at advanced rates. The improvement is quite equal to the demand since our last report, particularly R. PHILLIPS'S invention for extinoy;
y appar ent in secon — rate — which of late have from Yorkshire and the Continent. A few very choice Regents | 1 1 supplies the ready means of sayin
50 t to dispose mber of Sheep ie also | made 90s., but we cannot quote the price as general ; those | Life from that destructive element. The yen
r. risk, „but prices have adramaad for. alt from the Continent came to the market in er good condition, | cording to the scale of prices below, are a, — ac.
Trade is also proportionately better for Calves and Pigs. and 2 goni quality ; but the weather hap; bawn.so mild that | Ships, „ and Warehouses as well for Houses,
rom Holland and Germany we have 1093 Beasts, 3380 Sheep, | less m previous quota- | Property, viz., Out bälldings and stack; of Ha er Con ming
52 Calves, and 70 Pigs; and 1700 Beasts from Leicester and tations. “Th e following are this day’s prices: “York Regents, The vapou: 8 out from the Mac oie Produceabl
~
— 4
— nx — per ton; Wisbeach, 60s, to 703. Scotch, GOs. to | pleasure in a few seconds afte
Northampton, d s d Perst.of8lbs—s d s d nch whites, 8 to 70s.; Rhenish do., 50s, to 658.; | and extinguishes not only the 1 has
„Her est Long-wools, 3 8 to 3 10 Belgian aa 50s. t materials of property in general, but also rg from the
ee. 4 0 Ditto Shorn oer those caused by tar, turpentine, oil, s the same power
Ewes & 2d quality 3 0—3 4 MARK LANE. highly inflammable substances upon which, weet and =
2d quality Beasts 3 0—3 6) Ditto Shorn Monpay, Oct, 29.— The supply of English Wheat from | tion, water has no 3 en in combus.
Best Downs an Lambs ws „ % Essex and Kent by land —— samples this morning was Stationary Machines fixed for w protection
1 wt 0—4 2 sity . e 2 : moderate ; the former was disposed of on about the terms of —_ sonen a Theatres, Dockyards, and other 2
i t the r, pplications to 3 premises,
— 3787; Sheep and Lambs, 225 0; ‘Calves, iis; Pigs, 308. te offered at 1s. per qr. decline. Foreign met a retail in- | pany, 105, Leadenhall-stre et Lond — Secretary of the Com.
BDAY, Nov. uiry, and prices may be considered pominaliy as last week.—
I ce includi
The number of Beasts is — — Friday last; the We observe no alteration in the value of Barley or Beans.— | Size of Machine, one Charge, . Price of each
best 2 — disposed —— Mondays quotations, | y ee em ee ook wine ew must be written 1s. per qr. dearer.— aa or — . ee 7 2
Or
— > — a — . aa a —— — — e a free sale at fully late prices, but new are 34, — e É 0 0 2 La 0 76
lower. Calves are more in request than they have been for By FRIDAY, 5 -Tha market has been moderately supplied 4th, or n FA 600 mee s 0
long time anda rise of about 6d. per 8 lbs, is e, with English e during the week. The arrivals of foreign Sth, Or o S 0 0 0 14
are also dearer, owing to the 1 weather. From Wheat are oad, said moderate of other grain. We observe no The Machines can be made to order of any size, ata
—— neea many there, are 19 ester diee 4 Northampton, 1 — in t be ; — of Wheat, either English — — portionate price. & pro-
ves, a The trade is dull, and sales limited — Thin grinding Barley TR RoR a
Beasts ; — {ar ilch Cows 8 — a advance of — epee qr. ar Monday’s prices ; other HE BIRMINGHAME TLE EXHIBITION, 1349,
Best Scots, Here- wo EEN 3 8 n 3 10 | descri as also Beans and Peas, are unaltered in value.— AND MIDLAND COUNTIES
4&0. 9 10 to 4 0 Ditto Old — pri — good re — uring the EXHIBITION of FA » SHEEP, PIGS, and
Best Short-horns 3 8—3 10 Ewes e. 24 quali 2 0 — <3" 4 last y fase great oe i — prevailed in the Wheat ae. POULTRY, will be held in a temporary building
2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 4 ee Shor an a decline of 18. to 2s. per qr. has been submitted to upon Hurst-street, Bromsgrove-street, Birmin ingham, on Tugspay
Best Downs and see sen ee new, in — important markets of the United Kingdom. In | WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, and FRIDAY, the 11th, ‘12th, 13th, and
Half-breds ...4 0—4 2 bas“ Sebi beat? Ais : s —4 ° some a slight reduction has taken place upon old foreign. 14th of December ne next,
Ditto —— gs 21 — 4 * eee eee Printed Certificates for the several Classes may now de ob.
; ; Sheep and d Lambs, 5 620; Calves, 2 Pigs, ous: | LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, Ocr. 30.—We had a fair attendance tained, together with, — s of the Prize Lists, on application
of dealers at this day’s market, but a very poor demand — to ge Honorary § —
ntri — be — on or before — the 17th
HOPS.—Frimay, Nov. 2.4 Wheat, at a decline of 2d. to 3d. per bushel on new, and 1
ATTENDEN and Burrs ease that the demand for | old, especially on the — descriptions, Barley, sut;
w Hops continues at impro ces. Duty estimated at and F Peas heavy. Oats were dull, and 1d. per bushel cheaper.
80, "0002, ‘and py some wpa aided — e : — dull and 64. per qr. lower. Flour was also rather REAN AND HOTHOUS = made by machinery
. po oh taper arranted best materials.—A Lean-to Green 12
of ——— es B. Wai
3 Birmingham, Nov. ee
tool eine cant EE b 8 feet, lass ends, 1 doo d 3 f. — —
J 3 $ 5 s. | by gias eo e oor, an eet of glass in fron!
Remainder... a pa 275 tas 13. 200 8 with 16 oz, sheet glass of a large size, and POR att oo
17810d 258114 298 9d 303 0a | Of — oil colour, delivered to any railway or wharf in
£80,000 il 25 29 5 |31 for 1 1 0s. ; o. do. 15 by 10, 22/. 10s.; a do. do. 18 by 12,
17 5 9 9 0 29 281. a * o, 55 = 12, 32. 10s., including a plan for
H Ar Per I Load of 36 Trusses. 0 17 2 24 5 28 10 31 8 kes 5 1}-in Crea Lights, glazed with 16 oz,
D, Nov. 1 2 17 4 9| 29 5 30 3 | Sheet glass, painted three times, 11}d. per foot; 2-inch do., ls,
Prime Meadow Hay Gis to 728 VOlover sae . . 60810908 ; 5 f 2 [as 8| 2811|31 7 | per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Works, 8 —
Inferior ditto x 55 New Clover. — — . CUEAP AND DUKAS
pee we sus ue 24 28 Aggreg. Aver. | 41 9 | 27 9 17 6 24 9| 29 3 30 9 CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING.
New Har. J. Cooper. Duties on Fo- (yRoGGoN’ S PATENT ASPHALTE 1
MARx RET, Nov. 1. reign Grain | 1 0 1 0/1 0/1 0; 1 0l10 FELT is perfectly impervious to rain, snow, a!
Prime Meadow Hay os 688 10 725 Inferior ... ... . 50s to 80s Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn A has ested by a long and extensive e 8 in 0.
Inferior ditto... 50 ee New w Clover 8 — | Prices, | SEP T 29. Ocr. 6.\OcT. 13. oer. 20. 8 27 — Saves half the timber required for slates ; can be laid
New Hay... .. Str: 3 | facility by farm-servants, or
Old Clover 86 ' Josnua BAKER, 423 4d en 7275 E = a, Pri rice 1d. per square foot. CROGGON’S PATENT NO
Wurrzenarkr, Nov. 1. 42 4 . 8 ert oe „ | DUCTING FELT, for Steam Boilers and Pi , saves 25 per
Fine Old Hay .. 63s to 683 | New Clover 7 275 ide A Fes cent. of fuel. Samples and Testimonials sent y post on on appli-
Inferior ow AE 35 Infe r or ditto. . ee =e 5 | ed Aion to Croccon and Co., 2, Dow wgateshill, London..
How Hay .. o — — . M 96 1 4 = ae — L— F | | ia GRICULTURAL DRAINING : THE -DERBY
Old Clover. 80 88 "I 5 ads 8 ne —A Very Superior Draini
L g Level, of great
8 Brie p 15 to be had of the Maker, pe Davis, Opti-
London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. c'an, by above is securely packed and sent to any pars
PRICES 8 of the ton a
RENT, |Oct22,l0ct.29.| Oct.23. | Oet. 30. Oct. 19. Oct. 26. Oet 24. Oct. 31. Oct. 25. Nov. 1. tat isto Mra bang „
. 3 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 2 Ibs. Hydraulic power to wise ta 1 gallon to 1000 per minute to
Wheat— yſ Ba Be 1 Be BT oS. s. d. s. djs, d. s. d. a height of 500 feet, and from a depth of 900 feet. Douche,
New, red Ne 38 1043 38 7043 6 0 6 46 0 6 239 to4537—44 36 to40 34 a 5 0 5 85 0 5 8 Vapour, Hot-air, and all nae gree of 3 pang
„ White . 424842486 0 6 1016 2 6 8 * — 48/38—45)38—45/0 6 6 015 6 6 0 Conservatories, £o. Baniciu m
Old, rod 38—43 38—43 6 4 6 86 4 6 639—4389—43 — 5 3 5 915 3 5 9 V
„ White. 43—4543—457 0 7 67 0 7 4 19 — 47 — — 5 7 6 15 7 6 1| PROVED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STEAM-ENGINES
Foreign... |. |36—5236—524 3 7 314 6 7 2/32—46 32—46] J e a ee BOLTING OR THRESHING pe
480 Ibs, 480 Ibs, EMA AND
Rye — Old 23—24 — — : sak — A me 5 1 Makh n Wa nd, b to call attention to
i 3 i Th i ines, whic
renden bel . l % F | S|] SP |S | S| Retire ee sey at work don, cnn ap ees
á 5 — 8 eae — — — D — ic. seen an
r Ar. Ar. qr. qr. . 3 Bridge road, Water-rams for raising Water. ,
Grinding . (2426/2426, — — 2 2222128 123 222. 22 | Deep Well Pumps; Baths; ee
ing. 26—2826—26 30s—31s 308—31 n= 1 Se * owns supplied with Gas or — |
Foreign... . 18261826 — mae oe leas a CERET cay be paises Stucco, instead 6
: 6 bush. 6 bush, what ahem een Ft aud bythe useot
ent- Süß =. —{ = pze te. 8 A 20 hours o a 5 oe aye ee ree |
` ` à 451 45 lbs. kraami a M adopted wou n to dry. erpen -
oats— White.. 18—24 82438 22 3a 3s 2d 3 34| — | — 131813 18 19—27 | 19—27 | the slightest: difficulty, the se being oasi f
Black 16 16—22ʃ2 e sive than with an o what at
5 3 —22 2 12 7 — — — — 18—20 18—20 repared for — sa} Plastering: og lo Racal a 3
F 13— 3— 20/2 * 8 2 1 — — — penis — ee 88 specimens 0: of which may be seen at the Work
i oe =e. qr. qr. qr. 8 dnanrrs Francts and Sons, Nine Elms, ape
Peas—Boilers /28—30|28—31| 33s— | 30s— 263026300 — | — | 33—40 | 31—40 HH OT-WATER PIPES AND e ;
3 ; 196 lbs. | 196 Ibs, with all the paige |
Grinding... |25—30|25—30| 28 —29s | 28 —29s 11—12 Pe | gf Mokmater Pipes Elbows, eo Eico
; = ey ag: ora — 2 1 & 1, at J. JONES'S cash
Foreign .. |24—32/24—32| 29—30 | 29-30 | — | — | — | — — — HOUSES ; deres TA i st 1
Bea : t Ianga f
New, small .. 23—2923—29 — — 32—3330—31ʃ32—34 32—34 11—12 ar cou — — von ae an ae
— — 3% . „ Len any part of the kingdom 1o
3 28 ; ogl m found, for as
25 —35 |28—3026—25| — — 11—13 11—13 gens 2 shee’ * ey e 3 Nov. 150
40 —42 3240240 — | — — iis METALLIC Hi HOTS Ei
— — — — Sie eee 55, Lionel-stre irmin i
CLARK; Maniago, ‘ite. ig Deh to the 1
H: 1 = ae pe BA * RES Gentry for thelr liberal patronage of the above Bale er g
= te ee oe ee ne os — ry the —— vd 5 p fein him to offer bis .
2 ; ese Houses 0
6 ae a 12—13 12-13 | HOTHOUSES at a greatly r aaao P of from 24 to
280 lbs p- adk p. sack | per sack. | per sack i — pg, ap nd of such’ thickness as to — from lude
. . * h en „ an ae
30—32 | — | — [323513238] 31—34 | 31—34 | daoger of accidental breakage, whilst that whet pe pacatis
the action of frost is effectually preven nis Met ije Hot i
e * ers h all the — — — are bap |
a range
Imports. Aver. | Impts. Aver. Aver. Gloucester. 88 Mr. CLARE eg to the pg es admitted Wt
Averages. Imports. >y him in the new aa mplete of its hind i£ ©
ga „ 7 gre. , 7% gej e d qrs. 8 "the mos Koge
aoa 42 7 28143 37 7 | 3885 39 7 540 Beaufort-street, u.
403 28 6 499122 3 265 27 4 — peas bina ayn R Ya enen to ber See
10697 ji8 3 761ji5 0 | 2090 | 18 1 Z An moed, Chelsea: by SPeCORNAMENTAL WATES ONE
80 ; i — — — ae ponesi sd black Tei white ioe Egyp mee a 15
7 p 4 1058 30 5 234 33 4 %% | one winter teal gad si be.
| — — -m — shoveliers, ol d-eyed and dun * << Spanish e Jap Gi F
ECAR ond SANDARS| T qn, | Malay — — 7 1 BS *
e pma, | „SANDARS| THOMAS | 4. and C. STURGR, 7, Folan ‘Th pur, ia p6 )
44—1849. ] THE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
— by Aucti RO
uction HIDS AND PITCHER PLANTS.
Sales by Auction, MB. 2: c STEVENS is directed by Messrs, Huon | rmo BE LET, within 1h wis of Lees,
TO GENT LEMEN, FLORIE FLORISTS, aná Others, Co, to submit to Au tion, at 38, King-street, 1 of about 130 acres, with good F peee,
RS. PROTHEROE AND "MORRIS are in- Co ovest- garden, on TUESDAY next, Noy. „at 12 for 1 o’eloc 5 i „ 0 arm l
ESS | a small im 3 —— the laud — h pav considerable
eted to ot be 3 on oe premises, Highbury | a importation of ORCHIDS which they have lately received outlay h 7.7 considera!
> g from So A a in et t 2 y havi een recently lay be viewed, ond
opposite Barn vern, on FRIDA fi , ent condition, and comprising | particulars had, upon — Le on to ine WB 8
oer oth, at II o’cloc, S — of the „Proprietor, the selected 0 . 1 388 P To best variety | Agen at, Epsom, Su Surrey. orenen, Esta
NURSERY, STOCK, consisting of Frui it and Forest i Trees, ill be a fow Aerides and sone Mapentbes a. Sane Ween ond GLASS FO ONSERVATORIES
together | with a few fine Camellias well set with bloom-buds May b o cco Freres plants of N. ampullacea 04 imported.— GREEN USES, PIT FRAMES, e. :
choice D wart Roses, &c. 5 be viewed pa the Sale. 5 „ horning of Sale, and Catalog es had. a ETLEY ope CO. are supplying ion Oi Sheet t Glass.
Catalogues may be had of the pri — — f| TO NOBLEMEN, e Hiir NURSERYAES, & others, ritish Manufacture, packed xes containing 100
i the — American . sepone OKING, REY. yer fet each, at — e following REDUCED PRICES for cash,
OMPTON PARK N peia . —.— STOCK 5 — F = *
rgreen, and other Shrubs ; Fruit, Forest, . . Inche
ESSRS. PRO THEROE any | MORR Sare favoured other Trees. The property of Mr, Groncr Guarmax, de ad nder ¢ "by 124 i ee eet.
with instructions Eus - r, Joun N San ER and Mr, | _Clining war ess ERER wil From S ” — 0 „
BosesT DoNALD, trustees for the above estate, ry submit to an i will sell by Auction, on TUES. ” ” H » 6 24d. 018 9
. — e by Auction, on MOND az Nov a pe £ T, Non ember 6th, and following day, at II o'clock, — ” s s H » 4 8 —— a : 0 10
ce upon the Premises, situat ti , £
i gonis SS * aaa “of the exter nsive phon maces able STOCK mss the Soph We — = Ralo : mile from — —— ý ee 2
i ROMPTON FARK NURSERY, lately carried on by | STOCK, comprising 9000 variegaved Holler of ho week sorts, 1 Larger sizes, not ot exceeding 40 inches long.
$ . and Hoca, consisting of t ell-known and | from 1 to 6 fect; 7000 Green Hollies; 1000 Magnolia grandi- 2 from a 11 2 de e
Collection of Standard and — f Maiden and | flora, from 1 to 4 feet; 4900 variegated an en Box, from *
ete 0 7 . cote gate Cone = = ; laigs 2 to 6 feet; 4000 Yews, from 4 to 8 fee ; 5000 Chinese Arbor- 36 oz, ” 3 d. Td, —
f Evergreen an ecidu rubs, including large Portuga ite and Swedish Junipers, from 2 to 6 feet; 100 Sweet Bays ;
| ani common Laurels, common fan-shaped and irish Yosa 200 Hemlock proce Fin 7 R nga PATENT ROUGH PLATE, T THICK © — em —
American, Chinese, and Siberian Arbor-Vite, Laur rustinus, Portugal Laurels and Laurestinus, from 2 to 8 feet; 800 Spruce reduced pri ne GLASS for — al purposes,
Hemlock Birse, Red Cedars, Green and N Tolis and Silver Firs 3 to 10 feet; 20,000 Rhododendrons, GLASS TILES” ap aie 100 ‘tae e fee
Evergreen Oaks, Lil es, Spruce Firs & Also a choice Col. Imias, Azaleas, Phillyreas, Arbutus, Alexandria Laurel, thes ic th A 1 = mado: 7 any size or pattern,
lection of Pinus, Cedrus — Cedars Lebanon, and | Aucubas, and Ornamental Plants, 5000 Standard and Sinan Glass E ene ate
ee Grater 8 bed valuab 3 e sli Ilex, e arf nig 3 10,000 Limes, and other large maguißcent Mil Pane 22 ney ct ive Glasses, ‘Cucumber Tubes, Glass
c menta es; nts; 700, ad! i 8, various other a
a large Stock of Rhododendrons, Kalmias, —. bell worth the attended dere and other hitherto ma fom tured in —
Azalea s, Cc.
pproved hot-water apparatus
rames, “get and utensils, Also the stock o — eds,
Shop, Counters, and Drawers ; Counting-house Desks and fit-
ation, and will rot
Se. Safe, d — ee sare = prepar
n Nursery, Leytonstone, Ess
10 S0. GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, 8
1 NURSERTMEN, and Others engaged in
Mes
—Fare,
may be had on the premises, of the prin-
the Auctioneers, 1818 and Essex.
T0 NOBLEMEN, GEN ROE FLORISTS, and 0
C ĩð % / E E
; MESSRS. PROTHEROE A p MORRIS will sell. by
4 Auction, at the Auction Kart Bartholomew-lane, on
; 2 Ar 2 Standard and
ee 8a ' Bourbons collection
5
glass.
wi
planting.—May be viewed three days previous to the sale, and be present extremely moderate
Catalogues had on the premises ; of . Cua D, Seeds- po, o one uperior art 1 — it to supersede all
man, Covent-garden ; and will be forwarded on application Papoa r pagia sted 15 13 eman’s residence. No
by letter, inclosing fous postage stamps, to Mr. WATERER, Auc- r required,
GLASS SHADES, a
r Surv ape Chertsey, Surrey, ornamental to, and for
Leere al in of every deseri — of goods susceptibl
TO GEN TLENEN, T ACTORS, AND OTHERS. posure x ious anes te the removal of the cats ‘uty, re.
CHOICE NURSE i 4 STOCK, duced one-half, List of Prices and Estimates i
R. ae OCK is instructed l uction, on pplicetion to —— Herrey and Co., oh, 20 — m
— on MON DA Lond
five acres ‘ot
Youne’s
3
MES PHILLIPS anv CO., 116, BISHOPSGATE
STREET Wann offer the following :
2 a,
ntal
f the most purs — —
in 1 lots for th
as the land is
—— use. *Phe's may remain till the f ars week in Mar
if required, Further 132 he Mare printe
Sale;
nty Town
24 1
If rag at t top 16.
F 3
HAND GLASS
ACINTH DISHES
E the adjacent Count; YA
12 inch tee 2s, 6d.; 9 inch, 1s. 6d. ; 7 inch, 1s. each.
the Auction
e Chichester and Parteninath
h 3 — 13 mile of the South
F —.— : » 9 salented —— 0¹ Oran THE LATE MR. CLEMENT. TORRES STOCK OF
wuental 1 viz., “Adaathoe glandulosa, Purple Beech, APE VINES.
He Worked Thorns, Tulip Trees, Gleditschia, 5 Pinus R. HASLAM will * by Auction n, at the Mar
ie Ce da, Cedar of Lebanon, Cedrus Deodara, N on WEDNESDAY, Nov. 7th, RDAY, rg =
BULBS won ee , = ; . first class a eee a DUTCH | 10th, 10,000 VINES, consisting of Black patas Masea- x
t SE Or very üue ble and Single Hyacinths, ma Burgundy, Swatar, Ba Cluster, & c., grown from MILK PANS
‘ulips, Jong cus, Anemones, Gladiolus, Snowdro ops, 4 a af w of theme het worthy the attention of z
Le. Mag be viewed the morning of sale. Cata. | the eye a fe as “3 al 12 il. 22, 0d. 20 in.
logues had the Trade and those w “45 1 of the late Mr. Ho ire's 14 2
í Nursery on the Mart, and of the Auctioneers, American pt Tremis, havé reg aca. = the culture of 16 25 ster H ; — e
i yy onstone, Esse eae eee ee eee 8 be pd e 1 £ Dutch hus 85 3 6 2 ne
GENTLEMEN, B S N ; 2 and 200 Standar a Arse atx com he e had at the Mart,
m AnD rn NURSERTMEN, and of the Auctioneer, South Essex Nursery, Epping. Essex, e. te and Se, Pr tae ont Bee au =
MESSRS. PR PROTHEROE anp MORRIS will sell "Tg GENTES AR, FLOSISTS, AND OTHERS. ach Glasses, 104. ; Wasp Traps, 88. 6d. per dozen:
Casino pois, on the premises, See seg Nurser ry, N R. D. A. RAMSAY has received instructions to Pastry slabs, yacinth Glasses, Shades for Ornam
entonville, on MON Nov at 11 sell by Auction, — ths e Pre — pas npea paren pie me and —— Glass of every description, and Lamp
quence 3 Lease ing s sold for —— the | Fulh 88 Brompton (situate one de- par or tubes,
Y STOCK, comprising fine Evergreens, on IDAY, Nov. 23, at 12 2 by order of a 6 aban 19s. — JAMES PHILLIPS AND 00, 116,
yor’ 3 orest Tree a. i ree ian 8 E 'declining the Tata Sy and rem ee for Hetty ne 880188 tabs STREET WITHOUT, LON DON.
“Sag — Box Grena Ollies Privet, Lilacs, | of Sale. antity of Camellias a hřysanthemums :
Laburnums, Pop! lar, ee Lime, Moun- sorts, Lilium | 1 &.; rge specimens of a eee ee URPOSES, a MORE:
Standard and Dwarf Apple, — and Azalea indica, Aloes, Yucca, , be.: ;
seberries and Currants; Greenhouse mental Trees, with a quantity of Mush 8
N Greenhouse, Forcing-house, nine-light | Duteh Bulbs, Roots, & . May be viewed the day ‘prior and
oxes, Lights, &c., together with th ere OSs: Catalogues to be kad of the principal Seeds-
House, mer, consist of rooms, Shop, Wash-house, men, and of the Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fuham-road, : >
dad 3 be vi s 1 Brompton. m
dotte A premise o ~~ CHELSEA, OPPOSITE CREMORNE GARVENA. MILK PANS
uctioneers, Am n Nursery, Laro one Tesa. R. D. A. RAMSAY will Sell b Auction, on the 1 one
STOCK, CROPS, IMPLEMENTS, &c., ON premises, K: ni san, Chelsea, on TUESDAY, Nov. STRY
r FARM,” LEWISHAM, NEAR SOUTH-
d lot CK,
consisting of 2000 A cuba, tips po Laurel, Holly, &.;
quitting th
“a fires the — collec-
Roses, new silver.
PROPAGATINC@BEE CUCUMBER CLAS
‘of è Gooseberries, oven’ ed
3 8 a lange
1 d other Cre
seed 1P k 8 2 Azalea ee with ud Stam. wth Fa
of Aloes, Echinocactus, Cereus, r:
mune a May be viewed rior to ma sale. Cata! —.— to be from 2d. per foot and upwards ;
had on the premises; ef the principal Seedsmen; and of the large Sheet Glass, for ing up,
Brompton 3 8 road, Brompton, | Plate Glass, from 1s, 2d. to
Auctioneer,
London
Patent Rough ards. Gis from 3
4d. per foot ——
5 MSAY begs leave to offer his services to 12 10 24 f che
D. the — and others, as an AUCTIONEER, VALUER,
= Wo ts th — —— his personal attention, with
“of 2 urzel, a Riek cloth and poles, e — — 3 — 2 nae References e
stg Cob, oig, and Harness, and ail other given and letters . to Brompton Nur — — 5
ut the F Farm. To be viewed the day bef road, "Brom mpto p ded
— e avd offered for Sale ty Aue OMŒOPATHIC PATIENTS, DYSPEPTICS,
of the Auctioneers, | tion on the — premises. Tens sent on application, Hout i öf Delicate Constitutions, a 1 ‘Tee
. te Tae BE coded e ure TAYLOR BROTHERS DIETETIC
— UR COCOA, as being ‘the ©
Konus, NUR OTHERS, Nat hitherto introdu etur
A. RAMSAY, wil seli by Auction, on the — — om te f
ns n Nursery, Fulham.road, Brompton À i :
November 26, 1849, ani following day at 12 or | kose und
ote ‘ RY STO s 3 of agea
Limes, A a quantity of ous essen, pales proves at the came time both in
ie t and re
È Sage 5 e r Pe sk
Be, 1 a 4
een eines NURSERY AND oat oe SS, mio = ois pa — at 1s. 4d. per Ib., by most respectable Grocers and z
seke stin 7 Tea-dealers in the king ih At a ay be had Tavrot !
abo Brothers’ original SOLUBLE CVOOA (onty one-third the pric
5 Hyacinths, Nareis- ion of article exceeds ONE
dard of Coffee) the consumption — ME
-» comprisin ne 100,600 Ty cae, SOR TO MARKET GARDENERS, NURSERY MEN, * a Kir nove ee, which, AAN
7 5 Roi 10 Uig his hest bidder ‘on MOND AY, 70 BE LET, and e 1 10 upon immediately, YeD | parties — the appearance, are ta iy doer
the premises o s. Lockhart, Florists, ae Prime N T GARDEN LAN at Para pon resembling te proper e
; : Rn reserve, in consequsnee u ; are | ine article. epee ce e
s May be viewed till the day of trees, ane furnished — 2 4 1 her e the e purehase of halen eral in ickets
5 a 3 en eee Mr. I houses Held for a S e bis ae ie bear their mame, with
Ee bs post with Catalogues as «con as they Sach, 2 2 ees or to r, Banz ond 9 ere
Groet
7 04 THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF
WIRE NETTING.
STRONG
Pie
AND C. YOUNG),
MANUFACTURERS í OF TRON AND WIRE WORK, &c.
WESTMINSTER, LONDON;
LIVERPOOL ; 118 Hı IGH-ST
ully to
cultural So 0
where — Efficiency, Great
a
?
-i Aadal
yemni —
The immense damage done 1 Hares TIK Rabbits i in Gardens
hat in the cour — ye
and You
year 2 two it will amount to more ‘ban the entire e
with this Net. It is so 2 that ‘when
pose, akes drive
or —.— feet apart, Itis, besides, pecu
derin pr i He ae — =. 1 other existing Bian, completely im-
ont a ing cut up into small
ere Pieces of three —— — t forms a most effi-
at Tittle expense, 755 1 5 Plants and Shrubs.
8ins. high, herd 24 ; 30 ins., 1s, 3d.; and
. per line
b of rte 3 18 dak 125 will sos
f 100 yards, 24 ins. w
100 ple sig 30 ins, Wide :
f 100 9 36 ins. wide
If more or less than a web is required, it would be. Sga
atthe . — rate per
This Netting is pas dener. 3 for Pheasantries and
Poultry-yards, and is char t the saa rate. As carriage
has, in many 3 — — — obstacle to parties at a dis-
tance requiring this Net, C. D. Y. a nd Co. have made arrange-
1 — to oe it at any of the
nd, and Ireland, for One
nn 15 0
« p 0.0
1
21
beg af: tote ame width, at 9d,
per yard. es for — aaki — free of expense
C. D. I px & Co. testa ele every description of enie
IR ORK required fór this and foreign coun
Workinen Me: to all carts of Scotland. England, and ire sand
(GALVANISED WIRE DANE NETTING.—
d. per * 2 feet wi
eters (9
232. 225 22522
8
eae 72
8
SES 28222
10
extra strong |, lk 11
the above e oon Spinans made pA width at proportionate prices.
h, it will reduce the price one-
sparrow proof matting: for pheasantries, 3d.
po
BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place,
— 1 expense in London, Peter-
i h lement
—CoNTEN rs: Politeness—The Wonderful Sixpence: 1 3 too len
either Ancedote off of Rea 1 Life—Death Cl 8 Seif Advancement of | «To Mr.
i e, by Martin Doyle, 2—Cotta okery, by
E 5S SRB
anp COMPANY (LATE
CASTLE-
REET,
g
— and generous offers of co-operation were
es
[Nov. 3,
—
This day are published, price 10s. 6d. each, —
PORTRAITS OF HONORARY MEMBERS
IPSWICH MUSEUM.
DRAWN ON STONE BY T. H. MAGUIRE, Esq.
Published for Gzonce Ransome, F. L. S., Hon. Sec., to whom all orders must be sent
DEDICATED, WITH PERMISSION, TO HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN and PRINCE ALBERT,
Ips
n presenting PORTRAITS of several of the HONORARY MEMBERS of the Ipswich Museum to the: ideo 1849,
a ~ explanation h led to their oe This In 5 fre establis! in Iberer,
1847, aay with the object of contributing towards the free instruction of the Working Clas n the 8 in December
History, b y providing for them a good Mus seum, — 2 Lectures, and Classes. _ The * sa was n — oi of Bae
ma most
amply fulfilled,
omises hay,
opportunities have been afforded them, se o been
Unde: ee sense of their disinterested kindness, I d the P
= an t whom e fe el largely in nde ebte d for the e pr osperity whio has attended the pa ess of the IPswIcH Museu, 4
me time I h which it was ower to offer, fi
assistance they have centered us—either by y their interesting Lectures, or by their valuable donations to the A
It was e Prints to the Members of the Museum, but so man: ny
for copies have been made by the friends of those rides ‘Portraits have been taken, that I have obtained peri
limited number of large India Proofs at 108. Gd. each. They have accordingly Aa ca’ reserved for thi
1 a is W Any profit that may arise from the disposal of these
Institutio
to present to our Members t
the issu
funds of
e on Ranot,
The following are now ready :
RLES LUCIEN BONAPARTE, Prince of Canino, Author of, SiR Rg N ge Impey MURCHISON, 2 5 A.
‘ Fauna Italica, ‘ Continuation of Wilson’s American Ornitho- 2 a m e S, Ed.
To.
Sir J. P. Bolz zap, Bart., F. R. S., &e. &
James Scorr BowERBA NE, F.R. S., L. 8. “and G. S., Author of
‘ Fossil T and Seeds, e.
THe Most NOBLE TH E MARQUIS oF BRISTOL, F.R.S., Patron of
the Barik cit
a BuckTLAxD, D.D., F.R.S., L.S., and G. S.,
nst. Fr, and Vi President of the Ipswich
Museum, ‘Professor 5 Geology, Oxford, Dean of Westmin-
Author of Reliquie Diluviana’ owe a gant Trea-
Gem a Daguorredtype by Claudet.)
ARD — F. R. S., F. L. S., Author of“ “On Vicia angus-
folia’ in Linn, Trans.
JoHN ele F: R.S and L.S., Author of Birds of Europe,’
Birds of Australia, > &.
CHAR
Si. 5 rsb., Cor Ins tr,
Author of * The ghee ian — € The
and the Ural Mountains, Alps, 2 and
&., &
TEE Bo ed ae oF Norwicu, D.D., F.R.S., late
d F. G. S., Patron of the Ipswich Mien om
ROBERT PATTERSON, V.P. Nat. Hist. and Phil. Soc. Belfast,
Author of “First Steps to Zoology,’ ‘ Zoology for Schools,’ &.
Lovett Reeve, F.L. 5 Author of Conchologia Systematien“
© Conchologia Iconica,? &e,
PRIDEAUX Jonn SELBY, F. L. S. and G. S; M.W.
‘t British Ornithology,’ British Forest Trees, ig
Rev. Epwin SIDNEY, M.A., Author of 1 Wheat and
their Re medies,’ and EHlectriei rieity, its Phenomena; Laws, &,
WILLIAM Spence, F. R. S d L. S., V. P. Ent. Soc., Vice-Presi-
gaps pe ofthe] Ipswich Serata, Author of An Introduction to
gy,’ e.
Author of
REV. nstow, M. A., F. L. S. and G.S., Professor —
Botany, Gamb., Koc boar of. the Anta Museu
uthor of Pri
ne iple
8
SIR — Bart., — R. S. E., and L. S., c., e-Pre.
sident of the Ipswich Museum, Author of The Miki 3
ary,” 8 to “Ornithology, oor
Rev. saben te ot KIRBY, — L.S. and G.S., President
of the Ipswich Mus m, Author of — paré oductisn to Ento-
WILLIAM TRHOMrsox, President Nat, Hist. and 9 5 8
Author of The 9 History of Ireland,’ &
gee “Bridgewater Trecia 5 NATHANIEL WaALLICH, M. D., F. R. S. L. and E., F. L. S. and G.8,
J noie „ LL. D., A. S., author of Antiquarian Researches Author of Plante Asiatice Rariores,’ &.
nthe Tonian Baan, and Founder of the Hartwell Obser-
tory.
JoHN — Ph. D., F. R. S. and vy S. &c., Professor of Botany
n University College, Load ; Au thor of ‘ The Vegetable
Kingdom,’ Ine Theo oy of Honing e? SC.
ILLTAM YARREL wth P.L.S. and Z. S., Vice-President of the
Ipswich 7 — 1, Author of History of British Birds, Au.
tery of British "Fishes, &.
The following gentlemen have oe consented to ~~ 5 bilat added to ve Series skroto 1 D. T. ANSTED:
R. S.; Professor T. BELL, Sec. R. S.; W. B. Ca ARPENTER, M.D., . Cortis, F. L. S.; C. DaRWI, F.R. ; Professor
= —, — — R. S; Professor OWEN, 1 Di F. R. S.; the Rev. Paesens e F. R. 8.; Sir G. LYELL, F. R. S.; Sir W. 4
OOKER
opr < BY DR. GOLDS BIRD.
publis hed, in fep. Svo, price 5s. Cd. cloth,
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING
BY HOT WATE
i pries ECTURES on ELEC TRICITY and ALTANA.
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS,
ee FERNS, de:
tended Dr, GOLDING R. S., Fellow of the Royat
íl College of Physicians ; Assistant Be cian to, and Professor
H dica at, y’s Hospital, ‘ :
HH on: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LonGMANS. ——
H MHE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, for the yeas
11 1843, 4, 5, and 6, unbound, to be SOLD for f 10s, Maybe
HH seen at Mr. vas s Libres, 7, Ange Hammersmith,
2 701.50
ESSE E ROSS'S „ e i DIBBLE—
e see oor he 80
egie ‘
WEEKS von a Eades hreier 8 ——
® TURAL ARC HOTHOUSE BUILDERS, and HoT-WATE
J
APPARATUS N solicit an inspection of their Renne
various Works now in progress, which will — as to — that merited t
f materials and ar ce en They have now erected on thei:
most 8 3
in every other r way superior, if
and Royal Agricultural catalogue
et, Pwliheli, “Carnarvonshire, Oct:
hae forms k
$, Greenhouse, Ferns, and other Plants, in such imme 8 ae
bers, that as they are ot at LESS THAN HALF-PRICE. —The part of the field of ben a
Spawn, and everything connected with the machin obtained from you last pe PPE
1 d Seed r Plans, Estimates, and Cata- eing mu h more than = py dag
d on application. plant the 2 y
ason, I will, theref rs m
d erewl
y Y AnMoUTH aa ie eee, ea AND OF cee 3 3 remili
NEST QUALITY.
Yarmouth has ieee —— been justly celebrated for its
8 gs A —— ” the delicacy of — ——
obtained enuine sta nan no comment.
opportunity i a offered ; 5 ey can be 1 to any
n a post-
Da
“To Mr, Jesse Ross, 73, New vats
Sir,—When I purchased from y
Machine for my Booey a0 tenan rapt
kingdom, or for 9 (on receipt of a ried it: th
Pice arder), at 425. per 100, package elne AT o rders to 1 2 seed see hay
be addressed to ~i = DERICK BROUGHTON Youett, Church- | and of course takes much less
square, Great Yarm ch so as to save all t
m in the und, and
e
HE FAMILY 28880 1815 FOR NOVEMBER.
and heap Cook
; m Eleventh Article : compete Soles, cg =e B tn
ns, |
sipi Rie
42
‘Bat
Th—
Norwie
Implement Vendors
| e orders requi .
| Printed by Wrunras BRADBURY, of No. is, Ope om: Shia
Parish of St. Pancras, ag oe Ties h County ©
ie
e . e b.
ments and Com
SATURDAY, NovemaEn
Dat 13
; and sold
i at ait Mi Hie
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10.
[Price 6d. 6d.
No, 45—1849.]
——
d IN .
wat 1 Indian Cotton aise r
q ey ae {England 716 Ireland, emigrati n fro s... 1
710 Light, effect of, rd 8 me
717 Lime on clay fallows ..........
716 Maize, culture ph in ees 705
. 709 Odours stp 3 ne
712 Orchids, 80
44 Boi 55 „nn . 712
718 Peach-hotus, pennant of 71
710 Peach trees
‘stem s. 709 Pear, Chaumont eiie
wild .. 709 Plants, diseases o
to transplant. 5 710 « — odours of..
en 715 Potatoes, to EE eee
707 layering a preventive
707 isenge ....0006
- Til es, to raise from see
bs Royal Botanic — 0 710
„ 7 Salvia wien ++ 710
mithfield club...... ove 714
Ped deus sees Sowi g br — ... 716
. Trade memoranda ,
Vegetation, effect of 1 on 710
Villa gardening,.... s... 1 509 ¢
Vinca, monstrous, , CTET 00
Wheat. application ‘of ma
nures to % 71
Yucca gloriosa, large 710 5
run. —In last week’, 3 is Paper, in: in Mr. Henry SHAILER's
ent, front page, col. a, in ae 5th line from the end,
per pal
VER. Srey GLAD
W~ DENYER, SEEDSMAN ay are RIST, 82, Grace-
f i E London, begs to offer strong roots of the
ollowin
vape ndid, — — or 58. per dozen.
us, beau ful, 9d. e
Lilium lancifolium — — $s. cach. 3
nustum, very pretty,
Fine ‘mixed late Tulips, —
ue collection, 10s. per 100,
Spanish Iris
„ mixed, all — ai Pi pe
No cha are for packa
Caution.— W. D. begs
with any other person Of the same name,
ENDLE’S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE should
connection
e us y all who wish for a good bloom of AH
hg and other Dutch roots, Sold in tin canisters at 2
38. — he each, 15 sexier MET BE 2 apply
M E, REN and Co., Union-road, Ply uth.
Our ave 4 ie adjoining the Plymouth Station
of the oath — Railway, and o
ceeded 6000 tons during the last five years.
AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, RREY.
OHN WATERER has much plea ae in announcing
he has published a 5 7 1515 Catalogue of his — 5
sive N 4 RHOD RONS and other emis
— "P, 1 nana, 1s.,” read “ ants, &., which will be arg on —
RNER’S “ EARLY CONQUEROR” PEAS.—
HINE’S LIST "OF “PELARGONIUMS, contain- “This superior new EARLY PEA, which has s largo pods,
ing most of the tending. varieties, is now r eady, and may | Ye J DERICK
Per dozen, parcheser’ 8 selection, 218. WARNER, 28, Cornhill, and3, Lawrence Pou — 5
i phad on 1
very strong. 0 70 e made fo r ham
“plants 2 in to compensate for carriage.
ce Nursery, Ramsgate, Kent.
INE PLANTS FOR SALE. — The different varie-
ties of Blacks and Queens, warranted 2 and za ooted.
doplyto W. Davies, Starch Green, Hammersmith, near London.
RUS DEODARA
r or package,
3 ang ch the 8 so — 4 . — fe 37 —
es 0
ded on receipt of o
amphlet on 9 — 3 Bad br 2 losing t of the wood
ing three postag
-roa pati Bris
CHRYSANTHEMUMS,
HANDLER and SONS, Nurserymen, Vauxhall,
unknown — raga 0. and Sons — aiso
7 fine stock of Evergreens, at very reasonable prices
$ r
: 3 Roses,
e to the
N MACULATA, , admirably adapted for
and flowering early, 25 — plant, or — ge r dozen,
M. Sranx, Edgehiil Nursery, Edinbur
YATPS NEW STRAWBERRY, ees
en an D SONS are prepared to se nd ut
: of this « and the following — at — prices
: Myatt's — — 60. 61 rtilised Hautbois,
British Q 38. 6d. ; itz ; Mammoth,
Weiz s Seedin g, 38. 6d.; š + 7 e el 38. wi ;
ia aris, 7s. 6d,; Pri 0 78. Gd, ;
Ai’ Black Prince, 1 ris, Be Boge neess Roy
: ers are requested to be made payable to
Deptfor
rade when
ge
TATT, Manor Farm, ord, Kent.—Nov. 10,
— R. CANT, St. _ Sola s-street Nursery,
$ delivery, strong Well-
8. 6d. each.
venice BR RILLIANT © 17 44 55
e and package Prt i — n.
from unknown cor-
r — — request
The usual discount to the tra
8 Dar a 3 a *
er
2
` per ¢ ‘dozen, ce to 9
e bulbs —— eee beautiful Lilies, viz., Lancifolium
albı
BARNET NURERIES, HERT
\ N TM. CORNWELL begs to call the attention beck aag
Demen and theTrade to his extensive NURSERY STOCK,
and solicits an inspection of the same, which is ae yo this
season, — n arly the American Plants ; Age of 100,000
Rhododendrons, many of them from 012 feet, fines cimens,
with a large qu ity ot Azaleas, ‘Kalming s, Andromedas,
icas, Ledur rnamental Trees of all sorts, from 8 to
b
of Flowering
1 and Dwarf Roses, in quan
kinds, with every article in the Trade, an the lowest
W. O. begs to remind his Friends and the Pu blio that the
Sale by Auction, advertised aa take place at the Barnet
Nurseries, is not f. om the abov
HORTICULTURAL EST ABLISHMENT, BRACONDALE,
— e Jeading
NORWICH,
J intorn — 2 pro ep of 2 — , begs to
and the Trade in general that he is
men
ELLING OFF is NURSERY Y STOCK, at the f 4 1 low
9 all wa ted true and well worth their a
Dwarf ee’ — * 8, Neate: rines, and Apri tem, ‘ite x s d.
cluding all the popular sabes sf fine Pes hat 0 0
D ma ae Se . 55 10 0
rg T eo oe 2 ip 0 0
Be. woes * os 30 0 0
Do Do., soi Quince Stocks . oo „ 10 0
Do Ap nles vi os i ee 10 0
Fastolf Raspberr. ong ca ti ue per 1000-3 0 0
Cedrus Deodara, one y 0 $ 9 stir 1070: 0
Fine Spanish Chesinut, 8 to 1 oe * y 0 0
nahi 3 — years transplanted W W dale * * 4 0
If 50, 036
E S IMPROVED KIDNEY, THE
OF EARLY POT ATOEs.
MOST PROLIFIO
e pleasure
in announcing that in consequence of their havior a very
heavy crop of their IMPROVED KIDNEY TATO
of or reduced its price from 15s. o 10s. per bush
one
he f th
ee —— ay.
Nursery, Kingston, Surrey, Nov. 10.
er’ UNLIMITED STOCK OF SEEDLING AND TRANS..
3 LARCHES, of the Finest Quality, at reduced
Pri
Ww. M. wooD AND SON beg to caren attention to their
es of which will be-
furnished | on applic
Woodlands ate Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex, _
RENDTE Rabin PLYMOUTH,
CKS. HE
HORNS O R QUICK — 8 000 FINE TR
ANTED THORNS re 12 to 15 inches for 31.
we eur old Seedlings tor 15s.
RCH.—10,0 00 One- -year old Seedlings for 20s.
SCOTCH. Bs 5, 000 One- year — ee for Ses
Cf wept AND NECTA warf Trees or
Ma „ per posea 3 Tr siap e from 24s. to
308. per an ; fine — — at 503, per dozen.
9 ait the bert 3 in cul esse true to naue.
“ secre s ring we re »—This has
ANS-
10,000-
PEA
iden
been
my iann a be th arly ty ka We have more
a 1000 strong, lare, pens well pi resin Toots, a at 208. per
* These will produce abundantly next ring Smaller
Vicrorta.”— Very strong roots, 15s.
per doze mal
RASPBERRIES, R? “REND
rge Peggy variety,
the most complete seg tion. 1 Canes, 8
er zen. YOUE = ipek LFF,” 108. per 100
ES, Myatt ANoR,” 10s, per 10; Cut-
A e Fa is. 6d. per 3255 "Eiza, 5s. ot 100; Mam-
6d, ag ; Cole's Pro lie, 5s. per 2
Bedig 5s, pe 00,
CEDA a S OF LEBANON.—We have a large stock of th
in pots. “pos Plants, 18 inches, 12s. per done ae
er var ge š lants in j|
pe ach; or, one quarte charged. We myd
large Pol which must be 0
i 2 — i i get , 6 feet high, well
transplanted, 80s, p = 30%, ror 100.
BEST D 22 PRUSSIAN 1 4 TS, 5. per 100
ES CUKRANTS.—Very superior to the old
18
BL ACK, NAP.
sort, 6s.
T ra the very best varieties in culti-
308.
“PORTUGAL L AURELS.—
gm Aa 5 * ps — bushy, 20s. per 100; 3 feet,
100; 4 fi .
P BERIS, 0 9 AQUIFOLIUM, —A very large
quant, 18 inches, lës. per 100. This is a fine "Shrub {or
an | rosea, strong plants, 12 inches, 6s, per den;
Parnettia mucronata and floribunda, 6s. per dozen; Ribes,
An immense stock will be sold
* d japoni-
„„ . 1 8
8 sinensis, — nag as 15 5 16 E ki
f Greenhouse
n Bords of ali kinds te
Garden $ Nursery, Stoke N oe Noy, 10,
aa ore ys
dum, strong plants, 18 ine 9s. per dozen,
SEAE KALE and ASKARA G5. —In tan ge quanities, from
10s, to 20s, per 1000.
Our new —— nal Catalogue eg published, and
will be sent, gratis, to any applicat
Remiitta e or eee in 1 from unknown
gh sre
orders pre 51. sgi 8 ve red free of c am
to = r the stations on the ame ai
Exeter, or Great Wes ‘ai ay Steam rs Prom: 5
this pity v London, Dublin, ark, 8 Belt i
tapen E three limes a week, :
one ee von Kailway is now open to Plymouth, the
Station ‘bing adjoining our premises, For Cacalugues and
apply
. RENVLE and Co., con Pisak,
ESTABLISHED 3
706 . THE
AMERICAN PLANTS. th hal joel
OSEA WATERER to annou
published a New and Complete Catalogue o ot his oe
CAN — CONIFEROUS PLANTS, which be had o
application, inclosing two stamps for postag'
- Hosea WArTERER, Knap Hill Karson. Woking, S: Surrey.
MYATT’S LINNÆUS R
MYATT anp SONS can confidently recommend
J e this variety as the best in cultiva ion. The most satis-
factory proof of this a i
Gardeners round London
neus Rhubarb more ekteni an any other variety.
ro
rvin and all culinary pu ted
8 S jitto, 3 Royal Albert, ls. 6d. ; Victoria,
9d. The usual Trade allowance.— ost-office orde ers are re-
quested to be pete payable to Josera Myatt, Manor Farm,
GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.
G JACKMAN, _Norserrman,
Flowering Shrubs, Standard and Dwarf Roses, Fruit and
Forest Trees, &c., which may be had on application, — —
stor the e of
Nursery Stock on the Pa. inst. Moc at his 2 Mr. Ww.
Jackman o has declined business.
e 7er ge RAILWAY CONTRACTORS,
OTHE
OHN PARTRIDGE has Six. Fiun dred Thousand of
ong WHITETHORN QU 8 5 for sale this season,
all three years transplanted, and he can deliver them at the
Leighton a Atakon of the Lobdon and Birmingham
beti g Bedfords. hir
Deptford, Nov.
OBER . STARK, NURSERYWAN AND FLORIST,
begs to intimate that his Lists for the,season of the various
es noted a rneath, are now ready, and may be had a
ope-
ae KITLEY a to inform the lovers of this
favourite flower that he has a quantity of fine double varie-
ties, varying from white to black, with all the intermediate
a? at2l. per hundred. Also, a few come’ show varieties,
2s, 6d, each.—Lyncombe Vale Nur rsery, h, Nov. 10.
e
changes of dried specimens, or other interes iog Botanical
objects.— Edgehill Nursery, Edinburgh, Nov.
t
m GREGORY begs most 3 toe
the undermentioned NEW GERANIUMS and
FUCHSIAS,
CHOICE SEEDLING GERANIUMS.
se
r the 10th of November next
S BELMONT. wee very dwarf habit, a free bloomer,
— I petals blotched with dark puce, the lower petals striped
with the same colour; good for bedding or pot culture. Price
6d.
LUCI SEA COMPACTA. N N N from Lueia rosea,
a very free bloomer,
A
a 2 e upon its pare y
a compact habit of gor ma ‘adapted f for bedding or pot
ure, and colou um, not surpassed,
SPLENDID NEW FUCHSIAS.
Tobe tth
Bs tt ew paron White Fuchsia yet introduced ; a pure
like consis i
Sepals light tinged with pale blush, tipped with a pretty
of green, Pre 10s p arra nt scarlet, flushed with crimson
ACTÆON.—A ry fine large dark flower, tube
and se of rich crimson, 1 sepals ‘measuring 4 inches across,
placed horizontally ; corolla very large, bright ogee —— =
the beautiful barrel ‘shape, so desirable; a very free bloom
and of excellent habit ; confidently recommended. Price 10s. 6a,
CORINIUM. —A well-shaped dark flower, tube a pals
bright — of desirable consistency ; coralla er e tiok
purple, a ree bloomer, and of rather dwarf habit. Price 7s. 6d.
The 2 — discount to the trade 7 all the above.
Royal Nursery, Cirene eee ist
HE SUBSCRIBE ER Tai 58 Ofer 28 following:
niche thre bes
1 m, Engish, eds ed
Alders, bedded, 2 years. nr W e per 1000—12s. My
Beech, 0 | Gorse, 15 year 8 2
— 2. — i 20 0 Gan te 2 8 She oA o
ae bd 5 tos 0 | Oaks,
TRANSPLANTED FOREST AND One DIRETA. eet
aouen Tho ft., p: 100, 128. Od] Chestnut, Spanish, 3 to
ders, 8 to 10 feet ... 12 0 4 feet, per 1009 . 50s. 0d
Ash, 3 to 4 feet, p. 1000, 25 0 Chestnut, faa 6 to
4 t 30 0 8 fee 5
Birch, 2 to 3 ft., p. 1000, 25 0 Do., 10 to 12 te A 25 a
meS the true ee rai: ee here, 3 r 4 feet, 125. per 1
4 to 6 fe
75 ” 27 to bs
a i 8 to 10 feet, 60s. per 100
6 10 to 12 feet, 80s. per 100
x Hertfordshire, at the same pri ces
n English, 3 to 5 feet, 35s. per 100
Fir, sare veg 52 to 3 feet, $03. per 1000; 3to4 est: 403. per 1000
3 2 Me 3 feet, 50s. per yo 3 to 4 feet, 706. ee 1090
3 to 4 feet, 3538. per 1000; to 5 fee t, 453. per
10 ar per
Limes, -twigged, from layers, 2 to 8 feet, 128. to 50s. per
160 ; 8 tø 10 feet, 75s. per 100; 10 to 12 feet, 100s. pe er 100
5 . per 1000
Oak, English, 3104 feet, 358. ae i 4 to 6 feet, 50s. per 1000
£ Turkey, 2 to f feet, a
Pine „ Scotch, 3 to „ 208. aiy e 4 to 5 feet, 35s. per 1000
Poplar, Black Italian, 5 to 7 feet, 40s. per d
Lombardy, 7 to 8 feet, 25s. p. 100; 8 to 10 feet, 30s. p. 100
Sycamores, 3 to 4 feet, 253. per 1000 ; 4 to 5 feet, 30s. per 1000
Willows, Bedford, 4 to5 ft, 203. per 1000 ; 5 to 6 ft., 353. per 1000
it ve arge sizes of the above ar fine, well rooted Ca
having been teiue transplanted, and are admirably ađapte
for planting where game abound
2 MENTAL TREES AND SHRUBS.
Acacia (R foarte several fine species, dwarfs, 93. per dozen;
Standards, 12s. per d
=
e A — to 1
Althea frutex, a fine ae collection, 63. ta 9s.
; Ash, 12 fine sorts, amongst which are the pela — Chinese, | Be:
02.
5 ylla, &e., 12s. per do:
Beech, ernmleaved, 2 to 3 5 v » do.; 3 to 5 feet, 12s. per
doz.; 6 to to 8 foet, 18s 18s, pe
s3 ft., 8s, re — 60 s. per 3 to 4 ft. 5105.
rer doz., Fin por 100; 4 to5 ft., 155. per i 1003. per 100
Berberry, several 8 408.
Bre, P. P , fh per doz., 0s. per 100
- Elms, 5 sine Kanes na eee e., 68. to 128 p. doz.
Thorns, 2: varieties, including new double scarlet, dwarfs 10s,
PS al per doz. — 128. to 158.
: urnums, standards, fine, 6s. per doz., 40s.
Lilac, sorts, 253. per 100. Mountain Ash, bie fh. 13 123. per 100
Maple, Eagle’s Claw and several choice kinds, 9s s, per doz.
9 Oak, fine gone of American ee „ to 9s. per doz.,
. —4 mixture for shrubberies, 3. per 100
D 2 „2 to 3 feet, dos eas
ls, 2 3 foet, 20s. ; 3 to 4 feet, 100 ; Portu-
et, Eo s. per 100 ; 3 00d feet — tote.
3 feet, very fine dea! Bodice 1,
and Siberian, St he be ey
O PLANTERS, &¢e.—The — — having
arge overstock of the following FORE TREES, a
at very red i
Beech, 2 to 3 feet; Weeping Birch, 1} to 2} feet; Horse
Chestnuts, 4 to 5 feet; Spanish ditto, 13 to 2 feet and 2 tog feet;
ird Cherry, 2 to 3 feet Hazel, 1 foot and 2 to 23 feet; Lilac,
aie and blue, 3 to 5 feet; ‘baste: English, 3 feet; Thorn
Qui cksets, 2 feet; ae ate Yews, — w ee feet ; ous, seedling,
2 years old; Larc ch, ditto, 1 and 2 y
AMPERDOWN M.
The Subscribers respectfully invite attention to the above
variety of — a originated on the estate of the Earl of
Camperdow r Dundee. It a quite N me *
gomon weeping 8 being more pendant; form
very graceful ornament to the Pleasure-grounds. Tine Teos,
7 to 10 1224 high, 3s. 6d. to 7s, 6d, each.
Pri a List, now ready, 5 i be had — esera
Wu. Udo T and Sons, Nursery, Dunde
REENH OUSE, —Wanted to pu ——— a d-
hand S aetna in by letter, yy . size,
price, and where situate, to J. W., Messrs. Evans and Son,
Builders, Wastetieet Walworth, Surr robe,
5 5 SUBSCRIBER begs to offer the following list,
ich can be relied on as being the most healthy, 9 — rous,
and gane; — — hed res gi — Dre oe and will make fine
| specimen
8 on n
Ampullacea peere Eximea Perspicua nana
Aristata Ferruginea Propendens
—.— — Florida campanu- |Retorta major
PReanmontia Hartnelli [lata Rubra —2
Bergiana Hiemalis Splenden
Bowieana Hybrida Sy ——
Bandonii Juliana Tricolor yA
Cavendishii Lambertiana rosea „ rubra
Cunninghamii Lactiflora „ Wilsonii
Colorans Licopodioides Ventricosa, sorts
8 ee miele, Westcottii
Elegans etuleefiora, tr
And many 83 — varieties 128. to 218. per dozen.
ALEAS.
Alba 3 Dake ot Devonshire Murrayana
+ Dilec — uncle
Ans Exq
Ardens Fiora 7. 75 rubra Obtasa
Aurora Formosa Per
Broughtonii ee, Rosen superba noya
Blanda v Refulgen
Coronata iga Vaiterate
Coccinea superba Tateritia ‘grandiflora
128. to 21s. per d
GERANIUMS,
Armida superba Flamingo Norah
Agricola orget-me-not Ondine
Brunette Gustavus Orion
Bacchus Gulielme Phyllis
ant e Piutarch
Beauty = Clapham poes Lip Prometheus
Black Knight y Lind Queen Victoria
Belle of the Village King P mt Rolla
Clarinda tine “ea P
Cassandra Lalla k Rookh par.
Cavalier Miss Bercns Sipettative
Centurion Minna Sylvia
Chimborazo Mrs. Cavendish Terpsichore
Cupid Miss Holford Windsor Castle
21s. to 42s, per dozen.
CINERARIAS,
Attila. Cerito Lilacina
Alboni Defiance Maritima
Grandissima Maid of Artois
R — a N > boat agg Beauty
Dena iè Peckbam |Lady Tamworth Rosetta
ne St. John's Lady Cotton Shep- pe ga
atell
Beauty rae Uttoxeter Lord John Russell Standard
Crimson Perfection
to 21s. per dozen.
STOVE PLANTS,
Æschynanthus pulcher Js dd Hoya C amii ... 23 6d}
85 3 (strong) 3 6 75 alis TAE E
7 nr ERS kae or Balsamina
1 cathartica. 1 6 repens, per doz. .. 6 0
„ grandiflora . 2 6 | Ixora coccia strong,
„ Schotti 5 8. 6d. to 2 6
Achimenes Loudonii... 2 6 | Lagerstremia 3 2 6
„ Oe 5 she orig Larpentæ, per
th ea Jamesonii, 6 0
OZ. 6 0 Rondotetia speciosa mi-
Franciscea ee 2 s. 6d. to 2 6
3 6 siphanoii fioribunaa,
ees Be | 5. Gd. to 2 6
Hibiscus a beide 2e
treenhouse PI tante, 128. to 24s. per dozen,
sel isori bie Po oie, —.— r dozen. Select chrysanthe-
yan tae N varieties, 63. to 188. per doz.
il a . All orders be accompanied with
order in favour of 5 James Epps, Bower |
, Maidstone.
ing,
| FR oper Brist SHACKELL,
Upper
its exquisite fragrance, it
From various public
ry
the Be * Ga rdener? 4
Bat wwe h ave much ple
— made by vou in this tribe
ti j
3 e fact of its begi te.
tinuing till the end of March, is a aud cot.
0 ‘i n itself, Ja
growth of t i supersede the
— been cultivated has
oer
Antr Ai coe — d ih
the grower as proving acceptabl
t 38
A remittance m om pay aft Gale When a dozen ay
dered, th are 2 eli — 5 oa B
ga e! 1 — 55 cer tga ia e vere — ath station of zin
( Hr AND 15 ey by m
best materials
ae |
a |
8b. 10s. 5 a fas. do. 21 by 1
brickwork. 1}-inch e Lights, g
sheet glass, painted three times, 114d. per foot;
per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Nanas
Middlesex.
HEATING BY
WEEKS anD Co, Ki 1 road, Chelsea, Ps
and M Manufacturers of HOT-WATER APPAR
Economical Boiler _— all 2 —5 fire warranted to last i
hours without att
their Show Establishment, ee Chelsea; and alsost
most of the Nobility and G tiemen’s Seats in the couatry, the |
Li ondon Nurseri — oe c.
GLASS FOR CONSENT cous AND HORTIOULTORL
MILK PANS
PASTRY PINS
PROPAGATINGABEE CUCUMBER CLASSES p
; 1 ad
MILLINGTON’S — 8 ok
P, 200 fert
Plate Glass, from t . 5 I inch in r
Patent Rough Plate Glass, from 8 to les. Mak Pans!
I nd Tiles. Mus A
4d, per foot upwards. 2 ‘Cucumber T
fees Bh
12 to 24 inches diameter, from : 1
from at — . 5 ld. pgs Lactate
each. a on , . mide
warehouse, 2 575 nde ithout, ;
RAY, O ORMSON, anD ‘prow’,
nelsea, 3 the ‘attention of the,
—— superior
every
work done by t them a
which aap ons ha
tinues Ace
i cet dot Zäu-chneria Californien, A ey
make the 2 the higher sum per to
SEASON,—NURSERY GROUNDS,
on NORTH STONEHAM,
unlim upp eve on of
AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, AMERI-
SHRUBS, may be pro-
nds, at the most reasonable
may be had of the pro-
ee WI. printed ERS, Sen., NURSERYMAN AND CONTRACTING
d Forest Trees, 1 to 2 feet, adapted for extensive
Cope e fort — sold by the thousand; and
r Ornamental Plantin ug or immediate
t trom 5l. to 201, p. acre.
8 8
fit for planting out at once to
fs Pt tek
with large handso f flow
+ 1 foot, 40s. per 100; Ralmia rune 2 97
er 100; 1 to ? feet, blooming bu rd 50s.
„ 258. Re
8, 0
Ae Dougla asi, Tom seed, 6 to 9 tithes, 10. per 100 or
8s. to 123 per 1 to
NEAR SOUTH. info
Censker Wrote.
rmed on all such rane in ou
To Mr. KEE * eer of 2
and member of | the Royal Ace of Bordeaux,’
we learn from ave has been reserved the Bnet |
of seriously reviving Copnserr’s folly. He has
persuaded the Comuni aas ners of Woods and Forests
> — him try some experiments in St. James’s Park,
ood move on his part, inasmuch as simple people
wil therefore imagine ‘that his scheme is viewed
with official favour. Both Lends and country
newspapers have puffed his 8 ; à corps
of seedsmen has undertaken to vend the learned
8 s “new hybrid,” A the rota 8 =
s. 6d. a bag, which is onl t guin
5 seed; and he has
h thanks the
ouncil, q
ublished ba 1713, says that “the reason
oe aize succeeding x rarely in England is that
the 1 seed onl sown, reas the writer
sow: with the rs ee pellicle as gathered ”—a
1055 of forast 0
the N eceetiee of simple men; finally, b
way, w of really astonishing his readers,
he 3 ts that w every farmer will fi advan-
b, 308, per 105; Laurel, 8 29 * Bann 291 satisfactory to have Maize b . in his
408. per 1000, 8s, per 100; Variegated | house and at his table. The only difficulty is how
s. per | to make 1 aia
horns,
E does not, however, pretend that the
Miss which i is to make the fortunes of all the fortu-
pot bi: chore a piege ee is any
ye ontrary ; his is a new
hybrid, obtained 8 the Maise of the Pyrenees—a
All orders above 8h, carriage | sort which “has been the food of the Basques from
N beg to inform the tune immemorial, and in all | probabili ity is as ancien
Trade and Public that they are determined to sell their | with them as their possession of the country ;” i
of “ag te sols a pee Deng Ima M per | very original conjecture omg considering that
hp one lante 175 3 r 1000; 2-years "iio. 4s, per oe is a native of Americ should like to
Seedling A 2-years ditto, 1s. 6d. w how this “new id“ Was , a point
sore Laurel : to eon, Sn per 1000 rA * sou which ue 2 is not so communicative as
j — 100; Irish | might be e
pe
r 100; ditto, ditto, good plants, 248.
ee pat fg te he pss 8 feet, 100s. per
„2 feet, 258. per
*
à Azaleas, ditto, 6d.
bul, Ingle 64. each ; Erica, of sorts, hardy, 64
18. Per
$ ditto, 40-Folds, 15. per stone.
Kiles i Potatoes, ls. per stone, Garden — * Id. pi
; ditto Ree „ 6d. each; Sh T Per
r EA Five per cent. for coe
usual credit fives” by eg? any respectable Seed Mer
n London. —Co leraine, Nov. 1
Ae Gardeners Chronicle.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1849.
MEE sical FOR THE ENSUING WEEK.
a
ppe
28 8
BREREEERE,
*
weet Se
peice te tite,
ds E e nd ra na A
‘REE
ze
keke
wis
necessar
Wich to bring 11 Sito cultivation in these is
Will engage to say that the right hon. gen —.—
neouraging = 5 men to
project has x
ed and found imprac
o push the crop into sr a
were not small; bu
te as wa
Pyrenees before ere
ted.
| aise
e | names with which we
.. | boyhood, little aad sorts. cu rated in Lombardy,
in sue
“We do not pay Freight
no such thing ; he would as sor have thought | in
rice or sugar.
ó wien of hel ba 4 it
cable.
| it is climate ‘alone
| ing to pee oh ton & large s
We 1 tm thought all this beneath notice,
and unfit to bring before = of any intelligence,
i | but = thee Boe For ave patronised Mr.
KRENR, and patrons give nonsense pbmsibilityas We
r | shall thetefore ay a 251
8.
.
=
nknown parentage, but cultivated i in the
very in America, whence it
was originally im
The existence of pram and early ae 4 3
Corn in some European countries, is no very table
covery. Mais quaranta 2 and Mais bes are
h miljar from our
ome northern Maize preset of
ce. 83 8 75 is anothe ero
as the last ; and so will
Covent-garden
n at Putney, in the middle ‘of
3 his en
4%
a rich soil, can
he | would have it ores ide
The nature of Tndiam Corn is well air De
SINGAULT’s description of it is one of „the latest —
“ Maize,” says this eet shit, —— y
kinds of soil, provided they
ea — 1 the of soil, p 1 y AA 155 md
The treatment which it
and! in the oe ak clay.
uires is $
ty; it must have a pro
e a 2
sio of pry iñe; and T doibt
was pardonable at the Ane 2
mPa. ke
himself published 5 pamphlet i
Royal
'
Tace. d
These varieties — pas very well in England i in gardens,
ers of a
ipe specimens of Forty-day Maize, | pa
exhib
1 n
a crop which recpireb at 1
See e aig 27 te
Dacca was most famous for its Cotton manufactures, .
import of xn
stream
— 2 —
That the enst
Allahabad, — “of sesi chiefly at Cale magia e
down the e western
KEENE expects rh ia in the e of is „bat of Beans, Gol Dis estimate
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.
But men of 2 are better practical evidence like this—for — has
1
4 e statement
sagen $r — . a to e
to listen to romances
xplain, upon e
H
caltdn upon an
hitherto shrunk focused
ing off-hand way sets dows the yield o
DN
©
77
è
——
ce that can
ned, the 9 1 per — or its field
1 1 This he has
ing. He r e in ya et
con
2 what the 1 . is, and what the
ere cost of husking i
ract from
the Maize is — in * che fie
thus: The tw
th
The whole part
uring the work, Lect su
the
ening of the
ld; he
erform
urer, at 22
e must
Mr. — a phlet amol» which,
in the annals
husked,
slice of Mote
ned task.”
of
a hard day’s s work, siting Sni till e 1
ing Maize, a e generous maste
iving him
boiled Chestnuts and a glass of wile 1 — of
wages
This course shall make our ficlds to lau
This star its piessings to the plough ayel
This care our valleys crown with golde
Aud spread rich cattlé over the being
and s!
W
ain
aio,
Amiable enthusiasm! What a pity 5 60 — 7
and reality should have such small resem
£ deficiency in American Corron, and the
rimental cu
Tux
ag discontinuance of the ex
ae havi: — bgp 2 1 hag this sub-
ject, w ee $ on
plant, trusting ge = shall. be able
su Epi g j yen of — seri
periments,
this important
to detail =
es of unsuccessful ¢
e time point out Teale
t the
a 44 is farther probability of succe
e have seen in Bengal proper that failur
— n chiefly owing to over-
rich soil, and moist, climate
orth-western provin: ilure wi
pales i e
that success might
r-lu uxuriance ina
3 whil
ned by selecting poorer
0 ils and the more open eee e er the
ing;
same time, — 1
mes for so
În the more pi aes hes of the pro
22 success seem
“ee
the
the north-west
rains, 13 in
secure a e
where the experiments have
In our account o
Beng depended much u * the
n from Surat, and upon evel
pore, for transit
of this commerce
— pee is now
n Cotton plants hish had bee
‘caltivated even by ral natives
nehes brea
hat deeper ploughing and closer
the 8 culture in the
tha
l
destruction of insets
vince, suc
easily 1 as we
introduced
Sii ¢ o be
akin
ae
ssation, would
rop of American . even in 3
fai
even when
w esio **
emg directions,
3.
oe 8
po Ea tran Deduct 2. 8e. asov
GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE.
the coast and circars have been destroyed by the
more cheaply eee goods of Manchester.
0 05 tracts of country most favourable to the
yd Saki and to ah of
ý Berar is 3 the most suitable, though
8
li of Cotton belong chiefly to = Nizam of
2 th Ray Na he val-
much excellent Cotton is also produ
can, it has been stated, be used rer
Bee 50 per cent. of ou
u all yarns under No. 20—
about 15 per om less than the 1
The quantity which could be cultivated is so much
ter than what is ed, that it becomes
both interesting and impo : e
the 3 of soil and of climate which cause
it to produc
jst cn are su —
e S cul also be pro
elon Before oe it 0 ai strike
some ai our ar readers that the fact of good Cotton being
a distan ce of 300 or 400 miles from the
ic t
ndary of the tract in question seems
to arrest the air loaded with vapours from southern
regions and to cause its deposition on their sides,
thus the c i i i
wou be case,
Instead of theory, it is more satisfactory for our
present purpose to refer to the observations of one of
Am
American. During his progress he met with immense
sag of bullocks laden with t
rowtee an
seen, of f: neness, colour t
and, f little Bega cleaned, would ce
good Mobile or Uplan
rtainly equa
d Georgian. It has none of
the ek mon in the Cottons of th
no: provinces.” Subsequently he states,
as he had heard from Mirzapore, that Hin-
gunghal Cotton fetches 1} rupees more at that place
e O eke | e
el Streman, “th
n
Cotton over that of the Nerbuddah valley. But
when at Jubbulpoor, he observes that he learned
from Mr. M‘Lxop the following favourable facts in
regard to the climate of this re egion
blow here very mild, and not longer than two months
t. e n
arcity of rain is what never
that che greatest cause of failure i in the Cottons crops
is the superabundance of it.’ grain crops
are the staple crops of the valley.” Mr. M. f
perfect dru
: 1
e land is saving,
is the crop of om others, probably Hemp
the most read e.
much lich but level 1 land left bee *
2 as Cotton i is not there, as
ps,”
be infers, that
for the — 2 *
-= -e cleaning, and
ape otton 7
rops,
superior land in that district. pup
acubit or a little joe in width,
planted without admixture of other
picking, mre and
cleaning, everything 1 to be i improv ved,
taste,
th
above-quoted Biro
" | chiefly beyond — ace a the East India Com-
pany, none o experimen
been established liete thou
mpts 25 ai
eish, and it is pro
e e greatest success has a the
perimental price in the scuthern Maltat n
o Which we shall next proceed.
2 p . Ve, j 7
NN
AY)
following memorandum :
Cam
o send part of the stem
of a several r
e e
ee a ~ been “ringed” at the ground level ; why
we know not ; it is for the gardener to explain.
cou — thn result has been the destruction of the
plants, so as it would mei been that of the branch
had it been confined t ranc A and practised un-
skilfully, r in the e instan
evidence on a smal e, and w
draw attention to it again, w ithout much ae of time.
By DISEASES OF PLANTS.
693
SELO
Es
Brg
—
nating, an
frequent c cold rains,
d of
isease can generally be pre-
that Rice, if it grows
— time of putting forth = 3 der
i . 28 and i
ireum
5 58 ge.
water so as to SG — piant by he 3 of
| the sun is the remedy for t
* n of which 1 e cot 5 derivation, or an
other meaning, Translator’s n >
disease is i by the disease
a fallen, which ar
wi
it and the mes Retires
dæ we
a
robable that in the | in
moister ‘ceo se at the foot of the eras it will ao |
= trouble to dry the hips, 2 then
they are
I th
Of
pa
ecimen also presents nee os phy- u
scal shall
- grea
ane set dows be
5 ee fi
of — 2 3 until there is no
grains ing in the ground.
seed Pie aera woul be of no avail to
The two last-mentioned diseas
observed on Rice 8 15
| other ee plants.
GEN IV.; one species.
EA. a authors whic
much d
aes Pe
e its Proper ex
its prevention, it
us XXIII.; a one species. Sanon
i pina OF Rigg
after
years i in a the ground, but 2 i erry with fecha Fd —
that e seed to
— to the „ “hat the lates pa
eae
suspended in the fields attacked, and tas a —
of any
Prevent the evil,
seases,
may very likely be common to
have been a frequent witness of this sad
phenomenon in the Pea-fields of my own
rving of a close study. I am now
ted to what
and
nn
e supera! 450 5 oxygen, combined — 4
uch e
hat Fre rves the ciceric acid, r J
the plant, attacking its solid portions and paaria
them, in consequence of which the plant shrivels up
and dies, In those places where isease is common
the peasantry give it the name of rabbia (rage), whieh
I have a f: yet we have medy for it ; for
kn Lica 3 shoul pe on
who e su
steep the nil for 24 . in cold water before sowing it.
RAISING page gre: SEED.
Tue seed of Roses is in
$ in a scarlet case like
the common hips of the ale but tof wre or smaller
size accord ing to the
d it is to bury
these Any until they pa via the seed may be rubbed
or w out for sowing. ve tried baed
: wi
of wire: 12 aver having a qua 2 bruising them
out the seeds.
season ; the stren
reat vigour, and it is not at all
flowers before the close of the
sides, it may be necessary
can be re through the oo it ist
~è Another local term, probably of
e iiia).
er a very short ae > otherw
t affo :
en attacked with he 4 fi E
ise the
zen; but if this
eee
o1849.]. o THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 709
~ Tike much more room. In May the whole of them munication was to show that the characters by which at the plant. On accoun great
Say be 1 ar oe fr „ . species were distinguished are by no | real article, it is aat 5 “apres —.—
foot apart a * E r erni. 1 f 3 — Pte 3 — we nstant, se on the 3 extremely variable; | facturing perfumer ; but it is most „
if preferred, 3 at tne Daucus Carota passes into the Daucus opie’ by mixi i inger-grass pogon Sehœ-
er. 1 foot pa each other. agi they be attacked | mus, as it approaches the neighbourhood of the sea, and | — 1 an pat — ny the Awra — which re-
the fly, they m 1 274 nin ge i with a fine rose and chat the plant w which has n referred to Drais | sembles the former toa nicety. pae rpe Lemon-
pain water, vat which will dislodge them, and the ground Gingidium is also a sea-side — of Carota. There grass, grows abundantly in India, and the oil is
É 11k it be not eff ered E Ve * —
day after nef i not effective, recourse | variation of the supposed Gingidium, occurring on the | of Verbena ” is fo i i i
1 had to tobacco-water, but the plain water is coast of Dorsetshire, which is remarkable far hiviii dom ; this, A hew is tet a ee eee 22 A
pore desirable . and less trouble, and we have generally sek’ yellow petals with ciliated margins, whereas all | Ginger-grass oil in ‘spirit, The finest “Extrait de
succeeded W with it. other 9 of our Carrots have white petals with Vervaine,” of the French perfumers, contains,
If any portion of pie ere are completely deciduous, | entire margins. To this variety it is proposed to apply | that oil, oil of Lemons and Oranges. with the addition
they may runed to two eyes next the ground; | the name ciliatus. This plant, which at first sight has | of a li ttle Essence of Rose ; this preparation tion is really a
put if of the China or emooth- barked kind, merely remove | much the aspect of a veritable species, is probably the | very delightful and refreshing perfume “
weak spindly shoots and shorten the main shoot a little. — mentioned by De Candolle as occurring near Vrrivznr is the rhi f called
They will very likely bloom — the autumn. Upon Dieppe, ad pss d by that author to Daucus hispidus | Anatherum muri — l me Indian cog oy
the choice of those you intend to propagate, as being | of Desfontain It does not appear probable, however tie 3 —
of a name, a good deal might be said; but it is that the — so called by Algerine botanists is identical pme ve ti me — — e a
perhaps enough to observe that a new Rose should | with that from the shoresof the Atlantic ; nor is there | of Va nilla — rit ree de — df 3
possess some very striking quality to warrant its being any sufficient evidence that either D. Gingidium, D. kerchief alone, but enters — —— afi
added the hundreds already in cultivation. It hispanicus, or D. littoralis of Mediterranean Floras | of th kad into combination ow
ought to be, strictly speaking, novel and striking — a have been found (as has been asserted), north of the lein ee. 3 ~ and old bouquets, as in “ Mousse
ctly new colour, or a —— form and care e, Bay of Biscay. Living specimens of the plants de- the pti igar x- ca — —.— „ — in
than we possess of the same colour. It ought to scribed were exhibited to the section.—Mr, Bantnoron fashionable world. “ 93 * a“ 3 ”
be i — 1 * Mow apt 15 0 ele, atat, — — a of our commonest plants were the most perfumes which h hive also had — fet n of
nd character ; e nota ifficult to determine. e genus Daucus 7 ;
then it should * aparam some of these qualities in a high puzzling, and now that Mr. Torker b had aknak Gi ppe P oiekin r oe
to make up inqui i
' ld N55
have a on ene you will propagate, use your pronounce no opinion on the subject until he had ex- VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING.
eans, If it be of the China tht, amined the eo Moxur stated that there Tue culture of the Peach is one of the many subjects
on — of the common China, or take cuttings, or were several species of Daucus in ee The D. that puzzle “the villa 8 He plan
both, and at the proper season bud on the common 7 spidus of Desfontaines was the same as D. Gingidium | trains, and syringes, but he any adequate
Briar. The advantage of China stocks is this, the of Linneus, and D. hispanicus of "De Candolle and | reward for his labours, I shall e: pe fae the chief points
Rose continues growing, if you attend to it, all might only be a variety of D. Carota. on which success in this matter res il, if not light
the year bane ta gh en efore is alwa . eer a condition better
pd reeeive the an vet calculated to succeed soil, road- i i
oit; so that out of t am common season of budding on ON Une OF OETI 1 THE | stiff adhesive land; but turfy loam from a common
ng stock together by at m l ¢ should if possible be procured, and this may be obtained
it i in icini almost all to w buildi
id pr alls of gl
worth hile to Keep ay — sort that is merely a sum- Beauty's effect with beauty were bereft, 3 are carried on; the ex ill be ampl
i owev tae con . ts grow some of — R e ; oo repaid. In the formation of the border, the first a
; the kinds v which bloo nly i in Jun nd July Bases should Loess but their show, the 1 — still lives, — most essential point is draining. This indeed is the
not be disposed to eeh the idea of introducing new > AKSPEARE, funda mental principle of all good a whether
ones of that — 2 nor shoul tolerate} Srorax, obtained 1 the Liquidambar ge it be in the garden or on the Peach-trees
w pe o called, for they are es ok- tale by incision, and Toru by the same process, are ed require A dry s wane “avg The roots, if
ing affairs, except ‘that they partially bloom twice a both odoro us p somewhat resembling the aii permitted to get into the su more gpa if
lab i aa
er look we erfumery, not so
night at a time. We have already described and con- on account if their odour as for the wonderful property a% pt
demned them, and we span ey will generally get they have of “ fixing” i
turned out of good establishments, to make way for hence they are mixed, more or less, with extract of fro sts, in consequence of its iganik state, per
more conspicuous varieties with he tter Liane e pm Violet or — mg peta odours 5 om its being overcharged with watery matter.
due growth of seedlings, after once bloomed, may be TonRROSE.— This very fine and delicate odour. nage, therefore, as I have stated, is a cardinal
le same as other Roses. In fact, except that they are It is — from “the Dog tae by absorption or en- — Old brick rubbish, or stones of + a ee answer
searcer, they are the same as the more established | fewrage, alter the eo r des eseribed for Jasmin; the y taking care r I
_ favourites ; they have the same wants, and if neglected in | pommade thus made, on being digested with pure spirit, | is carrie main — ; provided ‘the 0
> hag these, they will soon exhibit signs of ill health. yie elds the“ Extract of argadi = of the s ‘oe Alone 9 and Fogat es it. The ae aloes soil constituting a
e versta
i ————— — . — mi n l a im
BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- | which has the advantage of being Mek white and does | dition is much more —— a deep border;
MENT OF SCIENCE. not stain the handkerchief, an important consideration, teams or liquid manure is easily supplied, and the
Continued from p, 692.) seeing we some ladies’ pocket bandkerehiefs cost from | quantity administered is so completely under control,
On a remarkable Monstrosity of a Vinca, by Prof. | 31. to 8l ! that little injury is likely to arise from a shallow border
3 Forses.—In this monstrous flower "the calyx petet r Tonka. —The seed or bean of this plant | with carefu supervision. Under such — ii
; the stamens con i i conditions short-jointed shoots, full of flower-buds, will
arises chiefly from
i xpression posite o
“a dopted is to cut the bean up — 3 oa pe on 25 healthy never in wet
_ ml exhibited no sutures on their inner faces; the three it for some few days in proof spirit at a 3 elevated | log
imer ones were larger, two were sutured along their temperature. The “ Extract of Tonquin,” thus pre-| The api of soil for Peaches need not exceed
i summi is used in the formation of tirerai eures bou- 3 inches. Keep the border higher than the 1 and
i if possible with a slope outwards from the wall, in order
that heavy rains may run off, instead of percolating
into th inage beneath, Some
ear bodies the to HYME.—T wo, at least, if 4 more jee of a =
Petals, a five-lobed i i i d i M odorous oil use umers, namely trees im Yi : N
i aing im ich sh wel ee Boni of tem 5 T vii and the Thymus 8 Serpyllum, The only be in localities very moist and cold, 1
of four bodies ent to carpels, two former may be used in conjunction with other oils, as 4 g 2 otherwise,
them. lager peek the other awe eg one of the 5 5 oil of Lemons, and the oil of Lemon Grass in Spirits, to prefer the 2 et — E “the
8 i style terminating in a stigma. The mon- | form a tet The latter has a large consumption In forming oe e pend i 3
ta i ri soaps, as in millefleur soap and brown bottom to be conereted, so as completely prevent
ith
rd
tion oi s W
g a cup-like disk, bord by five leaf-like lobes, | Thyme, Lavender, Cloves, Caraway, and Petit Grain.
within the in F Viri (Vanilla planifolia). — Th The pod of this
: ; i 775
1
EE
Fit
2 E>
au
1
.
ene. like
e reh — at kapim pee ] al Hy i tified spirit ; it has a fine odour
d t ity as an instance of true folial|cut small, in rectified spirit ; é
lade axile ee N in the same remarkably permanent ; its smell — — 3 on pent ae 2 in-
— The monster was found among some | Benzoin ; the spent pod, after making 1 tha weight of | mest suitable for small gardens, In the first place,
— di ing are
e scence Se
correct conclusions from examining the | nature as benzoic acid, iffering f t i
form of plants alone. For instance, if we position; few objects are more beautiful to look upon ieee N Pere : Biruge, e, Boston, Hunt's
determination of she eigin ot Ie ovale, it Suan Tile we viewed by a scarcely mention. that Va- Early Tawny, Imperatrice, ‘Murrey, Pitmaston Orange,
axial in the monstrous Vinca, but | polarised light. Violet Hati Ww in favourable situations onl:
vules into leaflets in the Tri- | nilla 3 is greatly used z Te cooks and 1 for sa are. ative. hite, in ad
Ame
favour t h It was pos- 88 3 a native} of South Ame
— ene ; 4 Foods a 80s. to 90s. per ge ‘shan 72 ur MEMORANI ..
VERBENA, OR VERVAINE, f tl - TRADE MEM =
4 es with which we are acquainted ; it is well known | Can any one say w a Mr. W. Bendall is,
32 of the Wid i . 6. by Ae D. pega a delightful fragrance by merely s pow from —.— mh, yon — — Fa
; e little vessels
: us, are noraen as indigenous i in our British | the hand over the plant ; — 0 Dak bo ant Ee — - 12 5 *
been indica‘ d sacks containing the essen
t to the D, Gin Gingidium. e object 3 m little or no odour by merely smelling | ceases as soon as he is
710 THE
i
CHRONICLE.
Nov. 10,
Home e
Athrotaxis imbricata.—The admirers of Conifers will
bes 1 safely in England. Four specimens were
ceived 105 ont "Messrs 3 and Son, of the Stapleton:
urseries, nea: tol, about 18 months since,
= rte a a doubtful stato, oa sind soon 2 and
te of growth that their
permanent establishment = be con-
sidere n. Itis described by their 1 N as a
noble ere tree, growing from 40 to 50 feet high,
on mountains covered with snow the greater spa of the
year, and he nace it will be able to endure our
elimate. e have no confidence in the hardi-
ness of this 505
5 large Cedars.— have meniz trans-
planted a very fine Cedar of Lebanon, from 0 25
— high, 127 peer 8 2 1 —. 1 ——
eede 3 Yon may
when I state
an opini on es e ite
2 10 — ue draw
Pa si
that it required the united effor
ge on whieh it was m a 0
bours recommend me to pee aud manure to the
roots, either from the farm- yard, or water, or
Soap- au ers recommend | watering it al over with
a garden-engine. avour i state
how you consider it s
panee about a fortnight 510 a ppr H than
that hich it ori inally consi
8 of good 25 earth was 1 shane the 47
Beginner, Tonbridge Wells. [Use no manure.
copiously next te f it grows.
its best food.]
The 255 for“ pony $ SA Feta, — by
G. F., Aigburth,” appes as I can
undersiand i, so likely to 11 of general tity z that I
am s he d be confer: a gr n upon
HE
= 5
oO
4215
=
ce
©
Qa
co
many su
if le would kindly give a few more particular
meter of the pi 4 the situation a
and a fuller desertion of his Apparati for alearing the
by a * chai ached to round
w- * A Ty Chesh
Slori tatoes 1 5 any 87 have eat aed |>
Phi a the following sæ in pt ing my Pota
ave always fo und them sound, whilst 8
my neighbours h ave moi and perishe d. I take th
weather, if I eae and pote them to remain
a day OF tn expoped paor isly to ple them in tl
pit oy cave, ween I eo ier with straw or haulm,
and finish with eart
3
1 to the length of the mtg more or ee-
t
taat a field a of Potatoes
f the sam
ime ; put pS not ps oh b ‘the
the
ery, but as
too often N and the Potato
ed with that of mish it
3
3 this beautiful tree — |
eased to were that plants of this p
my neigh-
t
Water
Sand and leaves are k
0
sufferers like pre” 5 “the high p Si g 1 55 8
ith me
id conn vil be to keep a few good aie for ¢ aliii in
and the 1 I place,
„ thre
es closely, apply toa friend at
ie, 80 pronounced—he ma
the Tu ma
able
| mA favour us with a co
weight of the io fruit, ot wi which
5 fair erop on
—There is now growing at
t e
girth. of the main 251 being 3 fee
3 and x e 14 distinct pends h
eich round
of Wight,
ae the : ops of See g 1 of Disease
—The following experiment has
een on ** 00 li e . cale to warrant
will i in all cases 1 a remedy for
he 10th of June I potted some
vag them i ina bet “of decayed leaves
as the t
were 3 in the d
t they ‘did an
Na othing Ae was
early 2 gallons
pe . ree. 1 vom
ery s a averaging about the
last 2 when the yield was n
all, 24 p gas The tubers were
sooner, and got the yield
T. Middlemiss, Gardener to A. Poti, Esq,,
Bentham iti, To nbridge Wells.
Cultivation. of Salvia splendens. an na the 3
s3 struck, I pot them off in a mixtur
* and and a little NR
about 60°. hey a 5 x isme them
|Back h le but they Stabs abe n bary and
w My fatu — ealti-
gre enhous se, where the wood will have a better chance
b x
8 1 p
will re them a front shelf, whe
—— pi have plenty of ight They wi
abou mth, and will wae a long time in
beauty. T M, the 5
New Grape. —On reading 1 G fine per
ae ’ my first impression was the same as “ W
Southampton a proeur for me,
— rt Smith's Vines ;
i
from Con stantinople, a eat Mr.
but on turning to the Monthly Volume,”
| 9 in the * of Vines ie the a “ Syrian,
that Cre ete, ma
the followi
ios, chy in
etius informs us
er islands in the rchipelago, affor
1 bunches sometimes of 40 Ibs. we ight, and in this country
Now as M
y have mistaken or mis-writt
nner of. pronouncing the word Chios,
8
5
rkish
Ro oya al Paie Society. — Havi ing observed among
is | your Answers to Co: ondents,” in last week’s Gar-
h
correct inform
r right. J. De C. yamala Secretar
855 [We es ean only 14 that a Fellow of the Royal ic
us, 10 days ago, that he had not been
o procure his copy rd these
Sor ieties,
remarkable
8 S
„© s -te
E gf
uince stock,
were y N to increase the
his | specimen
oot that or
v
breaking from: the mai in stem. W. W., 7 WA?
sored satisfactory, goi
V.
L think that if $ had potted the 8
5 half of
Messrs. Loddiges,
of the rare Oncidi ob
prettiest of the small bright yell aie ed of
tene ane Bi ics ih na. 2
of Hackney, If =
longatum, an, Al a
peen
hand l den ; Oncidinm
evi, a handsome large yellow - lipped
e ay at eee
and mon-
cn ightia n Medal was awarded
especially for the Oncidium for te these,
rom Lawrence’s garden at
ark, came a an roup of Orebids, consisting
two new Cyenoches, one with white and
with yellow co the latter covered with small brigh
brown spots ; also the A 2 luden tare
Epliondram vitam the P MAI Senai
on endrum vite linn, t e 3 M icta
mbidium si ihe pa 11 ma
tie four first- “mel 2. a — i
a large flowered Oncidium (brown, ed yellow),
Forbesii. — From Messrs, ee Fn
lace, came one i
ry yee
by Mr. Ande
of V. salicifolia, and much less thick 1 — in V. sp
wale the foliage is just intermediate between
p
gradually change to whale
spike w t is
jan ed a man „ It forms a ag a i i
Certificate of
ager rthumberland, produ
sweet-scented half — 9 Verbena)
for which a Cert ificate of
Santa Martha,
was awarded, It was
: highly creditable to the gro
“sm merit. The bost eame
to | past thei
he grows them
1 Botanic
the w
Certificate of Merit was
straight stem 15 5 — in lengi
n | trained horizontally on on either si
i
sorts, and that the result yat. possihly be a race of
sweet-seented Verbenas, The
same |
|
our
of the shops, pom hai split they “Took not.
zed
n middle.
apples — exhibited, all of them
— ty af. were of
— Pine
Esq. KF 12 1
consisted of two well swelled fruit of
other 5 Ibs. 10 oz,
th
fruit of the sa Queen,
eir * van sent by Mr. Bun
= weighed
re stated to
ting,
82
astle, Llandilo.
s by a her s;
Bundy —— —.— "tf they had been Ripley Queens
stead of old Quee agp no
2 Ibs. h
of Peak “house, g "roa
Ripley ay sig weights were
„ and 4 lbs, 1 oz.
— elled, but
unequally swelle good fruit,
7 Ibe. 9 Oz: „
year than the
` | hibited were pase swelled and coloured, and =
were quite ripe, large, and fine. :
was 2 8 Muscats er
nished by Mr. Davis, of Oak-hill, East Da
rtheless, — to those j = Mr.
were, nevert
ast three years.
GP Sen —
Pw A a
5
Mitel fr private purposes ee 7 extent is quite
CHRONICLE.
ee) THE GARDENERS’
son, and ripen perfectly to the very top. Inj Laurustinus, Arbutus, Bays, &c., which are frequently
verage s uced ;
; it is, therefore, contemplated to 1 a tem-
er them next seaso
ing shis year 2 b etw
.
best, havin
the meeting took place ington, Esq., of Uck-
feld, again sent specimens of 115 seedling Apple, called
s Pearmain, It ing sort,
, tinged with ak on the sunny side,
to bear and keep well.—From
i asp ce of his new
—. Mont erry. is been re-
Dr nothing fa but the old Double-bearing
Mr. Rivers states, ee, that it rtd
2 from Rer shoots, which it puts: forth-at
every joint ; and in this respect, as well as in — size
aud flavour of the ber near it differs from the
have just 1 5 ertificate of Merit 3
for it 2 — ** Cobbett's and of Fort
some account will be found in
of
Ar Spang and bi
on pi crs i ¥
at p. This —
Cornwall and Devonshire.
doors about London, and
itis searcely worth the — —— a conservatory,
Garden Memoranda
PALACE, THE SEA k Dox F Buc
amen While England’s poner kitchen ery pew
at Frogmore, Scotland ~ her's at Dalkeith ;
e consider that r has been esta-
occupying as it does a surface of 20 aeres,
= arrange rfectly, and at the same
as economically, as any garden within our own
Personal knowledge. The whole has planned and
under exclusive superintendence of Mr.
wh e and ability are familiar to every
. Since we last visited this place, in 1834, the
ns Pare? teen entirely remove e site
ney stood i
dings,
me — brick e rections, and the views into
— te been opened and exte
in the vans of the palace are exceed -
y picturesque, but we should say overwooded; por youl Ps
0
carri n the princely style which distin-
the — alreadyſcompleted, Dalkeith will then
yr
8
— an
Scotland,
— ont — of — 3 garden, near the palace,
se on which is planted a ——
only be Soe ms pean consider-
the woody 5 Cw ch block up
, and ante the atmosphere damp in the
of the palace itself. Mr. M is qui
of tg a out this great work, and we ma
modern ornamental gardening
3 — io. which is much required in
—
addon; se
Ter e n the open
q Yall, d Passiflora cærulea were ram
‘i also Ceanothus divaricatus ureus.
unusually large 8 of — ura
n the turf, the latter
poor e
but facts prove quite the contrary.
| upwards —
P
killed to the ground pan London, are scarcely ever
touched here, The pi N. ves and walks
"| Snes with them in te est profusion and luxu-
ese walks and irom, as wel as 8
th the gardens at Dalkei
18 18
5
ration, for they ewxlend
e im a n gar
tersected — briek pits 12 feet high, and we were par-
ticularly 2 with the excellence of the brickwork and
its present perfect OSR for although they have
een built a suffic * of years to bo elot
with fruit trees, 1 - or freckled defaced
bricks, or broken seen, the walls bein
studded on both Ae practico we strongly 1
The Apricot tr ees here are very fine 5 i indee d w
z
8.
le a
arden is surrounded and in- |
—
All the i in
e
young me
which was by . just before — y were
a picture of cleanliness and yon ars one a n is
ng | set a reakfast and d h a long
table in the centre, covered —— a perfectly — table-
as a cheer
—
o | made
evidenee of a decayed Tea ; but this is iont uni.
versally so in the north. There i - posas of that gum
ming and limb by limb dying o which is so
in the w
rotected
yo 8 an
suffered severely here, and in some instances they are
i | completely des destroyed, This, however, is very general
in middle aud southern parts of Scotland.
was un nusually supe and protracted ;
their usual efforts to
frosts invariably checked or destroyed them, This
fem thang sap
ns, form-
ft „ and
8
o
2. *
.
e its appea ago Apple
trees has ege “completely 3 by the ä
of spirits of t
We obs iret Celery bl 5 — — in two drain
tiles; the tiles es were about 1 s long, and such as
great num
of acres, therefore, were tn of their surface in the
immense garden. The soil a
i a
is 5 trifling.
A inferred, this garden contains all t
various buildin ired to uce an abun a
the different popular exotic 2 which are 5
verything, indeed, i
be understood waar x
the 0
a
; the 99 4 of the
ower rooms — 7 feet in th under-
a tank — the whole length “of the
eet, which receiv in. w.
with these cisterns are pipes, W
length of the hothouses, with taps
ite m A supply = soft tepid 8 is thus always at | resting and m
c d. The warmth of e ich
Ji
— ns are . being — to the hothouse, the
por is nearly o of
is found pena to the
in divisions of it are
ed
upper one for —
and sim
&e,, are
Onions, and not by
ity harvested ap-
se, and
is deserving of special remark, Wh eat number
frequently lost or get out o!
N 3 d i is sometimes dificult to
s garden ery man
set of all the implemento he
3 off.
fia re toe
The | on
send forth shoots, and the | w
from an Rg dn |
e — specimen
rm, and the injury it does to the crops x
e:
rja museum
— well —
e
arge apartments subdivided — rooms
of ample 1 raaa ty for eee bed bei
ms,
om lin — we —— inspected.
in — — clean and wholeso
aN architect, we ob-
e Ee = slept 2 os =~ feet of
re where their victuals are
w 2 buildings adjoining are
— at least 10 pte mp he others, in which are
ba ept the fruit, as if Apples and Pears required a } a ink
rying e, and pog of ym aps for their prese
ard the m at Dalke ith, Mr.
M‘Intosh “lays ad — — keeping an even tem-
perature in it; the walls of his fruit-room are built
hollow, as, indeed, all the walls in and about these
gardens are. Ventilators are placed in the ceiling ; the
vacuum between the ceilin slates is stuffed with
shavings. By these precautionary arrangements, the
fruit is found to keep, not only better but longer,
ther ‘of uses, W ds on the
brought | men
—
range is devoted exclusively ‘o a la
Holland plants, Camellias, &c.
a similar
ve scale, and eve *
W. steve ayy cm requiring a
e the na atmosphere affords, is most substantially
ms —— heated with 5 pipes.
In the pleasure groun circular —
hous, filled with Palms at other large plants. Thig
erec during the period
have sea ee ; pope
that it is likely, m no
2 the 3 Wines of 1
on
for which —.—
ens at ere contain a 1 extensive
collection of Al ts. We have
nothing approaching it in A botanie — 4 Mr.
n attached to this very inte-
M uch neglected tribe o
— pelosi! specimena
tates of
— it is apie
The
a similar temperature, the under |
specific names beautifully written on a
every pot. We believe that the Bean rement
*
stone
liar make, The stone has so polished
CH
RONICLE
TH
E
GARDENE
RS’
plants
the in placed
nec ingre
tion ome of * + opr
fic gem ad she pe alsa pore get
pan ‘facture and air pot and 9 t
Jing w raea gress pe „80 e 5 wat
ida conel oode ut. eet, am i veh olan be pe kf and
garden, in mess A Ve. z repre Into sh low the con- sary
Diei wah ti: ho ry imperf sented by th 2 | on MS
sta es of a ect e pots e te colo
te of ga — * tay gain Pe ted of accom- ered ge these uring, o
en e to a tru whi r ord atly . oth
in 0 l ic er re- ers e
Sale 2 5 8 5 . 25 to it ly ducal Sean requir , and Abe s — 5 a repair
which of P Mis elise rina 125 ti in som EPEA are. — Whe a dy fo „the uly cata done
M have lants cell Ors ese : : ing e ouse ded fort
th ess feces —A an the way 7 e, and ool will to h. F
f eoth rs. Low. latel small 1eous. stable foreir any regar and dy daring be in 3 and uc
ahr gangs „of Cl y re _impor and litter s Beaks my of y dur 1 . ber b 3
Epi wi yM y cerv rta fo ver b al a aid t n RAP ad Lind
iden r be = 3 sh pace tion of or the Bat liable OREH by me sit "3 di season. Gr — d condition =
i 0
cidi k ad toe ate South Orchids, Red t inings to be oned, ans o et ae ik it oo 25 n. Ve Peers
ium eri 2 fro h ght to Am of dun broken The pots id. pe effreti ap atta In u will Tet to
ike aes ;0 chi m th at kind the h rie fore to u by bei ane teats p af ashior 1 bung
Bes female, fee , o Plowing te eo Again isn ng rte i the iter it form ioned e a tC ml ae
an ev „ro a t 8 st ean Sin at w Ww „ WI 1 er 1 H avo wi the ase i nt t . as
and three Bi erp foldn eet gentloman' g Sees voles a . i not wanted insted je allow 5 — piapa
s. " ‘ i
Acinet ratum . ae ; alae a — n Epi- nentnes 18 Faden eap of * gat es a con sir ieena — ed Your houses, a Tady. ae onc
J.; a fe a Sp., eee lds cea, l plant ides, © On- t ou 1 8 ment r the siderab , the ocr proteas apes mer t =e aaki ma
leaved R to a Samy „n eee he 5 2 . — 12 8 a MENEE
ed = 2 15s L 0 nost h 18 n op “th onsi itter i du wa wo — lm db esc „ be J 10
fetched f tak A 3 tome Sac — oon hee em vater, th 1 = a high “ond 5 wie ate T 5 5 bars eseriptions wou 2
Soil fo e anther le ~3V Wall ace 0 een b all hed he m = pit 2 such orde : t part 0 the * Co 8255 . n to bot gga
* Sor V 1 to and „ Vand esia olabiu erid a at 0 ost e with t bil of at p ota and d væ 2 stant R se ro o pro — e to give to
onl ins u Preh * De a, C picta m, di BPE cog eat ak 1 conom he lish mana erfect eacrt ye 16 ugh eure 3
tu pon ids i ach. ndr ymb from itto; f e ab of ab ea i otto men gem ptio N Y plat a hh
for re, a a thi in Pi obi idiu m Java. nd out out m m h ts. ent n at Clerckella e glass — S28
aa althe nd i is poi ots. um; SAREES pr atio 30 i 50° stro eth eat s Wh p. 2 rekalla. Be “ao some
far — ugh 5 = — Samos di from. patted 3 able i mepi S high y ie 95 upplied by 2. il (see cen ace am ca
i i me
kno ache er. be oe fee any ee of ndy, possibl up om an ol ith ee 1 eedin to e up a = pang wo
on w wh me 1 it i littl dese ther 0 utri e of with aM inches e pl g 55 re 2
er ee: 2 or een 8 E e 88 the th grea h Areria = aced 5 a light
ver ed by — is eoneerned in ri import mhadra a be wate way —— flesh are, pr . Ther oil, wre n=
wh mall (some oiha still ch or ance ion; ew ry m ittas y roo 86er vi plan ch as
roundi 8 use hate e ee to an ©. mt Pa ake ing 5
is OP proka 3 es ing * raa neces oil, w elude i raó end nthe su fer ne e
beco which josphe reel entive ut br ots sary to . decide e ligh covere ntly He vs ee store mo
sa ny bai wine a inae o | Method, edly s ET dw sen The of th du
5 3 E Ea ts be Fron, Bene: he eth pla a avid:
resists the i ant requi e 0 tsh wth ein erio: Sen es nts arti
4 „ or wl utive quired same moi erds xam 3 it 1g — r to be utter oil ab shou *
re fbr ecay lo — oo 2 5 ee * t — ing t ee ite is mer wk le foree di an te — 5
3 — A tm e pee e roo tier e eer ur ae ss
t smal bt It wi pa sour. nor li ater a e six ts 4 i uch by t is m „ to
e 1 parti EE will t nd w „and t iable ia] | alter ore inches or to isie = ö ann
en urpose fre heref arm bat to the 1 8 ight d ap gather ier m shor a sii
Should ish à es of sh tapii whi val, ish art, i at „
-al b ed b = peat fro e be mosph ch, d and es; a su t for ter e z f ittedt
few e left a beatin, latter aaah edan ere, Whe =~ int nd if t superficial ya ether Marc 3
: e ae whe process 8 [ ee: rg fully avoit n the te = pring, | ts — 3y plant- soaps , when and — c
: — 2 ayed le quired to dr i may suitab avoid xtu KITCH by are prese he a aga W—7 wees aa ect
. av yb r ea le it sho all re EN picki no it T ung or th and
aal pate dem ehe Th, re ia eae senate anes ape Bargas aa e
ist rf: eces ; u r re 0 is fer ine 1 il ad 8
to pass uring wi of ite” inpo N sed, and ee ies bar al e tena e arte e va et 5
fi winter, siex at ite ith i e tim d cio arv sim e pas V.— 8 a ‘with
tije or Bagot ays thro 5 H 958 5 8255 ies 4 a fore of ekes ni 9 — fr ee an a elec iei „ Care- ar Tail — 7 i Watch = females a e e Tipula
ae te Poga A ugh 1 pike 8 ahs Srs up reed be fil a 5 1 os favo lorat nd dope, that it wet, Fir « Lge te pay the iw pie which also
G. ebe of aaa: hole i in ater not bs tot n the ple filled posible urable o g influe f that fh at species e is ne TS 8 a$ but s or aigo
ordon ewe fc ily ob es bottom ef 51 tl ts of = lof fe — ppor ai s of ay 5 “wi 2 n 2 ey ak
Pape oistu d und viated tom of able ose roecoli os nere c ng th ty to ad tak the an oil this poe —— she ts, with hot wate re yong nits or
rin the Jour see aspen ne: 1 quarters N eg how manir unf TE 16 a æ just ter or vom iuli
a a oy í 0 7 e. i
Cal — Wee ee. cing s$ Sco ds poin ey m 5 &e. Wher Pes rou and 1 biggie Pe ina ith hot 3 hat —
Tar Fee 5 8 5 tel Kale oes ee 55 ay ities and] adv. sh olay, o all be glad of e
—— . 1 e w a k ’ r
a the aie ndar of Operati y. Erom | aye the north, on sirable copying a portis 2 rage it 0 cies 1
be g air isi ANT Peg rat iety. sprou r ori ed, t age, o on an Bac: portion should nition den, — —
top sen n by so osibe he makes T wee gee — 5 iginal pr g a Brus spare pi Soran alto- nea 4 eae 1 barn ins ts late
dimi h some o ut ayas 2 3 con ther. ep righ re, sels ec 5 5. 3 the epth pas
iinet e ther means & — siderable pr eek oe of ground ae ae eos
ack walls will Seek ll z rainy ees s pro Ee ai tite ws , for th 5 be — you sub of pastur 0 you wil do aa
ty lls i y. Th will koti by eather thi to tate of th port ion. this bate a ae a, om the nothin id : N to trench 3 fet d oleae erdes
: as in 1 is 3 5 Weet} season, pi = 05 hele sin thé d well ¢ Ingle. A o the — for on pring prion
ased ow. Nov si m lew r Te rab, ack oloure e Gr: 50
e n M ; 5 a f. na Mi bu H d : ape much
of v instea thai eee 7 58 es * or but pin gnonn t rather fatt pi ut sti 8, gro the
entilat d of Sa day ze. a i : i AA cta be N E ; ra Cockle flatt 2 sour, Th ut of
ors Sige ATE endi st at Revi 0 er . Th doors,
in Sunday 2 12 Max. a. |) T nding N stewing. |- ge prs er than i it 1,2 he ai
se 41 i 3 ~~ Te 8, 1819 quality Ú WF. d, Tihe g 1 — usually ry like the
There — 20 cS ete 29578 Max., Min 3 : 8 fant pole Mari Pear the ston — * ; if
rr 8 2 23503 20.098 1 Toei ach Wind. 2 2 Blas 1 aria Louises 2 kn shelves eying dak
7 Mean ; à 1
= — oor . | is Rain Duteh Mi bk Morocco e seedling non han
Me Se - 31 29.473 30 3 — E cali Pon = 3 ing ari tem ri
hes 25 * ; è i
a ea ft ate 39 ‘|| 35 40 205 Py e japi AAi n A a T Be Mignonne. rne = in
zX 1 Dente fog 29.547 ie Be pt W. ent 8 DON ANDET ing 87 1 acha . Grape Vb;
— ense ‘om: ne; Th 85 Rea 5 S.W. 02 ylve of th um mw R
— 2 mse fog ; el clea 5.1 55.5 S. W. 00 sh stri ot P. JG. e Pi elow’ ell ; O24 ;
aR = ; 7 + at ni gh 88.7 | ET sw. 00 8 ve seem arsni Not ipp: s 8 » 5, Kerry R $
oF — fing eens = ri igar ai t. Bir 0 en tudy is right seed, Conia, ing; 9, Co :
aes las coe — "nig rain at n N 7 Al Hotham. — i the v som apparenti : o
More i Stat N 2. — ight. 8 me bert. W us v is n and umbe Hera y Ætbusa
to carel eofth T st and e — 1 — m nts. lf Sane o such (co Is are cleum ; Oy.
— e Weath ewe, 5 10 be 3 a a we Bonar not sim Angelics
xami " ‘attention ens er at C 34 * * sp en N wea not ell-kn as you Botany, You
lea ine the i Novy. aa uing hisw eg. abov A Z, ent eya re en waste own ask fi by Dr.
the lin wi g 28 week, ick et with Y in res titl tim or.— The
eee Me ts fi ill be da ill 2 5 83 8 —— Sige en 3 our fer essin sent for ed to eae Het,
+ whi other y Fom th 5 E 87 5 ga g Nov, 1e last 23 ge. ap ng s a 15 eos names. quest exa ch wretched
ch ee aily ne Mom” ESE EE 7, 1849. years, paren t he ot! speci re Man’ ——
Sas > i uent! ffe ces ton, n È |SS of f abl tly her men 5 s lif
5 our impurities ] cts sa 3 ars i or y an tw is 2 is
8 „ y, and rem of ti theese Tues 13 25 E e | „ specimens, ied to aati —. ian
8 rem never ually th ache. Gand thes Thurs, i 711 a Rained. Quantity Prevai 0 — ah Rep et hoe exaltats .
byti of th oved the short: 25 ee d da e, Satur H 493 36.8 pa of Raine ling W count — owin olepis ne of er seen but
tilti is ; ý tni hav lid amp. Satur. 16 49.3 ot 44, 13 e inds will ry. 1 f he we can de oblit them them in
ould Dg th a free and i. e ev ecay — 49.1 — 22 11 3 pla corre f yor ; also BN ma pees“ 2 a
ae be e li e circula: j > da er. in Th 49. 7 7 42.6 0.7 — Ph nt. Spo u ch he anner farni! e` itis
; li y- ra git e 4 31 14 31 A nd. 00: his of sh
d igh = toe ys wi FE ian 7 won OH. s t a us jer is
Fic- — ion of it 3 pr a 1 therm. 6 de EIR 15 oe E| fan < SETH T. Dor cre Bed — wit pe |
83 F the leen — air should b too it, let ord SE 942 = width 12" rar Pen Th n 1 paa tan . — E
same .— ORC ard cold ould d the nh — eck 0.41 } Rates 2 fee each- e foll e . i
pre i N — A 1 ie
wi ping t — ssary i S shoe Se eat ua ieee: A OL; Su ot putes 1 soit 58 — back 9 3
ith the the sh if it sho ts be il this T goar. Old & "a 99 toC — 3 i po ity, and S, S 0 — t. e wall 12
knife eee uld be untied, — 3 „ orre aS Gey th Ae T — reminds he College. T Pre z 1772
ife will uri attenti perf sista Ret er wh 22 spon e 12 cad ure e. pipes of front, in
mo ng s tion „and if Caer TE o em e eigen, nde z — s you of a our seedli do very we
requi umm has 8 n a Bakeri 3 INES v Simin Sa of addres Potatoes us ng
ec. jer very fa pa t the durin ing winter s howeves, ison abers I ated 3 43 we —— Feat As aa T
8 pac i o nti „K is o af. h , 184 ro pr Liq R nner’
it 8 paid, to 8 pen oe, and rep nly val necro 2 cool d urena cng s bark acts aie yous
will h ing Berens ‘and Tesa rg ke unh — f but J, alsin injuri down ur; — Hain tire used in a i
con- aoe well of lime them in da or trying may apply the —.— mnt ambūr freely upon milar Wa
scones, Ont 2. — 5 p ing. dry or experi- 3 pe repent? ET bordert
pe Kayii, bör D and lo They E Bottom, pro ova a aw the ee theit
y oer &e., alceo! am, sho ly so ovis. al of 50 be to ttle sl se er in m
tain wi lari with a = ea iđe idia aie bea ope as rough F a manner
ty. 12 para such — — a e, bore all th they 3 5 . glass;
wer l be elevati ome ep fi how i 4
b. iG Rages kerar tish 5 contrivan vd against the are conde
ehinkine ee Ne the S gain ati wall at rf
tgp fe ig are 5 at ni eiyan klaon mG top:
at g y Bor of yo e sea toge! ight. you may
th ine DERS ur son ther, In th
win Sa oi a
Reni aa You are right i ae
5 oe 2 75 t in su springs
e pripre it is o.
9
s, it
Misc’
— ey. Wil
y. Will be taken
into ¢
ASS
FOR roi, wih we — This description of Glass
roved, and
T
ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GL
en
OT. WATER PIP PIPES AND —.— PIPES,
with usual conne ag, tock
of Hot-water Pipes, N Tee Pi — Collars
Valves, &c., as usual, at JONES'S ¢ CAST. TRON WARE.
Pistan
EENAA p E
. feie 5 4
1 hing Hykeintb Glasses and ea
Globes, Plate Window Glas
hades, 8 for Pac
„ 78. 6d; 6 tubes, 10s.
ometers for 588 Hortien ltural Glass,
O., 116, Bishopsgate-street With-
E AMES earls and C
FOR „ a eg &e.
upply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of
h Manufacture, at prices varying fro to 3d.
u ma housan
i edia elivery
4 and estimates 8 on application, for
CR GLASS, GLAS
SLATES, 5 eee GATING
ATE-GLASS,
i ASS SHADES,
PATENT,
ORES,
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about
2
PATENT HOTHOUSE W KIN NG@’S ROAD, CHELSEA
: E. 1 eae &c., to the vast superiority in every
NT HOUSES, which he will
t to any others Good Glass
pid 3 feet long, 8
rg ed fro m 1s, 34d. ——
figs mg
—.— 7 — or petey and the
1 being wo ers and the glass put in wit
Putty. Patent Sashes, requiring no paint, from 7d. to 9d. per ft.
D HEATING BY HOT WATER.
l aeh WHEAT.—For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good
d genuine se ed of the RED. -STRAW WHITE and
ROPETOÙN varieties, Sam Te of
corresponde ied by mittance.
Au. each. WINTER BEANS. * ‘sean, — Dé supplied at 55.
Te bushel. Jonn Morton, Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershire,
—The Sante Show of
Tu esda Wednes-
The Printed Forms of
and Im mplements, must be
“4 Certificates, for = entry of 8
% from t rary S
filed = and | complete, ono ca — 3 Saturday the
n GIERS, Hon. Sec
— Piccadilly, pr
CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING,
eret 2775 and returned to bim
da = 7 ovem-
Cor Half
ROYAL LETTERS
PATENT.
— —
F M‘NEILL anD Co. of . -buildings, Bunhill-
* row, London, the Manufacturers and onl 1 of
THE ASPHA LTED FELT FOR ROOFIN
Houses, Farm Buildings Shedding, bE Tap and — den
2 to protect Plants from Fro
me Great National Agricultural K it is this Felt
Which been exhibited and obtained two SILVER MEDAL
Puuzs, 2 is he — — SOLELY Å pishi Sah and adopted by
> One *
ee, ND oar
the Dukes of Suth
e, Northumberland, Funan ay Richmond),
rl Spencer, a ano most of the Nobilit ty and Gentry,
Roral ULTURAL SocIETT's Ho
W
Roya:
bim the — of
ite Ea
of any other description of Roofing, and
gå T eS onstruction of Roofs.
ar Pub Sov. E Foor.
its ‘Use, and Testimonials
referen to Noblemen, Gen-
tects, nd builders, rs, cad pte to any par
* 8 sf noah wy uted.
c is cautioned that the pr — in London
byt the above 5 is made, ar
M‘NEILL 3 8
Lam dings, B nhill-row,
covered with the = . De sevd
s Courts peep 2 West-
. ‘roofed w. ith F 21 hetat d Co.’s Felt mas
; rs since, un u the Surveyorship of “Chas, Barry, Esq.,
7 s Commissioners of Woods and Forests are
Mad in sending direct to th 1 — an be su
ban e best St suited to th their 1 that the 5 pay 5
0 bird requ afforde
d particular 3
=i S ORIGINAL
e construction of Roofs, or
of the Felt.
recommended as the most
a ever invented, for the presery ation
ether with a copy of
e e WALTER CARSON,
adele; 3 of eee
be sent direct.
Self. 1 a
HOUSES. also f prera Pipes, G utters, — 3 Air
Brieks, &e., Socket . a Pipes, Retort mp-
sts. The above numerous other Castings at 9 1
prices, — of 3 qu ality.
N.B.—Men sent Bnd ig me to any partof the kingdom to do
ee ting wal the Pipes and Connexions found, oee — sum,
n- b ridg e Wharf, No. 6, Bankside, London, N
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ES, ) then, i is the characteristic feature in the Scotch Sys-
m of farming which enables e ti to give a larger
8 of = me produce ar 4 ? Té
— e the illustration
DARIAN CEMENT, , for ee Stace, instead o of 8
n plastering, may | d and pap red within NNAIRD, who, in writing to a friend in
2 of its 2 pplication alls, and E by the use or | England, says: “Your land, w t
ich room dered habitable before the — | A .
only a 3 — 4 begin to dry. It is 4 without se — 2 ae underlet , and
the slightest af ae the labour er sier pty tyne s expen- . Pah O clamour WI only — ual
ive than any other stucco whate ner quality is | slovenly me arming.” A iving a state-
— prepared for Ornamental — for 1 Encaustic Paint-
ing, & e., &c., cco cS iene g. — eo tthe Works og ment of 11 ears’ experience in farmin ng, his lord-
the Patentees, CHARL 18 sand Sons, eElms Lon chip sums up:
vig LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer
under, and pledge themselves that every Manure sent
out 7 ‘een shall be free — * bol slightest — —
. Guano 8 from Im W
Manure — er A
monia, Phospha
Superphosphate or Lime, G
very other A Artifietal 3
aah -URSER, Other Artificial Manure, 5., Blackfriars,
AUTUMN SOWING.—POTTER’S GUANO.
R. POTTER particularly recommends this season
for he his Guano, as, if now committed to the earth,
it is 2. 2 — when the — ng r
returns, to yield to the
ngs. In
by the —
we have had to contend with, in order to overcom:
2 ural = cl
t is
facture of his Guano, ' which he —
f all who wish to grow
ire vs s ek .
con ct oe ee . persons, once acting
she. TTER’S 3 — ry their
the genuine article, the cde r is induced t end a
— — plicatio OE “Where the — piren is
uate, an arra —.— as to carriage, will be made to the
satisfaction 35 i ee.
in a state eae d adapted for the
3 ioe: 2 ea ‘usual How pr ice
ee oe
E, . to an im-
ea by Pro — 9 War, él, per
er
orders,
per post, to the following ad
28, CLAPHAM ROAD ‘PLACE, LONDON,
The Agricultural a
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1849.
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO E TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS.
- Nov. 15— Agricultural imp. — 4 — Ireland.
THURSDAT, — 22—Agricultnral Im Ireland.
Farmers’ Cuun.—Nov, 1 192 —
Tux opinion is very prevalent anol: t Scotch
farmers that they are far ape e in skill beyond
their neighbours in the south ; ese opinions are
con and their v. — fattered, pers thos
who are held to be ee nel R aioe
d old t up a pes $
sree’ re 1 selecting — ud 225
very fertile aa Shih yield
high 3 attribute to the system of farming a
greater degree o merit than, upon strict investiga- | Y
tion, it will be found to deserve. It would be ae fe
on tiated ; but
-| of the light and inferior descriptions of land, which
e picture, w e
0 yea
“ i e of here crop in
me ood of
capital em
rent was enormous
their extraordinary crops, have
which agricultural writers have expat
represent the backgrou e nevi
have heard much, as these have nothing ast of.
farmer, in re to , has lon
e knew and
— 5 by
rce of the s
vaipat y an recent date in is
ho wish to satisfy themselves as to this, compare |
the numbers of wo and cattle kept on the Norfolk |
farms in 1770. en Younc made oof ban with
the statements of th Anges pa ns Appen. int
ts of the day, in Sir INCLAIR’S
ay 8 the cultural ae
cult
dix to the General Report of
and Political Circumstances o f Scotland, in oi Seg
d they will at once perceive sais difference in 3 e
systems ; ues pi Bo to believe
einer
8
who —
n | Pr
are deso
—+ cotch farm so much
applaude y and re — the — on the
lower districts of it, so well N 0 —
corn and green crops, which have hithe
the cotch 3 s main ven we
rmal produce on certain descriptions of soil
is is ot or Op under those circumstances, irane it is
er
stand more in dread of a dry
oist s. — bad as their climate is repre-
e ra e
Those also fall into a similar error, and
still greater magnitude, who are continually ising
up the imaginary advantages ¢ of the “ mpa
with rich soils and beau 5
every reason to believe that 33 ich re have —
been neglected so far as cropping is concerned ; and
when they are once 1 d, the dertilising i ingre-
dients are dificult If take Jac
report of the co r-growing — or Europe for
guide, the results are sober indeed; and the
exactions o of the Jew, p who is the 2 banker that
ussia can s rovinces ſar greater
oppression to ga daring ea vator r, the rentan ;
taxes are to the British farm
all our difficulties we ge much for whi
and we have no doubt if
curity n by landlords for the in-
ment of ve in ‘the soil, this — 9
tracted towards it; for it must be confessed that
while i ni — — have basi een paid for
terms and conditions have
„ as abundance
d we
ove a ers cure for this evil, it is Korea a
resuming, as an agricultural question, the sub-
in} In
ject of Emicration FROM IRELAND, now admitted
to crop, we mus
as l it not ie many on for the evils which
on the sor Cte
liative to then miseries aen ant 3
h which she
ntr
. z only one
essenti regeneration. Treland is the
ty of w
— cote ete i
wiih ye with neh ioe air the s by which
have obtained such an e notoriety, and
1 their less-known virtues have been 9 n
Not to insist on the evils which sprang from the
Potato in its high and palm or e dirt, the
gh
idleness, the cow. nebo which j
t was the use of Wat
was +.
r it is at the present have been the fertile m
in the s hi 1 its phases
e hi 5 lands in the south, this essentially the same under al
is men on md itself, w en rightly viewed, to enable and all its varying nomenclature. i
5 p apprehend that the land was much more fertile ith the Potato has arisen a dense popu ation, o
in e other. clusively tural ; that mie ee eo
jej one seems 80 on that higher | in agriculture, but idle duri coi g
7 bent
5 rit T in Scotland than in Totland, that at
t
e do
a bite E little hesitation in maintaining hat, if t
80 produce is greater in nue oe 2 ka
3
is less on aa . the like it is = e |
English counties 8
, even
acts of oppression, rial .
| hatin ast
not always of the latter chee
e 1
ure renders
the tpplication of en, Wen — do
not possess, to cultivation, and the — nt of
t cannot be d pary th
reap their harvests, and consume their produce ;
Its
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
and while some are dreaming of the trade of Liver-
Bally-
shanno and Man-
petar £ ‘the cocks tats rs of Britain have glutted
4 existing market with their wares; are sighing
or ne wales oer A they may s supply wi oad-
cloth, calico
acting as his substitute, would cause
— demand for labour, but it would be
ut ioi ope: — are important
preliminaries io better cultivation
be a smaller agricu ult
ural popula-
posi naturally prone to
agricultural improvement, slow enough ev. verywher
is rendered still slower in Ireland by the necessity,
generally admitted, for an extensive change in
wnershi wel
some, 7 e alld to be greatly overrated.
are y over - estimated
nsidered high autho orities—might |
y the numbers who must be detached
These, however, are
n industrious middle ‘clas
must first be created, who will employ —
profitably, in giving 5 a a nt to the
class: of J abour me. for manu-
i —+ iaa first be pes 4 by t the creation of
wants oe ‘whieh a WAS dpe ho population are |
unhappily 2 But the growth of such indus-
occupations is slow, and thus the necessity for
— — other than agricultural is immediate
urgent e therefore see no present resource
. ——
ere, woul
experience has ste her to 12 of all markets the best.
Much of the reluctance to ears emigration from
Holand has 255 rom influence of Iris
nsels, fro ope that we > aieh tide over the
aan till the Potato revived, — a See
a desire to m
of land in asii as ibe Peeps a possible in athe
kate l in which the first Potato blight found it. It is
Sen and truly, that the as a of Ireland
5 8 ive if the resources of the
9 5
II a SRTR of the m
ended in the relief of destitution in me had
beet applied, and only a portion of them could have
be i
of farms, ranging from 20 to 50 acres, would haye
stood their ground.
Txose of our readers a in the Show of
the 5 N
ensuing mo the
pleased to ——.— that the 17th — 3
he last day on which they can enter —
for exhibition. e = 5 apt to put these 3
off till the last mo that sometimes ther
| scarcely — to get et the breeder signatures, in ths
where they live at a dist and we take the
. ee of "publishing this sasiad tan for
their
THE FARMERS’ PROSPECTS
Tue task I undertook in
thankless one,
irection must s
e are proceeding on
nothing system is certa sin: te A red to show
thats whether juitly or unjustly, Joey 15 not the re.
ring from a conviction that
a false tack, —.— that
anee of our getting from the 8 at the winte
millions a year
— e the a on of a few
rents ; that the publie
out f rofits or farm
burthens pŠ- unduly bear
land, though we hear so much said of them, are, in fact,
so tr ‘fling as little more than to justify the shilling per
but in = shag emigration, The -pta appear to
m, men will e
8 the Irish pesant,
which has been poesta ages, whenever the
country i sete ds its means of sub-
gt mB s the rate of at at least a
y. They are doomed
to emigrate 2 on ox e necessity which this
ia. 7 has „ undirected and
im en of * public
neg emigration
s pestilence in its train, the es elt of oak
h d
n he emi
x er own of s
T Ta. ba ies as 3
adopting a 1 of
be
al than hig
„the es es and will wet S to bear
t, | horses, or his live s
5
ding the men to the ,
ti
es. already chargeable on the importation of grain
abroad; and that rents being regulated by the |i
June or J y sun, and ploug
erfectly decayed, the plough
ce 4 idevable t portion wasting on th
—— 8 of free competition, although they
have undoubtedly been — y the delusive system
rotection, will not be ed, so long as land ean
ivated sae then at a profit, or there ar
— to — em
gaining strength, that in England far:
unequa h, and that the — who comman
energy 2 der H
requisite for prosperity elsewhere, or in prasa
may aes, the land to good profit at + hoin
ings,
— are
of such produce as
ome, either by — family, his
e hus
oun
ys y, that th
ehalf ¢ the —
Free 3 being “extended more or
roduets, and the
may be consumed at h
i,
into
ofa all purchased er an
e abourers’ money v ages reduced, and the
t les
is tithes too will year
gg year fall with the fall A
forced to
e conclu usion that h n the
But stil still rates and e and iradamen s bills, though
ith br th
3 are requiring the creation
hi
been so applied, in assisting the destitute to reve >
w
a
my last letter was truly a
9 that the first movement in his fee
f
on the cost of cultivating |i
t | food consumed, that exact
made. Str
grain, mà he will ee p
payment he must now sell
bet
system of manufacturing fa:
Gazeties for the 14th and 28th uly as om
tical su head. To
ana of binds,
of phosphates,
substance containin rots, or is
the nitrogen ae with e of the „
w forms the valuable gas
a ton—that if this. ‘gos 1 ee W
forming cae not ee fixed, that is combined with
some substance, such as sulphuric sate which will turn
t into a solid, it passes at once into the a
pe is los t—that e even when fixed it ae
—that the pho aphates also are more or less soluble,
and that if water reaches his manure
flow ws away, it will necessarily carry with it the salts of
ammonia and most of the pho — with which it has
come in rely
facts, and inquir ir reality if he doubt tiem,
let him for a moment contemp late his own
— his sy — wa
ing stoc
and 8 additional straw as it is pro
d other salts
n ——
d to a fell
under 2
ry, or no
e e it, leaving a consi
urfac
What portion of the gaseous and soluble
of the excrements of cattle, of that w.
tion, tl
; 2
5 richness of cattle a ale |
and phosphates so greatly paN 2 S
penia og ae, .
nitrogen; Cl
2 per cent.; Peas,
per ce As nit
its weight of hydro,
or constituents p
only one-half per cent., ty amd th the dun
™ | reduced, bave to be — eas ut has to be paid
unreduced, and where 4 quarter atthe by ck: —5
all these ingredients will 2 carried to the fields,
peat the only risk of th
their fertility. But under the system all but y of the root crop would be the com tive, Wit h one plough the suriane ip only partially Eoo
| Saiversally practised, rarely L of these ingre- fo to dl with the seed ms surface, it would be ran Won ph — surface is only partially turned
Gua ean have es air and water, and wi ese e seed a sufficient quantity of dry concen. | matter esea: 14 * pid, spol, part 5 et — vegetable
| jggredients large quantities of carbonic acid haye also pao its * foree the plant rapidly into leaf and | quired to ben of chat
‘ t m atie SRT A yi wth, ith ** W crops no | into monid 2. OF be youd 9
| ibe xhausted of those volatile and plaian | has wre T think, ba approion Of the ninaa ren ronis form bat a i
stuents which e its * em 'of followin ing with a sein plough in the | should be tur. f land, and where they exist the soil
| Bev me attention to the prevailing | adopted. must, I think, become generally | and th ood, over. Cih twp ploughs in
y of cleaning the = and of shallow ploughin a f as 4 How nen r more maei rin 3 8 decay would show in
i — e — ding i ove to 4 the work badly which two pair-horse ag — t easily be eradicated with the culti.
‘and almost as much plant-food, as two acre pies 2 * a do effectually; and whenever lon much AY i Aaga urk moala be lightened, and
deep, and yet how rarely is the plough made | in, the use of t covered, or a foul weedy s A P. asted converted into
to A GERE a u inquire of two ploughs would seem to be imperativ r
the reason you will be told that the soil
inches 8 that buen there is ae cone F ARM ACCOUNTS.
or gravel, y co ay. È HerewiTs I
au that th the wr soil is only * oF gravel estimated Dr. a Bens ol Remar A 3 the four-course 3 but I conceive that
or clay, more o e ion changed by frost and sun and rain, | of in a — of medium ie con, Boa K $ be realised b —
ul mingled wi e remains of roots an a that ing to the common four-co — = of moll, ancora. | extended outlay in maumnse, artificial and home made,
a — te hee ospherie in Hines s the erude un. of the country, which is much Dae A es a much heavier weight of Turnips =e
— tat had ras AA oxidised and partially decom- | COrrect, a profit may still b eB A tomes a p consequenti heavier crops o! corn
; that excess of acids h y y e obtained by farming on | and — obtai 7 ne
ad been removed om- Est tained. Philo- Agrieulus,
SEK the berated alkatiin aaa with’ the stimated Debtor and Creditor Account of cultivating a Farm per acre, of Land
= — wed fall of rain and snow brought — Four-course aysiem a ’ of fair quality, on the
in a short time the u ex- | To Three Ploughi FIRST ZEAR- TURNIP FALLOW.
posed to these influences, would become as friable and Three e Dragging, ae and £ s 0S | By Crop of Swedes m
Rolli , Say 16 tons, at 10s,
mellow as the upper, and richer in the raakana ne food — bc and Couch gan ig atte ngs, at be, + : Balance carried the debit of next year .. ¥ 2 K bd
Dring and Rolli i :
if the lands be Parey ang PATON, hardi ngs a | = vr gre 2 a ure, 2 prs 12 tons, at 65. 2 1 0
cos
r te nd the landow. i Two 3 s, ‘at 5 5
ain, he had better anf eee tito — — Turnip be A, wede, 2 ie ‘at Ls, Ba, 6
leaving his farm, seek elsewhere a landlord who better Tithes and oo 010 %
2 i nant’s interest and his own. i 1 — 10 per cent, ?
80) ere here i $ 016 0
under-draina WME not esential 0 4 a Hedging d ditching, and contin.
y ands it must precede deep plough- 2 ee,
ec eep and effectual ing will £11 18 6 eta
era ae
„ no landowne left an | To Bal b men YEAR—BARLE
outlay. If not the owner of the One Ploughing wie g 8 fie 37 * ay 8 nee 6 ‘quarters p St His, #9 12 od
y borrow under the Act, and an in- Gee Baan T and Sowing ie VVV harvesting and marketing. j
er cent. on the outlay wi ne 142
cipal and . If 7 5 in fe y he pin See ed Barley, 4 bus bushels 1 45 * wo 3 7 3
at 4 or 5 per e and as lands sell for 30 — Ba carried rs ai of next year x a We eh
t on the si ea pa 1007. expended £912 0
ma eld ult 201 to E i EE . uo
o the sale va z
aina not sufficiently appreciated, from To Cleve peed, 4 Ibs, at 8d. 2 Eo 177 Balance 1 down
ani n that if water quickly flow off the surface Be „ oh : d r p a
nt required ae that its value mainly consists i lance to eredit of next year 116 2 — oy A R
the land laterin atanda d earlier in sprin 5
slight . to be able to gain R 5 = 22 „ 4 5 8 6
g, and to be rarely debarred by wet | To Plough sie * YEA
ee nd rolling ; : e reductions in t e "Hare arrowing — ee prion te * By Planeo se 3 at 40 3 3
ence occasioned would abundantl oa at, 2 bushels at 6s, 9 12 0 The s j i
ie extra rent. But it is “a 4 Went, ey as befor ap 3 (The straw to pay for harvesting and marketing.)
s of increased productiveness that it should be Balance, being proi on the four years: (288. 64. 1
ly valued as the means of raising the temperature per acre um) anes OS
soil, and carrying warmth and atmospheri
to it, rae admitting of deeper and E. £0 15 R
of more luxuriant crops, and By Bal years,
re complete ripening. P Who- — — . motho “i „£514 2
8 ater frozen in a white-hot vessel by
it an evaporating liquid, or cooled a bottle e Corresp nce. om out, Several years — 2 —
ing around it a wet, towel, is aware that Use of Poms on om Clay, Fallows. . ost economical, uses deseribed, in 8 iors 5
pa 88 paner of cold, and that if | and by far the est and most generally applicable Cont to me by Wm. Browne, Esq., of of Tallantire !
. on wad ps 0 a evapora- | mode of sedi te cloddy surface of clay lands, is 3 to this figure),
warm bi onally e and the | lay mounds of alt yers of the rough materials where the bottom part was flat; and having one
mm rays of y sun wasted, not its tem- hot lime, and to ignite the heaps by exposure to similar to „it occurred to me that a
tonsiderable Tadge ap into vapour, During a air, or by the application of water. A heap of 7 yards ribbed bottom would act i conse-
ae ger p e year rain is warmer than in length, 4 y in th, and 3 feet high, and | quently I had another made with the planks notched in,
fener a Wish the land carries warmth ixed with 72 bushels of hot lim recom- to press obliquely on the surface, as shown in your
e ammonia and 9 mended to be reduced to ashes, when fresh clay may | figure ; and it has been of ble service to me,
is by At other surface ad so long as suffi ent heat i The damp i and to numbers who have N it. Its action is that
heated e sun, and when rain falls h exhaled from the lime will produce a smothering i u rasp, of them are 1
at once carried below, in- | effect on the clay, that is not easily attained in the open
ie os by aig we and 1 air, = Boy ‘2 or quantity of flaming
ecried e farmer's diffi- | combustib in the former case, there is
b e n lessness, and in the latter of imper-
fo be attained withou
me care
Regest would bring 25 oa i
and the plan
farm into deep cultiva-
wi d bl
Aay course of on tion pulverulent mass sp
is 70 expose the subsoil to the at- and incorporated with the fallow. This ss will be
nded for the fallow crop should | very effectual in reducing stubborn fallows that often
in autumn, g the plough twice — 5 the — of labour, will add both lime and
so thro 1G hes to soil; but land must be wrought in a
5 what is better, e, ania Se ‘o before it ean be accomplished, when very
the other. con le attention will be required. The quantity |
vel, or indurate of ashes must be sufficient to cover the whole surface
plough should be preceded 22 subsoil- | of the ground, when — j are spread; if less the
gh with the mould board application may be worth li The ultimate
uld ather permit, a are a mixture of finely reduced and ih in moil, |<
e 80
ve and the
got at any time, and the
the
surface | stances, to be blended and incorporate
noms much of th
cina and use
ect burning] and extinction of the
surrounding contact of air. The lime can be
eans are more at the
+ Sek
715
exposure,
process can go on in wet or
command of
Aue of the
gine
ing; 9, comf
amount of 2 { cot! per acre) and skill w
me ane 5 to meet on
1 account, as is evident to
the 43
n soil with the new, and eradic Cumberland 3 to this im
assume every ferme to have a ty Paper of the imm October, | part
Zaan, or to be able to lire — where the writer is at a 2 i ,
bring clay land into p curious in the antiquity of it may see, on my farm,
spreading and ploughing — pe f the kind e1 , |
manure would be as usual, and as in C or perhaps in En
rus
waving and luxuri
clean gro
crop, a fresh supply of weeds
appearance and Mao Mage iy A
the midst of a Nor is
the field itself, but ex t extends to the as ean 1 5
housed, for on 5 men gree
stalks bein ing a 8 the bot
sheaves, it is ! 8 (at — in “his damp
t thoroughl in the inside;
——
arison * like sotto of
us
ars a fie ws superior r intelli
Al, however, cannot be lum
ed of p armers vill —
“ dea ag os ad.”
in | may be more inteligible to practical 1 18 1 Lona
to bus from pou to
een | quart
h | Ba
Wils
e
Shelley, 5 — Simonds,
of many for a bare subsistence, will keep up rents ae a
as not the demand for land in Treland bee
And
use of
oe payments, in
this 5 if of long n, will I firmly believe
i er 3 ean 3 upt 2 ruine
be untry. Biding the tim
ith some mental
tion at least, if no pecuniary gain result chesatfotit and
I hope Š shall not be slothful in my little farm of 100
pests F. IF.
ead.
Be “of ie = rep ae an nd Far
settle the quest
L hope you 1 = allow = 8
r, (see p. 698),
His yrds t
jumps
nes an 1
2 enka ama to clear up
ealeulations ; but this I see, that he says the 4lb. loaf is is
5d. or m self, at the time the erties was written,
we were e paying —— e (Islington), *. 3 and the 4lb. = se =
w 6łd.; of c eaking of the
quality and that li little convenient err or giv ~ ee
sack e profit than he allows! viz., 26s. ead of
0s. Qu. the amount of a baker’s 57085 after
due allowance for alum and water, as well as over-
charge ?]
om p
o that
Societies,
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND,
Tue Councit resumed their sittings, after the recess,
on Tuesday last, the pa — November, shores a monthly
meeting was veld ent, Mr. Tuo ae
C eH- W;
KE
n, Col. A
ne Bike, Col. sat
bbs, Mr. Le Hobb „1
Shaw a) Mr. Shaw parme —
W. Simpson
r Bra randreth,
rett, Mr. Brandreth
gree h and Pro 788 or Wa
e following new ers wees elected :
Wastes The Lord, K Hall, Wymondham, Norf,
Delves, William, Frant, Tunbridge Wells, Kent
Crabtree, John, Hales wo uffolk
Smith, Henry, The Grove, Cropwell- — — Bingham, Notts
Bale. 3 Flint Hall, East Harling, Norfol
Hallam, Thomas, Bridlesmith Gate, Netting hase
Tillett, . Hill House, aright e
Saxby, W illiam, Rottingdean,
The names of 26 ‘candidates: for: alettiin at the next
meeting, were then read.
FINANCES. ~ Colonel Cuattoner, Chairman of the
d to the Council the report
ciety to the end of the previous
onth ; from which it 8 ed that the current cash-
balance in the hands of the
534.
with the
bours. But can low pri
am a pra tial 1 farmer, and although 3 I am
not janie on the prep zily o of agriculture, my
earlies “pesca e and present 85
rooted in the
bs xperi . been u 8
clay hoh of 100 acres, 65 acres of whic h are arable
the other 35 acres are Grass, ave done mu te
improve the land, and have not gruðged any outlay of a
ive character. The follo owing is the result of
my last year’s cultivation :
Wheat from the harvest of 1848, 5s. 8d. bush ae
Profit by ss 5 of farm horees 25 10 o | th
Pigs do, sold 31 4 6
. 5 9 952
Beans (ót consumed on . farm) 13 0 0
One year’s rent 2 = +» £100 0 a —
Tithe oad rates one CEO 5.0
» exc. — of work done by farm
Guano and other man bought = 135 328
(3 ures U
Tradesmen's Bills gi 23 10 0
l £321 13 0
Loss, besides interest of capital 1
——— £320 6 6
Such is my experience of last year, Had, however,
the old average of prices been maintained, I should
rosie had s a ho s profit, but no more
patties are deeply a
exactness with whic
neial business of the
state i the Society.
Coun mbers in a
AGRICULTURAL SAARELE
e, I | tha
grati ifia-
58 —
e following er
for ‘an business of the p
1, Tuesday, Dec. 4. Mont thi y Cou neil at 12
neni, Dec, 11, Weekly Council = 1
eresse rofessor Simo
gements w were then
o'clock,
lock,
and 8 of the Toor in 8
animals; 5 8 articular refer seated rot”
w — Sheep, a oe onos,
. Wednesday, Dec. 12. npe Council for Fin
3 Ld 72 k k Pe wt Com.
S5 ese Pro:
Illustrations of the — A 1 hy Physi ditions z
Water, at 8 P. . 3 sical Con
6. Thursday, ka 13. Special Council for Stock Prizes, at
11 prec
7. Friday, Special
of Members at 11 Au.
AN 1158 having laid belore
the
3 wo e qualified to compete, provided they
ee en tard ring with the Society’s rules for
— mpetit
ENTS, —
the Country
r. 3 of the Society, N Win in request of
uncil,
Farm Accounts,—Colonel Cuattoner, Chairman of
the Farm- Account ae laid on the table a com-
ose
nicat td ei
Veterinary Colle lege to the
the Council, that Bone Simonds
to act as the nary Inspector to the wene The
Council w oted ti
cordial anå best
on in promoting the great object of the
o. opera
applies i — science to the live stock of
farmers.
SMITHFIELD 8 ie sarge wip GIBBS
those Members of t uncil who intended to
entries for the — Smithfield "Chub b Show, that the
17th of November would be the latest ür for that
purpose,
Numerous donations and communications for diseus-
| sion were received and 5 rred to the Weekly Com
on the llth of December.
F ? Clubs.
Bortey: On the Application of Manures for Wheat.
ent meeting of this Soc ociety Mr. SPOONER
Depreci ted — “US
ated v dae 106 15 6
2
Expenditure as above a i es 321 13 0
5 5 Assumed balance for interest of capital and profit £105 9 0
3 is the great erop on clay land, and T had 30 to the rec % practical
to the acre last This I consider a fair farmer), awarded Sir Taomas TANCRED, Bart, of
I am wrong in Cizenoester, pai rshire.
for any of your II. The Commer ete A Ho: judges to the
kindly to supply Essays N the followin
ne may judge of H Concordiâ res parvæ l ai
© cost of producti 5
ice of produee with which t 4. “ The talk 85 : Farner 15 * his gs ks,”
ct is too well known, | JounAL.— Mr. also reported that the new
ers in some districts have part of the So satay’ é 3 was in the pm vend?
death struggle | consideration, and report to the Council, on Dee.
would be ready for distribution reres the membe
soon after the ensuing December m i x
Prizes.—On the motion of M Mr.
Stock
| the following committee was appointed to
‘SHER Hoss,
to take into 4
12, the
others,
1, lists of me: subscription, heed an
rticularly those of the Continent, we find that our averag®
| alphabetically © classed in counties, with a a statement of |P * rop of Whe cat doubles theirs, and K ee dobia y the 2
p 3 ne yu A
paed during th use our lani fetter or more np ae — er
n the walls ef ae Oal: room, = order that an "| en nthe O ontinen, ut alee — ars depends on nature —
examination of these names migh 1 lace by mem- ments for the moderate supply of that Foai wi o in
bers = Council residing in the —— localities, and grain of Wheat could Lf — brought rode? aa rule, whilsthere
reports made on the subject to the Finance Com ———ͤ — tees aa mae
previously to the Special Council in December. ores — he exception, Th the land than for the — upply of —
MEMB F COUNCIL.— ouncil Digi with | food of plants for the furnishing the in — materials from
deep regret, i the announcement t of the decease of their | the disintegra gr — onthe ut ate constituents of
venerable member, Mr. Hillyard, of e near — ek plantè 1 N two kinds, organic reer
Northampton. nic or earthy. The former, although 3 three of
E Essays.—Mr, Pusey, M.P., chairman of the cipal bulk of vegetables, consist only of tert and of
Journal Committee, r iransmitted to the Council the bsr le — „ pay a bodies, —
report of the Judges of Essays, gra and Specifications: forming — from two to seven per cent., yet muck iron,
for farm 1 from w — it appeared that the numerous, consisting of salts of silica, lime, TS found com
as adjudicati ions = made. potash, soda, and a few others, which horie, and other ande
3 f 50 bined with nn sulphuric, phosphoric, ater, and others
ve pa o 0 for the best Essay on | A certain number of these are soluble in water,
oe. Construction of Farm Buildings (with plans, alsi are not so. f
and ing estimate of the farm buildings,| The Wheat and straw together consist 0 1, egg,
exclusive of due ing-h = s, enabling parties = 3 NNṔEL:! aae 835 52
matter
Carbon
Oxy
a C
Nleroge n A
1 . matter
e
Wheat removes i “4 Ibs
AS. * crop s 1 1155 n 1 acid, ‘i
5. po
— removes about
soda; it also —
351849. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ ET TE. 717
e considered that t 111.0... re a ae Rae
: — z was 1 all bones dung for ond T cod p crop, and to | mip be sap in 1846. “g ye Blo made this trates mpd it and e the workers hate been obit fe — Tare
Be
H
38 5
*
N
y been
— * — pecu alte
—— and the — food for Wheat wa
nitrogen
E
HEPA
773
1
j
to sow
b fit of the
22
2
č
8
d
88
Hin
pF
n. me was fa —.— neces-
mponition s = a dung, that it
turned, * z to e fermentation,
this p ntity 2 monfa, at least
this is valuable —— — dissipated a and lost. This,
as the sens ow : ethod of rais raising a 3 od
as most essential, in or m
which w utrodueti
crop, a m
Sarena of this altered system ma aay thus
We —
— Byt or “
al- Eka iana AAA bing are
chains for
4
an ordinary Now the carts
are all provided with well made
back-band and belly-band, the "n of
d is ay on without extra charge, an
horse.
Thad
* The trial bet
Perhaps we are pea too much discussion =o
— d one-horse carts carrying ;
| — details
— 1 —.— much more 0 di did your spa e or my
time admit of it, which would show seal clearly to every
one very oe are the kinds ich your
ts have been comparing Cumber-
land cart and the Scotch cart of “ X, Y. Z ;” but will
what I said in m letter, |
— the the waggon
EE ne
52—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 829
simple an affair, yet, if 2cwt. or even l cwt. can bestruck | Aware, however, that this mode of operation was unnatural, large white Belgian Carrot, and Mangold Warrel, All did well
d could not last for d desirous, if ib
off the load of every farm horse in the country, this is an. ever, an dus, if possible, to set excepting the Barley,
an object 3 of ev 3 9 of tie Gazette. 2 FV. R. ——— ele eee 1 — * Belfast, na „ the cont G —
Hand Drill. —It is generally admitted that a shilling | 3 — of a Flax mill at 1 — — 5 — the | Bethe 8. — — e W
ved is a 8 hilling 1 but if I can show that in excellent water power, and he succeeded so well, Wana The H
ing eat 5s. per acre may ily saved, I that before — year 8388 round the mill was at work, an Hayt l st leapsa! > g Boyton, near
i ese free trade times I shall i Fa pe meri hag nda 5 izhb
— — Me brother farmers, Some dime > ary dg —— — and reapesta mite 2 time, Sir Richard, | Of a 1 heat grown on a neighbour's land,
8 y ; ea y mited, gp napas the plan of | and which was considered a i e in that
municated for the benefit of “An Enquirer „A plan furnishing the seed to the e large farmers, who ere by this time t : . Mira mys
3 1 r í ata eto make their own purchases, and he d evoted Ai — r part of Wiltshire, he variety was
and description of a small reu drill, which I made e 4 ‘s,” i i 4
„ o helping forward in the world young men, of w T po- Spalding’s,” and it was sown in Nov, 1848 by the
several years ago, and have found to answer peten posed to make good far of his Rev. Mason erson, of Sherrington, . chal E i
for sowing Swedes, Moga urzel, Carrot ust mention that Sir Richard and his ‘eds have a school h a it earth. * The
Parsnips either dry or steeped. With a little e for boys and giris (which they open alike to Protestants pad ampia page n much poy aa
P ad ie . and Catholics), and which they themselves 9 had ample space to branch, and March they began
1 have applied it to another purpose, and found it superintend, From amongst the most intelligent and to throw out their stems, ach plant had 32 stems.
beam 8
answer equally well. I had the drill fixed on the = er boys of this school Sir Ri mer d i
lough, and worked bya light wheel wi -| the habit of selecting one, of whom he makes a stew ard Se
of a p ‘ 1B z y 8 ne ith = uni in a small way, giving him a limited trust at — — — Notices to ry onden
ersal ton the axle, and hav t h hi p ts.
5 ape: 5 ave put in with it this | his own immediate superintendence. When this state of pro. | ANSWER ro “East ANGLIA An A.M, and Small Farmer
autumn about 30 acres of Wheat on land that has pro- | bation has been satisfactorily passed, and the youth has shown | treats 20 ewes he — on 16 acres of land as follows +
duced Fouen — Wurzel, Swedes „and some he is fu the y, honest, and industrious, and ag accountant, 12 acres of are into four seasons, and
fallow. It es up very weil and strong in drills e i further intrusted to — 5 Ains bai — t a salary, —— — is 8 isto four equal parts. One season,
3 inches aa — with the exception of one furrow on pereen. If tbere is no house 1 * 3. sit Richard seta Swedish Turnips one Hd idem + ey — —
the crown of the ridge, in which the seed is omitted, | his you ng protegé to van to build one, ndin 455 ateriais ewes are now eating off the white urnips in vee
„ gh the ed, then
any drills on each ridge as furrows, 1 and assistance 22 aiy the green rounds, inst the Swedish Turnips, of which a part
in lf vod ridges. whic lete ith requires s much t me it a respectable habit tution, npe in ail are stacked at home, in case it should be ecessary to
pl 8 ges, uy —4 With | cases he insi K n the decency, re Ly * Aan ess move the ewes trom land in ba
A Y, lep, — —— * 3 whet
five bouts of the plough, . are nine the house, and tbat it t should not be suffered nany| last till the end of Ma
drills on ridge. antages 77 this me I e particulars, Well, the * * south Tar hee a fe — 9, is © ee s fouluwe : 1, ‘white Turnips — Whee
s f rs Sir Richard's t e is thrifty he sav e tops as ur the bs: t
ider ea lst, a saving of, at l st 5s. per acre, as por tion of his s ary, and is at length enabled nA —— 8 white Turnips, 2, Rye, sown thick, the — yA 1 —
the loug plete as it goes, pn the labour | own account as a tenant, He is at first assisted by small loans, | manure; to be followed by Swedish Tu 3, Trifolium
is not perceptibly increased ; 2d, t heat comes id out in judicious improvements, which yield hi ne m; to be followed by Swedish Turnips. 4,
Sir wider ‘drills Yh eg mode of drilling ; great return upon the abundant bog svil; he extends his opera- to be followed by green round Turnipe. It is calculated
h ficiently f. ? | tions, takes a larger farm; aud, being at length thrown | that w 32323 quantity of hay and
3d, they are su ciently far apart to allow of hoeing ; | upon his own 1 sow 1 nabii to support his family in| and Peas when the Turnips are finished, the above will more
and, 4th, the seed being deposited at an uniform depth, | comfort, to pay his rent, e way tor another recipient than ‘keep | 7 ewes till the lambs are fit for the butcher. It
and perfectly covered, all waste and the expense of a be his landlo rd’s frre Benen — sity. So well have the 1 — three crops on the faliow, which
bo ff bi : 2 philanthropic schemes of sir Richard O'Donnell (of which the may not succeed if the season be unfavourable. Any specific
y to keep off birds is avoided. Ploughing in is the | above are oul specimens) maana in his own neighbourhood | _ question will be readily answered,
: h
n p ” y
most approved meth putting in Wheat in this (for I regret to say that his means are more limited than his | Booxs : Sub. The c 2 book on Farming is probably Mr.
neighbourhood, except on Clover leas, but when sown | Will), that he bas raised very many of his tenantry to a state Jackson's, published in Ds series of educational! works by
hwoniicast it is dent to Avoid having too much seed | Which might vie with the better class of farmers in this Messrs s, Chambera, of Edi b.
- } country; and I have seen farm-houses on his estates which, | CATTLE Snows : Cogan a Co. ‘bey are held at least one and
on the ridge, added to which is the ee of | for cleanliness, order, and comfort, could be surpassed no. Often four or five in eve y county in England, during the winter
g the crop effectually. The expense of a | where, and which evidently bespoke the Prosperous farmer; | Season. Shaw's Farmer’s Almanac con the names of
drill co mplete te, and ready to attach to any plo ugh “at five and yet this has been effected moe i the — — 2 tation of their secretaries, and you had better apply to them individu.
N cal 305. AL k Tucker, W. English or Scotch capital or industr the innate | ally, as we e have 'no information as'to dates.
k min y * fre uckett, armley, nea untry, as to 5 and capital, | Cows: A s cannot the cause for
Bristol. If, therefore (as I maintain), Lord Lucan, instead of creating a | the fact — mention. The numerous complaints we hear of
English Forming in Toland. =I thank you f for setting desert and Pope ing it . and directing all his exertions and . ature from various parts of the country points tè
oa right with oke ôf 1 1 vast mean the e improvement ot the soil of . age ug ospheric cause, i tir eere eeg a change, not only of
1 vao yo esp any | had first perdi mp'e 4 rr improve the farmers, to a the individual bull, but the breed to which he ja
ign, E or otherw eves my part a ragi proper niet aon ag | but to mate them the 6 ot ‘the short-born will be a goud —— oss, Your to em-
the value of land in Ireland. - Depreciation there — 1 — em isha his own hands, and — 1 TIR is desirable, ee G. S H F. The
. sendiug them 5 go abroad or pon ai h complaint you ma enera e fear the
undoubiedly is, but Irishmen must look at home, and | and instructed them n she art o ulture where it was 48 beyond our “ken. Iti more frequen tly the fault of the
ae over the water, for the cause, apy cannot deny | required, and by mean of judicio 5 louse enforced the prospi .
— ~ — 2 pers. Batis committed, and in certain parts giret ho hit devoted — energy 8 to insuring a | CXCLuPEDIA oF AGRICULTURE e e = — We must be
reland are e market for the produce o tenants, and so given them peg of answering here m nous questions
one stated y age à, disgraceful 5 the fidence in their own exertions, he might ad perhaps found | On a work with which the Editurship of this Paper can have
Pepe enen to the best feelings of our | the task at first more difficult and arduous than sweeping them nothing todo. This column is d
nature. What is th nd; the transfer of | off the ground, and commenci operations upon a clear | With those questions on farming Ag. Gazette is 10.
h to more inte ig mpetent tenants h Sir e e bi . ts ha 3 as in chewed rs 1 — — of it to answer
z ir ar onnell’s experience a ws they must have done, e su t
been regarded by the former wretched and incapable | his labours would ‘thenceforth sg nile sd letters addressed. to the 5 If any one wants infor-
i deadly wrongs er