«V "NI HORN. As, 20, Grea
FENY LTURAL end. other GLASS, to bo gr tho Whole. A. Crispin Horticultural Valuer, 28, Priory Road, Wands-
ARDS, — hen Alley, Wes —
.C. ie from 1 0d. eem 4
WATERING GARDENS, LUMBER, Sales m cie.
XA ENGINEERS, M ect 3 TO GENTLEMEN, FLO AND OTHERS.
post free Was : . ESSRS. PRO OTHEROR. oben MORRIS will —
n Warehouse. 76, — ra} Joints Lane, on
Tondon don Bridge; or the ; ic Ives for cbe met
[ res (noi or
T E Y d
i — — sex
Diki fh hich Su tion P on Covers Plan deo
X or desee pt to Mnd rom Ps Hon Mi “Hans,” e Ee air f Sale. — to bo baa al tthe *. ana
kinds of Ma- | morning o! es al e
S PAI ATENT 8 — pan ee uomen & Bolste . Poe 25 erm Auctioneers, American my, .
on Ww:
Chest: Beating of the Royal eee ee s | ponr MED NN ai UNIQUE PLAN =
he First Prize gi e Society N. — . S ia directed by the Council o f
r Nn cs "3 B. A Stock and any modifi-
Bororss & Key, 95, Newgate Street, strongly re- —.— ads to order. — address all communications to
etn tho most perfect R EU JAMES LYNE HANCOCK,
i i bber Works, Goswell Road, London. B.C.
xd n AE Ad FOUNTAINS weer jon Hoe, Se i, ton ne |
: 8 E. CASES,
‘DES, EDGINGS AND CURBS FOR FLOWER HE best and cheapest PAINT for PARK FENC-
LM Siliceous Stone, ING, all outside Wood and Iron IM is MITCHELUS
for 2 has ment of the Villa Garden, the — Se eigen pe
Tii or the | private or public Park
Illustrations meee FREDERICK Ransome, at
; on Row, Westminster, S. W., or Patent
the
&e.
3 with POLES, PULLEYS, and Mannfactory, Kent n Lane, Lambeth.
8 omm BUNTING, SCRIMS, and Tir ANY, f
bo . J AMADIO'S BOTANICAL. “MICROSCOPES,
Pappas e packed ny ease, with three powers, co
Tren ation should be made forSecond-hand Rick Cloths. | pincers, and t o. F^ will — the animaleula in 8
; so E Site eof TENTS may be seen erected ön the Pred Vr it Si — Addrens Journ. AMapio, T, Throgmorton Biret,
ec of Second-hand MARQUSES and TENTS] A large assortm d d ;
the Chin mea, SBS- BN miae iA
ENJAMIN
EDGINGTON, Duki reet, London’ Mar DEAD wish it t
EUM FIRE E ESCAPES, 25s. chaly, vay bo strat } n ai
t ILU ent, 32, Charing Cross. Just }
TED ÇA’ „„ marnas ol 1000 int eje et
Es
304 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. {Ao
GREEN'S PATENT GRASS | CUTTING, COLLECTING, & ROLLING MACHINES FUR FOR 1859 3
GREENS PATENT HAND MACHINE,
2
È e
WR
E.
ugs | Dae Box and Tools for sharpening and TT
Machine in order, 5s, extra: 3 With On.
= 1.
. Preventing acc'dents and ! eeping the the weg,
ole m, 5s, extra
*
LIST OF PRICES.
——
To cut 14 inches, 6l. ; 16in. 6I. 10s. ; 18 in.
for one person. T 10s. ; 22 ir
SI. ; 24 in. 8I. 10s.—for two persons. If with
GREEN'S PATENT DONKEY “AND PONY MACHINE,
Suitable for a Don- ^ W
key, toent 24 inches,
10L.; 26 in, IM.
Fora Pony, 30in.,
154; box, tools,
Co., 65, 6d. extra
Leather traces, =
| to attach to | oe
: yl
To cut 30 ins.
18L; 36 ins.,
?1.; 42 ins.“
TRIAL t the Lond roe se a —
se en at the Lo on
First trial Y roro ooking Horticultural fedet s Gardens, m June 5, 1857. Four petit, ae pan
8 e are d trees, &c., when GREEN'S PATEN be the best in
See the Gardeners’ Ch à e i yes
LONDON HORTICULTURAL GARDENS, Cutswick.—Th. FORI I" 22, 1858, p. 423, under the heading of ‘Gard | Menioranda.” y^
Machines which does its work very fa ys e rema — rc Arboretum oed = z$ — condition ; it is kept jn order by means of one of GREEN'S ?
85 ng of al e-hal
„TRI P Mow Ext tract from London Times of Ju 8, Hand Ne e,
onsiderabl ne 8, and Gar 3° Chi :
22 exhibitor, as . — as possible oi "i uniform size and w "kel «i To sizes Tave been brought t5 to the 1 5 the trial. should take place e between um
as uniform quality as possible. er trials on leve id an uf t selves, or their men. The ground to be-worked was determined by lot, the fj having bee he best. sugges"
RES : el groun trees, the Judges, Colonel Challoner and Mr. Edward Easto n, decla red GRE Me atent to Des pastos, Jose
REEN respectfully informs the Nobility, Ge try, G: Signed) “
pe
e
B.
8
=
t
£
AGAPETE S BUXIFOLIA (Nvrr).
C. James. pner — de p. Pkt. Sir Willia m Hooker thus alludes to it in connection with the
This
No: more blooms can be sent out this figure given of it:— very beautiful plant; was imported
Two fancy ill be introduced fexta — "it possible | by Mr. Nuttall from the Dupla Hills on the eastern frontier of | o;
THOMAS Wirp, The Primulary, Ipswich. Bhotan, bordering upon. Assam, where it forms ei
EW PETUNI!IA S.
OHN SEALEY can now supply the Seven Beautiful
New Striped dr rm was awarded the first
prize at the Bristol and Clifton rie rtieultural Society. J. S. has
no hesitation in ing that they are the finest varieties in
cultivation. Th rik
healt hy grow rgreen aspect, will be
desira! ble acquisition for Greenhouse —— „ accommodating of a vl
itself me a compact "habit, - all limited. collections, amm —
equi ral treatment of similar growing p plant
VETRUFHTILA PULCHEL
An mental-leaved Greenhouse Shrub, of pA and com- :
ein of ing and music — — —
pect vm — api ntly pectina inated or winged. foliage. recognition “of all those ni eren and relative harm — colour ,
sound, which constitute beauty to the — aE o
DIAN AZALEAS. ERIAL his variety is
ETOILE DE GAND (M. Span) | LEOPOLD I. (C. VAN Loo) warf, c
M DE BRABAN (C. VAN (Ds DES PANACHEES
II.
E WITTE,
"eo een lua . ** Illustrated Bouqu
SPRING CATALOGUE or DAHLIAS, HOLLYHOCKS,
C, and of GARDEN lm SEEDS
may be had om application.—St. George's, near
EW VARIEGATED 5 UMS
— has au equal and
len — edges w D Foliage novel f shaded
a s with a broad or zone of s
crimson and pink, the centre of each leaf being green, wi NEW ACHIMENES.
small scarlet trusses vede m. 78. ae GIGANTEA IGNEA—LONGIFLORA FLORE PLENO
-— DIGBY (TYDÆA)
DY —.— — E KERRISON b mend
Cy m E * = Cr been n4 bove raised b Breeze and. Mr. Elliot. A n fi s
— 4 from ai amen t + eir — yet grace! atii
— Ade rada W HYBRID seil AS. with . m poine —.— ns presenting a a vary Deine
— waited e for ower rom justers onale
» Seedlings — by Mr. Stran; er to Herrn Consul
mcm and full ons of J. Ss unrivalled | schiller, of Hamburg — sg inei amoros:
— — 125. per — e ye new single sorts, 1 0 n A. dropping of their flower-lobes, as in some varieties. This very
sa seri — E ins | SPLENDIDA SANGUINEA | PUNCTATA. ornamental kind is admirably adapted for villa
son, 25 roh per dozer erim- ATROPURPUREA. - SPLENDIDA IMPERIALIS. |9f j ut especially for
— bys also | ; 11011
VF TS FOR THE FLOWER G he | EVENING Vil dan. VICTORIA—(BURRIDGE). .
Pi loving m tho prions ache, 1 EN-— The | DRUMMONDI.: | ALBERT—(BURBIDGE).
tablished: ts:—
— CALCEOLARIA
Scarlet Geraniums, Tom Thumb, —— vm — AMPLEXICAULE ALBA.
* N e ER that were struck last s J j " NEW pn
struek last autumn A ex in v For June. E 22 without a single
Verbenas, — the hang varieties 2 in * s DELICATA. BRILLIANT. its së the avenue or ribbon: ;
hmibby - id : aie are BEDDIN nete AS.
— tra, extra large $e exi Mus Tene —
Carnations . Wau. ditto 5s per Los 12 to ee
— —— e * 6d. to New Bedding Shrubby E uniqu
Gaillardia p ceret Rx oe M T va Be COCCINEA servo: mai A ups NCE OF ORANGE
H -- E .. -. .. (GRANT) ISpens:
Holiotropes 6 8 GOLDEN -——- (GRANT) YÉLLOW GEM (Grant) in the grouping of. plants for the flower
—— "o 2 — rn n known Tom r rw mb and Golden Chain have ego and are
“Rem ks, fine named: flowers RE OARS o zs ties as C. — — and C. Yellow Prince of e | P 3a, Sd each; four plants rr
Tantanas i y T E 75 with improved colours and truss. ,
- Petunias, ne sorts - : = ~ NEW FUCHSIAS.
Tes ncn dark Groundsel) (Seedling productions of Edward Banks, Esq.
Geraniu eraniums, Flower of the Day, f “fine cut down —— ec d ——
; es 10 A.
x * Aer. 6 Sich OF FRANCE LE PR
D & X oe Fiantingdon. STRA jens LITTLE DORRIT
Woo
NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS YSAN
Jen SALTER begs to announce that his SPRING YS
Eg ATALOGUE is now published, in which his splendid cine 3 of M. Pelé, of Paris.)
other new CHRYSANTHEMUMS of 1559 | MAS Ser 5
s m SATANELLA MAGI
mat greet as ell as the unrivaled goneral eollection, | 30 went KENILWORTH
will n ob England: * Prince Albert,” and every other variety, | QUEEN OF BEAUTIES ST. JUSTIA
ready in the course of the mont ersailles. Nursery,
Street, near Hammersmith T W. NEW VERBENAS.
CHRYSANTHEMUMS—CHRYSANTHEMUMS. (S ductions of Messrs. Breeze & Banks.)
A a E Run F.H.S., NURSERYMAN, Stoke Newing-| This collection possess the greatest advance in colours, form,
the lai grower most essful exhibitor of | aud e truss, with fine habits, that we had
the pem pei in the British Empire, begs to call the tunity of introducing, its, we ever had the oppor-
teni ~ lees collectio of the above beautiful autumn flower
“This mai Z
EUM ection, thestock of which amounts to u — NEW GLOXINIAS.
can ITA strong plants; one dbzen for Ok or five SEBASTIAN O. MADONNA.
Aem inte varieties, containing two of each senses, for II.; or SPAGN ae Sn
Een T0 PIT 100 plants in 50 varieties, two of each variety, j
25 varieties, t 30 POMPONES in t variety ; 50 Pompones in
reet aah variety Er id Song pan —— — PER ETE A 2
mpone the Golden Cedo Nulli, 5s. each, aro now ready, with AN ADMIRABLE a ee
LS tothe Trade. Every order will
a 5 taeda — the Chrysanthemum.
wiles e le to J. H. Bre, Stoke Newington, | : A
be immediately ebend fn " Catalogues on. — Wellington —
and Contin Jontinental). —
as Specimens of the
P Troein Prima Don
rel, Pri
, and 183.
per dosen.
NEW FREN
NCH SPOTTED GER ANIUMS.—Fine plants set
; With flower pde and coming into flower, 12s., , 188., » &2 21s. p
pe
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI
SEEDLING SPOTTED 8 STRIP
18s
in 6-inch pots, 12s. ai o.
NEW VERBENAS.— Nearly all I se sent out last year and
the best of the previously established plants, 4s., 6s., and 9s.
per dozen.—Eprs’s Nurseries, Maidstone and Ashford.
LOCOSTEMMA SIANTHUM (BLUME).
Amidst the prevalent scarcity of novelties of sterling
merit, it is wit! e Subscribers invite attention t
the above-named plant belongs to a new genus closely
to Hoya; and the present specie € € - 1857
from Mr. Huom Low, Jun., by whom it was discovered on
the north-western side of the Island of nén The plant,
which is not a climber, presents a —.— appea rance, Having
exceedingly handsome tdliago ; ; and it possesses a very great
— — in being a most | yea: I. the clusters
of flowers being uced in great numbe The flow
— Manufact turers
MANURES,
AL MANURES
&c.
king N
; instruction for
t
RTIFICIAL
Analyses of Soils, Guanos, Superph os-
s, &c., and Assays of Gold, Silver, and
uted with accuracy and de espatch.
5 in Chemical
le facility and accommoda-
nington, London.
viales of Ee. ; Coprolitea
other Minerals are execu
entlemen desirous of receiving
and Assaying, willfind amp
Coliege.
N MAN ig 3 removed to 116,
2 ch Stre C. (Established 1840) have the
dr MA AN URES — for deli very :—
CORN MANURE for SPRINGTOP DRESSING
URATE all of
MANGEL MA guaranteed
V OF LIME quality.
D MANURE
kin consequence o e the reduction in the price of raw material
the London Marure Co. are enabled to lower the price of
their — — N ime, and to materially improve the
Corn Manure and Ura
9 also supply PERUVIAN GUANO
he Gibbs and Sons), SULPHATE of
CRUSHED BONES, and
ne esi supplied.
RSER, Secretary.
e London Man
(direct from 8
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA,
m ry other "Manure a vs Wholes
116, Fenchurch Stre C. Epw.
which
Kew, by whom it is fi i
number of the “Botanical Magaz — ” It is also — —. —
MER orist.” Plantsin May, price 63s. each. Usual disco
Hven Low ry, London, N.E.
Y OLD A T SILVER cine “Up wards
of 100,000
on hatid; Tare to 9s. per doz., 21. pik ips or 180. per 1000.
ORANGE TREES. (ute Jur ^j A IET Ix St. rmm v
s. ôd.,
ith fruit and bloom, 2s. 6d., d. each :
Azaleas and Camellias, 18s., 2 * and 246. pe H ts large
ion of ign and British Ferns, and every other kind
of Greenhouse and Stove Plants; Dwarf Kidney Beans an
let Runners, ls. per quart; Virginian Stock, *
Mignonette, 3s. per Ib., or 4d. per oz.; Nemophila, 3s. êd.
Ib. or 4d. per oz., and ewy other so:
Th Catalogues for 7 postage s
The
be returned to es ce of not less ier 85. 3
—— ee 154, Kingsland Road, 55 doors from Shoreditch
SURE SILVER SAND, best quality for Florists,
16s. 5 Lage — A amg nd 15. 6d. per bushel; 9 —
r Railw: Peat, Loam, an
Mo: ald Rape E ei gets Sacks for Sand, v 94
ts 2 on ge 6d. molo five hold a ton.—JoHN KENNARD,
r Ma ajesty, Swan Place, Old Kent Road,
REDUCTION IN PRICE AWES’S prs a
M R. LAWES begs * announce that he has this
season reduced the price of the Manures e e by
viz. :—
CUTURNIP MANURE .
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LiwE.
HT ia
ARLEY MANURE.. s x 0
Pr ar Way and Dr. etka have pb Rome Balk ó f 5000 to
6000 tons Ri his factories, and their reportand analyses are given
in full in Circular to be Mi tained on Mu ns den at his office,
1, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C., or of his local Agents.
.B. Genuine Peruvian dun o dir e; ibit Messrs. GIBBS,
Nitrate of Soda, Sulphate of Ammonia, and other Chemical
Manures. American Cotton-seed Cake supplied.
AND AGRICULTURAL ee
ESTABLISHED 1812
AND T. PROCTOR’S TURNIP MANURE.—
Moses. = & T. y^ eed Lay nyt e Dopo — —
valual , which c s all t
m 5 fu d don
isfied is eon 15 ES
VALU
R. ALFRED CHANDLER 05 the Jate x of
Chandler & Sons, Vauxhall), iends
-that he is at liberty to undertake the valuation of. Collections
y Stock, Horti MASA d gs, &c.
Fo PIG AND POULTRY FEEDERS AND MILLERS.
MES — per ewt., in bags 1j cwt
10s, per cwt., in bags 12 owt.
8s. ‘ea. "owt. ICE for
— n aa American Oilcake, in barrels
nly. — per ton.— Sold € Cash
y UPP, 6, Cross Lane, St. Mary-at-Hill, Ea
ing t the “approa
good ci ema iti a e Pies fa fatten
pon d. — d
TATO, ei RR OS: CLOVER, AND Ps
MANURES; also cert E PERUVIAN GUANO, d
r IME, warranted of the best quality.
Apply to cep Vest of England Depót for Arti-
f ures, Cathay, Bristol ; — PnRooroR & RYLAND, Bir-
mingham, and Saltney, near Cheste!
NARD, LACK, anp COS CONCENTRATED
SUPE RPHOSPHATE OF LIME; guaranteed to contain
a Acid soluble, equivalent to 40 per cent. of Tribasic
Phosphate of Lime.
CONCENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to
the preceding.
Of these Manures Dr. Voelcker says :—‘‘ Thes sults st
be very gratifying to you, and are the best Drot. " € ——
high agricultural and commercial value which chara
your concen rp. ate.“
De with ions of the late 8
Chem yal Agricultural Society, with Testimonials,
— pis may be had on ‘application to BURNARD, LACK,
& Co., Su tton Road, Plymouth.
A DOMO — ^" —Patronised h
"fossi, Hi recs the the eL — Werne e Ses ate
aye ds
kingdom. ‘It is much cheaper
PAENT cur GUTTA 3 SOLES.—Iwro
-— „ Ns th
to rea y have the
* „Eg. e the fol ollowing letter from
“490, | Strand, Lo
worn Gutta Percha
g so much tak ng and 1 Heats
”
eir feet to adopta mn s
a gardener would es
e use of Gutta Percha Soles.
ra Ne pi an G. GLENNY. "
very variety o — Percha articles, such as Mill B
— — — Shoot. Pump Buckets, Fire —.—
— ts, Flasks, "boram fi mber Vessels,
oe
y, and sold by ther ee dealers in to or
—The Landon. ercha Company, Patentees, 18. Wharf
or Men, and under
ARCHER, ana sola manufacturer,
Cannon Street, City, and of all Ne Nurserymen —
eran tion
pe E N G U AN O.
— EL, price of this valuable Manure is—
127. per Ton for 30 Tons and upwards,
132. 58. per Ton for 1 Ton up to 30 Tons.
And, to guard against the purc
and of inferior Guanos purporting is ie app results equal to
Peruvian, consumers are — to apply either to our-
character, in whose
they may place — fidence.
ANTONY G:
one OF THE NEW GUANO; IwronTED
ASE FROM THE CROWN.—Thou, h
— with KOORIA MOORIA GUANO were — late in the
results
66 per cent hates.
Toce ton, on, appl appii to J
nil 505 20, North Jot 8
d HixDsoN, & —
e, Cum me land, Dec. 16, 1
ron
iverpool Gov
vian Ta
weight for [m unt
spit 1 j
erence
DU I Hee e can be
p—a very
eaten ack with N Very litt
Pen but X — * tha
á Lil »
* Messrs, J. & >G e
A Pamphlet, ** Hints on dite! " containing
of reports from wal known — — and . M f
cargoes here, may be had of the Broker, at the above Pep ofthe *
ur of the
sma
isi also by the i
NT TO FLORISTS A
DAWES'S 92
CARDEN
S highly CONCE p,
E, man ee actured —
w particu es
rticular
arantee d to this
tram: of Soft sts
table
n, in Iib,
ie sold "OW Packets,
fac ory, i n box xes ana ing 1 hs k esale p
28 Ibs. 8805 ‘Ram le pa cKets, alao loo e in Many.
cation. = vary w^ 8 ar Bin Ee Ere. fre Poston a t
M Ts
N p LIN OBA cco
“ONEN BAKER, 10,
r 10 lbs.
6 ENUI E: STORAGE PA PER x
gating can — tein da ied with the b
Paper at 4/ per cwt. ; any less than TEE To
BEN BAXTER, Messrs. ackson & PER „La
mur v Mes
e Surrey), es this opperta
a the pu publi that he is now offeri
si da m pos apt Tt d sold i;
each, at 1 er Ib. À liberal d di 2 5 ackets of .
For t bettina that b Do
Chronicle, April 16,
xu ys Sa for RIA ating, 3s. 6d. each.
to be "ies
payable to HENRY APPLE mane with 5 y. Postofíet Orie,
e — v WITH p OR
* ^ Y WHO: bs n ade. te Barns, Stables, G
are onses, — eads, Houses,
N M uy thie &c., cle: ard.
every RAT. A _ however
night. Printe
lot —— sent fre
Win M Goopwm, Hi
ST
may be
2 bmi b Er Tr
ost for
e p T . er Ane by
COMPOUND,
(magnified),
Bored ;
7
Els
Tm
Seal
GREEN FLY on Roses and Greenhouse Plants saft
10 of by A ip with PATENT GISHURST COMPO
z. to the —.— of Mast
xtract from leading article in Gardeners’ s Chronicle, April 9,59.
“ That it real 1 vu — po as aphides, mealy bug,
and scale, it ssible to doubt in the face of reports of
pacti tical m zem 5 we may mention Mr. D. Judd, of
: Althorp Ga Gardens" rm en follows a caution against the use of a
oo stro
E . sold in at 18. 6d, ani FI.
: bee pinions of Mr.
and prin Sir Willam
„Ar r. Rives For Nur-
Dickson. t Brew, "Manchester |
ickson & Ro
NS Ogg, bertson, |
n & Sons, Edinburgh
Re ger 3 —
— d Seedsmen su — y
Cant gener (Limited), mem iE
TIC PAINT.
T UN PRESERVI -
RICK CLOTHS, New
At BENJ NJAMIN E EDGINGTONS.
2, Duke Street, Lo: Bridge,
„8 E. an West End
W.
West End er 32. :
PE AND ECONOMY for F. armers, Gog
and Market E in the use off
TERED HAND SEED PLANTING MAC iness,
mbined with 12 ,
London Aj Mr. B. SAMUELSON, 76,
on Agent, —— J. HOARE, ‘old
hester, Sussex,
}
>
:
iu
Arni, 23, 1859.
SHEET GLASS FOR GREENHOUSES, ORCHARD HOUSES,
dem IN BOXES, vegan Pi 2 Sieger EACH, 2M THE FOLLOWING PRIORE
S 12 by 9, 18 by 9, 14 by 9..) 3rd | MALL a —Per 100 fee s. d.
— y * 13 „ 10, 14 , 15 „ 10 ., The 6d 15. . zur 4 4 by 7 by Ti by "ns
13 d 11, 14 , 1b 15 „ 11, 16 „ 11 Ii » si » $i » 7 ” ns
” | 10” à 10} „ 8k. 6
11 „ 12 15 „ 1 16 „ I$ 0m „ORCHARD HOUSE sizes, as Mipplied bros to Mr. E
18 „ 12 19 „ 12 R is — n. by 12 a 21 oz.
3 5,15 N „ 15, y 13 16s. 6d. 34s. IET fa, by 13 m. n. | ossi à og. cre Y dac
D 15 4 „ 18, 91-4 1 5 20 in. by — in. i) eie do. * * 16. B
1 21 5 14, 18 „ 1 uis 20 in. by 15 English Glass 4049 9... 19
EIGN SHEET ked in 200 ) feet enses, (à à and 30s. S 34s. 6d. and 40s.
Englis ty, in Cases of 300 feet, 28 Se, par oa Si
ARTLEY'S Bere ROUGH PLATE. hype as per List, from $ to $ in diia
1 TUBES, PROPAGATING AND BEE GLASSES, eee RVE * dj, MILK PANS, ETC.
UARIA on EsoxY Sranps, 12 inches, 14 inches, 16 in 18 inches, and 20 inches
Paints, Senn White Lead, Linseed Oil, Boiled Oil, Turpentine, Putty, Colours, Varnishes, Brushes, &c., dc,
JAMES PHILLIPS & Co., 180, Bishopsgate Street Without, E. C.
~ PAXTON WORKS, SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738.
S4 VOR |. anp COOKE’S warranted PRIZE
PRUNING anå BUDDING — 1 PR
mr by e ee Nurserymen erchants
HE SIR JOSEPH PAXTON PATENT FILTER-
ING WATERING POT.—Instead of this Watering Pot
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, ry ere by s ——— RICK CLOTHS ro
ELN —— — ca m 16-oz SHEET GLASS SALE, TT, 115, Fore Street, E. c having the nozzle or rose merely slipped on, as in " oa "-
f Briti anufacture at prices varying from 2d. to „ m $ à that it ot fall of; an
per * foot for the — dices: re 3 Tu thousands of Boers, P2 ATENT RS CORROSIVE EN- — "E LAU ig leak, break, or b i -—
which are kept ready or — delivery. RAVED LABEL, suitable for every description of D i h the interior, in which is a cone for the
TI rwarded on application, for ym eve + N —€— — re filtration, As the per! rforations in this cone are only
PA OUGH PLATE THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS Joux Snaw, Princess Street, Manchester, Age al ire si holes in the rose it is impossible for the
TILES, and SLATES, WATER PIP ES, PROPAGATI hal v 5 icu Simple improvements render the
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE GLASS, | QIGMA’S BEAN, MANGEL, an 8 c T Pair F 8h PR Paxton” Y Watering Can the esty et introduced:
ORNAMENTAL. WINDOW GLASS. and GLASS » TERS (5 enl HOES, &c. Multum in seph Ironmon Wholesale only of -
& Co., 35, Soho Square, London. Parvo,” combining Cultivator, Horse Hoe, Ridge Plough, —f be — e * — . — y
" ^ n x ici N,
Chronicle first rday in each month. 8 ye — and * fone L sniper mer iple te. 2 and 3, Bell —— it; Cannon Street, E.C.
HORTICULTUR —JUNE RIFF. ARORIOELTURAL WINNER N K der
HOMAS MILLINGTONS — Tariff of 5 A ND 5, Crescen
i S, &c. E AND F. TU Tpsvic ch, — ure LR London. GALV —.— 47 — og abe
fc lls. 6d. de ill r Crushing Corn, Seed, Malt, &c. ; Port- ENGINE, — boe egisten reader, is
du 4 75 d A N 55 03 9 T ate por 100 fet able Grinding Mills, Steam ee fixed and portable fro XXE for durability and low price,
n 100 boxe s,—4ths ge , 14s. 4d. 2 horse-power and upwa Threshing Machines, Chaff 9I. 198., to hold 10 gallons.
210 by 12 by 9, 123 ae: Mies jm Lay F " 13 by 11 Cutter, Oilcake Breakers, Horse Gears, Saw Tables, &c., all of Var rger sizes in wood or iron, viz., 14 gallo allo
10} by E 124 by 91, 13 by 10, 2 18 by 10, ' 134 by n a superior — — . —7 ted for Home, Colonial, and 94 gallons pe 35 gallons. May be obiained "
II by ? 13 y 9, 137 by 104, 12b 14 Foreign use. Illus a —— mt free on application any Ironmonger or Plumber — 5 — som
113 by th E 10, 14 by 10, 124 b; A toe and Manu-
oy 1s) Pee gt eon 22 OSEPH AMADIO'S Tmproved Compound MICRO- 2
20 by 14 Saperior., 1 Uem. SCOPE, 2l. 2s. ; Students’, 3l. 13s. of all kinds fo
5 15 Boxes included. „Both these are from Amadio, of ——— Street, and ri Water
"^ Orchard House sizes as supplied to Mr Rive SEEMS ped kind, the more expensive one especially." cz SS 4
mprov fi in thickness. Tue Mod any heig
Heys impro T great variety bp. and oe T — A e Asso! ACHROMATIC MICROSCOPES. by Steam,
Paints, Genuin: te Lead, Linseed Oil, Bo Oil, 1 Just Spre — ILLUSTRATED e t contain- Horse,or Man-
Putty, Coloute, Mie oe Brushes, Tai mp Glens ing the names of 1000 Microscopic objects, post free, for 4 stamps. — d ie nie
de Bishopsgate Street Without, same side as Eastern * * 1 VES. application. .
PPP bep A Prize MEDAL AW & Sons, FOR BER-HIVES AND Syringes of
LAZIERS DIAMONDS for CUTTING HORTI- Honey, — The poros d orici or 1855. 2 5
à tl — aa 3 — to 2, Sharp ad of the Whole- EIGHBOUR’S IMP ROVED COTTAGE si : ix
BEE-
{ape E Ds — Te HIVE, as originally — y GEORGE NEIGHBOUR &
Son iih atthe recent — rove m
NE, Vu and THREE- HR MELON ther apes rs
“BOXES —.— EA of the best seasoned materials,
for immediate s. WA m Hothouse Il aud
= is unique Hive met "in uni-
Hoc Old Kent Road, London. commendation, =
F W of y, man 3 - j xu with safety, brimanity, an p
t by the most timid; its ingemen:
by (Limited), equal in appear- 80 perfect that the Honey may be
SLATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH, M MIDD LESE
K ACTURES in Son
DWARD BEC a Holborn, or149, Regent Street, London,
variety of articles for Horticultural purposes, all of which mpt attention.
may be seen i ne Worton Cottage, on application to = Their newly-arranged CATALOGUE of I
Metallic String from 5d. to 1s. 3d. per Ib.
ARDEN e AND EM RE
2 TYLOR AND SONS, Warwick
upwards.
Ne
e Street, Tini: E. O., be to call xm e their very
superior manufacture of GARD DEN
ENGINES and BXRINGEP.
— ar PRICED LI with Drawings and Prices, sent on — of tw
rded on application. AGENTS.— Live! ur James CUTHBERT, 12, Cla ayton Square.
ASES, 555 SUNDIALS, FOUNTAINS, Manchester: W. WiLsow, 50, King Street. Glasgow : AUSTIN
FLOWER BOXES, JARDINETS, FERN CASES, & M Aste. 186, Trongate. Dublin: J. EDMONDSON & Co.,
NGS AND CU URBS FOR FLOWER | (, Dame Street.
mperishable Siliceous Stone,
DERS, SEATS, &c., E
at reduced prices, for the — NOU Garden, the GREENHOUSES, ORCHARD HOUSES, AND
Mansion Groun Or EVERY Vete MADE BY STEAM MACHINERY, AND
MP
Wet stminster, S. W., or Patent J LEWIS'S Mim Works,
f Which
gs
. J. TYLOR & Sons’ BARROW GARDEN | ENGINE in
Ir painted Oak tub, fitted with J. TYLOR & Sons’ Im
rdi Brass Pump, Universal J bapa and Registered Sp reader,
answers the purpose of the rate rose, fan, and jet
Stone Works, Ipswi e Hill, Middlesex, established 20 IU. These Buildin X
R AND WI E FENCL AT GREATLY REDUCED eae e best materials, and at prices which defy ‘ONTENTS OF TUB:—
bal — Dee n y Horses TAA = * Sheep. 8 E mpetit tition. oh ‘entiation is most efficient, and the greatest 10 re 15 * 28 gallons
Clearing Sale of th ho bove in con * of Pe aration. of improvement of the prese ud E Prices of any size on applica- £4 10 0 £6 18 0
ises and removal of Works. Catalogues of of Sale with prices References in all parts of the United Kingdom Fig. 599. m Es INNED IRON TUB.
Rewarded pose S06 on Mis cadet? Ge De ANDS'S PATENT is the only system to . ENTS or TUB:—
„ > 8 gallons 12 galona 16 ged 24 a. 30 Bw
ILATING Hothouses, Greenhouse £2 15
Heat, and for WARMING, FUMIGATING, and VEN-
s, Winter Orc chards, &c. ;
jd a atmosphere, be
D NETTING, for the Protection of Fruit to keep vegetation healthy in a hw and can
T pem Frost, Blight, and Birds; also, for the appli y kind or shape of Forcin aped and Conserva-
of fresh sown seeds, at Id. per sq i ; 200 yards, | tories now e ng at st.—For particulars apply to
2 i 500 — 58. Ys rim 1 ah wall frui ^ it; Garden | Mr. Jonnson HANDS, Eps
5558 GTON & Co's., th, Tent, an Waterproof
Cloth Manufacturers, 17, Smithfield Bars, Cit: T & Old Ke nt Rd. OKIN t AND HURD, Seymour ous T. sae
^ T Place, King's Road, Chelsea, BUILDERS OUSES,
AN EN NETTING, for preserving MU de GREENHOUSES, Pirts, and ev ie tion of
dy
in Wood or Tron ; —— 1 —.—
— plans a and at the
. Estimates forwarded.
GARD
Fruit Trees EHE frost, blight, T &c., and as a fence
for fowls, et One wide IId, 2 yards 3d., 3 yards 4łd.,
and4 yards 6 „ per i , in any quantity, may be had at g
coer i E: Strand, W. 65 —A liberal allowance
erections in Glass work, either
the same by hot water on the d
lowest prices consistent with good w
HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS AND HEATING BY
HOT WATER.
bo dues R. PEILL, 17, New Park Street, Southwark,
Pove eremo infeckarer of every wits of Buildings for Hoetieul-
x
bur b pes — ong oth
FO ING HOUSES at HE
piece, 18 y: each. Nets, Nos. l, 2, and 3, 5d., 6d., and Sd. *
gari, 53 inches wide. ZEBRA pu SHADING, | MORE, and at SIR ROBERT PEELS, in apices MIS
; yard wide linen shading, 5d. . constructed under — ae tendence of his M.
Peal Bt reet, Manchester. JOH
ay = Y.— The best and cheapest | PA *
material fo ing Conservatories, Protectin Fruit | seats i »
from Birds and Wasps, &c. Sold in pieces 20 yar ris Lo mg by inces. J. R. ug des r of
38 inches wide. No. 1, best quality, 5s. ; second | Iron Lm 3
quality, 4s. per piece. — — eas [x
sent free UE Jon ia yok ms
, Manufacturers and Dealers, receipt of one
Fig. 618. No. 1. REGISTERED STRINGS; viih India rubber
MT tube, one rose and jet . . el 5 san
No. Ditto :
Daos Branch Pipe for ditto .
B
Fig. p GARDEN SYRINGE, withone
Ditto
wgate
TT IM
GRASS SEEDS ror PERMANENT PASTURES & MEADO WMS.
THOM AS GIBBS & CO., Corner of Half. Moon St.,
THE SEEDSMEN TO THE “ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, "
B® to inform the Members of the Society and A Agriculturists genera ally: that their M IXTURES of GRASS nds ae propor Lay inci to sit di m age
now ready. Management will be sent with the See
Grass are
Full Directions for Sowi ing and
ES for ENT MEADOW and 5 g^ suit different 285
ER
p all other purposes
(8 to 121bs. per acre).
P
aay SEEDS in Collection
eu LI
MIX ATION MEADOWS, GAM& 7 — y
— AED MIXTURES A Improving Old Meadows and Pastures
MANGEL WURZEL. | a
RYE-GRASS.
Italian (selected, very fine)
Yollow Globe, O Carrots all sorts
Long Re d. Dickinson’s | Clovers T and £3
Red Globe Imported Foreign Seed Swedes 33
Long Yellow — v Annus al | Hybrids ; 77
Silesian Sugar Beet Pacey's Perennial Common Turnips „
ALL KINDS OF AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. I
Price Lists sent free on application. Reference or Cash required from HA ALF-MO OON. St.
unknown Correspondents. PICCADILLY, LoNpow, W. f
NATURAL GRASS SEEDS |
ETER
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN.
| NURSERYMEN, SEEDSMEN, & FLORISTS TO
| 3 NE
jug Greens, Crieket Grounds, Cemeteries, |
Railway Banks, &c. |
PRICED LISTS n ppli
tion.—Perer a & ii 25 Great Georgo
Street, Westminster.
“JACK OF NEWBURY 7 SWEDE, ETC.
TER LAWSON anp SON, THE
EW PUBL
"LORD CLYDE” (YOUELLS.
tention to their uine Stock of the Is is with aay pleasure and, satisfaction that we have the opportunity of offering for the mett pon
—— Send meu — 2 he above babl 1 D sia Mo has yet been introduced. tube and
been with the cire: They "e pals (. hich are at substanc e) a of rich glossy scarlet, the latter most perfectly refle: Rad. pries iting a
also a very fine Stock of the KOHL | mem well-folded aan of rosy 2 8 dene inked vith brad —_ of bright violet purple. The - of
RABI, or . CABBAGE, | the — ave muris e — of its bloo rties are all that can be desired. It flowered for the first
—— Seit eld cae Show-. The Ko tim 858 and h inta ined its Momm in every respect. Stron ng pe
Rabi was largely grown last seaso w be relied on | be read April 27 at at 10s. 6d. per paste cd ps sb free, if re 1 W
— aap - the Turnip and Mangel w where these roots do Correct Coloured n by Mr F ill ipt oj f 6 postage stamps.
for filling up blanks where there
— Its s feeding qualities, — and weight per acre
wede, and all kinds of stock prefer it to
YOUELL & Co.’S ROYAL NURSERY, GREAT YARMOUTH.
TO MANGEL GROWERS SPLENDID BEDDING PLANT,
"ELVETHAM MANGEL AND 8 AUREA,
SELECTED YELLOW W — These Baas sorts of gi
Mangel are still — — a by the principal root UCOMBE, PINGE.
growers throughout.
—
»
3 t d thi ready: th
15 great care, an are to em
— — beko ee Pe tày to supply tham | X
P. L. & Sow have Sends free throughout. SUTTON & — e fine SEED of each rae saved from — in po lanting o
England and Wales from. io Lao sensi large — m Eur 3 or ci 5 — 157 the cwt. sa exei gly moderate E M "
E PRICES of th | Plants; T erkshire Seed Establishment, Roadin — ing can surpass the brilliancy of its rich golden P.
»
upon grai ender ste
GRASS | heaviest showers and most fervent s
„Great reet, Westminster. Garros. " IMPROVED. I ITALIA AN. "RYE. un, The’ .
7 T 7 has proved the — kind — —— Ei EM mend the Golden Tritonia as t of the most rero
VET Han s E EL pL M I Re a pet 1
— for sowing upon d, is not affected by frost, and From Jonx BArpwiw, Esq, L odis - 1, — ud in ees Cottage Gh auch, Don 1 . A.
or in store till the end of May. N. — RATE AUTUMNAL ORNAMENT TO THE x
y It is certainly deli 2 hi E tpe and witness the
Italian Rye-,
poor Iai
2 good in the ground o of LOWED F
genuine Seed of e 9 Swede, price 1s: per Ib. pe . Gie £3 Os. wn 25 "m S. . El 0s Od.
odas E
carriage triage fipa far orders and upwa rds) may be had of t
d Riva, From Pimen F pem ETT, Esq., The Manor — . 115 9129
Market, M = London, E. C. Basingstoke; and 5), Seed Brighton, Marc 15 s. . iia
“T mowed your Italian Rye-grass at Christmas, 1856; within Exoter Nurse Established 1
PROVED WHITE ree months after sowing ; agai
ery, Exeter.
th + e e Nursery, Exeter. Established 1720, _ flowing
HITE. SWEDES are m rath 1 51 for A since, and am mowing it —.— Toni he ot — rome —— LAIRD Mà se offer the -
C. a p 1
wd are extremel hardy, A 12 bine D
but tie ib. HAM — * pril high ; an
id 7s. per bushel, quay to be sown per acre, 3 vente ig eae, 100 Phloxe sin pan „ 408.
; TION , Seed Growers, RM liave e howev. PRICED, LISTS post f free.—Address Sutton & Sows,Royal| Selection of the dim lem. to D.& . I. A ve allowam
8 2 à choice stoc 88858 old ind wi WHITE | por kshire Seed. Establishment, Reading. to the Trade.—17, us rederick Street, n ui
facite. pu iuo Sedes. ve Margit — PLANTS for TI. including bask we a Cactus
Tu. ME Ree amet | ZOO eee P. avo A, SMITH reno in o As Cat
tion. Pr ., 58. per ge : à LI esc C — Erica ventricosa coccin
— siemens RS of the stock 19 Anagallis; ux — ee Tung | fblens, v. brevitora, E: intermedia, E. —.— 33 Pm
— : i 20 Gee " 12 Kon gs E. ease ane Fuchsias, — i
UTTONS PRIZE S — 50 50 Chrys nce iar embergia ns . "Y h dy. v —.— — well-grown plants,
zm rysanthemums, 50 sorts | 12 Œnotheria ri v » d i
S T RM RN SWEDE SEED. els forts , 0 Petunia single, 25 sorts | Prepared for sending ———— M—
sorts. 50 do, double, 25 sorts Ae - :
At the Great Root Show at —— m in December last | 50 Fuchsias, 50 sorts s
20 Salvias, 6 sorts DOUBLE BALSAMS.
— — the miel Prizes — Aven Mangels, 50 Geraniums, Scarlets &., i Senecio, do double b purple ene SM — are now sending out ose v th
pegs A „which are unrivalled for size, form,
— 8 50 do. Variegated, 17 sorts — (12 V; gated ithe brillaney of c 5 — Se flower, and — Ww
Joni aa | Mr. Was, Horsa 3 n eliotropes, 12 sorts 100 Verbena, 100 In on ions of nine 3 i
Gee B. Mom, E Mr. Grono Mawauns Post Olfice Order bn gTiott Nurseries; Crewkerne, Somers half quanti
dean MA CU E KETTLE, — Correspondents. oe — fom The are genuine oni, in our 2 Em md .
PS. H. R. H. the PRIN ia ee he had " 8 respetablo Nurserymen and. Seedmen ;
EIGHT 25 GUINEA from H. PR
— the best 5 acres of Swedes at each of Eight peig
cultural Meetin, East Berks SE PLANTS 19. 12. o1. — 5 | United Kingdom.—Dulwic ay Sang, 8
— gs in rks and South Bucks. At all | of G PLANTS, 12s., 18s., 218. per doz.—
these t| was great competition, and in e: pl AS
CUP was awarded to BUTTO Pass Hana PION SWEDE, “Also [such ae Pema T pain ahorcado os W. HOLMES S offers. the above in fi 2
bo — EM - — ow sending ou! t cho Bo — ve we | mands ang Cren enaultia, Gompholobium, &.; also 88 dozen, the new flowers of last year from y
E Olam and 94. foe € their ch š Cis —.— e
Ware, or ee b the "bushel and cwt. " Early orders ne Mangal STOVE PLANTS, 125., 18s., 218. per doz,—The best kinds, iyere am 5s. = doz. Verbenas, from 2s- 6d: g. n
saty.—hoyal Berkshire cu EU Reading. Sloe — ge OR Senate Ix xoras, Aphelandras, ——— da to Gai Kater 2 62 pours
Gosneras, Gloxinias, inillas, Vineas, Alaman Cupheas,
NEVER MILDEWS. s. phanotis Rhynehospermums, Dipladeniams, Hoy — aire chaning Se Caleeolarias; 4s. SER
TON S "CHAMP PION SWEDE Ma —— gained —. Plants: ums, Senecio; Lobelias, &e:, equally cheap:
the TWO 25 GUINEA CUPS presented by H.R.H. consisting of the. new and leadi upon apr BD — — free for one stamp. e
PRINCE CONSORT to the Royal East Berks and the Royal wer bude, 124, 185, 2s, and 30s per doz, 3 5 Rc Ud = U Haren ;
Soui — ai ral — = a s "ume Eight Twenty: of en fne de of vi f yi ee (at
ve Guinea Cups at these two Socie ne grown staff. of the leading sorts, 1 0 pt ta of the “ga
_ This is the: heaviest: cropper an 1 ost rtain, as it rarely 13 30& per doz., in — = 32-size 5 r LO N STA sH FDISK, 1 in a few good plants LL e
(if ever) suffers from-mildew, and has rely eseaped the and full-grown Specim The following passage from Dr. Lindley ve an iden
ravages of.the fly during the Tast boo fes in which these TO E E TRADE. article i in the Gardeners’ — n. — AA ffieant when
pests were.so prevalent; Price ls per Ib., or cheaper by the — of young g stuf? just potted off, in 60-size pots, 50s denm uty :—*' Callicarpa purpurea, quite insi Sumerablo reb :
bu * ty plants and very bushy. e Per in flower; was beautiful i in its winter dress of iU nosily culti- -
SUTTON & Sons, Seed Growers, Reading, Berks, have at pre- | ACHIMEN Ea ES, TYDEAS, ann GLOXINI the qao Humb —.— about the size of swan shot." I ——
sent a good stock of seed of the above.
quested to pre ent dieappoint ment.
Royal Berk
Early orders are re- | and leading kinds 8 bulbs and t de
| Houtte, gh canes Parker, &c., Bs 1 755 E ereny Vam
PPS's Nurseries, Maidsto
Reading.
y g.
vnted;- and does- well in a cold 8
planted ont, out, te it will N erem
glass beads, a:
whole — hot, April 23
v cpu
|
Arr 23, — THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZ ETTE. (869
CHOICE FLOWEBS.
BUTLER & McCULLOCH’S
SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS,
er s on a new - original plan, with copious Descriptive and Cultural Notes
AS nd containing many ne and rare species and varieties not found in any other Cata-
eady and may be had free and post paid on application
logue, now x SHRUB, TREE, and votis SEEDS, the erop of 1858, saved with
e, by the most 'eainent gro
—
the greatest c
sorts with enormous berries, excited the admira-
tion of everybody. They readily sold at 4 fr.
— kilo, although it was already the end of
Se met
Thos who to know how such admirable
(remis were stained should well consider what
0 pes di e are " —
to
ek walle! i in manner as no
single — of surface ; there are no — es, but
In the spring the wall
is | proteate ed by Screens, „ glass sashes, straw mats,
linen blinds, or — at hand that will keep
and the i
Wem may 450 “state that the Sardinian correspondent of Messrs. James CARTER & Co., off frost, d the low t ra pring.
o Soeds cotees I applied whenever necesssary. The
] : 1
d the Agency from that firm d young shoots are constantly pinched or laid in
To meet the growing demand for first cl f particularly FLORISTS FLOWERS, during t hole season of gr tendrils are
ing the 1 removed, the bunches theniselves are thinned ont
the Gi dent Chronicle of February 5th, Yon the followin; notice of B . Mod. 's Catalogue. wherever there are m "i : errles are also
“B . Niedere (Covent Garden) Spring Catalogue of Choice Flower, Shrub, T and Vegetable Seeds. This list thinned by 6 Gr rape sbiss d and when summer
* ly ted Svo and is À rege! well got up. It appears that the corres pondent in Sardinia, — ſor- E
— — TA — of the great L ondon houses with seeds raised in that warm part of "Europe, has now trenetan N what eon with its long dry dl r the night dewsare
he savos to Mos — vee LLOCH. Le ros add, that it yields to no Trade List in the abundance of its materials mug; by a good syringing € evening. The
R AND McCULLOCH, while drawing attention to their general SPRING CATALOGUE which has elicited such
nones of pras is also kept up by —
» | supply of anure every three y years. Such
high — both from phe scientific botanist and amateur cultivator, avail themselves of the present
to select from its pages the following list:—
T) ACACIA LONGIFOLIA (magnifica).
e 51) DATURA HUMILIS FLORE PLENO.
One of the — splendid Acacias
de —— Grapes with their ——
reputation.
%%%
sous T d. bees felt yelo sia the inches i | scented. One of the greatest novelties of the Vine . Bovrexors, of Perrey, near
— 47 . ornamental, pl plants Sie — Mus at Therfin (55) GAILLARDIA GR ANDIPLORA:, (new). Of this Rambouill ntleman's Chasselas
than 47 varieties, all of the most deco; r. waetul and showy gen pin we have several other handsome vars, | the following condition :—He had several pieces of
5) ATLANTUS OLANDULOSA. 8 (972) PELARGONIUM aor bearing each with two or thr ts whose
pared to i ic ’s-horn Sui h
It mM te he on thin poor tol is 5 for avenues, other pore dm nt —— . — fancy, very e — a ena | wei, "m = e s A : "- - : : ene
and highly ornamental in bberies ; sometimes called Tree k, Which eatnat fabio — highly satisfactory. shoots left to themselves had only bune = in the
of Heav ambu a (1149) SOLANUM ga PRICARTRUM. 3E mon conditi tion, whi ile the contiguou
Miniature mere tree, covered all winter with a pro
Of these beautiful little plants we i» a splendid collection,
Us emer ie most SEPT kinds, erem and arranged — — — fruit; a handsome plant for greenhouse or siting ach twice as large as the other. arn was the
n — — — — me “ssp B IGNONIA RADICANS MULTIFLORA. ase with every piece of bearing wood in which
too well known to require comment. These Collections we een Finer and brighter than radicans ; flowers in large panicles one shoot had been ringed and other not. In
confidently recommend, containing, as they do, species only of producing a be MO ^ — e eee the opinion of M. Bourexors these advantages
MEN (154) BALSAM. and magnificent ; flowers o ous colours on the samo g ring 1g Sy amely, a fortnight’s
New Indian variety, very ornamental, mixed colours, more | plant, varying from the richest ivety purple eiTe met earliness, finer berries, and better quality. When
robust and hardy than ‘the other varieties. nd rare). This and three new varieties of He cea gran he Vine is about to he remo a ring of
(217 4 et sb ui ood dh 5 enira n by? z and a gratis i favou x ru ark something less th alf an inch wide just
From the newest an nest s and other varieties o: eoru. for uty, hardiness, an * ey rank s p
that muc ee 80 hi bas amongst The noveltios of the season, possessing advan- below the insertion of the bunch to be experi
ANNA. INDICA SUPER tages which m render them the grandest. ornaments for the ipe on. That is all he does, taking care how
vem flowering all the os arp leaves large, greenhouse, conser POM xp ver that as be shoot is eventually Miu by
Y. — o “Of sos pia picturesque and most ornamental genus ad —— A x operat
fioent — consisting o of 28 kinds, all flower is Wale for the bril-
we have a magni
remarkable 3233 of their flow: and foliage.
IA (species nova). Bos rapidly, and ‘covers a large space in an
8 — o in pro 1 50 X succeeds in a cold
ofi
incredi minke short time, Its greenhouse.
po naa rr
Sees
.of
ee
n this e pec of its class yet k owers most
re admir- | And eure).
greatest novelties 5 TROPJEOLUM TRIOMPHE. DE GAND FIMBRIATOM. |
out of o a ion ries from J “Fringed oran
see 3 ! eA ATIONS and PIO EEG saved we from the choice
(337) CHRYSANTHEMUM Golden). ; J Euglish Hem am aboot
ESL. umts .. sealad packets, a6. seccived: fom Our
we have a splendid collection, em: new or rare d " à 4
i Sardinia: whose ‘seeds ‘fo have
mre com e i — Punt ui „and : ties of
(344) hanot EN COMAUREA. the greatest excellence have been raised.
For prices
ber
further rei ee with regard to the above
e evergreen shrub, bearing
es — to the *
application
handso
Fin 3 of golden ball. like
em one of the green
ces and
plants in cultiva- | and * novelties, we refer our
itse lf, which is sent free and post p:
BUTLER &. McCULLOCH, Covent Garden Market.
SPRING CATALOGUE,
TWO HUNDRED GUINEAS IN EICHT PRIZES.
a D. — r
M ARTHUR HEN DERSON. AND COOLS Fon Four Years Mel ms Rova tar 8 THE
2 CATALOGUE or SOFT-WOODED PLANTS onai quo Cosson 8
all the 9 nositi "s this year), can no UTTON'S CHAMPION. SWEDES * the East
of them post free, on applicat: * — 9 South — eg — Na nese e Noni
Pine-ay s 1856, 18.
ipple Place, Edgw ware , London, W. idinatiar by thé: basb — fee. n
| A a Gardeners’ Chronicle.
SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1859.
MEETINGS FOR THE F FOLLOWING Te
Wepnespar, April 27—Microscopical.
ROYAL SOUTH HAN NTS” SEED ESTABLISHMENT, —
UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF H. R. H. THE
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF — rpm
CULTURISTS OF THE UNITED M.
AGE AND TOOGOOD'S STOCKS have produced
— Ale exhibited at Smithfield, and are so
dron Dalhous
ppreciated that comment on their part is THE possibility of IMPROVING THE SIZE AND |100 Cupressus Lawsoni
— mpete with any house in the trade. warrr ee GAP ^ 8 by ringi hi Ber fr
8 : | y rin e branehes con- *
* e Ke, 4, tinues to excite ite i in France. The nat 100 0
puitving’s Swede a ence, Hardy Green Round ..0 6| the process ha en explained at pp. 399 and | 50
Improved — — vs EL S of our last volume, we have now only to cus.
V — .. athe ner ment of the that were exhibited | pected
..0.9 e e — 08 last autumn at a meeting of the Paris Hortieul-
ES dan 1 — Society, » Sri ana in the Annals of the} A
0 8| Long Red 9.6 nece at e jäi
.. 0.7 | Long Yellow b fT
0 6 | White Belgian Carrot .. 10
.. 06|New Red 5
pes g Altringham .18|MEU r at
3 cg pe n $ | rest in n beauty; one Serve not tire 5 rer e
0 7 Dwarf Essex Rape . 0 4 magnificent bunches with
re ard arf
MUSTARD, — TARES, SAIN. .
8 0 RATUS 14. perl f (Bordeaux
DES —
RE GRASS, ;
t prices. Í ——
for large d Pack ed for r P PS
All parts of tho world. Gromier du
Oxford Street and Kisro Bas, soi Grosse Perle
uired the enormous wapa | eres coloured berries, far more Toss f
ee cn best coloured Grapes of
NE
This magnificent Passion:
poner, rr splendour of. its scarlet ps hr surpassing |
as
nnd. |
have to » —2 t at the next year's praning.
The only difficulty in the oper v consists in
removing the ring neatly, and ting
T | deep. i
| been M o Do by M
| the Rue des Epiciers 2 Bordeaux, which ma may |
tained through any Paris nurseryman oi
ir Bs
Ir is now tty rally known that the
Council of the Dad ea ural Socity have decided
upon employing the me of Ballot, or — af
the word is preferr x for reap
among the Fellows, a measure to whi —
led by the extreme diffieulty — ing a
satisfactory allotment by other m nes X Jas Fri
st I. of the season
ouncil ; 1 the hatt i “resit
xs 2 be without inter
and ninety-fou Fellows, each
ha iin M WO C sse Fellows, each having
one chance, had entered their names. There
250 prizes, and afines uently 433 blanks.
The
issue of the dra as this: ;
|. Of sache bins each two rene 43 obtained
119 »
iP
[or rani having oon tame obtai
Among the prizes were 70 plants of the Wo i
very curious Pinus Don Pedri, 20 of Rhododen-
8 A that they were equally abun-
Pie wo esl i e Apu therefore there
regs
THE GARDENERS’ "CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
If the shoots be made
i done E
must be cautiously resorted to.
» course) vader conditions |
and — prie REM of
whic
Enn 23, 1859,
conne! ection
with E* p* Mids 11 Persi red ni xamination
auring
they be allowed either from a piede of moisture or or
expressly for propagating plants by botton i 7
tained DW a anh of hot Lung iu age heat o *
=e with wooden bottom, W
ry you 1 have a picture of the case į 2
genes ate ‘extemal e Then suppose a hole to i e»
ne wooden bottom and a shallow tin boiler to be
pped into it, and over the boiler a shall ibe
under the microscope that ead sei not piros
there was not a ipi stare a a wg :
ua
tion, to become flaccid to any considerable extent, 95 dro:
ere
cellular tissue and i aih under the
emical a uvas indented: that the bodies 3
N
tone, but will in a short tim the appear: ance
of bro rown paper, tothe destruction of "the psa b be — 5
certain
oP ee eame which has
of shooting out its single, alako hi
05 Sie: in IT 1 operation
in wii plants s are concerned is a staken A worn fn
roperty o
aliot- like ham cocum pa the inversion of its
he force with which this takes vire
th
rance | WOO
extern conomies 8 0
cultivation of Sikkim hodode ndrons it is absolut
| Heaths Ay cod well need
not demir with the Sikkim i TE close
atmos phere and drought at root are alike fatal to both. |
EM dor
The measurements inside are 34 inches sby
which gives a yoy ae of 568 sq
* or Nn -inch h
17 Bre:
are inches, op
I have "at s in * four
conditio
€ | pr prose cote “tivated on
* erm with the
essential
5
tubs
im ati of root wre coh
cel E this pap it
their e as in that of vers
Rhodode po
especially demand great vigilance
*
5
. root dried, receives an
ma age that years of nn care will
amount of
1 11
course subsided, and the case may teac
"nya lesson to Wee who can wit
nh t
hardly compe
san
Where convenience and space NE allow some of the
n the conservatory
d l t their
of personal e We
gere ‘ations ol cade Pathog er tt
large, h
meet with so satisfactory a solution. M.
HODODENDRONS—No. VIII.
THE Tial papers under m hea Mare 3 |
hard
-— hc sree y hybrid Rhodod select such as will best sus ates
to speak directly of those froin Sikkim d heat; and M et en are among most
Debt for — the EY — — the attractive Edgwor oth 8 Madeni, means o of a
successful treatmen! iden |Je nkinsii, calophy may be es
- the latter
- sideration. 0 1 ee e
e of plants, it "n ta.
l
oul
ill readily testify w
com pu plants of Talea, Hodgson,
ttallii.
manent occupants of the
"id ants as per!
e a p rer Mati 54 5 to a mixed
e be advisable to
starti n eee es
lace
fined, idt on p plan
work at once. The
is 1 inch deep, and is vated With silver sand kept
wet. Attached me the under s — this
the boiler, which about 8
ts stand
very
tray | is
r.
n
very small a whi vy the lamp
bene and in the remit Tes e pr merit of the
ntion. ed hot ame |
a — mber betwe n the bott om 2 the boi
ed, and pursues a to
VEN So the heat is FRADA, ; auti the burnt-air
s by means of a 2 17 —, t the back of
the att and d Apo
plants. or dinasy 7 Aosi of a lp for heating,
*! 4 at 2
deta
heat, 60°
which by Mr. Wilson’ s ed 5 rey "E
candle, a bott eat
~ As was hinted in our introductory paper, the direct
with ias of the ordinary and “hybrid varieties. A
i garden value of th p Vui,
will continue to be found, not as ts coeupnts o of 885
; “Ameri: but as ornaments to
houses and conservatories. Cons
€ estimated; but with one or two
country. e pro
` however is so slight as to render "their success:
ey require
ful | the
BP
admirably. And, like “tke e hardy kinds, they, with one
or two exceptions, graft well. I lately cient
collection of some hundreds of grafted plants, which
were wip a earliest of Pate 8 beoe and co oat neat
t 6 or 7 y In mos
| quently are now at leas ears o
dirus ‘cou Aa
ft nothing to
a greenhouse or Where however a deban re can
be devoted etl to the to them as a collection, it will be |
ta or
“found highly
health
for. It is clear therefore that objections to
Sikkim Rhodode — ons are
hose of the hardy 2
wish
grafted
Bag gewor rth
wmm ee
ex of the stocks: de
iri is in t
Waun T the en ai the rest is as simple
as an ordinary frame mounted on legs an d finished
y-
—1. The heit
qu. d
ts f.
ens, it is pronun for se
a jet of gas will bara vat and ^7
‘stances can they be so 1 grown, and as any
protection
higher te
the height pr wee alluded t. to, qp 4 |
the greater th voee of warm
“they are subjected to
8 ite well with any oth er;
an Wighti, Thomsoni, e all those which
nity with campanulatu um best grafted on
— NNNM of raid
the necessary conditions are identical with those
duc detailed and illustrated.
Th floweri: ing ossa as setosum, ciliatum,
»
e
and MN may
the Gia retired
Although found naturally on widely different
elevations and in eren — impl. A great
emperature i
* Meo objections.
ased by cuttings and
seeds, an er free-growing kinds which throw
plenty of es are also eas easily propagat ted | by cuttings;
gor
the m
with abundan er or
J
otaimng
£
but for t
s, grafting offers b
W
1
bloomi by far
— ap p to this, as we have there are no
Th lr only Er TEN: has hitherto
success
e to have the case ork in
aid pr 2. a eh ene burning | all
5. While rving as t fac .
x
or inde is Per more ire among t on
here is at hen the satisfaction of
plants, indifferent e a they
— an
other 2 apparatus un no dem
ean-to facing the north 12 feet E
heated by means of one, and a ood greenh
are always superior.
assume a straggling 1 habit of growth as some of them
natu rally do. Rd
m
ie what may be done Me one by a p 332 sa
and
— Epiphyte, and as readily forgets the Pine | branches
eg Wy = 3 resorted to as a remedy.
mu
Cut Fe
y be necessary to form well. shaped i
A a — of the case give gie
Bi
flourished i in the humid forests of t
5 e that the um so pruned are strong at root
And glaucum and setosum too fram el eleva-
ne feet in Nepal or Min,
t Cla;
, Here these papers mah be fee toa close. Ei
t be
jn mé e ready ire
plated, but as th.
em
p
pham
other kinds to
w
7
al treatment under which
adapt themselves to artifici
aspect al.
atei as should ur wren alt who have — no experi-
vo int in "xr culture i is ol g greater
2 house full
f Fuc
other bedding plants;
—
Perha 25
ance than the necessit the "chi ng
jy 10 SCO!
the leaves. T un: iki hands under injudicious
treatment this is very li o be, as it often is, the
result.. The remedy, or i the providit is a
an abu 1 i
Ne
gt tently overl
y | Bagshot, Surr
: however any topie shou ia have been cmd
looked, or too eursorily treated, and inti-
ion of such should n each the writer it shall be
Mey breed in a supplementary paper. Dos ell,
gt
is powerful will then often be
least benefic ial, but even that assistance
at least expr essive,
eber
E WALTONIAN .
Tuts uif ta
gentleman resi on
the first case w:
It is,
ds:
the — of dung heat
the possibility of scien every
being perfectly under trol.
Th
A RETURN OF SUMS VOTED BY THE GOLD
GOVERNMENT OF VICTORIA, N.S.W., FOR THE
ROMOTION OF NATURAL HISTORY.
Apart 28, 1859.) THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND . GAZETTE. 361
so, to what Apo cause is that circumstance heated atmosphere within our
ascribed ? ems that the effect of deep vail da quite satisfied that if the plan V pot aya, it t) adopted
cuttings, in pa presume) drawing off water from the | in our north country collieries coul (as Í have no
grea at subterranean reservoirs, may have 1 d to doubt it can) | applied to ge struc ctures, that i is to say,
J. Expense o of pu d ill
of natural 0 | ft principle, that the ird attending. other modes of
ME Oed Sener jee OU tion of diera 8 other timber may not la be Pontiki io i would
weder ive expense o of the Bot l and Zool t We Eos Eso. be obviated, por an incessant change of air obtained
gal Gardens for 1858 and 1859— by asking z how, o on that theory, 9 prese an of heat within the
t botanist, with ES —— e continuous rains in this part of the 3 are to be e | a glass house or pit. To this end I would simply apply an
de na is vel sani 900 300 | accounted for; but we refrain, for we feel Į invented I 3 by a Mr. Wa of
Curator, w. ae os 300 | a wider induction of facts than we are in possession of, | Sheffield, to the highest point di a greenhouse, and
— ith quarters n 300 200 We are no in i nclusio which I will describe as follows: —It is a bottle-shaped
noi additional facts, ered from a wider range, may der, [n inches diameter by the e in
Nee ems inbontons, as. eso — lead to another and less alarming theory our height, with a n similar to a bottle) of the same
4200 6200 | contemporary m: rceive if he d letter from length, but not more than 2 or 3 inches b (
Purchase of plants . „ 150 | Lieut. Colonel H. E. Austen, in Illustrated London in fact to the diagram annexed); the neck of this glass
Purc agn ofan animals. oo: arenes a ea E News of the 36th Y ult. In answ er to the ‘question, why is divided by the placing within it a piece of zinc
Parao m food for animal it x > 16 870 hen thn t d, Colon or other metal, which has. the effect of causing one
150 750 | Austen appeals ot the tru th, now axiomati tically 425 half of the oar iad act as a down draught, this ad-
incidental expe — 2 in 100 100 | lished, that all storm winds, though they . seemingly MM ng fresh a o the glass structure above which
Brea of Y eet — works on 5 320 blow at a right angle upon us, in realit along 33 wit the other shaft pumps out the heated
-— oil à 325 — | parallels, in circles, w diameter vary from’ 0 ia viti aed of the gree iment
1000 miles. In our hemisphere, these wind circles, or | placing one r gm * of candle alight (to raise the
2550 5260 eyclones, invariably come Europewards from intertro thin ing th d i
i ions in the di ion TO W. to N. E.; . simple pu 53 e hea
RAINFALL, EAST AND WEST.—REMARKABLE | M ad ear 3 pr 5 R or cold and Lr draught ded a 2 » the shaft ph. the
CONT e er siecidity, Acorde as gyrate and impinge upon | heated er een sonla: dine by the other, as
[Wz.extract the following from the columns of our | us 2 om a western or eastern parallel. The frequent | be see f brown pa Y 1
able eye tmt the Whitehaven Herald. of this winter, — Colonel Austen, have all pro- extinguished bu but still incandescent over the
d rows aper in the Gardeners’ Chronicle 745 and top of the shaft, EET smoke D Ace into
have 1155 5 brought us the heat and tesi ds bottle by one shaft and ascend meaty by the
A tin, applied
ee: —
Jam “sa dis e ws erue 0.61 e e RE eie T a
Febru VOTES 1.31
March to to 28th -. .......- 0.71
od 63
Thi gi fi f nearly 2 inches, which, Md
to 11.84 i ossis arrear at the commencement of
the present year—shows a total deficieney making
allowance for, the proportion due to the three days of
e
March still to run when the measurement was taken,
that i is set down n at 13 i. inches. ; Last ear the autumn
ar t ] the inhabitants of all
he valley of the Thames to “deepen their wells; and
r, from having gained by the dd rains, t 5
A in these, at the end of March, 8i inches
lower than in August last, and the rutin was pro-
gressing at the rate of half i inch a wi
In remarkable contras h the sce: is our expe-
rience in West rake E fall in this town, for
the first t aud of the year, as indicated by the
gauge in the of Mr. William Miller, High
ped and the qi ‘of A in each month upon
rain fell, are as follow
— fae 179 W hich rain fell
— 1. 30 ACRI | ROB K
: March $2. EE d ge viene FO »
E —
In a note AO . UI node
— we are farther 0 with the n
orandum :— So far as ot month has
y
thi rteen days of April have been vet; and the rai
2 either February or March, being 3.715 inches, mien
a grand total, up to the present moment, of 16. 109
of the Gulf Stream and Caribbean other. An apparatus made of zin
Sea. How it is that we in Ouman ae got all the top of sashes of green jouses, w wou do. of i s
the moistu cs d a fair shar benefit in a ventilating point | of view. If vou are of the
and its neighbourhood a Loe seen: of "hs heat 1 gh,ina more
with less than their wonted part of the moisture is a | lucid form, to A, Jour r TE ers the benefit of the
problem the solution of m it pou be edifying t J. R. 8, FH. S., 15 Pad, ornsey.
hear. Certainly it is not owing to y extension of Brazil Nuts. TH Jou Wu favour me with th
either hedgerow or 8 timber’ in our Taie or fells. |t the Brazil Nuts of of
: Fei shops? I find it stated i in Loudon’ s s Dor Brit-
nicus” and his
e e, Correspondenc le otia excelsa; but asit “is also in bot ae these caida
ntilation.—You have lately t touched. upon. the | as poisonous, it cannot be the Nut 1 mean. I believe
. ton of ventilation: as em plied to various | the Nut of which I speak is called Cow-Nut in some
structures, and thus reminded me that this great | places also, about the size and.shape of al of the divi-
| sions of an Orange with a rough hard s . C. [We
| cannot t find the statement to which you allude. Londons
no indexes. At all events Brazil Nuts are 1 by
Bertholletia, wh nous. |
Pears.— Can you u inform me what variety of Pear will
| answer the following description of a said to.be a
Jargonell e, growing on the wall of a 2 in 2 small
wn in this county (orti. It has for many
he last however is
always injured by the fr e. Wien ‘the fruit 4 tbe “first
‘crop is about ihe. size a Prune the los-
gain, and the
soms a 5 th in
when the ne crop is at the same stage. If the first
crop fails the second is always should the
aem fail the third will appear in
ough from the rris 1 the season always small.
this AS a ity merely to local e
is it a peculiar Genes? Te We e cannot answer this
"n
Ligustrum.—May I suggest in reference io:
article in 8 Gardeners’? Chronicle of April 2, ek
hen ange
iy fells the. rh quise the same quarter has been
even van Mr. Ainsworth supplies the following
return
ll of r rain in January, February, ere ue of the years
Fa
1857, ae Toy 1859, aZ reading
Cleator, ebav
57.
ar Whit
18 858. 1859.
4.92 in 8.49 in. 5.41 in
February 8.786. „ 0.46 „ 47 „
N. r 8,58 75 —.— $s ‘te 5
Showing for the las t "three sehr e a fall váy nearly | ¢
double that of the corresponding period in 1858;
wi e pre year, seve e mes
greater than in the neighbourhod of London! Wet,
in West C
however, as the season i umberland has been,
is not the wettest on reco: rning üp the synop-
tical tables of the late lamented Dr. iller, (Transac-
tions o 2 Royal Society of E xi, part 1,) we
e d., vol. x
in the ecrresponding qu — of 1851 the
daes s given by the same resonet with the wet
3 jie W. 5 uc o. Wet days.
ne! — et days. I t
m J mary... ae HH ; e 8 10.00 2
ru
Mein. o, 75 y: iu 4.56 i
mean fall or the first quias in the years "1851,
and 1853— (we re e have not at hand the
The m
1852,
data
TIE
5
E
E
3H
sS =
$28
TU
E
©
z
3
E
S
r
climate of England has been gradually growing
or some years past, and raises the question,—If
A 1 pid ey placed | pe haps the Ligustrum of the ans
| i potus Catalonian Jasmine, J. grandiflorum. It is delightfully
oe doit hirhedted sweet, and any one sab - seen — Y y twining its
atmosphere, in which for graceful branches ound an old s hagus or statue
xperiment two candles| would not doubt tofi its a applicability j^ festi ve care ands, .
lighted are placed. while its white colour fulfils a of the co onditiong k
3 Poia Fal p classie Ligustrum. jeg con 5 the
Gouna ie 0 dt Jasmine, is habitually used to this s day at the patie
cate the means of ven- courts in India, to make fragrant chains (of the flowers
tilation by showing the | threaded), which are throv ver the necks of qnie
BROKE TE yet ber he nd | whom the princes wish z he onour. C
Cheirostemon platanoides.— Has this ever flowered '
in this uin d F etapa a plant of it in tho green
in ich showing
desideratum—which is now e 3 e e dr i P 2 m €
e, li
— 9
S carried out in a manner as freque
; pine Inter spesa T sn
ntly fraught making — € ila
U | mak! ira a pencil m on the ull: at the ex ind
1 as, good >> AA me s degree the itf of each branch; on dae itagain in the even
r]
362 THE GARDENERS CHRON ICLE AND. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Arr 23, 1859
the elags: 807 15 . — remonti californica | nation. In 1858 Mr. Peebles ; attempted c
w w Pla e y but he, too, has ouly bee — — Set
rcely any progress — fully — at p. 52; it was on this occasion | cones are produced high EA on the t
during the day, » enc! eit n MEX a ‘growth, of an inch ; | nicely in flower. The same — sent a fine Lomatia easy to reach them, and the seeds seem to b ery often,
indeed, I almost thought I would write to you to as sk calle d | Bidwillii, with handsome pinnated leaves, of | injured. bi resin of the tre € is used for ince
y ong, narrow, spiny-margined leaflets were 1 Prof. ur nication
i tl larly enriched behind at ilie base; it is a distinct | 1. 7 of. Pais Pa at Tayport, Fife, in E
pom Ex
ing progress Was rarely perteptible, but the fc llow- , the ¢
ing morning a growth of
it were a recognised law vegetal 2 physiolog: y. g r a dis
the growth emm pire nly t night. This, and handsome addition to the class of fine-foliaged ber, 1858 f. Law 2. «Exi m.
however, is so opposed to E facts now "rm je y you, | plants. ey had also a pretty Bejaria called micro- | aws 5 4 S Voyage to America j
that it appeared to me desirable to communicate the phylla, / Arthrotaxus Doniana, a small- flower ed — October last. —III. n the Growth of the nds
above result of my berie. Ignoramus. [You 1 v ra 0 the Ro
find a long and very fully detailed account of the rate edulis, A. Henderson & Co., ^v. appl venim In this notice Mr. M*Nab gave a deti
of growth of plants both under glass and in the open | Nursery, — a nice plant of the a 'yano: of the growth of the Bamboo, ta ben
air by day and night in the Hort. es 2d series, | phyllum magnificum, and a very fine p Abl flowered third j^ until die plant 1 the heightor Ii
Vol. III., upon which our statement is found Datura, said to be from —X having the habit of wi ith the mean temper atur of the io eet,
The oy Seth — toni wt Hae British AM digo: arborea, and fine creamy yellow flo Th 1 th a
Isee that they hr earnest measures | the beautiful New Zealand Loden ene, 1858. The average e ‘of ‘the i Fete
i g a new objects of natural| one of the most charming of all. Me Fraser, of | during the period of growth on ee m. 5 to 70" *
history. Let us hope t they "wil obtain some instructions | Lea Bridge Road, had nice plants of tlie e Clematis Mean mpera- e
ere they It is rather an astound- lanuginosa and C. lanuginosa pallida; Labichea Jal 13 j ture e GO
ing declaration, when I say that in none of our museums | diversifolia nicely grown; an Azalea called Benno, y 8 54 de eg.
are the specimens preserved in a proper manner. In with very large but coarse-looking flowers, rose-
making this assertion, far oh it —.— me to condemn coloured, the upper half purple; and another
any individual who works in those establishments: Azalea called Roi . — a per € hs pa
Those whom I have the — of reife ng both here | some flower of a salm of
and abroad are clever, honest, and indefatigable men. | Slough, had a pending: — called Perfection; 10 is
But they all proceed upon false principles, and, of|a bold and striking flower of excellent properties, and 54 „5 18}
course, their labours must end in abortion. As well of a bright rose or purplish-tinted rose, spo ted dis pee 2 Aug. 45 » 1993
might we expect to give swiftness to the tortoise by | tinctly on the upper segments. Messrs. Ivery & Son, : 47 : 185
cogent flogging, as to see beautiful and correct speci- | of Dorking, had a seedling —— a —— white, i 19b „
: audeo :
Q
40 „
A8. ; rd»
48. „ T "
50
4. n2
44 „ 134
51 „ 17
tests
QO t9 L5 bO fmt mE
ns i ans of anti- | with flowers fine : 45 204
quated and faulty process of preparation which they | decorative variety. cle collection ns of 12 on dep — p of August to the 24th of September
` uniformly pursue. Forty years of attention to the plants were contribute d y Mess Fra and Mr, | the ex wa feet, being an average
subject have enabled a neighbour of mine to st Cutl y Pelar- of — fet for every three days. On the 24th of Septem.
into a new and hitherto totally unknown path, em- | goniums in sixes by M T ght of the- shoot. was. 40 feet, the
bracing the four great departments of quadrupeds, | remark. Mr. Turn wed 12 bey seien the best eid. o l days. The plant was shifted into its
ts, and i I me among which was Dickson Matilda. There was a —À abe during the ea of 1858. The soilusel
: 0 ed f i covered
E
E
8
S. 2
"^
m
B
4
8
g”
lad
E
oO
à | Frenc i ; r, plan
Mr. Waterton with a visit, and inspect his collection, | among which Raphael, a dense shaded crimson, Comet, 19.5 “Meas rement of certain Coniferous m taken at
en -— certain that he would emp — — brilliant scarlet, and Virgine, bright carmine, were | St. Font, Tite, by G. Patton, Esq. Communicated by
new ideas, n his mind | conspicuous from their intense colouring. Mr. Turner Mr. yptomeria japonica (in cone)—height,
— the old p must be entirely laid idet see the | had also six well-grown egens ig the newer varie- | 21 feet ; dieit cine of 7 — a inches. wr
new one — "helre any real good can be effected.| ties; and collections of Cinerarias were shown sempervirens— pesos t, 133 feet; circumference
7 i Messrs. Dobson & Son, of Isleworth, and by Mr. 10 inches. Abie: cephalonica height 14 feres
Mor de dini —At there is an account of Holland, of Spring Grove. Mr. Bra agg, of Slough, | cumference of stem, 20 inches.—V. “On the Uses of
to Cucum da had which had been fumi-| and Mr. James, of Isleworth, pt stands | the Bamboo, with illustrations.” By Dr. Hi
gated via this paper. When tobacco paper is burnt in| of Pansies. A mixed collection of plants from | alluding to the characteristics of the Bamboo and the
: confined atmosphere of a Cucumber light the| the Pine: apple "Nursery contained ine - of various species described, the author remarked, “the
ps structure of early leaves is apt to suffer. The some Orchids, Heaths, 0 Nu Pine Apple, | Bamboo varies prodigiously in size in 2
reason is that 8 paper is a sort of touch. paper, e ariety of Rh ododendron the supply of water and the richness of the soil.
made by soaking in a strong decoction of tobacco, in | aureum, &c. A group duni the Wellington Road Nur- | dry hilly localities it grows Big to Sor 10 ft vii
which nitre or saltpetre is dissolved, and while the | sery , contained Rhododendron Dalhousie and Edge- in moist jungles’ and in
pg qe ome E out P peo gv deco! A ppeed and wor A Arthrotaxus eupressiformis, &e. Mr. Standish, banks of of Moga rivers, it attain ET
vie ich E 100 It has been known to 4 —
‘poisons f ti lares. T haled by th the|diflora (noticed in a former nd laden with its 18 EM in » [rh The p wget e
rer P — To ‘once made 8 canopy of muslin | snowy white to lowers, an and it was stated t ently | babl e fou ce in Burmah, w erc sca
à ithout in S ee 10 inc es i Mec oin
to destroy those marvellously reproductive insects the | our own piant are kill Bou ce omer of gx 0 24 inden in Te A s 1 15 is often culti-
orm The fumes web rra borse or destroyed| Some seedling Cinerarias were contributed by Mr. vated i in clumps , an nd to form ornamental archways for
l lice, dy the fum d shrivelled and dis- M and o! eo o as a hedge, being bent over
{five have never very’ inj d ros W. uckingham. | Ine mparable, a fine ees rosy crimson with a basal | and interwoven so as to combine the EL
er encouraged the use of tobacco — white ring. around the "e rk eye, the florets mers a hedge and a paling. There "ut ane many mi
hief bas ari ] haded
Garden Expenses.—I admit that. t my stat emen t (see | md of i
2 d t dod habit. In addition te dido 15 oe — when young an E e 3
p. 265) Pg. ore ae See The extent Pate kitchen Beaut „ a dwarf variety with rose erimson tip The M is given in the form of a ye Y
P á 8
en x» a purple, and Lisette a shaded blue, but all efto Europe for meking the tips of felingiolh
TN d : i nal . isette a sha ue, bu of|to Europe for making the tips o i p
3 ep well cropped and cultivated, so | interior quality; as was also 5 from Mr. g. poi Nera dist are ord when young 2s
and no charge is made for what they rs Some fine samples of vegetables paras the south of The stems are employed for prop built en-
.. "dung-heap, nor what I use myself or give to . nt for inspection by Messrs. Keeling and flooring, doors, and blinds. Some houses are
i m — be kei in b^ ved — ss work- | Hunt. Among these the Ca — Were particularly | tirely of Á— Paper and cloth are manuiac
/ from a d from a market — | fine, Asparagus and Artichokes good, Peas and Straw- m the p The tender shoots are u ^ d
bear little relation to each other; the market gardener n e RE «xd they Form one of the ingredi
grows what will y ield “him the profits; the In n our report ofthe first of these bene ce
hi a Bur
sorts of things that ‘ tony of correcting. Mr. Glendinning is there stated | tiful. Among the other uses of the sat
tensions buf whieh at ordinary tms eur dme | to have exhibited the “Camelia lowered Peach” and | the folo ving Doe for palanguin or eure ee
3 > 9 oba. Now he exhibited, he says, neither; and fo -— boats, ig is rafts, d kus e
à nd
with n
— " . ane xi 8 rag émis — communications the Hudson? s Bay territory,
he — as to tho Orehasdiiuee tetas ae bes r rne read :— re marks on Abies bracteata.” By A. meeting of the Dens Society ; also pr iesti from
. M. V." that these structures of recent intro- ge
for. I have 500 of wall, so says your coi à D
4 «c WS rrespon- | the e error is commi in t iet y', ial |
` measur, d 15 ani thing Flow 150 that itis the me advertisement, —— — e di beori an k fi ‘ied to feasts, Tight vile 5 pend idle : pe chairs, *
pb u ee thief ~~ ot the e walls, and in this velo ee x letters, especially forei ign, on | stands, distilling. eI s bows and E
3 sas in the subject of ne triloba, which up to this time has joints are employed for — and bottles, 835.
glass — Bec ee dm sid too younz to yet exhibited at all. We laste to set this | holding letters, for musical instruments, and blow. Pipes X
Dear; and if “A. M. V^ has ever . —VI. “On the Economical Uses of the Roots of Co Mir
p rir en all pr prodocing even a BOTANICAL or EDINE Jan . By Mr. M‘Nab. The donations of Mrs.
e season, o barren excep- Balfour in the chair. The f eee o t t
Wood, obtained sates ea a all injured by insects, nc
Y species of Spruce was first discovered — Jei ared from the Abies something
3 2 vr quithlp poH Pu by Dr. Coulter, who spent 10 years o life in ex- ie Ore, on territo su —€— acr
results in the south, here we ire Men err dog — it D I a 3 bed bis oat oe iae
o d a 1 the 17th
J w.. Pd Wis the eae
— ? i —
and nes it Patiently for very proiuising remite; 2 do a ne ~ long ^ — . i E t little | Britain of the Abies — dien $ A
correspondent, when T tell himn that the hose (( tme, 18H, sane this Fir gol brown pat” The spc ers 5 eg
Y e house cost less h
than pe sige pe think, see little to damp enthu- i » e ek ta 9 ete trod “i Conifers i "i Ping the m er e P in
siasm. J. D., introducing | whi e
the — ity in Burope M. Beards in i = : mua, if The poll nigra, i - Lr
E : ic s ioi im 1. T have
Societies. eM © procure perfect seeds; the cones S eid been ads. rac UR
S njured r^ frost. He noticed that the tree grew in a these t hen gro
Rox, 1 C, Rrozwrs PARK: Apri mE ad en pe nba us soil. In 1857 Lobb em v4 locality, but no hesitation ih saying that from the
three spring meetings was scarcely more successful. The were "found | roots now exhibited (grown in
John’s W. aes for germi browni
run freely amongst open
Arar, 28, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
dia strength E. durabilit
shown, I wou re e to sugges
things, o of t well as other Coniferous
ight, if d aal, affo d employm
ty of the articles now
est that the roots —
tre
n to profitab ble |
account soils at presen nt who olly 2 — The . 2
| gentlemen of t n the
old and — name of New Caledonia
now British Colombia, onis bs committed a diseredita
i the existence of a well-
ima ia
, for
he Colonial Office proposed to retain the
what is
ble
whether he could account — ib
W very g
As one instance, if 1 remember ri
orth,
and Victo a nd i
oria ;
(Scotch h Fr m, — and Lare
an) — — cut — for
railway sleepers, and other economic purposes. The Fede
f China or Australia, — or Van — "e j
Tinited States. call the
if ang at up, burned to get | them out of the way. ‘When
If so gentleman wo
Colonial Minister to account in e place in "Parliament
for this outrage upon nd the gen s
he wo
American Indians, we are entitled to 2 that
e don
J ameson of
is unen
"i Victoria men are talking, — that | monstrous
or the | it a good thing th
mmas formerly n
y thinking it tyres
n the ey began to
y, but would ae wrap them in flannel, of w
they had ine learned the use from us, and leave t.
lyi ying abou ee to cold draughts and everytl
used to wash quie babies at al
to do; ue er t W
e must pro 'oduce er in
iis subject :—
uppose, in great measure
dies Haand ng position. of New Zealand, cul be
+
d dried spec imens ‘of thre
to me by Pr. Jameso
0
alle st, G. cernua o
e Gentians sent
gher average, and the winds are
n more violent; that of one coe of — colony
E gr SHO - D0.— “One of the
t and chief p i do be inculeated on emigrants
— this countr y is "that of — T =
go'out meaning to provide = themselves, tot
of themselves, o ant their 4 3 — y to them,
‘Don ^t look to us 12,000 m
—
often
called Wellington, 10 is said that you may know a We ;-
lin nc up man by hi s habit of holding his hat on with his |
han * fow bene 8, rarely. serious ones, have |
"ti oe one
institutions.” In part
—— to their own sinews for their
En nglish wars, indeed,
1
| in - ole the climates are not
about 1 inch high, flower
ted Fellows.
included.” Three e gen En were elec
. J. E. Gray, F. R. S.,
insects
as purple- in
very — d T i s probable that anything, animate
or Ina sn vhs ves in England would do as
New Zeal
Lan. AND Tır —. This right to the 5 e
acquired by taking possession, is of course only good as
against other civilised nations. Iti is not good, except |
mies, as
well |
— i pu
— protection
y P
st n a
— [ene — on with a — that could no
| tolerated now. All that can y —
yt
of the place themselves, who are — natural lords of it.
ually occupy, an
mely p
hrase, to
JB se - that. ons must oy "both to defend
2 na m ids hr
a fion v baw a Legends new genus of
ifi æ oft
are understood by their own usages ‘to dain and hol ja |
There have been endless questi ons see disputes, some-
cent 1 .
wars and
with uc matter in New Zealand + but i
The:
assacres, connected |
into these I
as i y have o for the most part done.
They have, — * m our colonies been
mber
outh, ie L — with some er ni gp
of
Plymo
| —.— that — were me
wall
s, and a singular gr: r. Mr. Janson exhibited 2 enter now. ey have been long since, it
| numberof new British species of mim eetles of m: tied ho set at rest; and it is enough to observe
| different genera, taken near Lon F NW. |t that e: "iei — né natural — — observed
Saunders exhibited a large species o ti } by the eon
et 3 nd alive ina "a chest of tea from China ; 1 1 ys with some "of. — — hieftains
of t after our occupatio n ef i it, called
8 taken in small ru s filled with water near
oit but which in diii are dried up. This
— from being the largest Brit
and wi lly. ee oria defen:
o doubt t es from the habits of yer e
Landis, — as in all other adva 3 highly
| civilised lands these things are e done "t " row
1, +h
men 1
the cw of Waitangi: e a — the enge um ty of
the land was made o over e Cro of. En ngland.
4
ges
tomostraca. He also — some of | 0
merous
the possible a
of using them in the 88 of ink, as
unt of tan
he street
and call out for one of pes decorous and tightly-
of England becomes .
first mc Mer it would be the s
for the Eng lish G
h
— mi might think, at
sim n and best way
to En nglis ish people,
valk about for that purpose; or
ifit anytl hing more serious, the magistrates besiege
the ente Lord- n of the county for
yeomanry, or soldiers of o e ki nd o or another. Bu
your own — with — natives for
any land e
| ly been done, h the. nin | theirs which you may wish to Sie But that is i — . of the colony 1 w illo only say a word or t
8 was much less atn the ink-| what it does not do. On the contrary, the law of Of course in all new countries vn is uie M cies
| oeste da ais iei ciate some land is that no no qne an argus id. ra senis ani asd too Hrs m 1 5
larvæ of a small moth jj- try, the natives. |: y be w to e t has
i pennella), taken on Roses grown in pots in . | reserves to i f the right to deal with the natives. | hitherto d háite gg that they must often
Mr. White read th iption of one of the new | The Crown — srar from them: the English learn to to be th their own servants. From causes like these
species of Buprestidæ received from Mr. Wallace, — — get t land from the Crown. As soon. as the | a few, and but a few, have been disa aoib inted and left
ing a new genus, “a which he gave the name of Demo new | the colon But I believe Tardly a va n settler from
chroa carinata. Some new British Coleopterous insects — ay has. bargained 1 with the natives and got from | the first } Dais been compelled by distr ruin to do so
of small size vus also exhibited by Mr. George R. . by purchase, as much of the land as it can, or as —a fact, perhaps, not to be lleled in Posen his-
Waterhouse wanted for colonising, it disposes of it to its subjects, tory. And one striking fact may be stat
| just -— t — cae of — or — lan portion between the public revenue and the
y on such terms as it sees fit. e opp plan, that of population of the colon e revenue
E X otices of Books. letting private persons deal direct with the natives for —— ain an A Ireland, E fip is in the gross some-
1 their land, has been tried, and was given up because it ere nea: pego ,000,000,
New Zealand and the Canterbury Co olony. By Lord |led to great abuses, as - easily be explained.” or about 27.1 head. w colonies the pro-
| ü telton. NE (A pamphle — ee — —“ The main object in making colo- | | portion is E ut I esf no 3 has yet
| nder this title we hav sts pay for — instead of t has been attain ed in
and
e great ‘English
may become powerful
trustworthy account of — of those
settlements which. Uu AMAT i
th
ist
| gies it to don, is to prevent what is called the land-
| shank ia h system. Now what do Jou suppose a land-
A
Ao. > yeu
parent. — — — v - — e M à fish, who is as fond of eating manki FC.
ers is now a ey: question. | as our friends the New Zealanders used to be. But a Hort 3 for 1 1859, Part I. (Brussels,
Tuere are few counties indeed between the 2 i end land. hark is not the i r
ain Sch S Genet tee eee "shark is 1 refore re one of what some one called | Huyez), is w periodica A ees with
Canterbury.
There the vestis I think, is about 7000, and the
annual public revenue 100,0007., being upwards o of 147.
e| — head.”
ta of emigrants, all the well-to- . — — on land? it means a . who
iv to be doing well Any information therefore | bus possession of large tracts cao slant
communi by one who is him th a landowner hat: uei tivate it, but to hold v and keep
— — lder in the — t. Our own waste ti ini in the course of A t year, | in order as straight as circumstances
|
|
g g
axis shot up at — ‘underground | br us xdi room. will admit of, We should think our work but half
— At the time Sus thi took 1 n of the | — — —uĩ̃ä—+ done, or very ill done, were we to record the useless
other 3 in the open ground of the — had | Notices st Books. ber me of methods adopted by as many different
ed by an cov Y , uc e
te n 13th April, when the thermometer fell ell Our Woodlands, Heaths, - de Hedge po W. S. character of some of our most popular works on
22°, Mr. M‘Nab secured the present specimen from | —.— Vm mee rts is a shilling volume of — | ens ea. Acti merce are quoted, and all of
injury by getting a — we frame, about 8 feet about = shrubs, very well done, and containi persons of s note heir profession; but
high, erected aron — — — : with the in add dition to the princi ipal su cL matter, =
moderate d. information on entomological su jects.
-| by small — for i
woodcuts .
should have
all thee quotations, the person "wholly inex-
be bewildered, while the moderately -
—— vod Doa actually
pl 7 do we s he t ij
winds an — ;
3 —_ have
8 dedicated to — Pets ate, Lone edition of * .
its
8 inches. 2 — ‘about 45 | Pets, a paper
days. The last 1 7 ye of growth Dive Deut accom — Pests. By i ^ —— n 2. Knowled, English Grammar ies
plished in 11 depo i pum cum April. The first | Those must have the English Mero ictu qud he Gazetteer
| . — expanded at 11 A.M. on 7th April, and in the Who had pages, the Classical Dictionary of proper names 60
| hat day the — appeared by hundreds. te poges, tbe — om Compendium 30 besides
The plant has flowercd well, and promises to ts character—se h are various minor matters, in all forming a duo-
| fruit. At present 45 pound umbels | jocular, witty, ad P t m anecdote. dene 4| decimo volume "of 9 900 pages beautifully printed in
on it, some of eet en n dei a rrr A e esticated animals Proud of their D d meis
note was read from A. G. Spiers, Esq. of champion little | tl We have also before us from the 28
| Culereuch :—* The enc I took a a. Cryptomeria creatures of — affection. WE irou 62 pages noon is | publishes a new and revised edition of Man
l Lobbii; they appear to be attempts to form es, and ng fire of stories, — told, as may be | Historic. nd Miscellaneous — in the form of
I have not heard of thattree — in — cote Judged fiom x x nie extract :— |a small gelte of 570 pages
i —Dr. Balfour noticed the flowering of Rhododendron et was a mouse, caught Mr. Bohn has brought out a translation of Dantes
] al P Syme's garden at Millbank. i-i. — pet ‘highly educated. sai that p m inferno, * o Rer. J. W. Thomas, who tells his
The p lowers, which are of a r school were all mouse eaders that his 1 main object has been “to unite with a
white colour, and are beautifully marked with a purple | process was con ducted on the vater ore vii version almost literal the form, the beauty, and the
2 inside. — Mr. J. B. Booth exhibited specimens of a breaking tl the original.“ In the first he has su
uja, which he had received from British Columbia, | mice swim till they 1 i tired. After the e preparato ry | but we greatly pu whether readers will
under the name of Thuja gigantea, but supposed to be immersion had been undergone, their education was | the apna of the other twó Lindley ities,
the true Thuja Menziesii of Douglas. The specimens conduct: cvv es principles of ber kindness. Our The 9th Part of Prof. Li "s Folia Orchidacea
were taken from a tree 200 feet in height, and from 4 | mice wou! gas to us like dogs, an
to 6 feet in diameter.—Mr. Murray exhibited specimens | most docile em teachable. I g t | What t progress the knowledge of Orchids has made of
umbellata from California.—Mr. M*Nab that in a moment of extreme e pover ty s "eager nee ri late years may be seen from this instance. When, in
laid on the table specimens of the common Hawthorn | ‘admirable Crichton’ of a e for the unheard-o 8 — i vg M ee oduced “a the author into his
(Crategus oxyacantha), having the leaves of 1858 still | sum of five shillings. : Toby” ^ (dat was p name) w. hidearum, only 19 species had
green upon it, as — as the mature leaves of 1859, genius knew his name, o the whistle, let, bec 1 bis “of, which he hed only seen 15, Mere à in
5 ikewise laid on the ran u les ned doo: pr ed arms, &c. ate of unexaminable
p poles, open
seco Cr Y Crategus r in full leaf, the course of their eincdion. our mice — en got
ae and the pharmacy we adopted in these cases T
t the least curious part o 3 The fainting
* meu: AND HORTIOUL- sufferer was phlebotomized quad huius oo off a link of his
— e learn Trewman’s with a sharp knife; blood
this was in all respects an excellent followed: this ei
gmen!
da selon is for med upon 280 spec les, nearly all of
which have been carefully 8 i exclave of three —
doubtful species, and ni
other is.
Mes
à
to 40 of the While Bottan | ostium "im. dhe ul ion; die ont, it
psis; Cypripedium barbatum, 5 “And now what moral can I draw
488
THE GARDENERS, — — a p GAZETE,
now appears in a form which brings
and there is surel
m of plant
t this season;
winter de The
y | houses can scarcely be be p ept too mo
no one book in uro Engli enm =. tie! of | therefore cabled every available tees frequ uently
being placed in the hands of the young. It e they and syringe growing stock lightly twice a day during |
find the history of one w "€ ^ a bo of steady i industr m bright weather.
sobriety, intelligent pers
reso
be deterred 85 ao difficulty, pute himself from "the
lo peasant boy to the highest
following in his
w conditi a poor
FORCING DEPARTMENT.
1 LE a ©
[JUNE 4, 1859.
should be sown with Turnips =,
forthwith, 7
| Leek ground should b Celery an
and ! 7 b 5 got re bes Leeks Well grow: a
among late Potatoes sho ld en fanily Ban
slanted Swedes, , ve filled up with trang.
—— |
STATE OF THE WE
Forthe Week ending Toe IS — CHISWICK, N l
f
INE
tari o or ps oic matter it will be a Weel
recru
add a li
teps, ‘are oly affecting the destinies of the
narra ative of t the
foo
AU m tions of the phis The
the heat, but
tele fr mS material at interes nd in order t
thi nis
wit ith a few im in ch sof
ich dien
si imple means by which
— e pay in the Tut of every schoolboy, wit
e advice to r digest, and do -like
volame i= 2 is no ot howev ver a mer
of M *$ i
The
abri ridg-
> g
h caus ong a me pe at ti M nt there is
much a more
JI
Yabad ta eh
n of f fruit.
tT th
atten tion of young ye upon some of the m
Seng periods in Stephenson’s career.
o learn
1
We s
that the aput = univ. IM ig ees “by |
as
amber of su ah ng this hy se e to th e dem
short intervals during the growing season, Ee efore
asi to ke: eepiug upa regular seid of i ek es: if|
| May
season it will be safer to mrs parue
des intrusted with ven
valuable
1E
e | do
1 1
piece of biography that uim
their pupil ils.
Miscellaneous
Weights n in
arrots, Tur-
the ue reed
uch as Ca
es, Onions, &e. > and small
t 1 ae
Sor Et T
large Eis to increase, 50 that there was yo ro
| left for the young s
disappointment came in due cou
| growing "x ge for want of So RD
dryness at and afford them
in the after-
hich
usually sold by ¢ the botte. ae otherwise weit t
id
is at
Want
ber; and Sorrel
sale
—
ing Mer
Th:
and i Spinich A — — id oe cease to
e for in mannes
ze.
keep Grapes through the cep
stock, which pie accordingly, and |
m not let
r thro oe
a git, atmo- Mon.
to
n ie case | Books
24
3 thi nn ed. Be particularly careful of the f foliage
are
aniveauc ; por i
six middle-sized Mushrooms
rted f) ari
mi
r
tuces are sidi in botte
ach
lso
vian Endive, Cabbage Lettuces. Ter
Aquaria. — We find the Phar-
n ical al the following inge-
nious ; for ing air into
— \quaria, invented by Mr.
rot I = This is
a very simple, t, and efficient:
instrumente - It is of an india-
to one
end of a glass e B, which has a
ball of cotton wool, c, tied firmly to the
ve
t, whilst
B
"2B85
i
messo
x
we fills the ball, — that by
ely squeezing this ball with the
e pressure, a eur-
is thrown out at the
pede it in 3
writes that in very
Ceylon is : di Tarsus of the
trade was carried on with it hondreds of
era:
SU darin xni n
ancient native nam of
E vier "
(For mim md
s PLANT
Conservatory, &c.—The
be thoroughly —— ofalls
2 m be uired i in structures of that
ry 0
ou y regis
wild Chicory — 12
of 32 heads, or
high
author * proves that
Scriptures — That a yay
*
conservatory should now
superfluous stock. Nothing
iat kind
they
are not infested w T black the o or red An for if
= of these p on the
Vines, the fol blue will probably be mT injured, —
then are will be no chance of kee e Grapes
d Loses ——— fora ns time after they p Ex Musca ts
be encouraged with a brisk
as ees s the frat i is
trees may be
them hefe the lights are removed.
ed spider, dut. sut unn
handlights, and supply th
8 GARDEN AND
ewly bedded out thin,
regire daily
i d each „plant s will then be readily
wili il during — weather
of — —
Let t1
eed — |
legem sd Gm
radica
RE.
or six. Attend diligently to stan ‘ord Roses,
stant disbndding is necessary at this
TS.
They s m = — = —— a shady Der ine — by
themse| should receive frequent waterings.
— FRUIT — CHEN GARDEN.
In order to have a good and constant supply of
winter Endive a full sowing — now or T —
be made. Endive is general sown too —
. s
pits. Kee the at atmos
ing bright sunshine.
compost, a
good r osph
plenty o of Mio dor the proper gat of toe eir
is useful
; it flowers ——
and leaves. Selago distans
a goo
— t which ao not be forgotten
ng
- houses or
p umstances Lec
Ventilate t irai € shade vith thi
liberal sowing of autumn Turnips ; the vm E Stone |
are. useful sorts for the kitchen garden Parts
n
See that fresh planted trees have t
salad. d be ——. without out delay.
and waterings, e—
an yu for use and lup let
COTTAGERS' G
M s soon as early Potatoes
ground 8 eropped
The A EL. rok T im ssels Spro:
Gr reen an ttagers’ K
and requires nothing better p
33 wi inter Cyti
looming H
is ntion. If a cow is ke ept t the Thousand-
and above
should | Es di the "tag |
crated ingen, r4 s cam surpass |
of of good hat for her, A gm of the early Potato ground
2, 1859, as opened at the n" —
PH fii
|
Ee 20 — 9.8 4 i E
2 "Y 0) 55
Sunday 2 E 29,6 ; 5| 57
680
20725
?222222
[OTT e
29.7 29.649 | 74.1
N
ery fine't 5 5 night.
29— Uniform haze; thunder and li
30—Fogzy ; cloudy 8 3 at nig,
e fi rn i ; fin
]— Very fine throughout.
2—Cloudy ; overcast ; fine; rain at night.
Men 50 tani of the week, x above th
D OF TEE WEATHER. ATC
33 years, for the ensuing Week, en WES
an
RECOR
During the last
Greatest :
Quantity |, -
of Rain. 5
of
T in
which it
Rained.
June.
Average
Highest
Temp.
Average
Lowest
Temp.
Sunday
222
ees
i9 by m bo to nd
88888
n
nis
SPP
Neos
48.0
48.3
The highest temperature during the above period
1846—therm. 90 deg. ; and the lowest on the stb, e en eie
4 —
— :
2 - 1 5
the
All o
in
AULAFLOWER Prants: H B. If they a a
give them 8 2 — sy ringing once or tree with
[Ue mem it off afterwar kc cleai ter. will
—5 y cause them t
o disa rape
C E. The — like rangi from the inside of a
Reticularia maxima, It
^ run
m (Ulmus montana) is
S n the
desirable if we cou A
that most willingly. It is now requ
more than four plan ay be Se
Dick. Justicia carnea.—
than a viviparous Poa annua, wW
ban produced by the im Ball off the cba
mon leaves.—Adam Bal
e
L Capper. Polygala vv
Anthyllis v bie — SEE
1, Fedia- cs sree 1 "smashed ed to Sta
minable. — Lydia T. Abies Douglas pe
ttata.
the specimen “pone t et the.
en sen:
It looks like Cloth of Gold, but Wt wo should
early variety to be in
— south uL We are
It a
THE Gisnunsr COMPOUND: Newbury:
ET - éompound in hard water W
i
you me!
“the sacha AE em
ppose may be ad intel
de We
ts the nsertion of w.
June 4, 1859. _Toxe 4, 1859.) IHE € THE GARDENERS’ _ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 489
i 3 "nm ET En Er. RICULTUNAL MACHINER
. AND
THE " xi ES - ATENT Prize Mills for Crusbing gii — Malt, eie
Te 2 le Grinding Mills, Steam Engines fixed and portable from
horse. power upwards; Threshing Machines, Chaff
Cutter, Oil kers, H Gears,
NITROPHOSPH ATE OR BLOOD MANURE ze a nimat tr tone eid
Foreign use. as Price sent free o n application.
EDL K E DEN D
COMPANY (Liu ITED), W AGRICUL’ d yore ge. -f Essex,
HA wm or md
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND. pon p e Y x Ta ž l pe size, No. 1 £12
rge size, No
TRUSTEES. These Machines are free from ‘small and delicate m aud
— MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M. P., Western Colville, Linton, can be easily understood by a farm labourer. x. —
—— ones, Esq., — Place, Herts. Cambridge
, Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts. | hows,
ARD BALL, Esq., M.P, 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico
gained several prizes at the Roy gr Agricultural Societ;
Joun Brany, Esq., HORS aay on
8 SE R
M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq. No. H en n 4 r 1
We * K Dex es are made on the —
principle ‘combining — — and lightness, Free to all
the pri th ilway Stations.
W.
DIRECTORS.
Chairman.—Jonas WEBB, Esq., Babraham, Cambridgeshire.
Deputy-Chairman. ons COLLINS, ¥sq., ia tang 75 ‘Severe, Pentonville.
ELL, Esq., Tottenham, Middles ROBERT LEEDS, Esq., West Lexhum, No
rfolk.
uim OL cb Esq., Littlebury, Essex RonERT MoncAN, Esq., 72, Camden Villas, Camden Town. van DENDY, Union Foundry, Hornchurch, Esse
RICHARÐ HUNT, " Stanstead | Abbot, Herts. GEORGE SAXILL, Esq., 8 near Stamford. "0 ARM EKS.—If you wish to PRESERVE YOUR
Tuomas KxiGnz, Esq., Edmonton, Middlesex, WILLIAM COLLINS, ee ea kis St. John Street Road. HAY, go to Davis & Co., 64, West, Sm ithficld d, E.C., where
Bankers. m B occas 3 Lom vou may purchase a RICK e pre abe material at ad
ES RMAN, 23, 8 M ok workmanship, cheaper than so ih Tondon , ora
A i * ä 28, Parliament Street. WHY N x HAY
—Mr. James — l Seeretary.—Mr. C. T. Macapam. J. E TON fully informs tlie
Nobility and 4 45 that they can be supplied on the
Offices p. Fenchurch Street, London.—Manufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex. best terms with RICK CLOTHS, with Poles * RICK
Ea! I applieation should be made for
CLOTHS. MARQUEES, TENTS, aud FLAG S. t variety
of Marquees and Tents may be s seen erected o e premises.
A quantity x Pent goer HAND TENTS from the — — at a
tly reduced price. An Illustrated Catalogue se mt post free.
x
Tue Directors beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultural Public that the following Manures
are now ready :—
DAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL.
AMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS. Ducere Enamora, $, Dube Sires. Lenton Boise E
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME. Pen TUBING FOR WATERING
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents.
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &. — Manufacturers IMA URE wi Bao CROPS, of first-rate quality,
= “ Angel,” Islington,
and others —— in making — MANURES | ith Anal ranteed, manufaetured by WILLIA 8 Lond on, a E. Priced raran can be hat — application. -
2 — instruction 2 A go 12 r3 — E & London (established 184 Dat A p y ce the Address—94, Goswell
pe A Spd hp Meal pt J cM ars ir ar = GUTTA PERCHA — TOR WATE ERa GAR
[prre n of Bolle, 88 College, seen na HE aet eee JR Tave ge
phates of Linie, Goprolités, &c., aid Assays o Wer, and REDUCTION IN PRICE OF LAWES'S MANURES l cipt o of the
-— — are ex with accu AL — Megs LAWES begs to announce that he has this Lu pes "xe J. Fanna H, m, Gr xd o Dosw o, ee DLETON
Gentlemen desirous of receiving on emical reduced ri h man ALLAND, Esq., use, Near AN.
tone the Oo Assaying, will find ample facility and accommoda- | hini, viz. : 8 — —.— — zs d d 400 feet of — “Gutta Percha Tubin,
on at the
e ha
PS P n of 100
fr Er to£6 6 feet each, with union joint, in use for the last "last
TURNIP MANURE . :
REDERICK CORNWELL begs to inform hi EO RAS z POS ^^ $0 85 bettor than ngehing {have Ser ve vet, T pre
"gs orm his 6to 5 5 " msiderable, but this has not the slightest
friends and the ltural public that is can now BARLEY MANURE 8 0 effec! — very considerable, but this bas nc ightos
Sere coat maa os HATE of LIME” pen eA ng | Prof. Way and Dr. Voeleker havi — frin pelt of 5000 to | valuable invention for Gardeners, inasmuch as it enables på ad
produced. Each Bag teed to con 6000 tons at his factories, and their report and analyses are given | water * 9 — about one-half the time, and with
cent. of “Soluble m Lime." Price? 5L 107 per in full in Circular to be obtained on — 2 Y^ his office, | half th requi
— — — 80 e rrr — 28 1, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C., or of liis local Agents. Wer e by ‘the Gutta Percha — 1 NM
MASH c uan: ssrs. Wharf Road, City Road, London, and so y their ole-
and — — odio Or ARTIFICIAL MANUREN a at 2 a Peravian — direct m ors Orne, | enlers "^ tow Md AWAY.
ea of [2 "aer cnt of Ammonia, and other Chemical sale D . Pr
ures. -seed Cake supplied. Tone GENERAL LAND DE AND IM-
ment Street.
Te
ONDON MANURE COMPANY, removed to 116, ESTABLI
chrono Street, E. C. 3 — have tho
à 72275 — LOT | NG
AND T. PROCIORS TURNIP MANURE —
— RR
UPE
BLOOD NUR :
In consequi of 1 in the price of ra
the London Manure “enabled to *
their Superphosphate of Lime, and to materiall,
€ Manure and Urate.
e gom u* — ERUVIAN GUAN
(direct from Messrs. A. Gibts p: g^ Aes SULPHATE —
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, CRUSHED 2
ku. other Manure of value.
POTATO, GRASS, BARLEY, CLO ND TE EAT} 4. The . cost of the works and expenses may, in all
MANURES; also BONE DUST, PERUVIAN GUANO, and | cases, be charged 3 to ipea by half-
arrani
Wholesale dealers supp!
aian RPROSPRATE of LIME, w: ted of the best quality. rx instalments.
Ae Fenchurch Street, E.C. EDWARD boa Be to H. ETP m, West of SA. ^... ‘The term of such cha Oe
U V I AN G U A = ©- o Cathay, Bristol; or PROCTOR & EILEEN, Bir- | and extended to 50 years Cem To 1 — —
The present price of this valuable Manure is— mingham, and Saltney, near Chester. for Farm Buildings, —.— the instalments — be kept
p Ton for 30 and upwa within — a fair per- as the occupiers of the improved
per Ton for 1 Ton up to 30 Ton: n afford to
URNARD, LACK, ann CO/3 CONCENTRATED 42 ry —
“And, to pen. 3 3 B SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME; guaranteed to contain 9 pront is P
and — 5 — esl
ex
mixtures the actual a — only. — by the Inclosure
— results equal to | Phosphoric Acid soluble, equivalent to 40 per cent. of Tribasic pany, ne t
— — — pto fe: Phosphate ot Lime: TURNIP MANURE, 1 l eee LU. y
"Gibb. B: ht K Co, of Liver- | equal in value to r —
— Bristol, agents, Messrs., Gibbs Bright, & Co. of the precedin ing. n co LLEGE or AGRICU oe LA. s» CHEMISTRY,
onesty and fair dealing they 8 implicit [ov oi a ae these says :—*' These — = We ai GENERA 3 37 and
NY GIBBS & Sons. . E you, “an a are the best nd ae r of * — 38, Low 8
ieh — a, „value which characterises “oo m 6. C. Nssnrr, F. wn ^e cum &c.
— æl M NEW GUANO; IMPORTED | your concen! — ha ur tem of studies ed — tie —.— e
ER LEA THE CROWN. the experi- ed — wil "umts f nch requisite T epare rthe o -—
ments with KOORIA MOORIA GUANO were made late in the Opiate bo IM a 2 Sn e Engineering, Mining, Manufactares, and the Arts
season, and under adverse circumstances, the successful results | Prices, &c., may be had on a applicatio K, Naval and Military Services, and for the Universiti
* art Le M doubt Professor Voelcker's report—(in | & Co., Sutton Road, Plymouth Anal
0. 41, Part L, vo
Royal Agricult: pcm e Journal)
s sted
with phosphates.
Moorta Guano is essentially a phosphatic
manure, containing sufficient — o for — it and, bic a
mixture of one-fourth of ammoniacal gua guano, cannot be e sany
for either dressing or grain crops. a natural d
and will as imported, free from risk of ad —
tion. D the necessity of encouraging the
import of this valuable manure, her Majesty's Government has
giren such increased facilities for ship that ements
: ‘wih suitable quante supply. Pure can
r quantities - cargoes now on sale,
41. 10s. to 6l M ot i ephatos. Present prices,
8 25 — of SA. Con UY ndor the Crown) 20, D.
rens Dec. 1. M.
—I beg to inform i
Moorin G Guano I had from you ips, [rg 3
character, incumbent on a stig clay subsoil, and recently
drained. On each side of the plot with Kooria Mooria
Guano were Turnips manured with best Pe Guano. The
q ps of each sort were of equal weight ht
per acre, UE eg one creeptibl die now being
— of of with t a Very little
A m
Te € th Boenia Doria Moori —.—
) “Joun BARKER.”
Kae
x — — raham. - Guano Merchants, Penrith."
ints on Guano,” containing a la
of — pami ell-known agriculturists, and — eti
cargoes here, may be = of che! Broker, at the above address.
be at the Auctioneer's Offices,
Trinity Lane, €— —— City, and. of Extr e
TO AGRICULTURISTS AND DEALERS
ree RR MANURES.
ey s a ue. yi OTHERS, Ax» SEARLE
lla e New xchange Coffee House, red
Lane, on MON SDAY, ä 6, at 2 0 Clock precisely, 250 tons of
MANURE, comprising 200 tons of genuine sis ERPHOS
alyses and Assays of every descri cpm are d and
ratel; - ege. a other par-
raa RE ROPIGULTURAT. SOCIETY.—
ORKSHIRE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.—
GREAT SHOW aT —.— avarani 9 AND 4.
For Prize Lists, apply to the pe Be HANNAM,
Land
Agent, Kirk Deighton, — —
PHATE € M which will be sold E guaran
pom of WOOL may pied N.B.—
d will be taken yarchasers to t
- upwards.—Samples. Nas "S seen, with e sh ysi
263, Borough, Southw:
RIGI DOM —Patronised b: Maj
y her i
he Duke of Northum be ey for Syon
His Grace the Duke of Devonshire for Chiswick Gardens, Es
orticultural —Ó— x
fessor Lindley for the Hi Sir Joseph Paxton
for the Crystal Palace, Royal t „ late M i:
Lawrence of Ealing Park, an f Dartf
m nghe 14 bibe de Two — itia um e, 18. oa.
yard. A = 3 make [3
hadi: om yards wid 6d. per yard
ELHA THOMAS Ancuun, whole a sola: manufacturer, 7,
and
«c The Par icula Gazette.
URDA Y, J
; late sown ng corn
on the EM clayey lands in that
490
Less 4, e.
EG 8 CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
pean >> could
ow nom A plough was suecess-
fully a at work - E ^x last ona — belo longing
I. P., near St. Albans.
wem acres of rite
deep ina Jong g day, and ines
a wo day
Litty wood er eh ae dion
ploughed 8 inches 1 last st PRA in 15 days by
heat looks well after
Ai
work— and
acres were Thi
8 — from the pleu
l] years ago, and also from the
re
| not replenis h x by dire
"m pedo
g n full milk, the earliest angie |
having arly seven weeks at t Grass, and
nearly the whole | being now at the pail.
ement is as follows : — The |
e | seeas
or four years, w
and the sam
hiis it is Dio
t is
: ere field ag. E
A eonsi: derable portio on of th
devoted to the growth of um Pot a 4
the pails Tall
are brought one after another v ‘poured into =
ub. A pan of milk boi
the
ust ial and
mi —
tivated so much more efficiently ty
steam as to render the necessary *
economical "investme nt.
f the Me SRE Society
last week pos sess unusual interest. Mr. Frs "is
Honns's paper, and the 5 upon remed
= the Tur ed upon it, will be
th
report to the agri-
m-l
ae ee. enabling . — nein It
r this M and t
are indeb we 0 is
acting secta a the he Society, who —
all the doe — to be
e Society, which he has held for so
ing the past c days, too, the Bath 5
rinted without the usual a
th and e wh thu
poured a last into the tub which has contains the
ole milk, cream and all, of bot *m The
irtv
irty
iyot as a "omaia E :
and a dene MA promise
Lontonsing atter, *annatto," clin i This seed growing. nt itself been a
gill, is added to the 100 or 120 ga lons which may growth, and is an in e of the kind iem
an | be them in. the. tub a s the produ e Rev. Mr. — * re than onee recom
Asen in with Ge | m n: d in our columns, in de a devotion to
view of correcting the bitterness Which is to be this department of cultivation by a known
detected while the Butter-cups a full leaf ; - trustworthy man has proved, as he alleged, the
S|and the rennet, about a pint of brin in which | exi stence of an increasing e nd (alt 3A
two or three little bits of the prep ff yells or higher m for seed wn from carefully A
‘bag, skins” have been steeped over night is. selected ro
added to milk, wh t or a he re erence to this his 2 Mr. Dune
e-
lage, Cheshire = vats piod with holes for | Turnip
f at of fluid
— the lower part
rical vat, and the a
me 7 — Ag ing into it as the curd on
pressure sinks. inim p nin 5 in this
beg
is rem *. and broken b
and West of E England Agricultural Society h
held — 9 rd report
— keen teom 1 to 2 lbs. of fine salt AM
of iti is given in porte er page.
From none of the lines of railway by which w
have traversed Cheshire do you receive a just |
5 iyo Me
allel In 0 the ridge
versa
large cae
hout the
county, you asture
fields hin apes oe a Bake produce sse - toos,
which if e aoe is
T — ete
—— robably a
larger head of stock en any other ni » 4
You will find these farms more
hà poty pans ble
y districts, that o
een it, as
soattered over it, and the whole rebroken and
| into the — into
«| previously Th
iey yielding a acie
ass Which
.|drains for ——
.of arable land than
f | good
promise ae — grope, 1 Wheat, and Oats,
we have an here
Cheshire farmer es
cell os hout the year 'ear.
mi
y
good Cheshire
and lan
e of Tarvin v viet six miles east ¢
G The bus lies pa
. — 01
r the
the pressure of its own
——— der pressure,
on the second or third day amounts to
nearly a ton weight upon each —
wrapped in
By and bye -
as before, on a layer of
straw on the floor of the room, and th
ady
KT is tty g the history of a Cheshire
Leges tate dairies, in order to the —
extraction of the whey, skewers are used to pierce
ing thrust repeatedly into it through the holes
in the cheese id ,in order to the formation
boiler, and throw:
some of the
are on the clayey dnd 1 marly
e seventh or ‘eighth day of
ved to pig
there it lies i
m from 10 weeks to four months old, when it is
ne
f T 0
ure Pr ct
s, first o
then on the — tops, and poe psa on
s, Swedes, and Mangel Wurzel (the last of
which has just disappeared), eines with cut straw
and hay chaff. The ip: hae
in fair condition and Bur p Pall
of ret ante ready to be turned o 1 1 sang
rence of this kind to
Vu 52 incomplete vite mentioning ms
dition of the labo — „
Mr. eee d avighbourh ood than ai i
ing 10s. a week duri
= the —.— —— 28. a 2 du
all dim, foo a j
- ey also — cheap 6
Those on "Me is
ek, though
mi outhouses, including eo
n the iy Most
acres or more
bs.
c^
are extracted from à
uc don of Glasnevin, before the Royal.
A, "TE no
— superp ; but
—— the quantity manu
tops to be at least
seen, are
owing their quality to origi ity,to
and to boning. This last Eaton at the rate of 9
a ton to 30 = — acre had been effected, most of |g
feet. pem
elds,
3:3
Saal.
115 41
the
ust has exerted its
0 250 acres 60 arab A herd
cows are milked, and the other stock besides pigs
consists - a fi or ether sheep,
and 40 o ewes with lambs, bought in and m
sold fat Lever year, and 15 o r 20 calves, with a
similar mber md of two d inte
Vere he heifers, which are rtly introduced in
y come jato — and partly sold.
1. | on th ly
52 | wonderful effect on
annual produce,
— rable land on Mr. lies
tton the sandier
[poten —
arm is for the
it Th
— — ous on lea” E A
o| Wur zel, p "Potatoes EN ees or 11
| | down with Cove ds ud pO Grass seeds for three! from
recent instances it 2 been .
on ro sour | statisties mrien a
making them — — — — ous individ
t ided — *
| nef:
[ma
— quality of thej >
sterling. -d gugge» ^
if an y we may 2
1 ias
mes — mdr eid a half setis
the legitimate profit of r
superphosphates and the im
I Bavo no doubt but this sta
alarming; but ^e cannot Sia
v ress
nor — mpressivel y i
3 — The bread we
eal IIIT I ———EERRRRRRRRRRRRN
| June 4, 1859.]
NE 4, i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 491
1 J. ! e e e ee
ages drink are subject to the most systematised | of 3 nia, or a fraction more than 7d. per Ib., or] in iva chair. The Report of the Finance Committee
2 “of interes sophistication. 1. am in clined to 651“. 6s. 4d. per ton. ead.
hink, howe n ^y at 10“. per ton the farmer pays for communication having been made by the Council
tisfactory and calamitous condition ammonia about 1s. 6d. per Ib.; in eo cake at 5/. per to ES Hudson, the Secretary, and his reply having
than any other, and that there is no class of the com- ton he pays about half the price, so that as isly resolved—
munity so flagrantly tillage farmers | these articles cannot be conside red A. Inthe! On the motion of Mr. ward, seconded by Lord
who find it necessary to have recourse to the manure scale for valuing manure adopted in the eee of Feversham, s Tha t Mr. Hudson be s uspended from the
l market. Fraud pervades many a recess in this market, | our leading chemists, 56/. r ton is the pri this time.
| stalks forth cie ry in daylight, and not unfre- | ammonia, which is rather under its commercial P los. a the motion of the Hon. Colonel Hood, se
| quently ere. -— n the advertising sheet of the y Mr. Jonas,“ That Mr. Brandreth Gibbs be paso
farmer’s newsp: — — d ecd the office of Honorary Acting Secretary
Toia., Mii. science boldly treads on the Home e Correspondence. pro tem.’
track of fraud; and if she does not a always dis iscover The Craigo Turni ip Experi You are good On the motion of the Hon. Colonel Hood, seeonded
n isarm it sails
a ari to give yonr € tails of Je» by Lord Feversham, “ That all letters be addressed to
its career. He wo J uld be a blind farmer, indeed, who in cultural experiments made by pda a men for the | Mr. rigs eth Gibbs, as Honorary Secretary to the
this age would slight the " of —— e man n of science. t of interest to the 3 Society.“
ö urther progress in e of r ing the lost fer- One is fo oreibly struck, TI a the On AR motion of the Hon. Colonel caede seconded
tility of land with eco cann e ies effected without enr apparent contradictory chara: the | by Mr. Jonas,“ That these pisi eae be e known
more of that. oo whieh 4 dhomisizy has shed upon the | results. his? Have the 8 i * soil, | to the publi c journals in the ual m
brow d que -— e e relief from the crush- | or the and of plants, or the action of m. ann res no N 1 to the
— unprincipled manure | well-defined laws of o operation, or are the experiments | details | rendered siad for carry ang into effeet the
, ven Pers ors an be ifade oniy by the diffusion of the at faul Wek ove
— we alread of the chemistry of art, ish. that inquiries - the soil when made = 8 Monthly om (for the 1 son or task:
aer no ways success!
The N Nitrogen in Manure.— Now, in ure the a md, l, though the the reply be most Satien a aited nes) — qs EA -— — — 22 —
— 2. exist rug ver in the form of. ammonia ny but how much more difficult of 1 is prm dum P es PP sins TV
ammonia—or be oe id u in the tissue the answer, an we clog the question - unneces-
of the structure oft the s ubstan: . sary conditio Permit | me ina remark tbat field cellier eom
Fin —Mr. Raymond B
^ 13 8 y uet rre —— ‘the pa report on
epen nd ‘materially - whether experiments should only be made for ‘he elucidation 4
it exists in one or other of thos —80 mue ch of o one well. defined point. We may, i it is true, from the Tore € — em pier Ut mm -— ba: €: "ond
e
balance was
so that _Dr. Voelcker estima tes — l BIN de dit Oat tun ee . — xm 17591. 4s. 11d. On the motion of Mr. Thompson,
in mal or vegetable substances. The adva need | and radi question to be clearly p at and in triplicate, — M —— A — ay — th us
pone me estimates the real importance of not merely duplicate. In your E t Number you give wes hes Peto a! a special meeting of the
economising time will always seek to obtain a manure | the Mo reet of Mr. Grant, of Craigo. Not Frari Oetángll toe summoned; E
in which s nitr rogen exists i ina v say, of actual access to the Journal of the Highland Society, I beg to AGRICULTURAL CmEWwISTRY.— Mr. Wren Hoskyns
monia in k on them as standing in your Journal. Two C airman of dm
h K d from h the Chemical Committee, reported that
z * potential? 2l as Dr. U many years ago A “= simplicity of the question the que tion being e at peg pean eis
nated the — . —. that * 3 Japodi o£ Aime, — — ya 45 Uic eee e bot sather oF the tata ben stored two years, and that the Professor
it is irable to take | m.
anures Two sorts of ios. were used, so that
—" Á À À
this st the nitrogen int ds the dung the experiments were not even en malte some remarks upon the analysis he has made,
in estimating the "ics pes a manure may be evidenced | duplicate Then only the two centre rows were ine heb cafe ji —.— — ry ise —. e
i^ one or two examples. weighed. After which statement the experiments lose — influence upon the important subject of the stor-
l. Esti matin 1 the value of a specimen ol Welsh coal all niet 15 enin ence, The we "a s gi ven might be ing qualities of root — generally. J
is all we can say in t favour. The CoO eiii
of 2 — r eent.) it t would be worth more than 17. per ton; | reason assi sH for not weighing ar the rows is the tg igh, coge
= 2. irere of the Ge — Warwick € Committee, hend the re-
pee yet uld pay the cost of its carriage | mixing of the manures at the end 9f each sort; as well commendations of the Commi tee in reference to— 1st,
e Hon. Director of Show being empowered to
E "We kn know that. unboiled bones are probably the | by iu is filters my ee pity itis that v Aae rus fr shedding, hurdles, bs according to the number
— oe "de intelligent fay iy aa. p of entries * a a this — 455 — — 85 Ware 0 as *
wants n n , prefers pur 0 ise the results b owe aug p d
chasing that Aime e apo : Fc ihe form of tion to mer re detail, E us su 3 € ML hay, s ra, vemos MEI ame an sistants
guano. = the bones the nitr: rogen is in an inactive the we ights giv o be ect; then what is the h 0 4
and not mediately ir ttn — whereas in | difference in the e of the tae sorts of dung ? The — - Pfires; 4 * pem APA Sinita e —
guano i initis i in an acti e, of which plants ean | White Globes have pr roda geda — E crop than the Moatir g applica me
make read We € no dont, obi Aberdeens. Lea t the * in the of
bones second. Omit in
a short
tain the full | Yellow’
the * - est bee it in absent in
— sak
expec, arid. tis fessi 10 neglects it will ave i apt que 7 tots 8 owt Za 10 l.; and that neger with tà 1
chance of competing for maximum profits ofthe White Globe Turnip, 96 tons 16 ewt, F — —„— wer
od ure alone is of Yellow Aber- | Council for 10 o f v on June 22, for receiving —
mode of estimating the prae value of manures, deen, n tons 15 ewt. dq. 24 Tbs. ; 2 White Globe, — —— —— Accounts, and of the
lbs. Now as e judges
pinin That mode consists in ascertaining by pro- tons. evt: qrs. Ibs. tons ewt. qrs. Ibs. Song oe ars. Ibs. several d l 122 =
cesses which we will » describe the percentage of E ty ee, Z = paige E 2 ius e — | for cheese and — e stock, en € end do
nitrogen in the manu and then ig ia vs t i
he. re, t it is “staked that e was "e dung used in STEWARD ETLROT or I —— motion
ammonia this Ju itp en is equivalent to, or, in . riggs riment than in the first, in the —— of Colonel Challoner, € he Right Hon. Lord Leigh was
of 12 unanimously appoin' ward elect of Implements,
heen, u determined at 8 Bering: ing an it Then as 15 12 : f M. De seer I ome ae The Council gave authority to the House Committee
thant d S pneep aor Wee produce w. 11 11 0 1 carrying out the details of matters intrusted to
the absurdity of this rule, let me remind you that 2 So that if the experiments $ are to be relied on they do them
r cent. of nitrogen i th ds MEETING OF THE BATH AND WEST OF ENGLAND
17. per ton; while io 2 — of nitrogen in con coal have had in favour of the “covered court,” or better SOCIETY AT BARNSTAPLE.
would practically be valueless as a source of nourish- | Preserv — manure. x: there will be many ciation notes this week of a very successful annual
ment to plants! tried this season on the Turnip crop, you will do saei must refer almost exclusively to the contents
EB
oO
E
et
8 5
ao
Bo
[t]
E
g
®©
5
=
e
n
=
oe
RE
e
BS
es
B
5,
o
S
o
o
es of ammonia wit!
reach of the farmer, and its price per ton and pointing out the conditions necessary to success. to ihe Implements and the Art Exhibition must for the
The cheapest source of this substance is the liquor of Charles F. Burnard, Plymouth. mt be pos
gas — but as that source is very limited, compared Anticipated Ear ty Harvest.—In this district, South The Call 8 cannot — — that whatever
ia, i | to the v exhibited,
to the present enormous demand for ammonia, it may | Essex, there are vast readths ofthickly planted and early excellence ma;
be overlooked. The cheapest salt of ammonia, and the sda e chaffed” Wheats, — y „May 81st, in | the best class A pac: — 858 the core 2 Devon. It
nly one used to any extent in €—À z the sul. | fall ear, but it is to be regretted of very diminutive | sometimes happens that when a meeting of the kind is
phate—a salt formed by the union of p sulphuri e size and length. "The thinner pana however - bee held in a district celebrat rated for
— water, and the gas ammonia. Eve ZS 100 Ibs. n M * th 0
ure sulphate of ammonia consists of hi
re. the number £ land, but p? fall
men Rue co 07 ES d size, very ope — long, congue of greater de
: 24.0 tme ness. On a whole, should not a dripping Jun
The salt of commerce contains eden to the extent deteriorate the crops by lodging t — and injuri
oi cars ae e its co „ a very and abun- | ob
position in every 100 dant harvest may reasonab be expected. Never in my
Ammonia d nd recollection of 50 years can I remem! in ear
N ald: v SÉ . 8 — on Whitsun- Tuesday but once, and in that year I saw
- Water 816 field of the gem T —.— blossom on that
ow, on looking of last Sat ur motations in the day. This year i en enerally so of all
Farmers’ Ga — - find n! — del of ts. It must be boris in mind how- :
sale to farmers at from 157. to 162. a ton. We will ever that Whitsuntide cannot ibly fall :
Bec Numer e:— think) only once in two centuries as in the present year |
One ton of agricultural sui ammonia ..£i5 o o | 1859, though in the year above alluded to, it fell within | Deyon
DERS Ge TM er Wiehe amm urio acid two days as late. A. Hardy, Maldon, Essex, May 31.
—— saiph nor sac im about I ton (A en S — mA E
al n ew ^ s valler
osa or gypsum 1 10 0 Societies. challenge.
ROYAL GRICULTÜRAL OF ENGLAND. à 1 Cena
Leaving 137. 10s. as the price the farmer a i the A Sproran 8 held, by order of WE : Eure
above 3 years. —Seven animals were
457 Ibs. of ammonia contained in a ton of the — sident, on Friday, May 27th, Loi W.
— . —————w—
492
IHE G ARDEN RS' CH
RONICER AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
[Jvxz. 4, 1859
entrie
shown. Prob
ably this was the
e Devons. riz
e was ‘awarded to 23
E st a promisin:
G. de
ee ning t the-tee
> No. 1, a
avy’s No. 3.
for their selec tiom, but many pref
the pri ze bu 1; we find on reference to the catalogue |
colt Sx tt le John, 5 and th
nded
Dev
. | Stockley eras sin
Mr. J. Merson, Northmo He Abe m Bull)
Mr. W. Smith’s pe Ly The following is the award of j =
st, yard:
CATTLE. —
— Class
Sredi iton ak t p T. Badly
p with Foal for hacks
as INT
ne
n. Foal
t "mare elon
C s old, 3 as 50, the prize
beiter in Y Class M. "uf the ped Pk had been rather
G. ner I MUT pg
good Aen "belonging to
ngi 5
brown we'l-bred Boan
Mr. Richard Passmore (74),
e been
more uires we do Le think they w hav
— ved.
iss 1 N old. Ther
at 110 No. 15, Es fe of Mr. omes
Crass XLII. (tw Se Fillies for Hac
e Hunters 8 four AG entries.
ffspring of t
was the ze winner in the last class
1 owner,
as
d, his sire was e
ex xceeding 2 y 8.
p ize
8
Mers rson, carried away the
Os.
s not e NS. 10,
SES
e
given to
Mr Hamilton Tate com
2, Prince
as well as |
Cia s IV. e en
Aol, Mr.
winner, and j^ Cecil Smith’s
No. 42, had the seco! ond hon
Re denies
in 9
. g ** Nelly ? was the prize
3-year old cow Florence,
nour, es Merson's
thought of by the e Devenibire- |
as Mr — e o. 40, who some
= should pL had a priz
calf t Tne Heifers, we find was
highly ‘commended which of course
ced the merits at the
rst hon sun the
Consort’s ; “whilst
red. |
n milk—eight were |c
n by wein
ired,
nters
filly, was the first prize win No. 2
to Mr. Hamilton Baill e, the
prom E anima, g somè pt EaR de as
| companions in the
m s XLIV
3 years, affo o. 295, a
brown colt E.
Gapper, winning the
thorongh- Dred the secon uds 298, Mr. yh Ant
being commende
The Pony Classes (Mares under 14 hands) were
to — ae the most attrac-
A 304, Ir. EL W.
ead's
hony's,
eirt we sh
n all ber points, and with very shes rior ac
en to Mr. Aes Ms black Welsh
"pL
the e
Mr. Buller’s (58) Both pairs A Som d
There were five other pairs exis ted in this esas —
of whom possessed much meri :
(n 1 glad
The SHoRT-HORN
s giv
ps (302), cor npá act a s strong, with goo
too fat es Sei m better adapt ted X harness; 303,
Mr. James M bay pony, was highly commended,
action—a raga r fore-hand to
have been expected i ne localit: ity. There were
classes and 34 entr SR which were mostly filled up.
Mr. Holland’s bull was the aee. e the Ist prize for
ban 3 3 years old; Mr. „ No. 68, for bulls
years old, and the Rev. an. „Marker the 2d
the Lm Din not so o good i in his loi
s XLVI. 4 121
0. 3
Ogilvie, a very superior bay po ny, with
remarkably good action, was the winner of the sen
Mr. Cridge's, the 2d—all were good. A
d
prize. ^ Mr. Abbot’s the second. Tue Cows were re-
ably good. Mr. Stratton’s Mateos Ath: hos 80, |
and was
e few i in number 8 good,
althovgh there as
exception all - exhibitors were prize winners in one
-class or ano
The Loxc-vooyusn Sheep, both Cotswold and
Leices e very good, bu a al tas cde both Bow sex
and Hampshire, » were no
old cream- pias d. fil , had considerable
ien En t sho
oan
No. b 213 strong, g compact, v with good mos Mr. Wall’s,
Mr. Ogilvie’s bay Welsh pon y
Hi e labours of the judges
the number of local 3 prizer given; ges |
| there were no — than 11 classes fo: aloni
— —— or Cobs or 2 nof excee edm
14 han Sere age.— winner, No. 378,
beng | to x5 James Nu whilst Mr. eoa
. 877, was commended— both good animals. Ther
wi 7 8 naci entries.
ia VII. xs. and Foals for agriculiorel
Lo ntry, Mr. W. Howe's, but a goo
animal, and worthy of the prize.
i Cra XVIII Two- um -old Colt
r Fily.—
the weight of — ES
e further
until next week. se
ae were very indifferent and the Ponltry a
ent the society has been
3 Eee be difference between
ranging
—€— fhe weight pem ttle ani
weig their fleece.
«e a for ma whether miae on the cer i
ies
Sore
inferior brute not only consumes the fo food and occupies
e were shown, the Wisner
ev the prize, bos there was 19 competition.
Class LXIX. Thorough-bred Stallions.—Two only
onging SA Mr. John
rse, Swi inton, had ma ny good points,
ur deserved the
llions.— One o
— a Suffolk horse, pri The one the wg 5 Cat
deserving
is ike, by bh nyileh ans, = nr
Brew
wasn
—
= a brown ho
at all weedy,
LXX. Cart as shown,
tlin, E
"M
=o.
Mr. W. Farthing, Slowey Cor vis
Consort (2-yrs. Mr.
Peatrockstow ; 3d, Mr.
1st, Mr.
Taunton. —Class 5.
A winner m 9) r
esi ‘or Hunters of ethen sex under (
al
to
n | Cla:
fats ( Conci pr H EN
Hand
of | Swin
Clee 29.
d loins, but | Dit:
g — Pen — (Ex moo
0 Mr.
, Was a good animal, and re- | 3
by J. Sillifant, Esq., for ) = a2 nal
H. tho Prin
00
George Turn Sa * He pye: Barton,
F. Farthing (Cow); 2d, "E O
lst, Mr. Geo.
, Molland House, —
est Bull in
Bull); 2d,
; Ist, Mr.
(3-yrs. mm "y Rev. G. T
2 Ist, Mr.
ards, Wintercott, Leominst -
25 A N — Class 16. 1st, Mr. Wm. P. Gu ; 20
(Cow). — Class i. 15 t, Lord ere Gite; Nus
of Heifers):
ce (pair of
Hampen,
de. E. 2
T. B. Bro
d Si
s 23. Ist, Mr. Pene
W. — — th, Bi
morton, Bart. Bucklan
que Class 26. ditto;
lst, 1
3
der
Em. T ARE „for the
Mr. J. Merson whos of 5 Ewes) — 51. bu ol
Kni ht, Esq., M.P., for the besi of Exmoor Ewes in the
iE 24, Mr. J. Harris, atre us
RS SÉS,- vy ce 37. ist, — ps 1 e
Dorsely, ^
Lx dts ).
E
Ist, night, Esq.
Wall, Reda nd Lodge, 5 1
R. rnstaple (E ,
C. Wall (Welsh Pony); 2d, Mr.
— elsh .
n
— ( [Up
Highworth. — 49. Ist, at W.
G. Throckm: „Ist, Mr.
. Bryant, E
. Mr. mem Berea
— Grover l
of B
Barton, oe 52. 1st, Mr.
85 LS Br: ragin: ton, Knapp,
— — olsworthy
s ire Bi
LOCAL PRIZES. — Class £4. Ist, Mr. G.
(ben T; 3 Sows); 23
t, Mr. Joho
eed
g Devon, Heifer);
stn er);
ud
of the
Salons under 13 hands. — Mr.
av fen va a rt bag 3
e
am
5
through i is more ineffectually accomplished.
eapital match, and mare re just w hat ponies o glit to be.
Crass LXXII. under 13 Pe
Dennis, 391, 3 nee ae d 395, Mr. Knights, |
tock, Mr. — Kiliott, ^ 429.
was first n
most
perfect pers i
a bright bay stallion pony, bred in Scotian, but
nds.— Mr. =
z Pony).—
staple.
SH Class 60. Ist,
Dev Lim Jie 62. Ist,
Ewes); 55 M = es B. Torr,
pue
B
. Mr II. K.
. 3
PONIES. eA A.
2.
PIGS. . — 74. Ist, Mr. A. Clement,
ee x Sow).— Class 76. Ist, Mr. T. J. Dennis,
Serer Te
The sh
oy: 95
$
w of impl.
very he " M.
mare belong o Mr. commend
In Crass XXXVI II. e oli Colts) there were
seven f 107. being given
considera.
ved a coi mendatio
* — XXXIX. reren Fillies) was not good.
The 1 rerom nd the 2d given
liy belonging t Mr. W. Smith.
Crass XL. Y fring Colis or Fillies —There were
com- | He also
the best
n
ery Consort's bull and heifers; Mr. Stratton
S
- Bucknells inp colt No. 264, also
at oe action, ma jes the animai to in
RAM
pony under i ime ery
Welsh brown pony, though small, was ' also — as
well as Mr. G. Rett for a very good cart horse, and
Mr. Brewer for a tede bred.
n 1
ease bsence o
3 of the Exm beoe breed. | tion
"s special rg of 51. 5s. for | fi
N. ‘ect |
ements has
oi ji
posed to offer.
— against the prize
prev vious exh 8
— ent Pre
leadi
system
ns of t
his
—
are n
Humphries,
Smith & Ashby,
bitors, And the
d many
local machine: makers *
out the a we may enumer mts Mir James Merson’s
Devon bull, the winner of two prizes; ‘the prisci
s Short-horn |
‘cow, No. 80; Mr. R. Sm nith's pony stallion rieti
Mr. Knight’s Exmoor pony Bobby; Mr. Merson
nd- | Exmoor sheep.
e Show: oret her was very successft 3 nd well
attend. -— as exceedingly var managed by the
d m at ber. 2 ctions afd
ractions of the — The grea
an success exe — of Mr. T. D. Acland in eed Be
appreciated.
department appear to be generally a
added |
8
as an exhibition ots m P tendet
ant "ee a rac 12
dee match. But to this e must Es
he Fine
f
i
. ae tm e
| Juse 4, 1859.]
Reviews.
x Enc. ine i eme
the Elevation, — and
— Labouring Clas. iy 5
— 3 2 uston; and -— “Robert Bond
he Association, Thor d Ke nt-
Wertheim, — & Hunt, *
t
THE GARDENERS' ny CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
oh MANURE — —
of “of the Suffolk .
" WARDS’ PRIZE IMPLEMENTS, 1859.
D is AND FREDx. HOWAR
, Bedford, beg to direc e Iron
PATENT STEEL-TOOTH H HO ORSE R.
Both of these essays are written by d tl
on the mora — condition of a man, more than on any
epends his ee i
mpathy between classes,
SKIM COULTER for P or PP Plo
shoulder to any pond or tank required. AR
other And while
abundant "i comforta table ae garden AMES’S PATENT oA MANURE DISTRI-
ground, temperance, intelligence, rend! societies, qne, got fou of order. is thorough yd Sed for Brill vor
Åc., are advocated, yet it is argued that the solution of | g Due. or Fast 350 A - Waters — eee edem
the whole difficult; the condition 41 our n d SIX FIRST 43 gl :
labourers depends * duis one thing, not on many. Much Full Particulars and Testimonials may be obtained d of the | For which the Regal ds — Ties Pit Prizes pate, by
may be done by the improvement of their dwellings— |? e Tek 1 —— riz — e - Eng
tion—by the suppression, or UE — goaa Hos WARD have discontinu n the Pu
ne 8 y » E with a long List of Prizes awarded to "ed is —
tte but most of all, by t —(€— ER'S E IOU MANOR they mouk woul 3 state tha 8 PLOUGH, er eNO E
f re- A! ey have for several
encouragement of a sober and practical sense of re m ‘Pumps am dtd with 22d Bake y ve com 105 as Ae
a N's u. an
Mr. Cooper’s Essay, which this passage is ex- and cannot clog in action. The D PLOUG: EE Per: o dioi iocis FE og
tracted, concludes wit! is of galvanised iron, not likely to DD ditto for one Horse 330-57 ip dcos gle Cui M
good or evil of the e — of employers; quoting 3 = soe heh - rad together, TEL for two Hon 3
$ ana evene s dying * upon the power of that won whols my be piter i Gn the general purposes : í " :
4 .
Ir. is even dixe ou pol i and impressive on e a of 2 iy w a Lets zs A Set or Eaters -Beam HARROWS, with Whippletree,
the . Lem se rt € subject; and the award of po ea arali toca a n handie ve E 888 on wm ed Harrows, 94 feet "rage
= aad Ay of tenant far The barrel is 27} in. long, and the legs | A Set of T ireo 4- dium HÄ De 25 with Whipple-
err num r & paper are 5 ft. high. 3 Horses, 10 ft. wide, 2 ll 4 4 0
more appropria tely spoken by an earnest 3 from aM tec Pumps are re also prone ene e x th Patent Joints, 6s. per
the pulpit is a remarkable circumstance. Christianity — ter ogee anon P any oes git HORSER a KE n
is God's i ment for good,” if generally, so also with water butt or cari, amd fitted vith uth Dien -— Mec "» A, dl 24 ige tath I 10 0
reference y particular class his is th Tone mone — nion for attaching * | Large size, 8} fect wide, mari 8 H I
ofthe whole performance—for though political c: ich Gutta . Suction Pipe, with steel teeth 810 0
such as affect the investment of Capital E. E ye 15 1d. per foot. i large size, 84 S ARG, with 24 stoci
purely social nio such the acter of Rubber A Sot ors Pris tò ve aii x MI
cottages, the — schools, dit the — le and aa ro P inch AME — in ameter a in Tenet used as Weed. 110 0
. of employer discussed through many | go. atreduced price ^ — Free Delive ingham, Bristol, Colchester, Derby,
of this ra Lang yet the author Pr con-| May be obtained of of any Ironmonger or Plumber in town or | Gloucester, "Hun,
1
he one and only remedy for evil—the
of a personal ase of
as the only so
nually to
establishment and growth o
be depended — raising 1 the
Me of. the 7 any h
We need hardly sa; though o —.— have not
seemed a — i chanel for religious teaching on this |
subjec n that w irely y agree ee with the Suffolk Agri-
cultural i Association an mdi me cages fe in their treat-
i nly unusually ener-
in t i i
foundation on which all efforts should be built, but very
explicit and ticular on the various methods which
may be adop! y a well disposed man for the welfare
of his neighbours.
E — wy C78
e
is caused b e presen
windpipe, at the — A,
little creatures, and it is in the
is found at the bottom of Etabs, —4 other wooden vessels
here water 1 stagnan pim ent by a doubled
horse hair is but t aj be plan is to stri
Taiho? within A inc ch of the end, — à dip it in turpentine,
l,
earthenware — but not wooden, and the
di ead worms.
zinc, iron oi
water with ‘witch they are pplied should be fresh from
spring or well, but not m ji ponds oe som vessels filled by
from roofs of houses, We from experience:
— ost * y chickens vins a — pss in using
rain- x none — it was drawn from a deep well.
J. Baily, Lis, seg pie ^d
MANURE
E n
ively— e washings of the ya wi
weak that u had better keep them separa: find Qui niin
of the stalls. Your best remedy is to roof your arang
yard, and so hinder gas washing of the manure.
1 — —
stands
thanGutta Percha and d ita Perch ^ as
heat of the sun. reha and de The | doss not melt iik t 1 purchased | f
mine from Mess: erreaux & Co., xls Lane. eir vul-
iiber " mp valves I consider as a valuable
acquisition. Messrs, Hughes, of New Cross, ord, use
— in their high-pressure engi th unf: actio
and for ure ey save d ot
» trou e. JJ —
UNDRIES 1. Savine has considerable effect o; n the uterus,
its administration w would probably be the cause of th ess
wi
slipping her — W.
n the you » ohne Saas IE to be tty
freel:
the lamb. Turnips have —— f de 2 ia slipping a
i e same eff
does es should not have roots n théy lamb. "o A s
i E eie rir ot MEA bi pag Vete 5 London.
y be ——— ag cond London, gasehenen,
country, at the above prices, or of the Patentees and. Manufac- hrewsbury, Wis — Wo Pe
— * pm
con Bienni, ed
turers, JoHN WARNER & Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin St., London. — t fix ee eee
n. RNER’S PATENT ae STANDARD Howards NE TALOGUB: containing prices —
descri of t t Ploughs, Harrows, Horse Rakes,
ing Fruit
long by
pe: second
ick (see Circular
i : 2140 & Co., ., Manufacturers and Dealers,
ditto di ito? 18 0
A
Princess Street, Man
FVV
BSERVATORY BEE-HIVES.—A cheap form x
8 8 PUE is now imet es
same in ahogany,
Deer Ey Improved bar an
application ^t
The short barrel Pump is very convenient
te Dexia ts. situations — — a finie in. the sam
sad cate" De
“ity ie atai : —
Fe ia N igh the al af,
prices, orof the Patentees and Manu
ED COTTAGE | BEE-
GEORGE NEIGHBOUR
G8 256 iner
as originally
Every
MAPAN S PRUNING KNIVES IN EVERY VARIETY. „
WARRANTED GOOD BY THE MAKERS.
APPIN BROTHERS, Queen's Cutlery Works, ceive pro
Sheffield ; and 67 and 68, King William Street, London. Their newly-arranged oat ALOG — of other “Improved Hives
7 4 E CIN | with Brings and Prices, sent o eipt vd mps.
| APPIN'S. * SHILLIN G^" RAZORS Shave well Aa —Live: ool: "oie 8 ERT, 12, ener de
LVL for Tyelve Months without Grinding. eee W. WiLsox, 50, Kin, Street. KS em e
MAPPIN'S 2s. RAZORS Shave well for Three Years. & eg "* Tro rongate. Du : J. EDMONDSON & Co-,
MAPPIN'S 3s. R EM (suitable for H. As,) | 61, Dame
».
Shave well for Teu Year:
AP PPIN 'SSUPERIOR TABLE- KNIVES maintain
562288282 2
SIS?
; ase
TAM a
"Tole. Kns. Dst. Kns. Carvers.
Ivory ME 8 208. p. “doz. ; 3 16s. p. doz. ; "4 p. E
Do. 4 in. do. 25s. 18s.
APPIN’S SILVER: 8 TEDDESSERT KNIVES
, in Mahogany
n Pairs gg and Astro „Ivory B e in Case 80s.
Im es, d. 130s.
ted Handles, 80s. t
SIS S six — SILYEE PLAT vg HD. BISHOP, axp
MAPPIN BROTHERS, Manufacturers by Special Ap- ace, Norwich, in nin
pointment to the Queen, are the only Sheffiel — — 5 e an for the manufacture of
m —— eir LONDON SHOW enabled to make a
tain by far the largest King Wim ELECTRO SIL OR An o mch mesh — ;
con y far rges oi ATE 24 be
transmitted direct from their Manu- —
in the World, Which is Z. inch strong do.
factory, Queen's Cutlery Wi 2-inch intermediate, do.
‘orks, Sheffield.
Fiddk Double
Thread. Pai
12 Table Forks, best quali £116 0 £214 0
LEAN s A hd PST 0 1M 0
12 Dessert Forks, best qua! 0 0 0
12 1 710 20-0 * +
12 — best gigi 0 16 0 140 is of a coarser mesh
xquisi : d urow-pi
TCC
aud I. ug Williams e “Street, London Bridge; Strained Wire tle and Deer Fencing, Iron Hu riis £c
BROTHERS, 67 and 68, iam Street,
Manufactory, Queen’s Por) Works, Sheff
r P
a AES AAT)
294 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jews 4, 1866
. A ASR NER
JOHN WEEKS * COMPANY,
KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA ON.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HOLWATER “APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, ENGINBERs,
ND |
PLANS, ESTIMATES, & ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON APPLICATION.
COTTAM & COMPy, =, em &., x: Mowi y cavie
2 WINSLEY eee mi
efereni where these
Boilers are n: The Cannon cr ey A e Lu $
stock, and are to be had only of J. sinter 6, Bankside.
par EE of Saddle and Cylinder Boilers. hose ot ang Wats” :
bes i ii
do:
_ A SEOW ROOM DEVOTED ENTIRELY —.— ARTICLES OF E ea
ati err Vero i09 n LUE
ories Hand- —— — Engine Flower Sticks
Greenhouses Game Netting „ Syrin — Bordering
Hot-water Apparatus end Wire Work | Hw me » Rollers Pots
Garden Vases Flower ds Flower Labels en Arches, &c.
Hurdles, Strained Wir e Fencing, e Ne —
description of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought Iron, and Wire Work.
N. B. COTTAM ax» COr. beg to make it known that there is no longer an entrance 2 — establishment from Oxford Street,
but that they have made a second entrance from 2, Winsley Street, Oxford Street, W. the side of the old entrance to their
works, opposite the Pantheon. AY
S RUE m 5900 ENIVES, SO ant ets a~
ING and BUDDIN!
98 "n Aes of any Gardener or his| REDUC Sold by all. res pectable Nurserymen and Seed Seed Merchants is
to have Patterns, with Prices and H. J MORTON — CO., Galvanised Tron Works, | the three Ki
Tater Ale — ‘ames — Build SLA ATE WORKS; ISLEWORTH, u in Sram è
IRON — OOFING 'ACTUR: in
— Nghe principal Gardeners.—Please direct Mr. HavrHORN, for pem Buln Hahn and edem Roofs; the cheapest, most dur- DWARD ed H D dk. dd all of which
áünginuse; alsoSpouting at 10ġd: per yard, may ity 12 at Worton Cot; on plication to ta
FRUIT TREES, RIPE STRAWBERRIES, ETC aie STRAND CABLE FENCING Gardener. Sanden ür PRL ene
— DEN for Pro otad ting the above = r TUBS and BOXES forwarded on application. i
; 2 yards wide, 3d. ISS
puo 100 yon maed 208, Can be had in 2 — Rison PRA y
DELLER, G and 7, Crooked Lane, London a
i p NETTING, at RED 2
Square 10s. ; 500 „ 243. goes
scond hance (formed of Twisted W: rope or cable), the stro:
på for Sale, „ Cheap, all sizes, and d Cheapest and nontest fon ies nner ae th sme ` Td: — Bd. ttlesen,
Thomas Street, Old Fine S.E. c" NEUES of form by t upon or rE Co., Manufacturers, Whi
— Standards Ie ea per yard main | NJ ASES, PEDESTALS, SUNDI DIALS, F
Pena This fence is far cheaper dec hap — d rails, or any kin FLO BOXES, JARDINE
200 yards, iron fencing; and possesses four times the strength of soia BALUSTRADES ae „ 3 Halle Silio
12s. ; 500 yards, 25s. ; Serim Canvas, mare yard; 20 Geodon: bars. Will not rust nor corrode, Upwards of 1200 miles of this BORDERS SEATS, i m imper of blo Soa
Mats.—At EpcrNGTON & Co's, ick clot, "Pent, and Waterproof Fencing supplied —— — prices, for Ae ora public Park.
Cloth Manufacturers, 17, Sm eld Bars, City, & Old K GALVANISED GAME AND vmi x 0 e fen eii db 91, — i
j i
OR S eras ctually eyes the Bloom of Wall com dene
x| aM SS SS
—
—
—
cL
If gets to plans
Loomes’
Trees from Spring Frosts use SHAw’s No. p TIFFANY,
hg = 5 STRENGTH, M eeu = cos — eee — 39 — swide,
3. 6d, ea
— Aesth ae m eme e
OYD'S rd ADJUSTING SCYTHES are the 999509
Tp b lated i instant to suit peningsof any
* ey can be regula in an instan suit RT ane IRON CHAIN CAMP c ET
any person, and to cut any crop without change of Scythes. | POULTR
For Amateur Gardeners they are very desirable, as they | RODS AND "emend emis ream
afford a healthy and interesting exercise They have stood| Strong CATTLE HU RDLI
— pinio ven n 5
d
— — i nion for seve ad d for excellence, LES from 21. per yard.
durability, are higmiy recom ded, Se d
Upwards of 56 000 of —— may been ubt To be had of every | of all si or tbe ma of Privato Hom Mannion — ta .
Kingdom w . te Noe Liosueed Mats s Wa “ 70 20 E — eren siar” sim nm "Weeks from — pO cos d
olesale o e Sole Licensed Makers, M.|10t ts f
Dray & Go., at their New Agricultural Implement Warehous an ordin: — ary labourer = ny 8 so be ent triste to iod S 8 mer Kb Mestminsten iT, a
Adelaide Place, London Br'dze. "|S Hany J. MORTON 2, Basinghall Buildings, Leeds. Stone Works, Ipsi he
f
June 11, (16093 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 5
READ THIS. e
H. L 4
(Late Principal — and Clerk Fan pes J. Weeks & Co., Horticultural Builders, &c., — Road, Cheisea),
BEGS TO I M THE NOBILITY,
HORTICULTURAL BUILDER AND HOT-WATER APPARATUS MANUFACTURER,
and from experience knowing that a^ er ere a of Hor RN pa have bons 8 high, has come to the conclusion after minute calculations
they can be erected for 20 per cent less, leaving a rofitable margin for the builder.
MC. will furnish PLANS ia ESTIMATES pir of any p diii while , or "ud Gabily WORKING DRAWINGS a trifling cost for any Gentleman
— to construct his own, thereby effecting a second saving. H. MC, being "favoured with any commands, will 33 both Materials and Workmanship
to be of the first class, having — superior ä — of all trades
OFFICE: 7, UPPER CHEYNE ROW, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA.
SHANKS' PATENT LAWN MOWING x A c LN tee
IN GA S.
NEW AND IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENTS FOR MOWING, ROLLING, Mene teat pess DELIVERING.
HORSE POWER PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING, AND DELIVERING MACHINE,
PRICES
No. 1(a)48-Ixccn MACHINE (USUALLY DRAWN BY A Horse) je Ut 35 ..£27 0 0| No. 3.—30-1nch MACHINE (USUALLY DRAWN BY A Poxv) .. £1710 0
No. 1. 2 MACHINE mató DRAWN BY A HORSE E) 2° 28 0 0
No, 2.—36-1nscu MACHINE (USUALLY DRAWN BY A HORSE OR Pony 2
No. 4. m. — MACHINE Smeg — BY : Poxy on DONKEY rr) x» . 1310 0
Y). No. 5. * eg —€— — DE LIGHT FOR A SMALL PONY OR Pues y 910 0
Machin dh. 1 (o), 1, 2, $ & 4 have the Patent Delivering 1 attached. No. 5 can either be had ; if with it, 30s. extra.
— SEI LAE, HARP MONTES AND ROLLING MACHINE
No. 6. en MACHINE.. .. .. Se ee n f RIEN .£610 0
No.7.—19-C05'M MACHINE B/ , = Ia. IN MACHINE x dE x $15 0
P FULLY. "ILLUSTRATED sea aree” ON APPLICATION.
LONDON AGENT
MESSRS. J. B. BROWN & CO., 18, CANNON STREET. EET, CITY, LONDON, E.C.
GREAT SUCCESS OF
SHANKS’ PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING,
AND DELIVERING MACHINE FOR LAWNS, &c.
THE ONLY COMPLETE MACHINE FOR HORSE OR PONY POWER.
8 PATENT sms AND PONY LAWN MOWERS
man | vig the sse o or ratopi — the horse. These immense advantages enable the Machine to do at
0 0 c it. nes answer exceedingly well for uneven as well as level Lawns, are
t mee very d ble, hila th + e+
SHANKS PATENT HAND MACHINE for 1859,
fitted with all the new improvements, is the most S d beg complete Hand Mower that has ever been before the public. i int
1 Sih 4} e the 1 m
and eutting
small Lawns, Verges, around Flower Beds, &c., it has n
. Be UMS YS IRR M NS NS 8 eg Machine hots
From Mr. SHE ABER, Gardener t o the Marquis of TWEEDDALE, Fester Gard.
“ GENTLEMEN,—Allow me to Pd dried you on the success of your ‘improved Grass Cutting Machine which
1 1 "UP ee SUA You — — 1 cen my doubts to oi about — — a . the Machine, but m
of ita MED ot ame 3 — —— Wally can now go on the who! ut stopping, except the
r From Mr, Maore, Gardener to His —— uà ote T Ae Gan dens, Dunkeld, May Y
. 5 ap Pape 5 ne d p Grass-Cut xe Mac — r 7 5 wp due ith yu we 5 — Apparatus, I have much "— net new oy — Machines
ours to do in ten hours, to 22 M te Deum both =
His Grace is — wall pleased v with 22 work —— — — and the saving of time effected pk that he ng erties = eae cus K. be fitted
up in the same way as the one here.—I a yours, &c., T
vum Mr. DELL, Gardener to CHRIS. TURNER, Rochford.
R Sins,—I have great pleasure in bearing testimony to the — efficiency of your new Patent t Apparat for dal delivering the Grass without stopping the Machine. After repeated
triala both in dry and sowcry weather 1 amm certam We cim nom do i mash in obe ou a W e used to ot LE “J, Dew.”
“ Messrs. SHANKS & SON. — *
Tilnateatead PR T Th Warh? ad 4. tisfact th t t
ALEXANDER ` SHANKS & SON, Patentees d Sole Menntactorers,
IRON WORKS, ARBROATH, FORFARS
uw
ending ou
RARI
Which
UCOMBE, PAM Ne "CO. ave | E ready for GRAND HORTICULTURAL, EXHIBITION
JU 859 ,
AS,
been saved with the pesi atest care from fine
selected Five or the best new E € L gost) satis- E 8, 1 E
ti
faction whic year:
has induced 5 to ird N greater attention re ay . quality,
pres Saving a sgt sure s ELSE OR AWARDS,
ent season’s aving a "poing va:
previously sent out tby them :—
— kets 5s. 0d. each) Post free, sealed an
do.
6 ranted by L., P., & C.
Te sent is an pte ve time for soving — as their FLOW
men, ies 25 8. Bode, Gr. to Sir J. Cat
— p- wing to its select quality is limited, e
aia A — enn
] FLOWERS.
J]LASS XXVI.—6 PLANTS OF NEPE
First Prize, 5l., M NUS.
ei ize, 5 essrs. Veitch & Son; Second ditto, 4L, M.
irst Prize, 251. each, Mr. G. thea: y.
art., "Chertsey ; Mr. E Whitbread, Gr. = H. Collyer, [oM ] ys PME —12 EXOTIC FERNS (Nurs
FLOWERS.
Crass L—20 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS, IN
Nursery, Exeter, b 1720.
Er HOICE SEE
ESSRS. RKER AND WILL 1
MS
er friends and patrons that they can ww supply A
are r.
(0;
info rm th
the rA Tee eh choice SEEDS, all of which
genuine and o ii
2
Cineraria, 2
Clianthus poem 2
8 from named À
ity. ;
&—s. d. 3 d. FLOWER. Grave Esa.. Leatherhead ; Fourth ditto, Il,
dia 06
Seog ten 1 W. Cutbush, Gas MISCELLAN
Pansy, from n: med - T 10 Gabriel, x Siren eatham ; Third ditto, 5l. each, Mr. utbus First Prize, 3L, each, Mir. Pforsdo OUS
06 &
15l. each, Mr. B. Peed, Gr. Firs , Messrs. Veitch & men.
eadwell, Esq., Lower Norwood ; Mr. J. Green, Gr. to Sir E. S. Woolley, Ay irm mga Gitte. M., ; Second „ Hase
D:
Tr
t
beg to Antrobus, Bart., Cheam ; Third ditto, 10., Mr. T. Page, Gr. to Crass XXVIIL—12 EXOTIC FERNS
tra ditto, 5L, Mr. Baxendine, : s XO A:
PIA rdi Ex Guildford. First Prize, 4L., llie, Gr. to y. Ke Ja one
peri
a wW T
GREENH 2l., Mr. Gedney ; Third ditto, 2l., Mr. Tae Ge t Pu.
Mt, Say Ge
Firs 101. . O. Rhodes, Gr. to J. Philpott, Esq., to F O. Whit Blackhea:
Sta arts ER denied d ditto, Tl., Mr. J. Peed, Gr. to C. T. EH DE ISC ANE Lini
Kailo, Gr. to Earl of Lovelace, Ripley, Surrey. Ar, Sim ; Messrs mus
d sun auc AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS Mr. C, Turner, Mr. Waters, Mr. Lavey, and Mr. Bi it et, :
? inder, ir. *
2 K
i i E ads, :
"Paradise Mumery, Seyen Filtera ana Samay o FLOWER (Amateurs) Rev. 'T. Stainforth, Windermere; Third ditto, 1 vs
First Prize, 5l., Mr. H. Chilma are to Mrs. Smith, Epsom ; | Summers, Mr. Baillie, Mr. C. and Mr,
Phin” aito, J., Mr. S. M. Cars arson, Gr. to W.
dup enc. Holloway Dude E a
NES SEEDLING AZALEA IN DICAS. | Second d ditto, ai, Mr. C. Smith, A. Anderson, Bs, wood; Fourth ditto, 15s., Mr. H. H. Wiliams, Muswell É
Blane de Neig Triomphe de Gand
Pelargonifiora nova Vicomte de Nieuport Baron on Roehampton ; Extra ditto, 1. 108.,
Prince Impérial
t ss X isti
Farmer, Esq, Cheam; Fourth ditto, . Mr. J. Tegg, Gr: . First ee 3i., Messrs. Paul & Son, Chesh
I.—25 ROSES (Distinct varieties).
Roseeflora plena beth 2 x i
J dent, Belgium, begs respectfully to Obas 11 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS First Prize, 21. A. Rowland, feder Second nd ditto, 1i- 10e, Me
s Terry; Third ditto, II., Mr. Hollingworth, Tur key Mills ü.
EAN V
announce that he is now prepared to send out his seven new (Nurserymen).
Azalea indicas e, X fine strong or The price of rst Prize, 7L, Messrs. Veitch & Son, Exeter and Chelsea ;
3 :
indi as abov
the set is 3. Early orders ested, be hay e be sent N ditto, 5, Messrs. Jackson & Son, Kingston; Third Crass XXXII.—24 ROSES (Distinct varieties).
in
e reques
Strict rotation. "One selection r on three to the T:
The description of the abov be had free on application
Vi immediately ed
directed
toJEAN VERSCHAFFELT. bei
after orders are received. All 9 — to be
VERSCHAFFELT, Nurserym T Begim
CLASS É
'orwardi
to JuAN FLOWER (Amateurs). First Prize, 15s., Mr. C. Turner; Second ditto, 10s k E
ditto, 3l., ^ M Cutbush, Barne First Prize, II., Mr. Hollingworth.
0 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS IN Crass XXXIIL—24 PINKS (Distinct varieties),
Dods; Second ditto, 3l. each, to Mr, | Bragg, Slough.
First Prize, 7L, Mr.
Colgate, Gr. to W. F. Woolley, Esq., — and Mr. Crass XXXIV.—94 PANSIES (Distinct
G. Y Gr. to W. H. Stone, Esq., Dulwich; Third ditto, istinct varieties).
rare and | 3L, —— Gr. to A. ien, Esq., Forest Hill; Mt jain; Chis Bitton , . Benge je Second i
Extra 21. each, Mr. Oub Gr. to J. Foster, Esq, me
Crass VL—?0 ORCHIDS OF EX! EXOTIC SPECIES (Amateurs). j ir
3 to Rev. W. Ellis, Hoddes-
FRUIT.
pe m pup er P to R. | don; Second ditto, 151, Mr. Bullen, Gr. to J. Butler, Esq., | Crass A.—COLLECTIONS OF FRUIT IN EIGHT DISHES —
THE TRADE Erias
reet meris Lightning, x perfecta, Mathilde, Mrs.
hry, — n, Bleu Magnifique; Baccarah, Lady Cotton m „ ton. Second ditto, 21., Mr.
Comet, Marie Bougiere, rada Large, 8 Ab CLA [II.—6 CAPE HEATHS (Amateurs). Mai Arens Second itto, 2
| ; Madam Hoste, Sir J. Lawre e, Ne Plus First Prize, 4l., Mr. B. Peed ; Second ditto, 3/., 1.1 J: Peed; o4 Hecktield, X A
A Mr
Selections ‘of 12 of the above * pur r,ls. each;
entire, 30s. free, in fine strong pen hardened lants,
HENRY OX bi ING EL
1 36 cm AN TS for 20s.
cation r a 1 a included); € d an;
Asked. rice per doz. attached. ——
eraniums (Flower of sf the Day), or
ugh the past om receipt of one postage stam:
AS of 1859 for 6s., fite through thie past
pane
, and as good a
oxes ; cuui
of 1896. Colour very dark purple, the nearest appr
3s. 6d. eac
9
ades S nd
Paper of ay 21 21, P1859, page 442.
Abbey Church Yard, Bath.
aleas, Boronias,
erde Chorozemas,
sorts,
Madam Hardy, Ros: e, Rose: aclean, Satanella,
Cendrillon, 1350 0 e Beine “Blanche Comte de Morello,,
or half
of —
b 2
all fine and well "established in single
oe Test ae per 100 uo Geen e be
Also a Deseriptive and Priced Catalogue
oach
decided blue of any that has yet been png out. Prt al Seah
Poe" is à prolific bloomer, and good bedder. Plants
The above are now ready for sending out in strong well rooted
plants, Parties taking em three varieties will be charged 10s.,
lagam ta fre
list of testimonials see this
— company all orders either in cash o
Crouch ONLY. (5 distin i Ma
'oolwich.
Crass VII. eee . 2. First Prize, Yl, Med . to Earl Cowper,
First Prize, 10k, Messrs. Veitch & Son; Third ditto, 5L, Mr. 3 men
oolley, Cheshunt. Crass B.—PINE APPLE (Single Fruit of the Providence l
Class VHE—12 ORCHIDS OF EXOTIC SPECIES (Amateurs). First Piss ro Mr. a Daley Second ditt, 2, 2 p:
Pired Paton rg Bi Doda: Second ditto, 7L, Mr. S. M. | Floud, Gr. to R. To fothergill, Xa Aberdare; Third ditto, 1L,
Carson ; — — : Mr. T. Young, Gr. Bailey, Esq, M. P., Aberdare.
OF EX EXOTIC SPECIES (Open). x:
— . MY. Benn ditto, 4L. Mr. . Crass C. ian preci, E Fruit ofthe Quem) ß
Crass X.—8 GREENHOUSE AZALEA First Prize, 3L, Mr. G. Youn + Second ditto, 2, Mr. I.
Second ditto, 5/., Mr. T. Page; Bailey; Third ditto, 1L, . Davies, Starch:
Hammersmith. ;
—PINE APPI
First Prize, 31, Mr. A. 8
ditto, 9L, Mr. T. W. — 5
Norwich; Third ditto, 1
soon tem itn 3 ME by Peed
Extra Prize, 11, p;
e e
1.5 CAPE T
. each, Mr. W. Cutbush, Barnet; Messrs.
e RORA
, Mr. W.
Third ditto, 31, Mr, Page ; Fourth ditto, 1l. each, Mr. Baxen- Gr. to J
V.—6 TALL CACTI IN FLOWER (large Plants
kshire. First Prize, 5l., Mr. Green; 8 AL, s Bunn, 55
ihe to J. R. Scott, Esq., Hornsey ; Ex tra Prize, 10 , Mr. Waters,
m,
he set
—GRAPES, Muscat
OZ. 8
; 850, Berk horn: npstead. well ; tto, 2L, Mr.
n9. Tadcaster ; Third a lb, Mr. H. Bake 1
Leicester.
sgh Noe ay toie bah
erry, to er, e
H econd ditto, 4L, A. Rowland, Esq., pem d EL Heii ei
6 : Foros Lui ride erg puer a Alderson ; Third ditto, 1 i fl. Se wick :
6 ^. w urton, Addis- Dish)
on CX MURAT um
o Crass XVIIL--6 e FUCHSIAS IN POTS (Distinct Varieties), | Second ditto, 2L, Mr. T. Frost; W esf
6. First Prize, 4l., Mr. Oubridge ; Second ditto, 3l., PM Tilton Gr. Extra Prize, 10s., Mr. G. Masters, Gr. to Ear
6 | toe, Davidson, “Esq. Sydenham 5 "Third ditto, 3L, Mr. Cannell, | Sherburn Castle, Oxon all
Gr. to E. Grove, Esq., Tulse Cass J.—NECTARINES (Single adis
—10 — Two equal First Prizes, 3l.
NIUMS
Th, Ar W Nye, Gr to E Foster Esq Windsor I Second ditto, 2l., is m Page
e;
3L, Mr. Wiggins, Gr.
Cras 3
Second ditto, 5L, Mr. T.
i 4
We ewer Third ditto, 2-2 | Crass K.—MELONS, PERSIAN, “OR
p ). Prize, A., Mr. NL
urserymen li
Fir Ns 1. Ti, Me, C - Turner, Slough ; Second ditto, 5l., — nn Mr. J.
Messrs. Dobson & Son, Isleworth ; ditto, 3i, Mr.
Fraser,
— Windsor, ; Hampstead; Fourth ditto, 2l., Messrs. J. & J. L=
First Prize, €»
— Eje me PELARGONIU MS (Amateurs nate ). Kalle; Third ditto,
Be, S. F. NE yide Tees 2 Te Crass M.—MELONS, SCA
ditto, 2L, Mr. R EET
ose Rio PELARGONIUMS (Nurserymen FI Ks r
N. 1 Prize, AL, Mr. O. Tamer, Slough; Second ditto, [a First Prize, E» “Mr. S. Snow, Gr. i
snm Windsor, ‘am tend; Third ditto, A., M Park, t Beds; Second ditto, 1L, Mr. T.
Crass XXIIL—NEW OR RARE PLANTS, IN OR OUT OP Crass 0,--CHERRIES, WHITE (
ae n. FL First Prize, 2 Mr. Henderson, Gr. to ie ke
essrs. Vei: ich r1 Son, Exeter and Chelsea | land, qe
EUM "A nra Mr. W. Barnes, Camberwell on P. ft
of EC Thin ditto, 1L, ^R. Sim, Foot's Fit Prize, 2.
ru ulis. Extra Prize, 10s., Messrs, J. & J. | guson, Stowe, ue
-— IM Q -prus D ag
First Prize, 9L, Messrs. Veitch & toa (Portage St d
Second II. v
d. ditto, (Thuja Lobbii); Third ditto, 10. (Chama.
Crass XXV. -SEEDLING FELARGONIUMS OF 1858 & '59.
Second ditto, s ar. — aps: Died ditto y
Purplea 95); Second ditto s
* $6, ; Mr: ner ( 0, 78. NS Turner (Bracelet); d
t Prize, 10s, Messrs. Veitch m
Son (Mrs. 8 Me
dr Chri tine). by loore); er ditto, 7s., Mr. Kinghorn |
nied dl
Disb, 1 10 Fr
T.—MISCELLANEO
Prizes, 11. 10a Mr. J. Tegg, Or. to Baron
ER sibus: SEEDSMAN, AND FLORIST, vlet. Geraniums. —First Prize, 10s, Mr. Turner (Sarah li. each, Mr. Snow, Mr. Horwood, Lem
N Second ditto, 7s., Mr. Turner (Omega). Maubert, Norwood ; Prize 10s., Mr. G.
3 Juse 11, 1859. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 503
| MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON'S A:
NEW GENERAL CATALOGUE . cem T
NEW PRICED X DESCRIPTIVE. GENERAL CATALOCUE
ILN RNOTT, AND CO., cessors to Chandler
dr and hs A forw: — eas eats al —
ral Descriptive TALOGUE, containing d
SPRING LIST OF ORNAMENTAL BEDDING AND SUMMER-FLOWERING PLANTS, Liste of fnew Hyb Wi aene Camelias, Alla im
Is ready for distribution (free by post) wherein are described the — * sam PLANTS and also Fuchsias Polare — die ed Petontas, Phones, Bolliag
special directions for sowing, rearing, and final plan NS Shsworth Bond, London, B. Zelebüshed upeecda df
years.
SPERGULA ifa 1
the admirable substitute for Grass on Lawns, without mowing, o h good established tufts D ager
planting (from Mr. M: n's fine Lac at Forest Es near 25 ‘an e Cyel P ges hes me rage t 4s. an 1 Aa — — —
per dozen, according Seed Packets, 6d 2 UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF H. R. H. THE PRiNCE Consort, Dun
eir respective
BEATON’S NEW SEEDLING m BEDDING G enen 4 * N renim ny are— AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY or INDIA, AND THE LEADING AGRi-
and the MODEL NOSEGAY. K
ALLAMANDA ER GERANIUM WHITE NOSEGAY.
CALCEOLARIA AMPLEXICAULIS ALBA. a SILVER CHAIN.
DWARF DAHLIA, THE WHITE UNI m 2 Sr. CLOUD
GLOIRE DE FRANC. 7 GOLDE:
BANKS’S NEW FUCHSIAS. 45 CERISE MONIQUE, de
PELES NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS. Y THÈ re Ar err
d . 96.
OF VERBENAS, : 0 6 726.
0 6| | Yellow s Globe Mangel . 06:
THE MOST —— COLLECTION — OFFERED are those now in bloom at the Wellington — (^ Jeffery's 09 | Fage's Impl. Orange Globe 08
Nursery, - S which E e called the specialattention of cultivators for the first — ^ z : 4 —
time this The un season is the most pa for sowing Pngeslnpro relia Globe ? 5 "e 4 E
* .. se E
^ CAREEGLXIK CINERARIA, AND PRIMULA, eim White Globe 0 6 242
to secure an early and continuous bloom of the above favourite ares for Greenhouse and Conservatory Y White Tankard 0 7 33
decoration. Seed Packets, of first class quality in each kind, at 2s. 6d. eac | 5 ey 4 d
Kou e e DK NT!
i \ * Bulbs of this v. the enormous t
Wellington Nursery, St. John's Wood, London. Bem of this variety ha 5 ub weigh
BUCK WHEAT, MUSTARD, LINSEED, TARES, SAIN-
‘FOIN, HOLCUS SACCHARATUS, 1s. per Ib.
CHOICE FLOWERS. 255 . . SARTE TEE
BUTLER & McCULLOCH’S
SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS,
RRANGED on a new and fnr quarc nes is plan, with copious Descriptive and sap *
and containing many new — d in any other Cata.
logue, now ready and 1 post paid on applica:
gener et care, by the m — and dd s SEEDS, — crop of 1858, saved with piro folowing Seas net te supplied :—
est care,
Kors sins sale, that, toe Tarihi o of Messrs. JAMES- CARTER & Co, | — GRANTS PINE APPLE | RUSSIAN GREEN TOF.
— espe «a y Carnations and Pico coisas have given such univers mar ir has Price ls. brin Rau Lud a
—
| .
— in the Gardeners’ Chronicle of Feb fe iOS BR Ti achat
— es eres ek B= soe tt
En : n
NO FICATI
TTON —€— SONS ER intimate that
spei. A A tnm they have quite out of
SATURDAY, JUN. JUNE 11, 1859.
e saves to Messrs. BUTLER Let us add, that it yields to no the abundance of its MEETINGS FOR OR THE FOLLOWING WEER. .
or the excellence of its — 2 * June E Nod Botanie . 2 r.
URSDAY, — 16—Lin nenn 8 r. u.
— — à
BUTLER ann ED, vium drawing attention to their general SPRING CATALOGUE which has elicited such H x
high encomiums both from the scientific botanist and amateur cultivator, avail themselves of the present opportunity re is am l Ears than
to select from its pages the following list:— another it is the robbery of poor people the
it de (28) ACACIA GRANDIS (TRUE). (625) MASROPHAMN UB] HÜGELLI. oe pretence o: i a ice. The
P pulchella section, pro- This, purpureus, are all handsome varieties of columns of the y and weekly papers literally
golden balls, Of these ful and this beautiful — body ha: greenhouse or - y papers it
aang te plants. eur collection emiwaces no fewer than 47 — Should grow. All three — ane teem with advertisements from persons anxious to
varieties, all of the most decorative character, * employment; it is with no small diffieul
ALPINES 665) HIBISCUS ROSEUS SUPERBUS. that many of them ean spare the money —
— —— pears — bija Afar 5 Tua a EE Y Ft aio aueh p ep and, inexperienced
embracing ai tha m M, the Curatorof the Zurich | (680 to — HOLCUS — SORGHUM (Chinese Sugar Cane), in the world, they too thus become mere
Botanic Gardens. The value of Alpine plants for rock-work is Of this important class we have nine new and important | objects — * peg infest this
too well known to require comment. collections we can | varieties from Africa, said to be more ornamental and to con- modern
confidently recommend, containing, as they do, species only of | tain more saccharine matter, Holcus saccharatus. f
highest ) INDIGOFERA DECORA ALBA ROSEA. : pU the methods in which this
(199) CALLICHROA PEDATA. acti and dosua are all y free v flowering | nefarious sors is carried on. A. B. ady
A new crimson annual with white eye, very beautiful. ehrobe, ume — diey are also highly that he or she is in want ct acne ent.. In
(217 a.) CAMELLIA JAPONICA, ornamental out — day or t 12 anm :
From the newest and finest striped and other varieties of geto UMS. any or Sire e lobor ja uote ing to come
that much admired Of these both large flowered and fancy, very choice, and of | from a registry office, informing me > adver--
(296) CEANOTHUS "AZUREUS GRANDIFLORUS. other splendid varieties, inclu uding Scarlets, we have a fine | tiser that u upon remittmg the a
This, ceruleus capo and Fontanesianus are all | Stock, which A. fail top prove highly satisfactory. tration fee” he or she will s =
beautiful varieties of this highly ornamental genus, of which 49) SOL ur CAPSICASTRUM. h f es x ^
we possess nine splendid varieties. A omes are equally suited | Miniature jange tree vered all Z2 with a profusion | Chance of o nng the employment sought, To-
for conservatory and out-door decoration. of scarlet fruit ; a — plant for greenhouse or sitting this is added a hint that some of
ANNAS. Woran kind wanted are just the simpl.
Of th — i (1335) BIGNONIA RADICANS MULTIFLORA ; Tu. D vaoan
- : T nn nte ndi Ne e Bagani " than bap. redigans,; flowers in large panicles rtiser re
«^ most a : a mulie st long spikes
" on. shaded bright rose,
— n lens paesi? when. and therefore admir-
prs, E for winter bouquets ; one of the greatest novelties
the season, wal wort’ er out of or UN pots from y !
to October. dried specimen may
(337) CHRYSANTHEMUM (tall and dwarf —
Of these warf and tal varieties we have a fme stock, |
Ve — en may be depended upon to produce double
seeds having been saved from the finest CARNATIONS and PICOTEES saved from the most choice
Collection of English varieties grown on the continent, and well known to the police, whe
— — yeo fasion o 2 which be expected to produce fowers of the highest with his practices. There is
fae — — of golden ball-like merit, sent out in sealed packets as 5 Jesi. Ron QUi some obo 9 fter the regi:
* the handsomest greenh use plants in cultiva- f inian & whose seeds for years have cett yi
(451) DATURA such universal satisfaction, and ca the registration fee, but of
X HUMILIS FLORE PLENO. the greatest excellence have been raised, course to 1 to no 3 M n the registry office does
. of deep goi ve like plant producing a profusion| For prices and further particulars wi o purpo ee very week fiv. six
rtg low fo È wery large, ape — Ae sweet- f and, other novelties, we refer our y wee F
One of the greatest novelties itself, which is sent free and post paid oi
Bas amo m are two young ai wy
been en ehe tS shui the man. What i
very . cap district postman is in the con-
BUTLER & & McCULLOCH, Covent Garden Market.
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [ons 11, 1859,
asked if it was ossification that
nd stock ;
entle- junction. is "formed between the scion a Ber: Bhs ook Hae was the
e te af 3 ae rag £ [ as it is immaterial whether the bark will run heart, and said, Oh! ur d her, hand on her
à, i un,
me etters et hat 1. read this statement | or E it ma T i es ised 78 DT long ne . RAS nant of E navy? der um
i - | without any particular precau . those toa: the Army and N re in proposin
w 2 to it; and so caution adver- | witho yp and Navy, coupled "
wil drav a 2 t fallin; into the T that is set|thatif done in the course of the summer it has er n mee ar d 5 Admiral Ca; ry." (pue healths
for th E is great advantage over budding that you may f a few brief sentences for go onm. ant Wu Dep fetes =
waves ea TSR GOS PRET have shoots 12 or 14 inches long the . W cs n ir respective
cil have just t performed before the | Sir Charles Fox nex uii
Tun Council of the Horticultural J T if the 8 is 28 4 — hich he finds in | Right Hon. the Earl ot "Carlisle the President A of the
issued ‘the following ‘important notice :— of Augus vantage w. tion, which was responded to most warmi of the Institu.
e satisfaction of issuing e dli consists in being a able, M h airman : T Ladi s and genti 17 h Tam
The e th rt upon the pr AAT n ftin misses over ag ose to you what is usually called * the toast of ot fhe ee pro-
the first num! r o a monti y repo 1871 dectnite the spring grafting m i t and that is, ‘Prosperity to t Gerd Bauens
ngs ty, and of infor wd t & late period: a powe er extremely C k Society.’ assure you whe our
Fellows that the continuation will be de ia hat iia b. when old branches that have been hea ded bae E neon ids. e meeting, I demurred eulos
warded by post or otherwise. It is intended T m have to begn afted (Journ. Soc. Imp people, who, both from thelt kaowi doe uf d
monthly issue should conta m 8 rene ras It is not clear to piled 2 ne whether smearing | station in society, Had better ability to perform (he ene their
ol interest connected with th ME thos 0 ars m ES RETE ds or grease order to keep off — that eee e upon me, that I should have —
on the wrapper, |. : s _ | have P dut i
a temporary nature bein g prin ^ed will receive | insects is mischievous or DA r some pi p e ansari- ig was not any power o nt bande aM
while the part which is regularly Pag ed will re 1 us OI : y peech that
subjects of as Reports of ing 12 5 such applications are ua A eme a but a person who could extract th PM
" T1 some other A
Councils aud Committees, 3 “of Meetings, or othe s that they are highly bene 1 5 n Melee pont IPM INR o d emere it ms =
d matter of general Horticultu important it is is to ver t ds point, | with sincerity and truth declare that {know of no body c rad
llot —— of which a R has recorded i onatsberic in this ero mtry for whom I entertain so
intelligence, A se Ragen that vegard as the gardeners of England. 1 have washer me
econd ballot for
list and parficulars are annexed, is arranged to take [fc uc the result of some experimen nts t
at id tried,
piast at dhe rooms o boue is ofthe Bog wee i to Regain Bln men much as int a
E n a 10 T. ve we i
Canncil Laetus ina , positio n to make a i highly 12 mixture of. tar and whale oil oil Ec app in th in this past than w who have lived in the br oe
a ere are one or two things expressed in the
important communication with r 1 1. A tree, $ ims whi H ald lik . g
tion of a large garden near wey Metropolis, upon terms | spring before they were quite in eaf, va s like to V seo it
Should their inihi | knowledge, the general attainments, the greai
be realised, +} en pushed * 5 hen the ta r became Ped the bark | ticular accomplishments ecessary to make a gardener, Tnt
hich tł burst in us N. shen began to bleed there. 2 — ve esman, Ni r will I
Ti
possibly ake E Tt ag d been MM d the au 3 n the X^ was well 1 dead. — bé. Hose pere ia y E E "o him
that. scd — unwilli send their valu- | 2. When the 2 5 had their stems covered only | another word in the report which I should like to see ex
able plants for exhibition i in a gas-lig fight a room, in con- 2 a or fede ih "ey took y ve: rylittio harm, panged, steh. thag ada is, that t 8 ety is called “chariy:
sequence of the injury they sustain from so dry an | pushing freely th fterwar more t fnk. ig deat in toe station of a man,
Severs, the Council lhave determined upon ier ring only a arg a lands bá Sadi h wide was tarred they — s would therefore advance the gardener himself tothe dig-
no further er expense i int tha t direction, and upon took nó harm » LA. t anrea mod This would 1 Line sj estimation |
: » e an tribute largely
2 x mesa Hall on the 29th and 30t 1 27 25 Hence it is to e inferred that a mixture of tar out of their profits the wants of their aged body, itis wry
phi sia ` Grand Fruit Exhi bi. and whale oil m may be safely used fo ring wrong to call that a charity. 1 should be wrong so the
not, Tias "affect the ruit Exhibi- hie ar debit oth ts hat wu grateful offerings we have to make here to those who have
tion in December next, which will certainl eid in| Which caterpillars or other inset P | contributed so much to our pleasure and modified our taste—
The disinterested support which the Society | trees from the ground cannot possibly pass. and we'ought not to hurt their feelings by call 5
has received from the public during a pe À Lu Society, by an abstract which has beon 7 before me, Lam
eder to be 3 BOAL BENEVOLENT tat "ist 0; in =the hae steady and aly pro ogres
inly h: ed
amply rewarded, lead the Council to rely with confidence | — before 1838, , but 2 existed ey ^ afore then, for our first
Tue anniversary festival of oe institution was held on >
es now supounced. bein as | wajneeday Inst in the Crystal Palace. Covers had been laid | forefather Adam ner, and. I believe myself that if
the dictates of a sound and prudent policy, by which for 247, leaving a considerable margin for casual visitors, but | tb ER pala minm, had n not eaten bebes she i e the
they hope and believe the Horticultural be | so (Y T o attended, beyond those | Pea” - ona — — * ; 1 Said 0
n the high position it has so Untied King: fi v n much for an ape TC must have beon vary inferior in flavour
: most useful associa’ to fruit before us to-day ; still a
for the ent of ev i | may be drawn 3 hich is that a gardener
u Ts wife not to touch forbidden e
‘were sm ha dde Ladies were numerous, ani en | Pensioners o his society, I see, are allowed to reside in any
part of the United Kingdom. Well, there is very little in that ;
bot A
with the oa a nn at table. A tim band eredi "the Lee by the number on the list that the average
ageis 73 years. Gardening *
tion; if che average age is 73 many must de over
Jose Bs Paxton . M F., General D ew ir Das he Rev. i ut
0 n, ic n, ADM: ‘ral the R. ngl occupation ore
ners y
dio arrangements Re obtain. SR . Bellew, C. W. Dilke, , Sir Charles Fox, Charles — (EUR rie 155 c n bo placed aa on 8 the i i
roug: a satisfactory eic thane prx be Vati n. Well 1 think the "e Booey are e^ nch to have
no ce ge that the place would be by far the best many 7 applicants, for T nover Knie cer me e d Haben
etropolis. We do not mean that it] bei nts „ p
weal cm as good for as if it were 20 The stock is invested in Governme 8
miles away from town; but that, in connection | accom is called Robert Wrench, Esq. capital nim, ee it will be
ith iss wanted to ae the screw on occasionally, wE Ih That's
wi all garden of supply, which woul unn is case to put the screw on alow
necessary, it would be an admirable Lose for exhi- 8 sen duty $0; . Long life | the Re pers M it, and now, ladies snd gentleman, lf 0
biting everything that is going on in Horticulture, Sit dite to her Majesty the Queen." The toast was drunk | me for one minute more. i hópa I domt be object forwbich
* É whilst the ingupon you. ou musi
in the most advantageous manner. Mod dà to oll aen . Ge eue th II da national | ye have niet here to-day.—it is told the
and exposure, it is infinitely erable 10. any "The Chafraian eves “ Ladies and Socie
ext
place on the CCC
r ot cold, heavy, um e clay on the | ien. is the health of the Prince C Conson ithe Pr Nit het Ma d weer
2 8 was drunk "with
3 " reden
north the rest of the Royal fa ener; and I know that the progr? tnere are les
ELM thusiasm. built on the experience of the ener. betur ‘done if you
M. U'TThe Chairman: ‘The next toast 1 have to proposé ou important things which you ual know must hey are
is, *Our gallant defendere the Army and o succeed in ndening, 2 hose three
The 1 eei that you have been pleased to pass upon -— — land dry, let E t be w warm, and keep pee r shown
toast shows me how gon opt it is for me to add an t axioms we owe to the principles of and the
observations to it. The gallant actions of both those highly us by the market gardener; the bt practise.
and noble services — > renorded in history; to
o es,
:
is laid hori- ad day are — red, very as every
higher du Tl f be Tai who aiea for rtune deer Pg. the .
N | surprised to see in one vi after another, how bravely they | society must receive akan: odo p
prefers to have conducted t themselves Now that the revolt has been | presence of the ladies.. i rs de 127 bed from the gi
crushed wi e senses form | a recip roca bei —— Mer aec Meca Mr
f ro
Judge e the ga
av great an 2 honour
had ad the ladies DOE L hiuk Ed N
t
— here
a fine eye, not constant, an is
There is another gentleman Who
head, with almost all the religious and phil
be be I mean the Earl Shaftesbury re
isto be found; but he is described pes to tpe
showing t the YT 2 E aye i bio pnis
on't think they o l
zd m Matilda whoever she is, ‘has a.
One
t
the:
sst naval Pr of my
bebes 8 North America, and I had the honour
a $
seniors nothing; their deeds are recorded in the —
of
Em
the na ore t len:
a more serviceable y of
s service. Th y
a rig wem i, rand som and ied their promotion is not more
2 Bater mm. with th
for a
cad . 5y ud roat, grent constancy,
character
. The object
bscription to aid this benevolent
Joxe 11, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND ee ee 505
charity, and I should be to i ich was heartily — ed to. The latter read the sta g th "n iplo oe s
‘Institution’ is not the word you wo 55 | ment oe e pa past year, ld a d, Iwas, however,
Te 3 "P Low e in — country | vns Laer: was next drunk, and having b T E for Ed when preparing
tronisers of enin they could patronise nothing | to with cheers the company sep arated. pey pere of ‘this design. And the arrangement
better. N re is r b est I wish to make " tion of, | as here given may be of use in layin 3
and that is n people employ a gardener—and no one | A greater extent : d š .
employs them except persons of property —I hope the gardener PLANS FOR VILLA AND SUBURBAN . ‘he idence i is deb au CUP OAN
ill s “We have a society, an E A NS.
ry contribu guinea a year tothe funds.’ If the 5 A garden separat ed 1 the — rogas by
Borde — employers e 8 e sum that ds nt to (PLATE 4.— Two , plans are here given, neither of | S wall d th i nem palin — The whole geren ip diio
into his own pocket ; bu elp to provide for his br n is a
£ their old age, he will suffer depreciation and find very are both of a y simple kind— —fig.le espe cially. 1t surrounded LM loy SEE. At 8 ‘th , pimeipa
few to refuse. throw out the suggestion. Had I happpened EE me for a semi-detached » resi- „ g
to have been an humbl mber of the Hou: ommons at 1 Thi T bé ond of a ery r uest bd entrance, 4 a portion of the offices, The small flower
the time when Mr. Disraeli talked of a 601. ty À 2 E ds ved | Plot 5 is surrounded [a 0 grav s ba 6, and es ever-
lification for a vote, had I the means I would h: that an e rupte ted | i pre een hedge 7; ; beds 8 to 11 are on Grass; vase 12
vote to every gardener in England. Ladies and . 1 throughout the whole 1 of. pe 53 o | sr h Ens
Lee conclude a somewhat up) o arien by, recommend- ti 2 S46 chi ³ ] ta tio bid occupies the cen
g to your notice the ardeners' Benevolent) tion; an pu y 14 is a trellis 2
Association, and that tj well which the gardenis Mn l
—— o yn you w by a door of like material,
with me.” 15 a broad gravel wall, 16
The Rev. M. Bellew a seat, 17 and 18 two vases,
rose and 8 che health 19 4 Basin of Wal d
f Chairman, * was basin ater an
Sine" distinguished "b his fountain; these last wer
talents in literature, in law, built by a former occupier.
y
and the honesty ofhis pu: > Seven su ding the
"3 rdeners well knew the value ircul lot for
a good transplant, and they circular P 0
hs p g over them at p: ordinary “massing” dde.
that moment a gentleman re b or they may be dwarf per-
was at n amon t J
Sem. E 3 y ROATA li anent ones to be i er-
espond to the and drink |; mixed with gayer kinds in
the the health of telr bon. chair- N summer. The indary
slic »» j Yu
t was drunk with ha shrubbery is intended
ro’ of cheering. When erely to hide the ),
the applause had subsided, the and to mingle in appear-
in replying to the ance with the plants in the
t said, “I you that dioini ^
Inever rose before with a dif- sdjomninp rapes
one to Ae agr what I feel this is ly ed
of this kind
en to ^
as errors, an
therefore. uia a little
the
understand it, and
why Show not Panes] When
Severe advice is give eople
ies on being present, and
to whose influence he attri-
AR cr Feet
iru
idea.
walk, AL are are pyramid frat
trees form a
vista 1 85 petty the eye in
2 pleasing manner to the
small green mhou use 22, whi ch,
Allal
and the front pua —
open, will form an interest-
ing feature from the house
n the walls in the vege-
table garden fruit pu are
trained. E iss x
greenhou and
d uS receptacles pen vri qud
ish, E STR: 00
cundi e teh —
Was a very eee on
Civieation 158g jon be pl
as also the
n of
thi
an? he
dn zi
ni
led to — entire a Soa
mpany had done great great things for *
iw uhar returned thanks in a very appropriate m;
for Th Chen and co-directors, and sat down "m 5
Chairman next proposed ‘The health of the Secretary,”
[We have t
with very great
mination of these little
i in of
d of the talented
author. Mr. Lovel was
the son of a gardener to
Sir Hussey (afterwards.
rd) Vivian, and was him-
self brought up to the
business. After spending
many years in qualifying
him: for a place, he was
engaged by the late Mar-
chioness of Hastings t
take charge of her very
pretty grounds at Efford
House, near Lymi n,
It was here that he ac-
uired that fondness for
e more scientific depart-
ments of Horticulture, in
which he became in-
ished. Already in 1849
produeed a very.
per, «c On e.
d rhe: — tion of
7 m plant 8 are omitted. The following 8 volume of the Journal o the Hee
will — the sc: —1, the front door of | which he after
the h ; 2, from whieh you pass to the dudes us ur M
ste 3; 415 the end "to all yard and offi y Hastings left Efford, T. d ee
5; there is also admission to these from the garden at in the Nursery ot Mr i E
6. The ci v — 7 was intended for dwarf ever- edtill the period of his dently See
greens, a e position for a handsome —_ chy vin with nae een
dendron e ^s apa. ground, but the cse very decided taste. If we are not s
end Near Pr omission. The 1 the designs Queen's . —
beds 9 to 20 a “bedding” plants ji Brev ‘Aldershott. "Esclosive of his “Plans for Gardens,
The alternating permanent lants 21 E 30 reme he communicated mamy other iiw to wheres.
Roses, an r dwar j H endron ivation.
hedge with the small shrubberies near the M ieu - the ae gs iis on Monday the 30th of
ices surround the ornamental en. The portion Mr. “ye itonitis, in the 87th year of his
devoted to vegetables, commencing — 33, extends Tm di of all who w were aware
er | passes nds 100 or = feet 5 the ont
—Ii t may b
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, n
M
— — the Indians * * muck- | Douglas, who found it in in Oregon, is the “Pride aan
tables € rk and biscuit cuit called b yt » a drin k of of the Alexander qe j = Ash”
ence. uck,” topping out with a “horn, anglic? a enzie’s voyage.
Correspond — mpm n las states,
b ; tales of fores hat it is commo
sup F hen t uere ios teams A omi Ister ating 3 th . Re experince in the Gulf of] of the Rocky Moins "nien the he Hend. tle
eatly o o any of your re egular round of song Scouler met
fog relative relative . ex subject ; red rie ancient oF Turín ary, and dec. old at glades ring again with | Queen Charlotte’s uu “The entem led with re
any ewe 2 t. The dusky sons i ^
n f August of the | sounds of unwon ted merriment. 1225 i à great i y
samo se: 2 inserted in prier ‘of another Vine | forest who e for and with us, go ow * — thy to xo Tr paths ods of N. "e
eti cu fruit the next season; or rather is it prac-| a-muck” and formed another et not far Jatt tili Lo abl e db sen d home: cas ofi correspondent will
ow. E for udi (similar to thos se Ew in budding and sot the night drove E with songs and Sopa gd esf e ripe se amen it, and of the
s) to b hat will f forgot all | of British Colombia. Old Westminster pe .
August 1859, to be inserted in an ober stock, and praye er for d — raS — — alia dx ay. its neighbourhood some of the pro oduct e —
On "y "er i ng T "eiiam plc t rai cd vids me br oak fast — , the same as — 1 ; then “ All] Westminster, the name which it is intended to ned
‘oul Ponds.—For y bend den d by navvies | on boa Td the cry, a and we em Our canoe, | the capital of British Colombia.
bed at e ; xu we Thad pea, |
d planted wit ellow * ST TED S
plan with w , 7 t
and other plants. The e has | took all the e of the party (excepi bw : — 5
8 ducks sent ad gny y throughout- i e dee Des days Loo run Mili. irri
Í ^ cently been s | the Indians by some oversig i . ——
1 ail the p es but the water is We pus ushed ov er Nem. d and big "pe I ™ Crystan PALACE HORTICULTURAL Exmpmpr.
uniformly clear by pumping plentifully from the well]! ge ev ssh yards, aes d ki Y|June 8.—A fine day and an E 82
of the house. A Subscriber, Toxteth Park. thro ough rapids and all sorts of impossible looking | bought oa on this c occasion a
Bath Asparagus.—Could a favour me with the | places, crashing — been till all at once we came |
name of the enclosed, phahi — 5 in our market in upon a huge tree Moe was particularly difficult to * an ge: Gre use Plants were again furnished in
wnches as a substitute for As p All got on the tree, the voyageurs and Indians great quii, 19 in beautiful condition. Indeed
* vegetable is very good indeed? [NE is en » strove to get the canoe across; to help “them m i passed | n nothing in their way could possibly be finer than the
thi meighbourhoo od, and has a root not | B— on the tree, his indian- bber boots slipped, an
like that S the double white Narada J: Smith | bang poker t into the river, emerging like a drowned round table in the centre of the principal transept.
Bath. Ut Bath Asparagus, or Ornithogalum cold and shivering for the rest of that up I| These were contributed chiefly by Mr. Dods, gr, to
pyrenaicu opened. — eyes wide in the hope s of finding sand- Sir J. "Catheart, Bart, and Mr. Whitbread, gr to
Ea args Tour A ccm agerem « J, C. H.” Essex, | stone, limestone, ironstone, and conl; ang n the "broken f. Collyer, Esq, of Dartford, between whom
h tter try flower pots as traps for these. The plan | banks of the oe and also s bed, I at last the struggle for mastery in this class of
is to get some No. 40 or 60 flower pots, ses fill them | covered sandston m a at at shale, preliminary 1 now principally lies. This time, as will be sem
aout px a of perfectly dry — then turn the — trust one da ay to which must in my opinion be by an advertisement in another column, their merits
on the th ere regarded DE the judges to be equal In Mr |
may w
g th y Thence Vier full of hope we at length emerged | Dods’ group noble mples of Allamaniss,
d kill t Moss | i beautiful lake 24 miles long, which we called . weten anong hich gis
pots. This is an d — * en "but I ‘Burnaby Lake,” a of that name. | macrantha rosea was
iw qu it isthe best yet. H. Smith, Darley Dale ies is situated seven miles fron T with fall | and Muere both still i ne rimasti? pot as re- 3
Nurseries, near Matlock——About two years ago a xum — to NUT a any amount of water for the new gards bloom; the fine Brew of Cape Heath called
gardener told me he had a frame full of Cucumbers, wn. The ere are lots of game, swans, duck, „teal, Ko., Erica nem Wilsoni, Coleonema rubrum, Erioste-
which were fay oe destroyed by earwigs. I told h y S| m Adenandras, Boronia serrulata, and some very
to get as m th ery | e Ixoras, more especially a plant of the Willow-
alittle ashes y left i in them, and to put them i in the frame. 555 camp i a e Ww the side of t he lake, in tho sexed variety, on which were such heads
ur way across the next day to of bloom as one rarely, sees on this kind.
his frame. But for this plan I could not have a Dahlia | « Bovey Tet, eich from its great depth of water | It had been grafted on I. coccinea, which appears to be
Bloom ent ire. Ro bert Ashcroft, West Der rby. may on e day, i e of war, be of the greatest im- | an excellent stock for it. In Mr. Collyer’s group were
i dododend p to Q „ protecting its rear by ships of equally fine specimens of nearly the same Kind of
of Canterbury ai Ea eg Lam and the fire — a battery of heavy guns on a plants, collections of Which were also contributed
— the most ost beautiful rake's island" in the All along | Messrs. P
f bea w.
g
$5
|
Ca
specimen
Pim x
s^ blue Leschenaultias, 2 reflexum, Allamandas,
— up at Boro: ronias, hae flori [pori A
Unfortunat n 1 flower, Everlastings, Cape Heaths; and
— so we had but poor lodging after all. My A L
Foreign Correspondence. boots and clothes —- never been quite T since. The -— Lo — for fine m e there was 3 ;
. ]
Camp, Queensborough (or N. i lake rose and we nd built | large Messrs who contri-
s Maren 20. 1850. meme our fire on logs jiii inen ter; the sides of our | buted a — * ngs of Dieffen-
y Of by camping place we stuffed with brushwood, and the Palisa pie picta, Dracænas, Palms, ipic $
We started from here four days ag loring | bottom was thickly laid with branches of the Spruce | Ma inte be: ta and zebrina, Crotons, and the 2
expedition up the [nee The stream at first was not Fir and Arbor-vite, which latter gives out a most|go ta imperi rials and some Tree Perms —
thought to be of so much importance as it has since | delicious We laid it a ti thick, and added | — decisa & Cutbush m furnish ed good oie ;
turned out to be, but as we got a mile or so up it to the bed as the water rose; however it beat us at last, tions, as did likewise Messrs. Dods, Colgate, —
sco greatly and widened, the current running so we decamped and made the best of inst ay down. | Summers, Oubridge, Rhodes, and Hamp. oe]
ity, 5 or 6 miles an hour and more in the | And t nt. The Indian at asd | were the handsome Maranta capitata, fonoa —
hich we had a continuous succession nearly stern gave the word to another Indian at the bow v us; Caladiums of different kinds, Cissus V.
i of | glided past point ver tree and snag, eating Palms, Ferns, among which was à magnificent
hat i grande
um
occasion
he h it n em at an
flexion, and round we went dn of the 8 that this year. Messrs. Veitch had a splendid puse
threatened us with destruction. was perfectly | contained among other things beautiful
wonderful to see them, so easy, composed and — White Butterfly plants (Phalienopsis), " ;
ome- in 1 the most — situations. We had Mossi, one of the handsomest varieties E sc Y
ming up, and were now rushing "barbatum; vari Aerides, among jii.
P É llis, of
Cypri a. finely in flower;
ead foremost under, and had | the beautiful rep ore Devonianum,
*
pepan gin us experienced
was over. It was quite a little ex
dition
Coa out oe pgs all flying down stream, they saving them- Clow :
į = - med EN and he e and s cmi th le scarey 5 i hold of | gala of diferent RE s kendes, ad of on
i going through a real pleasure, At the 7780 ng themselves by main force ashore; | From en, gr. t d r
canoe "eyed : bei and inI went; but I go : racemes me Da
a brane i f
TVTTTTTTTT LE
a WO! i 3
. re, but had to s sit ali | shinta and coats warm off onr bodies and took them a — Clowes pe rege flow
At length the shades of evening b to fi hough with a double load and ei ight men in our fection; and Trichopilia oyee oga
we busied n felling t g ce Soe all, and | canoe we got safe over all difficulties ud returned to|a good d as had also Messrs.
r “the | t nights ph — ae anxious friends days absence e — n and Green. In wg -—
: or the | amping ou intelligence of our discov Saccolabium curviflorum
tier some 2 — foet h high, A t wm with a a ent a vien drobium aggregatum, Las 0 Cane " — E
* iai 5 to 8 — in —Ü r (as n near as we could Jointed, and covered with “sharp poin AS big m. n ere roga past th „
1 Azaleas were d ro
low saplings serias were preparing to take fhe. p — onfined ncn te
t ME S e which - con i.
^i the 1 N On scraping away the snow we an tell me its are from Mr
most glorious moss you * e ; — my friends and I TI be very glad to know it. A — if possible, i iow
gee in a circle — the — was probably the orm. ard rr zs and " for their number,
a handy spot r firing| Sir Wm. Hooker in the Wit 4 volume of his A os Seedling
t 1 Fiora Re —
a
Juxe 11, 1859.]
* Heaths were again furnished in in great. quan
and in good 1 iri — deficient in —
They, ps pe
ts show y unmistakably th
Roses
the late pw unc eather. pedem rn of those
M Lane,
THE GARDENERS’
ill effects of |
Thos. Bailey, gr. to T. J. Drake, Esq., | or
à the next best collection, which con-
Mi Meteo
aon bath Exotic and British, were in —
yn
Ellen, and. Saracen. contained
plants of m um nan of the Fair, the Bride,
and Roseleaf.
i 5
Of the former the b
Vei! sent um mns — poe
— Ce fhois,
hylla; A teris evecta, thea -
hecistop ngiop Di
Balantiu ta,
m culci Fraseri, Ci
- Dav: allia polyantha. * bids ny d puero
gu -— Mr.
gr. to
c. 1 , Esq., „and } Mr.
ers, gr. Tu eo
gredien, ue The former — "Todea ea pellucida, quite a
ne ery
antarctica,
botium Schiedel, i, ay pat
In the class of Fancies were some remarkable speci-
Mr. Turner’s plants were Celestial, delicatum,
Star, Madame Sontag, Madame
were of M 2 and of
unequalled beauty, every leaf Y y the mass of |
mens.
Eveni
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETT
Mr.
fruit of the ki
hei
eir | Letter,
ière, and | “th:
E-
cellence. The best w
Napier, British Q
f Twicke
507
were vere dishes of Sir Charles
an nd Keens' Seedlin; :
nham. Mr. Clarke, of Twick ham,
Mr. r. Stoddart, of Colchester, also bot 3
nds just named.
Among Miscellaneous eee we noticed a bunch
and so
of unripe Bananas ery good Cucumbers.
Notices of 9t Books,
on Modern Agricul:
Rat by John Ba MD,
n & Maberly
0
By Baron v. Liebig.
Small Svo. Pp. 284.
the rapidity of
solubility.
AN
died ag
n rain
their roots, regard them
many opening
an sim well bloomed id. etions
*
6 and 2 feet high, N
m The
four species of Gleichenia, one, microphylla, ver
d ebd pt Alsophila aculeata, a — Micro
= 2 g len and Davalli ul
r. Sum
le. | of
the | possessing.
an
— —
.
Calceolarias both herb dshrubt
spo
beautiful exhibitions, | co’
T and
"dm. half i in the pt. g
abso
consequence of t n from
eaves, the rootlets e up P ae a ich — with
*
substances Done eec ent
toward:
onwards
Thuja Lobbii; v | Vücibus fine Bego.
nias, the best of which — been noticed — us on former
of Ceanoth withered
g
m
a
enetyllis ma-
came a a white-blossomed
F
ed in
large rich o mange. lowered. Heme-
| of on
whieh too little — has lately been
—
— — carinatus, a Gen plant with
Wite, all all Be oo
m |
r the orange scarlet Embothrium
pole Sg essrs. Veitch’s valuable intro-
Of Pitcher pilla:
bited
ey exhi-
id
of lanata, —
vittata, and
Messrs. V. eitch and Gedne
gk in which were noble ee
is, Raffles — —
others, all of whi pertes muc! —
m Natal, with — flowers, and | We
ian-lik
England, a E
Ad d
— — Gates from Sow ee aun’ aah
— at irme - consisted of yel
— grounds dotted er with
exception per was eme
wn in fine 2 in
before na ed the best kinds.
Godfre Seedli Mr. Hobbs, Mr.
ales,
„Lady
„Colchester, Cardi nal, Seed-
ebe, Sultan, "Seedling Little "Ri These
ely laced, and larger t than the av
ruit a considerable quant xA was v produced, but
dea Was. Providence
Jam
Black Ham — Grapes again furnished
admirable condition large m n both in bunch | ca
berry—b . Hil
ill,
to E. L. Bet
Mr. Frost, gr.
Vise +
e
came from Mr. Th
and
minute tois v with
to | fi
roc
cat state by
by Mr. Turner and Mr. Bragg. | so
Mr. Turner’s kinds were: Unanimity, Napoleon, Gem,
partiele of — a — 0
ost
0
continu m the field,
re
— — any of the essential constituents
only retains firmly all the
init, but i
of its fertility.» The soil not o;
food of foe
9
This is p m but surely * e phy-
Je ae yh: "c n the earth
er of good
rked with maroon st
full si good habit; Magpie, — and m
with black in Tom 3 the
flowers in the style Pen eim th better, and as
Si . Turner of Slough, t the three
the judges for
mega, a
ina of the finest
nct maroon spots. This
na (Kinghorn) also received
UN hridge. Mr. Frost
ar as did also Mr. Hill and e
Masters, gr. at Sher ira Cha tle, Oxon, Elru:
tarines, md and pe were furnish ed by Mr.
Preston Hall, ally fine dish of f Violet Hátive
came from Mr. Bi ll, gr. to R. Sneyd, Esq. Mr. Pag
and Mr. Mathers also both 2 good dishes.
Of Apricots, a dish of s Pe well ripened fruit
from Mr. Fer; erguson, ot Sto
ja
e good frui
Mr. Richar
OF Cherries, he best were wo dishes, one of |
Black Circassian, the o! Sie Steed Mr. Henderson,
gr. to the Duke of rdi at Trentham These we
e had some de eB, the
— Fair Ellen, e — rk
were informed grown in the kind of glass
ture known as the “Trentham case," and
2 very fine. e from Mr. Ferguson,
Plums w Ingram, gr. to J. J. Blandy,
of | Esq, who pac pred fet ot of Denyer's V Victoria.
Strawberries were not remarkable either for quantity
ge d of
Frost, Of
0
e partiele, — — at roots cannot seize upon the elements
while
Nothing can r^ more just than the erben co
-— nof. the plough and the spade, and we
cultiv: will a pir ene it; for it
he
— sout 30,000
“ A piece
(one ina of earth, n no
—— í li i —
i of e uni -
porn throughout the earth, it will suffice for the
nourishment of 120 Wheat plants. Ten thousand
milligramm f food, having a sur xtent of 100
square millimétres, are within the same given time not
i i immes having the same
ace extent.
am one may be very fertile, and the other equali
508
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
[Juse 11, 1859.
uufruitful, if the
bod is more lont distributed |
throughout the Le thas the of 8. plan each; lots consi
LII 77 bre
Lace-bark Pine of China, from 17. 105. to 17. 17s. per lot
nte. B EUM soaked with water at on
fero: S ere
isting of twi
ungean:
s up the so
a certain extent, |
But th
al y grow
pade breaks, turns, and mi es it thoroughly:
} ]
e spot in Which vd are Linn . mly fixed by fro
the 9 we can wha nse influence Gnd". from lls.
exerted on id fertility by its Hamel mecha- | corn uta, from
nical division and thorough intermixture. This is the | eac.
o IM difficulties which the yos
to produce a crop, corresponding to m: other "lots 5 and 10 pla nts
full 4 of food present in it, the first and m Flo t;
important condition for its accomplishment is, that ps | fale — of 2
physical h as to permit ev e fines
(For the ms
0
Plants with thin delicate roots cannot gr on
tenacious heavy soil, even n. abundance of min
food. These facts explain in
A cee KC. —It is a
simple manner » *
res
; ditto of
lo
to 145. per lot of 10 plants eich:
11. 10s. per
bies e 25 plants, 11s.
lots.
Torreya gran is, i
ies Keempferi, from
Bo of 25 Lun
12s. ; dig:
specimen,
e and is plant,
var
t,
era
DE from 55. t
The ‘whol
Calendar of Operations.
Week.)
NT n
it is desirable to get to grow r rapidly should je
ce, especially Ç i.
Y FRUIT AND KITCHEN
same attention will be useful to Fede
especially Peaches ànd Nectarines, I
ject to the attacks of mildew if allo wed to
€ root in summer, Those
o have a heavier crop of re set th
kely 1 to bring to perfection, should thin at thet M
season. See that there is plenty of P
tm repe a late autum » — and e for
ceeping eo a — sion of Fren ch Beans, Spinach, and
all kinds of salad. gie
te
STATE OF THE WEATHER AT 1 NEAR LONDON,
ed at the 3
ver. 5 common practic
e
nagement of the show house to huddle the
f
| BAROMETER.
very =
of t effects of 85
such soils, and e ds to andes tl ^ 18855 m plants "ied, in ord: produce a dense mass o suem ER] Max:
the preference given in n many „by agriculturists, — his should never be done with hard- —— — — penc
to fresh over rotten farm i ard manure The | V ded ln ts M E t this season, when the Estar, 4| 3| 29539 | 29725
mechanical —— y thé uut E d ct, starting into grow most thi if they are to be | Sunday 5| 4 20911 | 29.862
remarkably altered by the ploughing fn Ss nó and of any Me service peius a fair share of light on Te. Fy | 2999 | 20863
their remai "A air while in bloom. Valuable specimens of hard-wooded | Wet 9 7 | 20.803 | 20.708
cohesion ; it sc wies pedites ay e things, particularly Heat should be frequently Tu egy Saree
than by the mat pine plonghin ng; t in a sandy | Ê amined, turning them partly round in order that their Average L 5 75.2 | 530 | 64. 613
soil, a certai rence fntrodaced among its hoots may be equally exposed to the light. Should we Aar an xd dul un overcast; heavy rain at night.
ifting particles, ch stem of the green m v he weather continue bright eds and borders "s 5—Overeas st qnd m miid; ve 5 lac; tanna, NOTED
plants ploughed in opens up by its pA a sein of this tt will ri e a liberal supply of water to = 12 Fre — ut.
ed, delicate rootlets of the Wheat plant miniy p tan pr ropetiy molt i da the sol about strong | `- = md story ine overcast a Ri a j
fa rections seth foe Wi Deseo | re, Pants saloon ee de e ar ree ee
e m , RECORD OF TEE WEATHER AT CH
the green manure plants phu WIE GE Edu for the amount of moisture abso y such things a Dawin vne tast yee fr the env Weck, ending ne ISA.
previously contain; and these of themselves denn thisseason is m ch grea an 8 persons EP Se al ac | No.of | arestes Winds.
have no effect on the i 3 of the crop, without the are apt to imagine. GREENHOUSE.—. that A Ae EE EHE SE E Quantity z^
ee Lich Ti 18 Min Y tarot A POE pl lant i penam wi gré thay wil te renova “al ae better bani ao) E aa Z
vocates ithe of green : will do quite as well or better Sunday . 72 | 497 | ei xb | eme |-| a] ala) gil ag
ures, a pr ren much more ida vel during summer will be T 119 49.1 | 60.5 16 2 H
the ed than D nsively on sity for Aures es e Specimens dafs EUM — that E 3 22 En 917 a 90 air
„The cattle is necessary for the production p nds quite clear, so tha s parts may | friday 25 17 9 19 213
of manure; but atto X send p is by be fully exposed to light and air. In placing green 22 | 305 44 AERE
~ for the fertilisation of corn fields. In | Bouse things out of doors care should be taken nor to gine highest temperature during the above pezind ose EO.
‘Sit green arope sn te grown and ha ther r Y
"that green and that their re a e ving been kep |
* b wed icona vit the arable sur- ar be Stunt i eed, the plant ground Notices to Corresponden
ae o and it is quite for the meg wes that the plants w ot be ex- — mie ge but A = new; 4
‘cereals green crops be previously eaten by 1 axis etin A to the fal fore r things i n pots will do | Gi scs 0. The Calabrian Raisin is a very nice large white
manure or much goed if E exposi t ECS OF: oar summer's G , but ot of first lity. . rok
IM Vetches, Clover, Turnips, &c. are iz up and Ix — e. The beetles which have attacked your
ploughed in, in the green state, their action is far more due Oe o Ch are the destructive weevil, deen dene es
powerful." 2 — ders that have been lei . 2 e 89 lay a i sheet bach em dois
i
t the use of the word MANURE he has the should i be carefully ede and if found vog dry gi shaken, “They pn then be k killed with boiling water.—
ae objection. — tabi W W. Some of the shoots of the Willow sent are infested
eu seie agricult manure finds no longer le e earn farm- -yard tank. It will be as ranra how uM y us . h gall containing an
Lo. ace; for the notions that were formerly attached to imi m$ the manure-water with sufücie Lawns: 8 T. ot get rid of Qui en. from your lawn
Mt ompletely obsolete; just as is the case Take aà ring 4 temperature , from 7 P t1 90". ». except by wey — 2 if out as fast as it con-
centu ` Wl t etic epe which, up to the set of last the N. Sheet rightdays to admit air — where tinues — vx Ev Ms nt le ft in — kien Were vain
3 explain chemical phenomena.” —.— ‘by . al ants fro iir der the have been remo — * you will have to
— - is Vines 8 plants from under the} break kip the lawn and leave it fallow until you pr
nu for any « — process the forking out every bit of the Quiteh, when, and not
a recours it 2m 8 m soil about tho 1 roots in a healthy moist till when, it may be relai 5 a litte in
e Gy oe of scientif agriculture to explain a given mat amen n" : jured by their tris travel 5 h the post office. We bare bs
the — ibuting it to * adi m in the pl ke necessary unt until “the e Vines E a fair uet ever, pat — - spital, and bids hers n: i
notion gg qa manure, which has no | kee pras $od diu eei rre edad w vom es |
ve now for ev j : ealthy as istur to reluc-
elemente of iul N Pu sowing —— extreme. Give air freely whenever the Nau or Pa 1i ine ordnied o s uu tt w
for is - use every ns to e venters t ae nating heme of drie at i mila duy
question. ge in ath heri the dem thin, and prevent never have or = could have crake — n unlimited du
H eum
in a mere chemical sense, but the ng red with useless laterals, especially „Young gardeners to w i oo ire Ae
: * practice nor ought . ‘or assistance, they sho uld N * ir other e
Mis here assumes that he has fathomed ceived, which when left only serves as nurseries for — information. We em the u .
the mystery of W nutrition, IM. that only meet — — yet a fair chance of obtaining a ——Ü and t hinking for ense pe can
MEN skeins id 1 B esirable if we cou we
effect | have ng rigo e- if any of the frames which that at most willingly. tis now requested that, ta tae
2 Aia Norwich, "The specimens aro “on "ELT W
otamogeton d water o
such means as were "pointed i] week, before tht Pios
in flower. It B not "eg to impede je navigation ipium |
extent.—F S. dron ferrugineum ; 2, R i
3, Kalmia gla Ld
4 ere i gan J €, Norwich. There is is no appearane?
a certain Aaron, bat gour ores anada, oe eli
tells him that Sir ae ER GARDEN AND The ef does not howe wevor ap 2
y merely using the g eather for the last 10d dut Me 2 "ose, 1 terribly spotted and decay .
nia separable from it vly -planted out stock, and well-prepared plants aged nsect is not
ig which have onl bee plan p! THE ASPARAGUS Buc: F Mellon. n
as long ago | roof y been. ted during this time beetle ou should
ko fa uring are called Crioceris Asparagi. a vial i
liga ^ leat F ose who have trusted wholly to pick the branches, putting the x
ppl ions. et us preserve "then our word planting out until 1 the first week in June, and were you gather them, and will and the twigs of th
prepared wi . Moreover you
| will probably 1 plants in good condition,| bristling with little brown oval usually
Our iniu ly ve their beds minia before those who mh er b — e are the eggs
E t permit us to advert to Arc in- E earlier. Should the weather be dr. and will me grubs devouring the
Pd inferences drawn b 8 7 Ny m the e is a 23 for ‘ating ai beas Geu 33 bees MU iia
sir usbandry. »ortion x hum Be i bee a Ae of 1 plants of them into the fire. up
varie ^ Ermouh. Al
‘ork the attention o paid and g e paias eur ann d C S RU MEE e
. Parkyn may be —— sly directed, selec 5 stock, potted in Lees —— will be one of the most iar eign po
sait | Thes iiie soil, ad wet! in the reserve = F an interesting in
Misce Hane. eous. vlog little attention will make ni nice stocky it umbia. We believ Government to
Mr. Fortunes Plants.—Th um in the matter t Austell, There "Er ic
Th ose sold by Mr r, Stevens | li thi „ie the gold; nor is there any unus pd
ursday realised the following prices :—Abies | can riy be pt: of autumn ise a finder's is never oj
Muposted yi 4:9 feet in bel ht, ant nd | man thi ee ot » — w
ig y. Misc. : t
Os, by repotting and placing them in 4 Correspondent, The two ough E
p oral g go ood, ; 2 circumstances early in spring. each t will clay between then ge utt. the legal quet '
urnish a large number i p bai
20 lots of 10 pn each, | make e good stro rong plants before planting out ume ^| as ast ke ete
p DT We EDI D d
the insertion of whose con!
Joxe 11, 1859.)
PATENT
NITROPHOSPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE
COMPANY (LnurrEp),
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND.
W EM
ABEL TH, Jun , Walton House, Ware, Herts.
Cn — 8 Es Essendon Place, Herts
Eowarp BALL, Esq., 8, Belgrave e Road, Pimlico
Cambridge
MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M. P., Western Colville, Linton,
m Jons BRAD, Esq., M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq.
DIRECTORS.
Chairman.—Jonas WEBB, Esq., Babraham, Cambridgeshire
pui EY- CNAN —JoHN COLLINS, Ésq., Myddleton Square, Pen tonville
Epwarp Bett, Esq., Tot dam Middlesex ROBERT roma „West Lexham, Norfolk.
Joux Cray DEN, Esq., Littlebury, Essex ROBERT MORGAN, , 12, Camden Villas, Camden Town.
RICHARD Hewr, Esq., Stanstead Abba, Here. GEORGE 8A. » Ingthorpe, near Stamford.
Tuonas Kyou, * onton, M: Map yr t. John Street Road.
nen ;rs.—Messrs, BarxeTT, Ho. . 5. ee
Solicitor:
Manager.—Mr. James ODAM:
—Messrs, KN uam
Auli —G. W. Brown, Esq., * Par! Iams rà
ie
| Secretary. num C. T. "MACADAM.
Offices 109, Fenchurch 2 5 London. Hanufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex.
Directors beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultural Publie that the following Manures
Tus
are now ready:—
DAMS’S BLOOD MANURE
D
FOR CORN AND MANGEL.
ODAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS.
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME.
Full particulars may be had at the Company's Offices, or of the local Agents.
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &c.— Manufacturers
and others engaged in making ARTIFICIAL — —
cod faee reparation, by applying to J. O Nessir, F.G.8.
and efiicient m Gey
l of the mal Collage,
— of Lime, 1 S a, kd cp AF
Gentiom d — — — * 5 in Chemical
of n Che
Fem amm Assaying, willfind ample facility and .
zion at the College.
ANUKE For ROOF CROPS, of first-rate quality,
with fark tame ts guaranteed, manufactured by WILLIAMS
& Co., 47, Mark 3 c rmt pong! due at 6/. id nd
includin, ng es.
Trade su 2
NUR x $
REDERICK CORNWELL pen to info his
friends and the ieultural publie that he can now
Bs. Oe Ora ana H. M E" MÀ anything
* io contain from 20 to 25
5i. 108,
| trade tein to Mos NE CAKES
CAKES ON- ES
ie PUDE 6
market prices. —Offices, 7, G St. Helen’s, B. C.
13 MANURE COMPANY, removed to 116,
Fenchurch Street, E. C. Aree 1840) have the
following MANUBES ready for deli
— po for SPRING TOP- DRESSING a a
o
MANGEL MANURE guaranteed
quality.
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME
22 MANURE
consequence of the pere in the price of raw material
the London Manure Co. nabled to , lower the 20 of
— 2 W impro
their Superphosphate — Lima rove the
Corn Manure ana Ura
The London M: ERUVIAN GUAN
(direct from — Prag rd bep Res SULPHATE d
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, 8 BONES,
every other Manure of value. Wholesale Seed ipplied.
116, Fenchurch Street, E.
E
‘tures
results equal to
to apply either to our-
ht. & Co., of Liver-
‘character, in whose
confidence,
IBBS & Sons.
b
agents, Messrs. Gibbs,
a Bristol, or t or to dealers of.
An
and of
Peru
selves,
pis y and fair dealing they may s eds — ary
; P PROCTOR'S. TURNIP "MAN A oe OR
s Moss d H. & T. to this
able Man which ecessary
for the full ——— of the Turni p, 80
trom their ledge and long experience, they 6
CUPIT know! Cisterns of all si
Satisfied vantageous to the consumer. It has CALVANISED IRON PUMPS
they ‘Stained a high the eminent Agriculturists for Liquid Rt or Domestic sedie doe diameter, 305, and RÀ
J
for She weight and qua 7 the which it i F efe iion IRON SWING WATER à BARROWS
; ‘ or or use, about 20 gallons,
E OaE sepa il bo di rr fons d =
b
POTATO GRAN. DE | AND
TO, BARLEY,
ANURES; also BONE DUST, PE PERUVIAN V GUANO, FN
SUPERPHOSPHATE of LIME, warranted of the best qualit:
ü — ly to H. & . est of
AC!
am, and Saltney, near Chester. "
AND COS 3 CONCENTRATED bn
b e: — to contain
40 per cent. of Tribasic
ERPHOSPHATE OF DP
soluble, eq
Rem TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to
Fru
Of these 9 3 Voelcker says: —“ These
ou, and — ra the best e of x
mercial value which —
must
characterises
Seedsmen ho yan the
than
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF LAWES’S MANURE
R. LAWES begs to announce that — de "T this
a Mon seine uced the price of the Manures m
m,
TURNIP MANURE .
SUPERPHOSPHATE mi LIME «. .
MINERA A do.
I vna.
S
sets a bulk ot
B. Messrs. Gin
Bitrate S ay Sod, ‘Sal M of — and other Che —
Man Ami -seed Cake supplied.
— STUFF 2 oer ARE A — * MAN
—The unders|
URE
rice 4L 1 s. per ton in tierces s (no ch: casks), deliv
~~ to to any ta railway station in M ror
TLL orks, Clerkenwell, London.
1AMS & Son, Soa;
Sigmar E. C., iud
4552 r may purchase a
WHY NOT RU va TO um
Bee informs the
Nobility and Gen be on the
best terms with RICK C les complete. :
need price. An Illustrated
West End Establishment, ‘= CL S.W.
BENJAMIN EDAIN 2, Du ke Street. ndon Bridge. 8. E.
E D L A T E DENDY,
AGRICULTURAL Eomae — Essex.
HA ACHINES,
Small size, No. 1 zi». I nee size, No. 1
‘Large si e, No, . £18
—.—— — — ge from small "and delicate arts, and
understood by a farm labourer. hey _
rizes at the Royal Agricultural Society's Show:
ERT
No. el | No.2 . £T 10s.
nd : & Dexpy "d 3 Horee Rakes — made or on the tubular
princip oq bining great strength ightness. Free to all
the Le y Stations. A
Wen: & Denpy, Union Foundry, Hornchurch, Essex.
£12
ed ha lar;
orwich, 1 ere they ph "highly e
arge on
Hex J. AND CO,
8
LVANISE
GA WATER CISTERNS
— Cottage Houses, & contain 50 gallons, 25s. ; 80 gallo:
each; and 140 gallons, 36s., and fitted isign th tap, —
the water perti sweet and clean; will ni corrod
E RIGI DOMO.”—Patronised
Queen, the 2 of Northumbe:
ae -— vi aem n RAE puteos
A THOM.
| eni Tane, Gannon Set er
mats as
covering.”
prepared Hair
dim eat and Cold, keeping,
rit D applied a fs a qon p i tomporataro. Tt, It ,is adapted for a
rel from | !
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 509
ANDS pu PROVEMENT COMPANY
ace Yard, Westm!
o nd ko ie. 2 Bolicitors, Reta Agen
veyors, &c.—The Com mpany is incorporated by ie Agents 8 of
wered to charge
tance with the cost of i improv 8 Mire the money
wed from the Company or advanced by the Land-
hae 2 of his ow! hs —
The Company advai — mited in amount, for works
of Land 1 the. ns and incidental ix
being liquidated by a rentcherge ry a speci:
Mna ard the Company be
o not — nyt clans
chi — ontrolled y the
horised comprise Drainage.
Enclosure, Clearing, Being.
Fa —— — an
team Engines, W
effect improvements on their Estates with-
out — — rte expense i and agree — in-
cident to Mo withou! of
— — riy Appi jo jointly f aly for tao
Roads th rough the ct, W. — ac.
and for forms of 3 y to
. NaPrER, Managing Director, 2, Old Palace Yard,
*
West winster, T
ARM BUILD GS.
TS Ni BE OBTAINED ta THE GEN-
2780 2 D DRAINAGE 5 —— — MER 9 COM-
PANY'S ACT, for the full amow Sae y- owners oi
bents, gk Bodies — orate, &.
Houses, Farm Bu gs, and
iced Cottages, ag gi by then their own XE: and sanc-
tioned by the In — Com The repaid
by à ren —*— ^ estate — any term the landowner
may vu E exceed:
No i
very de
eic — entire responsiblity of the works w
ee by o profit however is taken by the
Al CLIFF
——— 52, Parliament Street, London.
cu LEGE or AGRICULTUKK AND CHEMISTRY,
AND OF PRACTICAL and emere el 87 and
38, Lower K. n Lane, K. near Lond
* nei . C. Nessrt, F. 8. $ POS,
The system of studies pursued in the College co Ty
ranch requisite to prepare youth for the pursuits of Agriculture,
- | Naval and Si Mining, Manufactures, and — X for the
Naval and Military Services, and for the Uni
Analyses and Assays of every — ion 7 — pee and
| | accurately executed at the College. e terms og other par-
ticula J ad on application to the Principal
OYAL AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT
SOCIETY or IRELAND. — The GREAT ANNUAL
of thís Society will be held at DUNDALK,
the Secretary on or before
— om a detailed Prize t ei i
ifferent Classes can.
and Steam the convey-
&c., to
7 9
Belfast wails the Midland
The Dublin and heda, the
Great Western, and „F
convey L from the Show all unsold Stock, Implements, &c.
ree of c
The Dundalk and Liverpool Steam Packet Company will
convey from een all pen Implements, &c., intended.
for exhibition, free By
— — Royse, Secretary.
_Society’s Room le Street. June 11.
YORKSHIRE, ae RIGUL TURAL SOCIETY.—
EAT SHOW at HULL, 1 3 AND 4.
ons Lists, apply to the Secre Sh. de x HANNAM, Land
Age, Kirk Deightou, Wetherby.—June 1
Tue. ‘Agricultural een
TURDAY, JUNE 11,
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING Ne:
Weonespar, June
— —
Oxe of the most useful and interesting agricul-
7 N of the season was that of last
the
510 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND M UHEURAT, GAZETTE. [Jone 11
> .
2 ee ee ee ted and | failure in the 8 or the P
veri ng ian — 3 tiv mper co his e for that crop that wes otatoes, or any
wing h luxury: other
not do. But Icann w the Turnip aem which | instructive. hat would keep, these many differs ent “farms” in Sijs Suriande over
i versal | diffi growing Turnips that wo keep, L 8 inSilsoeand 9
I used to do.“ Thi was the almo ty s igh.
~ a se fifi ie th
Mr. Owen Wats had a similar complaint with | manures, in the increa 4 328 FEX bo prier ri part A
erence : e Wurzel.—Mr. SwrrHrES, occupying clay pared with that of a
= inferior — E ihe ie p ved not grow I. gia in four ae lane ae —.— perhapei their E cle tn ditm
„ ? i nan 8 on t »
č faul ttributed for the most part | sown Mangel Wurzel an 15
to the ie fr s har eii of these crops in the wit perfect success. His pow was :—1, ents peg. 1 is ub eae the gen
four-course — On light lands Turnips green crop (Mangel . ; 2, white 2 75 E OEA PEA TOENN mer s ub la t Monday ? y
should alternate with — Wurzel in an gate Paley * Oa: 3 [E vem OP, . : — 2 sR edes, for cr 0
course 4 e 1 - » thus only once in Be ad T^ 60 Ey g
— followed by Wheat d Miser, on the county of of Kent, ee ent of 1 lig cht i rest that a oi ns cultivation is succe cessful when
h a dat — —
d Dutch with Trefoil sil; but still growing Tarnips wit a — —
he of y Ee pe Wheat. In some cases amount of suce err e too, but yet, with aD ar. x MANUF ACTURING a
Oats may follow the green crop, and Wheat follow | an occasional turn of the Giant ae growing |
Oats instead of Barley after Wheat, Under a tolerable crop rT of Clover.—Mr. th m A
man ement there is no risk of the land INSON spoke very decidedly, not ; merely on the ne acid, in an agricultural oink of view, a
Sonat be al C but ek their Er und à n ed hence thi e nitrogen o
d, id in the autumn | the use of guano and artificial manures, buto ir|is o mic and the come ere ial pim
Cone before, the e is ee for the prevention | standing to one another in the relation of cause | pounds co ing either “of these substances d
of perennial weeds, and a spring hoeing of the and effect. We force the spop s its early "e practical c bau to look upon any new method of ob.
will keep down annual weeds. Care| without supplying it with e food w derata of the day,
mut — be Mia taken that while destroying | all the more requires during its later stages, So is The at "arto mat Er Mee Penes the elements
weeds with one hand you are not sowing them with | long as farm manure and bones were theonly Turnip acid, — ing t paupe 2 hes mds A
the other. Mr. Waxtis has for several successive is we had no Me B. in def on guano crops of | formed; : iy o
3 4} n
mi r rod
1 2 pet . god. 21 arley ; 3, | of ammonia or nitric acid from the elements by meu
ar: a der sed " erops with those weeds | Red Clove er; 4, Wheat; 5, Turnips ; Mais which would admit of practical application,"
to which the f: exposed, , 9, seeds fazed during those successive years; | After having been engaged for many
Under Mr. Warrre s fiveyears course three-fifths 10, Oats or Wheat. o spoke of the CAS: mana on this subject, I have arrived at the prises
of the land are in grain—the Turni Yd [mr mie of salt—3 ont per acre applied wih guano under p * ; nitrogen and
a half-dressing of dung and a half-dressing of o visus "m ng Whea Ydrog gaseous, or e 4 bre ee
superphosphate, all the young bert 8 a sHER H t ble 1 „ commer-
Tp , cially available. To make them unite in any quantity
dressing of 8 loads of rotten dung a "the eneral subjeot of = meron recom- it is necessary that the — should, in its nascent
third of the Turnip crop is pulle d ond earried to mending rm growth of Rape seed or other oil kas De brought en [^ aa
the yards to be consumed by battle, and only seed cro as profitable in itself, and — union will take place, but this co pv
thirds are consumed on the land with sheep; on a by wa K g tl readily 71
small portion, some 10 or 12 acres, of t e corn |a rotation. He also spoke of a method of | pro- 10 — nascent a it is of course necessary
stubble Rye is sown be mown and fed in the curing three green crops fr ee the same land in f its unds, and thus far I had
— 8 g p mpo
spring, and afterwards to yield a erop of Turnips, | one year by taking Vetches after Wheat, feeding 2d arrived at t the same o condlusion as every one
and these have generally proved one of the best them off in April, and ifie Sindis "the land The object of 8255 paper is to direct attention to a bye.
portions of the whole n the fi illi ant chemical
ne
i d 3 which is exactly adapted for our purpose.
i 88 "s The animal and bees ast have been so
pee MER Ma ea € tota- enough to an common —— ims or bre searched by th 2 ea —
Crops ended, viz., 1, , M nthe <3 land may be — and whi n DPR ve
Temps 3, seeds mown ; 4 ACIE S MAE; 5, ia 0 come u with a second erop my» now mi gen cmon idi in fe laa á
apr
d
t
autumn ed to th l js "x tig ry
Tho second year . e is an certes be succeeded by another | beco — — — ages dd 5
pem 0 ad pes.
ur of 7 it enables the Wheat 4 5 8 eU referred to the proper manag kho own for years that nitric se, oe
— ing of a larger breeding 4 stoc san alter- | ment of fences recommended in opposition to Mr. | Ez ends of
Me Oats may be grown after 255 second year's | WAzLIs'sannual Meer Neira rmed, which ens d therefore the Eo
seeds and Wheat taken after the Oats. —.— leave the hedge ridge — heier sloping | Lae no novelty; but 2 we can o obtain 1
Keeping lan rass longer than one side, angular at top — wide at botto n -— from nitrate of soda as a s bye rolas, w M"
£ di sion a a have ea pud Hap har facilitating the mant |
" This, I be I have accomplished. Of the thou-
e prac- | the four-course system of ero ping. Mr. Warrrs's x ually imported into
d recommen sands of — of ite of ida ann impo!
» " — imi Od d them paper was no doubt perfe ell Set to the cds this country, I have been told, on good EE. that
It is well known that sulphuric acid is
SA ords— | from cial manu ing the cause of Turn urnip | factured in a large leaden chamber having po
cost of eultivation—the half of the failure, 1 1 HAF not there be grown without it a burner where sulphur is kept constantly Aeg-
the probable Te-Invigo- | them. had grown acres 2 year with by which it is converted into sulphurous acid.
n once in six seven or pm heavy loads of good farm dung and | great difficulty of the manufacture is to give
e to
—
d er. Into each
zu — dr al d as suun the i k few
s of ung alone, and it was plain to rege
imet of food for stock, every observer that the crop on those places was peter —— dum M 2 * Sulphate of so lt
hi He cake) remains in the pot, whilst nitri qe pass rides i
acre
| ha
ust come — here and there over the field without the — in the following ma
iving e heavy se th peine
e ago | oth:
3 red ne^ 4 he yeh. ago he grew 8 acres— | sulphurous acid into the leade
jing on 40, all up and looki U. Thei fi i ds, and becomes
m „ we eir manuring was from the nitrogen compounds, and!
8 z rie hich, with wat
aay is, | cwt, and 3 ewt. of nitro- | into sulphuric acid (S O,) whic! a
and R.
ut to
ee ge hate per aere applied through the liquid | by steam jet or otherwise, conde
greatly to ceo mi i iti i a
R TE ander ads mated ef managemen He found a difficulty in ,
ALLIS concluded his very excellent | per aere, but he no di
ere wi ith a recommendation to tenants to farm | 4 ons of Ma:
h
s e does not wi trav, | of farmers is against him—b LS T ae *
it rather strengthens it) —to stand for the most 1 agai but t we is we mem should be taken ¢ up. and that sud ni This t)
part, exceptin such modifications as ** circum 8 oe — — e Pepe vari M 21
week of riding with | as
ift.“ andlords ! F 8 Mr. TnETHEWY , of i bable that sulphurous acid, *
— — reser " the are! ni retation of — i of ‘of 500 ieee emere Wheat |a Tv ibis oxide (N
ments as would enable an intelligent tenant | has been taken eve — —
i ty other year since the date ecompos i
farm bel eoe Re em, "rh ch akez new Poor where = p have Wee [tede to etsi the sient ve
accordance stances” whi n
Spas c tal ken nearly as often, There as no evidence | ledge of the fact that a chemi pt
v
8 and impossi
Joxe 11, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 511
" y * — — ——
icular und of nitrogen and oxygen with the same reference to a celo result; and , subj ect, and ‘no one else i
opm ascertained, a as the fact of its being a — | thes it is poset we so often give | pts has, with | the like oben,
compound wa sufficient for the purpose intended, viz., | If our tion has — of it its results if we find i| It is sufficient to say of his system, that it deals with
e applying this waste product for the manu ufacture of | the poor but TT benefi rather than with facts, and with things rather
ammonia. | sendi: . their children to tie and aly ta take "n sq v words: that, — ded for a class of persons
At the commencement of E —_ — 1s transferred | away on the least € chance o € re to a elve out an existence from the material
escapin, : d th x
on of t gases — assumes thi
to my own laboratory, and cde and th in|the ma ; that in the education we yc to their|of those objects to be legitimate subjects of interest
converting them into ammoni 178 children, the springs of opinion among them have to them, and of reflection; and, as a principle, that the
This t I did not feel satis- | never m n considered, nor their wants consulted. Almighty, in manifesting his wisdom and goodness in
fied until I had t tried the eus on the large scale; It is in this that the secret t of Mr. . Dawes's success all material things, has, in mercy associa’
therefore, in November in the same year, an arrange- appears "uhr to lie. e elements of thought with labour, V — means of
ment was entered into for this purpose with Messrs. the springs of opinion amongst the poor by consulting | exercising the highest intélligence with the humblest
8.
ose kind assistance v" the matter I take this oppor- | to — wants, by : a careful study of their condition. That it ds for this reason that thinking and doing
tunity of acknowledgin: King's S ne s that what we
e" apparatus fitted s up w i f t faith object and
A furnace was built dite de: E: de of one man for hi — and, —— that the with an adaptation to some y-r we "p with. S araara
— vitri tate tre and a brick gas retort, about | wages of re dr the parish of King’s xad borne v
14 inches in — 8 feet long, "y d at both | very low, the mes fee. was fixed at — that of julgnent for no object, and with an adaptation wap
2 was h its whole length. This retort ot other ne neighbourin schools, under the im im on that end.
filled with and kept & a red heat; th il Assuming, then, that in the knowledge or science of
ott tube e the chamber, ar a steam- jet to supply the of him for what A believed to bea — 5 — and | the. inge with which - Observation is familiar, or
hydrogen, were attached to one end, ful educati associated with his 9
E. hes ied = fixed an upright leaden cylinder, filled create pri belief in his mind. legitimate sphere for 2 exercise nn labouring man’
and
De
coke, istened with dil Who to be — — farmers, and to pay the reason and reflection ; and that
these afford the means
"din the p gases and steam through the highest fee, ae radesmen and labourers, Mr faculties and of — them to
retort containing red-hot charcoal, both were decom- | Dawes claims the Te himself to —— e one are | the utmost limit of his powers, it s to “the science
posed, the oxygen of each uniting with the charcoal to — ithin "rd Walls of the school on of of common things“ an important visis in the system
form carbonic acid (C O,); the nitrogen and hydrogen perfect eq uality n their e gs of the school, and a gr — besar and this
combining to form ammonia ( O, or without -— in the 4 in which they are p and seems to lie at the root of its s Mr. Dawes thus
water, N H,); then ‘ho. probably forming carbo- € p same advantages of instru Pda ai speaks on t ems subj hei
i i Wi
i H
decomposed by the diluted sulphuric — the sulpbate Here, then, a practical omm ute of the mes foregoing pages which h is ofa — kind I woul say, —
of am Mole ida found remaining in solution. is | which * rad s recent measures appear to don — 2 — ^ — BÓ: —À
solution was then evaporated, and in Fely, 1857, I first | body, an nd — public opinion now wen qud — tary schools Ka such a character of usefulness to their
had the pleasure of obtaining amy quantity of crystals education i is not € mp ig — instruction qualifying t — to teach in me
of sulphate ded ammonia, by this process, from a vitriol | to men's social Áo t the right of all, inasmuch | Subjects, introgasing — —7 th ——— I
cham ber in a ual w ork. as it is necessary to the growth of every man's under- | and convey conviction with them the moment they aio -
standing, and, int stat f lite i may please|and explained. It isa great mistake to sup that bays or
invention b patent € ev when the T. God to ‘call him, an — element in his moral well- 12 and 13 years of age cannot —€— e
rati
make him undervalue it. It e th 1
Me t rocess as it is to those interested in the ael — that the iE of 9 among ci rl t. — s 12 ae katin aa electric appa-
matter, 155 ing deg so one else may apply it — rofit. the poor or years kin ratus, &c. One little asa text
ably than pe and feeling — that--as A i 2h ms To treat labourers always as separate and dependent — minas corse om atter and Motion,’ and this is
no reason why it should not succe: t | class appears the likeliest 3 perpetuate their The end of e dU ght to be, to prepare them for
—it will be the means of advancing the manu- state of dependence. In all we —M to avoid | those duties and those situations in life they are called upon to
factures, an 1 commerce" of this country, | wh — intermingling with them those s who, having — 3 they be *hewers of. wood, or drawers of water;
emer; i ieved some E
the sw ition, have ps 8 i i
Pee f. it may be thought that the process is only | degree of independence (the employers and the em- | citizens and good Christians ; and I thh Et will be found that,
adapted to such gases ‘as escape directly from the ployed), is to neglect an obvious means of cultivating | 27 rding as a teacher keeps this in making his instruc-
— and c d any v the late improvements as | those feeling of T. ene 8 * mutua D T M rof Tife, or aie 8
coke inde J „cannot be app lied; but and io and f P
vas — teacher competent to his wo!
Ta — rr ly ——— that many
and labourers of
carried out dn
bya slight 1 modification, to [UE ie ands |" ther : about
that may have been « — by the ilute sulphuric . o — of d and he ad ed their "s i ich-
T ae teal —— mora upon ii uch, no t, to the | rn
pei dp Red oiii ie ndpliig fest rr d ah ior oer
in the nitrate of soda need em that " 3 ed. "s nett to 9 9 . — : whatever other process of i
With regard to — ond “obtainable by these receiv: ucati i 4
eans, I have not as yet been able to ascertain wae children were receiving, on condition of their paying 2 idonee — —
pers ty as for e privilege a row te of remuneration. On place of it when he to bea man, and when his
— stated, it appears probable a ‘about half of — el and on the 2 jednention should te tell u “rated tim
the whole quantity arriving in this country is in fact that their children were offered a may be difficult to teach ‘him pce but not
the — of oil of vitriol, or * hurie acid. i iion at home for 27. a year than they could — by | ct Yin results, and
Now every t thousand tons of this cubic nitre, allowing sending them boarding school, for which they — these results toh
10 per pet Pi ities, would, i the better ed
ET
ati
N is substance, side my w. day. m enerally i count
hich, at 307. per ton, would be worth nearly 17,0007., d of the — are accordingly those of farmers ee ose —— € de mn —
many tho tons o Tm radesmen, and t. i wo-thirds those of moters of su. eola A
they us r 4t.
of the enormous amount of — material | late AR pro boen n disappearing E : : E — :
daily wasted. M à T 5 jobs et oe — pit uh instruction “of the
of i der thi FFF E dit of the | Shi
it, may render this W al vanneces , and — ion of the farmer and t the te
thus save the pocket of the m: urer, and at the la — that it is mpossi ible to conceive the existence Be uy: Doniores as NN books. —An Account of
same time benefit the public. Tournal of the Society of | of a class d bya class of 3
vm ig gnorant . or a „class of educated farmers in
THE MONEY VALUE OF MANURES.
If the one class is to be cated, we must educ:
cate| The Phosphoric Acid in Manure.— The The various sources.
| also the other ; and the e: ue ee the aon 3
e | they both thus need can a ote $a br x e of a of England are Q) copr dep De e the
here id and A o frat Ireland
wa; c we spend our own money, i adapta the chi ä À Price Porthonitrogen (in ;
we — e. What we give, we give to whom we like, and the King’s Somborne schools. is the nature of it| ofi (od I 5
in the manner we like best. It is with us rather a| Mr. Dawes "—— fally . — in dis werk en) ^ : y P mms
matter of sentiment and impulse than of deliberation. | titled “ —— ints on Secular Instruction.” No cost of the46 parts werte iis
We do not make this Men the same Tr: other person having these im to attention gb. o o Ms. por uon.
thought, and caution, thriftiness as we do — to have given the same deliberate consideration to the Groombridge and Sons.
ae
512 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jose 11, 1689.
— — 3 at which guano ness t ano , ness to 1 rec eive. any furth
F s phosphate of of time, | Md m cin * eee y further particulars he might wags Wish fy
Sere may be sald Ui cunt the Eti y" epe ton | ditus according to the foregoing scale of v * . Smythies, of Auck
at eee si 3 ^ Hua eule whichis te le èr e ier ose e sed an — ag to the Cou
i
$
as 2 5 New
round apa nei .. ether
CONDE S M ^ 75 7 10 0 „ " nd that, of guano. The grea were in possession ‘of any remedy t
d And in bolled bonca h - E super erphorphates omitting, wise) against a small ri ge Lye he stated
I have satisfied oif. iy direct Are that of course, sophisticated articles, which belong to no over the face of the country in swar rms durin À passes
pe ena bes phosphates in which are valued | known genus, and can be referred to va Arendt 2 7 1 N all vege tation 8 hot dry
chemists at thl It uncommon thing to fin d manures veni munication om Mr. reenw ood, of
duction of the erop o which they enen ely Ap: whieh the farmer purchases ammonia A the rate of | Brecon, was read relative to an insect tht had
plied, while ground bones are most efficacious manures. |1607, per ton correspond- | stroyed his Mangel Warzel Med ss hat a
ow ing figure. yes not worth more tan 21. or aed seen du urin ng the ie ie hat in b ` E
i lv advert + 1 been eli
li ected very un.
i e . 2 — prt “manures; but Per f le at from ime pof im Lor ners stated that]. ly
thei ron phosphates P not recie and 5 who has an interest i in the Ert nd bad found the Man 5 pte on his Io orig
as the Worm not so dissolved is 8 at 7l. ent of e should len d his aid i in stem mming | | eaten all over when about an inch hi gh by E
8l. a I submit that little relia can
* rif viera the: bas — tion in the minds of those Professor Simonds stated that his M.
be oth in the” „present mode g in pro; dm ing 1 know am 13 blishment in this | been wer by an undergroun id d rab. een ui
to sell Peruvian guano whic h oes not | 2 the insects to be forwar ded" to E
inso| insolub ea ph verde Muir v sad be gach a ety ro that substance from the Messrs. Gibbs. | entomologist, for ex xamination, an d; also so desi int the
Ik
I think it will soon appear that the rule adopted i in re- "
Lo. val Gi faki ) phosphate of | of Oyster and. other PRS are "€ and after ee that the Society would be obliged by mel
hemists who value (insoluble) p
*
2 now of a concern in
any farther
Ir" ein
e at 75 a ton say tha at the soluble ha 5 pho: aeg ative M. ps h ad vuffaréd: S agnis ae
2 orth four or 280. per "Ther lative ance of dak 8 mim the ae hi oe e mixture 2 thos shore named, and in case an ny successful euch,
3 ee of the mere Us oe two 8 is et follows :— s to dissipate the little ammonia contained in the|had bon f application. by an account of its —
f app.
e Wn i oa Bi- phosphate. limited pra of guano added. I see manure vendors ede
bs. .
at present selling superphosphate 9 to analyses copies of the pe
Phosphoric acid. 46.15 d e two years ago. nd a advertising | of the a Cottage [memo Society,” R Me |
V " | phospho-Peruvian guano, and ern ape that | Street, Mes |
Es their sample contains a quantity of ammonia Baron o Colt, of the Bavarian Legation, trans.
Supposing that a ton u 7 * tatna dad copro- equal to 15 per cent. of pee eaphate 1 Sat. mitted "pla: of the 5 and Almanae of the
hich is calculat o mislea e
De ey iw. f biphosphate from t $ A liec dun . — een » that quantity of sulphate is “The thanks of the Council: viti ordered for the above
oducing a. m een t chere fli only equal to about 3 per cent. of ammonia. I see, i as also for the ai. of the Stat
aha i f th l acid f 100 lbs. of |! t a ma e advertised under tlie tical Societ ety, the Transactions of t n
— — 45 Is, dave e in i Na we AL name of British Economical Manito i in these terms— | Society, and ^g American Geogra hien and Statistical
; h “11 to 14 ewt. of it dcr aere, though costing only 15s. | Society, which were placed on the tahle.
employ 1008 of real acid, which is supplied by 1236 lbs. to ide has Dei und 1to3cwt.P : ano” Te Covell st then adjourned to the 9
Seid aei : T equal to 3 ewt. Peruvian gu: ij e weekly
m liquid acid, which, a peas s wont 246 ff T (w rhich, t retail R i ce, would cost ab out 2L). Surely, no | on Wednes — né —
cnm à 58 0
— and to er dic the arce, wa are informed that Barn AND West OF ENGLAND. —Inaadition to thors
3 75 me Lt 3 0 more (than 14 to 14 ewt. As acre) must not be used ited
We get ines fli |
m
: — that a saving of 75 per cent. may be effected by the at their very su ccessful annual meetin
miste. (por ton: : DM io pus o B e of —— — ad is ba eked by thousands of | we now give an extract from the report of the Council
23 Ibs, of biphosphate 0 testi nials. the Society, some of the statistics of the
Of in other words, Y ees 8 fraud, I submit tl hibition will be fo
sulphuric aci wa OUR M C ded Ems 157. es 8 Ist. deal with men of w The Ge neral ] Meeting of the Members of the 89.
ton. | kuo wn pr obity—men who ax a stake in the ees ciety took pla ace last m J. Rinse D
Eu. Eno that f which, say to lose. President, in the chair.
ce oto i E s. d. te To send a sample of the manure which he pur-| Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, pres a Femke for
Kr new x „ „ 0 [chases to a chemist for analysis, and ascertain by the 502, for distribution as extra pri
MC x: acid, wo — P successful exhibitors of cattle and pa
Ate italy E Sg ey 3d. Tao Ei farmer should, in my opinion, always was received with acclamation, and a vot
Wa pits N gypsum, worth.. 1 3 0 manufacture his own manure, and Sa » imously p . The report of the Council
Pi erm Tek o ure a | then read decia the i the
or about n —" large, shallow i f mci governors, = life members, and 75
If those mox ens be corr I am at a loss to | bones being the c be capes — baie; moisten them with | other members, since pu m g
1 € Aeon value en PA of lime a t ng water, 'after which add one- | exhibitors of stock at t 5 meeting;
280. . per ton. And I do urgently i weight of brown sulphuric acid, which — of animals was: 177, sh
the stie ot par chemical | friends to this part of e | costs sia. que r Ib. ias * will be more effectual if 55, p The number of exhibit
2 7 pow SES rete and ac e first mixed together, but it is | impl ts was 108, and 1080 articles were efterel.
now explain for the safer $5; roce ed a ES oT Dave directed as a very violent In the io riated to machinery in motion
iHe fev ^ practical farmer, how hem may, with actior Ra e whe en and vitriol are mixed the: ere a * 18 e Dy The sted
0} £P I i
a first-class ch. ist), ascertain the value of a manure. ^ | da ays, rm mass should be 1 und stirred; ry! 5
The following | is the table of prices adopted up to the|the work of Solution ceases, frog s may T died — ot reporting that the pl Dicha comprised on
present time; and any substance not 3 in the with fine dry mould. most beautiful 5 of the works of art to be
aie wd Bes be Meet overlooked in the calculation. A lligent do who can command skill | found in Ts The Council are
Pis perton. |and every qs rug cience on out, and 1 who | moe te rib puce
0 10 is is content wi uneration
56 0 9 and capital, su
700 than the mere farmer ; t seems to me e
X H : desirable to teach the small farmer, w
20 0 0 me a prey to fraud, how he Say make his own
1 10. 0 superphosphate.
3 rresponden
»|. Thick or Thin Sowing.—I am about "i flag” gm
osphate, — of a etd of Wheat Ed with 43 pecks o s 3
Had I sown 2 bushels it
The
be le b multiply t ingredient | cultivation, » and cleanliness. A thi i
M ia prion per to a, and sso the produc idl | net re ere thick sowi sio crie d: i anata aie te locality and »
100 gives the price per t is sowing large quantities on highly farmed] From the interest excited in the b
18 Catt he mii of Qe ius e If I were to catechise a farmer jedem X a n ind: at the meeting, its effects n
average composition seed
ian n heb. do you get for one bushel of | doubt tend permanently to improve the agricul”
of 8 AR nobleman Told me to-day he got the neighbourhood. Alt ep gree
2 to 2} for one. I replied that my crops which he was | Could not expec! ers
compost Price per Value of | looking at would most probably yield 40 for one. oa
tone 100 tons. | Oats and Wheat we need not be iss
ress 7 co. pie Just yet. His land was
1652 56 0 6 924 ne province as St. Petersb
Organi ~ mati and E. 52.05 | 010 0 5 Mes uo * icey consequently th
Potash 3.50 20 0 0 70 — iain. good crop of weeds. J. J. M
Insoluble j phosphate | 22.78 7 161
Phosphoric acid in alka-
salts 334. equiva-
line sal
lent to biph 465 28 0 0 140
lime .. m P: ^ |
=
| Societies.
imc War RICULTURAL OF ENGLA:
£1321
Or to Wk te i perton E. y Couch held cld Wednesday, June Sih, 8th, best show men
ER rustee,
—— present, te: EM ht e pris
of the anomaly is simply this—that you the chair, ili seme as its disadvantages. It no doubt
va quantity of — paar from * use didates is directs atten a
Phate, and only part enn irit partiy n phos- " „R. Wainwright read. nventions; but at the weiten ied cru
in gen — estimated; but Mr, Way found this | * satin d that E he had 8 nne | that eaat a 4215 oec m iri Fee "lad
uncil expressed t tbe willing- | E is not due, and
g praise where it
Joxe 11, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE am AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
5
13
ney RE. : €
m: good conditi st | intelligent persons con
fr zope really good inventions have been — — however, that t the Turnips on 1 ade e the bing ¢ on | able that the tenant ha al poen pss highly unreason-
by the which the sun reflected were somewhat soft in quality; N — | e it t ar cae powerat certain
ed over by the » judges. o obviate this, I would recommend that some part sh periods to quit the unless the landlord have a
aA ted r notice of the D Show with T should be selected for the place of storing. In Ma asina ig powe d the tenant. ‘Now, such a
mit in ou winter of 1853 the wettest, AIL the — n ; 4 — clause as this wou i. my opinion negative justice, and
js nse ntity of Turnips, t
2 of 16 acres, a a 4 mile om the town; T stored up an i and built p often in the midst, of heavy rains ; | Strike at the — t of al > r — arise from a
ud b să there was pe space arn for the dis- | and, as in this case, building and covering were carried on at | lease. The clause in favour of the tenant would remain
2 whi f the ting, the | same time, and the roots keeping, 8 antil t the end of | a dead letter so mn. as tom r$ of the farm was
of th numerous attractions me ee heir — no battar proof eos could be — 2 — of — TES and profitable to bim
irability of the met angels and i "
ite lane O spa: ace te o spare. We — 5 — — Mie time of frost, are sure to give w y in the heaps, | Obvious adva "^ in —— ding an increas Án rent,
mand th hibition of fine and useful arts, a E] left out in the fields in winters of pro! V dre m wili under r pain of notice to quit. Witho ut any power of
week to e Nr k f t -colour er E re to rot immediately on b fresh time beg ing in.
- ^ 8 abs 3 e than a à have: gat found this to fal — p he agr ed rent during the whole term; and should not,
cop nty. We cam mpt to point out us Analyses.— Kia a ut the E I submit, object to the tenant possessing the power of
F ures offer or sale — e : :
principal UN or those worthy i of the most attention sults Y T andy, of manu quitting, under page rey Wear call fi
or a
cent., when im-
present seaso of 1 Reh — Soli — redi sedge serie de e "E
oae the 3 ion of two samples of Ritchie’s vitriolise ratively demanded; for a ii press circum-
wr trict is cel persica A hee r aie * bone compound, one of which had been e np s v stances of loss, a and not allowed to quit, would obviously
euh. diskret = aie e m W affo the ‘manufacturers and the other for a mem ier tenant, aries. as he would cease
ages nos E D opportunities 75 their | Soc jety Jn n Newtownlimavady. TT arts co contained ork and improve the farm 8 pags dg
— i — the loss of ction in mining leases, the power
ps " the “4 2 : ely ee p Herne ioni mi matters. 8 ven quitting on v ut, of the tenant only is eid i
i 75 : iversal, also o of his lease;
— n d md care authorities — Equal to bone phosphate made soluble .. 18.12 submit that the comparison is not ou of urse, | the
of the Society, the Mayor tal skin T eue Insoluble pho sphat i $i n 5 eral” 7 l is — yo — — Y»
of the most — Hospitality. speaking of the} Hydrated sulphate of lime . 91.08 .
implement department, although h there were but tb ee atter . th dn ob M ^ sliding s ro Sas "n
duce of the land“ —for insta eat ;
— E ^ right T mention. y a rather important 2 — 2 erg — a » 1.90 n amen such an 353 be made en-
Garrett & Sons, by which the fan is ren den more 100.00 + i mee eet e every contingency, yet it may be made
available in separating the corn, and being driven from | ble of yielding 2.9 ammonia.
the drum, a great speed is s attained and a ber of poem a e an gh value. sh as * are * — — give Ec. their tenants ——
bearin gs dispensed with, by Re n the machine is .—A sample of guano, term ed | * Ane bie moro! prede meg cn I
à noticed an im- Patagonian by the importers, had lately been examined, = — ing, th ht, “whereas “in the ie coe -
provement. in | ploughs by Messrs. Taskers, by which A and w uch superior in quality to that reduction as a rig
— e "i to this country. been, he be Bt db
repeated Murat ed MN n
without dragging on the ground, the improvement ) was informed, taken arri d reste amare ing
Messrs.
C introduced without increased expense
s, and Messrs. Ransome
inge collection of their sterling impleme
e useful 1 of the 8
den: of Pricer given tr byd i Dis, — —
The Jud
pen ETE i in on 1-2. er
Leer 3 the lists, pus wer
make
Waa
patting the Poets s eso was at 1 den zd
at, a ree prizes vg respectively |
to. enkins | “Calvi, and May, whilst several others
were com may e an
It esting to n adio fi
Tu Near eet a shoe rang
— Sims with a -
mu
how were a
Inferior Phospho-
h placed before e: meetin ees
es beco usted, an
spirit broken. I will with. great deference 3 2
the consideration of the club the basis of a ease, calcu-
viz, a fair proportion of the amount od of the
roduce ; yere it also would qu the ge from
the evil consequences arising fall
prices, Ko., as hereinbefore enumerated. The
principle i is illustrated in mining leases, ren 1
viz.. tha’
rd reserves for himself 1-6th or 1-8th of the uu
ue; the same
The ques
S
9.66
ble of yielding 1.61 ons ammonia 25.42
* — general
iA
Su!
[omm carte, MM.
i ca 5 pried am
nsolub! y —
.. 15.72 P
18.94 |landlo
0.00
Peru Guano. — Dr. Ho; odges
mple Potties. Peru-
vian guano offered for sale in “Londonderry at 121. per
ton. It was darker in colour than that
examined for Messrs. Seagrave of cried and w
not value for 3 more than 67. per ton. abe following
100 parts
me standard of
der cn
| value can be Mid [ue of * this is ad practical in
case of indirect selling im distant markets. Ifa code
of t this zort oap can be.
It was e 3 Lem
er by the Poka J. Sillifa who was well
and its interest was jdm out w *
a struc
suggest; but e Ti myself unequal t
the 5d „trusting t iat they may see it. orthy the
omi neis of a eee committee of their body to
anil 2
*Capable of yielding ammonia 3.24
— — *
Nzw N-TYNE: * Leascs.— At a late
monthly ‘meeting o z of this club, Mr. Dunn read a paper |
this from which we “ake "the following
an ee professional
Sootla
M uar been
:—Having during
CHEMICO-AGRICULTURAL, ULSTER : Steaming Bones
"Mr. M*Mechan gave an account of some digo c he
wee with bones softened by stea
with bo
lised
experiment, the great r
fih
conversant with the princi
at the same time, direct
io regard:
tives of e tenant, — ——
agriculture i in | first to the landlord, at a p
f | interested re: ind also p
. — for added value, or 8
S as be A be fixed y gemere s ogy ee e grounds
of such cl
der the prevailing cusi
ears' leases, and I am constantly spen the
il effects upon districts where leases are not 2 *
tained by the employment of the 00 ive
„Though
‘the lime and other constituents of the soil, yet the ai
— of the A divided tri-basie phosphate w.
zreater than could be effected by any mechanical m ethod
of di ivision.
for erms rof agree
tly por o corn 2
nant, , and t
d et
ait Storing of Root Crops.—The following letter, in re-
aaa ne held « on permanent leases
“` Having just seen, in the report of your proosedings
last tet fom Be aa t dine A
Schi which he
ice hitherto
thefarm. As to the most desirable
there is none equal
y size,
and carried up — — at equal
top (taking care, in the course of formatio M wann
or even htl; damaged vg P^ well as
A freely his capi tal, labour, lo fn cmt m agree in
pee one he so long live) "that
to himself
and famil y, whilst
referring a
Me r
* Such I understand to form the basis ofthe
beef ak ae ee
rticulars of which have been
n. The object to be attained ux such lease vial
o farmer ly spend and
H h partic’
directed is - apparent difficulty in laying 2 P ah | I
principles as will be agreeable to both Srp eiae
De» which, with great deference, I e
follow:
1. "The e difficalty of establishing a fixed rent for so
‘bad
smallest in size,
Hing). There is no
for the perfect covering of the hea; :
or th p e straw should
ies evi aly and n ; and with as much care as in the z
ec — a corn stac! attended to, a very ordinary suppl;
: z ipe op nnd ing is quite unnecessary. 5 bes i x
ean vouch for the fact, that at that iod the pln
they were, on that
side as hard and firm, and in ev: every
.
ru
not stricken by the sun, y way
state of labour and the value o of produce. gis
2. The absence of a provision iz perang a tenant
ie only to quit at certain appointed periods, but to
alienate ade lease in case of eath or other circum-
stances; ae cui qi it to the landlord under tenant-
right com
i hat his capital and industry ma have ? produced.
Upon the ou — of eating the lease, I find that |
h — three leagues long), an:
eee have areh nE — over z the la — the en.
cultivated fields with their beautiful green or their
jaly the | brilliant patches of Colza, and thickly studded with
observation of certain ae gel land —— s is,
— as here eo would negative the very e:
I deny, the principal object being to
3 ar — i
befor
saw the
"ets s along the top oft M
we arrived i in 8 ight of
waves of I us ned
n long lines of curlin
e
embankmen
seashore, ¢ on m
North Seq
variation, for w
—
Pri
hant to 3 Less ke have a
— don: Mr arae eat FK hg ee which ma;
rn uring the currency of the leas
A discussion of the subject was postponed till the
following month, when several addresses were de-
livered, which will be given next wee ET
walls, a prospect i is made up, whieh if wanting in Migs:
is at |
| least pleasant to the eye; and abounds a t all events in
[e ns kn of interest which affords m x thoug ipt to
bo» ntemplative mind. For — step one takes,
e; fn 1d one sees, tell of t battle fought
of marshy
footing and a sca:
, SMITHFIELD ( Cine The flowiMe is their, bala For every yard of the f istrict we are now
| 2 through! has been wrested from the ocean ; ; in
of walling gidma
scarce Ec
d on whose
tread ; on à poo
Les in hand of f bankers, Dec. 10, .
1452 7
0, 1857 6 11 H | corn waves, and where now tl
are heard as it goes on merrily with its — or the
1 8 howl of the wind as it sw ept and
hea) d the roar of rae ocean x si heri in s Onde
[tonem de the bos ch, reigned su mpe the olden ael
Hong ago. Slowly, par foot by foot, à — I bee
n from old Neptune's hands; nes it not for
re
x E 26 4
Half. yea 7 dividend on 3 per cent. "Consols, due e
July, 1858 27 1711
Annual — for 1858 si 1 i ^
»
Received since (by Hon. — —
3 3 0
700 0 0
a een for Shaw 1867 7310 0 evidences whi ich ar everywhe re met h, y
h Nds. }
&
m
ial suber for 1853
AGERE 1854 Thus not far —a few minutes’ td i from aon
thes village of § St. Pierre. sur la Digue is met with. _As
more chaps produce.
embankmen
tts is curious eld hereafter
o trace vh » = 852 d
» 144
» 1855
T 1856
1857
1858
1859
Non-members’ fees. Stock at Show 1858
"pene "
For steam engines
its name imports.
»
»
eoocococo::
n the
fou the W À M
ook the and as
— eh iis quiet dr si press the eit dn
ss of the houses, or wish examine s p church, |
ce oul t you
Mee
210 0 0
130 4 0
603 15 0
and barn wo 45 0 0
3278 13 9
Drafts, prizes 1857, not N at bankers— I
0
9
M'Combie €
Earl Darnley E
15 0 m
9| n
£3293 13 9
the:
INVESTMENT ACCOUN
1858. Dec. 1, Amount of Stock standing. oes
cent. Consols in the name of the trustees
includes 10001. s income ordered to
not a
. £1920 14 2
digue or sea wall, li at out the tide |i
To orning's gue ubjected.
uxuriant Gras
| pun and the shells of which, or rather the
lose
remai ins of those whi ch a clo se examination only
bis.
invested until want 9 expenses )
q^ am led at ——— 985 0 0
155 10 0 res.
55.0. cats as we
and all, w.
| nothing bat their towers left, which looked u
ed and heavy. in the landscape. This |
rame deniko of the spires - X were led to |
understand, done by the orders o
wished not to ‘gi nh.
landmarks to o.
drove emen to notice how
3
the and ca
ere stripped of their spires,
nfinished,
A few words will suffice
method of the formation of E
dive
,
T
cecum ooooooo
V host "waters of — two canals | scan!
draina:
23
* H
eig the "distri a
Courtrai ;
1616 6
8514 5 parallel to ea
110 111
Postage and receipt
to Dec. 1, 1858
Gos te time ( (as Lud ad
eie "más to — *
fron! line vos Belgian feom — in the
- ho erection -
the line
Merc tme invested, » added to Stock. in 3 per
[of e local "ud
e Polder land in Belgium vast extent, an 1
ary à increwing, for the etn of the sea i ti
abet it is ually leaving Bel E
Jy T "s. abet of land rom tes ÈA |
nsols .. 1510 0
£154 11 7|$V
1827 7 8
1 6 eulti
23203 18 $
2 — was in
The farm houses had | i
attached to — — which,
the greatest care and
of flowers and plant showed that we -«
Balance in
Balance
"ee 4, 1858, Audited and
. (Signed) 2
hand of bank: 1
EN 1858
correct,
found
Wa. SANDAY,
W. Torr,
coast. It
he hbourhood of Valais, in round to L'Edes
— AL. subsoil of the Polder peg nye "
bo gathered rainy from the above description of :
w
D and
as they o here.”
No roat 1o love for ^ ugs he
8 ere indiffer
* it
town than one where staid iei mete
figure how
eria r 7 — than that wh aeu Du shim fo range of mechanism
is all `
— E 3
was the large when the
“This
are
presence to the flowi
ous | destruction
ed
Polder
warn" the hour, whi . i
if cro
Jmanur
where eve of pure pont
of the dykes in times tempest e he
The cq notable feabure in the cultivati e t
existence of the “fallow” systems oi
all hereafter fully tee
hor Flanders ci
301.
ere frm
dent. fat as a bo ds
eans dull o
this
|
a bow ling green, was came close the town ;
ie e. Temi à farm with rough rad Pis IE — "^ and land
— fo: bage gradually f.
— —
o fi
sea a from the town, ‘that we had to walk: for nearly two |
the
3 and edi iets L od
The, cattle are
to
de
portant part in ga breeding
ders for their fi tem. Stolen crops, so re- com lete Mowing Machines offered to the public. They have
le 5 ^
Juxe 11, 1859.] 1HE — CHRONICLE, AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 615
istinguished Flemish agricult uring| . SHANKS'S PATENT MOWING MACHIN AMES PHILLIPS axp COS S PRICES of GLASS
c Molan t the system of root valtiystion and the AND C. LEE, NunsERYMEN, Ham stis have J ' for the present m
substitution of the perpetual cropping system of Flan- „great confidence in recommending — as the most HORTICULTURAL GLASS, Srocx Sen
the sky would present another aspect—black with — gn respectfully nation — publie to — re the
winter’s leaden-hued storm clo uds; „and when the
"gn and bearing igh as on wings the sea spray,
ORNAMENTAL W
I estitute
| th Bec
wap t are ae Polders the nore of
* ap health places for man to pitch his — in. The
ofte of 0
———— Saturda th.
HORTICULTURAL GLASS—JUNE TARIFF.
HOMAS MILLINGTON’S reduced Tariff of
ob by a T] by Sh, siu bh, 9) d 7
100 boxes,—4ths EX. 12 6d. ; 8ds do., 145. 4d.
* had ce with SHANKs's Machines, and haweever|Ipby 9, 12by 9, 13by 9, Mby 9,
markable a feature of Flemish husbandry, form gene- | found them do their work admirably, effecting a eat saving 12 „ 10, 13 „ 10, 14,, 10, 15, 10 T
—or at least where the E dg small extent only -4 Men and not liable to get out of order. For d „apply 18 „, 11, 14,, 11, 15,, 1L " » Ad d
1 sA p of the Polder cultiv: Agents, J. & C. Leg, Nurserymen. Hammer: mith. R fe 12 3 v3 e 10 rie iP u 3-
x 5, 13, 19; 12, 105, 18, 1T.
d Unlike the other districts ot * the holdings e KS’ Amo quo DAWN. MOWERS a are oghes- 18, 13, 19 „ 13, 90,, 13, 21 „ 13 sey 195. 6d. 14s, "n
of the Polder districts are comparatively large ; a farm tionably the ines for Monti awns, 16 „ 14, 17,, 14, 18 „ 14 E,
7 8 1 " i Vi & ta 2 rtp vA ee and Pony Machines are 19 „ 14, 90 n 14 21,, 14 **
1 RN SETS s nus 8 This rea 4 cris iio cally —. — Ei E e. d and Deliver zn SER e
management of the land is observable at once, for Oni. gents: Corram & Co., 9, Winsley Stree Picken GN Dudes
i ^ of the landscape being dotted with s numerous — 200 fet 4 5 m Suse
rm houses, which g give 80 mu ch of human interest to AL GAR 300 feet 3 E p oz.
many a Flemi t seld Q'AMUELSON'S. PATENTBOYD LAWN MOWING
them ; they are few and far between, and divided from D and ROLLING M ACHIN E, , the only neu that. vii dat vet 3 HOUSE SIZES, as sprint] by = » Mr. Rivets.
ds bad at the best but so fearfully | as well as dry G rant à easily 20 in. i
B » al transit in ong ie éd weather oe handled, and readily kept í in Ti a "poing . — E a ik
six men. 3 arriagt : 22 ~
gen - 47 a stop to all communication dete Ceki aiey tetida T — 6d. and upwards | 20in. by 15 ip.) Bnglish Glas „
them as perhaps this feeling of their utter isola- | Copies of testimonials post free on . fot to Mr. SAMUEL- IMATE SQUARES. Per 100 fest
tion in the pe of winter that made us look upon a | so's London Warehouse, 76, Cannon Street West, City; Messrs. diva ex hs — 77 by 8
Polder farm house with a melancholy s which never DzANE'S, London Brid London Bridge; or tho Works Banbury. Oxon. un eem ER x4 M SI D £ 7 } n 6
E NE ‘A! 10,, 8 103 „ hrs b Ud
Flan ercel: shon: ma; used anywhere at any time, are self-sharpening, JAM LIP
E of 2 2 ira lei ona as ail’ Nature and ada of ween B — — d res parts. ——.— 130, LP rimas pig 27 Wi ithoi "d Sain E.C.
hooked, im its ch influence, still a wind came | Manufactured and Sold by toe ee Co., the original FOR CONSERVATORIES, ETC.
sweeping up from the sea which somehow, e introducers of Mowing Machines D CO. supply 16-02 SHE
on the lofty bank, made us think of the time when] Several infringements of their patent having taken place, DP'y
N ET GLA
of British 3 at prices er ip ie 2d. — —
m per square foot for the usual sizes requi ny thousands o
cin re hir y deg gi d e TL d 2m whic cha re kept ready packed for immediate delivery.
» "
and Estimates forwarded on application, for
i f Price
cote cage ICKSLEY, SIMS, AND e», "S (by Roran Lr. PATENT ROUGH PLAT PIC end GLASS, GLASS
Colza, would come areering wildly Over snow- clad N IN y INE. TILES, and SLATES, w ATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING
TERS) PATENT LAWN MOWING MACH GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT, PLATE GLASS
M
WINDOW GLASS,
& Co., 35,
* "x
5] oz. to the foot, 11s. 6d.
per 100 feet.
1 llby9, 13by9, *
sea breezes too often, in g health on their i by 9 94, i? i ib, 11 by 19, 12 Pu 143
wings, carry the seeds of ague or of the “ Polder fever.” 20 100 abe, pet i
All these things tend to make the [ very scant 20 by Pom s» lO... 94s.
as compared with other parts of the province, and — uH Superior . 18s. .. 27s.
labour to be comparatively dear. A feature of Polder AII Boxes included.
farms of practice to be noticed here i 0 hard House sizes as au pO H.E
| ticed here is the
giving a portion of ploughed land to the labourer, who
Fla: it. Th
H, LANCASHIRE.
— ng this Lawn Mowing Machi
uest a strict examination, or pisi le a —
ox of construction, „lightness, vao nm E
Ore!
Hartley’s improved Rough Glass
— . —— in great variety, at 9d. and 1s. per foot.
Pain e White Linsee il, T
n. dim Colours Varnishes, Brushes, Lamp Glen &c.
hopsgate Street Without, same side as Eastern Coun-
from d tog in thickness.
d Oil, Boiled urpen-
labourer. he Flax grown is wor for domestic partion Slasly reques
purposes, while the Potatoes are used for food or for a r mo kind of plain, ie in
cow or a pig. aright, — wir enr y NOUPLANIPS IMPERIAL WIRE AND WINDOW
Uu. we have — the wheels so as e to pro- BLIND MANUF 370, Oxford Street, W.—
Misc ellaneous tect from injury So ga 4 shrubs, & oa — — Wire work of supe ior "ipie useful and ornamental,
as the machine, at e time not being liabl e to obstru: for Conservatory, Garden, aina -room, Flower Stand and
Hounds.—How A an n established pack | or damage. ket, Garden Arch, ery, Fencing, Birdcage, &c., and
Len
5m working of = is generally done by the family of the] P., S., & Co., in trod
|
|
Price of Fox Bas! Ros
of fox — is cheap at a tho usand r twelve hundred . h this machine works m: on undulated and sloping Domestic — other purposes ‘in elegant rss Ban Aviaries and
pounds, is with, n style. fendis Aid
—
Ter ice a something es Un the 1
th i
former sum; and the machine our new : ON, late STEPHENSON
Sarde fetched MOD guinea” When bition Sie ae VIT. mM ide 5 deren e Siret, London ae at om |
happily Weck Mr. Fol; ey to lay —. . earet revolving of -— spherical guiding balls, under the most Hurdles, — Improved Iron and Copper Conical
circumstances, never fail ^ "s for Wi f
E his ack was sol 1 fon r 3000 gui The TE EI à to this X: a rack and pinion I —— XXL or Warming Buildings of every
otion, the cutting parts (t being nd Estimates furnished
10 couples of hounds out of his kennel, pa the — of A pr Preston v ‘a 5 machine Aion reg na Pos fone oa een
Stamford gave 470 guineas for four couples of Mr. | the same time upon the Poneta mac e ge
Rn d 13 s hor From the Encyclopedia | machines a slow, tedious, abba operation, into one ENRY FREEMAN. Horrors and
Bri New Edi. of quickness, ease, and certainty. Hor-Warrr APPARATUS MANUFA ACTORY,
erroe e BE a PRICES:— —— £ s. ckney. repu 90 3 Good su! tantially-bu
Patent Lawn Mowing Machine 13 inches «+ 510) greenhouses fixed in e kingdom, for cash, 42 T
— ces to Corresponden Ditto ditto ditto 16 „ 350 long by 18 ft., 997. ; 21 * K. 50 l.; 12} ft. by 10 ft., —
Black PUDDIN 7 Take 1 quart of whole bovis boil it | Ditto ditto ditto — 19 „ . - 15 A first-class Co Conservatory, 30 30 ft. RNC 16 ft., 1301, A large asso:
and let it steep all in the water; boil a penny loaf in | , Ditto ditto Cu — 22 „ 22 5 to 22 0 Went kept. Estimates
milk, put in 2 „ fat cut small, four „ Some oF SER msi d 3 10 o 10 10
Pennyroyal, or Onions, black Pe per, | Bean, Oat, and t Led è M ni m e
Nutmeg, Cloves, and M Mace, and what blood you » Gorse an —— zh 10to150 0
. " poop Boil it ” no Mil. 10 to 12
hot to prevent — " IELUSTRATED CATALOGUES can Ve — G. MESSENGER, ee mee BUILDER and
BroOD STRIKING in sh te of the natare of apopl lexy, that is, OOMES’ GARD DGING z P W. 6
. the blood is suddenly determined to a particular part of the I 4 Cg gg T ee GM MM
body, and the vessels become — sed uper is CABLE PATTERN. hbo
esirable if the sheep can be seen suffici early, — Erections,
— Eie ot often the case. A — of the | Sod w Piro
pro-
duces, with saline purgatives, isthe best preventative. WCS,
ictoria Little. We have for 8 eard of I fitted to pleas.
thrust forward o: Conservatories fitted up in the best
Be B: 8 Window pke riae ier epe,
en! hanism b
lighi 0 che entire length
do not fail to give complete — (as num — Ted
— 8d.
Valcourt's ean Te It was a box churn we believe with a doubl Loomes & Co., med Whittlesea, near Peterborough. monials can show), for the = reasons :—They are much
— ter
exterior, the interval bei f wi lighter in appearance, more dura le, much stronger, and
f k rtea o — 2 — 3 of ith water VED HOT-WATER PIPE. cheaper than any other can possibly be.
employs any of these niceties of contrivance. Put your milk HE HORTICULTURIST will find herein an ree years’ trial has proved his PATENT BOILER to be
or cream of the right temperature into the churn and churn it ey amas i om superior to any hitherto invented; a great number of houses
in à room of as nearly the right temperature as possible. ea of n N an be h at once with this "Boiler, with the facility of
FLOOR FOR CATTLE STALLS: H P. Asphalte flooring has been | important Turin Ax eating any separately.
recommended.. We give the following recipe, not on our and may i^ pro-
EL MM 5
: Such as is used for topping wal ectiy ,
— : tar ; level the ground perfectly. mix pine damp, or saturated with
re tar, Kerr parere of che datter to each bushel m — I
best do done on a boerdéd or sonata —
one inch thick ; i roll till hard with tees Hany ar crt, 2 simt
Plan
—
imei dry, v ad MEUM Pii inches tages.
purpose for oor is required. Warming and Ventilating Co (Limi
ri - po rema unti ic T e RE at 6 incl 6 inches 5 George Street, Weskudiniter, SW. Sou TN
„ 9d. — —:: Hidden ino Tot ERR UE OO DR
bere ar Aami per bushel ; — — "C —— the
MANGEL WURZEL: E L S. We should h. pix on in imm ii a a manare regulated in —.— to suit
. soving and commo ape — h per any person, and to eut any crop with — y ——
CE 5 between the — — of ey em Pera horse For Amateur — they are very desirable, as ner
3 oe — s d being rich afford a healthy and inten They have .
ears, and fo; REN pas
TON. A reply has been ty, are z 0 ded.
has been published m Y | Iron. nmonger, Hardwareman, and — in the Ui
of fa 5 4
Fa — — "Published by Ges on this —— Should Kin Kingdom, and wholesale of the Sole Licensed Makers, Wt.
ol
Illustrated descriptions and prices of his Patent and greatly
M ce as seien ENGINES sent free upon ore:
timates, May. monials for
Chronic 2 ?
Il
pu
^e blished m opinio pesce ag tA 1. 15 recommended. the ge k 8
by Mr. Phi m — economy, ,
sid as the whole t he pamphiot ge br his te Laon | Upwards of 50,000 of them have been sold. „„ or aa im Fone N Xx
4s. 3d. each ; Ouid on adt
1 5 Prices: — MÀ —— dutemist
hill Street, Westminster. a Deen eae — „ | —
Adelaide Place, London
*
}
THE GARD F — a
= oro eae SUN | rs
& HEATING BY HOT WATER
I
LT : TAS x AE i Mt : Lud Mm
m jg obo EE ! mun m
JOHN “WEEKS & COMPANY,
KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, LON
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HOT-WATER APs MANUFACTURERS, ENGINEERS,
AND IRON FOUNDERS.
PLANS, ESTIMATES, & ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON APPLICATION.
menners cannon sat |FOWLER'S PATENT STEAM PLOUGH
SEEN AT WORK.
8 SETS or yii ope denim SEQ. v can be seen in operation o»
of July next at the w of
SUFFOLK AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION AT IPSWICH
SOUTH YORKSHIRE AND NORTH DERBYSHIRE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY AT SHEFFIELD
SUSSEX AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY AT HAILSHA
ty Het m about BOILERS For further particulars apply to
ater, Boilers have now —
wen’ the the eat a prosent invented, They we JOHN FOWLER, JUN., 28, CORNHILL, LONDON, EC.
rudem. ts
Me. 1 aoe — each ; . : ng
ie toe = “oo ew HORTICULTURAL WORKS,
‘rought .. .. » Ms $ W.
— t cin Pe dmn deos DANVERS STREET. PAULTON'S SQUARE, CHELSEA, S
stock, and are to be had only of J. JoN£s, 6, Bankside, Also
every description of Saddle and Cylinder. Boilers, Hot Water (C
Pipes and Connections at prices lower than those of any other t
house in London. Estimates for 8 Apparatus erected
an III. ogue i 1
on.
on application to J. JONES, 6, m Southwark, Lond.
P eu AMADIO'S dates Compound MICRO-
SCOPE, 2U. 2s. ; Students’, 31. 1
ce meri eir kn athe , of riwha Street, and
are 0 |
excellent Words, N 8 e more expensive one especially.
i large | SCOPES.
ing the names of 1000 Microscopic objects, post free, for 4 s MA.
TO HORTICULTU
GGAUSTLETTS PATER PATENT VT CHRONOMETRICAL I
combines an mek daw loll Nate dme d im: EET
FB
an 2 mu 1
Tometér wherein glass de LLL LR Din
writes |, Hil mb a mi
are | REIHE e a e CHANT
when. Mn nd ilr
of dite description, edad on the most dedit à rincipl
Wi HEATING BY HOT WATER. Gs
3 ‘ally d à fully prepared
destin of publie and private bing, vig i Names dk eder wül a ll se Ne oh
Society's 2e n 10 ii in the most efficie His system is the most sim le Ee dai adipi A 1 TÉ
» long experience 6 be the bes [* rie be constructed at less cost, and is i ore easily managed than th
This is the only instru. _|s Hill Ma nature which hav tite x notice of the public. plicity of cA
ment that registers par 6 iiil T I ! "| has he ae to fac t yep STURON CORRUGATED ARCH BOILER, which vog pe^
Sad wie towne ed PM MM ased or many ve m = ven the greatest suae tn mea i "
no boreal arist should | pai !l 1 mu) usiness is fits consistent with best er.
be without and M > = a
hacc EET H. — — on-Tees, Plans and Esti Estimates furnished on the shortest notice. à i
© down 18,1859.]- ———
THE HE GARDENERS
ENERS' CHRONICLE A
* ‘MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON’S
NEW GENERAL CATALOGUE
C
SPRING LIST OF ORNAMENTAL BEDDING AND SUMMER-FLOWERING PLANTS, | px consequence of the Horticultural Societ
Is ready for dist enm echa] di 45 post) wherein are described the fol lowing NEW PL
ANTS and also
ections for sowing, rearing, and final planting of
SPERGULA PILIFERA,
awns, wit!
wing, o
n La thou of which g
— red Me 3 E 5 fine lan at Forest Hi, near to the Crystal P ge * Broa ed at 4s.
Seed Pac 28. 6d., 58.,
per dozen, according to their respective siz
kets, 6d.,
BEATON'S NEW —— 58 GERANIUMS — pues m Cai um qd are—
ALLAMANDA VI ron
CALOPOLARIA AMPLEXICAULIS ALBA.
DAHLIA, THE WHITE UNIQUE.
bor NEW WUCHBIAS a Sende
PELES NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS
IMPERIAL CRIMSON and the MOD
GE
- — NOSEGAY.
SILVER CHAIN.
ST. CLOUD.
GOLDEN TOM THUMB.
CERISE 1 UNIQUE.
THÉ RA
OF sonatas
THE MOST er COLLECTION
Nursery, and to w
time this season. Tho pre
U
RED are those now in bloom at the Wellington
h E. hs HENDERSON & Son gem called the special — of cultivators for the first
ent season is the most suitable for sowing
e CINERARIA, AND PRIMULA
io secure an early and continuous bloom of the above favourite — for Greenhouse and Conservatory
decoration. Seed Packets, of first class quality in each
kind, at 2s. 6d. each.
Wellington Nursery, St. John’s Wood, London.
ood established tufts foc peus he e ORU EURA SOCIETY’S
and 2
Tru VERBENA. —Edmonds's set of the above as
nt out t| ri M:
— inca — E^ r. Chas. Turner. Twelve of
3 urserymen, Gray c
BUSBY’ z STOCKWOOD OLDEN Are GRAPE.
ET * Nr
y ty havi
abandoned their intended ee at St. James’: s Halt
on the 29th and 30th 4, - month, account of the 2
sustained by the pla m the * dryness oi
lighted DNE:
JAMES VEITCH, JUN., begs to announce that the PRIZE
of 51. 5s. offered by "him for the BEST THREE BUNCHES of
the above GRAPE. will now be awar2e1 at the next Meeting of
FRUIT COMMITTEE, at
ion Place, Trafalgar
TUESDAY, (zia i 1859, a at 3 P.
N. also offers a PRIZE of 5l. 58. "ir the BEST
mann BUNCHES Exhibited at the CRYSTAL PALACE
on July 12 should be delivered there not later than
Place
11 A.M. op — d and d ME Jun., will be happy to pay the
carriage
DER THE PATRONAGE OF H.R.H. THE My Consort, Tur
RI AND THE LEADIN 0 AGRI-
S have produced
hibited at a ME = are 80
hat com
Yellow Globe Mangel
CHOICE
FLOWERS.
BUTLER &
SPRING CATALOGUE OF
M on a new and original plan, with ntes 2 and Cultural
new and —
and re
logue, now
the greatest care,
/ whose Seeds, especially Carna
S —— the yen d from that
McCULLOCH'S
SEEDS,
Notes,
species an ‘ound in any other Cata-
and post — — —
and m — be had fr.
FLOWER, SHRUB, TREE, and Y VEGETABLE SEEDS, the crop of 1858, saved with
by the most eminent rowers.
We may also va that the Sardi
tions a
nian correspon ndent of Messrs. JAMES CARTER & Co.
e nd Pi cotees, „ have ove such universal satisfaction, has |
rm
eri —— Globe*
Red
d3sacasuu l1 .
d J DS
i]
et SG ονοο N
his variety have
at Sm ithfield Club.
EAT, MUSTARD, LI INSEED
0 1008 SACCHARATUS, 1s. per Ib.
TARES, SAIN-
vind PERMANENT PASTURE. —— mE: RYE-
GRASS, CLOVER, &c., at lowest ma
contracts for e — it packed for
exportation to all parts of the world.
Oxford Street and Above Bar, Southamptou
NER — 6. K-—XOE-D
8 x
CHOI CEST
To meet the i rtp demand for
first class flowers, particularly FLORISTS’ FLOWERS,
supp
he saves to Messrs. BUTLER &
of the great London houses
Lock. Let us
or the excellence of its arra ts.”
ot Tear ty astho gr notio of B. Mo
Ws , that ie pics to uo M io as in s
Tree, and V. | Seeds. This list
+ FVV
the abundance of its materials previou
BUTLER axp McCULLOCH, while drawing attention to their general SPRING CATALOGUE which has elicited such
high encomiums both from the Fhe Hay m botanist and amateur cultivator, avail N of the present opportunity
to select from its pages the followin
(23) ACACIA GRANDIS (TRUE).
One of the most beautiful of the A. pulchella section, pro-
d deep golden balls. Of these — and highly orna-
mental plants our — — Meine fewer than 47
varieties, all of the most deco
70) A ti pi i E ^
Of these beautiful ittle res d we have a splendid collection,
embracing all the most admired kinds, collected and arranged
for us last m rire by M. e the Curator of the Zurich
Botanic Gardens. The value lants for D
o require comment. These collections
containing, as they do, species ataly ot
(199) CALLICHROA PEDATA.
A new crimson annual with white eye, very beautiful.
(217 a.) CAMELLIA JAPONICA.
From the newest and finest striped and other
much admired.
that
CEANOTHUS AZUREUS GRANDIFLORUS.
lius, and Fontanesianus are all
beautiful varieties of this y ornamental genus, of which
we possess nine splendid varieties. — equally suited
for conservatory and out · door decorati:
CANNAS.
Of these we possess an extremely E collection,
(625) HABROTHAMN U8 HÜGELLI.
, purpureus, belli are all handsome varieties
hia Doa utiful genus, which ak tine having a greenhouse or
i should grow. are extremely orna-
ment
(665) HIBISCUS ROSEUS SUPERBUS.
This, Syriacus, and Thunbergi we can hly reco: d.
Allare S plants o of great beauty. — Qm
en 688 US OR SORGHUM (Chinese Sugar Cane).
this important class we have nine new — Mo. ctor
varieties —— Afri — te ome T to be more ornamen: to con-
pii saccharatus.
Holeus
. — DECORA ALBA R.
The above, purpurea, —— — — are — iy iud floweri
— — p: are also Well
immer
Of these both Sem, fl roe go ae choice,
ese rge flow: cy, ory , and of
other —— — 1 eee Scarlets, v we _— a fine
stock, w.
1149) — CAPSIGASTRUM.”
e tree, covered all winter with a profusion | S
a handsome plant for greenhouse or sitting
ms.
(1335) BIGNONIA RADICANS rM mes
Finer and brighter than radicans; flowers in l
who for- | which enables
80
L UTR O. have ve^ ready for
t
sending ow NE RA 8 Mie eee
which their have
has induced them to
E., P., — er
superior to any
fe. 0d. cach] Post free, sealed and war-
The Kx it i ti ct for contig. oad at VE
ie presen! san — me for so , and as
ä —— EM y is limited, early orders are
: Meter hor ursery, Exeter. Established 1720. .
|The Gardeners’ Chronicle.
8.
ATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1859.
vermes ron THE — w WEEK.
Tuurspay, J
ALMOST every one is aware of the great supe-
riority of true field MusHrooms over those whi
grown under sheds or in houses by fines,
though t the latter are often preferred ao the com-
par. safety with which — deny be used, and
on ^ "A are the only M: which are
Atem to be sold mae wi the 3 at Pans,
e
ttempts have been
to grow u dd 0 x air, but
after all, except they brenk k through pen y are
producing a splen: p effect.
E. most — a multitude of long spikes
68) TACSONIA IGNEA.
pcs silvery 8 —f therefore a TOSS; — DEM RUE is unequalled e
TES vim of th itatost novel Riot liancy and splendour of its scarlet far
cor ri pots rm A Lu si respect any of — yet known. It flowers most
$ > covers a
incredi short time. Ti a ^m y — ——
even against a sou a protectio:
I ET wem a ae ee
iriy all ef W depended upon loaie | (1499) TROPJEOLUM TRIOMPHE DE GAND FIMBRIATUM.
flowers, the seeds or e e saved pert fuot hune ged "e
CARNATIONS and PICOTEES Saved from the most choice
COMAUREA. —— of English varieties e rox a one = the pod eed and
wi ice wers
UE: ten sirah, berry pearing profusion of g golden balise | merit, se out ir sealed. facete an Torateed fen | ma
ouse plan! tiva- | Sardinian correspondent, whose seeds for man years have
(451) DATUR. given such universal satisfaction, and from which vs 'eties of
A A HUMILIS FLORE s cde "Enc cr meer — E
— — —.— producing . profusion | For r prices h regard to the above
3 2 —— 2 ye doub — sweet-| and other ide. ae er our
ba pies thi 8
itself, which is sent free and post pell om ep “4
BUTLER & McCULLOCH, Covent Garden Market.
often gritty, a tg at prese: zT ersons seem to be
able Nad beds eoated with
itm
" years since me M Mrs. Hussey, who
2 devoted so much time conjunction with our
lamented friend, bee eI to the study of
| esculent Fungi, proposed their cultivation in lawns,
We believe, however, that proposition was
merely theoretical, and, if at My very imperfecth
ont into i entis ON, indeed,
in her “ Gardenin 8 ed in this
e nc = 1 per Wiel ‘that kaioa
to grow on lawns in ple
3 UT me bricks pawn
April or May, and after breaking them into piee
one or two square, buryin pieces
intervals all over the e = each place a little
of the E e be aised, under which t
wn sho e d Kol: de t
Den Pe The ll urf then pressed.
should be afterwards
524
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND — GAZETTE.
: Agar d dime aspec To Aga —
e will be requisite till | more vigorous species of Agarie, such as j rious pes. »
3 N for 3 which arvensis (the Horse-Mushr oom), for yu nts cam 2 me "icem, and] hight hly as ini is "ron
they will be in September if the summer has b ae pestri z the T ie v ich ve pines Ate 25 1 Asc i d 3s wing fron
tolerably warm and dry. This plan only sueceeds |1n pr ce to culti 13 e and those whs hun,
is.” Whether Mrs. Lovnox get the spawn at once when the Mushrooms appear, | any
whore there areno snai thi we are unable the spots should be carefully marked, and oie where i co ae = gather iti m Hd satan pd
to state, but it has been frequently tried, though, as had pit IM geris a me of tor ate e|w s generally ng a
far as we know, uni pe without success. Without taken out 1 foot or more squar Lie P
i i i it d breaking der soil deor as ` little as Lave e. Oreades is next to A. c
eriments in this line, it deep, breaking after car Aa moval, the: very bert ‘of E should its cava
discouraging further e
may be well to have ieri th à another plan where | This s should be inserted,
make the lawn a prolifie Mushroom without needless delay into the law
new turf has been closel nine “aati ae
“all roduc tive of
eic vd wry hag fb in-wat ew — — 2
wished tor
bed. Some
Mushrooms, but there seems to be a preju
some quarters against the use of the Mushrooms | tur f is
they 3 though 2 aries hw the | the
slightest foundati The plan we sho ropose | this
is o pro M ihe spaw » at once 2 Phe certain that the healthy Mushroom spawn is use
th ts should be ich is not a W.
A d. f Ma 3 g^ s , hased. The cultivation of Agaricus arvens 18, |
adviee as in the mer case, 4 my
eun ee her! ol isola ited patches to e for E
ok i th UN uM rae ubtthat | the spawn should b pus t pa ex T either instance
ge or loc s won e little dou ould be disturbe xi ttl
iai eor locality, d. It would at least "Y for though it is very tru : tha 1 5 à. laos
referred w cattered abo " e f
as the . Oreades (the burn bi ipe but es TUE ing i where i ri E t mE established
ble n —
f and not produced i in "rings an 4
b that former is not rable on lawn
will be a better f the
from any admixture with that of inferior fre | that turf is always withered up and has
ug
:
'A
a
m, c IT enu
e il e Dll i bal i e
|
n
e
nize,
hum
sie; m ie
(in ftmt s»
Wf
The finest Mushroo
hi
“ITS
>
pari E ET; 0 l
He
d. | 18.
19. Masses of €— Kalmias,
Qo
ther Amorictn
and o [plants
E Border for e Climbing vo 15 i idi an aie
M. 0 ; l
Ki SCALE oF FEET
10
ä » 20 N ap sp
1, Pedestal for Sun-dial. 7. Do. Pernettya mucronata. | 12. Beds for Geraniums, Verbenas, &c.
2 Specimen Trish ` Yews. 8. Beds of f Berberis € rers 1 Beds of] Hybrid 5 ads m
2 D pai - warf -= m 9. Do. Rhododendron hirsu- . Beds for choice Herbaceous and other 1 20. Conser vat
E ih romeda fio: ida. tum 15. Specimen Hybrid R . ndrons.
B i 5 —— _ Eo do. ferrugineum album | 16. Do. Half-standard Roses. 22. Te PON bank of mine
6. Do. Do. mixed Heaths. 17. Standard Wista ria sinensif: e grave
el walk in front of Co
memory of man, and the b est chance of success | by feeundating the Common Lentil” (Ervum Lens) | and which, in the absence à n an pe
ible in the same condition as that|then remained to be done except to sow the
it was before its sepovel: J. B. nti tils and report the result. F M
D
pM where the spawn in e e situation is as | with the pollen of a sort of Sugar Pea. N oup looks 125 a ene
5 — add that
HAAGE o
e with Werle fo r trial a few pies 8 for
3 ourselves The latter are now in flower, and we
P een a Pea and find it neces to state—1. That there is no
v
‘berg an
bis ing obtained by artificial OR Our appearance wi in
with al
ies
caution that so startin an oe led y
its improbability was poin ated’ out, no well at
case of mules among pointed on Nas 5 c presen e undistinguishable fro
BE — M —.— pon m Dr. SEEMANN that pois under — in
manipulation, the intermixture such very a p s. Pen eda me inb rgh Gartenzeitung, where
— — v e Ë 1 — the tiny Lentil, Au the large- seeded "ue Vete ch mints dasses lene io jn)
cosperma
evertheless in the face of such evidence as was indeed ts E abl a lute or the formet, which
Lec mte o one could 9 Anni the truth | our y — — - sn ee
— recom mg arantee of Dr. | to pot; but iti is Wande thor th 29 05 95
„and sam lis of Ehe Pea Lentils — r the one or the
3 a
»
a
reached us fr i h
them from Dr. Ravon msl i mtr ue edi m s being the case, we think it due to the con pions dain d other simi aal
+ oie ilii Ahn Moe as pai io th at Dr. Rauch should offer some explana- | wil bone nour in the Flower beds at Nos %3 id
2 y the | tion of the circumstances that led him to put forth ES e wall of th ne Conse use bein oy
di
raiser that the“
at the hybridization had been effteted | the statement thus shown to be wholly unfounded, | height, a border (No. 21) 18 inches
t| Tun
in course of formatio
li
keeg
un
Un
n
monanthos or Provence Lentil, was
same as Dr. Ravcn’s Pea Lentil;
we see no difference between the
n
DESIGN FOR A FLOWER GA
2 it wes
31
me time ago ago E jo do
Erfurt, prp
was apparen rently the
and at :
plants of the u
RDEN IN wx
FORMAL STYLE.
accompanying ran Nurseries 22
feet
ps
the
Side is to be
eee ee
[Jvxx 18, 1859; ^"
T7
at the foo!
A
S a No.
.
of a
. 1 ou i of vd
y to the “grown n front of it, a small Terrace rofits to the wants of his bottom- ws T also send & 8
) acy * 22 is formed, which h e effect of raising | aged brethren it would bo ver rg o eall that E Black Hamburgh Vine, which TX — £m
fhe walk 6 inches above the Flower Gar den I nould | eharity;" it cannot in any way assume that definition. | a, I am 3 has been planted nearly 20 years
ieri 9 S re isa f the| The Institution ought rather to be called the Gar- | This of many nearly as large, the crop
entran te, which forms an dere gene termination | | deners’ Society, as it chiefly consists of a united | of fruit and bunches is largo also. W. Chesher, Beaufront
to the principal walk. (There was not room to show body of gardeners and those who patr ronise them. | Ga ardens umen m. [The Cu M ‘ed ves sent mea-
fhis in the plan.) The branc aches of the two Wistaria I have been for 10 years an annu Ibscriber, si] dies 14 inches p stalk to point, and 1 foot in
E. m 17) ub eventually form a kind of arch many other gardeners I know ha en so | diam eter. "The Vir ine e leaf "à inches from stalk to point,
o walk near the gateway. J. V. Chapman, | longer; surely, therefore, the time is coming, or ]
come that the gentlemen of the ittee will well ] this he:
nsider what they are doing and come ard with with a age net or 2 5 about 5 feet in u height, coming
rrespond
an exce ption
to bloom, or ers - flower stem has just made its
appearance. Car about the plant than the
and kno often after blooming the
no nt "that
Hom e
"uos A s Af oe s Practical ps vut id
not subscribers. It edd he be better Aa em | trunk rots, would you advise me to cut the — stalk
on his recommendation I pure to decide oe a the pension fon away? By so doing would it preserve the plant from
n e although the matter is in itself m 7 161. to 20l. yea every gardener I is desing? . A., Finedon Hall. [Let it de you
yet it is pu t toget erin a manner to puzzle the most » ood a pensioner, and E in the place of 1 I ty of suckers.
industrious reader. In truth it is a mere jumble of | widow a mo ovement wo ud iie Sardinian Gar nations and Picotee ed
good things without any means of M € they universal satisfacti ion n to t that der this designa ation is sav ar-
are, I have been looki for Chrysan i l ‘En; glis h, French, and Belgian plants; the
give up the s . The name is not in pw —— des, = — pes] likewise, and ind t the hour Oe need —— Sardinian Carnations being comparatively
it is called, which leads to nothing; nor can I befall them, they themselves may n not be | worthless. The fine clima M uthern Europe enables
its place in any f the volume, Your notices * — wt "but be gladly received. 1g d the se nsequently
books are generally very just, b ink good-nature | [We quite agree that it would be better to drop the | more fully deve loped ; but “alt — — thus saved
has in this instance M Peel justice from her stool. d charity ps. -— jus stified the change; and that give a large proportion of double flowers, they being
Carlton. would be the rsons received assistance | — ragged- -edged ie not suitable dor show-blooms,
ound WIe. h reason vuey
Monstr ous Car damine. —I d xd ousome “monstrous”
ify
except those who a hive subscribed, a measure the s
think of wh e to advocate. But vatio n by nurserymen; more especially as Carnations
the same state befi ore, they m in teresting to you, when the funds of the institut ion pplied to the | and Picotees ey y rarely come true to description from
as you cae what in the — state should be the relief of those who have never contributed anything to | seed. MÀ — H^ looked over the catalogues of the
pod becomes a second flower, and in some cases the | it, that surely is ity and — else. following firm rner," * Henderson," and * Dod-
specimen is at once uble lower. Daniel Wheeler, | . Menta Peg.— ing I needed somethin well & Bailey p" » 1 think oA pr find the sort he requires
M. R. C. is the most oh oar p deviation | to keep the venda of my Chrysanthemums dow. li a one of the above —
from usual visions that seen. v fe r Number oflast year, page 639, and Charcoa al. —I ha
peta
2 — — years practised the
M
we
e s in its usual ng “the —
flower ap p fi g of Simple and economical
and stam fall away; then = ine A fags ce es | by Mr. Broome. As however I } e fi is either
a long stalk, swells, and opens o , where — to — sawing and eutti ing of — 1 — w worthless small to be «e — anything else; of
cluster of petals bursts forth. in "imitation of | myself of something more easily attainable, — I think | course —— — but that is no disadvan for
the natural flower. This flower in the inside the|at the same 12 e more serviceable. It follows: I gardening pur The ma jals have the
ovary arises from the torus (or growing point) of the | procured a — quantity of copper wire, I thin all branches and twigs of all trees, clippings of
first Boer: but scens to be independ f the technically te ter 8s,” 5 cutting this up into hedges, Evergreens, &c., which it generally costs labour
placenta, which bears abortive ovules much as usual. pieces a about 6 i inches in leng h, the end is readily bent to destroy. F could produce this charcoal at a cost of
e hope to examine this structure hereafter it Os. a ton for the mere labour of making—assuming
better specimens. | to as made by Mr. Broome. But a : difficulty arose. My that the materials mus got rid of somehow. Of
En agrance.—“A, Z.“ will feel much flower to the | brancl hanging y were in, con- course it could be sold with a profi es) any price
: f quently pegging them d to the — was of vi ery above 105. The ped of making be best
To what do plants owe their fragrance ?” And why little use. I theref d that tl y being seen—as gem is a a little, but
is one ki nd of oer eee and a very little, practical skill | required. Th e materials are
other scentless
Void the tissue of plants is originally dod: 6 scent ?
Lie can only reply by asking other * Why
as one person fla axen and another blac! ir? ek 4
seeing
where water is at hand. The heap is set fire to
allowed to burn up, but when some € advanced ^
is then drenched with buckets of water.
h.
. “charity” ought to Nw
that in the beginning their animal tissue was alike. ] the burning to as n iron rak e plied
Weigela a: mabilis Ale ali às Co: oreen sis). —I observe i in the | to the burning mass, the larger parts separated from the
Revue P ute ieole that this plant smaller in a Half burnt and burning state. The smaller
1 ts distinctive 8 and becomes mere will be fo und the excellent small charcoal, ie E
Wi | only a s = iiig This of th
variety. 3 thi mo and a red
ni 5 which will
Are Puf Bale good to ent? T neighbourhood f
is now — pnm
Boule de N -— ex the Pench anda very bad ad substitute Do i
it is for true Mushrooms. 1 found some very large i. ash, but that loss is amply compensated
young pe Pall the — day, which were 5 of the process and t! — char-
according to Mrs. Hussey’s and Dr. Badham's indi- coal produced. e
cations," and they were detestable. M. wood, as it enabled me to twist | rience is required to ex the well as it
Mi or Malaria.—Being nt from England, it any em 1 — 1 — € z the means at my | admits of performed, but a perso
itwas only to-day that I observed the notice which you | command of — some distance over stands it can teach to do it — as
i to of my work in the|the sides of the pots. The e D d is a sketch of its — I manufactured i de reg; catt eng
Chronii Ath ult. In that article | appliances in the gee I have it now in use. no on would buy my charcoal, so so I ceased to ma
the reviewer states :— “ — e aut is of ion aie are capable of being bent to any shape, w rt to th AA
that miasma, as it is ed, is ‘bonic aci wooden ones could with great inconvenience only — estroying annually a vast mass o ial
and that whatev: ill resul results this gaseous substance ~ 2 or pot mM Another advantage gained | which might 2 em converted into excellent char-
may produee in the extinguishing of lights, er ait | te iat few the pero f 2d. I procured sufficient wire | coal at a cost D I had no intention of
ife itself, it will never, can never, € writing so much wh The quantity of
fever or any other disease.” If by miasma be — i aki was only 20 minutes. It is therefore | charcoal which ca be — ‘by this simple ced i
he emanation from decom or pntre-|I think an i rovement on the wooden 3 Should, | cess in all districts is immense, if people onl.
factive matter, in addition to carbonic acid, carburetted | however, a doubt arise t the wire w slip from | it in ri ceiem and 2 orising, and in s Stee 9
hydrogen, sulphuretted hydrogen, p ted the mould, this may be remedied by — — of profit to the owners of woodlands.
—(—— or azote and ammonia, should also with Le finger where enters,
have been mentioned being, as is well known, | compact body to resist any attempt at riiag. — produce an immense quantity. . zt
the ordinary gaseous produets of the putrefactive pro- | before ixl: Trak add 4 wu word of ca 1
cess. The argument, is the same, for it has amateurs like A 7 ——
been my object to show that ueither of th intended to be bent down be too strong and too full Societies.
substances possess j^ i —- grown, it MTM crutch or
of th malaria—to | prop (similar in shape only to bes sted by aiiin Royat Borantc, REG: re Pan ne 15.—This
sea. s e im 5 majority rof — are to be in ae ei dr ee — formed out of a piece | was an n espe show, and was ve] vr attended.
coneur with the writer of of w. r the joi hi great í
and produco disappoint i A piece of bast t tied and Pelargoniums.
l e ia to the parent stem
if my Merge Any infor-
—— . to
trien s, and a source of revenue instead of ex-
iture to the — s all large towns.
J. Parkin, London, June 10. - ,
n, 7. n2
this Institution, and one ks bipes t
of the day, I beg to humble thanks n-li
to Mr. Justice Haliburton for the kind manner for :
in which he advocated the cause of ns p — into bearing; the sort : Allamandas, -
deners at the last anniversary festival. I since Web Pebb's Im ial l Spine 3 to ] beautifully flowered, Ixora
— — n ip Ped = ——— ita with | very prolifie, It was bat e e ) ns proliferam | nusually well
nking that gentleman; said the word with a little be bottom-hea s it, Stepha-
— ash pesci of showy —
ND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
"Mr. Fothergill, and we
Sta sie ee
mall Jama
p of furniture, furniture, being elegan egantly v
of a high polish. Of the p
Hower nes l A
te ry hanna of elem fm e each of being [n me were Drik EN “Hond, The put a "Y the interi Rae tne country, t $ =
, Black Hamburgh ear om srs. Floud om ne i or of Brazil by way of
larger tha: five shilling piece. They are also fare fr supplied by Did
to which the d Hill The three bunches from the lat upp y Dalbergies,
e o Bode V 2 a oe Bart pr Ms. together 6 Ibs. Others from bei Hendersor a, Wood, ec qn a. Other qualities
Ze x Te É i | arly equa 00 8 ac .
Mice e i. ^ Ny inp 0 Bey specs of | Deters ant 1 lock Prince. fine mE were Tori Rosewoods appear also to be the the pia dd
Raad. ioi e on Allamandas, Ix by Messrs. Allport, Fullerton, Turner, an ane of wood is d 1 is the tropa E bae
cluding the fine example of t the Willow- NA Kind, kw sorts Mr. Bailey sent ex xcellent example s or us P. edi Ba i S nd x 4
j Sandars
to which itn ion was direc T in our report of the :
Thi M Jackson, Wood, XP and Alderso pecies of
ky 8 " ie x d 1 be Lo hig ens pe es SI cach Drewett, Bond, Pur, Standish uj wood of Dalbergia Piss.
lowers of a brilliant orange colour stand well up above | 4 zi Muscats io p y all goo Ay and man j resins, Such a be eer
dent, thus giving to | the em were unripe. An exhibition ; a
de pens an ke Rs eck eld pe 4 artisti er, from Mr. eani apponred to ies d ite 10 1 mapu DM
5 genus tignan and ve d of its ki rizzly Fron- er pu s in
2 — pues. We di der dennen s Mr. Richards. wq tiges ES 5 dd N 2. e
à Baxendi ne, Peed, Chilm tignan,” ito n this emi was evi y attributed to o ophyllum monetari
Frater, 3 poe € for m the d part pe bes ery of Chasselas 8 d» as very fine and nof cracked, lunatus, and some others. The i
plants that were shown at Sydenham last we eek, he only fault ae mging to this Gra igs. The speci- | fruits of several species are known to be
Orchids wer . in beautiful condition; in mens in ques x roved however that under r pr vag astringent, narcotic, or poisonous, All the
general however, they were very muc y be obtained w ithout this A 5 of An m commonly known in South Ameri
those produced at the Crystal Palace. In the Rev. H fruited by Mr. s nam Angelina, are there coi caer power
Mr. E attleya pt bi sk ag jen fait, or the’ Violet Hative srt ully anthelmintic. The Lonchocarpi,
and the singular looking rather than beautiful Uro psi came from Mr. Gorton and Mr. Sage; Mr. Oats sent | Tephrosias, include like them som es
dium Lindeni. Mr. Bulle n, 3 4 to J. Butler, Esq. had | Bellegarde; and fin fruit was also poi ufa y poisoning ish ; as also is the closely xag
a splen ndid lly flow ered Brass; and Angulo oa Clowesi, with | Messrs. Peacock, Miller, and uad ed I pde Erythrina. The fruits of sever al spe cies, on the othr
no fewer p let Hative, came from na hand hough we
sible perfection. NN bralias ME and Galeotti) | Messrs. 8 Forbes, eom OX, occasional inis of bed aaa ae l
from Mr. Woolley were admired; Mr. Dods sent a very also showed — 85 eb "f. Mi i m probably never very palatable. "hose
fine * $ on the mM nj a d n Ora ange. ted as s articles of foo Ü i
ee — Titmas
and the
Duke of 8 Sion, eis i be Me ete gr. to c Duke of | vi
Ms
Saber ke Trentham,
Acineta Rambelati in a remarkably fine pie o of The sorts were
pale watery looking yellow blossoms, : Others did not Elton, both. large and in every way per
differ materially from those mentioned is week. fect. _, Messrs. Pe achey, Marcham, A others aléo of
Among CapeHeaths, s collections of which it. Messrs. Lane had some finely shee!
exhibited, were some beautiful specimens of mutabilis, | trees in ‘pot
tricolor Wilsoni, one of the best of its class; obbata, Strawberries were scarcely so good as might have
fine old Heath; Massohi, 1 but very E p" — e d by Measrs
mal:
end different seedlings of Hartnell: a nd aristata. Widdow
8 spinosa p Cantina and it is said
Dee x, kmown a oti ages n in
An | is largely ——
g the varieties
hay oe eae among Azaleas were Ivery’s Gem, a sort | d meti Sir 0. Napi er, IU Seedling, | an oil which is ther
remarkable for fine form ; and Extrani, the latter a Matt's Suri, and Sir omy the last very dark e en The Poonga or "xara ail of i i d
lovely rosy pink kind, still fiel yin coloured, fully rip pro oduc of Pongamia glabra. Whether for food or for |
es real novelty ere was little. Though not abso- Of f Melons a : great many were exhibited. The best 1 ex : I ded in the |
ely new perhaps t t strikin 1 ing were Bailey’s and Snow’s. Mr. use o "i ruits and seeds of this tribe, on account of |
specimen of Cologgne. EE from Mr. Lawrence, | Bailey also in e Bent d Heshed variety. their narcotic or intox age qualities, s inci which |
gr. to the Bishop of Winchester. This bad a fine spike Of Figs were m ood examples of Lee’ ess in tribes mi col my
of pale green flowers mained on the lip with jet black, deae and pins especially in the arborea Gala many
J Jer. 1
a contrast of colours not less remarkable than pleasing. mong Miscellaneous Pr w e some Bananas and | Phaseolez, among which
Messrs. Parker & Wiliams sent a „white — — of | iie of the French Ó quos 3 cle N €: a eci- | ud hor important articles of food or
: sà in P
Masia rocia, bieh peon to b plant; 75 Even the common n ^M Mes
. Parsons a hybri i ; „ WI eo = pem lous (an Ws - |
brilliant r in the way of Meteor. From > Pre- he same time disa ble to the taste) if
Bese aces tay ot Bester ee iin, x SE Ludis] Dati vt. Bhi Society without throwing away the first water, The P
_ crimson variety sinensis | were given uming for : M al oma ed descriptions o j mo
called Hedwigii, and i with lilac works on Conchology not $ “on the
d b prey ae nera.—3. A letter from €. |
0 stained in the throat with yellow. ^ | “tthe secretary es * since Sa Slug of New Zealand.” —4. “ meal orete
^w — we have formerly alluded, Law s t Dipterous Insects, collected by Mr. Wallace,
oss - ng; E 45 CD gn ^ erus 2 erer s and and sigs Associates had died, that one I Fellow had with- sar in Celebes,” by F. Walker, Esq.
ain in 22
condi tion, — o Associates had been elected. ‘Ti ial ins ik m
Of scellaneous articles, Messrs. Veitch se = apri read showed a prevar 3 Notices "1 Books.
r ce in fi
* ^i noble jest wil with palate Society on the year "s account; of 2387. 157. 3. At —
glaucophylla, the violet Tradescantia e and | Esq. ; ook at. 5 me. ; € beers * growth of — 5 i Iuli, pes S
> B and . —
i integrifolia, a well known plant, whose singular r | McAndr Pr g ve i e rétitovel oni the Coin and Tu MD. e 9 c. Sedi 1 KEERN afi
that 0 bird lows "T elected in their Society of Arts :
C e e meae iier) B- Danteg Nader Ih E.: Goant, M.D.; T. C. Jensen, This isa long ne aceount of the present
Ferns. were considerable quantity, and Prof. Bel was ree Ims and Sir C. Lyell | of Cotton cultivation im India. AMD f
t M.D., Led = 7 ; Boott, | failed to discover much novelty 1
Treasurer : Bennett, Ten, B ; | be vali for pu of reference. We
Busk, — The thought however that the possibility of growing
Esq, P. Boott,| Cotton in many of the regions under
8 Esq., of I ie] ch c shown 50
lutions equesting that the President’s no ct and Royle, that to
"€ b meth eee M s point would ur been super
i anation were
ll, President, in the chair. fea 3 the government o
F. Dr. Iliff echibited the little Indian farmers (Ryots), whos E are
f ( K p. ), | proved powerless. Upon that subject A: so Colo
en found to infest a church|shrunk from expressing an opinion. Ao
sy papers were read: Sykes, who takes the view which has
y G. Bentham, Esq,— in these col *
„of Leguminose,” by | thee conse "e — — man
or stated that when work. We rejoice t. u an ally, whose ig
n Nee years ne» speaki i 5 gr poa
P RP qe iy Y
k 5 »- a di pri
ofg but having since | sup ply of n Cotton increase z the pr
^ of him for ex. Seen dun fell, the quant o ndin
us of Asia, Africa, | fell in a co T E
bb. the — ees " ify | 9 sei follows (the Tales are apre eu
P pape „ ie “ A
dira rn mainly of descriptions o thor tuii wore been à maria supply B,
nds prett, . This 5 critical remarks on their The nts and descents of the quantities, P i
Chain. Mourra. Veitch had — — — 2 wh the flowing Mrd — ly suppose 1 had beon aaf,
— on ee — Sh aae — the C — the most part bar ded trees, of of — j 8 waite — du^ Duy or
: : e » T
Peces prre the best of whieh will he fem the deck or pal —— 1 ‘he bad n donbt the. quai:
: = ek’s report. b ince rush illions of Ibs, next year.
ero tolerably ios È 2n branches os liane 2 brining. up to the e armor kag a ca a price of 34d. per
e . eac! m Meas or hooked sg ing t dit went to China, W.
8 Baty, and The m jt "the b "beer — T The : wood of the arborescent better price. "Ther 7 re, as far as the su
zueen, e — about 4 Ibs. a wis. wall | and d ble, and often of great be weis ure — is hard there was no doubt India cob i
— rom Messrs. oung, Rey = the species is réel man rice "ael m i
of great —— as tim ho supplied
mont
and Bailey also came fine
y of
a ber, and | th
Europe for the manufacture ! i
Joxe 18, 1859.]
GAZEITI T
ksi
57
=í
ence per Ib., and there all advantages to him ceased. | form with h alt dd om EI.
ft Poen — — the — soe of o — persons, and 80 ti me and ooh 3 c X 1 vegetal, dat had e [romeo of them were cov ered all ore with bri april
ft nd its y ie COS )alrs, ia nt a
price, — the —— PWhen of the agents each if plain, « or c Sy. 6d. gm oloured ; may © en | Th oder B. Rex, on account of E e facility with with
through w whose han ds i t passed. there was a nom "gs sean our country friends doi d — - | which it may be propagated, may n e ha d in any
want of In bability of their acquiring, at a reasonable t. a 2 by | E antity. i "
Europeans to gerit it, and they got land! in a Bengal for its of sterling value. The first cri which is is occupi ied b; fine Janis oposishon of grandis, Isis, n pr ocn i,
— were. in the * dark? day of tl l Virginia. "These are hybrids raised between
y i t i ws Rex, and are all remarkable for the
interdicted — going into the cou ntry; but, | of Wan E. two pre plates, and six beau pre of t nely variegated foliage, the mace
nevertheless, those ‘persons somehow contrived to get cture of the insects de- |t markings of which, varyi hey do from white
woodcuts, illustrating — Jg
These last how
0
land. are scarcely worthy of the crimson, are very handsome. One —— fea-
with the pee in this country and. in Europe gene- letter-press, owing | to u ilful engraving and not over | ture of these hybrids is that they are furnished with
rally. How was that? By th e publishers will beautiful long hairs varying in the different varieties
E It was the same with Sugar. Ithad increased | what we mean if they turn to the ‘beautiful woodcuts | from white right red. The blossoms are generally
from sm: mings to an enormous amount. It of insects in Blackwood's oe of the Garden, or their p a mb pink colour, and are Supe gers 4 larger than
was thought worth while by some European houses to | own Cyclopzedia of Agricul ohier kin E ae Of
send out agen mts to India, to to go into the villages an nd yenia und som plants; the
r. BALFOUR has published (Maclachlan aang violet khe ek A er of p p — must
| of thousands of tons. should not the people of sina) 4 A List o the — i and Poisonous Plants ways render it a favourite, but it is ove well
| —— do the same : due they — — Cotton, ae as | cultivated Botanic Garden, Edinburgh — Cultivators forget that it
uad been done in the ueri § Indigo and Sugar The This would 7 5 a useful list for other ens in irs requiring nearly the same "imr as a
government of India ni 8 Which similar S bp for the use of students. Heath, and give Mi much heat: the consequence
enn ee There were no roads for the the traffic | Murray's Edition of Lord ms ks, is plenty of w. leaves, but few flowers, ne
when " 1 ins the - " sui Vaceiniums
„Colonel Svkxs.— ads were sufficient ther miscellaneou ch | Rollissoni, a — re dark, crimson- flowered kind, "m
to
200 silos 8, — — — i"
o tht e
of Ibs. in one
+ +}
ers v was uo quee
tt.
ness,
and so whi
Bird the rough writing “of E Eng Bards 1
Scotch Reviewers," and “Hints from Horace."
is sai id to be hardy ; ; and among Conifers the beautiful
0
new edition of oe E^ be of Johnson, edited Pot :
"i Ray *
M psis borealis, Podoe €
aved P. acicularis, and Thuj
who raised the outery against the Fading government
wou Cm proper price for i£; but the wheel stuck
in the rut, and, instead of n" themselves, they
assist
tion. The manu-
emselves, if they wa
Cotta a or any other article of great consumptio:
Religion, or — of the Works
Sun
p
Botany and,
of dod i
want either
n. k
broker, is now a „the hero of the gossip | gi
——— in his 64th
Notes on the Defences o Great Britain and Ireland.
y t.-Gen enned
quis a were conspicuous,
o sof e plants such as Pelargoniums consider-
able attention has lately b yi aid here; PAM pu
By Lieu (Murray, a ion of ings of that s OF
pamphlet). The "lus pex states t| “these | spotted Pelaggonisma there is here a large
Notes while in manuscript underwent the criticism of or uve mh the 2 fe: f which,
subjects hem; who unanimously were o of ru]
A dat sari Wald be laid before the Public.“
General Distribution of — By Prof. Balfonr.
3d edition. Bl T Ze m Pp. 436, 12mo, with
t higher guarantee can be given of their import-
an at the present conjuncture? and who is there
except the Vellutis of om . to obe: f the force of
eren . s last së
upra will not wi 2 108 :
The Rudiments of Bol — Structural and Physio be fn per post ion "antil "s can K show ipu > 955 EE X AES
— being an Introduction to the Study of ‘he the “ona yt the MES state o, 220 15 defensive means, | petals, ith bro oad belt of ing * red; under
2 Mice ^ -ie By er Dresser, that on her own shores she can ot only overcome the | Bright Irene, upper petals rich
— Pp. 449, with num e ny y one power, bu “bat that of any com. | maroon, surrounded with bright p d, and m magnak
— = as botanical science is concerned these works | A 2 a ot contents would be a great im] ee | | vi dark —.— " Y n oe cube = "Those
— á thin etree ‘eee Be owledg Amet — ate the multifarious subjects included in 1 fully hybri
the second is the — of —. ‘itched t je deris m let. $ the. most attractive of the French kinds with the best
in was . Balfour addresses the religious is Reer Tuy cs uN E Eo bok, and tiy 2 8 rikin f the Fre vw orts combined m
— — = — — — he learned trated y steel engravings and woodcu' 2 NN their M orig fne md P eter,
except th hat sn limita ^ *the wisdom of God —— d eid cadi cia tix Wei Ceci d | partake: of tho improved apo td subst ne of ite
— of the Creation ” to th e | bec come Mn tsman by pod reading books Ake this, de nglish kinds, In all the spots are very clear
a wate well defined, VEL is not the case with the majority 4
by the. Vegetat gdom, and ac * i
» gw ch v.
Of do
e rar
n ste en fected int hows iu. beon Truy Ten
add that in two other importan ouse
er; Dr. Balfour en hs subject and ce they aio has | The s pianta — ipa paca il vat oa She best: Mandarin, sb These are all,.
ut cheap volume w was lean-to, one of w is : :
clergymen; Mr. Dr d not understan — his wit | plan ts, — ^ parated — Camellias by a Th me bln, ee vci nursery is becoming
ject and has produced an expensive book, which was | few large and fine .
M à for. me of. the tram gen- ——.— Of the different varieties = Everlastings greatly improved; 5- the internal arrangement of the
tleman for the task he has imposed upon himse e is a fime assortment, as ind there is of
S from ine waiement (p. 200), uat. Meade iid e a nee 3 RE
a Fi, as a peduncle turned inside | Heaths, for whic is nursery has :
i gemit rà 3 Of thers puras is far better st te
ve powe im
aswel o
eod
en obliged to
0 0. Carex distans and intermedia. —Anonymom 2,
a morsel of some Zichya, apparently T !
re ; 3, Galium cruciatum; 4, loo! BG, hut.
odiola rosea.—Galway. Lavatera Froticosim:-
gate. Tamarix germanica and Bupleurum us?
— — prs the Bes trees last Dn "
$ 7 e ‘others a
— hich e e x
nning into wood, loo! healthy, Sou to 0 ‘al
vigorous as those about we a 7
eren. to € — —— xt peer Piel ain lars bare tho of
— — sí — foto the branches.
— in which * are reco
liar circum
can be sad. You will have no eno didiculty in your]
— cred itg seek by iig
Tue SLDING RULE: .
that with this instrum
might put into their — Re ned
pati poc! s ku
PUE of have vin their UP
eee cmm as they e Tae
rost- Te bas mi
inquiry among
ipti
.
e M
SER E tne 1839 ; or ju may obt
u n
else Bs ees of Mathematics.” For prices inquit
rate, n. These are now selli nig te Pa a
unica
made. We must - eee the indu
ents
the insertion
ose contributions
dcc
June 18, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. - 529
RTIFICIAL MANURES, — &c. — Manufacturers J — 7 e
and others engaged in making ARTIFICIAL MANURES FOW | E R' 8 p T E N I QT E ‘AM [PT |
obtain every necessary instruction for their economical
f the Agricultural and Chemical Colle,
of the Agrieultura i Y olere SEEN AT WORK.:
men desirous of receiving . in Chemical e DAD SETS or FOWLER’S STEAM- edere TACKLE cin be seen in operation cn
Analyses and Assa g, will find ample facility and accommoda- the 1st of Jul ise of
tion at the College. iy n
RRA HE Adde OE SUFFOLK one pie ASSOCIATION AT IP
F WELL begs to inform his
REDERICK, CORNWELI ubile th that he can now| SOU YOR RE AND NORTH DE nere 1 8 e SOCIETY AT SHEFFIELD
— . superior to anything SUSSEX timeline SOCIETY AT HAILSHAM
per cent. of “Soluble Phosphate of Lime" ue 0 bl. TN por ;
tow delivered reo to oY a SEED OAKES, COTTON-CAKES, FOWLER'S —€— WINDLASS, AND WATER CART.
and all descriptions «d RIAL IAL MANURES at low est
market prices.—O fice; t St. Helen's, London, E. C. r further particulars apply
E R Y T: * N ü UA N O. JOHN Tout ER. “JUN, 28, CORNHILL, LONDON, EC.
The present price of this valuable Manure is—
12l. per Ton for 30 Tons and upwards,
131. 5s, per Ton for 1 Ton up to 30 Tons. AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY. | mate Se FARMERS.—If you wish to PRESERVE YOUR
And, to guard against the purchase of adulterated mixtures E R. anD F. TURNER, Ipsw ae an etur HAY, go to Davis & Co., 64, West A E. C., where
and of inferior Guanos purpo 8 results equal to Ue Prize Mills for Crushing Corn Seed, „ Ko.; Port- dE u may —— a RICK CLÓTH oo tars! best m aterial an
Peruvian, consumers are recommended to apply either to our- | able Grinding Mills, Steam dc fixed a — . rtable — pisce dar cheaper than London
dn to our agents, Messrs. Gibbs, Bris Co., of — : — tei and arie cali — MÀ Machines, hey WHY NOT ae DR WT
or to dealers ose | Cutte o
d nesty and fair dealing they may pisos implicit confidence. superior — ss MD perm for ‘Home, on and GION, tfully informs the
ANTONY GIBBS & Sons. Foreign u. use. rated Price application. pet Euri E: es Orns, pon dece on the
et | SEF ENED = F est terms wi
URNARD, LACK, anp CO/3 Vas peel WS NENS IMPROVED 3 MANURE |" Early application should be made for 8 ECOND-HAND RIC
SUPERP. HOSPHATE OF LIME; guarz anteed to co: —— OR GENERAL PORTABLE PUMP. CLOTHS. MA ar — ZENT S, and FLAGS. A naa tn
Phosphoric Acid soluble, equivalent to 40 per ent. of Tribas These Pumps are fitted wi ‘ith J. W. of Marquees and Ten may be A erected on the premises.
Phosphate of Lime. & Son’s Patent Buckets and Suckers, | A quantity of SECOND-HAND TENTS from the Crimea at a
CONCENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to and cannot clog in action. The barrel | greatly reduced price. An Illustrated ero ae sent post free.
the pros eding. is of galvanised iron, not likely to West End — —U— 82, Mod S. W.
ad hese E T Dr. Vo — 2 — — eri must corrode, and can be raised or lowered n EDGINGTON, 2, Duke Street, London Bridge, S. E.
very gratifyin ou, and are the proof of the —- atpleasure. The legs will fold together, »
high a 3 mmercial value which characterise: bad iret hole . 1 5 7 = D E N D T.,
your concentrated superphosphate.“ rris tale any nato rtank required. AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS, — Essex.
Detailed analyses, with opinions of the late and pre: Price of 43 in. Pump, with legs, 3l. 3s. HAY MACHINES.
Chemists to the Roya 1 Agricul — l Society, with 1 If with — copper barrel and | Small size, No. 1. £10 | ae size, No. 1. £12
Prices, &c., may be — — ion to BURN ARD, LACK, lvanised iron handle, &c., 14s. extra. Large size, No. 2 PEL
& Co., Sutton — ia he barrel is 273 in. long, and the legs oen Machines are free from small 5 and
SR ness Pam l ad hout — ed 3 bmp th Ro at Agric m al Soci ty": g
ese are also made withou ined several prizes at the Ro cultur: ety's Shows.
T. PROCTORS TURNIP MANURE.— the legs, Aib osQong -wrotgibimun ^ pr ORES 1
. C H. TE — attention to this straps for screwing on to any ordinary —.— x . £6 Ne. m e. . £71
valuable Manure, which th ins all the elements necessary water butt or cart, and fitted with 1 E & DEN pY's Horse Rakes are urd on the — ma
for the full pie ica of the rop, so combined, that, inch brass union for attaching flexible principle, 5 great s — 1 and lightness. Free to all
from their chemical knowledge and long experience, they feel suction. Price 50s. he — — Stations.
satisfied is most pdvantagoous to the consumer. It has been 13 inch el Percha Suction Pipe, E eem „Union Foundry, Hornchurch, Essex.
very extensively used by most of the eminent Agriculturists of 1s. 11d. per fi x
the day, and has attained a high reputation throughout Eng- Rubber — Canvas Suctio SLATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH MIDDLESE
land, Scotland, and Wales, and, they venture to say, isunrivalled | Delivery Hose, from 4 inch to 4 inches in diameter, i in E | DWARD BECK MANUFACTURES in SLATE
for the weight and quality of the Bulbs which it produces. | of 60 feet to order. Branch Pipes with Cocks, Union Scre variety of articles for Horticultural purposes, all of which
The application of this Manure to the Turnips will be found to | &c., at reduced prices. ^l ay be seen in use at Worton Cottage, on application to the
benefit considerably the after crops of Barley, Clover, and Wheat. May be obtained of any Ironmonger or Plumber in town or | €"— Sundays excepted, PRI — 8 pe of PLANT
POTATO, GRASS, BARLEY, CLOVER, AND WHEAT | country, at the above prices, or of the Patentees and "Manufac- | | TUBS and BOXES forwarded on applica‘
— s D. P RACINE 2 uud AERE SEE rs, JoHN WARNER & Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin St. n. | YORKSHIRE PRIZE > ick
0 „ warran! of the quality. , G STANDARD
Apply to H. & T. PROCTOR, West of England Depót for Arti- W^ RNER'S PATENT MEDIO daas STAN RD R. WAINMAN hasa few YOUNG BOARS Ax
Scia — Cathay, Bristol; or PRocroR & RYLAND, Bir- ——— of his Large White Breed to dispose of, bred from
mingham, and Saltney, near Choster. e: d 175
PATENT CAST-IRON PUM i. . d with J. W. & SoN's| prize parents on both sides
Patent Buckets and Suckers, which note ig in action, for | Prizes and rA arded to nl
Farms, Cottages, and — ells, not exceeding 28 feet. Shows of England, Birmingham, and the gael Shows in
Dia eos aa Lane — 22 .—Apply to Mr. Fis 8
The 5 cult
ONDON MANURE COMPANY, removed to 116, them at t yal Agricultural
Fenchurch Street, E. C. Geen abli: shed 1840), have the
following MANURES ready for delive . Height. wid 4, Bos:
CORN MANURE for SPRING ESSIN in. 7 in. Fitted for lead, | 1 1
TOP- ‘DRE SSING aller 2 ong 8, Ags quite a pee 4| 1A FEEDERS AND MILLERS.
MANGEL MANURE _ guaranteed 3 ,, ditto 3,, 6, iron 3E 1 in bags
SUP OSPHATE OF LIME — |. quality. " "gem pipe | 2 . SCREENED RICE, lls, per N in bags
BLOOD MANURE $ ar Pts — s be reinen RICE MEAT. 06 Gd. to Br od. RI
In consequence of the reduction in the price of raw material | Age : short, with 15 feetof Lead ‘or grinding. American d Ton
the London Manure Co. are enabled to lower the price of attached, — A em only.—All Sold for Cash, and an allowance = Mil.
their Superph: te of — — in.long ditto ditto ditto? 30 LA Pade Jupp, Rice Merchants, 6, Cross Lane, St. Mary-at-
Corn u —
d Urate
The London Manure Co. a — RUVIAN GUANO
(direct from Messrs. A. Gibts "` Bons) SULPHATE of
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, CRUSHED BONES, and
every ed — of value. Wholesale dealers supplied.
116, Fenchurch Street, E. er ae PURSER, Ss
ei 1 OS OS LIARS Dae 15 Gr I
5 GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE AND IM-
PROVEMENT COMPANY : Offices, 52, Parliament Street.
T e * Henry KER "n
ound tank: fpe or * — Forcing, aada Plant T —— the any is k nope by Act of Parliamen
: d, the Makin; po "the
tex ION IN PRIC WES'S MANU de di e fixed, when desired, | Erection of Farm Houses, dings, and.
ME LAWES begs d renounce ou 2 rn has this = be obtained of any Tronmonger or | Cot and other rg pen crine Prp-
LVA season reduced the price of the Man mber in Town or country, at the adure ecclesiasti c te Pro; mem
8 : — fthe Patentees and Manufacturers, | 2. T vestigation o of Title necessary
O OF LiM from £7 to£6 6 JOHN WARNER È 80 NS, 8, Crescent, . Se London. gned and executed by the Land-
MINER AL do E. iE » b d H g Every description of Machinery for by means own y
ARLEY MANURE.. » o a, — 2 e — A y 885 Fire and Garden — 9 — by their ex . — ed
Prot Way and De Voeloker have; sampled a oa aot of 5000 to err Es REDUCE e RM o moore ros n
6000 tons at his factori r report and a
ks and expenses may, in all
. on-tpgiicution ak Jis ellis, „ Ter MORTON n čo. Galvanised Iron Works, whole cost of the wor gu paid Y
1, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C. mee pobre 2, mall Buildings, | eat posa 08 tht Lands improved, to be repaid by half-
s" So Sa Meer Guano from Messrs. GIBBS, * GALVANISED IRON. erm . The term of such charge may be fixed by the Landowner,
Nitrate d be — of Ammonia, and other Chemical for Farm Buildings and other Roofs; the cheapest, — dur- extended to 50 ne for — Improvements, and 31 years
ures. American n-seed Cake supplied. able, and neatest in use; alsoSpouting — Per yard. Buildings, whereby the instalments will be kept
OFT STUFF GREAVES ARE a carrTAL MANURE WIRE STRAND CABLE FENCIN centage as as the occupiers ofthe improved
———: — — LANDS.—The undersigned have sent large
4L 10 105. s orte no cha: casks
E c statio ‘ n. € s —— ÓÀÁ
HN WILLIAMS & Sox, Soap Works, Clerkenwell, London.
OUPLA ERD ^S IMPERI . Ke
AND WINDOW BLIND Erd
370, Oxford Street, W.
(formed of Twisted Wires lik rope or cable), the strongest, C
MN - cu mpm "X use, will MEN the CN — 38, Lower Kenni
Wire work of É not bend or out of form tre: ing — Princi
for Cu — is E. c m — — pre : eni volin —.— of the Aperte Strand, ir —
Garden Arch, sery, —— , Bird &
Dom and other t elegant po rn d " This — — T far cheape = than posts and rails, or any kind o
- Conservatories fitted. up i e best style. Sun Shades and iron fencing; and ai meat four times the strength of solid
"Window Blinds of all sorts. bars. Will dot rust nor corrode. Upwards of 1200 miles of this
The —— 5 vm
branch req!
1 — King,
| Naval and Military S
Analyses and Assays of
i T = F —! e had at 3
Ten DOMO. P her Majesty, the ED GAME AND POULTRY NETTING. |ticulars may be had on
E : meten t Norn 5 — . dm 2m = É Gal 24 ins. D
eu EE SeN
essor for t
Por rs , Sir Joseph Pa Paxton jand 10d. 85 |
or the TEM i ae Pek a — AR ate Mrs. itea s * Galvanised, 21ins. wide, The a i 11
Lawrence of Baling Collier, 15 Dartford. 18 Ñ -inch mesh, 4¢., 5d., and 8 raat JUNE 18, 1859.
A get:
peo WINDS
a Canvas made of patent prepared H:
and Wool, a perfect non-conduetor of Heat nd Cold, naire openin f pr
herever it is applied, a fixed temperature. Tt is adapted for | GALVANISED IRON CHAIN CA 65182 65 MEETINGS 708 e e Band . Noon.
purposes, for PRO AHLI mende, June 2
Fruits and Flowers ne the scorching rays of thé sum. FOE. ROUES LED ROSE TAINS € FEEDERS, TA 2 x
and fi - morning frosts. To] Strong CATTLE HURDLES from 2s, per yard
—— —
A i PATENT IMPROVED CAS WORKS meter Has bee e e . — ot
or een a
.— yards wide, 2. 64. per yard run, | of all sizes for the use of Private Houses, Mansicns, — at Ciren : at 5. late Tia
Trinity | la ne, uz, whole e manufacturer, 7, | Stations, Mills, Collieries, Mines, Villa res, — Works from the Rev. J. Const 5 ,
TM ie Cannon Street, Cit; 5 Er of P | Nurserýmen and | 10 to 500 lights estimated for. The w entrusted to | Hants. 25 rA ES ry to kn now
than tate di roughout the king “Tt is much chea eaper | an ordinary — La fe
3 covering." Henry J, Morton & Basinghall Buildings, Leeds. | possess
his selection has been the result of
taking oe of the claims of a pls ‘list
of candidates who were es of first-rate
— tices.
15th inst.
successful trial o th ing machin
will no doubt 8 pie s as frequent ntly
and month as the
It, lik oe
m
heavier produce.
ved of for the Clover — ng m ay be
b
THE GARDENERS CHRONIC
The fact is, that in dealing with this pest, the |t
armer has followed zt me rather than reason,
as the foll owing rustic directions for the destruc-
that | tion of t!
ly „If Nettles be cut in April,
They reappear in a while ;
If Nettles sd — in May,
They peep out again the next day ;
If cut in bos.
hey appear again soon;
If cut in July,
itted by al all, still the question is
to destroy Nettles.
- this is adm
stantly résurrind: I
ust?
offer a commentary upon t these
E is * 8 be a Goat
comm
1
Let us no
een, w
LE AND AGRICULTURAL ——
con- į wrested from the rule of old O
| meadows or the wavin ^ corn fields of the G —
the pastures of ne eee we have’ Camping;
sented to us a sı
10
N
e and Mie a teady grace the gifts
hae pen, lie > 8 Et 1 er n
this à
the tracts
[Jvxx 18, 1859;
Ocean, Ocean, or view the SEE a
at man can do in rking
wor -
unpromising materials as rs an
h +] l, and Py
To feel the
and waving w ith the
ning $i on whi
Ai lorie and the winds Now into —
eed. obs
y wer
r heath covered M a
still, sea-mar
The ervant traveller has many
te ti
i te por tion
€ will ror Al be very eg
will be
24
be left until autumn
ibt —
is Mover little doubt of its being soon adopted. |
It leaves — on ass behind it, lying where it stood, |
already sp dded
ss will |
weather is just w ur grain
eed, e is — * very b
upon —some
summer From nod owbt i injure it mat terially.
n tenant.
h
fi mm a wet
no m
d upon
seen that even zi ma the
pois i e will be less than that which was left un-
ng is the season for the most vigorous pum
M EN DUE eU cree: int
surface "a owth its |
way of predi and the materials out of w
rich fertility has been won. Alongsi
smiling green
not yet brought under
L
vind of heaven.
hiftin
"x Teri along the 5e; of a
e
f noticing what has as been
n, he will note
pg mastery of
oose and poor that — pes it up into tiny
s he walks along, or sees it whir
, so apparently hopelessly sta sterile. Or
1 (lw)
ne ide, 5 Sees bleak aud
bel rm
ts the ocean; and on
rren tracts, he re with a pate ch of green
of
Vie cenis: of n. ed. ems Aind
that —.— are concerned in the growth of all other
parts of the plant, those well developed in May
will all June be feeding the underground p? well
Cutting them
by
and hi his s landlord has been lately — ude in the
t before the Court of Chane
men, under
were e employed o to destroy the ba
the farm, thereb disturbin
d been pre
ears to have € etablihed the
right to Which! he had laid cl
Waar
Norms? ————
we cannot do better during the present p=
sts than offer a — -
usually destroys the leayes, t
ultimately recover Sars Ar or
the Grass o
—
he pes
— position is in
pas where of course its exterminatio —
of — — out would, if Tres be avoided, its e
which
Bum and cuttin,
ees the best way g them down is th
of dealing with it. But though
and rabbits on ~ je
ing d pora: away fa —. of
h
farm
OF DESTROYING | quite as readily in
question so offer: put rar that ME as m Hs most. c
tter d. inflicted by Augus
is this: t
18 commoni |
Pre FERNER seeding is i
As to July, it is
previous
: ift
then ei a few — only will reed as a! thi
ut remember that what was | h
4
:
| second crop,
the o
15 br
n produ t
recommending August cutting of these
must be apparent. to ony oir. The mad-
n the mm 18 — — say to t
> Killing his enemie
Kill à I: s head Re own;
They'll die of themselves if you let them alon
—
ion th at "which we have arrived
Y
he soldier as
CoO)
be
he whi
to
— — — à of t
aided and
consolidated than A rest ; there a mass p
ksan
ds which in
presented a an —— of sad poe and ¢
inexperi r but
pas
—and anon sand heaps E:
L
out
ud produe
d observ
e most
owerful and
itia
id
Hz a
BRE
elaborate, and it a —
shoots of this plant
= = ira 3
e ded pro-
y and in
we and m
tidal ve very “triffingly by
M — nd the —— is B ene
applian
E? Flanders
— what may be cal
he spade, the plough, and d the harrow
and. simpl
xed t
id mechani — : - used in a ¥
ination
n all pr creased
— mat Vp repeated therefore both in M.
following
and even in -if
July m
plements are few i in 7
i —
again its appearance,
the rale of Wes [$n year must be the practice of
il August, as
ripened seed
ag ound meda the
s 2a
er pen ee
SS we
| eriment i
| eradicating Nel. the easiest. method
2 ref pamen — pe
— — “
flat fields of Flanders, examine the wia —— d — of the plough [See
hale pass ae Las s the plou
cs first obvious disti nction between
the swin; ng
Juse 18, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, : 531
end it is necessary th t the workman should always Ber! 2 a — — booth = en — complained, yet | stage of the grow th of the plan
his right hand i in —— with the han ndle, to Mela eady i that i isa not open to one ; it is applied * — — — a
when it will - * it in time vini piment such an | pepper-box or small bellows (of whieh he enclosed a
meets an obstacle. So accustomed are we in Great | occ larreucs “this year, more especially as they may con- sketch). A woman can dress an aere of Vines per da
itai lou handles, that | fidently reckon upon from 50 to 100 per cent. more | | Scarcely any change will be observ able in the crop for
itain to use
at first view it — impossible that a Flemish plough visitors than even at — with — weather healthy. Should
can do its work. It is nevertheless true that it does | I was told while complaining at me ster by a gentle- | rain fall € in five days after the "i mE of the
i irab isi : h ~ me
T wW — ——
Flemis | i
the Scoteli or English swing plough, EF the soils in| 15,000, or 20,000 ^ — of a — M in two or| Wurzel crop had been nearly * troyed. Mr.
; A i ti ates — to be the lar vm
cha- | t eek essed my |
racter. The heaviest soil in Flanders bears little affinity | that t he R. A. S. lar — yet arrived at i the point of I" tim "wet the crops of Mangel Wurzel in
to what is called heavy — in Great t Britain; it is in | *circumlocution ” indicate: yt reland and in France. The beetle is the Silpha opaca,
fact a soil light enough fo: ips, and is 1 — removed | gone conclus ion "e “how not to do it.” X. Girdwood, 49, Fly pe — in UA Society’s Journal — viii, page
from the sti 1m retentive clays e ing the Pall Mall, Jun late 8, figures 12 to 24). Mr. Curtis observes
heavy soils of England. ightest soils of Flanders Corm Notes at Barnstaple.— Of th
again are more Ii n Y po wer else; and in| Notts fair specimens were shown as oe stoe x Mr. | — the pee aes * known to recover and
none are the stones and boulders which abound in so Merson was the winner of the priz for the Exmoor | to produce a fair air crop.
much of the soil of Scotland met with. e soil of | sheep, l d d mour, | pr ber of an entire edition of
ers then possesses erga features of eee Med ll | The “improvement effected in these sheep by jud | 16 reports able 3 in n the Society’s Journal, and
calculated to ald the e v ol regular worki an|selection has been immense. They have not only tl I
implement like the Peni ph Wich is be ho Finn good hind-quarters which belong to a mountain breed, | form by — Blackie & Son, entitled Farm
ow e: 2 their short fore legs are far MM the ux — Insects,"
p NOE and circular, and the fleece heavy. , The thanks of the Conneil were ordered for each of
— soils of Gre eat Britain, in ohg "i Boot — was — Aa to be not less than 3 * per niger a | icati 1
— where the numerous obstac les to uniform In sp of the pony classes in vds last as possess- | The Council then adjourned.
control over the plough; a control "attin, we we speci ipa va pers Dest in e yan his 5 Cux AGRICULTURAL, ULSTER : Drying Milk
think, only by the Aa of Er ha: 5 stilts. The compact, but highly bred 2 — « Bobby," M ed Coes Tne flowing — eem € th "I —
one-handled plough of Flanders preferred by the|to Mr. R.Smith of Exmoor, and his pur to | 5u ee ete Pe s
EC allowing the | improve the Ex xmoor ponies, or 2 — te e hime on dt edis ri Tua Haviz 8 TRÀ
left hand of the ploughman to be at perfect freedom to| by which they may be improved. The produce of rials E UM I TUUM the —
handle the long tool or cee ment by means of which | “ Bobby” belo pusing v 8 to Mr. Milward sold at Tattersall’s | practice in a small way, 2 — matter
he can free the mould- board of the manure, the earth, | a fortnight since am each. In South Down
h ir oniar tot carried 2 before | V.
operation of the nstant man egre is him, b za there were none of Mr. Jonas Webb’s, t
da, hich | Du — of Richmond's, and Mr. Rigden's to du oen ay the 8 tt to
would require the use of The roa ea wit > Horn and Somerse were , but 5 pomo
plough then of Flanders appears w ed for the | were pm uM » "x exhibitors, ‘These |: hole o soerat But stein —— My of m ik be he
ties of the mode e cultivation and kind of 3 hav: n we ag carefully selected | , he animal.
soll in which it depict ii Tm P DET oe the fest Bur days to a keep down
sole (sep) to which the working parts of Ms the prize a and Mr. Bond the ài The «eru e rbd and Cx salis ation On the fourth day, four r quar or, if
f of blood
Pi o-
furrow (versoir) are attached, is generally made of portion o the vast and ond extent of country -—
wood ; i is a meia d sledge, wine slides along the | these sheep now oeempy: Next year at Dorchester we should be taken from a Py ie . ee
d the left side of w hich works may expec see them in greater force. Mr. Brown V cedes
the part of the 1 land not operated n by the | had — of the p prizes, —— — with Mr. Moore, will 17 — e but dor
to softe dg
D 9 Soc ned eid whic priota 1 * n =
tesi : d * GS EL almost have disappeared without any bad consequence
a of the i Thel h af the (sep) sole Societies. resulting. I have known some — where after such
Obviously regulates that of the working parts of the
plough ; some advocate a long sole, some a short one; eras AGRICUL TURAL OF ENGLA
KLY Counc held June 15 present
for friction. The action of the sole in adding to the Mr. 2 Barker, Vice-President, in the chair —
pe of the plough, and also in forming a hard| The Earl of Malmesbury, Secretary of State for Foreign
urface in the bottom of the fur no less the | Affairs, transmitted the report of Mr. Morgan, her
after milking only, and not again touched until
sad in for slaughter = the end ot the season,
The above is the is "RU t o
being sent to Grass; but on eee the bathing =!
with—the Grass being
bath—the friction of sistem
br id pr de Ml of. €:
appliance. This le in i tio vhi
which are placed behind the sole; these be
t be
plough, and serve as they re ker s hp e result of an ag cniin be made
of the uis on pU soil These may act very well in the view to ascertaining the 2 — Ru substance. hang out, 80 s —
einer ly on agen soils ie ky with in Mug. ts but i re al soils Mor, gan's report states that favourable e te have point of a small knife applied to the band where it
not ve judicially s dua little ronda y- d .TI the f — a red tes degree ee — ile
To the fore ot he 1 soc) is con g T said that we eris eatedl i ' ly
ME Say! fe on the Ei most available rise its are 8 on — road to p^ diseases of the ors hae in cows by the emplo
Ape the 3 not only the diamond districts. The chief mentre e I ment of the MA thie 9 ii tinet Pus 57
to jend » x seprilin or ett ay d the e ON Ai good roads, but 8 r railroad is bryonia. In in which 1 — - the
sad this ay up to th Meer pam Ther — ac e "
furrow e sedi n REM E the River . b. e ye . AMT Ih e
LL requires to be made so well that it will San Frances co, — — of X — — — altogether hof; "ari oe,
a ee ae nop and wi e of — — a Eo giving one — the ——
ti bstac passag much softer, In twelve hours he commen
se of oth doe! the mould-board. In many of the leagues The. regant proceeds to to ‘detail the process of to milk her and gave no more medicine. After calving,
— Pepe da p he udder again became very much inflamed, and her
— Pe of wood, me es the face ve with a ay Mares — — to acad PEN = body exceedingly swollen as far forward as the fore
integrity 2 eger neg y oen i m 1 — ied oF ie i ibis m X legs. She remained in that state for four days. He
of iron. The upper part of the turn- deposits lying i in the intended line I believe, with th ~ B Beye — M yo "A. E E ight 2 Nee
— e yore is so curved t ee it lays — in England ut 7. (o Gl. per ton. Should the trade in (eam » quite soft. To another three- vais heifer
erc the Flemish plough generally lara carved this article inerease,. either from competition or =y A epi 5 sou ene ae "ü
outline nearly equal to that of the — line of mo abundance, it is but natural to suppose it would be brisa: ee
board ; ii is rarely placed Lesern n the — at placed at a lower figure for the purposes of our com-
least n early vertical — as * hane or English merce, inasmuch as the manure in question contains
R, S. B. highly organised matter with a large — of real
ammoni Ls nitrogen, ies, magnesi:
| and car of lime.”
nce. On the iii Mr. Wren Hoskyns, these commu-
: 4m Show.—lwas|nications were referred to the Chemical Comites
ot 6 Aa ented attending the last half-yearly | with a view to Ge canine analysed by Dr.
— Royal Society, where I cker, consulting — and the
inten to T brought ary, the 8 ol thanks of the Council were ordered to be conveyed to
shall only be echoing the remark o brand. wen 1 | ese cn = F
the want of catalogues in 3 A letter from Mr. Bullock Webster (dated from
* demand at the Shows 15 in whi
e : M wd year after year is Athens) was read, in which he states that he has been
Md e to the managers. To persons who devoting attenti the Vine disease, and that the
e spare time to exp ery stand in application of sulphur most in
the implement yard but who wish to see anything n ce, and that the same has uced
or likely to be useful, tof aca zl» | blighte H speak vd rna
eq 8 y blighted green erops. m as
i me one to an inhabitant of this | to Potatoes, Peas, fruit trees, Roses, trees, &c.,
— with no other ad oe » that he has no doubt of its e as ds both | consisted.
py P and although I must bear witness to the courtesy I|Turnips and Hops. He also states that S ue d , The sand extracted
ways experienced in being d with a Gad e he applied in a very fine powder in the early | from the sample ting
t Pm THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND ee GAZETTE.
t lay down any particule ır rule, and that the crops shou
varied to suit differences in soil and cli
i mate. With reu
Miri dime Y (Essex), whi hn
Ü he nagement of hedges in this county 2
ee Culture —The — b was the driest in Ergland, the hedges were, = ie E oe
en os report of the discussion before this Cla — qp aer pet that ins 5 Een Teneo,
and not the hedge. e k was th p high,
ET i : hink there was
tly it was very dry he did not t
E hire) agreed with Mr. Wallis, that the | quen T u k
Mr. J. Pain (Bedfordshire) agre 8 n light jana if —— county is Énglan : Pes f e : ed parsed
four-course s; ande „- the „ of Turni —— a
oue Cet d ssi t
Turnips and Covers s 1 age that n EA E 1 — dich 812 fedis ib bise H had
ad n, by doing whic! ck,
p a gos ge, derer
ane s
good T: land in Bedfordshire, they co 2 ful properties of salt; in
asthoy used todo. Therefore Tu Pre ved otn the very bene fal “But pe e ffening of th wai
ge
i old. lan with Tare hing
E Turnips on the fallows ; (od Basler, Beans, Clover, Wheat,
ans and Wheat When the land was good and wt
no difficulty bad been expeHenced im getting two erg of that when with this th
Wheat in six yea: vet with gu
Mr. dr (Farnham) could corroborate what] Gunso for
Mr. Pain had said MN, the general prae rof the | when nixed wit
Turnip crop. He hi rmed chiefly heavy lands, and m ue Ded ee er EM
had done » for 20 year. m dry , wherever h a
isued a ye system. The a whe =Á = | Wurzel, it had invariably been successful. T
ad nat bag subjected t n rnip c did note i
and Swedes, fan he ees | j phosphate
ce | ure— on
| That the basis of' such arrangements s Should be
[Joxe 18, 1859,
9 -on Orchards m Imi rigation—on Fre =
S gs for Small Fi reich Ap
arnstaple E xhibition — 2 ts and Manufaet Oh the
Elementary Intéoduction to the Princi res)—an :
of Art; and “The Note neta ae
selves a s fo lovi: —
X Resolut ons as Amended by the E CX
of the Committee, si That
t rms of arrangemeni
d be reduced tee
ore the tes ofthe tenant on the et r4
of the Te nant: Security that
Page security to landlord and tenant :—
if he farms (o) In frr
t :
some difficul mA in A Rtg it om; but he found that he —— E stopa upon heavy lands, which ment be out of 8
ed to 22 er foun in an
"T crops that he us i
rop 5 eed to Aat nigh of th o eo | He had usedit upon s cloy. landa in in the pr oportion of 2 owt. of
t 3 be; next, | guano and 3 cwt. o
urnips, Mangel, "Tires. or h & had & s f
white accor circu: e has not had time te in a fair
whia — dese sa Rene — d wed by Mr. Lyall faber said, that in the district in without being paid for it (b). In favour of the Land
Beans, and the Bean crop by Wheat. He had gone on the | which he resided there was a great deal of mar ila lord: Security that, on the other hand à
ie TUM RE DEI ord EG oh apo A pert hs een eee ge e C ienee, could be more profita or temporar: d
i and, perhaps, oftener 1
e N 18085 length lined rx fürmed on the exists system t - any otl er. bad managemen . SS or
Turnips and this year he had not grown any atall He had| It was less expensive, and p greater — g Mies 3d. cultivation clauses should wo eo
substituted Globe Mangel for Swedes, pete ape for Early | green — s and corn; and te ig approved maxim 7 1 trict am teh ds 50 ix
fri of his had recommended him to e he “Grow : all you can ; sell all you can ; and at the least co: lessly restric e tenant as e succession of his
th lime, and he tried it a year or two ago; but he did not can.“ As to artificial m N in the Lincolnshire Y lds crops h. That such restrictive clauses as may be
find that it was successful. The seod crop did not fail, but | i do MM NAE ‘the Exe dh oe farmers would necessary should, as far as practicable, ans P
0 t ears, W rodu V: x gi 2 8 K
Tarnip jf „ h oer daly could not p he past year he bad one field 46 acres, which he | penalties, by way of additional rent, 80 as to be capable |
He does not use much artificial manure, their effects depending | heavily dressed with good cake manure, at the rate of seven | of enforcement without the necessity of hora inte
much on the weather. If they used a shee Fe a inog A 8 ot Vue qe e tx * per m 3 — legal proceedings to assess dama ages.
ano, and wet weather followed, it answered; put on ee compost, mixe af *
Sather — 36 be dry, the results were rather the re with 4 5 of f pho sphate, through the dri. ET | claim for orien on the ground of hg i
After all, he did not find that even for high farming there was| mixture he divided hea eee a land all | fi clean be entertained. 6th. That ordinary claims
anythin, hich th ld so well rely as gi good anga — re oe m with jhe ex ception a8 A o drill brea — | on the part of the outgoing tenant be to crops
du id on all his manure on the Clover lea for ins, ween the heaps, which were le or e e purpose o seeing
and took his Wheat afterwards, and theresult of that was inva- | what the effect would be without the nitro-pho: nm in ses n $ 3 — — 1 W Th
riably a better crop. The result was, that where es nitrate was not Gand Ose | according to ex value to n incoming tenant.
Mr. Parkinson (Newark) said revions to the-intro- | not pe grow n AMT s as wher A d — sed. e That in making arrangements between landlord and
M r hat Was but a young M gel Wurzel grower, hav ‘commen d | tenant, the ES - mich on of the coun be y
duction of guano that it ight — Say of what | only — years ik "But his progress x wk BN The met büred^osq That claims fot rot
balk or wi weight they m t grow Swede —— for | year he grew 4 acres; the next 8; the next 12, and this year 40. - pe pur
ith e to grow me beyon nd its | For Mangel he used 2 ewt. of guano, 3 cwt. of salt, and 3 ewt. | cha manure or pure! ased tter of pend
power, — at that time res had — Turnips on ed — dii it Mange i being 2 — * ;" RE — MS — agr e ^ square metres; its ATN eig as 6 metres.
One of the most striking facts in this return dem — / en : 5 pat in | This Ivy was blown down by a hurricane in 182 s:
the extension of Vite onilura. The Vin Men dn wilder as in the north :Pasi&o-oiti ne ad tun The climate and soil of Montpellier appear fa favourable
1 in sep embraced only 112 acres, in ^e 7 with pad e m of "justico and of legislature that | i anr ood of — arden der 39 n 1 o ue ;
ro bee vba fw a mE And in the opin not in 20 yea uro and in fen erence, but its age is " — this is not the ease i
ys e will doubts. E : den ey. succeeding | | 2 à years mo will be talking of independence, with the one I am about to describe. On demolishing =
tity. i4 argely to the qu — an mir vies “like South Australia of — ng | Some revious to building the choir of. 2
— S "n n e wine is at pres millions worth of farm and garden produe thedral, an old wall was exposed, ich had fo 3
Wélieved p European consumption ll be readily the ancient monastery of the Penn
Ni xr t Vins EA nd Ay are perfectly WE are asked how the beautiful TOMATOS, 2 m e by, Urban Cs An ocenpied. b ybe en :
the wine will mend with us i à Tit K dye 3 in the > French mar tkets and so o much fine e sesso de ot ‘planted 3 ue 3 ERE y
Was poor at ; ear ike e 1 1 f the faculty. At Om. 30
ie L „as regards its Sauce made pe m ti em is J '
Ras it it ane rank by the side of the The obvious answ E paraply betten At the the Ped geen ras rete
80 in
sare eins ater mem ee Fade eti Ge [ie t M b DET
Tomatoes. ertai fait n f ne
be SUE PAR — ati Bo mare e as 1 Me influence the quality nm dn . — The LB ceca over r the uie Ed
steadily and rapidly in quantity is uantity : moreover climate itself is not the height ‘Of which is 10m. bu ; vii
must m did. a that South Auetrülin | aboot beyond reach. Management has doubt- 3 with the top of the wie is n: 25 in length;
colony. Nor are the — wine producing | ‘© oo a this as well as in other cases much to do | it Presents therefore a s of 126 square me
WE ati ts pearch uf € behind A | P "ult. 3 space much larger than — eee by the Ivy
; the i: rowing th ean. If the wall were h her, t
8 y better suited to the Ats seem to re quie. o discretion) Bri ums 2" by the Ivy would be still more considerable ee: mir
ok a “Bl E now talking |^ arly, RR a it in the hottest place that do the branches rise above the top of the wa in
1 described as a magnifi- | and keeping it f p A. SAM. O04 thy he roof of the amphitheatre w
cent sor seeping it from night cold and heavy | abu ime to time to
5 5 to the rn 8 . ripening; these points are ts against it, and they are cut from fg posed to
although it should i 5 understood by experienced men; altho ni well — their entirely covering it. It is 2
bother side of our hro icle, yet ‘we prid in di the | be Abs ie that the i rien à A “oo pt to cipality of P Monty. pri . e. eh
neglect the aj of Montpellier his projects
(cm xime thie 1 IRE the the Horta in a pretty go Qe ow place dirais we ae Ailes 8 onis "enin most co cnet Vae
jec ANDR from H e miles | Presa venerable,
prepared the re following table : ee tola mer ad = they were stationed at the I had fancied this Ivy must be extremely vt
x Ice und EE A wall, and left tosprawl over the when a lucky accident introduced me to an 0 d gardene
—— M | Maize. | Hay, Ke. Totals. autumn s e wild things, with no pruning, and n —.— MM ard, 71 years ay who pi - the slowing
—— — j n:—At the age of 8 or T 0 years e
we English practice, in the b 4 — ‘his euh in planting a a Nut- to eo ot
= — unobjectionable; nor indeed does it hen he noticed a young plant
aterially differ from the French Be a it ivy doing o the vn all: he spared it, and it gradual
agement, T in summer | increased in size. As the child became à man he to
o nail t. to a wall, or to lead tmm in ighbouring gardens
em over slates, is right ; Pat to th ead | pleasure, when cultivating the neigh Hasch tho
on banks, although it answers peg ar down | in seeing his Ivy gradually d the wall, Tu wo E
gardener in vary. Vieni dry 2 1 ä et e about 1833, and finally pass 5 D i
not to be recommended in pri n E Resto E M most, 8
quality is more i priva ens whe pom to be about 65 years old af mpoed —
as the fruit of . ee inasmuch v arkable instance of the imee ri dee? iready d
r. Is co to absorb animal matter
ain or heavy rb = A. Which. i em rn Um
e kept .
8 were published in the i . during
ka th sit ci er a that Ted tion th Soi are qui te particular cote jed there y bones and
eir
i Plants, so that as nice a} taken from some catacombs in the e neighbourhood
;
Jose 25, 1859.]
Fora
the Public Vaults. — € distance the soil
was filled with human bones rotten wood, which
were found in large quantities p digging the f foun-
tions of the choir of 17 Seas dral. This Ivy has
therefore grown in lan in an exceptional
red i
manner, and incomparably idee jn phosphate of lime
dg the richest ordinary soil.
obtain an idea Ls — influence of this unusual
Pin of food, I have
what would have been the age of the Ivy if it
d soil.
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE - are AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
541
clothing them with a ppo No traveller
"ini
gree
3 the prvi spring.
will forget the Ivy which the ruins of i house than mine it 4 ld flower yi in spring or
"wu tle of Heidelberg, ‘the feudal fortres ss of Bressui perhap in autumn, but as the thermometer falls with
E 5 or 36°, it — tear loses some of its buds
the inheritance of the vespere "eun Th s wich are iae n autumn, but even thus, enough
on tle has stood since 1440; s flanked b mains to ma! 1 plant very gay in th spring, and,
metres in height; the vy is trained with much | well culti ated, it would be by far the most gorgeous
over a s, and the pp we know. J.
It is i Glenny's Manua lof Practical Gardening.
are
of the foliage.
charr
ib idea of the
rming effect of this castle s» veri 5 In England
—80 a
“ Carlton ” ae questioned your
writer who signs
L E *
Y
for hes i
in a soil whioh i is neither cultivated nor manured, may
t have i" de en
the A trees. We have ascertained m “the mean
decrease of the layers is represented by a hyperbolic
curve with a horizontal asymptote. Other considera-
tions show that it is very probable that the > hyperbola
The 3 of the ago of Ivy on a ruin would o
itself be very interesting, for ^ 5 sure examples of
prodigious Me ll vity would be met with; besides which
we | should evidently have | a minimum limit by the age
e of
grown in a non-manure De Candolle 1 a I have admired e Ivy clothing the honesty or judgment, me tels you that your review
basis for the ulation; he measured at Montpellie worth. Loudon diis those of Brockley Hall, in will cause disappointm He “ss “although the
Ivy growing in ordinary gro yae “old 98 in climb over the trees; one itself very acti is put together in a
and w 5 in diam e Uam tablish a Om. 266 i ameter, another Om ; both m st anner to le the most pte r In
geometrical ratio between the diameter and age of this very old, Ke the growth of the Ivy is slower in Eng- truth it is a mere jumble of g od Qus without any
Ivy, and the diameter (Om. 245) of the Ivy of the land than in the south of France. Another Ivy covers | means of finding where they are. he As.
cathedral, with the view of date the po le ge in the town of Morpeth, in Northumberland; | for Chrysanthemum, but give up the sı name
age of the latter, we sho rror, for i out of a wall and measures Om. 490 in is not in the index, as it is aet d pt to
foresters, horticulturis! en e and C iid at the "een ze where it branches, a height of meen nor can I discov er its place r ar Da I ‘that he
saw. in all trees the ligneous 3 metres above the groun volume.
laore dinh jn int — the centre to the cir-| Ivies so often ada r ruins or old buildings, that it fished i in the ‘Thames for a red herring. He loo
cumference. tely the laws of this diminution | would be very interesting to study their growth i ork t M denied to rata
even been ascertained for the commonest diameter; this can be done by countin ged number of | operations, a id: io h d sin ingle
i assistance of my u „ligneous layers i in old Ivies cut down at the base, or by | florists flower, and 8 it Seine not
Mus I have determined them for the Pinus measuring the diameter " those of which the age is | find what had no business there. 1 must contradict him
+ aha the — of which T 8 studied known. certain number of examples compared | flatly wl s “the index leads to m
rom 70? of N. latitude to 513; s to say, | together would furnish s a mean by which we might AE is not a sir item in the index à
“sok Lapland to the north of Fra — Tt is in| y lea to the number of the page on which
the middle of Sweden, in lat. 60°, hat this t e shrubs, ars. doubt Carlton fancied
ove
h
ald h e
f | but I can assure AN that Dr. Lindley's “Theory of
Horticulture” mg as j i
to prize fighting. There’ is nothing about the
ring in | the index, * “nor can I discover its pe in any
Clever fellow, thi ! Geor orge
all species of trees in our climate. - to the A which clothes it. hiat physiology and | Glen enny.
For want of other elements I ee 3 pp nich ld tl QUT struck Oak.—I have a large and handsom
that the Ivy of the medical schoo! ould have followed p ig ich has Hemd beg * . gee -— much
this law had it grown ina mer 205 : h I|tion Charles Martins. deis rein The bark ri
" that it M have been abou 90 years old. — sereme rarem e E about one-thi en i dom, bas wiles orn m of
us, an Ivy planted in a highly manured soil has orr ndence. loosened,
acquired in 65 years the den which it would only Geraniums st um esponde accompanying | the trunk, rine not splintering the bark from the
re attained at the end of 3 f unmanured ; | is gee of propagating this class of plasta by first point of injury to the ground. The tree is in a
nsequently a manure abounding in ph f li ts. I don't know if it is generally known. I find place where it i a great ornament, and I am very un-
2 — the 0 ower of this
These facts complica!
on
P. for example, the Ivy
trees deduced from their
E — pe, by De udi in * and which
ameter, would hav tained the
oí ut no if it had grown in
an unmanured soil, but in a well manured garden pi
would be 5 pin while, had it grown
2 Ae ry of the Abbey of St. Germain, it
an Ivy remarkable
est horticulturists
and FEES more than
those of w ae been speaking.
5 De Candolle planted in dee: newly faded northern
a forest school, in A gr the trees were
ral The common Ivy was plante
*
it v very useful. Roots eut into short pieces at any time
i
Uy n
wx" 77
| AJ l
NL
} ; 2
can be taken to rad its nd P.
he bark I could see hopes by
fear ock to the
whole system een great. The age of the
tree — be about 100 or 120 years, in full vigour and
beauty. L. W. G.
Gigun
loc. —At a jobbing gardener's
“Her
s there is an American Hemlock Em — * with
EA 2 to
in perio ilies.
there, as usual, with a s The stems 7
er on and 4 €— 5 5 X it formed a whi
lar to t of the Am Lianes, which. end b br the flattering — of fine * flaps" for breakfust
killing « p replacing the tree which T enfold. e and “ — ? for sauce to € boiled fowl at dinner.
support not high, so that the is only Im But alas! nothing came. — id get one
high; it is » ain, in ies d at Om. 30 above e whole —— no Viet Discouraged at my
ground; the top of the tree, which is perfectly round, failure, b yg d that it
is not more than 4m. 35 in height, but it is 19m. 30 i to try, and not seeing in what -
circumference. he extr emi ities of the lowest branc ent was faul ore But,
touch the eart ow that the subject is revived, I trust that among the
ance of a pyramid y verdure placed upon the e grou Y many intelligent correspondents of the Tdener:
This Ivy is now 46 years old; its trunk, as I have sa Chronicle some wi ble to di this inte-
is not simple, but dr ae . of an e e des ‘al resting subject. For myself I cannot see why Mush-
e ed stems and branches which have been co room spawn should not be made to “run” in a lawn as
tin i ing in If we esi m wel on a Mushroo ; nor why, esta-
an idea of the = of the Ivy, it is very important to blished, it should wear ont faster than in a meadow.
distinguish these compound trunks from “single ones Suppose long surface drains were rammed full of loam
like that of the hys on the aeg of ors and ho roppings, and ned! y
This tendency to form trunk hy "the inter- ———Although I aa thered 3 Mushrooms
n ur of s bran mier 1 d ftl arth, If put in in| from ai an exposed A: paragus bed n April, yet I have
0 the ornamentation of parks and gardens. I the autumn they will — in spring ; any t been able t on my lawn. y
have proved this by experience. In 1852, I transplanted | summer they are up in a few weeks. W. W. allure I — attribute more to the " api
a Pinus Laricio of 5 ranged height, and placed i Tacsonia Brita: A plant was distributed a few | being a d to mismanagement, and I am
hic} cupy in the botanic gar- | years ago by tbe Horticultural Society under this to say good spawn is difficult to
den. After some months the tree died; on which I name, but I do no f it as having flowered in | either hot present at allinthe “ D: you buy,
cut a its emen and planted at its foot two Ivies AM erg nor have ever seen it exce in my own has beg to run and has got Y
© Banksia Roses; for two eui both creepers | gre 1t l
wed to advantage |
‘th bu t by o
and the top of the I
ieee 15 e
Fy soon ed
the bra
e of this, and they now fall — all around, pre-
candel
ouse.
in v colour of the splendid g emus Passiflora, and more-
a hardy greenhouse climber, Se ither Passiflora
), the Brazilian
Le Michauxii, nor P. 8 m
they
lour
colour is intense orange — s0 Sentient with the
aid u upon
| average e scarlet Geranium, that petal bein
. | that dire
ek,
found that in ev ery instages d xa. p pes and was
dead. I however intend to the
ctly aa follows tala
get good spawn,
circ
senting the appearance o of an labru
eit st
support itself if the Pine should decay, but 1
nature of this tree ensures its preservation. Were I to
l — the hoop twice tl
whilst the rays, s, which are
€ gan 2 the effect of a scarlet Anem
flow early t the same size as Passiflo — —
Te "
nearly black, enim this | covering
The | sods,
ween the stem and the ipe! oo
may be: 2 i in any ordinary — and it is so
Mee
the
on M.
d I see no good
in,
as to leave, betw
n verdant summerhouse, always“ cool
ral E
, but
it —.— ot pass t he 58" of N. latitude; it exi — how-
ever, ^" the island of Gothland, but it is not found in
Sweden In Britain it stops at the Shetlands, and
neither grows in the ct ond nor in the res isles. In
England a nd Germa ermany it embellishes the ruins,
&
on bars of the lights within an incli of the glass in a
- y
— — Its only pecu liarity is in pruning.
It lowes
year, bat est niet ams roduced on that wood, and
most su ul — — is to shots the principal | reg
shoots in August when it forms laterals w hich produce
were ee.
3 not ris obtained from
the Wa. jost describe
men ia d E —I cess observed in recent
bers of your Paper ome commu nicati ions with
tation
— the difficulty i is aie by the oon quantity of
h during the season, little loose, but still a first-class Ros
ich may be them served as a daily PO dis it
ved t hrak “ang a ni wut i in vate did and think the e superior to the Steeg die i sor in etre. gur, white; d NA de Dijon, bronzy zy yale e
Kjad bbi by , den t the E gut ds with wet sand. | flavour. There may Ye’ some difficulty en rich full deep rose; Ch barles Duy
E — em wine me by a French verts. One frie nd d ex ; beer al hao to x 2 re, = i but good v. ariety ; oun
jig I Nd to answer CER A, D. B. | partake of them alone the ey made their| Madame Hardy, white ; Triom mph Be.
a
2 a
He
e de
gd table; s jeu bec red with|deep velvety crimson Hybri
Grafting.—In ar Number o the 11th of impunity his family anc d some guests took courage the do puble, but Sn novel in e
TOS P:
gn
x lle Thertse A t; ] i t,
delicious and w of its name. Iw used i moise ppert, pale lilac x 6
the summer to — Ma of August, but he does nei sey tait Fa nother quantity 25 a P a who hed to Ta Keg rM riy E m ; Bor:
how he prepares his grafts. t tl t much against urgen ac ais de Paris, p^ crimson, t Triomphe
spring - na x the vital spark — the Ist of Lu Or Vu U e hs d Lim acid aint ie e fatal effects a green eye; Laure Ram xdi o
August, o he 55 ut them fresh foni. Me t that must ensue, and listened anxiously occasionally at bling M. Vidot; William Jesse, Baronn
Perhaps. T i eno R^ is d doo a elf that her maste s b
117
er
TJ)
5
i
d
ji
—
explain in e future number how he prepar the i s i ui
keeps his s grafts; it would be most valuable eoi SA t8 be well Locke d, an nd th le late P Badham abbage, Bath White Moss, Baronne
Iso" ry Oligo supr Mad Aerial man e direction for “Dal season | deep lilac tinged with rose; Boule de
t P. I, Prio ne 20. with Ne and salt, and put a piece of butter of our be: lead.colo
ill b erto M. Loise: " upon each, bake in a cn e pie-dish for about Jacquin, Duke of Cambridge, a good full
ment you will find : that he speaks of herbaceous py quarters of an hour." Richard Ward, Salhouse, | Rose; August Guinoisseau, la:
grafting ; a term which conveys a distinct reply toj vid. K Lord 1
quiry.
7
ES
>
c
un
et
o
M
E
Qa
oO
©
&
E]
@
=
Bm
E A
.
HE
i
rge and loose but d
ueen of Den aglan, . J tle de
your inquiry. alla _@thiopica : Somersetshire Climate.— There | all the brilliant scarlet kinds; Glo 2 Parthenay,
Budding Vinis An the Gardeners’ Chronicle of the | at Ne erent nee Taunton, a | Caroline de Sansal, Chénédolé, rich and fine; M. Dog,
llth ind. 485 , kindly had inserted under “Home plant of Calla æthiopica, which s put some years | large and beautiful; e Zoetmans, large white. _
Correspondence: some queri ies fro om relative to ce by Sir ir Walter Tre evelyan tc rd * that | Felicité rmentier, delicate pins :
budding Vines, and I t "the past and which this year has 40 | Mousseuses, large fine Moss; Mrs. Elliott
N no notice has been taken of it t by gardeners or | blossoms on it. I [2s that at Cl in Hertford- | brilli: t 6 er teoria M. ambae fini
Will you u therefore allow me to bring this shire, a similar prios was EL to be found in a |rosy lilac; M. Willermoz, pale yellow, with a
sct bef r. Wm. Harrison. cen itre 8 eral Jacqueminot, with blossoms
in 1 than a appears rs at first acht, for if it can be e proved | ds “ché across, and very brilliant; Mathurin
that in the cara of July or August buds can be Sloe Blight.— Among the effects produced by delicate pa good; Noëmi, Triomphe de P Exposition, 1
transferred e Vine to another, and the next blight, the bush from which I gathered the 1 Sio, faulty in the centre, but shi Charles
season bear as oud “fruit as an esta blished Vine, er- >
n sho
te twigs is certainly one x bu most remar kable I have Lawson, one of the best of Roses, largi ^ "
is a new and the best means of at once changing met t with. You will p e it i William Grifüths, Géant de Batailles, Lafontaine, a
any variety not 1 0 en a n on g,” as it is familiarly called (Prunus m You | large course kind; beo ber Louis (his, a
variety is let out, such for instance as the “Muscat en badly form an ade wed idea of the strange ap-|fine comparative t, which E
> pearance of a targo bush decorated with pos s of in every election 47 . norr,
^ M 0 = l 2 | these pendant monsters in various del of growth . Cast of the handsomes
uce fine ripe * Black Muscat Hamburgh this | and odd enough, mnatoa with fruit in a healthy and crimsons; Dr. Juillard, Coupe d'Hébé, Lion des
year on an e udded as flourishing state. J. M., Hawkehurc E near Axminster,| Combats, Duchess of Sutherland, and Souvenir de
j yowthink Asc ace Vds ur —— m — ri ape- de The Sloe branch covered with bladder-like | Malmaison. From Mr. Francis, who also showed m
wor! Shall have something it, in which there is ran a vesti joe stone, resembles 8 b s Persi Á
[^c en BERI vwidod l 10 3 if E it has fruit wee er Age this class, came ek 4 looms of Persian Yellow, the
ca
is]
B
[e]
w
A
&
E:
B
sS
o
E
oO
et
iei
| exactly what gured i s Journal ud most striking of its colour; Cloth Ke in White Bath
yet been in operation. James Aldrige Dea | p. 406, and 1855, p 532 where the pedes informa-| Moss, Col. Rougemont, large an e; Gen. Jacque-
a. 8 yy vend me are t ‘ha tion will be found. M. J. B. minot, Prince Leon, Gen Cute end Senha
7 ume process ha : pale yellow.
Dope m in stock ant wdge buds vill l take "inl 8 the class of 50 varieties Messrs. Can T — —
ven ad tha hast
bleeding: but we do not understand that 4t be — Sotieties. tine Poems of Ba ule ds N e of Are,
or correspondent means. a Ville de Bruxelles, lilac rose, large and fne;
ie " Hor : At a meetin: ng of this Society held 9
CCC
cliff). T purchased some plants in Angust hot, Adelphi, on Tuesday, the 2 Ast inst, the following gen. | oire de Dijon, gaian
nd I think it due to Mr. f. to kiso my e 8 allows, naar oe 1 rath pre E de, 0 Ami, Etendard des
" seis is variety. The lants thrived so pro- — prt pai e o Me — 2 Amateurs, crimson shading off to rose; Chénédolé,
iS. ot lling some 20 es usual G Er Wilson, Esq, Belmont, Vauxhall I. Rivers, Gloire des Mouss
> ia 2 eade oakes, ‘ope Co 177 Highgate. Triom phe de e Ar M. x hair Bacchus,
October, which 1 Y M vs kare from them in A variety of plants selected Y by the Council for distri- | 4 good brilliar mson; Paes - Me s
e € : potte : Bree ia ina e house in ; ere for, and will be — . M. Stolz, N y — Pe qna sha
plant p ‘produced u nice quantity at bot e T who lilac; Paul Ricaut, Prince Leon,
4 to show its prolife tendency, far Ine pl: a 3 I
eneral p ueminot, large :
were Bo N and de runners 5 young meeting s the National E Show took — UN Griffiths, Devoniensis, Colonel Henge "Ein
plants of the n it was not ex p
wi orm e * Pe Thu ene ond in the Hanover Square ‘on — 5 ot- eon, dee ety crimson,
: lato i UM — g that in many localities there is as yet A of its aei ; Tafontaine, — 5 ad
of doo ms owing to the first grow His Tet ble in colour; i M. Vidot, D
tof by frost in April last, the whole of ee d crimson; Willia m Jesse, Prince
led ey EP 5 *
As be fine; Souvenir des Braves, t
ec- | queen of towers Two — ning the entire von ; Souvenir de Leveson Gower, an excellent K
of th m were MS with ¢ cha: rming Cardin ne de Sansal, Lord Raglan, M.
boxes full of Roses, both in the shape » shading off to p ; Alp
— of pridem of three In lilac, c, medium 5 and ard
centre of one of the TE and Tt d at intervals | S
; Gloire de Dijon,
Mat it tl sna others It may be rem
table w were eerie of beat title plants, 10 5 those that eme 5 Bath were for the m
med Perpetuals, all on e M anetti Stock, k, from Mr. | very large and
ET +} |b :
the clas oF 24 varieties Messrs. Fraser,
et contributed the be st i It co
—
5
on the the
3 omm 3 as a step
prolongin ng the se son of t
and $ think it is ud TU to the 5
favour, course, as
„ à
other kinds, its character will vary more o E with x Patrizzi, ne
. Mind c UM = Beas zA light dy aoil — in ly | an old ie EU all x ER Y uline 2 Ohl,
o are favoured with a r Straw- anachée "Orléans,
— 2 me be enabled to say st its | the few W striped kinds, i ble
€ W. Rode D., Ki ns
m er) iy to your cor- fine recent additions f, deep velvety cri on 75 fe a
T Sat Pe cg 1-3 the hey may be inne: | Pinna Cabbage, Moss, Lord Palmerston, decree |T Ries Cynthia, Triomphe e Exposition, Ais
ndi Lycoperdon | ar or giani nt Pa bull, Amb 1 W V and Madame Rivers, both Hector Jac acquin, Device Triomph jst es Eil. Row
however : an exception, and in someseasons is frequently excellent of e E kinds Pri Popa P Fus 9 Pl norr, (Billet P Parfait, Car d ehe hu E es did not
ER Seri um Pcr a ee e: ae er i- vite Roses; Gene al Pelissier, not sufficiently b erly a. differ on tice re ero ci
y state pu nothi
richness and ae li of flavo | my iles ii E 3 ^ "anger an d by some consider
ost, which it great] besten í
sare wo) rth, — Of eng be better. ] e Mas ^ a 7 es; o fro m Mr. Moffatt,
5 ee during Ducher; Sou roe p tee uat »wer, pon mee "ES id consisted x acd ae F br
Some of my neighbours hav ot deep rose ; Louise Peyronny, lilac ; Duel tifu idot, M. )
ess of Norfolk, a] Jesse, Baronne Prevost, M. M Masson, Comtesse
Mibi o més dames?
Jose 26, 1659.)
Jules Margottin, Cynthia, General Jacque eminot, Duch
of Sutherland, "Triomphe d e Paris, M. Rivers
Rougemont, M. Place, Paul Ricaut, bar
Prince Leon, Souvenir de Malmai: and
Hallez.
Of 12 —, Shown by pg ee RL the
C. M. Wor-
best were
glan, — Leon,
Madame William, the yellow hi TU X
RE x on
leon, and Baronne Prevost.
a D in which were
"Bosanque
aison, Gloire de erem
Jules Margottin, Prince Leon, Adéle Prevost, Cardinal
de
Gloire
Napoleon, General Jacqueminot, and W. - Grifiths.
the class for i
the best 24 sorts . Cant & who sent |
beautiful bloo ooms Nanteuil, M. Schmidt,
Pa ul Ricaut, i
; li
es Margottin, General Jaeqneminot, €:
t known b ow-a
minot,
v —
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND
Colonel
Griffiths,
Baronne
Tho w
nne Hallez, Paul Ricaut, Cloth of
Lord Raj
so much
s Hall; Em —— clas:
Mr. Pate. of eed |
Wi | good
d
—
aon
ss | Ch aix, Gloire de Dijon, hess of Norfolk, Quee
esr ae 9 anit Moss, and wed
favourite kinds. We also noticed some char —
masses pt different kinds from Messrs. Veitch, Turner,
Hollamby, and —Á
OF Seedling Roses, Mr. Standish had one named
Eugéne Appert, a deep velvety crimson Hybr
he judges, an
i ing. It is in "
Victor eee and Are very dark
s we saw n othing really new.
the day beir
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
Hybrid Per —
pa om — be suitable — for pot caltre or for i
bed EN certainly
draining of the luke rose more than 100 teet above its
level; PE a ae : about tet Asthe
— oves dow urse fromithe
— side of the J
ee
he Massa
torrent it mi: oet d rocks E it
sses the —
ts this lateral outlet, and te
S Oa
arcade which was in one of *
which they were composed was a deep blue ‘colour
tha ver
r of visitors. We e only regret that t
e exhibition and the pleasure aiy a — |
W. hen
The fr ragments of the
the
| except those of its own crashing instruments.
Notices of Books.
me ! Svo. Longmans. |
vill t
rs? Oné would have
ne, now that Chamouni and Interlaken are |
chmo matt
eur acci 0a less so; yet eve
ubje
y
fearful noise of a band which drowned all sounds
sm
Tour round Monte Rosa.
he English publie be tired of abo
fancied the subject a | fiss
t | all its inmost depths we
s read, howe ever r little novelty it | could edt the
re part
ttage,
all as mince observed that many yof the ml
covered dote: Sich had been left hd abounded with
n p in this in-
in it. Nothing co
the appearance of the enormous ice-cliffs which towered
ve the lake. They were already s ith immense
sures, and i in some places | ros, d »
yi ant.
Fai jr of the vu be
re “as closed. Nothing pes
qme beauty and de Via of
n adequa
appeared
13 f
In —
e great er part of the "ake * the ciel, which are
laid bare
esse, Kean malin
rous, but aré dem e powers irga any one possessed |
oues: Gloi
Ami Géant
enerally ha
sell to their foundations; c Ps n pieh to
nir | all w
ehh re recollection for the — of future years.
se | ‘Twi in the
pibe ventilated rooms of a
z health. and strength. The authoress says :—* feel observ e the different character and colour of the ice
tain that any lady | health d below the usual on that — being
activity, who is capable of pe sey E little exercise ‘al ofa far deeper: and ed brilliant hue. In som
fresco,’ and has a taste for picturesque an the most 8 shapes, ani ind di
sublime, may mplish Mer of Monte | spot it appeared to form a kind of landi ing p — TR
Rosa —.— — delight — — — arene an ere steps an nd ba 'ustrades
bring
of ice leading up to small p blue caverns.”
From this book, as w
Alps,” it 224
om Mr. King's * Pennine
I 5
h £
ad
:3
SO m r'dg gx ms c. lel At aE
a o © .
D
Mare
furnished by Mr. Ca e who sent magnificent blooms of
Charles Lawson, me Masson, Boule de Na
J i pe rre, Baronne Prevost,
Comte nteuil, Omar Pacha, Devoniensis,
Raglan, and Cow homas Waiker,
lan, Caroli ine ri Sansal Madame Masson,
1| of
ngo, and La Vi
Of 12 varieties in the class last named, the best were | P. 391.
The a
nteuil, | i
Kean, | the o
asq., | E
Ricaut, Jules Margottin, | few e
Rag
William Griffiths, Lion des Combats, Prince Leon, and | b
Saronne Prevost. Mr. t sent Caroline
, Boule
siderably greater than Aer ae
hours’ pass in the pure, invigorating mountain air.”
mthoress writes well, in a sj
-
verrun by travellers, and. t
| ere
ment of eet — queer in the different excur-
I ac S a
epresenting the southern
rade pap —
w. As
inter
m ^ia little n is ^ E sio
nd o
eautiful.
n T have — some persons, especially ladies, who
aes ern and severe character of Swiss scenery, that
y | they oda not fully appreciate its sublimi ity; but who
W After ove 35
ve at the ascending for above and —
(IS fu ths an distance, whieh che ring sun just
— Cervin, or the
ity? could go no |
farther, and I —— the gentlemen on foot the | to
5 AL, without once requiring any assistance.
On reaching the , summit, one's first difficulty
a:
e well to state that A ain is situat lea en
Viesch, on the northern side of ne hz TE The of the oo where 2 "same majesti, emm
authoress an hotel about t parts up the mountains — m with, but set in a E
stain, whence sh a Hüte vil —— od
P ES
uxuriant fo
owers also abound on the
| than in — and dre
— 42 — rem
Regnier, Lo
IT Y Nen gm Marg ottin, Madam
divers, Triomphe de P Exposition, Tous Pey soniy,
Luguste Mie, "Baronne Prevost, Lion
aiim ueminot, pil Joa:
LLICA i Transon premens Sici ie, Boule de
Tanten. Colonel Coombes, La: e, Pri
Ac
ie,
u II
es,
of
nce
vidalii
observations, asa there is no leve
stand; but havi:
l spot on to
g done this, I found myself torre on
loose e
nob se
any exercise, especially that of walking.
Tue illustrations are generally good, though the
ightly
coloured
cem
Glacier below. This feeling of insecurity is, | however,
-One fault must be pointed out, namely, that
the
Coupe d'H
3
‘Malmaison,
—Brennus, Chénàdolé, Vietor Hugo, Madeleine, |
ration and delight. at the , Wonderful view. This i
Madame Rameau.
sse, Gloire de * Fidis Willermoz, |
s Deroniensis,
the
e whole che nk BLUSH
i ARLET o
n. Jaequemin
Gen. Castellane, Prince Leon,
J, Frankia. Ross :—Ool. Ro
r DARK
ot, Lion des
Paul Rica
very nest |
RIMSON :—
Combats, | thi is glaci r is bes
à Sir is
the range of the Bernese Alps on the north, and that |
-— ain on the south. „The e JEggi sch.
th
horn is placed betw
is |j
It embraces |
red line in the map, if intended to trace the
— of he — i is not correct, since she con-
|T héodule. ^ is supplied this
a f end; “nevertheless she cannot
book
| baue and at « immense depth M
very fi tretchin — |
in pe A d c 20 entm * «€
uthern edye
expans e te
$3
ph nie statement ten she has * snecessfully accom-
plished the tour of Monte Rosa.”
or Jlvstrations ii the South-
ing fi
capensis
m the
et,
ve sat down and i
n and rena
though the rail part of the drainage of that glacier | 1
2 n have little to 3
nd be
There were, however,
good.
— TO and (Eillet fend
yond
t
above Bri lacier, where i
54 — See, does not form a great Pad,
n huge masses, which fall into the lake,
Jules Margottin,
across, high],
des Be Batailles, very fine
—— These cliffs extend for more than half a mile across the
The
ravine, where the lateral —
| about three-parts dry, but there was still deep wa
is | the base of the ice clit, which in consequence o
flows from it, and empties itself into 2 pee. a little | the plants of South A
the | learned
authorities upon South
mber of the work will contain
mbers at ing a volume, which
f. eig nly
d for the Cape
in v^ v picem dead im-
It had burst its barrier or
the previous nig
THE GARDENERS’ OHROXICHE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
(Jose 23, 1859,
110 ect "d - OD OF TEE WEATHER AT CHIsw] ICK,
art 5 EE f olia e pM the fo eta of coe “Weide eee ending July
Dr. Har vey “does not bind himself to issue more n | development id pedis — he atmosphere of thi sales " = 2 :
n E ie euge die ums Pod i ke ept too moist, and t e plants il e 825 58 gE E: h K. lei). N
1 1 85 . 2 > SE Hr
FFF rn ieee ee eee
Ser : 3 t moist. Sund 737 | 50.8 | 622 4 ITem RI
ne ve remarkable for their beanty as well as soe). and every available 19805 po ae ne qe ES m PIHE i . 7 75
d 7 50. 5 0.6 - ]
Lm fe orate he PINERIES —Such v arieties as are Y al liable: to en Wed. 30. 73.0 | 508 | 619 8 0.20 3 4 3 1 is Us
appear. "To botanists the work is invaluable. 5 difas , fo | ial Gs) a doo ET
V "o 2.1 789.1 ! 519| 625 12 922 303 4h ¢
1 ible immediately they s Satur. 1 02 2' 5l si | aho ae
6th part o of Messrs. Henderson's Illustrated | now bo kept SR possi erke highest temperature during the above period se cd is
ompleting t the volume, is now before the the least signs of colouring, keeping tig atmosphere 1 heat temperature during the ab DUM en te 5
mr m hs contains fine figures of three Mice also as dry as an be ba tonar without M disi 2
: = 2 us À |
Gladiolus gandavensis, viz. Danäe, Adonis, an Archi- the stock. VIx rapes in d, if neces- Notices to Corr respondents,
medes; four Pompone Camellias, viz., St. Jun Miss | the winter should P^ r^ nned m fre m tnt, leaving Booxs: A Constant Sub. Any good books on general
e iy 5 oye bs Lo sai “towered |; AI. they paia a; = me dt aic: Dr 1wl m ch you h 10 5 kx 16 0 Strawberries, As or Special treatis
Dampieri, Dipteracanthus affini aay t tl fi; | there is Reid on the Strawberry, published by Baldwin, and
iare at ie to Roan and fie tre lesa toch aah other, A made pol pig Oat Neetot fad th suec in ida aa
a Alice, Cartoni- robusta; m" Mathilde de Lande. on the Vines; for to ensure success in 1 doros: vy. Your small-flowered s edling, ith, us
] thes ese are accompanied y very ull in- fresh and i in n good condition till next Mare E usually large amount of the charming s bange * au un-
structions T cultivation. The pese me is dedicated by be sati tisfied, therefore, sith sissimus in it, is ie em We seen oth er
p j Ca +] light ee ever, very much like i
e eee Fe or CAULIFLOWER 5 If they suffering fom
We hav also received th e follow ing :—P, 'actical | of houses where the fruit is mes give them a good sy ARA onde dr A eds with tol =f,
F n ual n | in aliva circulation, using * by dapi 915 ee it after wards with me n water. That will =
7 a bably cause them to disappear.
volume, giving the traveller information n upor Sorts | abundance of air, and leav ving a little air on at nig n
of useful matters. Ro: ays passports, luggage, exports, prevent damp. If red spider appears ed to be 8 EUM S Jam Tooling 15 mm 257 ea a "ie
imports, conversation, railways, in ns, br adesmen, things, | troublesome, wash ipes, & See ee D March or April, left with a more than three young shoots y
to be seen how to see them, excursions, and a multitude | soot and lime, and if the colour is objectionable add| ech, pla in very fi ch soil, pegged down when lug
of other matters ‘fll the paga which is ad ed a ore soot. Fras.—Trees that have pt dry while enough, and. bre d to p N an ud l. whi re
small map of Italy as low . The author is said | |ripening the first crop, and are now cleared of this, Let Ars ele
to be “an Englishman abroad, » and he is ev vidently dne; M PR Pa root, and | if there i 18 ANY | Dapane cNEORUM: Old Sub. — order to make (his grow
f: mss with what he descr bes purp Fx aR mg ie en more compac tly, pr e itin n; ^: little, E. un irs done
that l nae SP eh blooming, or rather when it begins O push fresh wood, T
n Map as : AP xe 5 ipi = trees will then stadd 4 Rita cutting without inju ,
the sorts Doda Aè at the least ae ^ a h g y second er and | ph Dun MORIA A KS edens 1 gt
he Seat War Lm th italy, Set aee Bes Lik ist by fi inkli caused by too eme moisture somewhere combined with
k P 2 | 1
besity of its execut Ce. Keep the shoots thin Ea regularly tied, so as| su ufficient ventilati
has been published by M D Blackie, at the price of to avoid e n, and expose all parts of the tree Qoid $i anak Mos? Büberibr, The specimens are es
1s,— Mental Arithmetic, by ugo Reid Gon mans), 7 equally s ses t. Where the fruit is ripening attend | Poxcr Iv MELON Bes Uttoxeter. Ton will destroy tay
little volume intended as much for teachers as fo OF | to s dirdétió ons, and keep the atm 9 and}. dusting then m ot lime, which will do your
1 , and apparently Ws peii ps either.— PA ds Aii , conveniently be do one. Assi ist| no — — what yere
new edition of the exce Manual o very ific inp by giving FED M ub 80 ae ba 1 e Pe M
Inquiry, published by author rity of e a f the| water. grow and colour Grapes under.
^ Murray), under the superin. er R GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. Grapes: X Y Z. No opinion ean possibly be formed of the
tendance of the 92 ^H: Main, of the Greenwich | Go the beds frequently and keep the Tom g ape fal f the disease without seeing specimens of the berries
0 atory. Many additions and some omissions Wong shoots u "Ver benas. „Kc. n nicely r regulated a nd ed Mes — WM M. The Witn leaven axe „ P
to this edition ; among the latter of which is Sir John | down until fue groun nd is fairly covered, after which the | "formed by Eriosoma Gallaram Ulm mi, a species of the Apbidre.
ch shoots may be allowed to grow more ‘at erty. On We can recommend no iS presse du than "bu when tke fib
nd We observe. that Mr. 5 ed (a dry soils two or three applica’ T “of weak hel Sige Sine ey . pre — ith gas tr water WER
sed Sie Wim Hooker in revising the botan manure water given at intervals of a few days, and| burst th the inclosed i sects W.
| when the ground is moist, will greatly assist in getting | roxc.sv: JITALITY IN SEEDS: J W. The eg by :
». Miscellane haart the beds covered without loss of time. Remove dead| ‘have been in your family and in thai aon state for
i iv wards of a century are those of Abrus epa That
Stream. —The @ f Stream, where it and dying m from Roses, and give the autumn Ms of tiem After being scaled ii: MID iali
mlf of Florida, has a doct of from three | flowering variet Spiny. of manure bI in order to base shown signs of germination, one having ing spronate three-
hour sos with the season) a|keep them in 8 health, and eme lenty
of an inch, although it subseque! per den a very
DJ
i ni m ure of 83°, | wood for blooming in autumn. ose budded on the
= hig arte = de 12 70 about the Ru ey must ie 2 ered g . zn. when Eimer tore
degree of latit w l. pasias x üm. owed to grow, weaken the hea — s: We
.peráture of . Sokea ug t quits the coast | unsightly appearance. — z should be proceeded | tantly decline naming heaps of drie sor other pst that we
Abo m * ear, and. Reni the Azores, ith d ecd to vor oul 1 ae a 1 n unlimited duty of
itself in wide diverging streams over the basin of the | troublesome after yi hy ata, and no uld be this his Kind. You rs, to w ks
Atlantic, MT the coasts of dota and Spain, og: in du mod the infested plants with buds for the . bear in m
imm a vast eddy, overgrown with the “ Sar argasso ” | enemy will soon spread and destroy the rd and us for assistance, they should e
or n e, Rs pok stream, however, continues ruin the plants for 2 in autumn. eed with
ard, direct ted full towards pag Į ly as
pie Islands, o. niout $ the 46th parallel, in the 40th | possible, in order is work f ha nd nd the that most willingly.
west longitude, where its force is much — &e, at] Td dh e advantage of showery| more 13 7 four
weaken y sion, e surface water, however, | Weather, give the walks A wns a pe mln ue
8 rd flow othe in the same directior, and endeavour to keep the Grass vi and n pens.—A
its presence on our western shores is eviden ced by the for nothing looks worse than ba dly 1 25 Gras, form a ex
warm vapours the Sonti vun winds waft from above HARDY FRUIT AND 1 Bas Meis cnt T
: QA by tropical plants and seeds thrown ashore on Occasional showers will be found favourable for the
] coast of Ireland, on the Hebrides, and
Were the isthmus of Panama broken | i
here is no doubt that the whole climate of in a close shady frase mad us pi ned prx
di
n
ergo a most notable iorati Prepare gro bs for Url e
ia Britannica— New SR ome eavily manuring pant hin; if grou
nnot i^ e at ws 83 the stro: e. dani
aud plant them on a shady border in rich soil, to be Pteris longifolia;
o; € Pha f Operations, transplanted MON "halls early next month. Asparagus commonly old dee, “ium pel ade
(F or the ensuing Week.) beds can hardly have too much manure-water from the | Stor 5 1
Hasr m 8 ap tite me n ing the present month. On gov) D. PIAFERA 15 M. Your plant is not I5
ARTME dry pf ge,
Shading should be used this . vm on st ils, as s SPOT ox ORANGE Leaves:
e exoept. on n bright days, for 1 dull keeps th dt d r and t
j all the light that See that t there 1 is 9257 of. [ed Ed — me
Wanted ter an iy, and also a
beauty of
quu a „ and up
a succession of Frenc 5 5 at ae "s
ode Plants win p onge soa collected on the
of weak manure water à should be given| Let ev d be constant] broken cold onen to kill the young tissue.
equently whenever it can de 8 i be inp Sm filled s with some kinds ar pens SrRaWBERRI der cien
ep pereo: monet, Clerodendrati Bc. may dern i cea ee sag me extra
n full beauty from Jane to Octo| throw: ügh pens E Fee will i phage compensate for
liberally supplied with "po v but this m antat it 1 “This s the ERE A chief capital, and |
A nerally most effi
as moist as can be d but avi d damp o eold | s To NEG TNR STRAWBERRY LEAVES: C
ights by leaving sufficient air tk ause a per ntie | | STATE OF TRE WEATHER AT CHISWICK, NEAR LONDON.
circulation, and spare no attention to keep the plants | For the Week ending June 23. 1859, keds at the e Hortienitural Gardens,
RAT
Stock ower- | rere a
ing will require careful attention to get it sufficiently | dune. 59 reve in is no trace of
forward. inese Primulas, especially the double Min. |Mean jio has the re
varieties, if at all backward should be placed in a! mus ay 1| 16 | soon | 25998 ER Lu MS er runden sof the enr are the . —
cold frame and shaded from the sun, where will Stay 9| 14 HAES 5 8 | 645 Tie Locber TREE: 9. A» pe s
ake rapid ogren particularly if the pots stand on a 29850 | 20819 | 66. | 4l | 535 name, we — wr M otop
slight bottom eat. Ci ine arias for early flowering shon! di n El : 30.008 Er ALS 0 doa : Tn i —
ls as Bei one 6n s Ver P. You crimson s seedling, wit
7 blooms were
suckers, — —.— them in a close shady frame till Average LE 30.012 * 29,930 ar aitwsl ; ae a fine kind. mye ae qi
i j J 17—Cl y. siderably withered when the i
rooted. These are sometimes very subject to the attack ! une W Qe less. nt, not flour cai
of thrips at this season, but if they are kept cool and a par udy; very fine; 8 overcast. Misc: Sub. Flowers of ee t te have been received
moist, and s ON occasionally, there is no danger ofj "-— € Fine said 8 ar night. As usual, many rere v gram P essary ing
their Be d x : ly. Srov — 23—Very fine; que "late, an and others are detain dulgence of
ng c and growing vigorously. STOVE.— t seine. very a, Rue A 8 made. We must also beg the indulg: ns is still
egi, be growing very rapidly, and, Mean temperature of the week, t dek. below H Ux ents the insertion of Whose cont tributions
Sa
Jose 25, 1859.
=
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE
PATENT
NITROPHOSPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE|
COMPANY (LrurrED),
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND.
TRUSTEES. -
ABEL BwrrH, Jun., Esq., W: House, Ware, Herts. MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M.P., Western Colville, Linton,
qu Bann Esq., Wege Place, Herts. Cambridge
Epw. LL, Esq., M. P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico Jons BRADx, Esq., M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq.
DIRECTORS.
Chairman.—Jonas WBB, Esq., Babraham, Cambridgeshire.
Deputy. “Chair vem miae COLLINS, Esq., a Square, Pentonville
Epwarp BELL, Esq., Tottenham, Middlese: etm Esq., West i N P
ROBERT LEEDS, Norfolk.
Jonx CLAYDEN, Esq., » Lena Essex RT MoRGAN, Esq., 72, Camden Villas, Camden Town.
RicHARD Host, Esq., Stans Abbot, Herts. — mm Esq., ingthorpe, near Stamford.
Tuomas Kyiaut, Esq, „Edmonton, Middlesex. ILLIAM COLLINS, Ésq., 5, St. John Street Road.
Bankers.—M . BARNETT, Hoare & Co., Lombard 8. >
wditor. t.
ger.—Mr. JAMES ODAMS. 2 —Mr. C. T. Macapam.
Offices 1 Fenchurch street, London,—Manufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex.
Tux Directors beg to inform their Friends and the Agrioultorid Public that the following Manures
are now ready :—
DAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL.
MS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS.
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME.
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents.
AND AGRICUI LTUR RAL _GAZETTE.
KSHIRE PRIZ
M Sw: WAINMAN has a few YOUN
NN Large W
n both sides.
m the principal Showa in
Meda
— ‘of p — Birmingham, an
ly to Mr. FEHER, Carhead
—— . Ba tae neashire.—Apply
s Hills, Leeds.
EDERS AND MILLERS.
for grinding. and
only.—All . € Cash, ry an allowance
nt &R. n e Merch: ants, 6, Cross Lane, St.
stchea)
r ton,
fary-at t Bil
ha he
OANS MAY BE OBTAIN ED v r GEN-
ERALL AINAGE id IMPROVEMENT COM-
PANY’S ACT, — yi 1 amount requ wners of
eq Estates, iau: poi re oe rate,
for of Houses
uired, and peer d
rims branes enn egal -— enses mide
ey e tua
— ved by the et n: Commissioners with a Commis-
sion thereon, being e charged all c Applications to be
addressed to WILLIAM CLIF went the Secretary, at the Offices
of the Company, 52, Parliament Street, London
— * ee fg
wners are empowered to charge the
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &c.— Manufacturers W IMPROVED orna a ANURE inheritance with the cost of of improvements, whether de p
and others in making ARTIFICIAL mede ENERAL PORTABLE be wed — the 5 r advanced by th
"i e instruction for their economi These Pumps are — W. er out of his own fim
and efficient preparation, by applying to J. C. Nrsnrr, POS, & Son’s Patent Buckets aud UN. The — 2 — money, unlimited in amount, for works
&c., Principal of the tural cm o College, and cannot clog in acti — nd Improvement, tbe — and incidental a
ennington, London. Analyses of Soils, rep es fie Su E and is of galvanised iron, not likely to | being liquidat ted by a rentcharge for a specified De of yea
cR of Lime, Cop * &c., and Assays of bgt pe hta Meu corrode, and can be raised or lowered vo investigation of Title is M ohet, ard t esf T bike ing
Gentl eouted’ with accurac at pleasure. The legs will fold together, ofa strictly commercial character do not interfere wit the plans
Wer desirous ES receiving on in Chemical w e x ontrolled only by the
Anal: d and the whole may carried on the | and execution of the works, which are cont y by
yses and Assaying, will find ample facility and accommoda- shoulder to any pond or required. — co — —
Li... Príce of 4) in. Pump, with 1 — 3L 35, The improvements au mprise Drainage, Irrigation,
RTIFICIAL NURES If with planished copper barrel and | Warping, Embanking — Clearing, Reclaiming,
REDERICK CORNWELL begs to inform is oce + handle, &., 14s. extra. | Planting, mo and 3 Farm Houses and buildings
friends and the ultra] public that he 15 The barrel is 273 in. long, and the legs | for Farm ses, F arm K ads, Jetties, Steam Engines, Water
12 HATE of Li sy superior to uy itg aro 5 ft, m 1 eiw ipes :
et produced. to contain from » 95 the red with pi also made without Ow ments o ir Estates with-
per cent. of “Solu m osphate of Lime." ce 5l. 10s. per stra 3 7 strong wrought-iron | out — the expense and persona a "responsibilities in-
CLE any Railway or Wharf in London. Dealers ea 1 5 gine | on to any pow cident to Mortgages, — without regard to the amount of
and the trade supplied LINSEED-CAKES, COTTON-CAKES, 1 ch b or cart, and fitted with 14 | existing incumbrances. Proprietors e d soni jointly for the
and all roga, mie x N MANURES a t lowest rud rass union for attachin execution of Improvements mutually beneficial, such as a
market pi T, Great St. Helen's, London, E. C. 05. Common Outfall, sod thr gagh the District, Water Power, &c.
E i A N G E N For further information and fo
15 inch — Percha Suction Pipe,
1s. 11d. pe
R uber nd
to n di T. * Tas ö K 2
and 3 Var be ob any Ironmonger or Plumber in
Pera gto FFF Man
Selves, our
town or
iufac-
Ue Liver. | turers, Jonx WARNER & Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin St., London.
ARNER’S PATENT VIBRATING STANDARD
deer
PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, fitted with J. W. & Sox's
— Buckets Tv Suck: 2 h
E, Cottages; ail Vi an tine whic! Vu X clog i in action, for
IM and Bristol, or or to oF Sea of X X. character $ in in whose
esty and fair dealing they may — — are
URNARD, LACK, anp CO.'3 5 CONCEN TRATED
BUPEREHOSPHATE OF LIME; peonia
Phosphoric 2 soluble, equivalent to 40
Phos; 1 f Lime. = ware "Diameter E. s. d.
Mat. NTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to 21in short 1 ft fi Fittedforlead, | 1 10 0
r2 — 22% long 3, 3, tta — | 1140
ese Manures Dr. Voelcker says results must 3 „ ditto 3,, 6,, 4 or cast iron}2 80
iss you, and are the best proof of the Pd 35,, ditto 3,, 6,, ed pipe,2 12 0
"high agricul and commercial value which characte! » ditto 3,, 6,, | asrequired. is 80
con ted su — — x 3 25 „ short, ned 15 feet of Lead Pipe
y: inions o! e and pre attached, ready d fixi y P3 14 0
Chemists to the Royal — 3 with Testim n. lon ditto ME ditio?
3 — ng itto ditto? 18 0
out
1 hort barrel Pump is very convenient
or Gxing i in situations of erat height and
qnem for the Supply of co: Mun — us
ash-houses with sott
ound tanks, or pa Hot, Venu "i Plant
o
CORN MANURE for SPRIN 970 TOP-D! DRESSING ouses ; they m
y be fixed, w hen desired,
URATE all of under the stage.
MANGEL MANURE
SUPERPHOSPHATE or s — May be obtained of any Ironmonger
BLOOD MANURE
n
eal r in Town or country, at the abov "
prices, orof the — . Manufac turers,
JOHN WARNER & SONS, 8, Cres Jewin Street, London.
Every description 8 o Well Pun for Raising Water b
of ihres t d Vell Pum wps; Sea ; rA m and Garden |
Engines, &c. ee application.
In pect Pal of the reduction in the price of raw material
the London Manure Co, are enabled to 5 lower — — of
Lime, and to materially improve the
supply PERUVIAN GUA
(direct from Messrs, A. Gibbs and NE. SULPHATE of
rforms of 2 oe Naka, to
the Hon. W. NAPIER, Taal Director, 2, Old Palace.
'estminster, S. W. —
n — n
‘TUESDAY, July 12; WEDNESDAY,
— The Im
Yard open from dE ce cauia, ul e detec s
Tuesday ; and from 7 o'clock in the morning till
6 0 tl on esda;
charge of 28. 64. for each person, Machine
by the Exhibitors at work on — of these days.
pe Judges to inspect
WEDNESDAY, 13. the Live Stock, and
to award the Pri.
Public ie gn of f the Steam Cultivators, on land in the neigh-
bourhood city, during such hours as the Stewards
may gru qm
At 1 o'cloc after as all the Judges shall hav
delivered in — s which —— ici — Ai the
Public will bea mitted into — € ttle Yard
of 5s. eac the 2 Entrances.
THURSDAY. Orne Gen Yo w Yard of Cattle, Horses,
| Sheep, Pis. ‘and Implements open v — ra ne fro —
ening ;
I
epaym
$ P m the morning till 6 in the
erson.
PRIDAT | * —The General Show Yard open to the e
—.— — o'clock in the morning till 6 in the evening; adm
sion 18. each person.
8 Moeting of the Members, in the Shire Hall, at
10 o "clock i in the forenoon.
. T. BRA H Gre
ondon Acting Bec — — pro ro teu.
z^ the 3 of the gociely,
| — Show Yard, or other places in the tempor: ary occupation of
| the Society during the 3 - be subject to the Rules,
| pre nd Regulations of the Council.
170 TRE AND CHEMISTRY,
Co:
& Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin Street, ‘London.
[ia years when they go on
ARN (ER'S zn. > | 88, Lower Kennington Lane, Kenr gton
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, CRUSHED BONES, and | (T NER Garons), 1 55 EOM apnd SR ROS
1. alu lesale dealers supplied. | 90 INCHES HIGH, will save much of the md * — v asd | m 3 "e studies pu pursued in the College e
i „Fene! 1 E D Purser, Secretary. | labour. May be obtained of any Ironmonger fi 2 o to prepare 3
rr Engineering, Mining, d for t ihe Universities. 9".
» the price of announce that — hed NN mx nalyses and Assays 0
him, Viii prios: accurately executed at i $
TURNIP MANURE .. ag ticulars may be had on n to the à
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF Linn: 8 d iyd : EMO CNET à
BART Mange.. o n e d ultural Gazette.
BARLEY MANURE.. Chr Agricul Aral G AE.
d and Dr. V. cker have sa led bull 2 x sd R
6000 tons at his factories, and rem T sts to ^ SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1859. ;
x full in Circular to be obtain Brides on application at E Office, „
de ore d ndon Bridge, E.C., or of his local gents,” MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WE
e Peruvian Suns direct from Messrs.
. ener our ca, tn Wroxsapat, June 29—Agr. Society of Taiana». Noon.
anures. Ami tton-seed Ca SI —
PS "TURNER, Ip I i pA ve always been con nsidered one of the
; : Ale manufactur. come under the care
851 LM Mills for — Corn — Malt, &e. ; (roe Also a — . of Mises p es for Hydraulic | Mes. . erops NS ich Alber is dry, they
— — Mills, Stea es fixed and portable from | Purposes, and to supply Gardens, Hothouses, "Cottages, Farms, of the agriculturist. d i »
Butter, por and upwa cot am Threshing a Machin s, Chaff | Mansions, or Boards of Health, with every reanuisite connected | short asd produire; if wet, they are rank
cake Breakers, Horse Gears, San Tables, &c., allie of | With the conveyance and distribution of Liquids. d uriant, but s ore unproductive : and
E Eoo ted for Home, Colonia — icem for Conservatories, Lawns, &e. an va
. ce
] find
. —— hopes of the
and promise a productive harvest, the hop of|growth of a Dean when spr routing — — ve
the Pete are "sequenti — — by t at these tubers m — Fede appe uv uniformly fog ae all of rain in dei vá a e 7 in the year 185
the ravages of plant lice. There are other minor | at a very early period of growth 4 inches, while in the wast Adoi Essex vil
afflictions to which they are ay arising from was between 60 and 70 inches, From of Eng Engl:
er insects or parasitic Fungi, but in gene al not — During last week several provincial NE pp f ue dd tay is betiak T
to such an extent as to ct much notice cultural their a to tl 5 of stone ier ale
It was hoped that si sengena of winter The Norfolk Ae Association metat Swa son that account that few "persons in pe =
Beans might make the of cult Essex Society m «orn j mi y^ of Essex h. js die their attention to the eastern `
certain, but like the ie pieles] they s meeting took : 155 of the Cornwa 1 of sto sic ock. He ae red more particularly i *
from drought or excessive moisture, a and de deere Society. At the last of these Aere zs bv 7 — arge extent of Grass tim E
tanding their comparative n ey are ings ain Davy, of Southmolton, o had a "ced 1e e was within bounds when he said that wi
someti was urely proved last year, officiated as judge of cattle, referred e duties ri A sari wn not half-a-dozen cor
rendered almost abortive by aphides. of his o terms which especially deserve rigen ant PEA — exhibition of sheen
To the ions above mentioned, in the case publication at a season when merits of com- aii Pu. the 155 » mg im hel the country
of wint s, one is superadded which renders peting cattle are everywhere being dete termined. ous suh aA üt be ashamed to as a whole =
their cultivation still more precarious. At e following is a passage extracted from Cap- part of = United King im O exhibit in
present moment in all parts of ut — this [tai n Da VY's s spee ech :— Eua "em E |
erop is rottin on the groun ith singular Somebod Lod that t e ornish armers Cheshi
rapidity, the bala beco: e from a te of 115 been fo = ANNUM ith f far P suggests the propriety et ems
0
h ver,
t de them fat e a rds ea
knew, hov
re age; but ya
AU elf had often been called on for this
before,
ne oung " bulls, and
"err and
wor
w them
for fodder.
Ten years since the writer of this article pub-
lished some — in the "Agricultural “Gace |
larly
ich h.
ni contended it was th
away b
| certain animals, wh:
iota
fatten, an much m
li
draw attention to the first and the third prize t stale in re *
e They wo called by so
ad an indieation to cte
ges not to be |
Te
T
to be brought into — —
of food adulterations mer i
5 us as the latter.
The follow:
arks .
(Jun e 2, 1849, p. 345), whieh agree so sing
Bat we shall make no apol oey for reproducing
one or two ci the opening paragra k -
* Early in the spring every energy was called | put them by the par ar iem others, and see how they Im
iuto prematuro bien en w sudden nly |W will look, You member that fat will cover | course he .
2 deficiencies, and — "little animals we awarded|of food, as well to the tenan
checked by a course of dull c Si a weather
atten: de a à i equentiy with frost, an . cha almo — to ot al | the prize to had no fat, and he thought it would — the 2 aet In a dairy distriot iti is most di
at irect solar light fo r some week a more powerful oe s than m : ad, to dp out any gre to i e the "epic — and more igno
deficiencies in He should not be afra o | farme make tep out of the besten
7 der satisfv d s to * r| i MGA
mst cap shoal ee uh ce Hec over rft than that | the awards, and to e bim from the head to the ré il, IE. This elass p eagerly j jump * eii s
an occasion a
conditio n of tne winter Beans is then anat prize. There was one animal "wd INE Meg mmp ly H their fathers an bars da
aecording pre cisely w with the experience of the|might wonder had not gained a » Eo —
present year, y i n the uie AIRY MANAGEMENT.
PP linT } il e milk from one dd wel. he did nó Sig JOHN 5 NCLAIR has stated that 9
3 was a fit animal to 1 a age that E
would produce
however, on
the affection irec!
quantity of plant upon 1 roun
— — T a Co
| na pi to as a milch cow.
5
In agriculture "alb w
t article of
It was an all-
same extent, in in a si uem y, and for that
stalks are very close in some inst nces
-prev
that ‘like produces like,’ a he firmly be
pr obability 3 the
iseased, if not to the
wasa
224
produce, and d makes a a good En
law the
nimal
— he ey | res)
"ihe t
ordin gako present ra j
. 10s. Sd. as the value of the beef, f, reckon.
d. per Ib., and 161. Mis. 9 vi i
ing the beef t 70
the butter, et. ng the "butter at ls.
hypothesis of Sir J, Sinclair be correct, t thes
doubt that it is the in of the
system in preference to t|
an
absolute f.ilure of sme piu the stalks them- though — "na agri rioultural —ͤ e
ee or wa Beret "uat "nula w ex a. acne pin 17 very creditable show s
MON by Mo akuarain, ; mls 3 n plements—180 entries from 2 hibitors—was
ides the platite thin nly seater a de es S not so large as on previous occasions. Hay-makin
Gy ali tinm aD a a d mowing machines were — bited in ——
* he local breed of cattle was well rep sented, |
and Norfolk has a number of ell-known
Down flocks, from which the best eee af the | in
was a good
m the herds of Lord
ime.
The Li of e
rtly as to
— of sho: —.— in Sate Lord WEN
Lady e , Mr. 8. Goocn, and others were dis- :
— inning of this century,
At Colchester, the second annual meeting l the dairy stock at
of ‘the. eri Society w was — g ir a -- or, querer ngs et parts
markably go of implements by all the 18
1 eed 22 Medien Me. Ransome . 3
. Eeo E SMYTH & Sons, GARRFTT, COLE- ay of luxury, a mo
we believe, purely from Tue Ai „oon ENTALL, „ CATCHPOOL & | every day; and of late
ö odueed men; with —— f P — MENT m UU
parasitie Fungi; the hough 2 ^ 3 ers 2 and Bur- a few Potatoes in the 8
very Enn, and others from a disiance. There | effect of such feedin
as yi AR vir, Mi. cattle and | they are turned out
— n horses, so numerous that of the previous e so dri
ts "herenfeer comparativel: 8 like the ghosts of cows, th
ex N Tus and a tolerable’ show e p and it is not till t
1 1 me Sh a of i At the
orwar ur again, and his winter Benne ^ as the show, Mr. r eferred in Grass, that they give er
lock extremely ant in Mareh or Apri the following terms to the faults ded merits of and 1 me A
would be wise to hoe out every other plant, ere and though a much b ^ on 36
n ternately in the drills, so as to mak sd ue ho er throughont = v prai
stand in a sort of quineunx. e are e mess proud of his own pu when he stated that
that, had this been done, some crops whic we ES 4 county 2 need not bow their D x mise —
bius 8 r^ nate pe might re eee he] Farmers have now, however, ^i
. e exact prepared prii the finest sam oh ion; of
plants to be removed m of course depend upo gunt. of sampl er om, ll —— pene ‘the to be N now is not—how & sufficiency
the state of the crop, be | other part of England as the agriculturists of any
Within comparatively few
ticular kind of food is to be gathered e 3
life for a ger gre
t À in what
erci = to ns Which the cows i rage
uire such treatment, io hens adva but rat! what variety
“hh “a em M additional re- gene — im hr been € corn, and th therefore m of eme of gem "
mar me farmers before x ert the diseased | 8ticulture, with o ascertai ee ae 8
geou have rved a nu nur of m tubers s ae as the Pine: " corn, 11 icu € tle "Y wi Ai —
tion wit 8 2 "t ve mart ee — * the poks th 73 . chere has been a great improvemen
y. is is e case. ot Stock. there e ber ee he
them up the fis pes - dia or climate of this their dilatoriness hithe The | well as many other ete
closely allied plant, and they | to the provi ab tbe nd 4 aede peeatari ee ee dist a a
a | e
8 if they watch the cd of anmals, "Now: 10 is ee to the Ke. Even now ins renner son
Jone 25, 1859.]
ws some nourishing food, in
than milk, to
p eti of e|
bsta:
e co
addition to the estu, at
season. Draff and Bean mealare the two su
more general n such circums
If the production of butter is t pe the main object
of tem gen a dairy, there are two
should pay particular —— the
2 tbe fe 1 When we ers of
merely 2n io am 1 aah what
is gro: m his
v — —
the feeding, w not m
— c farmer purchases, but of w
THE GARDENERS’
ces | Ferae for 1893, A lb. of Beans i is
and other meal ; and
ing qualities of Linseed-cak
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
by Lord Berners, “ That Mr. Hudson be dismissed from
de
in the epsit of the — National
said to be e equal i
rnip, and nearly 3 Ibs.
f Secretary.
The Special 8 (with the addition of the
names of Mr. Fisher Hobbs and Mr. Brandr reth) was
in reappointed to carry ou it cer rtain reco mmendat tions
fatt 30 of Turn
| of oatmeal. I tri he Bean-meal one season, at —
rate of 3 lbs. a ae e "boiled for each milk cow, wi
Mangel, Turnip, and hay. By February one of them
by the Council relativ re there 5
| Pic the — of Mr. — seconded by Col.
was fat, but : may say dry ; and the others with about
tity :
half the ipe
I tried for e quantity in
the
h cow pem: doma — the quan-
—.— of milk than those own on pod We
f milk — iren and turned out full better the
following summer, It ried the same quantity í of F yellow | W
halloner, as resolved, That a Committee be ap-
poi ae co eror of the Pr esident, Vi — presidents,
Trustees, and € crt hg members of the Council :
iH dec . Col. d, Mr. Barnett, Mr. Jonas Webb, Mr,
oskyns, Mr. Torr, Mr. Fisher m € Mil-
Bra andr Mr. Mr.
have known cattle fed on T
farms made mals fed
on Turnips with the addition — 2 or <7 of Linse —
cake each per day, the treatment and housing of t
animals being alike in both cases. Certain fields “in
^v m vincam milk than
be ded. ho not Y the locality, "put by th
determining what 4 EET. of the dairy he should | seen
Peri o — While he may find it Pott
able to sell all his sweet. TG even at a consi erable
Ebé
baa
734):
ro butter. I tried] bran for three winters, at the rate of
ate Mr. eth Gibbs,
Brandr eth, t
wet th
bs. ever gl
10 il what iu their opinion Should be
— while usi y As — ut better th
Sdlowing summer Fiir eeding. The
bran not only y thems — Heny e — them a
greater reli ish | ir foo ud there me combina-
tion — * what inis riter I have
ributes — i
* hich the food is n has also a great
effect in the production of both mil kes M" yield of » We!
jd of utter
vert it into butter, iae 1 used a great don] of extra
food for his cows, the profit from which, unless judi-
ciously used, is not pen certain. We are aware that
often dra ze used where th ie production of pM er is vibe
à parti f the Secretary and
the mode of his appoin tment.’ *
JUDGES FOR THE Warwick SHOW. — Col. Challoner,
| 88 z mrs Implement Committee, enm the
| re ending the judges of implem
*. Mil — chairman of the
r
Committee, presented the
judges of live stock, — and wool. These reports
pec
were received 8 confi
—On the motion
and milk is never so at when
Turnips, with Beans boiled quite soft amongst them, as
when =y get the —— Turnips — =. same — 0g
of Beans made in eal ar nd m xed with the
Again
STEWARD OF
of e": Brandreth Gi ved Ar. Nas was elected to this
Prien Essay. Mr. T son, chairman of
main objec a lar;
milk f butter, but e nom
We are convinced that
and not be satisfied with the
l increase of butter as a proof of the value of the
dnf, they ' would come to the conclusion that it wo ould
s
the ies ratio.
it, — the Turnips are 5 — mixed with eut
ved or — —
f Turnips a ole — ** Journal
q A di Siria " i neice on
this eu — Ags M. Lejeune, a director of * —
n Belgi
milk is to be sold
t Thourout,
rmented, — if the same dee e |
ae =
H. S. Thomp:
reported the recommendation
that the - of 25 Sovereign for the best R
the Agr — of the Islands of — Guernsey,
Aiderne: — d Sark, be arded to the ai
fall the eet,
— the quit; that can be obtained, ——
watery aX inferior i ad br i — d — tet the
return, In this ot the „ is
—
Without referring at all at present to the — —
cow most fitable for a butter dairy, we pas
er — be
profitably for the production of but
e great authority on this — on is Mr. Horsfall, who
— laid the publie under great obliga ations to himself
to test any idein but are pi extracted from his
accounts, and show the importance of 3 to the
le in wi il In
anner :—Each co
Beetroot, and a
mE com His method of feeding is the
— — ayi his feme are turned out on rich
pasture near sire — — — end are
uM, — mw upplied w
— mixture, to
— è me hay * morning to evening.
6, the cale
was made from the milk of "lo cows, + of
ich. were those with which the observations were
The nutritive value of the
£ + "p alculated
June mown Grass
they — * —
are food.
e — libitum three times
are given, from
Rabi till cach of th —
supply of each of
H n
H
Bm
ri a warm state. "The a —
b. to 14 Ibs of .Bean-meal per cow, accord-
c There
portion
equivalent to
lbs. of ssi meadow hay per er head. NET
consisted of Oat
—— of 30
given in 1856
was
of —
butter for 20 quarts
e exception of t the food, — in the same
h years, and there were more newly-calved
an in 1856. The Farmers’ Note-book in
the Journal of Agricu 8
Hom e Correspo ndence
The Wheat TM in the North o se relists Jooks 2
promising ; $ it i is I think about a id: later than last
Bier ion to t
he yield of milk, those in fall | 3
etting 2 Ibs. each per day, others but little; ; it is — —
3
" "n H
arately." This is certainly high feedi
repaid by the results; for while cow
ï de dl — — milk Which yields
ing, but
s fed in in
TITIO mds It is also an im-
part of his system never to diow his cows to
off in condition. He considers the Larger d -
Th
tha
It is a
earlier nen among eee in the nor th, as
the Em essential to a large yield of milk.
can be no doubt of the soundness of this opi
have all tend
orn
arkets ed downwards bu 1 appre-
ben however, ok a halt will be made now that it has
n o 48s. per quart not
r, as there is any probability
of . foreign Wheat coming profitably to our market P
from he eon prope
below that rate, h
uantity of still in farmers’ will no
1 | dane to o m sale, it
dee
milk co — that
supply of en it be Attended with ]
and a consequent diminution in the
quality of th
e seen from
nt
e the ‘follow! b
believe fium the upon — — maet,
Farmers
cause a fall in price as
for as the rise which took place a
H. J. Turner, Richmond, Yorkshire.
xad
Aiii:
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL
At a Sp
1859, his
in the chair—
i of milk 8:—* In |
g& over the experime: eeding in ens, a
ce of opinion comparative fatten-
" The report of the Special Committee appointed to]:
examine the past accounts of the Society was read, re-
tut and confirmed.
t was moved by the Hon. Col. Hood, and seconded
lon
ity | ber
1 w.
corn rent, and
was e si E
blooming very |
e once
Mr. Dunn's paper any
War the
ia MEN ti — A te
make e arrangements relative to
ded several cases as to
The ned t eekly ing
Wedn verge Ue 29th . pedes Prof. Voelcker' 8 piae
on the analysis of a Mangel root kept two years will
ead.
Farmer rs? — ubs.
NEWOA! Leases.—The following dis-
cussion 2 d on grec eg of the paper published
the week before last :—
Mr. Chrisp, Hawk Hill, did not oppose leases; they were
— EV ir: * ally with a — of capital an
lord, so that a "n
power aba
nto
the landlord. ‘An obligation of this kind ou t to be reciprocal,
or there was no use in it. — -w
than formerly. MA ood and n
|m
pen: Their wo tioned
clauses the t t, but y
| stances t] been over ch rded, he great
| detriment of e landlord. This was the reason why
| landlords equently obje to nting long leases.
| He did not say Don't grant leases," but let every man do
| what he thought right, according to the s Sud the z and
other circumstances. To urge a lease — casio less.
est a
| Cuird — it y — eon — .
r benefited landlo rd nor tenant.
number
getting 8 it, the one never could
to receive, nor the other what Pose 3
) always operates y b ves
[terere E A
landlord an:
recomm! endatio on as to how the farm is
that this and toa condition capable o usbandr y,
tenant Las on to ene prp iio cal was mixe
n poe with sandstones that required great lal abou! n digging
e The p
one year, even do a Pa EAM
time nd this
dios is kn
fot oes or ae
prep: a a SS the fall an
arly as pe icable. After t
roni.: is “mellowo ed, and the grain
harrow or rat i
| , irrespective of "the lea ses, whit med before any effici pt | sary, 9 e earth is dr
bend iced r e papain 18 55 entivation duit ba made mb ; if not, i "n one
lea t wi w fair pro ct of ure
re n an 0 rov
0 i . A zhi Thi essing 3
on- Professional both in clearing and breaking the subsoil, which has e should be di eeds or Thistles Appear in the fa
o may, will never | been Ri "x 1 705 ght its annual rewards. The eM pte e era icate ed before > they attain ‘ae
| te g ke a tenant put hard 2 vias un nderlaid the native soil was attacked | over f the Wh
| o a loaded cart on a good level road, when he is by gradua | persistent assaults, year by year, this ware, f nature 775 won s and matures AS
o put two (as we may see almost every day) to do anas peus d . it needs but little attention till fit erog a
| It will not. py him 2 his corn low when y
| cut it compel a tenant and a 8 the new matter brought up time to slack harvest my Wheat soon after the M. ‘a
by pia guess ce ae air and water, and to form a Tu whi Heg the 8 e immeditalyg the
ass with the so oil, In this manner, nd by cradl and cap, an ac M erin aro
tect 1 5 won, ‘There a.
1 p^ reropped im the eve nt of t ut 1 made
ma e FAC Se amg into ine! Haas of 3 xpi shell, a littl
nal man. T Bain A e leading articles in lands, improv 2 bush » ES dly, the st
agricultural papers go ye cy ra aie T d ow aland-| Fo rmerly my er op of W heat stare” 10 or 12 bushels, | secondly, the straw is more
; lord i in his leases a Se r Baan pua of manag ent and my corn 20 or 25 bushels per acre. Now, o stock; thirdly, the
dE zin eee ribi Hn Baie ad Mr x m arrange. same land, where the hard crust has been Mica n | affords more and “better
any system of management. They studiously, however, keep | broken and mingled d 55 7 0 b my Wheat averages I left a portion of a field
eut of view altogether that Y: lease 5 N top UA uem r over, n averages full D and | upon the same dy for E. 4
when a lai erfect confidence in his nts, | rs, | latter ha: Ape g were t 8
then he might with propriety X them full liberty to follow | Some etimes amounts to 80 askals per acre. Mym and be E NIE
the bent of their own cropping, vis still Ser liberty | which jer formerly liable to fail in dr 2 haw gee a
ought to be given altogether e ent of the lease, so that hardly worth mowing, now yield lar and u miller, as reg arde d t
the Lope EE — - in 5 os er to I teh his i prope d | crops of 2 or ons to the acre. sidered the
taki aking y lace opino dpa very n puah adapt his mode to his means as bec more C the other. The sa ate
The Chairman said it would be impossible to compel tenants | well as his soil, i order to a satisfactory result. The GR oth rains, as I apply to LORD 2 2
and lan dlords to accept leases—that would be a principle acted | soi] on which I have operated being stony, gravelly, and ssf ul. My average crop o of Oat:
CCC i tl ighest parts, needed no, sub-soiling 55 i and o 3
first consideration was to invest it safely and properly; and loose on ine highest pa ? s The bas b
the same consideration arose with a prudent tenant taking a Here the labour and expense: "wis that o ing from wireworm has been injurious for &
lease. Every man would noi like to take - ie «Suid I stone, pulverising and e enri ichi ing. On the es and in It attacks ive. otatoes a 2 roots of
refer a yearly taking; but if a person wished to lease a pa of m A ht evt
er his te and found a tenant willing to take it, it became a the intervales, t he . 5 ac by * l a d 8 NATH 1 hae. lbs. , ee 7 1 NE
matter of fair in between the two; and if h erst ; ee’ enic, unn
the lease question aright, it was to make a fair one | and “pulveri ising to impro he crop and insure its 4 of a n acre of land, badly infested Mes oe
between man and man. The 1 oe his — abe certainty. The best m ethod, ee! the circumstances, | I pl lt i rg
was hi: likely he own certain conditions f. $
Lege e he would let it but e right way was to have the | i8 supposed to have been adopted. For had the land | three or four days I plou the
conditions so that he would entice men of capital and enter- | been thoroughly cleaned and sub-soiled i in one season, planted it with corn, and p crop was
prise to farm — per! ya nd give him ahigh AK It was | it would and manure | the worm, pr
nə use evading the question; if a person had property it was his r 5
tight and datsto vs Ge Dir E REBEL e en could, | that could not be afforded ; while, by the gradu al p ro- | In my EXP mien £ an xi t s
No man d find fault with à landlord for this; but if he went | cess, fair partial to Clover or Peas, and w em
beyond the resuli the as er cases of The cost of clearing the land of stumps, roo is and | become troublesome I seed down with Clover and
Som md DIE d ae Ded. — ded he stones, and the manure necessary for each acre, | worms uniformly disappear.
knew of, the iind via rasa perf E coe of obtaining | thoroughly prepared and sub-soiled, 2 not 5 kinds of flies, grubs, and worms that affect the
. his rent, course, when men got wrong in their de 9 st less than 30 dollars per acre; which is but these are the most troublesome and de
Pd Mrd ^ — 8 in stances where expense that can only. be incurred byt thos this sectio
am
wh
: “Tot with a sort of tenant ight a tho end of them 5 —
'he e ps I cultivate are. Clover
years before thi 8 ume ord and | In the i in 1 and natural w er- ways, on my far herds Grass. I sow 16 Ibs,
tenant were grante “for dr ibomd be entered | the ha: rd crust was thickest. There the. water in the used alone, x: p mixe
poe Spe RIEN . Tn this he wen : Ic Eee X Clover with 8 quarts of Timothy
apon the e principle that no land in this country ougbt t to be in bU vae oF se or us In order to y be sowed either in
a productiveness, and that b ggf re aap vils I co ystem of blind a "hie c crop, bnt should be Ais eh
4 in this kingdom onght to pee meat i pude Fin ofa width and depth proportioned to the water — a strong root before tbe M ccs ough
‘eat hardship that a fi Fad Ba cao cemec 2 | that might be expected to pass through them. The or M urposes white Closer is the bet t
gi ship farmer should be compelled to go on for g ug. Fre y 12 25 sthout ca
21 years; it was a lon efor a an e in operation and | are from 3 to 6 feet deep, and the width is from 2 to | is i Da util to our soil and flourishes without
66 rer ee might ht be ob) obj sei Sp a 5 feet. Stone are laid on the sides of t lt ` For s past, 1I» y
not of Mr. Ferguson's Ya opinion, nigh rs rn ht genera ral made | bottom, from 6 to 10 inches high, and covered by flat | acres, producin bb pan pas wian i
ry bad farmers; they were generally ve! y, much imposed | Stone. The ditch is then filled up with small los acre. My time. for cutting Clover is w'
up m A eolliery lease w. different from a e, store, withi in a foot and a half of the to op. Stra s|begin to change is wil
* ; 33 se was ar ry speculativo mptions et ink ll cocks, where it is allowed to
> when you a
— was there. Mr. u Dunn s alae —— de m liis the drain, and the soil dug from the qe pm in. the air. When it is thoro onghly ae eo I
e pun We ts had proved to be very om The result has been most satisfactory. Lands that t
fam, he might nares a ASH Be
tene: but y neat had a farm most productive spots on |
(orari
N has convinced m
the only animal whose ale ife is
of husban: Muse
more than an dei. Sa E the farm, and the acent soil es eee s 5 ue
and he wed about 200 rods of these drain
Met 225 great pense of Mess idi ants, per
erf, TE ma post heap annually. The Hop Vin
oint, ni dues A as rae othak spere ee that are n LIE for for
ha toc! th
doubted whether the landlord allowed the e o th " 8 e: pice 3
shift for Naga he learns [e its of
es | becomes a loafer of the first class, M.
less o ready to p
ra down during the winter. In the sp when | Carrots are the mos
the frost is out, the heap is oed = covered with for als in this p
the muck Ue uring additions made orchard at its commencement
pA also to pay. If the | to the uring the summer, ry such materials as|since set trees, grafted on se
Me geala not eer will i ee its value. Salt is added to the heap be- well and begi bear. I was
T fore and after t e muck, for the purpose of retaining suds every spring, b
agg epi wth vigorous. I have a rods of
en- | quantities. den the heap is formed the soap suds| wide at bottom inches
eee me |ke bse other w. aste waters are thrown upon I. to . ers 2d & cost of about one hec?
p it moist and prevent the e of gases, ve 75 rods of board fen baea
t be th constitute an important element of manures. In t : Durs 25 eg the wall, and AEN
a % | the fal post is used on jd field for a top- that cost abou ^ cents per.
i mot bull “nor! the a ng, to i the m and shield the im f of wood, 28 by 38 feet on the
had capital eno "this was | © also make a fie ition of 6 stories in height, cla 1 an
establishment fo g P i
mon T 2 ee t of rae societies fn dn endin d ng of es ; t d es, 1 bushel of plaster, 1 bee outside, the t09f covered y th Py
t there the land. would go as "unproGupPe M erm. RO » slacke Me, pes Tha shel of salt, a small = tity | wind "T with blinds.
should b still more ALD t into the land to make it adyan- Of sulphur, pounded ag are This is us sed fi wing, 28, a E
Hedis 3 landlord and tenant, ana if it were advantageous | dre ing. It is sown broad cast, on like "e RN tois on t
under most.leasos, a man was im Se re A AE gen On — — it ries be siat soon after t itch Ta pantry, and W.
andlord's consent ; this was a matter of favour, not a matter On early a s practicable afer the Grass e = ge : ng room 0
por nad BS be ht to You could not encow aman s Ac i N tam n body of b
. one noine 1 prea ^ mi 1 vour. wi 8 : it is is applied before and after hoeing. On 1l laid i in mortar, that is pro
ie Vc the farmer to be secure be additiona. L capital i: lie i accel ne f hoeing, Under the kitchen is a cistern, b
SUNL. —.— and to be TU to us it out; and if this and Slightly covered, a i manner on | lime, of the capaci ty of 100
apa agreed upon they could ‘easily work out the | gardens. This composition was made at an expense of unfailing supply j - water.
* a mx per bushel, and used at the rate of 2 = ‘Operations
ushels per acre, on in and ee ae i ls j
AMERICAN MM EC a Wien : omposition, with a small addition of gu vas — Calendar of, S
E Neo i x nx S. WarnaTH'S FARM i a apos about an acre, ceni ealtivated for 10 years, J UN
diy i or, arming operations, in without other ma mures, and the result was a eonstantl Isie or Erv: June 15.—To-day ‘he her j
eey comfhenced m — spring v 1839, when |i nual produ t: —— last crop was W. uL m on the 16th of June last e it st
was to vd recl eve from the rimitive and the yiel 30 bukdi per aere, ves hen seeded ra p p
= wes d slow and darsi with C ores Si Timothy, and during the past season | Pr€ rops gene
» left ced obstructed i" it has ges s "gar of hay; the im of two, the nr Fer oc aw
Euri iras to second of oi
e favourable, DA exerting a vt
ray io of crop. The cor
Jose 25, 1859.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 549
— — —
ortnight have produced marvellous results. The Oat |
— and the — appear to have vied with each other in
i nt a luxuriant and fruitful appearance. me |
ve bee 8
king to p
of the heavy crops laid a 155 deal, and
must inevitably yield a small produce ai -— g inferior 8 ve | Hothouse Eiders aod Hot- W HE App aratus Ma
benefi
a pw a L rly | " "
D cay te begin . : - itself distin sif ior | Our economie Heating ra
blade, which will, ith seasonable weather, bring us to about ights, and
the last few days of July, or quite the x erop das — gh for |
st. As alread perpen the Oat crop if 2 . TN
mensem e had alf Mf said unparalleled—progress. Cert tainly | power with simplicity of
re never saw so m — nme in so short a Gite. Where | : . »
r is a full plant there is every prospect aiy — sag construction, a Range of
even where the Wire-worms ad so serio and | st >
rea it, the progress has been so great that in 2 — Houses being Heated as
instances there will be a fair average bulk ma straw. e : ? at Pr
— lier sown are just breaking into corn. The s look very easily as the smallest Pit.
strong and healt! y and grow — A ad We may say the same
t the Peas, but we dare not venture an opinion beyond
os; for the sudden and destructive enemy References to the Nobility and wines d in most of the Counties in England.
Apparatus combines great
glazed and painted
oS ready for „
e have heard of some such visita-
tion upon ter Beans already, although as none are yet Claremont Place, Old Kent Road, London, S.E.
grow: we have unable to ascertain accurate partioauuͤöükkü ͥꝗ ꝙꝗkL !!, —Z—ʃẽkU¶ͥ᷑ĩ l ——
lars. M ted irregularly in several instances,
been
Mangels have plan
alth: ih others, they aro all that could be dosirod We y
think the later sown present the most promising appearance, HORTICULTURAL WORKS,
showing less failure of — "Potatoes — the high vu j CHELSEA Ww
grow strong and look extreme thy on some of the $ 5
Pons are — weak and poor A ee by wire worm. Hay-| DANVERS STREET, PAU LTON S SQUARE, E S
making has commenced generally, and some of the earliest
ked in fine itio
an increased
demand for lea E cattle i en and prices are moving
^ wards. Meat is not so brisk a trade, especially pork, which
s 6d. per st. Ou: We seem likely — bes the anomaly of a
mihe in Europe and low prices for cor The Wheat trade is
dull in the extreme, and prices are wit thin ls. or 2s. per qr. of
what they were before the commencement of hostilities. The
future is veiled in darkness and we seek not to pry into its
secrets. Wool is advancing, and for those farmers who brought
in their sheep when —.— were comparatively low, will
very remunerative. Your Fen orter.
—— June 15.—The nice genial showers we have had
the last fortnight appear to have — the fears of the
8 regarding their pastures, hay crops an te sown
s fave recovered from the effects of the
the w se and other insects have — them, but they
e regular in ro
dition. or F the land we hope they will soon 1 up for lost time.
*
h and in some instances doubts have been er ined o:
their recovery; the weather however is much in their favour,
m
an
indication of disease, but the cause does not appear to be under- ^
stood, nor will a — upon — me known until it is taken J A M E S G
about 27 en abt ht; the m ahlat T Kidney, the « eim d —
t t t; t P. f y, t t d
oe ig 9 — appear a — with ny, S curl and a baw: have FR yon ae begs to inform the nobility, gentry, Nurserymen, Gardeners, and others, that he continues
already be ! m The team "horses are eie d irme vd above old established
roads, Ko. ii 5
woll, but many
to carry o
—DU repere 7603 . CONSERVATO , Gl BES, ROR 2 , VINERIES, PITS, &c., E
mouth uy i nice Y ‘he progress 2 k n ; A
of ens ee Cine Na BY HOT WATER.
lingers. Clover roo! s roots mre ‘mach improved P ne IT ^s — >
Temar eg abe e to be busy at wo the course o! Pr Lx pnr oe ban vi n s ˙ . crise Ped w fully F
other week. "m^ description of mot puke — ee irito DAAGS, Vi :—Churches, Mansions, Warehouses, &c., as wells as all struc 5 ures connected with
— Ross: Jun ne 20.—Dry, dry! excessively dry. For efficient manner. His system is s the most simple that € — be W chic n has found from
33 years we bars had no season for drought like this. Itis now long exp experience to be t reg best—can be pues a! at less cost, and is ly managed than those of a complicated
more than — months since we have had a shower of ey im- | nature which have attracted the notice of the publ
PPP J. G. begs to call attention to his CAST-IRON CORRUGATED ARCH BOILER, which from its simplicity of constructio
Barley have had scarcely a ‘drop of rain since they were sown. has not the liability to fracture to which those of a — —— x design are always subject. They have been —
And wonderful it is how things have looked until within ms used for r many years, an nd have e giv ven the greatest sat ist. action,
few days; but now every any te is telling disastrously, and every
succeeding dry day will tell with rapidly increasing disaste er. F ple of! ivo profi 1
Pasture jf is becoming thoroughly scorched, even in the | and el inen
best fields, whilst for some time it has been completely
withered away on light soils; hay is light everywhere, and in Plans and Estimates furnished on the shortest notice.
many p
rapidly into ear, and must now be Pa 22. ͤ— — ] TORT GO S EE CET AMRSRRUEMDSET PRESE LE T UT ERE TRE
thin sd short. The earlier —— fields of Oats and Barley are
— wd caes d into ear, and cannot be very materially benefited S M H & A S
d rain no elds H B
dd be greatly Dn. And it is no slight rain that
would now be really serviceable. The over-heated soil
would now be really serviceable. The dry, over heated soi AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS, STAM FORD.
— . one "ep — o where ier ag ay Age ice
at pi annoy score
X — The Swedes have been sown for some HAYMAKING MACHINES.
time, and few comparatively have brairded, and man
have again disap . We know of few fields in the —
that havo elser promising bard. And what is now vost ts | | E last great trial of Haymaker took: place at Londonderry, before the Council of the Royal Society of
M nd OT PERO arge Propor: | land was full of deep broad grips, the crop > na M
tion — 8 common Turnips remains e. — = weal hot en Clover, upon which tho
88
E
A
8
.
n
E
[2
zi
5
3
Ei
*
8 e
3
ee
>
- x
q
E
zi
>=
"E
2
"o
E
[3
18
E.
u
D
ing in the us ing i in
ry as ashes, hoping that rain will come, and * that 2
"itn it comes the seed, E start away. O penin work admirably, without a a single failure,
the drills, and co he 1 ze leaving 1 the ground and was the only one * ar iy rags the
unsown until rain “come ; sand ot ers again, exercising com- gear. The Prize of 5/. was unanimously
to achine. This makes
fabratrded Ne it it is no easy matter to join a neighbour cf
mine in saying, * We must content Agricultural of land (1857.
— to us. as T with the crops that = every Poe offered since that Show,
— d in "pera hd the 31 First Prizes
2. prs vanced u
*
MITH ;
lately TO 4
cultivation is the goly aih remed; introduction of their new egra LM
: Regular Reader. We ft refer to the m next . Teeth, which are warranted not to break, and work much better than those of a rel d Repel Pea — -
to the Ades en x Prizes announced up to last season, SMITH & —9 Bv tock the First Prize o —
. It will not do to continue its | Shire Society at Ulverstone in September last. The same Rake took the First Prize of the Royal Agricultural ety of Irelan
beyond t the ho Arst For after —.— It dies after two years in su ee
ith as | as to mans, We sould plough ^| price, full size, with improved Iron Teeth, £7 10s. Steel £8; Extra large Size, £10.
oan
pring, and ei! : Seu
pe Ez For “ull particulars see S. & AJs Catalogue, posted free on application.
550
)UNI zi RICULTURAL AND “HORTICULTURAL IM
G. geeks — x he OM PO bier PATENTED. AS EMENTS 8 by RICHMOND p 7 A mg
magnified). Meaty Bue RANSO! Sms, SAMU other pm ^ A »
rem T mos (magnified). ordered from Wm. Davie 8 "co. r ope dge,
3 Chester, wil be supplied ak manufacturi prices.
GREEN FLY on Roses and Greenhouse Plants safely
rid of by syringing with PATENT GISHURST COMPOU:
a sd
D,
2 oz. to the gallon of bier
Extract from leading art: Gardeners’ Chronicle, April 9, '59.
COTTA
inventors of the PATENT ENAMELLED MANGER, Water
d TTAM’S PATENT LNV ENTIONS FOR STABLE
UISITES, awarded a Pri e Paris on egg
and 2 by the E and ok Gov vernm
M AND COMPANY, of Pagi Street, aro the original
an iron top- -plate,
* Thai eall — red A — a nidos. mealy bug, thrips, Trough, and Wrought Iron Rack, united to
a — 4.41 i In j 5 n d face of reports sd and 8 one complete and useful fix xture, having CorTAM's
practical men, among yt" ntion Mr. D. 8 eigo qi patent noiseless halter gu 5 nee collar rein attached, rina is
Althorp Gardens "—then foll gainst the taken to the UD of t the anger, and works with éase and
too strong solution. om up or down the gui ide
The Gishurst Compound is Rr y boxes at ls. 6d. an COTTAM'S NEW PATENT SEED-BOX, ai
each, with directions for use, feed opinions of ES tion ires ipee. veing simple ere den light os
Leon s gardener, Lady Dorothy A Nevills gardener, Y atin durable mote; cleanliness, and is economical in its results.
Hooker, Mr. Rivers, and other nd authorities. r Nur:
— the large size is recommended, but where e con
sumption is not large the com d keeps its strength best
the small. e undermentioned Seed Merchants, Nurserymen,
&c., having taken in supplies prepared to sell single boxes
Alexander, C., Edinburgh oster, W., d
Bailey, G., Rugby Gray, W., Gainsborough
Barker, W., Godalming Griffin, J., Bat!
Barnes, Thos., Thirsk. Harrison, Am Darlington
SH T., Weymouth
E.G. & M St.
combined, c
object, as i oe be turn
* | rated moveable cover, the use
can be easily cleaned out.
COTTAM'S CAST-IRON SANITARY TRAP, from its im- | Pipe
proved constru —— ives a — n ^md and does not
‘OTT. igh) PATENT igi and HARNESS BRACKET
n be used with great advantage —— — I —
ed up —.— of the way when no
COTTAM'S IMPROVED —.— — with E
revents accidents, and
London pin. " — any smell to ascend from
Brown, D. — — x 3 a mem — LOOSE-BOX NTTIN 0d — . — — —
Bwye, H., Grea — ts nedy & Co., Dumfries table, kept in stock, plain, galva:
ess, C., nham auiem, fencing, hurdles,
ham
Cheltenha c pton
Clark, J., Chel m i ORB Corax & Co. beg to make it known that there is no
Clari, 25, Bishopsgate mm - —— en longer an entrance to their establishment — Oxford Street,
Street Within Matheso C., Gloucester but that they have . *. a second entrance from 2, Win -—
. & son; car May, J. & Co., 1, Wellington St. W., by the side of o old entrance
Cobre. HL, Birmingham | Nelson, J Bristol IA ed
Cripps, T., Tunbridge Wells | Parsons, G., Brighton IRON HURDLES, FENCING, Kc., MADE BY MACHINERY.
Darby, R. F., Cirencester Pattinson & Son, Hexham
Davies & Co., Wavertree, Perkins, J., Northampton
Li 1” Pontey, A., Plymouth
Deane & Co., London Bridge Pope. Hi, Heath, near
n Mr, Gracechurch Rid B f C, Aberd
Street, City An i T 15
Samson & Co., Kilmarnock
Dickson, Francis & Arthur and Stuart & Mein, Kelso
Sons, Chester Sutton & Sons, Readi
Dickson & Brown, Manchester "
Dickson, Hogg, & Robertson, Tong 9 23 oral W itham
a 7 J., Liverpool
n & Co., Edinburgh
Epps, B Ashford Kent
Epps, Mai
S ene: & Co., Shef-
o
IA
Ypo!
Wood & Son, Maresfield
Weich : Son, 33
t, W., Retford
— — 7
The New Illustrated a and Estimates, gratis, upon
—— m to COTTAM and COMP
M. —.—.—
ANY, 2, Winsley Street, |
S
*
— ster wae of Winsley Street, have
Nurserymen and Seedsmen su buen by Price's ParENT |; machinery for making Hurdles, &c. ; the bars,
CANDLE Company (Limited), Belm — Vauxbs ll, London, "aa arge of ve — ted by hand M old fashioned style,
PAXTON WORKS, SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738. —. d e ly tighten the di en rivetted. 1 They
— are made of superior iron only, and will compete in with
those made wr from cinder or common iron which so
o^ segg — mal Oo and Iron — — all
Mu — nservatori ater
Apparatus and Garden Impl ra
AYNOR COOKE’S ted
S PRUNING ed BUDDING KNIVES, SCISSORS, ee
Monk — Nurserymen and Seed Merch ants in
d
ei 2 sies
222˙
Su
M
S
AIME 259995
242494 45
8 223282 25222287
Place. Norwich, in consequ
e — —
of improve mus
enabled t =
marae ture of et —€— —
reduction in the pri
Ga —
2-inch mesh, 24 inches wide ..
— — "y re 5 = per yà.
5 2 inch a — do. ; » 54
2-ine „ extra strong, do. 1 " 7% 3
1g-inch , 24 inches wide ” ys x
ig-inch „, strong, do. 63 „ dere
1g-inch ,, inter iate, d. 1 „ s $5
2 „ extra strong, do. 10 e
e above kinds can be m ade of a any width under fect
at proportionate prices. Er the — half is y a eoar arse: 4
than the lower, it will reduc. pric s about -fifth.
anised Poultry 5 ing, N per yard ? feet *
23d. p
xpense in — Peter.
ufacturers of [mproved
ia notus &c.
parro Dali pront Netting 1 for Pheasantri
Newcastle. Man
E:
loi bi ix rn bm
but that they have m a
ARNARD, BISHOP, — BARNARD, ben
ti
ce fi 2, Wins!
Street, Oxford —— . see — sido or of the old. extrae 1
their works, opposite he P. 'antheo:
TO .
Lamia CU x E EN
g 7O 80 90 x|
ED
TP UIT
16 20 3 5
FETTE BREL
BENT
RO ET
NET TO
TIEFE 0
TORO E EUR
Tuc um
s un
bh
van dae
best English e
di |
ted
took place, and] how pn
such change continued. E
Theabove slip(reduced
in size) exiis e
Leere, Soa
TON a mw
Ttt LL
ji iil Wil pilli uM TT D
,
W
ne cuyos LT
This LU
TE ir
perature y
SHEET MU IO MU
BILDEN
SILVER MEDAL,
IL
be without
Orders received by W. B. w
ROVED > HOT- .
HE HORTICULTURIST
inexpensive inst
roared
ospher y be pro-
duced dat wil either " por:
y
The London (rid and V ö
26, Great George — „Wes 1d Vontilating Company U
CANNO
BOILERS,
—
UCH has of late — said about
Heating by Hot Water, but th
themselves to be the best at a
adapted forheating every deser
of — sizes. —— Price T
eh C:
BOILERS fot
ve now proved.
pres ein invented. fie —
f building, andan f.
1
dr n Lond Ho
— in any part -- — rs and an Illustrated Catslorse
on applieation to J. kside, Southwark, London. “
B 75 * -HIVES.
PRIZE MEDAL AWARDED TO G. N. & Sons, rog BEE-HIVES ast
Honey, AT THE PARIS EXPOSITION OF 1855.
EIGHBOUR’S IMPROVED COTTAGE BER
HIVE, as originally introdu Grorce Neiensove &
Sons, wit improvements,
"on with sii mi
fit by the 8
N 7. »
Holborn, or149, Regent prc m
will receive prompt attentio
Their newly-arranged CATA TALOG Tof other Improved Hi
with Ding and Prices, „ sen receipt of stamps.
AGENTS Trpo — 1 . Carton 8
.
Do sbi 2. niet JE ro. él, Dame Street. Ae
WARDS’ = IMPLEMENTS, 1859.
ES AND FREDR. HOWARD, B Deer
Works, Bedford, beg to direct atten!
PATENT STEEL-TOOTH HORSE "ENS
received. — Three e First Prizes
F E
or which m I Soei ety of
for raed io their Im
mel for several years
HS.
&F wand
f Prizes
the s long Tist just, stato that
HORSE — ES, they meet
Prize for which hey €
D PLOUGH, fora Pony.
DD ditto for one — fh
P ditto for two Hors
TER for 'P or PP Plough
HA ws.
Three - Beam HARROWS, with em
v ovs eral "
Seed Harrows, gut
ARROWS
t. wii
th Patent pd
HORSE R
Small size, 74 feet wide, marked A, wi
Ditto, with Steel Teeth
Large size, 8} feet wide, marked B,
Ditto, with steel —_
Extra large size, 8) fee oot wide, marked G, with
A Set of 15 Prongs, to be
used as —— Kxtirpator
— — 'H Ml, Lineal -— 7 —
eu , Hu incoln,
“ah | E Retford. Shrewsbury,
Ter
m HA
8 for 3 Horses, 10
with 28 iron tedio
in, Edinburgh,
Jury 2,
1859.]
Cou E PAPER FOR FUMIGATING.
8.
price. is AE
each, at ls. 3d. per Ib.
For testimonials that will — ei ts qua
gir eer pn: 6, p. 338.
n Pots for fumi, gating, 3: ach.
N NB. vo perma 2 — ‘accompanied oun a Post-office Order,
uality, ardeners
paya yable to HENRY / , Dorking, P
18 RS E ^OUND, PATENTED.—
(magnified). Meaty Bue
(magnified).
GREEN FLY o Plants safely got
rid of by arido cy PATENT GISH RST COMPOUND,
2 E — the gallon of w
om leadix — ril 9,59.
t fro
"That ‘it really kills. red cm — * me — thrips
ps,
and scale, it is D" to doubt in the us of reports of
p i men, amo whom we may mention Mr, D. Judd, of
Althorp n follows a ution — the of a
too strong solution.
The Gishurst Compound is n bees
each, with directions for use,
Rucker’s gardener, Lady Doro: Nevill Fara iSi Sir William
H Rivers, and 7 — authorities. For Nur-
ended, but where Arad
sok at 1s. 6d. and 6s.
and p tod opinions of Mr.
thes erchani
&c., hav vin, g taken in supplies are prepared to sell single boxes,
Alexander, C., Edin! Foster, W., Stroud
Bailey, G., Rugby Gray, W., Gainsborough
Barker, W., Godaiming Griffin, J., Bath
Barnes, Thos., Thirs! Harrison, J., Darl
Barratt, Bury St. Edmunds Hawkins, R. T., Weymouth
Bass & Brown, Sudbury Henderson, E. G. & Son, St.
Batt & Rutley, Strand John's Wood, London
Bell & Co., Newcastle-on-Tyne | Henderson, A. & Co., Pine-
Bell, John, Norwi apple Place, ware
Bradley & Sons, Halam Nur- Hooper & Co., Covent Garden
sery, near Southwell Ivery & Son, Dorking
Brigden, T., ilway Arcade, | Jackman & Son, Woking
London Bridge Jackson, Thos. & Son, Kingston
Brown, D., Norwich Jeferies, W. B., vo
Bwye, H., Great Malvern Josling, K., St. Al
Burgess, C., Cheltenham Kennedy & Co., Dumfries
Caldwell, W. G., Knitsford ^ | Kenway, J. S., Batheaston
Cattell, J., Westerham i , Lincoln
Pe ee f o ie ia Low, Hugh & Co., Clapton
Clark, T., 95, Bishopsgate Ma comp pe — S Norwich
eui rae —— R. tC. "Glo uoester
May, J. 5, i , 1, Wellington St.
THE GARDENERS’ _ CHRONICLE AND AGR CULTURAL GAZETTE.
Labour m
PAGE'S COMPOSITION
;| DESTRUCTION OF BLIGHT UPON ROSES, “WALL: FRUIT pm: CUCUMBERS,
MELONS, VINES, STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS.
make four fit Jor use. Age and pee charged. at
to Lon
Extra at As. rer gallon, sufficient to
price.) Ten gallons and en ards Carriage Fre
N Journal would grant space to publish the W In 7 years it has attained great reputation
is used in the Principal gardens of the kingdom, and should be by every person who has a Rose bush or à
th b
Wall Fruit Tree. estroys insect life, and produces luxuriant grow y its fertilising properties, On
October 25, qe im ar Lindley reported upon 192 cases, 10 only of which were adverse. W. H. T.
| Hawley, d s of it
‘For se my wall fruit trees have been destroyed by a gradual decay, which I supposed proceeded from cause,
ELM ode 8 roots, and. 4 “te ere — — "the nature vot the soil, d want of drainage, — in short aay —— but the right
one, which the of your invaluable e proved to be the aphides attacking the leaves, which appeared as if scorched up,
and the temm s effec — — yt — exte ivo t " branc i ithered and died,
3nd most of the trees have ultimately been quite destroyed by th 2 mn well saturated the trees with the blight
mixture once—just before the blossoms made their appearanc trees were in full — and the result
been that not an aphis * remained —— - they have exhibited a een health oW. und have made vigorous
shoots, and have borne a plentiful c f fruit—vesults which n soa M r3 the — of the
mixture on my Rose trees E other pou os been equally — p 1 sh oe to send me another
e br. before the Winter r closes, in time to repeat the successful experiment next sj
Rm LONDON AGE
HENDERSON & Co., Pine-apple Place Verron Son, Chelse:
Hoor ER & Co. „Cor ent Garden CUTBUSH & Son, E ire,
. BARNES, Ca mden Nurs Rad x tie RK, Streath: e Plac
. Horaoop & Co. M ? „ & a aesicth. Road
All the leading 8 e and v dn Visit es Mannie,
PAGE & TOOGOOD, d-Growers, 37 & Oxford Street, Southampton,
(adjoining Radley's, 10 yaris from the Railway Station).
Shepher
Seeds packed for Exportation to all parts of the world.
ORIGINAL
Tur BRITISH GOVERNMENT,
THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT,
THE ge ey GOVERNMENT,
H.R.H. THE PntNCE Non CONSORT,
CARSON'S
ANTI-CORROSION
Jon. East IX DIA Cae
Most or THE 1 AND GENTRY,
New eie A —
Tun Doc
PAINT,
RAILWAY AND CANAL COMPANIES,
‘Sed PRINCIPAL COLLIERIES,
MILL Owners,
RON MASTERS, &c. &c.
MPANTES,
The ANTI-CORROSION PAINT is now used extensively for all kinds of
OUT-DOOR WORK
Such as Iron, Wood, Stone, Brick, Compo, Cement, &c., and has been proved, after a practical test of 70 years
to surpass any other Paint; and bei 2 adapted Sor Conserv atories, Hothouses, and Frames of all
eriptio: n y NO. Hen Jor such purposes.
is much lower in Price, and lasts s long as the best White Lead, and can be easily applied o any
being sent in various Colours s, hats m simply to be mixed (no grinding is needed). The Anti-
lemen
Corrosion is a powder, and will keep any length of time.
COLOURS :—
White Stone .. 34s. per cwt. Tight sot Dark Lead.
AAE i Red
Invia G
—
so T paean
OIL, Tuber rk AND BRUSHES,
A Copy of Testimonials ), will be sent upon applicat
WALTER CARSON & sons, — to the Inventors), 9, Great Winchester Street,
the Royal E — London, , EC.
WO AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE UNITED KINGDOM.
Darby, R. Ci
d & Co., Wavertree, Ha y
verpoo) um
Deane & Co., London Bridge ERU ied
Denyer, Mr., Gracechurch Reid, Go xberdem va
Street, City Samson & Co., Ki ock
2 2 — - Arthur and | Stuart & Mein, Kelso
ms, Ch: H
Dickson & —.— Manchester Aber, 8. Wrerzall ‘Witham
Dickson, Hogg, & Robertson, | Thyne, J. & R., Glasgow
om Tynan, J., Liverpool
— fo en ey, T., Liverpoo!
Epps, Maidstone Wood & Son, Maresfield
Fisher, Holmes & Co., Shef- | Wood & Soi bridge
field. Wright, W.,
THE. * MULTUM IN PARVO," ALL EXPANDINC.
0. ee Hurst Green, 8 27 78.
ARBER’S POISONED E = 2 and ISTS AND OTHERS.
DWARDPS Pat PATENT CANVAS d AND
OSE are the best and cheapest in
EDWARDS'S PATENT CANVAS DRIVING BANDS FOR
ice
and Sparrows are found dead. Barclay & Sons, 9t,
Farringdon Street; W. Su i 1 CHAFF CUTTING anp THRESHING MACHINES,
tes & Co., 25, Bu London ; and sold i|, €.J = and Canvas Hose sed Band Mar-
d factory, 32. Great S
Druggists, Grocers, &., —— the United — — 2. ui
Bansrr's Poisoned Wheat Works, Ipswich, removed from Eyo. VULCANIZED INDIA-RUBBER HOSE AND TUBING
CHASE'S FOR WATERING — ke.
d is
BEETLE POISON;
porua Han
Goswell Moun and No. 8j 8, Goswell —
TO AMATEUR GARDENERS, NURSERVIMN, AGRI-
8 AND OTHERS.
UBING FOR WATERING |
edes Vuicanised India Rubber
from 4d. per foot; Brass Hand
AND ;
CATS AND 1
Destroyer of BLACK
trial alone má
A box will des
preparation is, that 1
1 and corrupt ne air, -
is
A Engravings, sent on application. — mars
ea irect
KEATING’S PERSIAN INSECT DESTROYING POWDER. each
ULTRY, DOGS, Aw» PLANTS are effectually | mostly reso
e Fi at ate. or Vormin with which they uei Ste
= hich harm one
: —— — — — — —— w — Sil TAg 15 T to l
therefore She ” Cockroac! Beet! mdon, E. ‘a
es t NO. e TORIO speck "^ mesi aro T n: oe e bout one-half the time, and with one-
instantly destroyed, packets — , for e
| rus Pe by Tuowas Reatnio, Chemist, Rara Jabour the Gutta Percha Company, Patentees,
j 79, St. Pauls Churchyard, London, EC. ‘Take, notico each | the R ON mn sir Rr London, and sold by their Whole-
Seals aa de Bieter ors st
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jort 9, 1859, 78
— = cS Bape oar XI UE uod E DE B
i F
Mum
SE HEATING BY HOT WATER,
STEAM POWER WORKS.
JOHN . & COMPANY
prs respectfully call the attention of
e Hortieultu de m to the more than
usual facilities at their command to offer superior
1 LOLLE p MO ee LUE Horticultural Erections of every style and descrip-
mp um! un tion at lowest possible prices. The extensive
= — — LUE zl — 1 to their Machinery, Workshops, Iron
— a complete and v
i Y.
E rü al E " a nes n for production of every
Em - nmi. EW T branch of Horticul Rim Bailing and gay by
E Ex] al |
Hot-Water. J. WEEKS & Co. TON E OILER
SYSTEM of acis À has fi , clean-
liness, and economy, rendered such tinboubded
— == == satisfaction as now to bec almost omen
d. Numerous Horticultural Establishments of considerable extent formerly heated by 10 or 12 ordinary Boilers, also
de urches, Chapels, Schools, Museums, Warehou à Hospitals, and Publie Buildings are now more effectually heated. dat an
incredible saving of labour and fuel by Jor WEks & Co.’s ONE BOILER SYSTEM.
JOHN WEEKS & COMPANY, King's Road, ovd ber Horticultural en ee and Hot-water Apparatus —
En and Iron Founder
Plans, Estimates, 5 phres Catalogues m on application.
MCALL
» 9
E BUILDER AND HOT-WATER APPARATUS MANUFACTURER.
id i
~~ NOI aa m Te EA | 1
p mii ff | HII THTIETT | Ml 11 vm rm fm
zm
H. MC. will furnish PLANS and ESTIMATES free of any charge whatever, or will supply MA DRAWINGS at a trifling cost for any Gentleman |
wishing to construct his own, thereby effecting a great saving,
OFFICE: 7, UPPER CHEYNE ROW, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. =
COTTAM & COMPy, Engineers, Pounders, ke, Tui an eee,
nexpensive instru- e
m of n and very SSS NW
, WINSLEY STREET, LONDO
A
=
| : 14
pout BOILERS
A SEO W ROD] UCH has of late been said a : larem
M DEVOTED ENTIRELY TO ARTICLES OF HORTICULTURE. e aN IE I s
ote
NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALO
€ —— gere P chines —— 1 8 LM wert . N |
one 3 c ag 22 Ys Garden M. Tiowér ficii of various sizes. The Price of t ; £5 105. od, ern
COE "Apparatus Ornamental Wire Work | Hurdles — ts ringes 3 SENE 2 lach Frogs ditto = BS £1 0 »
iron “Hurdles, Strained Wire , Garden chs, ae | Mrinchast dito. e n Ct
Hur i ji » x 0 5 T W.
es, Strained Wire Fene pos tting, &c. References t Gentlemen and Nursery na Hi
Game Nett ng,
Every description of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and J Vrought Iron, and Wire Wor
XHIBITION PRIZE MEDAL GATES AND ENAMELLED “MANGE tros design, t dale end e ano
4. di London. Estimates fo for Dod. |
3 TAM an
but that they have mad d ent fi Ar: n side
tee bese 1 2, Winsley Street, Oxford Street, W., by — side of the old entrance to heit t Pt s inany partoft — pes
"works, opposite on application to J. JON 6B side, —
—
OOMES' GARDEN EDGING (
—CABLE PATTERN.
5 — 3 In London.
Straight . 9d. — 6d. m" yard
Bends — "d.
If fitted to plans — Sd.
LooMEs & ufacturers, Whittlesea, near
NER AND Eo ae
A
tub,1
May be "obtained: ot
erin 2—
21 e stro
5l. 10s. ; 2 ed cot Nabe [j 18s.
any — or Plumbe
Tr.
| (Hothouse Builders ¢ and Hot-Water Apparatus Manufacturers.
Our economie Heating
1 combines great
wo Hundred Cucumber
a N x to 1s
GARDEN ENGINES AND dá
TYLOR anp SONS, Warwick La Newgate
tJ e Street, London, E. C., beg to call —— r^ their very
3 manufacture of GARDE N ENGINES and SYRINGES.
Fig. 598. J. TYLOR & Sons’ BARROW GARDEN ENGINE in
—— well painted Oak tub, fitted with J. TvLog & Sons’ Im-
mp,
power with simplicity of from Three to Four Hun.
ini R f dred Lights all sizes
construction, a Range o kept in stock, gubi anil
Houses being Heated as painted complete, ready
easily as the smallest Pit. ior immediate use.
References to the Nobility and ra in most of the Counties in England.
Claremont Plaee, Old Kent Road, London, S.E.
HORTIOULTU URAL S-
AAR D ES, Galvanized Iron
1
LE g
/ 7 »-
CR
ach.
sah. ‘ditto, to hold
Mow wing Machines, with Boyd’s
Patented "he coder gum £4 17s. 6d; £6 6s, Od.,
£6 17s. 6
, £4 13s, £5 128, £
Garden tools, 4s. Ad
s, fro
Boyd's Selt adjusting She dei 80
Wire Work, 18in, 4d. per y
Every Implement for Garden use on the
lowest Terms.
DEANES :—Opening to the Monument, London Bridge.
roved — Universal — and Registered "rye we
Which an rs the e purpose of — —— te rose, fan, and je!
CONTENTS 0 —
10 gallons 15 . 28 gallons
£4 10 0 25 10 0 £6 18 0
Fig. 599. do. TINNED IRON TU
CONTENTS OF TUB:—
8 gallons 12 gallons 16 gallons 24 gallons 30 gallons
22 15 £35 £4 £5 £5 18
Fig. 618, „ with LE rubber
P suclon tube, one rose and jet . £1 5 each.
No. Ditto ditto ixl,
Pip o. 2 1010. „
TY 619. GARDEN SYRINGE, withoneroseandjet 12s.6d. each |
620. Ditto 11s.6d. „
„ 621. Ditto 108. Gd. „
„ 622. LADIES’ GARDEN SYRINGE, dick ties ee Vk
=
Fig.623. READ’S SYRINGE, with two roses and — > —5 |
a
„ 024. READ'S mt with one rose and jet
„ 625. 3 ditto
FOWLER’S PATENT STEAM PLOUGH
SEEN AT WO
iuf
STANDARD s OF FOWLER'S STEAM-PLOUGHING TACKLE
; AN BE $ EEN IN n H me
de
sein YORKSHIRE
ON Too 4 — 5.
SUSSEX ebe S OSAE
AND NORTH DERBYSHIRE AGRICULTURAL roisean ar SHEFFIELD.
CIETY AT HAILSHAM ON JULY
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL BOOETY AT WARWICK ON JULY 18 13, 14, AND 15.
For further particulars apply
JOHN FOWLER, JUN. 28, CORNEILI, LONDON, E.C.
„ 626. -Ditt ditto -—
Manufactw imp: Engines (fo ele o
deep Wells) Plumbers’ Brass Fou: do of every E
HighP re Cocks and Closets, Copper and Tinned-iron Bat!
mps of every description, Canes
Estimates given for Hot-water and Bath Apparatus
REDUCED
., Galv: anised Iron Works,
"c AL or
for Farm Buildings and other Roofs; the 8 UR dur-
able, and neatest Roofing in use; also Spouting at an peryard.
WIRE STRAND ‘CABLE FENCIN
2 th ongest
Wke eges st cattle
m by 8 Won —
ines of the Guided Mira nd, i
. per yard.
will es
e: and rails, or any kind of
cing; and — four times he strength of solid
not rust rrode. Upwards of 1200 miles of this
Fencing suppli ied.
GALVANISED CAME AND TRY NETTING
alvanis
peningsof any size.
GALVANISED IRON CHAIN CAMP STOOLS & CHAIRS,
8 FOUNTAINS & FEEDERS, PRONGED DAHLIA
RODS A Rond ora EAD. &c.
A
PATENT IMP
Strong C
DLES from 2s. per yard.
js AS WORKS,
T E of Di rivate Vilage, 45 Railway
eries, s yi Works fri
10 to 500 lights estimated for. works can bé ent rosted to
— labourer.— Apply to
J, Morton & Uo, 2 2, NEM all Buildings, Leeds,
GREENING & COMPANY'S
PATENT WIRE FENCES.
PATRONISED BY HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS 7 | THE PRINCE CONSORT.
"NERO
QUOI
MAMMA
TI a JI": - IE
| UR
T
—
No. 11 variety, Strong Poultry and Chicken Proof Fence.
C NE aa Meroe bars of stout tough
wire 6 inches Meshes at the ha P fence,
1 inch apart ; m ae centre of fence, 2 inches; at the
top of fence, 4 inc
“ By far the most elegant and durable wire fencing tho pm
come under our notice. Below it is sufficiently fine to be pro
alike against the ingress of rats and the egress of chick eni. "i
being "enr ied e it am M no resting-place for the fowls, who
ently do not a t to “a over it."— Poultry Bo ok.
"e
feet Serie * Nen “opened de 104. gavant,
24
2 29
3
4
5
6
8. X
3
It con and other
and Wire Fences for Parks, Farms, prem. pi
Poultry Courts, &c. í
Post free on ims: ofstamp.
RENING & Co., Victoria Iron and Wire
oR orks, 81, Oxford Street,
Manchester,
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ORTICULTURAL
[Jury 9, 1
E GARDENERS’
N EW ren OF F l RST- -CLASS eby given, that a
T d I. Notice is herel
wil be held in the rooms of the a Special
Street, Adelphi, on 8
D CI e to consider hs arrangement with 2
E CKOL: AN of the Ex pry 1851, for le:
A | 1 Society 20 Acres o round at Ke
and for piden i" var is eet TR Gore
0 II. CHANGE : dim The 0 :
8 C A R T E R & LI directed that the Gate ending ! 0 e Odd from wall hare
J A M E 2ü of Devonaht es main — — be closed; and d that t M NL :
x a of the same quality, principal — er shall be at x Nationa 18 the
Are now ready to supply Seed of the above, in fhree-sized packets, all of Bastel) oppostts nie say chool Gate, Mn
1s
ately hurch on T
III. MEETINGS OF THE FRU "odd
x 9s. 6d. oat 5s. *— that the Mesi of this Coni MEN for moe] hereby
ae meria held at 8, St. M oe Plata, ce, Trafalgar NeXt three
Y, Ju
at 3 ^ TUESD. DAY,
High Holborn, W. C. TUESDAY, Avaust 9 TUES i
JAMES CARTER & C0., Seedsmen, 238, Bd E — At the Meeting on je n a Prize AY,
awarded for the best EARLY Sni EU
TARINE, if found to possess sufficient merit. The sed
be accompanied by two or three of the full-grown C fruit should
E E RSO \ & S On Septem mber 20 a Prize of Two Guineas will be j
M E S S R S s best SEEDLING GRAPE; a Prize of One z
LN this Meeting be given for the best dish of
FER STRAWBERRIES. r, Aa
OF Blank E forms t to bo filled up and sont with Sel
Fruits tained on application to Mr,
NERI S Secretar to the Fruit Committee TERNS
CALCEOLARIA, CINERARIA, & PRIMULA À AUR tov
om; N. B. Th SAA
In seed packets at 2s. 64. each kind. The superior quality of the above may be the fine varieties fr Acud be 3 DA Secretary ph A rape Tae,
1, as the bloomed in the Wellington Nursery at heir pommes sea: The 8, St. Martin's Place, r Square, London; red
as they are à are much finer than those of any previous one. be de zn red before 1 P. u. on mths spective days of meeting,
CALCEOLARIAS and CINERARIAS of the present year IV. a n held in the rooms of the Society of Aris
on Tuesday, June 21, the following gentlemen were m
5 de ag er viz. :—
fablshod: plants for Sells, jun. Highbury] G. F. Wilson, Esq., Belmont,
The admirable substitute for Grass, REQUIRING NO MowrNG! is offered in good established pla E park, West j Vauxhall
immedia un cw ing, at 4s, 3s., 2s., and ls. per didi: according (60 W neci sizes, and in seed packets digg qp Bas 1, Dixon | B. ce Na Hie i
» 7
at 6d., 25. 6d. „ 10s., and 20s. each. * clare t aw le for inal bythe ea plants, which were
| red to have eengaine e followin Fellows, $
BEATON'S NEW NOSEGAY BEDDING GERANIUMS of unique and beautiful colours are— : be
Mr. Wm. Cotterell | Mr. "Fish * CG i 5
the IMPERIAL CRIMSON and the MODEL NOSEG. — d Bart of dae | ata v
New Plant duseribed in ih i jun
ALLAMANDA VIOLACEA, the GOLDEN TOM THUMB GERANIUM, and other New in tne e A
D alle aco Se name [Ve Mont Ee fere
. d. R. . . T. J.
z : i Bir C. Lemon Lady Rolle Lord Venon
Wellington Nursery, St. John’s Wood, London, NS Calabra, 13 Plants, $1 Applicants. —
r. arron A. S. Gladstone, E; Earl of
W. C , Esq. Rt. Hanbury, Esg.” Mr. J. ner ee
rarer: ure Esq. | Wm. Hunt, Esq. Mr. J. Pes j
FLOWERS BEE ees NE
C H 0 I C E » C. B. Warner,
ve Plants.
BUTLER & MoCULLOCH'S Eres E
Chatfi 840 |
SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, |".
gg
T. A BRANGED on à new and original plan, with Copious Descriptive and Cultural Notes, TE paaks 5 ;
AANA Wa aining many new and rar er Cata 33 Esq., | Col.
i E. ; gue, now ready and 9 on application. :
pe a hts SHRUB, TREE, M GET SEEDS, the crop of 1858, saved with | W. P; Lindsay Car-
the greatest care, by the se eininent growers. R. Craw
We may also 2 that the Sardinian — — of Messrs. _ JAMES CARTER & uc Lord Egerton of
whose Seeds, especially Carnatio ons and Picot ees, 5 | w. J. Biches Esq T
transferred the oem ncy from ü K LGowa J. Dea
demand for first, dis as wee prt FLORISTS FLOWERS Tho following plants, of which there was a sufüclent num "i
g to supply all the Fellows who applied for them, were
Professor ee in the Gardeners’ Chronicle of Fi h, has the foll re & MoC.’s Catalogue. n
„Borken & M gue of Choice Flower, Shrub, Tres and Vegotable Seeds. This list | Pinus Don Pedri ..98|Bimbusgrem is.
Alls 84 closely printed Svo pages, and. is is remarkably well got up. It appears that the correspondent in Sardinia, who for- Abies, sp. 9 Mexico 3 4 Pins Gemelli . E
merly supplied one of the great London houses with seeds raised in that warm part of emi has now eee what Perret . 67 | Buddlea, sp. from Peru "-
^ ULLOCH. Let us add, i la, var.
i
5
h Mee RC
Lawsoniana di
he saves to Messrs. BUTLER & MoC et us add, that it yields to no Trade List in the abundance of its materials | Pentstemon, from Mexico 47 | Sida malvæfolia "
or the excellence of its arrangements." Veronica decussata Devon. 31 | Clematis microphy
; : Aràlia japonica — .. 15 leptophy ik uL d
‘SPLENDID DOUBLE ITALIAN-SAVED CARNATION AND TEE. [ipei e iemp 10 dendron ..
8 PICOTEE SEED, 3 — i Y Na ua v or Tm
; "The following Hom e i — COLLECTI varieties cx GE 10 seeds caah 6 0| AND Bau — etie is "x^ k
3 ne following 2 ecms of Carnations and Picotoss have beon xa Do. ae 40 shi do. 3 $ next trn m * e e he x
prend E dui EURO ian correspondent, a | Yellow 0 0 y e ESDAY, JUL!
lc reme H : the the Clair to o' a.m. On this ocat
will tai lace.
List of
p
Bazsi and only pe m do.
ETUR fowers of f the aa est se — —— T — — aue Miren a 28. per Packet Fine A Mixed, 1. packet. third B
m them: can wit Toe eem
lovers of this her om be | P beim valeo ot 10 aoe a 6 oji
3 6
.
as in to uce at least 5
ining | Perpe choice mize, 2 RC Pa uii pit d
Ej — e rot cro per p e mix per 0
40 BERBERIS, SP. from | Pichincha.
20 Tecoma LATROBEL Greenhouse climber.
40 Sprr@a CALLOSA, Ha
osse
oocooooaosc
; CINERARIA. m Peru.
Saved from a splendid collection, composed of the "from E
newest
and ur auge ‘of this class, in in packets, 1s.,
Agents for F. & H. Smiths 226
packets, 1s. 6d., T — ant 5 0
ge Te Ae es Ov S. OP. es OT?
Dun
: packet.
seeds each 5
do,
d
t E ELI.
H pieni, — ot — $0 .
PS — — cations for
Wo f do 3 0 aml pis vetuit 0
Perpetual Choice Miei, 2s, p. packet. B Mixed, 1s. "a pkt, The same mixed s ; do. Te 1 0 aso?
CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA. —An exceedin; ngly Y RA * ends sent —— — Tres s
bl.
man“ worked" plants, der per packet,
— — ct
BUTLER!& McCULLOCH, Covent Garden Market.
Or Ores
1860.—January 20, Februay 21, March 23, April 20. dd
Jory 2, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND
trade lists abound as much a
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 559
Foreign ever in new | speaking, so perfectly well understood
,8 underst as it ought
oF cm AS JACKSON ax SON having determined | names of attached to xime Vs ste ? of | to > It is n simple; but man Mem with
their — collection of. Orchids, have y ,
resolve zi to p X71 — extremely low prices; for instance, what seems Ainet whi prices are asked | rable loss, and disappointment e been
offer 12 good plants, selected from the under-named | for new seedlings, Vid in eri to rec —— | the perin of not knowing it. It — 4 lk per-
(purchasers s selection) for 3 — — the 20 for 4L, packag* more attra — are decorated with es | forming the operation n the Vine is in active
spectabilis, Brassavola Calanthe vestita, Cattleya of persons, places, or things famous for gro eth. wad can * cut without bleeding. Tf thi
Moss e, Vou rim em Dendrobints daeng * — or great deeds. And r the present | is atte tende d to, any of the usual modes of placing
sant oa ensinorum. obie, pidendrum Primulinum M th 2 3 M : S
Trenste aromatica, Miltonia spectabilis, Odontoglossum grande, | S250 wi — forth some Duke of Solferino e scion in conta with the stock will sueceed,
0. pulchellum, erg cet ag ig apilio, Stanhopea or Dichos de Magenta, o r Delle Palestrina, to as hip, cleft, or saddle graiting but a
oculata, he new and
ag such
say nothing of Buffaloras, and Mon 3 i
Gar ala
— na E OE E d certain failure will be the result of every mode if
See po "Bos Kingston, S W. id ibaldis. But alas! a name carries — e the Vine : in a bleeding state.
CHOICE SE with it, especially — —.— ; it is no — e| T states in a paper read before the
SSRS. PARKER AND WILLIAMS beg to tha t the bearer is sweeter, or fairer, or| Horticultural Society i in 1821, that — practice
AVL inform ther friends and ape grip they can now supply | healthier t than those who ‘vere born before her; of grafting the Vine appears to be ancient ;
— . ch are warranted perhaps it is rather the reverse. | for it is mentioned both by Cato Serum
Per packets. d. Per acket— sid. tter then of — conjecture we may in a way which shows tha common in the
Calceolaria, herbaceous .. 2 6 | Gaillardia grandiflo - 0 venture to suggest that no new ere pro- | Vineyards of Italy at the period in which they
Cineraria from named vars: 2 sss, we. 10 duced on this occasion because none a e — wrote, It must consequently have an opera
Ho! oly} hock, from named Lin Swot Williama, from extra we the old ones. The im I doni = — - | tion sE eas 55 he hn asol it is 88 to
— of inferiori e oubtless — we er- | succeed well in the hands of t ern ener,
“Paradise N gr md Hornsey Roads, by the purchase on f Roses. For ourselves, | who is, nevertheles better
a ^" oice to see in . « sign of improvement in|vided with instruments, and can scarcely be
AND A. SMITH are now £7. ing ont Seed offt ublie. years’ ago su inferior in a KA
. eee COLLECTION o of cir gat deos er of my an exhibition as this would have been E Ai d | the ioo of that period. Tt the efore:
— — — S W care ted Beers Select | With carefull — — buds and 8 looms 3 e that er pe acquaint ted wit!
only the ve t for upwards of 10,000 of the finest | produced under magical name of seedlin ngs, 2 of o g, = which the modern
—— cotinge of the Bot tanie Cour G merae it and purchasers n have eagerly contended fo r | garden ignor — aft wall known that —
merit, and were much a In packets 1s. 6d., 2s. 6d., ET their 38 there being a notion in the minal . — in propagat ing the Vine, employed cu
s. each in stamped en —— and may be had of most res 7 e| of the rthy public that to be a seedling was tings w MÀ eee par artl f — ear-old -
Seedsm ain the United Kingdom Dulwich, Sume d. n the United — Surrey e wo aving—an idea by no means indeed | partly of two-year-old woo [NIGHT con-
; confi — to Roses. We well remember hinting to | ceived it pole e that the succes — of the Roman
an excellent hortieulturist and great buyer of o ultivators in et thei ir Vines might Mee
plants, now alas! no more g fts similar to their
priced acquisitions did not se ue as her|euttings. He ther CN vem
| —Á ned ites; a suggestion not taken in very |of about 2 Ain prs old w 5 inches o
ia ood ot so good!” exclaimed the fair annual wo With these he was successful ; but
TUR SEEDS, 6d. per ame; E 2 my — sir, rami seedlings, | let the condition of the Vine as regards its vegetat/on
1 — meccanica — * BEE | ut spore year * the aa me n i st: It is, however, evident that if he
¥ ave harvested Co., t eat Continen’ nurserymen.” at had known the simple principle to which we have as
E of HARDY GREEN ROUND ‘TURNIP, which is redy | was the light in whioh sed ed in tt te weld Wave ut oles
few of
IMPROVED SKIRVING'S SWEDES at e: i Ib.
PAGE'S IMPROVED ee on. A4 at 8d. do.
SCOTCH HYBRIDS, 7d. in — 22 the a ibi ivy
YELLOW TANKARD, Td. ae near London of horticultural produ For there | have stated that a Bybee of do- Véi- -old wood
FOMERANTAN WETEN Sm, a por m Iu has — easy to contrast new things with old the chances wot at not one in 20 wo
W. Baker, Esq., Purewell, says is preferred by his beas ones, and to institute comparisons under equal fail wei in the hands of so practised —
sheep to any he has grown; itis quite hardy, 1 less injured oy nre ter it
— or
— ——
nat jn
The — Throne. Tei ‘hich
was gon pos
TURDAY, J ULE 2 jas * i "ts inte rior to an o
the for Or! 1
Moxpar,
Bors,
IT is no secret that the an whe so af ela
conducts the agricult M of Du —
Journal is Mr. J CHALMER orton, the
itor of an excellent Cyclopedia of A culture. Such in nr big W jth nd ha A ge thi
It has also — —— that a Mr. JOHN $e 1
LOCKHART Mor writer on eee 8
also
has been price for trial Mi a oe of forge
We therefore think it n. blic y
ree,
n are aware the credit of first dis-
that a new covering aie explaining the essential principle 2
beau, the ioc LUN aak of Vines is due the late
whi ing is ensured. —
living tha prre Bi our readers would profit b
| an account of these interesting and conclusive ex-
iments, we give the following extraet from Mr.
e exh
ecessary to th [
is no connection or determi © on that c ne w jä that Vines — Re be easily
between the last person and Mr. J. C. — |! the Rev. 1 8 LE, Will hav " Men UI E made to grow by g g; and that the proper
e ancestors of the latter gentleman’s — have Hes A the second-rate — ers in that class time for 8 “the operation — in January
Wi farmers for generations in the 2 f Fife, who a ways struggling to be placed in the|and Febru "T ; for Vines nnn under glass;
while those of his mother have boon for the, most front ith of binis in spite of Fh aom. ral com- — in March for Vines Le in — the
part clergymen o ee in e same Plexion, loose array, wrinkling skin, and feeble border. But bw of 4 ZA which I
county; the late Dr. 8 — , | constitution. operated upon in the abovi — E had the
As to the committed for forgery, - mortification to fnd t that * — f the grafts.
believed to be a Lanark ark men, and at all events | ck pr cae — — under glass x grew, and those which did take beeame weakly
nothing | so much im — so use plants.
be a cp s- em zia whatever for the Aes alt — pensive 1 rved that the stocks of the Vines grafted
el which they "require,
bai to 92 5 ist S
iw Commi
are les med by most perso
and the Connell [rin are admirable se
as above-mentioned all bled ter and upon
ns. e
oane. Linn
that the parts of the grafts which joim — to
of the Hortical al Society, Yo hia we alluded | brought to perfection; but they a stocks were sodden and turned black, by ‘hele
lately (p. 504), have 2 war atsomething like a unless forced in suecessional houses. t
conclusion, and a general mee per E Society rape house, however, a long supply "fia the | of the
summoned for Thurs n the | dessert may be daily obt ed, with ore manage-| * To se = ‘the am. * 7 ev E. :
Council will be prepared to lay | fefe 285 Fallows men ne and a ipinin 5 of sorts. ith stypties, cements, DS.
the re applica ut it ep enne ntly s that in houses of well of, with many others s
^ | that tho "Royal Commissioners established Vines sorts for which it would nation, but all without
consideration the propriety | be desirable to e set of young | will men
the pd a lease of 20 acres of ecc raised from Ais e icd. mei, power of th
land at at Gore. juse; but the rooting up | are breaking.
o is not so stated in the advertisem i
we believe chat no objection will be made to — planting a young one
presence of strangers at the meeting on Thursday |re — an Wee poat
—.— — à rs, and yars ly
e been seen from our
wil hav report of the or Á—-— they take possession ot 2 mew ap sing $
great Rose sow hei list, Wed that, with one : pened Lon. ino . 2 ae pores ML frm e gon
exception, not a single new variety — 1 the lateris itself able to wide so. Monier trowel zee ace moisture, and EIC
separately. That however was a e; and these inconveniences recourse should had to the wound with a ol T, W re
— eee Appert promises 8 take rank grafting, which will be —.— — best mode of | securely ied w — 3» po
— subs tituting for any MÀ sort is more of waxed twine. n 7 ~ xk
ag absence of n -— M ertt desirable ? regards ine, however, the|drawn very close to t e topof the shoot, soon began
Audi is isi a subject of regret or of congratulation?| principle of this 3 is not, rally to stretch und to rise like a ball over the wound -
THE GARDENS CERONGIE AND ATIS GAZETTE, [Jury 9
530 =
TM UE INT ETO TE tinguished British and foreign natur: lists 2m
ed over d a g alists, upon ec
fthe Vine, the stock 7 tied ma clay , scientific botany. I shall — fone
is distended, ni one Pah dae ghe to all hole for t ve Ms howey r, that in the number of young men ted e report
N as if it 3 it ead Vs I caused 8 whip- “grafting T aut A ell, oag ir many | naturalists or ollectors to Govorimo t mum
s is to erre D England, the Colonies, aud on the Cont
wat Jig b well Mes be Yn AS Mr ve pla an 11045 of Eds pa OWANS adds, What 1 | Thus it is only within these six years that ¢ the R.
an ut neit us nor an ean be considered as becoming a mearl
the ant, 7 still think of 5 importance bx establishment. Till 1853, they ere but rie completa
eal
i i d the sap from thought, and arl
LE cea Mie Ped ip * vii y much EM in this mode, is to leave eye or young | whereas they now approach that condition whey a,
ERE de badder in At shoot the top of the stock, and E pes it to grow | able extension would, in the state of our prese
force as urst the bla abou ours shoo go ? top Ban tt PH be eut off, leavin ng | ahaa scientifi c relations, be unadvisable; and w
$ : s : ew days, when it shou desire " — 5 ry once completed) wi
e operation was performed; the weather fora ys, We Te e 6d d (he e ed * Cons once completed) we dally
d one leaf to y to enlarge
|m ust not bi o forgotten that, 18 years ago, England
" ic
ivate individuals, and of man, provin cial
4 0 0 N i i: h I new woo For in- = had attained an excellence d towns: in the
s rong waxed t ine from just under inva made 12 0 or 15 ind es i ingdom, had à s du MN
the an M — t to 6 inches cst in stock. stance, the grafts which I I ma ade on „the gris it E have been discreditable to the Royal iui id
The sap, ing now no to eseape, was February this year hav y,
na
n my Annual Reports, I have classed the imp ;
be Gardens, &, under ed heads, o of the in
Supporting them,
x
E
objects of Gov ernment in establis hing and
The; 1 are 1
As a place for the healthy recreation of the
E “the national love of gardening, aud aff
information as to the appearance, ie
countries, &c., of an extensive series of
cA from all 2 15 and climates,
oe whethe food, Aker W
cabi i Te.
e;
shoot with se oin soon beca: me, st
evident that a eh had taken place betwee In the Reports of the — eee of the
the graft and the stock, as the shoot of the former. MORES Society,” there is an account of a
pi sh sickly, ind. pers odbi e having been f 3 Fee after | ^?
e RY, 0 1 8
5 d he
t season I took a healthy growing Vine dens Brights . The artieulars of thi
B a T3 and carefully ma kober it w with a se edling | were given n the Binder ronicle of this; des
growing in t or a Trebbiana in a bearing state a
tiore "t inarch at toget her, and bound a bladder Muscat was desired Te su stituted on the
of using cement. Upon Ist of April, 1858, the Egit being at that
in fu Fr cut off r
tani:
ions,
bees cmq and cep gt also by. trainin,
collectors and gardeners, for hom me, colon iie Ut foreign
ue
se manifold objects are not attain supporting a
number of —— 2 branches of the pros iei Kew; |
d vide that
with.
as
E
E
EE
8
RE
Ri
en
B
un
oe,
but are the ult of a sys! tem, ed t
n the other ^5
oming more glutinous, The Pointe grew to ne MM of 18 feet i in the me
"t consequently no now oceurred 2 me that the same season; its red very nearly
time for cutting off t veg races 31 inches; and it also 8 5
af E M cem the — rin From what we have state ted a cause of failure i
h bl. , Was whe n they had ed that Vine grafting will be fully understood, and there-
ig dad al hich the sap fore can be mir avoide T
any
7 0 »y e
„and no other covering was used | disappoi
of bast s surrande with graft- pons ng to where eh Mey
?
T it, NE Spa
rom these and various experimen nts which AUS elas allow. er
have since made I ein t in stating that left to push, say 6
healthy Vines may be Wessel grafted with | whip grafting pene that shoot, which may at d Oxon
young wood of the preceding year's growth from | the s time stopped; bind the stock and "E tendence of ofthe iles
the time that the shoots of eks h the | scion together w 10 0 surround with clay, nme — seer Ma. nsible fort
grafts are to be put upon have made four or five and over this some Moss which should be kept good keep and efficien t working of every Meh ir
eyes until Midsummer; with every prospect of the | moist. 1 eut back the shoot left on the top t 1 hich, as regards
afts gr owing, | and without the least danger of of the stock to one leaf as soon as the e graft begin
es 8 suffer ering by bleeding. o push
Some eu! gs of Vines sent from Madeira SS
which I received from the Horticultural Society | REPORT ON THE PROGRESS AND CONDITION um, Library,
Se emen on Lo ues of May by me on seed- | OF TEE Bo GARDENS OF KEW, FROM | gardeners fo
but
Muse Herbarium. He selects foreme
es nce wok hein
mends all r and 'vements, :
spects and signs the bill sober and accounts of the G en
blishments. He supplies:
ar, A ines which wi 5 ging under glass, 1853 2 —
jut fire heat, with X Hs VAM results:. AN oi Report by. AA nm iis lagged K. H., to the | le T 45 of tho world; ad f Pal
shot eet, Left pas small | First missione ks, &c., on the pro- | satis requisitions o A applicants who :
H : ithout drawin y deupa a babaen Ü 08e ap] ;
bua Gg and 15 50 its wood well. gress and condition — the Royal Gardens of Kew, hat benofltod ri pss gud But it is Tu
these demands may pee adi adu meronis o 3
such regulations as were found ot 3
of living specimens of plants, to which Serr
rus the A f all the 8 und, tho
« T'he Ne Molle, grafted on the same dod during a a period of s years, viz, from the c commence-
he oe 12 feet, oe o fruit, b d. The
ripen eed
"O
i tanic Gard.
Wn | viz, a Herbarium and a Lap A A 3 only can the
objects in the Gardens an e 1 d
and ticketed, Ary thst in 9 — va on afford.
travellers, and men engaged in the Ex
— — or horticulture, which is here daily sought. It is also
since 1853 that the new Museum has been built and its on
tents arranged ; i
' he contrary. . ducts has been acquired from the French Exhibition ; hat the
ad ster the bus tte Vine bt 3 cee
* | living plants ; ‘he has the supervision of the = em onnertel
3 and sent away, and of all the
o hire and discharge
of the rener,
at by m
nits state of pos is
the conseque
ni
e result; and "EM
er T our T ENDE was first =
out by aa —Ü in the above eo!
About the year 1834 Mr. 1
older: Garde near Glasgow, w
ful in ines, of vas h he produced a
th dt;
Aus -grafting, ex » ata in the Transactions mented to tli TA A
sergio 5 series, vol. II ; while more li Gard 4
1 " re liberal and Ge leners’ Library, the have often $
114, no api 23 ont of w pes were | garcons E atly increased their efficiency, by rewarding Sundays, and the n oe err iy the ole p :
fow :dad rious, an is ing the deserving men; and an 3 i E
m ded wi ee selected for a — fe rene’ A" ance and support has also been * 9 meii. — tends the dou m Propane
scion a i of the preceding yer s = with
of ge; a
one eye, Lu eut it into the. : re Pal
shoot of Aroidem, — ah and C M n 545 dee raising of
the middie, and both Pre thinned to fit on man ag, foe Fiant 3 require heat: hf
wedge-s io * Till that time these desiderata: Ward-cases, and of tà
haped ins on of the s which was 1. stone 1 — ie * Pal |S intends the packing of ^W rok What are n
its eye opposite ‘that on the ln of | refer when describing these departments of ho establishmes i | ene bron abroad, and keeps accurate lists of
Se —.——
2, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND — Sh GAZETTE. 561
T A Foreman has s charge of the Orchids in Nos. 4, 5, and 16; J interco nication s d proce x- | whi trifling sum will suffice for the removal of the re-
the ornamental and v: eaved Stove — Watei — it — 2 ar r? e — é — especially to m: nig Mac d ud for 8 ting the conduit to tbe Thames.
Lilies, Nepenthes, &c., * I the Tropical Fruit Trees | communicate with those of the mother count An active w e Queen's Garden.—This 8 ul piece of ground, re-
and ices, as Man een, Geta Nutmeg, &c., which | corresponde and in ge of this nature are the measure hag for the use of her Majesty, and situated on the S. W.
demand great care and skill: also of the Plants in No. 9. of the useful and su f these establishments ; and it is pet of Agi Pleasure due consisting of 12 acres, has
c. The Conservatories devoted to th es and Shrubs of | only needful to refer to the eminent services rendered by the — been enlarged by 1s more acres taken 2 om the adja
our Colonies, and of other co ies possessing temperate | Botanic Gardens of Ceylon, Calcutta, Victoria, Jamaica, and al Deer Park ; new walks have been cut t — ugh it, much
cli uiring protection, m contained in Nos. 12 and / the Mauritius, as cases point. Another class of demands is aJ ipie wood and copse cleared away, the paths ns freshly
18, under another Foreman, Dey! it also is to keop 2 sped flowers and leaves, for flower nting, decoration, and | gravelled, and other improvements ag
the lai double house, No. 10, Be “lled always with o; m ms 1 cedens — Th eons Erin bed — IV. Tux F EcoNowic Bora:
mental Azal Fuchsias, Roses, Ex Stine argely , and they consequently multiplied far
4. Tha Palin outed and new Victoria House, from the great generally The formation of — 17 — „
tself to my
mind in 1847, when a very humble building (within the pre-
reused, e the e power of supply ; ; 80 v — ey a
n pre
rred by kitchen a!
mand a Foreman's entire operations here perform: tide or have other — 1 oe piar aa they usus — "aep d what PEN 8 et m - —
are very laborious, eee, dete -— watering daily br poo from ee — had no such clain —.— 3 | table, no longer required for that purpose. It promi M e
hoses ; while the of a what icated apparatus | often for the commo: rubs, trees, and w of the road- afford. for peri Od tie 1 dis day er
— beating, syringing, and ven ntilati ting is attached :to.-this — — ortis rarest stove = Had p “applications poen vm Bip dy n demand byt 1 5 bue aree eaqui especially such
— Foreman is c with the Hardy Leanne Pisite uses would have been mate MÀ m ; EI ño mo re fim are 3 we — ern mie we 2
me 6000 species), w are scientifically arran e | men than are absolu! . o have d
DT all seeds of out-door me and — a — stock 2 r ts T n packing, p ym a parcels fo DEC nucleus ofa Mu cree mt 8 —
of —— his department being the oftenest applied to by | of lea em een seriously deranged their daily A: re 3 voretabis-ordaniestisn. and Atak aA
n Colo —— Gardens. * rations. — . —— — dy exhibited in the living state.
; m —— e, with the Flower Beds of various | The hours of admission Royal Gardens are from I r. x. guch P fi NOt; tall ko ahbwar thet bud C"
Tho majority rit.
"winter, and great in TERI
roots
—À are — to secure
out plants in our changeful climate,
v. yri
no fewer than 400; and to — till dusk on week days, Ay rtm, 2». u. on Sundays. On
demands on Christmas only losed.
eave (o vhi ehe Garden
amg: en refused, piene 8 who have a
a collection could
Day they are wholly cl often propounded, by showin
rr mete —
re 1 r. M.; but the
actua 5 ou e e
M
"-— pes — t
of erable of Art th
Dir 47^ been Tu during the previons 40 years, in
— ra with his own private Herbarium; and, thanks to
her claims to be admitted.
hat, as previously —
cuts P - labours of many months, Besides this 8 E — — th whole of the work in the Houses and Museums the — * dis tonei; id mx - "nt. Jeena the 10 apart-
kee; number of well-grown Fuchsias, b Gera- | must be concluded before noon (the dinner hour for the men). A wu ti z e e ch MA
niurns, - to besunk during the summer in the lawns for 3 is obvious that A exclusion of the general public till wore full An ta “ee —T d ir fenem re et com gh as
— ial ornament. lr. u. must be rigidly enforced ; otherwise the foremen ca commodation, was then requirec br MAE ithe ones *
niere. on of the
energies of a Foreman as well as a great m
in
ason an
for A bres
tion. Each m
tor inguirios ae as to
ting, ari
—— — — — rise from uM — z 515.
t 185; some of our best foremen me Mie
— . ers while others have been to
Labourers.—Their n with
and the work.
three liveried constables, and two constant gate
female attendants in the ladies’ cloak rooms ;
M M —— — and engine men.
must je
less restricted to half a 2
II. Tux BOTANIC
On the transference in 1841 of Nabe — grounds by the
mores Situa Soa ublic, the Rotanio Gardens consisted only |
iyo: additions tilly
1547, they’ —
b ^ »- d " — ich I b
ention. As regards tha er of Of visitors, beginning with
1841, the increase has been wd py po —
e trees, lawns, walks, clamps, Rhododendrons, and the | not be answerable for The atya of their respective collections, | 1855, into be a early in 5 o
lawns and walls, — the whole | or the steady worl wear v
„
Angers.
young mem namely, that the children be diente f
l darela be pore Aver ^. they | 12, each with a sui
their ‘goed z — 3 e and — other visitors, and that th
necessarily varies the Agricu
The 1 9 — also pnr: ine policeman, volumes
eepers; two pin Week
label write
summer of 1856, and but little
orking of their
and are in many ways ——
schools are admit.
who are often ad-
— me — — = te Gatton, b y , was put under
M —
nto — ps
meg so that they — d ion:
Houses, Museum
ot be inco — à crowded
kets of
suitable
the addition of the seco!
Bardens or ierat oec eda of visits
J
tationery for the f readers
th eners, — the direction of the
o extensive series of magnified
and “pots nical scenery which hangs
dur plicate specimens from the Museums are
and n — energetically urged; and they mostly
rom publio Mei icem f and especially provincial
s. But I need hardly remark that the preparation,
articles wi
In most instances t y
ben d
in con- mus
conservation, and naming of museum
— ——. labour, ver pcs
eserved ir
r museum objects ne: — ces Img and orba edi de
A More ing to that of
pelootisig, correctly
*
each of 3000 copies, of the
€ been ae old, between the years 1846 |
impressions of the more rece "4 Es spe cimens is trifl
4.85 eking: 8
| by a wire fence from the Botanic iade is 1257
ch time it o it has been | ou prima seen i
vation of every tree and a which who should be
Sar of f those tothe H will stand the Vend the open ar in this climate. An active and WX proper selection of x
genera DM mass of people, ite THE Foreman superintend it, who has one 1
rie e ouses an useums, the eagerne:s Dtm
with — they ore curious and interesting middle 8 feine are TX open to the public from the ihe
the
plants and their ucts, aud s read the notices and eject
tions given in the Guide ‘Books and . to — * objects
in the pee, all evince that such privileges minister food
to the . lth to the
ane The gr mber of perso
coe hes "ir have free access to all
ix Tu The best attended months,
June, LN k ugust,
w^ to the
peri. A as been
8 are
mbered
— the Ferns,
a
tiole,
of
c M ree et described by the
the rare Cinchona, or best Peru’
noble collection of Sikkim a Rhod:
— of objects of lesser
atti
me
laim for duplicates, and in certain cases it
mate the Loca he with than. But it is plainly more rid
vantage than to that
y rmi the Cycads and | sapply the 3
5
same writen, the m from 6 to 14 feet ; while our own
of the Royal Gardens, that such | race of t
eos s fe
„ where sim
are
museums being form
he Kew Museums were
— ation of this | established to in: m re how such institutions may be found:
a hill in these | and conducted, t as the source. whence they are to
W.
been prese!
report, an — beben ie is proposed to
Arboret wm.—The peculiarities of the climate of England V. HERBARIU! D Vera
e it singularly pei for the growth of a — col- rthe Kew Fer nical establisk-
lection x “the trees and shrubs of temperate regions, from | me Herbariom and Library (eithont » which m plants.
= l parts of the globe; and —.— arose a eminent | could not be c ae ec amed) w a des: True,
Jar. au kn Naor 224 p baei ken pv —— to me
eh 3 — - — ted in a suitable — * the A nc d of the
pursuance of this object, the best suited localities in these | 255 mn ha wire — n, with th the needful attend
evo a eger yo age of — ants, to all men of scie And in 1855, as fully
c Wil-
well-disp osed
vast number of carefully-named trees adap j
and to judge of their effect in the lawn,
—
engaged i in subjects connec
In proof 905 aged assertion, I
mor e
u pri
¢s.—There are two in the one spec ET
;
with o ornamen —
Both are
to be à very useful
. In 1856 it furnished 10101 trees (c ar raea and Elms);
part 185 7, 4100 trees ; and in ig 2175;
ing | th
voee ¢ oed numbers) fro:
1 ipeo pem
and shrubs o:
grounds at Kew with no | Hons nd some ee
losed. eere
ke.—A sheet of water in such extensive and noble | meet with prom;
been a desideratum. It is | statements, ae oes
—— — —.— their mis and Libary,
ks and —
Howe u e the ier ) and it will be in vie
e n onservatory. Hith
most im nant service to Indian
botany, rescui
Hectis f pla
ernment by o
3 — Siad accumulating for 30 years in the cellars of the Tullia Hu mre,
m consequence of the urgent remonstrances that eu ianated
S atre x LE sx to fe fe hin esa
ae ode 10,000 yards w: requi
5 the new Conservatory at but a —
ND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE
[Suny 2, 1859,
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE A}
t the Marrows) and pretty g eal of light, but not th
1. 1 Lech AC Mc: of Pe onville. | sun. W “alg the first two lea aves are ? — ray:
: oncurred i "^ ms opinion of others, imi im E we a frame, gradually giving
it i tl hybrid, b robably a variety en them y these means, = discard ar h
that it is apparen T TN t pro n Š à
A: and
Company consented to
rour * and ui
materials, and as:
“ie es d last these . —
rk of inspection
from Kew, the Hon. East India
«oliections "being — under
the Hon
»de fray common I Lentil,
a : grow in erhaps my pl .
d | Plante, that i betw icm g pe np y pian nf be of
til, ith a statin that it is a hyb "ei between | others. Tentor W. Buller, Strete
Pare: tua iad -— as bee, guar ted by June 22. :
: wore 70
during Government ‘mis : France, I believe. The sample I recet oíato Disease.—A report week]
o borders ET wes ing 5 sk] | 4. perde the RUM information led ae at once S | respecting the iter ess of this diii E zT Pape
8 awings, a à f
1 r Hel 1 5 — en and consider it identical with the Provence Lentil (Ervum |a able in different parts of the e country, m; may be oben. i
The whole are still regarded as | — which I have grown a sold un hat if it E accompanied by statements of Serviceable |
epartment of - Government of India, me fi 30 yea and of which I forwarded | planting and mode of culture. Do you not
imate desti e roductive | In this neighbourhood I hear
Nor are nefits of this establishment at all restricted to bon a sample at the time. It is a voy 2 E lea C pensonn. ^ thet the han]
the authors, more or less eminent, who by i je aid have carried | | forage plant, yielding | e e of stalks an igns of decay, Bot begins
out the above-mentioned works ; they are also educational, in either in a green der 19th of February and 4th of March 1 planted
a very important degree. PY cio for EE a sina, and-wuiteblo ay any sort Of fl Hov ver, I breadth of Prince egents, of a sort
F i " ation, are i J B E DE
ey nee and seat inthe duties connected with | doubt the value of its seeds for culinary purposes, shire as Golden Reeds, and of Ash-leaf
it, we train them for more lucrative positions; and a respec um Pe which hane the bitter taste e A clita. I do not know | few of the former were damaged by the ja
able list could be offered of individuals, BOW ANE aeg fear opr of it the e Ervum prod is correct, bu nr it is by not seriously, and their growth à
ic: perinte' nts | a :
olomial 7 33 the Indian Presi- P no means a variety o CM cia sativa, as ‘suppo osed by and gradual, evidencing a robust Tibit
-dencies), who have gone from Kew. The ill-health of the late | several authorities. ite different in form of the | and strength of the haulm, which is mot
able Curator, Mr. Alexander Smith, has deprived the Museum — m habit of the — from tliat 8 alth Pm | too high, but short and stout. No ;
‘of his valuable services; but suitable training has enabled Mr. f We believe at the time of planti
-Jackson, nee. commended by the President of the * e some other species of Vicia. [ p ;
nnæan Soci: pp Song cs aam suecessor. Mr. Oliver b bosa, as was lately sta al Along with strong; and I had prepared it by
y
Li : ted. ; p
es Black, pei n the Herbarium and Library, are rende Edo sample of seed sent you of the above I|Parkes's steel fork two spits deep. I
d icd n service by "their industry, tact, and ae . haita ubmitted to you a parcel of Beans, known supposed that this mode of
n culture
Japan A Oain ^t TB palante c TONY quintum 918 this 2 y od the name of Lareh|ensured a diminution of the evil; but boy
ifia — e to the Library must not pass unnoticed ; it E Egg Run Bea old-fashioned sort almost last week the dise ease a ppeared 1.
is the very extensive and 3 cosa collection of Botanical | ont of Mis acer being ak in quality l 4]
rints and Dr: mainly presented by pesa th „und kinds. I consider it identical with the Ney Zealand | all the sorts, which lie av fe
ce to
Runner Bean, of which I received one dozen seeds for ^ the distance of 22 i pis d 4 S
: aw: | 3s. p ost. I have some very handsome new annuals, remarked yesterday in 450 ee
wade i Renkin n V o| &c., from name of which I would take the liberty to peonliarity i in the aspect of m [s this season,
& r^ TE di Si 22365 the pua of Mon day) | | send you pla nt ts i n flowe ud your opinion, if you will |^ | Nash, dis ant two miles, a lot f Po tatoes entirely fm
erta
beantiful orange- coloured large flowered | M dear as|on Saturday to be affected; several bad
m free vocem ts er Mer asting as S. procumbens, but much | taken up in a bunch of tubers which were quite
an drawings, prt PE | more show xtremely ne ong (Enothera with beauti-| and the haulm of which, quite devoid of spot or miller
Garden Report, as presented by Miss e mai | fal l flowers; a very free blooming only showed tokens of maturity. I fear that ar
5th, $r considerable series of coloured drawings made a „ Lopi 1ospermum ; of garden hybrids a brilliant carmine | that has been said and written on es er eci 2 *
<= conta striped variety of Verbena Maouetti (Imperatrice 3 prt as wellas
Elizabeth), a striking improvement on the old variety ; the dark as at the first on beesik of the ‘ial
a beautifully variegated variety of Coba scandens, &c. J. S. Temp "4 T'hornborough,
e c W. Haage, Erfurt. We first observed it last Monday in
Lightning-struck Oak (see p. 54),—I suggest | Chiswick, and it is spreading there.
and Picotees.
] n nu 7 that “L, W. G.“ will do well to let 25 Bak remain| Sardinian Carnations
ird ly small ex pense to 2 ya entirely under the fostering | care of f old Dam me Nature of a correspondence i in your Paper relative to S
or — — 8 e To = a few months, I £t s petals tal
I may m
go — on the eun perceive that the TUE NE at te place where the | the laterals of numer i al seedlings. which.
i 1. 8 i as begun to mens mew, he may | raised this — e t
— e . bern god ipar of ulti neem If on the con- | which we feel mu
North A especially on the east side of the Rocky | trar such a sign is p me gd "he "hide conclude | Macs md n con
Moun ntains. (W helle under the auspices of the Secretary of that a tr ree is in a very dr. state, and a — | on — — inst. PA
2. Pr. ihe Colonies) in Dr. Livingston pedition to the | long, T will be as dead as Julius Cæsar himself. e by eged. ‘The ma hi =
Zambesi, and for making researches 7 8 5 the interior of | the “a tearing of the bark," ris portion of it ua EEA red and tl the 5 gui wie ene Ae Ded ade as
— . me rn Africa, quite a terra incognita to us. (Lords of | been loo; osened by by the stroke, even in the slightest colour at once shows the car jn eisai
8. Mr. Milne, botanist and collector in H.M.S. Herald, it's a; present e selection of ier E: . most i
"Captain Denham, commander, or survey of tho Fiji and i pe it would be only loss of time in| most —— in shape and with colon hot
other scarcely known islands in the South Pacific Ocean. | L. W. G.” to apply a “plastering over the parts.” A In justice to Sardinian growers we have ume
er of ue Adis t mall potion oniy of, the aly | lator i V .
., 10 1 * 3
ded, . Milne has returned with his colle i All it can ever do is to prevent the rain from pene-| Cov M Market. "TThe specimens SU.
espond with
p : / p
4. Dr. Lyall, R. N., botanist to the very important expe- | trating, and at last pA. rot in the tree. Should the | us ke very handsome, and quite corres
J e bou itis] er,
uppl 0 regar umns to
— . — seretary of State for are 5 had an ornamental been led to ire hah the miasma arising
ms ral Buttle, assistant N to pr all (Under Oak 80 fatale Aae in a ne niin that "t died | eae o vegetation in the ;
ority. outright both in root and branch. Had W. all my family’s constant, attacks of ague, ^ v.
jn. peers pi Mons 175 au um tee 1 here I could show bim divers trees which have been | gites it a great favour ll us from j
China, &c. n have arrived from AT imd | vr riven by the M s TM but which are now Parkin will be rye . to tell us
ti
is abont to proceed LÀ Re sonst of in tha i3 jn. to them, and although I do ge consider ld, native or Se int this
x g vessel, uni light of a tree cen worthy of a diploma, qe I} attack once in six ear
des that what with my own simple nostrum and the — le- Hope, E: in
Vota is ating powers of old Dame Nature together, all m my Monst vus Cardamine. —1 we n
: teen the third, iit or 2 — " injured tres, either by lightning or by tempests, are | fusion, i pich i ; t
per uh 8 vessel m mend a comfortable state of convalescence. I must a variety of Cardamine pratensis M. yous
iue e, both 4 [^ii es strict justi E be described in
d most success-
; nnd the
— the merit that may be due. N last week. It is thus otic
Waterton, Walton Ball, = 28.— During these p. 54:—“A double variety 15 ?
few years several 3 s on this estate having | which is remarkably pro
de ois by lightni Subsequently eut co. new plants where they come
yed [e 155 ve Sie tee = examining E extent of ground, and the flowers, as *
dmiral m ; e h ey d sustained, although | stalked flower-bud from their
uti prt e ae T ion of South Ie ot y way of not equal externally that di cen Strawberry.—1
be det cun der, the ps es, ‘This er de * Lon res — ondent as carte ager to his tree, 5 5 ead Rod afta iv a very high
taken, w holly a — * own Lei aud os oug! 8 whe n they were cut up, that the wood was rent asks if others cannot say e I
5 iR 12 ^ et lo say
CO EDU D - 1 pe than he ha done, r ira,
iv 5 yeller h us En Papi nech re ia Equa dor E ow short tme d I Am ve therefore ite imer that if your | dish of it to the Roading ux kS:
„ ree ua ctions may be ted. 3
{The report concludes with alist 1 e contzibutars | injured tree, E» will icis it si omui Ne ic I have Po miram sient Bodety 7.
£o the Gardens, Museum, and. Herbarium. deser: ibed. H, Petrie, E. dud, ie ered to be very "inferior
— cement ea s just
in prir an
a Ho me Correspondenc * in your Paper as — the best means sion strong. ee v — — is m ns i14
The entil.—In consequen uou — an . success " n
to the so-called Pea Lentil in a [ais number of * my grea ming sci E te to — ^" s i 9 Slough = ^ j
m 2 id n to communicate to Tn plan, e pots y out 4 inches bare iol many | kind last antumn from — mod s
now about i our 3 upon it in sherds i th b ide of Re?
January last induced me to write to Dr. Rauch, re- | very iin he bottom bu sA 2 pio ho of ag ofthe — rt n di . Blac Black Pri me
1 per ee for further particulars «nd. a sample of it, eri sand in equal SM a ies sow the seeds 1 inch deep. soil Aneel o cay, but but vi
Eg. affair rested | Let the earth be pretty moist at first, but never water I planted this new w and, said to 35 7
"ah Place the in an to test its meri
pe his re E po
e party in Fr ejl not very m oist stove; and to kee} he earth flavour. —
hr E under "that see hee sla each pot every morning for —— two ee with it Ser in er
tit is a hybril be- | three hours in a saucer of water, They should have a size, and in flavour not cu we
Jury 2, 1859.] THE
—
CHRONICLE AND ái ee GAZETTE. 563
planted alongside of Keens' Seedling ripened , some |
green interlacing arches hick i t
"EC
and even i after the lapse of so many years, retain
sprung the
m
cames or four days before that nei kind,
decidedly = or in flavour to it. was inclined to | ax and Guainia, about half, it was. stated, is laken dow n HR “If w spes her by her life, she is the Scottish
impute this man earliness ss and flavour — p " " E emiramis; casting herself, before the eyes of all
liarit: ty in and — ended In rirers o the arms o of the e assass in of he T husband,
opinion, — n Thursday, the 23d vlt, — seme ex- pre ld g| g had tl
ted a
hibi nsiderable . of the M
s Pomological Society. |
e wich occnpy Us inhabitants.
nod — -ma B
— — n
use made of the beard of the Pi: — voee — in ie. —
The berries were like mine in —— and shape, stated ed that the pulpy envelope of the he * er y * and has been denied, and nothing in
but in fla — even inferior in . t they were pro- | ripe fruit is M^ to yie eld the most delicious TE all "Palm effect, n — su v letters, proves that she
nounced to be flat, acid, MS e most inferior kind in | drinks, bearing great resemblanc m both ic scinally s - vea Any ccom ae hed or Ern ihe
the whole callection _ On tas — them I felt inclined | colour aud rie e. "i have mu un ren emarked, “had that she m attracted the victim into the
. Nicho Ison tor eturn the ,geod fortune taste i hat she — a Boca the right and the
n moi ney I — ason "T Midsummer, but like | hope of succeeding — ne after bis death; that
n your e for — m Dr. Roden — fruit of most other trees is subject to seasons or she had been the 24 2 means, and the al eged prize
— skilful amateur gardener, aa — of this periode. c of intermittance, when. little or none is of the crime; finally, that she — the murderer
Muti Iam — to think that neither Mr. eer ured.” The fr x — nine pens by bestowing upon him her hand,—no doubt can be
yself have received kind, or st the o ripen. Mr. Spruce gave. as follows. the. dimen- | entertained re peding these ee To provoke to
— agmen aca Dr. Roden. as the May . — sions of one of these 22 which he cut i in the! fo: rests murder, an nd t nto absolve the perpetrator—is not
Thos. he Guainia : thi
Hybrid send you flowers of | including a petiole of 4 feet 8 inches; pinn æ, 63 pairs; * In fine, if oed AMAN y her death—comparable
— m — be inte between V. speciosa and | beard, 21 inches long, on young plan wing close in its majesty, i its picty, and its courage, to the most
p partaking h as — by it was as muc feet 9 kau Jong; spadix ft tyrs
do of the — n ot et. other bearded Palm alo’ r and aversion with which she had bee
the first batch of — — is — rmv with the eastern r 3 ihe Wacom Mr. —.— described | - — at last to pity, esteem, and admiration.
me, forming - very neat — shrub, 4 feet high, to be true talea, dist tinct from A. fumi-|As lor ng as there was no ex xpiatio on she remained a
and about 22 feet in circumference. The others are | fera. ‘he beard of this, which is. deciduous, sai criminal ; rs expiation she became victim. In her
second crosses from decussata, and are smaller. planta persistent as in. the Pi ass: — makes excellent, bro ooms. | history bl seems rashed out by blood; the
In the Quitinian lt of her former y w it d her
t
riferous habit. A. Devonian. ——
No.
m
solve, we
b
tlo
handsome both as respects flowers e rca the | a), but the hte onc oh req 3 3 but rather
beau tifu 1 "arrangement and shining dark green o of the | T mns et from the fibres before they ove; i find — or her con-
to|to this 5 e of the cultivation of tm duct in the ferocious — dissolute manners of the age ;
excellent advantage. As a bush even without flowers | nuts in | Ceylon” e, the Rev. Thomas Foulkes, in a in tha t edu cation, de eprav — and fanatical,
ust be - ndsome. The leaves of the diac are | letter Hooker. The writer first men the Court of the Valois; ims her
1 va and less conspicuous; the flowers had dropped | t tioned "bas eee but all prevailing cultivation outs her beauty, her love. W.
before the — — reached us. of this tree by the natives, remarking that i t obtains with M. Dargaud—to w * we feel deeply indebted
2 ORD th E the researches which have guided us—* we judge
Societies of 2000 f untain sides, A somewhat | not—we calf relate.”
a dd d. putat : — e m nu I T Ns
in all wot Ceylon af upwards of 20 millions for t
ICAL: June 6.— Dr. J. E. Gray, F. R. S., TI T The systematic cultivation rden Memoranda.
Present pres the chair. Mr. Stevens exhibited A. a" Doxar’s, Esq. 8 am TH.—At few
number of beautiful butterflies recei devoted to it, however, dates from about the year place Sue, aed im — Chry ums grown in
Mr. Wallace, — whom they * been collected in 1842, when it was undertaken. with. v — san- n perfection as ag are aig by — DE *
Ternate, n ew Guinea, He also read an extract! guine hopes of apes and large mene "n the | Do xats ga arden Some account of his mode
— — by the same po inves — it. In very time 5
anew and most gorg —— of Papilio,
is well asanew kind of | Bird of Paradise. — ns had
Mr. Stev 'ens : also n mentioned | o
|
4 ; m
the case of Qm they are cut down afte
and set in à cold frame or pit (under a north a wali
abl 8
thousands of a of unprofitabl
" different perte. ‘of the island, and
half fa} million . maen has been
le jungle were ib e
probably. upwards ing
expended on the is pee efer:
as they
n
he capture
1ave
yh
RE FE lo: Es cian tail “i be divided, es offsets are removed and. put
and Hetgrius sesquicornis. po Janson exhibited a the remaining provinces, which occupy. an area of into 3. inch in a light sandy soil and
— British genus of ants' nest beetles, belonging t tothe | 18,509 sapate ni ee Ae ms cie extending | ke ES ather "ms for few. da; —
of Formica.. over 22,40 Taking ge o of 80 trees te to * g and shading, “ke, When
es
that this — wo robably ——
of the que Symetha € ano in Dr. H —
the Javanese Lepidoptera. Mr. MacLac
of two species of Micro-Lepidoptera
gene Ornis and Tortrix, He also read so
given we
suffer from want
roots they are on,
size of the mo When
into growth they are pinched ud.
them break stron seamen the rae “After the y have
the latter are pegged Eo 80
a fair plant, r o ener as may, be
ben mg By ond [stad — the size is increased,
and it * the 2 of aes into bloom. Those
who have stock by th , OF who wish to obtain fresh
y us genus Trinodes. Mr. Baly read —— of
me new exotic species of Chrysomelidze.
LINNEAN: June li — f. Bell, President, in the
chair. E. Bradford, yir e Ven. Archdeacon Hale, |
H. ersteen, M. D., J. . Disi d Dr. G.
Rolleston, and talc Willi re be ected Fellows. |
following ae . zx 2
Synopsis of the Distom ida," by T. S. Cobbo! d, M. D—
2. A memoir * On ap — ag the — e
th deseripti w species m Born — J. D.
from
ae 225 ‘Synopsis of
ised | t
H
600000 nnual
yield of the » Jaffera estates —
„000,000 of nuts, on 9000 a mal
only of the trees being in full = bearing. The q
"s Cocoa-nut oil exported fro PEE in —.— Wale
was 70754 13 gallons. per gave an
(interesting account of the manageme — pi the planta- | well turne
ions, and the author concluded with the following recur ae o open
end
| nurse
ry, so as to obtain nice
which will
enc fine specimens for. kr purpo
4-inch pot u a 10- Ap h one if required.
Mr. c ae qd uses is loam and stable dung,
bulk for v E 25 E together 12 months previously, and
mes), with sand, the latter to
d diii They oug
ses se
The soil
le
meres
for
but t it is no t the eagle:
high ; Cin . 5
Re water; but it is not - raio pinag; MEM. cn x des
— ion of a
description wf ^W
Dr. J. D. Hoo en
Wallace,” by R.
iassaba of the
—
AES has lien US — want of safiicient
S be identical wi er fumifera of
— which rhe ba of B
It
It is white ; but it’ is X the silve:
It has th nine eee t is not t Siva.” iu
. A memoir “ : f by | of soft wat
arke wm Lot “On the structure red ad | 7s 0 tissoly
nities of Batideæ p Callitr ichacem; on the structure |
and 3 of Vochysiacee ; and on Cassythe,“ yi
| 1 th
| B. Clarke, Esq.
On
e the
e plants. od -eful
It will not os perde “but prevent “fly from
its appearan Shee. uld mildew 2 Mud
phur, puttin: "s it one day ai h
Well sprinkle the :
Notices of Books.
Stuart, by Alphonse da. La martine, Svo. Black. un
With portrait, autograph, and vignette.
manure
A ren of translation of one of the most beautiful f
besto:
T
D "thin y J 5 1. 5 5557 Tx APE
e, long ke Sade ts e them ccm nes 1
ascertained distribution of. the Piassaba Palm, —— s P bl. AR ak ab range ys cepting, 815 th
ont. in lo Marr y wi a | translations of the poetry of the Queen an
epe depth s. from the —— We may homer er- extract een
pee 15 5 DT s; "the "Rio Negro, on the | Lamartine, in wii. ha eloquently condenses
, an inions as to t e character o gnata tini h
Pa acimon sine east. NA: : EM vill oed PE en, M 2 in the light of h surface of the soil. hese. get sco or
the south. — of eal te siara veio thor re- | charms, her talents, h agical Ln over all men | pum plants are almost, sure Ee [5 icing
marked, “where I pen deep into the forest, I| who approached he AR — ed. the. Sa this is however easily avoided by the mule rod
came. on grovi . . and . that the 1605 century. All that Pa not, love in mentioned and freqnent waterit » x í qn me
I eee in Amazonian when dwells e str poetry; her verses, like those of. Tl a pom he pa to cd oe ipe:
and —— tly on memory than d teacher, possess a at ers them ornaments de gari N i: E; *
thes range bearded solimo; ge. walk among de en simplicity ; $ they are written with lof bloom. Pompones Mr. Shrimpton keeps in shady
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND A
situations: till — he € stops them two or three inch = a each other, holding all safe with the
bach my left hand whils t I drew the soil
Ty" 1 4 +} 341 rig t. Th ey were
d the ends of the pot, to fill up t dcm gap 3 a little not watered, but took their chance. The resul ult was
soil. If this isnot re to, water when
n the
e bottom thro
8c
g
e they are Mni if this is |
out
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE, _
- [Jv 2, 1639.
diu IT AND KITCHEN GAR
Tom be regularly attend
shoots HR pit stopping dins bores d to, TM
for if tk
that el one grew, and
edging can vostitds be desired. It called
fett heca ericsefolia, and I think if some plants were
o | procured, and Botanic
— rden, Mr. Francis would be able to report also me .
erits, : and visi itors would likewise be enabled to
now fi
done immediately the
allowed to yd establish itself, it is very difficult to
m
ectual how
e pest hes its penance ‘for, if | du
so asin
wn eee
many cases to procure ii in
Bottles for flower -border
that
the plants are Pih murum
freely there will be c in an fon 45
£4 on
the grommdates the Babs are » matured, area apt toniks
end rot in wet Weather, therefore these bed 6
a ba
airy pn. to od before storing theii a man
n ut and dried for „winte er my Get herb
the idea th
ngs Nie mons A s
ae looks |
a thir lot."
ill colou:
Box it vill
for his family to with every co:
attendance till death, Sed de dece at the E
Posal a sum m whi eh. en eq S - print, bind,
“ Firs Twe
purposes for Fakri
in the
ER Wo
a
Gali " pesations.
For the iid Week.)
PLANT —
1
od, Evandale Nurseries
wit.
e
breadth bra
t
| nicely pu dee 7 — sag
2 j| CONSER KO. that of the | | trees laid in where not already dd one.
eries of Twenty | Camellias, deen and. other piss have y be en placed in ä
e on British Mosses. 3 the procee eeds of the sale of ois; pe ing or 2 ees STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHISWICK, NEAR LONDON,
oe required “by any of ‘the oa e may be | For the Week ending June 30, 1859, i
to bri up his orphan The bo oy, following th eniently s recomme mala 33 BAROMETER. |
bent of a a strong inclination for a sea li fe, has week pay gr eatattention to plants for autumn and | m. EET +
tiom he bas I ilor, In accordance wich his. M ery winter decoration. Le t them have plenty of pot- à un
riday .083 | 30.02
apprenticeship on board a merchantman, the Onega, | and ple space d r perfect development, regulating Satur. 8 5 E EE: 3 755
om Contain Scott, of Dundee. His en ma oris cordin Non. 2 25 | 30.091 | 30/4
cha curred in this final expense, when 10 added te a ra nd they will make rapid re Mealy bu ug a and ie S 3 8 2 So.030 | 3004 |
1 ue or bis up-bringing, about 267. will | thrips will require to be looked after; M utmost | Thurs e 3
. effort which, in duty, they eoe iligence must be used to ke thes check. 8 30.207: 29.043
Po — they od freely sies the ds 3 of|Srovz.—If there are any y or bad] ted | June 24—Very fine throughout; E
m in discharging this obligation. specimens here the t be fi tly ined = __3¢—Thunder and lightnin
On the authority of the Rev. William B. Borwick, Dun- | for red spider; otherwise they will become a nursery | = afew me glow rai a tmr
dee, and emer J. W. Tayl ,F Flisk and Creich, | fi s pest, and from im: it well: 800 lid to T Em ey sayy ren 2
Fife of whom have taken considerable in- di ; : — 30—Very ane clear and fine at,
estivi, may ve stated dat ; at eee tele e mets e | us
as to disposition, Lon dle ang ability. E commu- ly to watering, giving manure-water to all During the last 33 years, for the ensuing Week, ending July 9, 1959.
nis ts in free growth that enjoy it. Gardenias and leg TARAR Prevailing Winds.
3 es Scrymgeour, [nns things that have been in the Ane while} Juy. EH HH EJ werte 8
r ee rr aram ar ae
Book of Mosses, ill i "i 2 low ime or ger ing their | Sunday 3. 742 | 51.7 | 630| 1 | o7sin-[a
mené (pide ˙ land, which niay be bid unes cee before short days 8 — oa 8 me „ m ass
the Messr ent. Shading ni 8 P rad atiende to | Ti: Friday 7: 55 523 62.9 3 ni
"i and Tree Extra — bright sunshine occurs. w the em, however, as 9.82 50.1 | 61.9 5
achine of
vel character, adurtod. “for the pue of
» | couragem
when
much light as they w
BA
will bear w without injury, usin
+
ts to dry and
bles about two years du:
vet Toutes ar ago in sear m. of plan
: Conti tcn to clear m. prar mme and to
the
range í of hills I was agreeably surprised to find the | A good m yere groünd.
th-like plant, lanned
covered ny the a eo ndis] D. meme 2 — Rr i: | um lots = ciel v rone of t pr e t
of the old tga The plan e from | as this Mee however, Name the cónstint a
Mak fow One cove’ jee with militules of|ance o man ing some little debe vs "
. Rursery, tpe ud iced plants e | flowers, san oo could not be ied out —
ic Tum Eur E ^ "hid as a | th lere is a stin been ——— oat — of bulbs
ustered with small fi at th T.
d to stand
i immediately news piecon making of may have deere Vashon or "ier gs e
xd planta. o re iretche 1 wa - ins een them. o" of Pans ould
ot oO
ee
«d i clippe d fort
> Aers ndary Pe other hedges should be
H
the highest temperature during the above
1852—therm. 97 deg. ;
z E d the ! the :
ning: land of of trees and Aser n was tested the other ints e mds Basis CERED 1551 and 1858- theri. —.— „
y in the rve,in the n f
‘his Excellency the Gove The machine, which las frequent ane e ices to Corre capone ents. 3
omes Pus ed by Messrs 5 Mansfield, and H , con- FORCING DEPARTM Drs : J Robertson. We are e ]
MM Pay bom p wee A an 5 in . , PINERIES.— Such varieties as are p all liable to eat bas cased the mischief — OO external; ami 3 that it
‘horzontally | by a small di at pe end. This: beam Mw aged kept as dry Ls t poesi sible immediately they woe whero dee. i" 1 ae ert thea D vee t yon can ascribe
it with a chai fasten. | the least signs of ‘colouring, keeping the atmosphere | Poi, ,,,,
dag vin a chain to - dod stu ump at a distance o as dry as can be pui without i inj ry to the rest of | skin is removed, oe pate that suggests i fermentation
about y from the tree to be removed, around stock. V intended to hang through | as going om in the spots. Is your border warm 3
"which a strong chain is fastened at a conside eleva- | the winter Dt be t thinned very fr — " rd if neces- — pe ma A= t. directions for
: tion from the root. The other end of the c is fixed | sary, they should be gone over a me, leaving Gern Hs H H. You will fnd ample n 1852.1
= a hook to the lever, about 8 inches from the fule .| them so that dun i when fully swelled, "e ly | Iss thoir Hd No, np 74 4) of our m bi & here had the under
The action of the machine is ca by four bullocks touch each other. A moderate crop o should be left wed off by th ho yellow oe of ees? a
being h f the lever, and drawing it | on the Vines; ccess in keeping Grapes fy, (Selandria rethiops). It is diffi reach thom E
alternately backy a forwards in a half-circle. At fresh and in good condition till next March, the Vines| 55 iy m. 1 eee P — ss — eee 0 ine
PE md g the tree with the le must be in first-rate health; be satisfied, therefore, with he € mA — s ught on sheets:
shorte by a contrivance f the purpose, and th oderate, or rather light crop, in the late house. K ep | _ destroyed. W. obliged to. e
is consequently increased, while at the same|the atmosphere of h bius we ruit is colani Dates OF RUAN IA TCO BAT 7 plants, that vt
— gain 15 p! —.— The machine in active 3 using o fires by day, w. 9 . corresponde f
á constructed on true mechanical principe, abun of a air, arid ir A . air M at night, wo never have o L^ have undertal
when —— it is eee that tore: it or the mer ed spider pe nclined to be tbis kind. Yo ung g
give way. In e mie erday the | t fabio ab th e pipes, &c., mixture of ospacialiy apply, 4
— in à td E — appa- soot and lime, and if the colour i is Gier onde add e Ns
qr ei on the machine. oed . that pee bee been kept dry while
obses l e mg the
s — height, were dead, pe should be well watered at N 0, ‘and a there is p= mar, m X
ipse ie viai. TS PORNO Rud . be thoroughly | Lin
A UE r presents ter obstaeles to the action of ing a hi n »
k machine, and poss this advantage, th its | moist by frequently sprinkling the : lere
fall the cots a are drawn entire from the &e. Keep the shoots ilan add feris tied 80 as
lef he | to avoid confusio:
ground. Four trees were yesterday tak | i N T ac) pus f the tree
time required for each did 505 eb. A yeh e the ns dide bie at fruit is ripening attend |
the eradication of stumps a second lever, with a v oti | borde dry cn conn tly apes) ec
action, is ut this portion of the machine trees i i e dn ae e
ourne 1x. ter. a
m W P. “IE you wl be
3
pi i be so good as Tae yo
pened on 5 :
Jory 2, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 568
planted —.— — — Kee eedling ripened some | sprung the green interlacing arches which shaded. me | tears, and even after the lapse of £o many years, retain
three or four before — See — and were overhead." » Oft
decidedly infi —— in flavour te about half, it was stated, is taken S E ce If w ing judge her by her lifo, sha is the Bro.
te this lack of earliness — — some pecu- Para, ther half goes to Angost the Ori Semiramis; casting herself, before the p of all
iarity in my soil and there — —— nded my th the Indian villag t i Europe, into. the arms of the assassin of her husband,
opinion. On Thursday, the 23d ult, Mr. Turner ex- | present a very lively app from the boat-building she had thrown into civ it
hibited a considerable quantity of the May Queen and rope-making which occupy the inhabitants. Besides | wa:
Strawberry at the meeting of the Pomological Society. | the use made of the beard of the Piassaba, Mr. Spruce “Her dire eae € 1 in the death of
The berries were like mine in size, colour, and shape, | stated that the pulpy envelope of the sarcocarp i in the oung hae has been denied, and nothing in
^ jet unas 8 $
h rr ep
unced t erior dr in | actually
the whole collection. On ing them I felt inclined "e aud taste. *I have wed he — T im crime; but that she had attracted the victim into the
d r. Nicholson to return — P eae fortune to` taste it, even to see snare; that she had given Bothwell the right and the
- money Thad paid = for 100 plants, but on — t Midsummer, bu bui like hope of ding to the th ter his death; that
n your Paper for June 25 a letter from Dr. Roden ri of most o the r em is subject to s s or she had been the end, the means, and the alleged prize
pa. skilful amateur erer deri highly eulogistic of this periods of intermittance, when little or singe is y of the crime; finally, that she absolved the — —
— er inclined — * that neither Mr. Turn ured.” The fruit appears to take about nine mont y wing upon him her hand,—no doubt ean be
lf have received the true kind, or at least the * ripen. Mr. Spruce gave as follows the dimen- entertained regarding these points. To provoke to
mh Roden as ‘the. ay Queen. ofthe: of — Tn Im uA he cut in the forests | murder, and then to absolve the perpetrator—is not
— AH n — — t. f me n
Hybrid Veronicas.—l send you — of seedling ti f 4 feet 8 inches ; pinne , 63 pairs * In fine, if she be pati by her death—comparable
Veronicas raise ed by myself 22 — are and bari, 2] inches d on young plants growing close in its majesty, its „piety, and its courage, to the most
dec ussata, which may g — by it was as much as 4 ad 9 inches 10 ong; spadix
do of the — ‘of both parents. of | 4 Pint Another bearded Pal g the horror and aversion wich which she had been
the — batch of seedlings, — is perfe —— . with the n roots of the Per es, Mr. 3 described esteem, and admiration
me, forming a very neat Evergreen shrub, 4 feet high, to be true Attalea, distinct be. A. fumi- As — ng a s there was óg expiation she remained a
and about 22 feck in circumference. The others are | fera. The beard of this, which is deciduous, not | criminal ; e beca ictim. In h
second crosses from decussat ta, and are smaller plants, persistent : as in the Piassaba, makes excellent brooms » | history b eems to be washed out by blood; t
1
uilt of OW; 'ere ler
floriferous habit. A. Dev [No. 1 is extremely | the base of the petiole of the Cádi Palm (Pyles veins, with the crimson stream; we do not absolve, we
handsome — as Weg pA and foliage, the | macrocarpa), bat nos the Sg parenchyma requires to | sympathise; our pity is not absolution, but —
beaut ifu 1 arrangement and shini ing dark of the be — — — res before they 1 :
latter p thi 7. “Noti ~ — "the cultivation of (Dm duct in the ferocious and dissolute manners of the di
excellent advantage. Ph bush even without flowers | nuts in n Ceylon” the meis qu ig corsi ina — that education, depraved, sanguinary, fanatical,
it must The leaves 8 the others are lottar to Sir d The ic i er
smaller ad — conspieuons the flowers had dropped | tioned the 8 kem t all preva 9 cultivation | youth her —— her love. W.
before the specimens reached us.] of this tree by the natives, remarking that it obtains | with M. Da —to — -" feel — Mom
= 5 i etg ne Eat | — eer which ha ve guided us— we judge
its mountain si — — late.“
Socleties. N 7 computatio on estimates the t * etapa
ts of Ceylon at upwards of 20 millions Jor this |
. ENTOMOLOGICAL : — € . J. E. Gray, F. R. S., mode of cultivation alone. The systematic cultivation * Memoranda.
Pr — in the c Mr. Stevens exhibited a i lusivel . J. Dox Esq, Purwex HRATRE.—At few
number of vn tifa) battens recently received from | devoted to it, however, dates from about the year places a 58 as d Chrysanthemums grown in.
Mr. ace, A whom 8 wa collected : 1842, when it was i i eg with very san- such foe ion as * id Ln by N Mr.
Ternate, near Guinea. . ead an extract guine hopes of quick and largo returns upon the Doxat's gardener, of his of
from a letter by the same, alen, announcing the | capital patet. a — d. ey bo t time | managing them may cue not os PSR In
capture of a new and. gorgeous species of Papilio, | thousands of a ungle leared | the nu; 2 I ren jas, T" paid t down after bloom--
as wel asanew ew kind of Bird of Paradise. Specimens had | in different parts > ‘the a iE d — ah ing a cold fra r pit is a north wall
been forwarded to to England. Mr. Stevens also ' mentione d | of half a ' million 5 has been expended on the is preferable and dade cw the midday sun. As:
ta on e pushed 2 to "we verd
including 8 clematidis, Stenolophus elegans, , there are in the ofise oved
| to be 1
3-inch.
2 Hetzerius ius sesquicornis. Mr. Janson exhibited a the. 8 provinces, which occupy |
; 00 2
n him a small species of East | to wa. cras i we have 22 millions for |.
Indies which resi M fe i ants’ nests ; 5 qu eni of trees th — sar the island, and assuming | but still M
F Si of dull colours, and i are peculiarly con- | each tree to produce annually on an average 50 nuts,
Es — for r its mode of fe. x Westwood suggested we should | have the enormous number of eleven hundred.
f Ceylon. size
| As all the — 2 fall bearing, this must be
ac n | beyond the imt. and yet since fifty nuts to each tree | th
etle, C isa low av for dapes nu tdi er ar
- merdigera, an lustrations of ren habits | thirds of the — number would probably be a fair ant, or otherwise, as f" be
of two der Fi Micro- 8 — oe: . — g to the though low computation. Indeed, one estate in the | requir a By st opping them again the size is increased,
g bid o] western province, with about one-fifth of its trees in full a se it prolongs the time of — into bloom. Those
| those | bearing, is said to be producing at the present time ave no stock by them in fresh
of the genus Trinodes. Mr. Baly es Trama 600,000 nuts annually on acres. The estimated tl
some new exotic species of ene elidæ. er of the Jaffera estates alone for the present year | Nursery, so as to obtain nice little pl
000,000 of nuts, on 9000 acres ; a small proportion which will bs fine specimens for ;u rests fom à
s5, pu
LINNEAN : June f. Bell, President, in the | on ly of the trees — in full bearing. The quantity A. inch pot up to a 10-inch one if required. The soil
chair. E. Bradford, pm the Ven. Archdeacon ^4 of Cocoa-nut oil expo — Corlu dn 1857 (the last oan Shrimp m uses js tariy loam and stable dung,.
Rolleston ad D. W par ersteen, M.D., lm Llewelyn, Stet Tullo e return) was 1,767,413 gallons. e paper gave an | bulk for bal Ik (laid together 12 months previously, and.
IWS. | interesting account of the management of the planta- val turned at different timen) with sand, the latter to-
ead: —1. “A revised tions, and the author co - uded with the following cir b eee soil, and good drainage. The
ri for
en requi
“On thestructure of the genus Nepenth “ lls on not the eagle : Cin are "S subject to the attacks of aphides,
tions of new species from Borneo, * N pony) but 155 = not the rain-cloud : which r must be destroyed as soon as perce NL For that
e mc reri i of the — species z db die but it is not Siva" aaf fi km been found effec-
patiens ; » e w genus me . viz. tobacco and 1 Ib. of soft soap to 5gallons
ala rem! 5. “A ede of the genus | B. Clarke, Esq. “9. Notes "On he s dere pne e, | of soft he get E A 9 iy nS S E tho tobacco
ropiera of ir —— — oR — — 5 nities of B 9 Y 9 bà tho ftiuctbre and di issolve the then stra’ t through a p
poldinia ace, ? h,
p "ito Palm producing Ia ae ve the rd pese of Vochysiacem; and on Cassythex,” by the plants. Carefully us p HE rs
i re ter known of Para, from which e It will not t opiy. 2a destroy but p
crt We Oai da va quantities 40° Kurope cad à its appea Should. z
orth America) has been supposed, for want of sufficient Notices of. et Books. : phur, putti ng i
ata, to be identieal with the Attalea fumifera of next Wel a
artius, which furnishes the Piassaba of Bahia. Mary Stuart, by Alphonse se de Lamartine. ` vo. Black. not harm
Mr. Wallace PT d correctly referred the With portrait, Partt gi ec manure
— a genus Leopoldinia,| A graceful translation of one of — — most beantiful | y
correctly, for see Sli Mr. 3 = has in lity | p li
before the b» — ished. The we can ont plese: them w! e prais
mat ditto of the Piassaba Palm, ves as this 1 60 most abundanti; the PES always us
where the ui of Ronsard. | dow
ght depth in rainy weather, is from the ves We may however extract the concluding passages by | are
adauirí a large tributary of the Rio Negro, on the ine, in 8 dici ieu d eondenses 2 bere I
i to the Orinoco on the 8 the true character of the
near Queen.
: eue tw — S
south side of. thi Moser scm the author M y PME agical ed over all men are am
; here I pen deep into the forest, 1 who vin e her s E e be called the r orem 'es; this 3 pec ec
a : Piassaba, and nothing t|the 16th century. pra erh devel a and frequent ars a
e seen ee eee, dwells more Beta: . was verias her keg ye those eauses the plants to grow healthily and
jleasar on my memory than my walk among | worshipper and f and teacher, possess piste renders them ornaments to the garden, even when out
bearded columns, from whose apex | bined with a quaint simp i
situations . he stops them two or d
THE GARDENERS' CHRON
ICLE AND AGRICULTUR
i * ee m each other, holdin ng all safe with the
a y my left hand whilst I dre b mieg soil
*
1
ight. ey were
round the inside of the ay to fill up the gap vitks a Wes
nca $ sifted soil. If thi when
hat
sult was ‘ee
AL GAZETTE,
1 UIT AND KITCHE "i 1
Tomato the Mop atte
shoots thin må eec 2220 a
lant:
EN,
d to, » keeping
if the p iis 3 et * e
p eerie but took their ‘chance.
th at ive "y nor ee rh
si be des esir It
freely there will ion a poor chan e grow
t mer its and "visitors
+ I think i some ebd were
a bed or
the gr oundafter the bulbs s are eins Sli »
and Tot i in wet w enter, therefor e Pe oul
vp
low
their own edighbourhoods. “1
always
ls ough to induce a some
= ew. to ‘hil the Chry danch is very
p lants w
phur.
done immediate] yt the
allowed to orri A establish itself, it is very di fer
iwe as as colonists, are “a thirsty lot.
nd untidy at t certain seasons
dying off i and as
gener
i dev J. F. Woo
Miscellan
late pene, Gardiner. with much
sum
for his family to mai
ntain him with e every comfort, and |
he 405 o Farm and Garder
Calendar of Operations.
(For the ensuing Week.
3 NT.
posal | a sum Which | enabled them to print, bind, and
f the “ First Series of Twenty
PLANT
,, CONSERVATORY, :
Lessons on British Mosses.“ the proceeds of the s of
out-of-
which have been pei sufficient
&c. that me
Azaleas and other plants have been placed
TS, paint ing o other repairs
ma st
red “by: any of the aie: -houses
3 airy pan G: dry before stori ing thom
n flow and dri
s
ed fi for win
I Get he
inris
nicely regula ed; a so ge
S
STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHISWICK, NEAR LONDON.
aes at LS —
For the Week ending June 30, 1859, as obse
to bring up his The following t
„bent of a strong ination V a sea n has M d
sailor accor rdance with his determina-
enient]y
Y mme:
last week pay great attention to plants for aresta and |
early winter decoration, Le t them have ple enty of pot.
83 on 1 8 merchantman, the On nega,
brigantine, Ca vu Scott, of Dun ie His eas
have cop when added
ncy fo 6 As this wil
211
rida:
and plenty of space for perfect development, b een Sund E 2
on.
the temperature according to t
and they will make rapid progress. Mealy bug g and
thrips will rcm ire to be looked after; the aimat
ace be used to kee these in toe
he kind friends
arging this o obligation.
liam B, Borwick, Dun-
H,
à Creic
to make, oe wo would freely solicit t
them in disch:
the father
isk
p
ere are any sickly or badly rooted
they must be frequently examine
Lip RBUESETY
thas 8 in-
ve tal
stated that the boy is promis- | no:
and ability. All commu- | ie
nd
e been
in
hue thee 8 s
beauty i is over, | in order to allow time for getting their
M
" 30.094
Tues. 29.933
Wed. 29
Thurs. 30 Š 30.092
9755
ey,
g. below
RECORD OF TEE WEATHER. AT e
During the last 33 3 years, for the ensuing Week, ending Jul; rem
Prevailing
22 =|
poor
, price 3s. hrrg ids on S MO; which 38 7 be had | a;
through i bookseller of the Messrs. Lon
publishers, London.
Patent Stump and Tree Extract
rather a novel ecl p
«€ — sag of trees aud stum
—A machine of
ups, — ted tl
day in t Pe in the presence of
Lis e the Governor. The sss, which —
een patented "i Verom Mane eld and Hewitt, co
an MAN d beam eam about 23 feet in er
pted for the n very light screen, and tha
ngman, g e Shading must
when bright sunshine occurs. o
much light as they will bear witho ee usin ee
ig t only ban —
necessary. Kee Pos ao of insects and dust
frequent syringings or „
FORCING DEPARTM.
, PINERIES.— Such varieties as are at ‘a liable to > spoil
rrived. Oncurps.—Growing stock will require en-
st Wei
e
$ . — -
E
NUN
—
1 br tbe & by ty
a
=
tom
ə
The hi — tem ture during the abore |
1852--therm. 97 r ae — lowest on ti
1851 and 1855—therm. 37 d
ices to Correspondents.
DISEASE: J Robertson. We are er. fie i e
has yt rial mischief * ue This
eden y is internal, n
e
erence and 20 “feet in length. It is He pm
orizontally by a small wheel at enc ch end. This „bea
Haw hs be Bees as dry as as possi e “immedi ately they show
ee pis ee i 2. 7 M"
ng it with a chain to a tree or stump s a distance of
about 100 yards from the tree to be re oved, a round | t
"n of col e atmosphere
tion from the root. "The other end of the yere is fixed |
* ee — hes pss sem fulcrum, |
freel y,an
sary, ive pu gp gone over à second "time, 2
d, will scarcely
urs in the
im aie
it to? No
Tz — air — in the
H. You will find ample
42, of our volume
ves sent hi
GUERNSEY ir Ro 3
their cuum d in 1 Ne. Ee T
Insects : t The "Rose lea lea
action of the mac! ur —
— ig ——
| Hob and in good co
| must be in
apri"
on t
ch other. A moderate crop only should be =
he Vines; for, to ensure success in ae AE
nditi on til next March, the
first-ra ; be satisfied, therefore, vi
1 oiai or rl it crop, in the late house.
the atmosphere of houses where the
active
eerte that either —
i the experiments
—
signs of vitality. The —
Pw vigine resets no greate
r the | ent
tarday the | trou
and appa- | soot
engine. G
E x hany second crop, ater to rp
e manure- w
ad cte the *
surface gnaw ow lars of & t
fy, Selandia. æthi ^ d
syringing the ghe vit pat 10 envel none e
d fi
01
coal
ins
Sve wil Slil
pia ane
e been so often
ot dried crete E
yonden iur
ertaken en an wn
these
. Le. Keep the shoots thin and 1
ground. Font ur trees were Yesterday taken up, and
time 4 ri for — did not exceed 10 minutes.
the eradica’ n of s amps a à second lever, with av
action, is us
n in the
For
ertical
avoid iom
tested. Kale, .
Thr
Mes about two years
send to England, aft
ago in n search of plants to 5 and
— to elear everything amiy D and to
LU te sei
Sina Wii MÉ - AP. Of y
— — in flavour
range i of hills I was agreeably surprised. to find the
ewhat resem mbles
e M bask in
which brought vividl ly to my recollection the Hea
covered —. s the old country.
85 inches to t high,
pink flo
The plant Pape
2 9 On removing severa coo
y, I noticed that Wes shoots, about as thick a
were clustered w e small ees at their
i o piec
and covered with — of |
to
Here then, I
I stretched
and kneeling | e
cally 7 and e ee be one o! Ethe most
- | useful plots about a Such a valuable adjunct
as this would, however, fequi constant attend.
ance man possessing some little knowledge o
flowers, and oe could not be carried ont where
there isa stint of labour. yed patches of bulbs
r| which are Pone to stand for early spring flowering |
have Verbenas tesi things introduced
from pots between them, vbi gs of Pansies should
= A ie out in succession are too much
usted. ould be
Th e latter nt
three, "n done not appear to aifer i
Royal. vise you to send frui
Hort roulal i Fruit 8
e can
few fish in f
E
other column, „„
— 12 or aie. hedges sh
1 WP. y gn
answered.
Jury 2, 1859.]
THE
NITROPHOSPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE”
COMPANY
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND.
THE GARDEN ERS"
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 565
BB to inform his friends
HIRTY-THIRD ANNUAL
OWN — - take D
the hon their company
PATENT
AX, July whe of t
beenden a 1 E
ep will be Let or Sold.as — and may remain
rehaser& Conditions
(LIMITED), 1
20 g upwards
Railro ad Station, A their € carriage back paid by him.
Whittlesford —— n the aste rn Counties Line
E me from ission, all trains, ——
TRUSTEES.
AnzL SxiTH, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts.
pmo Bar Pas Esq., — Place, Herts.
Epw. ALL, Esq., M. P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico
Babi — y perm
e express, will w that day — at beer ere where
or be — readiness to meet them.— Church Farm,
ridge.
rus E
MAJOR- 2 — Hatt, M. P., Western Colville, Linton,
a
OHN BRADY, Esq.,
GEN SERAL LAND DKAIN AGE E anD IM-
„Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq.
ent Street.
Chairm as W DIRECTORS. ham, Cambridgeshire. 8 KER —— ue mo M. prn
an.—Jow. EBB, raham, Cam ges ire. ER SEYMER, „ X. P., .
jputy- . c om Coluuxs, Esq., „Myddleton * eutonville. 1. This Company is incorporated by Act of Parliament to
Epwanp BEL ded Bunk ERT LEED , West 1 Norfolk. facilitate the Drainage of Land, the Making of Roads, =
Jom. tapis, Ee ^, Littleb: Deme MR 72, Camden Villas, Camden Town. Erection of Farm snd 2 — Buildings, and —
Ric UNT, Lx Noe d Abbot, Herts. GEORGE enun E "Ingihorpe, near Stamford. Cottages, and other Improvements on all descriptions of Pro-
m e A CT n, Middlesex. WILLIAM COLL S His. 15 5, St. John Street Road. ys — - i ^ — under e cep mortgage, in trust,
gi Ra essrs: Bart Hoare ken esiastical or Collegia!
i EGO, Siret 2. In no case ís any investigation of Tit
Solicitors.—Messrs 23, Essex Street, Strand. Works may be designed and Samed ere y= byt the Land-
Auditor.—G, W. Brown, Esq., 28, Parliament Street. owner or his Ane — or the Com ! “4 * ke sheeple
i E t by their ex agp m 5 any Vi
T 8 . Equal facilities will be afforded
Manager.—Mr. James Opus I
oney — for the wor
Offices, 109, Fenchurch Street, London.—Manufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex.
Mi
in heri er
"The — cost of the works and expenses may, in all
5, be charged on the Lands e to be repaid by half-
Tun Directors beg to inform their Friends and
are now ready :—
DAMS’S BLOOD MANURE
ODAMS
S'S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS.
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME.
year 1
The t charge may be fixed by the Landowner,
Te 4 to — * for Land Improvemen M and 31 years
for Farm Buildin — reby B Pes instalments will be kept
centage as
the Agricultural Public that the following Manures
FOR co R N AN D MAN GEL. within such a fair. pes occupiers of the improved
ig can ai s to ny.
. No profit is taken on any Works executed by the Com-
Mr the ral Powe ath only, bss ies by the Inclosure
Commissioners, being charged in ERT
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents.
OLLEGE or AGRICULTURE AND CHEMISTRY, |
AND or PRACTICAL and GENERA x 8C 98 87 and
38, Lower Ken — ngton Lane, Ken: ear Lond
Pri —J. C. Nur, F. G. S., EOS, ri
The system a: of studies pursued in the College comprises every
"branch requisite to prepare youth for the pursuits 3
Engineering. peg Manufactures, and the Arts; for
Naval and — and for the eee
M Collage, "the te ‘oth
accurately « 3 a the College. ‘The . — ot
ticulars may be had on bes to the Principal.
RTIFICIAL MANU. &c. — Man
ered ag 2 in —.— ARTIFICIAL MANURES :
T instruction for their e
T efficient p
Mt preparation tion, by applying
of the — — tural
8 London. Anal;
phates of Lime, pnt, hee +9
other Minerals are ecuted
Ene
tly 29 |
er par- |
and
s of Soils, Guanos, Superphos-
ud e of W i pr ver, and
1 va
with ac despatch.
AL 10s.
any
Joux WiLLIAMS & Son, Soap Works, Clerkenwell, London,
ARTIFICIAL AN RES.
DERICK CORNWELL begs to inform his
friends and the Agricultural public that rv can now
P of LIME” s bee eniro anything
t produced. Each Bag guaranteed to con * — €: 25
E aad ais of Aj oca wd Phosphate of Lime." “price s, per
to any Railway or Wharf in aan: Deslers
*ton, delive 2
and the trade supplied. LIN SEED. CAKES, COTTON-CAKES,
and all descriptions of N MANURES a t lowest
"market prices. Offices, 7, Great St. Hi s, London, B. 0
— D, LACK, ann CO/3 ‘CONCENTRATED
SUPER HOSPHATE OF LIME; guaranteed to con
8 Acid e a equivalent to 40 per cent. of Teibaste
Pho: w= omoi,
ae TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to
— Kralle von ax 4 2 h bt m ror th v er
M yo and are the roof of the very
8 — mercial value which characterises
your concen — —
Detailed analyses, with opinions of the late and present
Chemists to the Royal Agricultural Society, with Testimonials,
Prices, rv may be had on application to BURNARD, iaoe
& Co., Sutton Road, Plymoutb.
ONDON MANURE COMPANY, removed to 1
Fenchurch Street, E. C. (Establis ahi 1840), have x
following MANURES ready for delivery
Mee MANURE for SPRING TOP- DRESSING
all of
MARGED MANURE guaranteed
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME quality.
To MANURE
consequence of the reduction in the price of raw material
i ER ON m^ i lower the price o
Corn Manure and Wr A —
The — Aa ERUVIAN
GUANO
(direct * * Gitte tg Sons
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, CRUS. i Hep. CERE vi
every other Manure of value, ne
Gardener, — 2 excepted. A
| TUBS and BOX
9
7 WIL Curronp, Secretary.
OYAL AGRICULTURAL THER ROVEMENT
SOCIETY d pues ND.— The GREAT ANNUAL
SLATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH, MIDDLESEX. S TOL 2, 23 an s Society will be held at DUNDALK,
e inve tong a ——— in on —— d All Entries mus bo iade with the Y on 8 pee
may be seen in use at Worton Cot on Aj —— P the Ey + sg Bh vi recs c ets Marmora Vue, WIS
CED LISTS of PLANT
the » di
d p foligas favounsble aig cr a c have been made with
e Rail a — Compa’
warded on crion nies for the convey-
Western, Live
tee to the Show, — any unso|
x charged to the Show, and any
mplements charged to
— Cc — ill y
the Show ; any
g to the
thi
o Dublin and Drogh di. the Belfast Junction, the Midland
siad Western, and the (€ - Ennískillen Lines will
m the Show all unsold Stock, Implements, &c.,
d Liverpool Steam Packet Company will
convey — 1 all Stock, Implements, &c., intended
for exhibition, E of freight.
Order, J. M. Royse, Secretary.
Society's Som. 42, Upper Sackville Street. —July 2.
RKSHIRE GRICULTURAL
FIRST PRIZES, a SUA
€ James, Tivoli W. 4, ekia Pi .
un reed LIQUID MA e.
Ns IMPROVED LIQUID
OR GENERAL ge sy PUMP.
These W. N.B.—Perso! n of becom
* ers, are reques ö d their names immediately to
c! l| An Annual Subscription of 1L enables a member to e
an unlimited number of Stock, to —— — tue Exhibitions, and
to receive the Society's Publications of charge.
Kirk Deighton, Wetherby, July 2.
OYAL At BU RE 3 OF
ENGLAND.—WARWICK, 1
pla PROGR. ue.
galvanised iron handle, &c., 14s. prog ; WEDNESDAY, 13, — The Implement
The barrel is 27} in, long, and the legs Yard open from 10. o'clock in the pras till 6 o'clock in the
are 5 ft. evening on Tuesday ; and from 7 o'clock i e morning til
These qd pene ical 6 — k in the evening on Wednesda: t mission
the | iron m for each person, Machinery wi will be shown
« 28, 6d,
Exhibitors at d on each of these
ges to inspect the Live Stock, and
d in th
um:
wit!
straps or sere win ng on to any dep 5b
re butt or cart, and fitted with 14 WEDNESD: AY, 13.
— for attaching flexible to award th e Prizes,
Pu abli Stania of tk igh
sey inch Gutta Percha Suction Pipe, e ee of the erg note such shig as the Stewards
ls. 11d. per foot, may determine.
Rubber and Canvas Suction and At 1 o'clock (or as soon after as all the Judges shall have
Delivery Hose, from 4 inch to 4 eum t wot, Union in — Paes ot in their awards, of which notice Ve on th be viper os
10;
—The
pŠ 60 feet to order. pm Pipes with Cock will be admitted on re — le
, at reduced of! E j^ h person, at the nimm.
ens btained of of any Ironmonger or Plumber in tow THURSDAY, 14.—The — hee ae i of C Cattle, Horses,
country, at the above dri e or of the bag: se — “Manne Pg s Pigs, and PE pen B e Publie from
turers, JoHN WARNE 18.0 win St., | o'clock in the m g til 6 vening; admission
ARNER? I E 64. — pe
8 PATENT 4 — LATING S ST AX DARD FRIDAY, 15.—The General Show Yard open to the Public
till 6in the evening; admis-
PATENT CAST-IRON s fitted with
E Buckets and na Sog
s, Cottages, and
3 * J. W. & Son’s/
rS, W ich eanno oat, in action, for
Welle, à not exceeding 28 fee :
meter
of Barrel. Height.
25 in. Short 1 ft. 7 in.
$,
6,
6
hp
General "Meeting ‘of the e in ans Shire Hall, at
10 o'clock in the forenoon.
y Order of the Council,
Fitted forlead, +1
rire Ww reha |
6 —
h 15 feet of Lead pi
sh ready for qn Tan
in. long ditto ^ dito “ditto? 18 0
e —
are the merits of * the Abe cox
iaa ca vir is so called 10 distin-
RP of the Paten $
JOHN WARNER & SONS, & Cresce airs London. pen 1 them "à ordina: - foods which
E —
susie
E
hen desired,
obtain ed of an; or
Town or LINE rat the above |
and Manufacturers,
116, Fench peers , EC. ARI MANURES 5
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF LAW:
R. LAWES gd to gi shar that he. — this
—— bm reduce the price of the Manures manufactured by |
TURN P MANURE . from Ex to 6
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LiNE "e S ; os Z
MINERAL 5 4
BARLEY MANURE.. 95
f. Way and Dr. Voeleker have sam le d fro: from bulk iL stil
6000 tons at his factories, and their ansis rtan stalylas M^ given
in full in Circular to be obtained on application at his office,
1, Adelaide Place, London viri E.C., vnica -—
N.B. Genuine Peruvian i — 5 GIBBS,
— x Soda, Sulpha toot As * end other Chemical
American m-seed Cake supplied.
Cae the Ain SEN ae GY RE e
Every description of Machinery or Raising Water by means cattle are M e ned. ey are very costly,
f Wh * * Deep Well rd „ &c. ; also Fire Garden
3 e i Purp 3 on the plea implied or cione that by a well
e
Batian tiga as to be nen y in value v3 deme too, ET et the Sunday morning, is
ingredients to as
[ les
i i i d to this that Woop
i inati ight the kind of preparation s some minds ha 4 ay a at Woop
rre 1 e of years been brought in IUe for listening to the marvels related of d 5 machine brought
contact with every class making up the rural] popu- the more modern cattle-food 5 — ions.“ He een eue AND] . of Salford,
lation, and happen to eas from experience how| The compounders of cattle food then, it would | à wee ant y in operation Rei
anxious are the carter and the shepherd and the | appear, ano e ed a p pos e to 1 or "A posting ob e
cowman to , soquire “t resaits ” for LM in their | very c cun ngly a mi Feier -— s dotes Farmers ( A F A € of cw
d the two last bets i xa or cattle to is medicated powders |t e experience members in the cultivation
—.— e le trying — zt — y se uch with their food, a prepare for it by a pre- [eris d * gel Wurzel. Mr. deu Yum
prized E mpounds for the ‘ yellows,” the id es fended concentration eeding materials ; and so are indi C irnside, found th hat Perun
water," or the * shab,” it will te — gh for a: > wt pl 185 1 TS ous t S desee class, Wa ke e siz mam e
i of th e ` at T e other day a th d been
Prodilectlonz of the enter. i : : o little surprise & that his horses ate quite as upon Swe dish cde FE
man de charge of horses, if he be worth — corn; and indeed that he eould not keep alone 5 8 iae ng them ost effective of the
anything as a groom, is desirous of having his | them a bit vtt since he used the new food. ries ee oe Er TAS of Conte flde
eattle look health and well ; and, especially in the anne people may not be much surprised at favourably o angel Wurzel, of um 30 tons
lier par he = Pia | re th | per ac grown tedi
8.
a gr ere Swe
change, he is solicitous that the new garmen ments up n anal pin of cattle food, read | the os manner Tl ith the xception of Wanting
shall be sleek and fine, an vie nes — ws ought before tte Dublin Un niversity by Dr. CAMERON :— a second dres sin - 9 artificial mag ı yielded rather
about Ae Recah feeding ar nd g ing. But RUM, so-called Lon i cattle food is sold less than 20 ton
Lu ter is s it that N er ton, which is at the rate the 43d. ePi ru eme E 20 ont kak
uch as bis penes bh and so mae the: while in r reality ‘it is not, at the very T upwards of 20 cart lh
«llo out with his horse to - present enm tmost, worth 7/., or 2d. EU das Jaen d "i "à
what was formerly a custom with the igher either Linseed- — or Rape- cake, ‘rena it is of March, r 3 dd Meere d, erated m ii 1
animal, "e Every spring tá palatable to cattle than the latter. its e 12th April with 13 o g t. of P ed up
fall, he plies his beast with some ie d stuff, | pes inferiority to t the oileakes may be m ere ed E to drilling 3 cwt. 701 s xi
even though it be forbidden by the master ; and so apparent by contrasting its AR is with that The drills were compressed with a lich ,
powerful $ the influence of tradition in 8 lof e averai sample of Linsee T allowed to remain for B daysto ae mler mi :
of these a that these pier men pay out of No wonder, therefore, that this — — should | sown at the rate of 5 lbs. of seed per acre, on the
their own pockets as much as from 2s. 6d. to 5s. at have added the te — to his report, in ani The seed brairded about the 8th
a orse powders. : we cordially ag regularly, from careless sowing ; the blanks wer
again, as showing the firm hold which th „J consider the " ot the peculiar article they aim 2 Lone! Pre the crop was d
possesses, it will A not out of place here to prepare an imposition of the grossest kind on the 3 e wet’ 2 "té 1 k p speed bipes this
state another E connected with the sgrioutural 2 md ve that portion of the vltimabeN ud e “athens m 8 Tec M
^ P e urban ity who RENNES of horses. plan Bank 15 ineh i dE 1
istër 33 eturers p = were abou inches apart, where regular;
"oie of the d ils. 28 ches Th und
ghana k be A . is an ordinarily; an rhs mp attle foods? in that eaten ry o a e little pl _ ithe es
carter to erib from tim me the dama 8 benefactor which includes the manu- | for Turnips, with the exception of being stirred
prim —— 58 ^i YT = Miser the anim xi 18 | facturers of an ers in spurious guano, for tho e - with a two- p grubbler as Ta pn
day M aking the medicines; and as both he o advantage: =e 2a prevailing i an ce horses could work it, about the beginning o f July.
im this a ed of the but fedi ixture
y constitutes
pe e S A — Psi s and sins x td, or an excellent fertiliser Het eiie guano E. fe sole i ere was applied,
one in soil at i ral differe 8 worked in with the small plough —
sagan ir bpm DIG PIDE a I
erin i pa of | it not to be worth 3 d me. sects ` F
heu 5 pai the cart ok dealer who vends eue “oot at Figur per ton
* xg piles * ee “roa yet knows 1 ey its in edien 1 ^ inning
more am
3 wages are en egg sacrifice d to a : Poets the Saw = e Seid pea pee a
e the stuff w we shall now inquire fa Aa Ald ow our agri- the * h Ja une ; ; what was stored aften yeka us —
it Ber be well — to state that the foundation of per the foundation y "upon Which the
horse powders consists of seeds or other parts of en built, many :
aromatic plants, as thus—Anisced, ende, | we would not have them unmindful of the fact) Mr. Witsow believes that Mangel will deen
Carraway, and especially Fenugrwe seeds, the that the favour of the food is a really important tivated in Berwickshire to a much ju M
roofs, or underground mata p. matter —an inquiry into which, as it will fu — than it has cver yet been. Tt is the best root E
ger or Turmeric ; these and others are sometimes elucidate our present subject, we shall ho ope t can be given to ewes when lambing, and to cows, —
mixed with varied quantities of nitre, sulphur, or | in a future Number. "the milk produced by it being so safe for eitis
i he uri i a 1
fe
E
ul
8.
e
8
o
long delayed, and it was stopped in the middle ith a
"s eek's weer in the mber, What was
ored befi
Piha. i Eton 9?
and
W. 8
D ally | Lof Bunerss & Krv's mowing machine e idi summer. All sheep and cattle IM b. i
) dicini very frequently lead to disasters at aa near Dublin, is reported in the T April of it, preferring it to any 9 er roots "i
iy hi of which are but little Weekly Agricultural Review as haig t been | £fter ES,
dreamed of. Fortunately, however, where only remarkably successful. Mr. BALDWIN, of t| ddendum to last year's separ uc
the vegetable medicines are employed no evil Albert Institution MÀ estimates tha ke pt con- E “Statistics has 3 been iia
ri
wholesale drug merchant admirably when the ground is aven and free fr > ex E
„ The extent to which stones, indeed | the work Wild not be better done, as to bring out the gross produce of the eom m -
thered from the fol- The fi pow ne is Mr. BAT DwIx's estimate of the The Tables accompanying uw
from Gray's Sup- ost :
Son —— which Atos nae ey
“
Assumi cing a Jen of 200 statute acres, under a fou: an increase 5 83,5 i
xe rotation, a nd h G rass, the co d extent was Pier un avi ge produce per we, f
hayin
ga
T
n
825
fo
bat
LJ
92 3
F
m the first cost of the machine for wear ield great roduced 58,194 quarters |
ee &e., e eee Bh 158 Or per 74 more in 1858, owing toa larger acreage;
d | wases ota mian ta ae 2 d. 1 6 2; g ! > RA
8 abe . 2 0 and Bere, with a higher average y
: Aan edie Aaa - io gave a lower total produce, owing to. ase both
ke ES E ES De 3 0 $ in theirextent. Potatoes exhibit - pe
Sour 3 | in acreage and average yield per — food of the
Wal
This is tolerable dilction but sm it contains
some of 1 is real mira the next it will be seen is
an entire Peso Sot Shit omitting
on Ai lat
Total per acreeeeee 1 94 na ], and Cabbage,
n ni ;
the cost of horse labour, wemay safely | — OT dion Mange hes $ 1848. Flax,
igne trita reducta,
Ibs.
ased pr
" : acre. Now, I k | i wee tent of 6075 acres
Bs Lini DE MES 3z Linseed. paid upwards of 5s. per acre tt nme d na emn c 5 d
ed- meal.
Ebo i = eec T n lasnevin. en if we charge the machine with The h increase in yield of 9 tons
Dutch Pn... om 5 | the peris bos i ud SINN hay erop also appears to o poda
in | mical Than the he Rones it — still be — 134. 362 tons ue in 1858 than i in 1857. — ho
erage yie
will not exceed 3s. prine ipal erops vd m the "pn z yea Sor
r is he 2 per 1858), was as follows:—W he barrels of
ood. p and, of course the cost will diminish as the 20 stones; Oats, 7.8 v of u stones; Tad ls of
| be mown increases, I T have not not . com- one TM rrels — M 75 nes; e
K der e. barre.
and other machines į in n the markets ET is A to em, and Pea: 271 E — of 8 — 3
varios of 20 13.
stone: in Turnips
"i
Hi
HE
qn
1
j
AR little | Flax, 85.8 9 ofi idu hay, 2.0 tons.
» ey a a n] : the]
tent to buy at rund 855 d m purchasers, while 1 the gunning axticle ei „„ in We abo ah - tenth
>
ND AGRICULTURA Gina Oo TP
Jury 2, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 567
a barrel per acre above the average of the = vious ; chine will jah “rege ed to commence work in the | fodder, where ha; is given less will suff 83
10 years ; whilst Oats, Barley _ Rye, a trial field unless by the express orders of the | being a s neg as rents pa ‘the — —
Turnips, Cabbage, Flax, and hay were below the Director of c9; compton No — will be farmer, with a caa stipulated quantity of feeding
mean acreable produce for the same period. allowed to be painted or varnished a it has | for each cow, I will not speak of what might be
a A n t mowing machines been t | by extraordinary feeding but will only oy — is my
Park, the seat of Sir J. TYRRELL, excited a All expenses of the trial will be borne €—Ó sults. In the dairy of 100
— of interest last wosk. Three machines Were by the A . Government; the transport of the of Turni ^ ^ pr bci cmi giv — 2 42 lbs.
tried—Burerss & fot mow oon’s machines to the show-y ard will be at the charge milk a *? as soon as ibat is is — a fi adde wi E
x rea — and a emule implement, ot the exhibitors. It is desirable that the machines | stra, then cleanse out the c cow (houses, 1 3
reaper and mos hese Burcess & Krv's| should be landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer, where "er ce i
— machine ad the best work, though not Very facility will be given to exhibitors to go 12 turn them out to dra, put another feed of 42 Tbe
the most in the time. It was drawn by two Ji through the — A e of Turnips in their troughs,
and cut half an aere in little more than half an The certificates of entry must be sent by the | the house as soon as they Tics fodder again withstraw
bou forming the work well, i.e. close to khe exhibitors to bis Excellency f the Minister of Agri- as soon as they have their feed of Turnips consumed,
, ng f 3 cul 78 bis, Paris, on or = — 10th of a cleanse out the cowhouse again, and after milking a
regularly without mis ture, 7 Yet: gain
gro eg y sing. month. Forma 0 cate: be had on at 6 o'clock, the last fodder is given — and 8
—— A correspondent asks for the value of application at the same mcer n o'clock. The litter is carefully shaken up on their beds
das as a fertiliser. There is tUe su F Py time they gd fodder. Two active e girls» will on
hich b . he certificates must contain full information the in feedin and clen
riority which black imperfectly burn about the machines to be exhibited, such as—the e iba ng git "m
exhibit over quickly and thoroughly es] or red t g hena 9
Vid thle sd in name - address of oe exhibitor—the name and | one may! 5448 eee coo
vh hoe net » TAT eri ad h e inven d PAM «c mne a Bean meal in a — — of steamed or oiled Turnips,
h has been burned out o A — — at im — ave r siad with cha o r chopped straw, is given daily to
which À that en barned "Inferiorit tter ryp t what — um e e aiit h w ated] Sho gets halt oF h the time the cow is & week calved,
wha 2 1 requires 0 or. JV— o n she gets er allowance or
ay however be the effect of a greater dis horses and hows lal Y her "E T 3 d, and 83 Ibs. of
how much work it can perform per hour or per | finely ground Bean meal in each mash (given her twice
M die space required by the machine—whether | 22 day). Ty having tried various methods and
the machine both cuts and puts into sheaves or C A — ^ s peA m - À
only cuts, and any other particul 822 " oilcake, Rape, &c., ecidedly prefer Bean
i 3 die | meal, b y and quality of milk end. butter,
b
as.
ash. Carbon is itself the most insoluble an
changeable of substances, and i 3 rey a | These two mashes are given at about blood beat, being
manure cannot depend, as that of others does, upon ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. well mixed an A stock of cows
ability to become directly and of itself the food of Tun sessional examination was brought to a close | calved by ret Ist, and receiving this feeding—
plants; but as it exists in charcoal it is united | pn. June 16th, for the first time under — | Super- | assuming that all the ‘herd have come to their proper
with the mineral part of the plant from II. A dI | mne, ob. 8 rg. d about 11 imperial
hi sod 5 hi uarts each dally, or .
— BEF ens — — * —.— Diplo ma, * ertt — — as and graduates weight of milk aa: bein the most certain way of
solved by water passing through it The Seton ore C 3 Sicdbteruhire: accurate with new milk, and in speaking of the quan-
foo in charcoal is presented in such a porous 2. Thomas Wein: Forgan, Cumberland. gen 1 putter or c 2 ches produced by d rung .
as as to possess E on 19 77 of a Tli Bos “aa dosis ars. newly calved ci cm doe x yield so much butter or
and concentrating t gaseous sub- t puei y 1. Gibbo cheese as milk fro; approaching their time of
stances which are available as food of plants, 2. Jekyll Highly conimended-— — going dry (im fuper | s oe weight 01 milk). Thus
and so ur gn tq aste from the soil ? which ditiis "m — stock of cows " calved by May 1st, edes ^d
it is —— oft trond — ri products of decom- LABORA TORY. k milk will give 22 Ibs. of cheese ready for the m:
positio: ways more or less Classes 1 and 2 the month of June, while the same quantit = milk
suene e ines —.— It is in this way Classes 3 and — d E wae ene ee from the same cow in October will N 28 Ibs.
— sadi fertilisin tics as charcoal pun n 84 ns — y = * market, and increase in the yield of
00% T. Newton cheese from antity of milk until the cow goes dr
neea ids, it may bea Profitable e to | i Nott D
undergo the cost of grubbing up 60 acres of copse- Anatomisal—I. Doxet 2 M'Ivor Tindal April—20 days’ y opa ET we of milk daily 840 Ths.
— — AND 22 xa - » " 9 »
wood for 1st Division—1. Bro Commended—Dix ” "d. ”
on many other Sings than the value of charcoal as * Binge rena ege
n ivision—1, Ive 0 ended —A Dan 2 ^ x
It may be more prof able to sell it for fuel y ——— a A aan ba 540 „
with t 34 November —30
[f erui ptm : nó 85 Division —1 Highly comme nded—Moun sey
n ! y € : i B pe å
ft] na
— 00
oe d ure than lied direct!
the soil. . If r replied: however, * we would rather
depend upon it as a permanent fertiliser of the soil,
and as „fitting it t for the growth of all sorts of é
dapted for the growth of . Hu
any 338 erop. T^ would improve the texture T bimus i
of stiff so vw , and the po —2 Ivey } ea. A
possess of attracting fertilising vapours from both : TD e e
soil and air — make it a good nurse and feeder| 1. Wostray L ieee Ti Tindall is brought to
of ali E 3 2. m M } t 2. vey | germ -
TION OF REAPING] 4 Big: 4. Doxet Lo í 3
Maag villi be | be held, under the D J. F. Jones t en ot ER Xu 3 ee ^ — io" 10 e died i
of th from 2 to th NATURAL HISTORY. h chee
G à the mann which the milk is tur
25th of the month, at the Imperial farm of Fouil- Lg Lu e nin It is not even the Dunlop metbod oct y fol 1 followed
leuse, near Saint Cloud, a station of the ns Huli j^ lay jet that is to blame fori, ae cheeses little jf at all
—ͤ — 5 miles from Paris. 3. J. B. Jones ; | 3. Congreve :
es, ” Nott je Waiting | -T inferior to either Chedder or Cheshire be made.
competition Cg e a all kene 5. Appleby ; s Twamicy > My — n 15 making Dunlop irl 15 — follows :—
are admi e premiums 6. Beverley tog, . Phillips putting the last night's and morning's Ro: together
Westray °F after milkin [m
7677 g in > morning, fai sing
The following prizes y Mà — the French 8 È to from 76° to 80°, using sweet steep (rennet) —
Seen to A M ed 1 amt D rar dae no more of it lige will coagulate the milk in
as 1. Doxet |
1st tou i Medal. 2. J. B. Jones Ma ja breaking the curds thoroughly at first, and icis “the
2 rine 20 & ne ^ nth à Silver 1 Medal. e — Ü whey is run off keeping up the temperature of the
d prize, 127., with a Bro: SURVEYING AND. ENGINEERING: dairy, so as not to suffer the curd to cool
Anda rest Gold Medal -— be awarded to the best Ast Division. 9d Division. 8
Reaping Mac hine exhibited, e l Nott 1. Tre i a cloth in a dresser an
or Foreign TIME TEL wt a TTE
warded by a jury after careful 4. Beverley 4. Dayman 5 Will’ sso nins ed
— à n the fields of the ————————— ied n mil die
z USO E E UIS oe them er to the cheese
SEU, UP EE EUR pure rr
> „ e quantity of milk yielded by a
time to every exhibitor by depends 8 on their feeding, as nothi
d competition, Exhibitors er common than xs d
uested to be in attendance | summer, i
during the trials, while the judges are i ing | have nt feeding for. This miserabl
implements, in case any exp! ion may be rule; sufficiency of food given to
from them, and they or their servants tion. y experience leads
— 4 every fi to missaires * w cows as much
judges, by having their implements ready for af, in Summer,
e and tel at the time intimated od mg N eae Gn whether t
any exhibitor, after having had due notice : E el
— ees either to have his machine tried at his | 2 N ten. A them. When the pee nin The
a risk, absence, or to have it removed winter, 60 Ibs. of Turnipe daily will keep cows in good | fro:
— Pes the show, without any responsi- | condition, but — e foggage is bare re it will feque:
bility attaching to the Director. No ma- 81 lbs. per da is assuming Wheat straw as the
y mg reaping [84 lbs. per day ;
510
the bares. MBA, Arn presentea by ner m OE a
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONTOLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ticum ~ produce as high rents and profits, and |
Wo uni m
of gross produce, wheth: tillag
price already — ing t
the Roman brethren. To our taste, Orphan, a rich
ar m among =
the calf presented prior r to | in TM ass.
attention i is ee
which a
form sha
e other guai of¢soils to which particular
ueste d,
all W
pas ee and hien are, at the sam
Salle.
£41£
®©
®
4
A
2
a
A
8
=]
=
n
EB
e
2
E
eA
BP —
o6
EI
ES
E]
"d
8
a
a
2
a
un
e
a
un
2
Bg
©
eee named), by Sid ington Du
Á€— N bull, by the Fourth Da
in Janus 1858. Elsie and Miss Chr istmas, althon ugh
1441
useful for
of ligh
Ruby, both very e ne stood
ucester. Songstress was fally
of he
average qua ity.
or | together
T
mers—
»_thos ose on the High lands, |
adapted to
8 st
ON FE EEDING HORSES AND
is now v proposed t
ould be far more “aha and remu
ZH
200 Irish acres
of an
=
®©
ung € M
0 show that these ncht Eae v ur
eat w: *.
p th ^ e
tar more per 13
Such land vin generally carry
There would Be as "A — bes daes
8
e
13
cows, and a say,
r with. 30 p to — the two-year-olds |
e nes
e
all over one year old, will n
rance — wp the cowman is 3 wide
a that * they will stand a good
that is not
e good chance
anywhere; but it will probably ces that the com-
petition will be almost, if not alto; age as close in the
one de artment r. pitally
tage a sal — of the —— to supply o
weer ily.
this
able to cultivate in
oatme al |
e farmer would
es for the use of his fam
pan of management and the e under
system may be briefly stated as follow:
DEBTOR.
The
floors, a
solid manure
re
and tanks beneath, | 5 Ei rt pen bo
made by the animals, Thus
as in Hei up to | Rent of 200 acres, at 250. ES .£250 0 0
z d | Herds wages per de : 30 o 0 1 — admit of any deleterious
an aristocratic bearing; but drm WE that his Babe a B 52 the tanks under the animals, on open board
E s Poor rate, peck cvs cess, &c. TRO. d
philosophy in the other respe Leaving ari dicine fi s 13 o | The inconsistency of these men i is strange,
the lawn surrouuding the LE villa residence of | Sundries, as medicine for stock, bc. — 5 Ks Lear clou Laer ee : the
Mr. Bowly, we found half-a-dozen promising yearlings Total .£300 0 Oja ers
ing in a field of rich pasture back. Of ` Creprn | exceatingy wei ene farme
ligh roan, re the Profit on 200 sheep, at 17. per om 55
0!
t Hitherto. shal! rite go, —
Probably the fact of fake st . —
rther P a
wall at a
more stimulating character
nded des m
ier age, as well as the 47 2 140
of the food, -— ^et unbo esire for early pre-
cocity, have o in producing such ec rag | Perm
things. But n i 3 s appear to be here -
down, as regards the
which - ey should
Do. on 30 3 -old cattle,
Do. —
=]
88
10 cal
Sundries, as pigs, Mee prs, &c., for use of the
farmer's family,
Total Eu
Deduct Debtor 360
cltivated under
10 dairy cows, at 61.
ves reared at 3l.
"o|oco|^^ 2888
4
Balance. 4s
— = shows a balance
soph ee pci ee the ws — to «X
viz :
Turn r green crops, enema
D uM. x: 3 me aeres in Oats after Auc
ear's Grass
xcept sh is s 60 6
wich A state my [^ ta rience on the 1
Neuen t them to seriously think ib it, and to
perime llowing or ning all, ora
8 40 do. in first y 40 do. in second "
Cur s Grass; 40 à 0. in Oats, after e year's Grass; E Mera po sey bs
nd that the landowner gend. all ihe building This im N subj
withont | Pay vae | For 10 years before I co
farmer feed i 120 head of | .; y
how | Un or | times my father’s ploughman, and had
5888 of a pee rn dee cattle son winter, A rw Grass, besides supplying my care, an :
— Uren s. Wel dairy of 10 cows. here. would mu pe 5 . - mia
‘needs, to the fullest extent, all cept das, amd o nnn seod amk other sindriés steaming anything. My father had an r
E — — — — s t — i The result may be 7 1 as follows ES C die cades bap am — mest : acting 5
av - i t]
rivalled breed of sheep, which is cultivated with us Btwn ad's wages yearly Sa - pM n Tu 4400.0 1 bve- sr Stinn ak Ok nea even.
and aan nt; in the other department there is Teton at th per we eck 7, e u 212 0 |] 2 n — = d
some way to make up. We saw but this day Vi annum 72 30 0 0 and became a sorta
s 4 arpenter work per annum E m1813 I ASE farming, $
C ae a Gee eee 8 EI om eg
; , às guano so 0 0| Dr.
we ld respectfully ask * Where can the in — aern, county cess, &o., — TE — eeper ploughing, Scot
Boi à dries, say 85 48 0 0 cultivating angels and Sete à
T. Bowick, abridged from the Leamington Courier. in in fo p in win
d 8 £1000 0 0 was then becoming the order of r^ da,
TILLAGE. VERSUS GRAZING. 40 acres of Turnips, &c., UU profit. 2600 o o | Proving farmers; the high price
LI 8 —— ent of a paper read by Mr. Levinge | 55 acres of Oats, to sell at SL. a „440 o o|and debt-creating French war
i to the lighter class of soils on irish upimde] ^ ^. | 10 dairy cows produce, at a ai eee
à Viewine the positi 0 calves land, introduci
: — — 3 ve ho ae — Pre ro sold, oF. i E — : e cepe the oa practice,
x of managing the land, whether as regards = . 30 0 0 in feeding stock.
the interest of the landowner, the t-farmer, Nein d £1460 0 0 E
community, must s Deduct Debtor. . 1000 o | outlay in
importance, ope TASTE — — all things ed e =
i i £A00 0 z
ee forward even to a gradual This ped shows a balance to the farmer of 4604. — e ard
cattle |
ed by. tho endi Jul
and finished off by Novi
* ja this Ie of
t produce as hea
an the light ‘arable lands of the country, eultivated
land, "» converted ti
lere is toy 3 any necessity on the present
ell o
a la labourers are |
—.— nm where the rents, profits, -—
mms are, perhaps, hi her than could be ex
peeted under the best and s d
port
per annum;
fo | farm:
avy, or heavier boi |
the management of this class of lg
ber of labou:
consid,
| that it may excite discussion
t appears t
might be one-third, that the
which
in the hope
"i kiviaia however
hat on this nya class of land the = will be g
Liapor under m:
land may naturally be expected to become It will be seen at once that — T
Eris . inira icem for the welfare | tioned in this latter case erat, — is an oma rinm
especially to those who are engaged | immense difference in the a — f ren fit, and | and conclusion
gross produce in favour of the system of tillage as com- | properly carried ou
1 Bos Grass; it ol that the | various contin
- accuracy of the old system of valuing land for | ing the new —.—
b v. ei, 3 one-third of the few years many farm
1 » cA i
i and the other ird fer € the — er poti bens no benefit in
— Sein t
=
2 ow the best far?
should eos be se t 5 € to horses
ent. of p
: ge. onantity, of. E store catile “and « even strong sheep. | are here given are decisive of no
ing. How Mr.
m does
e found on | Levinge make 157, per annum profi off his Turnips ?]
in f d d
[keepin every thing. sweet and C
— 3 the whole c
to come near. There is the cost of coals. Requires ayo
r class of servants a for — diligence, and | When w
If this i case, the master must | doors, and let them r
e green food as aly
either very, spe eben
r Rape. not turn
comes in, d po them
cows
hay and s
11 not more estote, by e cutting and
ttle can swallow the eir food quicker
of undisturbed quietness from the feeder or any ©
water is given let them have it hes of
— ain ene t ata quarter or
wint
them out in the night till June
are ex xcellent, chemists, an
yard and straw system. The ewes s are mainly fed
during the — months upon fresh-threshed Barley
or ' Oat-stra pla aced i iu binns, and some eut mio chaf,
d Trefoil husk when p urable,
of and, — to lambing, some 1 miller’s offal is
er V etches, Clover, They hav
each aay. For
ctober comes in. | gr.
d very correct sowing fo for
ms
m state of the weal
— v ps
he spring fi wy Rye — Italian R.
up when pon i fallow s
Dairy
e , except very | thermom In thei
ted with the |
digested pter
1 out T
have a|
ar better mas
beter i the int
when
a
ter; bu t I have aar m
traw bag
By a great many farmers a far greater stress is laid | Tu
on making bad hay palatable, = n on the importance |
of making good hay at hay harv dit
apod ahy s y other steamers an and choppers d
honestly admit that the only p: in cattle feeding,
on an arable farm, is the re they make. But by | mos
h weather,
the qp Pat noon, which,
more many o
use there than bere, as the farmers are bad hay — ence is often
I shall now ps what I consider the.: most pro rofitab
mode of keepi ock, and a few o
i — 0 lm acquaintance always followed the
and men who never closed their eyes to any
thing rader profitable in n practice, but men of €
and of calculation, not taking for granted everything |
the most suc
m so much depen
goo
I shall first state oe z qM c horses in full | in September last, and if
was mer, or at least | condition in April as
I them | been worth 3/. a
| hav
ve —
y are
» | hay making,
to be | 5 stock. After
also “penny w
ns, and bran mix mes
ts, ed
m quantity aecording to the work MN th
eter
test the quality of food. given, and t
1 them. They
there
„between the
bi dl
other
m 30 to
v. is * = "ai isagree:
find fault with 1 t
nds
in mes
re ie idis this
Grass h as been € cut 24 hours itshould ne
the temperature o of
ought never to
is the least frost, or in
appear pro
to sheep nee uch is
upon April 8, 1859, I recorded the present position of
he fi Jt is as follow
ay at any season Acres.
and pasture in the — me wd
4 94 Peas and Barley
12 White Clover fi fod i in spring, and to be saved for seed.
16 Red Clover fed i " spring, and to be Y for seed.
15} Italian Rye- itto ditti
10} Sainfoin, to be
Cabbage seed
after Cabbages
2 acres for Mangel Wurzel
acres — Rye-grass, after
wedes, Turni
pe, c Roll
* for hay
2 Oats,
41 Fallow ES
6 acres winter Oats, dit
8 acres Rye 1 ditto
3 acres Tares, ditto for Cabbages
ee 95 pasture
but I am TEM waste
he Cheshire remo because |
a ramble |
Thos 130 a acres ar e with corn, 444 for seeds, 10% for mow-
«hf i
not hing m
first fed, it is any at
market price = la gan that such a
more paying tl
n in the same
sey er have
dien think
they had
They
wise and 4— "foolish ” in
in making hay for a dairy
TPT
be allowed to get
4 13 * 1,
lovis .
The first thing, at n the morning, a feed of th:
mixture e^ a httle has were given while they and
dew nights, saying
None of their wives — allow her
several
-grass an
sold, the ewes are put out t
hund. +)
o keepfo
ten to to lie in — — e "dtr . 5 Tye-grass has
Ra
nothing of rain, before
the stable were cleaned en gave what water they
would drink, and a little more hay. Not cram the it. tu a 1. 8 M F
full. At 7 o’clock go to work till 12 Oclock. But the senem farmers are not the resh ones who e ^ ent As Mari ta nothing better
soon as the * the stable give a few quarts of are faulty in respect. There are but too many in perience to guide us successfull though d difficulties, 1
water, a feed of the mixture, and a little ha ay. After — ‘omy m Ape this br — of rural desire to Jay bef vade which h
* paea t dinner more water and hay. — vil gen — ja * — of 10 miles round effectuall xd ati AP Pr TE ig Net me in dd rox eni
2 o'clock go to work till 6 at ordinary times, and A e qu wi n ticle in perfection, ally
very parti times ae, dim s d Gun ries’ a e weather val allow, and they have MI ns I ought first qp to state that on one of the
till 7 or 8 tit in the ‘stable aga — a little enean en nie n — i - hae e sa - Gr rass tiat a monastic ru which was very much over-
water supper is over with the m hen | Cheshire. Yet, for mill heir hay is wor
+l d Ob give what 3 p will | from 10s. s. per to ry great quan- si -— ME cating with, the ` —— at his
take, then a feed of the — € a few handyals of | tity made under more — rate. By e appuen Foxy va ad", perio um
sliced Swedes, pub y Give a bed of|the mode of makin g bay ep it is in fine er, ded a 1 Spring sno 1 The es an *
from 12 to 18 inches m of stram. Tf it be thought | made in one day less time — bad weather in hen "eg Sand y am » my ae Asher ies
* a liie more ha n not, athar. iol 1 1 5 5 hen determined to pu em up by hand,
g to 2 per-
They d be fed. cep them firm in
flesh and in full vigour, | p pee T the summer
d two or three days,
account at less e
"ik ess time, and
W. Rothwel
iius F was diligently carried into
D
Clover or Vetches to be gi ; and if the | your — in thi j
labour be not very oa no co required. | adjoining counties we have erred by too expensive |;
Colts and horses out of work are "pest gs id I. system of bul pm 3 ; that we have — our
8 medicine either s| a rate for profit; that t under 7
Or W. p m it, or at any o r ti lt h j dd
when actually unwell om 35 A rel : E . Richmond, Yorkshire.
lastingly physicking th SEU d Per Bele | to exploded and expensive — manure making
grooms and coachmen. | to the partial 8 ect of cattle and -— rearing. More Societies.
For — - the following e of nde | may be profitab in lamb reari on hea — —
Lerne m ents. met Se den | on light and bise soils. Let me re ide tne "p ee pe e GRICUMRURAL ler ies
y frst, for dairy cows, for three months before | of a gentleman in West Suffolk, and the result W his ef rng * — es "hair the mames — June 29, Co r
beim T. and T from Nov. 1st—food, Oat or nri ong experience. Tv isited h A nd W. we
straw, uncu — i pleas e 7 bs and Pr. Voe Ickes submitted 2 the Council the following
got, giv 3 N ee ol the ewes, 88 analysis of a Mange el Wi 1857,
Rf get, g give y ^Y E prets & mE the best, |a 3 f lead, “He 260 acres of very good aby - T a
quum bedding. Never er give Whea e 5 — iam clay land, oP which only about 25 are sound condition Bundles Con position
— scarce. sufficien y gradually i bursa his stock yearly, In — Calculated
of 3 ps them in oa condition up to th as as lamb renting’ bas promised to pay, he now annually - en ary,
time of calving. Imm “a oes ing ; give er 2 from 20 to 21 scores 0 of ewes, and each year the *golub 97 25
all her first beestings, w. udder, fall of his s year 8 30 — Solvilo protein compounds" iw 2267
except what is given to the calf; y let r3 AN Tiek | the score. Of course, the wonder E s ho Soluble inorganic salts .. 1.23 15.87
et while in beesting. left to herse maintained „ 8 È
i s r: e (ce € à :
* it till it can sand a an P sack T "ring | ficial food must be used. _ The —.— peer pr ex- Indian a pee vus MR 2 7 » ied
with better food for gs Give. ioc spatinenl [1a ^ (185r —
one meis If she EXPEND s. d. RECEIPTS. E 2. d. .OContaningxiimgen 5 ,
a very or difipalt ime of calving, give some | Artificial food 0 0 400 lambs, at 24s... 480 0 0| "Containingmitrogen —
good honest ale onc rcd ‘After a few days let Outkeep in summer 35 0 0 NA MEM -. 110 0 0 LLP Ca re
ber food be N 1 e. e $| ‘The amount of wa wil
a day, with t CaS BAS : m eae Tur :
roots. I should prefer t amongst the sliced for 60 shearling et is ee Gee a — Mangels,
Cows in fall milk must be well fed, but never so fot s "d there a an average of Nae ch of water. The
food given at one time = - ite If, v c Uer ESO :; p vr t
when food is gen the animal does not begin to eat — roots, Nearly the whole the mineral matter con-
ith a relish, take it from “tg her till the next feeding | fei. S05 18 0 Sists of soluble salts, and more than one half of these ts
2 CCT
E do not like mom ^ They The value of the — is placed the labour. Mangels of which a was anal; i
ka errar i , but. they ao ike Shang milk Növ how is this vast pra result annually acon-| portion’ of e roo is also larger than the
a md butter. For this they require many hours a day | p ished? How are the sheep fed? The secret is, the | average. The conclusion which may be
vith uch less average temp erature ein i o | on this, and guard against t th
tions is that this Mangel, although ee tly MS o ai x enl of England, used drills are gead a pa e of serious moment,
ha referable, as the flat surface wouid usually, £ gree
deteriorated | cong "helng altes tg cker’! vi dire but the case is completely re weno in de | there i is m a of opinion
istri just named, w v can fr
ag te ee ve 5 teroraton than 20 inches of rain fall annually. “The summer | and other implements, as
deduced from the preceding results © evil which it in E
t must bea
matter of veri ver qo . "i pat ma to to | heat is also greater, and, of course, the evaporation is oni she Arie Den cs it al
fik far more than in Scotlan or Ireland.“ , th not be
know ye lo pc ang Abe — stored ait a 15 “One of the chief causes of the many : failures that | recognises the fact, and is incessantly
— ike mum feedin P a erties. He also | occur in TP growing on light land is the undue digging, &e. The farmer, is awan
pe bat the ty Of salt e soil immediately eer oa time of it gives a greater surface for the absorpti
‘ar a 1 su
i ntl d for two years in ber se of clays, every tim expose gives 3 :
8 had. . it 1 a fresh. urface e may expect some b denen e pei un- : ed e think clay lands
tine and expressed the opinion that the character of | less the geni is wet; but every time a fresh surface altere! ys ssi. ed, A they absorb fr
the manures used for growing Mangels had a material | is s turned up c on glo land in AU or J une, the Turn nip- mois ure t ily. — he case : different h
influence on their composition, a circumstance whicl Me jn — 5 ds Sowa see
ps «p
naturally must affect their keeping qualities. Dr. | escape o of moist
st: in i I a of tars in spen dde. season ; $
ise i ti d ents, I abstain from | retentive force
r ‘and allude to it „The . of autumn cleaning, whic
S but a in icht bg has no ate surface open for the adm mission Of air,
lors
ow | li y
spec
i i i ted to light-land Pectin the sides of the drills so much as to ]
mainly for the purpose of showing how e agit nar well acap g 2 ills eave but
d the cl ree and ploughing of strip of earth isa the plants, ex 4
i Mirrors id with Mr, Valle ntine, | heat on all sides Hand and horse m e sun's
ti his can alone be done properly by a mue light "n in ur n,
matie series of practical and anal the qued nts.” that ‘all soils which have a Padan c d with caution and discretion on light
er Hobbs suggested that in 8 Dr. mrs nein k be ; prepared, as far as po welle for He soils.
Voelcker's report in a condensed form i ne be Tur utumn. If light land is cleaned i j The ian eei — — to light soils are
stated that the analysis was of one small root only, which antara n d 1 5 Bine - acquire consistency an Bie. | 100 rooted plant — s Turnips, Carrots, rey tho Ox,
had been oi ch two years, and that it could Mis tue before spring, and only requires a grubbing aud | Barley, mr These follow each ather in ay
be average example of the keepin | barn owing before drilling at seed time, by xu p course of s Hm suited to this class gular
properties T. whole crop. ‘natural sap’ is retained in the soil. If any cir soils will not bear such frequent cropping with gine
A vo erai cu was read by Mr. es I — should prevent autumn cleaning, the Pei pur as clays; nor will they all grow remunerative ^s
of Green, aen the thing is to prepare it as early as possible in spring, of Wheat and on unless s improved in texture yt
investigations of the laws governing the ye ae before the heat er d so as to boss quodi =, mois- addition of cla y o marl, o r some others mea tans, * Thep
seasons occasionally 0 in this country ture ‘Some yea o the practice w. and, y plants, but produs
Ne motion of Lord Feversham, seconde d b y the Hon. | in some — is is still e of ploughing enr abundant returns of the more useful ero crops, Laying
Cavendish, thi clea n la nd, three or four ti means of rers.
the roots of the Grasses
Sour ‘Sharyn and the thanks of an Council | and summer, As t rasses accum :
were ish be conveyed to Mr. Fulbrook. ee it work vane such a practice on eves soils is is * in the soil, they add to it organie matter h
iere of mperial Far ES f 5 bour and the chance of which MM soils are naturally deficient; this, bes
France, ente to the Council programmes o of the ring a nip- -braird, as dis: Ux d ity es
special inte rnational , competi ition of reaping eue nes, of. the MH “We think i right t ote here the of cons ter which enhances their v; d
t l Farm of Fouilleuse, near| opinion of an able oes —Mr. Clare ‘Sewell Read— | this reason that the five course (two years? Gris
St. Cloud, between July 20th and 25th Wat The| who, in his report of folk farming, saya: * When | better ada bs
certificates of entry to be sent by eene = these light lands of Norfolk io lean, aut cultiva- | year’s Grass). y light, a six, seven, or eight yay.
3 fie Excellency the Minister of A715 culture, 78 hey are à den course may be fo news by which the land is =
Rue de Varennes, Paris, on or before July 10th. friable by natur rg do re wan dt to be finely pul. | three, four, or five years.
— following communications were also received | verised or constantly stirred, as the heavy winter rains} By sheep folding on Turni
m Mr. Chas. W. Hamilton, a Schedule of Qu the ure into the porous subsoil ; | di i
inel by the 1 Dublin Society respecting the Con- so that the best farmers s (Wir theland is clean) give | the rental h en in
dition of Farm rers; the Journal of the Agri-|a good winter ploughing before Christmas, and thus | examples of this improvement on the most extensm
cultural Society of 1 and the Journal of t he Ce en- | grow better Turnips than when the soil has been scale in Norfolk and other of England.
tral Agricultural Society of Belgium, for all of which | well on ated after harvest. —J. E. A. S. England, sheep consolidate the ground, and enrich it by ther
Md a Nae pat toa vo) „ p. excrements, 2 has been truly umi
he New York States A. grieultural| “ The time and mode of a applying ı So aoig E
+} asing fertility, also gives them a
e
ee
c
—
er
o
.
as
zt
ex
2
$
2
a
BE
B
iE
E
t
lad
2
—
e
un
3
e
5
8
B
ae
gia’
E
È
E
a
8
male 5 J in their power to | most fertility to the soil. To add to this th
ti e bok oa general exhibition. the case of clays, the additional advantage, that in man
en adjourned to the Monthly Council | decaying the mi manure tends to p n 5 = 1 19505 T |
T
d July 6th. soil more loose and — It w
m————— that this -— 8 e in E m
ET manure to lig ‘ery 3 if Ed ed in
r ee no ius can result; on the con rary, it is
to increase the retentive power of the soil for | abu
Agricultural Essays: No 1. 1. Soi ils. By Thomas Baldwin: moisture. There is one 3 secos how-
des g^ e Albert Model Farm, Glas- ever, in connexion with this subject; namely, is the yin y
Dae: m, 23, Upper Sackville | Street, soil capable of draining the cléments "of fertility as organic matter; third, pet w
This W da t fe wies | they are liberated in the decayin ure? Clay soils | organic matter, m. which ate
5 —— e as ntains — —— pters — — — eral con- have this Lot and . prac arde ay Y si mir fi be Post; fourth, claying ; fifth, marling,
stit th Se ats jetion—on clay, light, | carried out on those soils; but owing to the facility | practice and principle to to claying.
an pea iy sile—and : : — s properties of ib. with which wat 3 through sandy or light | and the last of these processes be i
H Aa Sah shieh v — . series | soils, and x little power they possess of taking up the | manures, we shall notice in this place only Mi” i
: att ihe nititur are taught. 2: due te ents which it isos out of the manure, we namely, claying. A ing aul : m dead
: 3 al th this, Tien a e X ers of | apprehen ai the ce of autamn-manuring is not a | manures, claying may be considered under
oM er agri — instruction given N one on the lighter P neverthe »less, it is so spem to way m"
there i -I win's essay on soils * When, and in what state, then, should restes may introduce it e. yh n itol si
gives ha nitro Be phie to tight Turnip lands? In in three ways: first, in its 3 “state, te, as dag i
ing be pon 18 may review Tits bearings: Ber Li
M ing m to ferment, it diminishes in va alue;
E ^ i ni to be washed out of 75 dolis srd, if to
PP.
available for the ius Ai i ry i
e for the crops in due time. Under these cir- | the character of the soil to be impr effects. D
ing | eumstances, it is evident that the best system is to|be leareous, it will resemble roping «
form the manure i i ile i :
eaps, i
Soils | poses, loss of any of the liberated elements is he soil;
0 is prevented; ness and retentiveness to the son; dapt
Ede and to apply it under the seed i n a pretty well decom- | contains oc ochrey or ferruginous matte l. U
1o of rain can in will only —— an n nm s
» from ity and want of attraction see D E eR ee ene that frm ‘arm-yard | white san e are bad, but those of 2 u
for water, there is great difficulty in raising good crops manure can be any deprecia. | and oe Psi less "etum character, and af s
an such a soil. When under a green fallow crop, for xt E UN ae y covering it with earth, peat | consistency, are alwa acre i?
instance, the ae so readily that every Las 1b 18 applied to Dg Fe sco ade inasfast P * It takes = — ant to cover an 4
i i * d sown i lee This m f
e ie air, hours, es for on light soils, — difference of a ru Bit whee it is ade
ee ilg. affect z Apana qy of a day or two, may materially cultivation does not ex
n dry Fae oe And accordingly we find green crop. The em miare, too, suffers injury by | | once be seen that
pen 0 raised or flat
in such eee ~ Or TAE UTE TS by! loss of moisture than
**In
annlieati
by loss of the elements of loads, the av e being abo ut 80.
moist climates,’ says Vallentine, ‘raised drills dumping — 8 ‘The eres practised by ie “An — ale 11 or is the 1
leave a kind of water-course or channel between the|h Ri 8 breadt: othe’ Tarn: v land at once, is | applying clay to sandy or light noe corpo?
artificial que which ac most conveniently for|d desirable to retain — 1 vhetr 16 ds — ee ae lay and i
Wr e m et in away, and not ay follow such a ure in nt x > soil; and those who | th
ith h su
Whe ere, ; sure, with a roug he Earth-worm.—The common
m forame d * set i han it can | obtain fru. 10 thon d Lf to be despised and trodden 3
y et the careless farmers reflect useful creature in its way, Mr, Knapp
of dry | succeed i i Pis
ate for edge MW land, for the by injudicious expo
= ^ oi few
Jury 2, 1859.
the natural manurer of the soil, consuming on the
face the softer parts o decd his ore MNA, dh
conveying downwards the more woody fibres,
there pr and fertilize. "They
all d rect ions,
sw
id
which
perforate ' the earth
HE
Nobility,
GARDEN NETS a
from —
^ ter, both indispensable to vegetable life. According
o Mr. n s ee e of expression, they a kin cA
of — tilla the land, Locis sgh the iin e belo
above for the garden, xis
rocess of ti
r the support of vidétitian. T
ibuted by fa armers to m
terials, really due
please direct t
ORN
merable casts o whioh the initial ws consists. These
are € pr by the diges Absit ri of
the worm: — take into ‘thei nal ca nal a
and then rae 3 it in the form of the eoe casts.
* In this mann says Mr. Darwi desee manured
with mar! n covered, in years,
with a bed of ec av Am 8 in eee
From the * New Edition.
Calendar of Operations.
eigen
JU y e
ORDER OF THE Fens: June —Large quantities of hay
ar . — — the crop of
as been
hay is qu paea A — teret cut early ;
Clover is no! vy. I an portant
item in the n accou ; — 5 among them every-
here, hoeing, weeding, and singling out. oe have als
made their appearance, and the weather seems to have been as
favourable to the nc it has been to everything else;
en the s mproved where they have been
suffered to stand after the — da .— which affected them
hav
the t has succeeded,
not vim and — inn late it bids fair to yield largely.
The Wheat fuxuriant and looks well, a — — . Be crop ; errand
ne
is equall d promises $- Pot
wW vell dnd sagi he country has a very beautiful ppearan
e graziers have had so much Grass as uite
“ embarras "i í
autumn, with abundant food for the stock, sheep and
cattle be offered in prime conditi Pigs even partook of
the animation in the trade, and e wi
After à con ntin ony very
"to get a little im a — it appears to
h a few miles Rue B there
e for haymaking. But here
X and
getting much dried up; low. But
during the
past night we soon h to change. eat looks well
with us, quite up to the , and perhaps we shall
have harvest earlier than even last year, ears in May were
more plentiful than they havé been long time.
where forwardly so —
eas are a ine
0 k or two more will n make them fit to m The
hay crop [oM not been a reg heavy one, but, — early
al ne in; there ob no of Y wai ant in
the ree Man; nge db erally looks we a though with
its — b me: but these will amem — they grow. pnm
with some a ward and good, others have lost them by fly,
e ground waiting for
any Turnips yet sown, as if put
—— "ud dry before they are wanted.
in Turnips after cet Peas, ahd it stem the A
t
Scan as F es
but
10
A USTIN, SEELEY, axp CO. respectfully invite the
attention of the Nobility E Gen
r *PORTE-F
now some handsome delia, "o 7 5
Fountains of every description, Vases a
FLOWER BASINS oi
dens, and Ornamental Balu:
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL e
FINEST FRUITS
IN ENGLAND
The Nets
lt
HORN, Nottin;
ENING
— Chemin r.
Figures for
strading.—370 70 $75. Euston
—T -
T5 Clergy, Gentry, and — YT era are res oectfully
informed that odes ORN'S EX
teed t
garde: a by all 3 a ew
For testimonials, — and prices (ride and tree by
Mr. Ha
post),
RS,” o whic to serati large
Gar-
Road. |
ND 8 CLOTHS, HAY ROPES
MARQUEES and TENTS; NETTING,
fan fruit trees; SCAFFOLD ——
IND and SASH LINES, t Circina!
—— cheaper OUS M at any h ho pase
ex. H E" R lU Es y
—— PATENT HAYMAKER, to which was.
dec e First Prize of the Royal Agricultural Society of
England " ‘the last contested trial.
celebrated STAMFC yg? HORSE RAKE has lately been
perm ved, and has obtained 26 Prizes at competitive
x
SON'S
ING AND REAPING MACHINES are performing their
work most satisfactorily, and fally amity ‘publie expectation,
cutting about 10 acres per day, at a cost of 9d. y
3 for the above machines should be dde nce to.
D & CHANDLER, Salford, Manchester.
Branc h Establishment, South John Street, we
bl it o: SER
B N EDGINGTON eee gs the
MM Ta Ai that they can be Pre on the-
best terms with RICK CLOTHS, with Poles
Early application should be made for SECOND-HAND RICK.
CLOTHS. MARQUEES, TENIS; — FLAGS. A great variety
of Marquees and Tents may be seen erected on the
A quantity of SECOND HAN D TENTS from t i
greai eatly re redu uc oed price. An Illustrated Catalogue sent La fre
32
Charing Cross,
3 Wetahlict
|
{
| BENJAMIN EDGINGTON, 2 2,1 Duke Street, London 1 4 S. E.
| E DL AK E D N99
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS, Horum, M
HAY MAC
Small size, No. 1 .. £10 |
— — ev $ se oe
These Machines bere and d
can — oily understood — a iu. —.—
gained several pri
212
parts, and
e per have
zes at the — 9 M ultural Society's Shows:
— 4
No. $4 . £6 T^ oe 27 1
WED * & Denny’ s Horse Rakes are 7 on the rud
pm combhaing great strength and lightness. Free to all
the ise Railway Stations.
| WEDi & Denpy, Union Foundry, Hornchurch, Essex.
Stand No. 30.—ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S SHOW AT WARWICK, July, 1859.
SAMUELSON,
RITE SEIT ENGINEER MA
CAN vd aeu WEST, LONDON; WORKS—BANBURY, OXON;
ihe . of A
76.
1e
culturists to his
— DOUBLE-ACTION HAY-
KER E 131. 135.).
This Machine i is gual
RAKES.
No. 3, xem width, 7 feet
No. 4,
8.
LSON'S IMPROVED HORSE
TERM 8 0
anteed against break -
6ins. £7 10 0
0
8 ` REAPING
with aide dive; in sheaf EE no
rakers or gatherers), price 327. 10s. at the
834l. in London.
d ds BOYD'S PATENT
WET as well as dry Grass,
Al. 178. Gd. to 131. 138.
SAMUELSON'S
ment for separatin
g the dirt
CHINES. Theonly Lot hajar siin
and small chippings from t
SAMUELSON'S PRIZE CHAFF CUTTERS, MEA
scription ; also HARROWS, FIELD ROLLERS, 'CLOD CRU:
The above may be inspected at MR. SAMUELSON'S stand, No.
LISTS may W obtained, or at the
Works, Banbury, Oxon; London Warehouse, 76, Cannon Street, West.
lean and
aan aes and food-preparing I
AND CHINIST,
PATENT PRIZE GARDENER'S my tne ACTION TURNIP CUTTER, with the new Patent improve—
useful pieces.
P
t the W: L qr
, , where CATALOGUES and PRICE
Y supplied +
tly, * enough —
ge An 3 n. 57 — at — for
n d e — and the price good. Our
qe very fast; within the pas — few years it
— ee ‘but the mand kei pace we it, and perhaps
we have at Chichester as a market for verything
— the south of En; ge out of London. On Wedn:
e had our ann ool fair, and owing to prices having be
puta a agens high, 1 — was checked for a time, Bae even-
a good many lots were bought at ree bl ce
prices. The Duke of 3 sold See ss oy pe
t
en
could get our suspected friends bound over to keep the
peace for six n to come, and then we could keep a look-out
for them again. G. S.
Not ices to Correspondents.
Biacks TN WRHEAT: Cefn-cettim. You cannot explain these
blacks on any chemical theo hey are n: ro Wheat (i. e.,
starch, gl „ &c.) minus water owing e dry season!
pd. are the — ran of s true I2 i : life,
my farm abounded with applied agrieu
a only one dressing, and at vation di of the year,
and scarcely a Nettle is now to Ofcourse it kills um
fe
e and most effect
pted,”
ADDRESS: THE MANAGERS, ST. PANCRAS IRONWORKS.
Tue St. Pancras Inox Won
OLD
IRON
Obtained
ST. PANCRAS
TRON
The improvement Le o — omms 1:
K it in its position, confine the bars to short bearings, prev
M a ien — he HURDLE.
. PANCRAS CHURCH,
x: Sr. PANCRAS AS ROAD, LONDON.
co
ied iip Medal
HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.
of the Royal
HURDLES.
Agricultural Society.
j
NH and RIGIDITY to t
PROFESSOR VARNELL'S
being strained, and give more than
MANGERS AND STABLE FITTINGS,
(LAR ERING ENGINES,
à BEE-HIVES AND PAIL MACHINES, CONSERVATORY PUMPS, and
« — M m 8 c: ON OF 1855. ETUR SYRINGES, —.— all the latest improvements,
1 _ | manufactured only by the Paten
EIGHEOUR s — e — — RICHARD RE — —4 beris: cS PICCADILLY, LONDON.
PREN Descri with drawings sent post free. POR
NO WATER COEDBRS in the easiest way is by — 1 wit kn 1
— FLEXIBLE TUBE. Brass Se Branches, “Ros s Trunks g Bags Wi QU. ARE Q
es ti ge » with Sil
05
B'S LOCKS, Fl IRE
RR ES, CASH AND ma y
i ed sent free. dU St. Paur
vm nes rri ; 16, Market
d Jets, Gar
Price pro» to JAMES SHEATH.& Co.,
and India X ET ‘Factory, 35, Old Street Road,
e best articles AR 5
— TAUT Ti 885, RIPE 5
ANNED NETTING fer ‘Protecting’ zh above
yes Ps. po ight, Birds, &c.; 2 yards wide, 34. Le a
yard, or 100 yards, 20s. Gan be had in any quantity of EAT
a Dicas 6 M 7, Crooked Lane. London Bri idas. |
will receive prompt NNED NEITING, at Raven Proms.
Theirnewly-arranged CATALOGUE square yards, 10s. ; 500 yards, 248. quantity of good
«with Drawings and Prices, sent on dares à two ro Bamps.. fede hand Rick Cloth for Sale, Cheap, ai pos and only PRY SONS
Acests.—Liverpool: James CUTH 12 ayten Square. | once used, Samples sent free.—Address FREDERICK EDGINGTON, . FRY AND , MANUFACTURERS
Manchester: W. Wises, | 50, "King Stre Thom: E Old Kent Road, London, S. E. Liebig, the celebrated Chemis at
i —— H. m i
D NETIING, for the Protection of Fruit sustenance, 18 invigoration ot the be bile, and the
Trees 5 Frost, Blight, and Birds; also, for the | mendation of Cocoa and Chocolate cin growth,
security of fresh sown seeds, E 1d. per square yard ; 200 yards, fhe following Nas :— Caffeine aud ear bo zecom-
12s.; 500 yards, 25s. ; Scrim Canvas, for wall fruit; Garden | only about 29 per cent., whilst Theoh Theine
ats.—At EDGINGTON & Co's., eer a ag BOM Kent Ri, Coco: S contains upwards of 35 per c
WU PU RA OX AMNES E
3 AND ONDYS PATENT PURE CQ i.
L rud ERES. um pee MR St. ES INGA NCENTR,
Ro: 3E. Vii d
ind are |
5 Ai TS.—A mon Stratagem for taking RATS Report vot Dr. "Lotheby, "City. Officer of d
by wholesale, ‘without 3 POISON or TRAPS. —Ships, Mills, | the Lancet Commission, and oth hore, Six Quart Sam;
Stabl Era War armsteads, and free to auy Railway for 3s. 6d.— Sold by the Trade,
1 this — — —.— A wholesale, 63, King William
cleared at — ji
AYNOR COOKE’S ted PRIZE | nun nay bo, in oue single night. ci
warran numerous they may be, in one single Printed directions SURE WATE D. ner M
S PRUNING - Were KNIVES, SCISSORS, do — | how to M aa genis the whole lot alive, but powerless to pie sna Te oiia peu naru of a perfet
Sold, b all £e ctable Nurserym d Seed Me move, sent free by post for 12 penny stamps.—Direct FISHER & OW Supp MÀ
the Pax 52 ee rehants Son, Publishers, Kingsland, London, N. E. Established 1847. ee ben BON a S FILTERS, by mt
—— To HORTICULTURISTS — — Nortce.—Appended to this invaluable Publication will be E vid "ise rer Bisse ye. rs im
ULTUR found, sixty raris, Farmers’, and Agricultural Recipes, the | ang 4450 € anerem s porfoetiy i —
Gauen PATENT CHRONOX ETRICAL rarest in the wor 25 À e E m “upwards E
mE RIZE M L, PARIS ARIS EXHIBITION 1855 & Co., 62, Fleet Street, Lo — EG. Se ee.
ETCALFE, BINGLEY, AND CO’S New Pattern nor E anim E
and Penetrating Tooth Brushes, Lac victa pir pm YSELF CM yy COUPELLE continue
Hair Brushes, improved Minen aba tat id ki qs p de * — " Y and interesting deli
10 20 3 90 100
III Gaui BEBE
of
clock of the best English
cue pos y)).
a e Perfumery for he Toilet. The Tooth Brushes pier thorodglly we reiting. in an unique ë 10 ‘of description peculiarly her own,
ometer, wherei RARE EHE ETE URII] | between the divisions of the Teeth and clean them most effec All persons rng hr dan f knowing themselves, or any friend u
and quicksilver mT Kn n A 10 il — hairs never come loose. M., B. and Co. are sole whom they are interested, must send a specimen of th
with, wr HHMI] | makers of the Dre and 5 and Orris Root Soaps d uer. wá sex and age, and ogy igs 13 18 penny p
own the temperature An A a t Aar i Í HET I eld in Tablets (bearing thei and address) at 6d. each ; and irected envelope, to Miss Commu
of the atmosphere on a 2 of METCALFE's celebrated Alkaline Tooth Powder, 2s. per box; oh, "Caste ‘street, Oxford Street, 93 and they will reci
Slip of paper, w when ll | IA | | Hil and of the New Bouquets.—Sole Establishment, 1308 and 131, w da nute detail of the talents, is tastos, ritu ad
e .öl [Dire bd ier wot om toes t, anim. | ling oe ene, wih many ss a
eer ec ee (gf if MIL a TTT EA a
valuable record 5 — Hear & Sow's Show Rooms contain a hm Mom assort- O YOU WANT —LUXURIANT HAR
Xemperature, with ‘all its 8 ment of Brass Bedsteads, suitable both for Home use and for E SKERS, &c.1—COUPELLE'S CRINUTRIAR à
Variations, | Tropics : rae Anat; ron Bed: ith Brass | gu i
Servants and elegantly Japanned ; Plain fo
very description of Wood Bedstead that is manu-
-—
of
1100 SON'S ILLUSTRATED € CATA. Ni
4 and P ta
|
iii ERE nn
M TI Ae
, UE con
as wellas of 150 differen! em tides CY d mena Porcine seek
ry s
„ as b;
e test can it b é distinguished from ey silver. À
known, Á— — has for a long seri à
occupied a distinguished place at the toilets of the so
ul plate chest, containing a set, guaranteed of first
and — s nobility — Bare: while the versa held.-
ho words Ronen
pnm.
APPIN Ie ue s er Works quality for finish and W as follows :—
ii I
show yard at Chester, | ||| NINE | free by post.—Hzar & Sox, Bedstead, Bedding, and Bedroom growing freely.”—H. Merry, Esq.
by one” of these instru. i 10 00 iih m UND BATHS AND e on
ments, to ‘hich sÀ DS, AND y More for *
te tho Society's % WiLLIAM S. Burton has SIX LARGE E IPS- bra s 1 opertis i restoring, Sensing, an
3 4 Vii Fe 8 to the SEPA ARATE DISPLAY of am S, beautifying t the hair, m prom AME th, as well as prevent
m : 100 T i Hil Baths, and Metallic Bedsteads, The stock of each is at onco the | ing åt falling of or turning P ken 18 li
E is the only instru- 10 %% TN IMP mp ndm ried eversubmitted to the — — lington Street, North, oit from the I
ent that registers tem- |g | me n prices propor vinis with those that have tended to | Wholesale and retail in bottlesat 3s. 6d., ôs., su 11s. ME
perature continuously P TETTE mars his establis mant essc distingashod in tis county. | Chemists ad Perfumers. Tia nao for ide end ROWS
na riton it dowa, ff e i Rm ME TIL. SXTHITE à
Orders received by W. H. Garwrrta "m LL Paro olen OI 0 I ther
TĪMAPPIN’S PRUNING mee v aa — mi Tn RFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR it yor milon 3 E compounded of oriental
lemons: Qi ins cnc Matti ci recen SILVER, introduced more than " ru
— WILLIA S. B N, when PLATED by the
Ee process of Co., is be RNA all y,
on the ve artic TAN to ster I ver that - imports earl.
APPIN’S : “SHILLING” R 5 8 8 g i i
F RAZORS Shave well 335 3 Sa 3 8 PE pE Pace 25 “Od. [^ "por. RS ^
MAPP 8 RAZORS Shave well for Three Lears. Bus S8 8 Bs a3 ———— o Govern.
E table for Hard or soft Beards,) 6 Sold by the Proprietors, and
M AEEINSSUPERIOR TABLE-ENIVES maintain |12 Table Forks 152/$ 5| 25 3 % T quom Sot Kingsland
eoe loose ho blades aro all o of the ip fend possibly | 12 Table Spoons .. ..| 1180 | 2 $0 | 3 0 0/310 | with a scorbutie eruption, ove
manufacture, every quality, being f Pores: Forks 1 100 1150 2 2 0/210 0| and spreading up
PPP LMETETREDBRGERUHES An
T s 110 0/118 0 HULJE by a frien
CUu e eee EO ittota" 0280 |018 9 |De o/13 0| which patoi hor dosten
010 6| 016 m js area
ESSERT KNIVES 1 E bowie, 9 80|0110 013 6| 015 | pot of Ointment, which e
5 ere | ra ES — 5 0 40 %% 5 0 0 6 0/0 7 6 her friends, — en
: E 803. ou. pose, m" 920|026|03 00539 suffering fellow creatures. Dr.
2 Do. — 180 "of Baga’ Torigs ool veel ors FRIEND and PILUL/E ANTISC
TEL ELECTROSILYER E rire 1 Bur or ah carver AL 40/1 76/212 o 18 0| wounds of every descri
: 1 BROTHERS, Manufacturers by Special Ap. 1Soup Ladle +10 36/0 59/0 7 010-8 0 Is. ; and 22s each.-—-Sold who
pointment to — i the only Sheffield make; p- 1 Su p Sifter 0 130 0 17 6 1 0 0 1 1 018 Banwicorr, at their Dispe
SUIS ho — London I LONDON pn gar Sifter -|0 40|0 49|0 5 910 8 6| London Houses; m by all res especta
ROOMS, 67 and 68, King William Street, London Bride Total lista elut in the United Kin and the = nies. . i
contain by far the largest STOCK of ELEOTRO-SILVERPLATB| Au 1 : „ AUE ic D
in the World, which is transmitted direct from their Manu- | che o Pen to be had sí ingly at the same prices. An oak AINS IN THE “BACK be
factory, Queen’s Cutlery Works, Sheff vw. co age e above w cA relative y en em. P- manga ie Indigestion, | ps
Fiddle Double Kings | waiters, oed, and coffee sets, cruct and liqueur framos, | lity, &e.—
Pattern, cks, &c., at 2 ices. 1242 | been long ELM qs as à . —
12 Table Forks, best quality £1 16 0 EU o Pantern. AX EM rege e oom 1 C say ki
2 Table Spoons, best quality 116 0 RTON'S ses of the ki EN
12 Dessert Forks, best quale, 1 7 0 3 06 0 22 ING IRONMONGERY S GENERAL he = tally, which, —— . E T
— Dessert Spoons, best i 11 : 20 0 94 fons of is Gee It contains upwards of 400 Dictee —.— Yin men einn, confusion,
ta Spoons, best quality 140 14 |Mousof- ited Stock of Electro and Sheffücl z eon ré
geh 8 tuli buyersto inspect ator Dies ire Britannia Metal goods, Dish Covers and 285 — d to oF 1 combined
their ue display, which, for beauty of design, tg die ves, Fenders, Marble Marg qur a Kitchen | they are ual) r salutary action
exqu 2 i and novelty, stands unrivalled. Their Clocks, s Table Cattery ey Tea Urna and Kettles, bile and acidi of the — they prevent 4
eng va Ca ine ee ae poris continually receiving addition o f f and Brass pamti sed and d Tost Wi Turnery „ Tron? thon of stone —— establish the healthy fanon a ags
x receipt of 12 stamps.—MAPPIN | of P. angings, &c., with Lists) o —Prie 2s. 94,, 4s. 6d. 115, on i
— — 67 pes 68, William Street, London 1 B of Prices and Plans A 16 large Sh rgans, e As. 1fd., 28. 94d., 4s. 6d.,
rid Stre ow Rooms at * Oxford | thr dors, or sent free
Manufactory, Queen's Cutlery Works, Shetfield we | Smet d La 2 and 8, Nowm wma So and4, 5, and 6, Perry's | ponat - postare "stamps 3 Bobs, 1%
Esta Street, Oxford Street.
Jorr 9, 1859.] . „THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. £81
J r ARDENERS’ ROYAL BENEVOLENT INS I.] meritorious cultivators; the first of these opera-
ORTIC ULTUBAL SOCIETY. pe N. At a General Meeting of the Members of this | pe
F ENTR: E GARD uncil have - 7 I eot, Adalat, T^ Ge laetior Son of There Pen. | alone; and the second having amounted to con-
oh ,
Abd that de Gate leading pt S — the following wes the result of the ballot :— sie Revie ks = 20 0001. Ner r was there any
of Devonshire os d “CANDIDATES. activity in t
— entrano rie atq ta ee 901 Gate, imme- ; E — ERATE arn of o; eration, so Mur the means ati “the
Ser S (Names. rio. ers disposal of the Society were cul nt. But when
MEET or THE Fruit Commitrre.—Notice is her 5 eby zn Eleventh 78 554 the w orld: forsook the s for other
for the next three | 117 ze ++ „ Eleventh |/* f convenient access, income rapidl
given, that DM Meetings of this Committee | becriber F years) Been. 6 515 | places of more co n , pidly
at3 — ES exc od renes ein gp gs ai 2 Wasson Pre (a aera d 4 Sixth — us declined, and with income the power to rendér
E i ber 5 year Sixth |68| 41 ie servi 3
TUESDAY, = * — Aveusr 9, irem Macraszom (usc ers Bear Cixth 7 49 | Public services as formerly. A great opportunity
UESDAY, —— R Fourth 70 161 | now presents itself of recovering the lost income
eta Guinea will be | 7|MARGA er MITCHINSON Cusband sub- u| 135 and very largely increasing it. There e
—.— sing v e SE SEEDLING PEACH or NEC- 7 years) N 72 tes possible doubt that a magni ent garden, such as
TA — if found to possess sufficient merit. Tu ruit should 3 s| Thira 71 386 it is proposed to construct at Kensi: Gore,
On Be een : e S ld be thronged daily by crowds of no
ze OCO) 2
„ On September 2) GRAPE; a Prize of One Guinea will also | 1 * eu read Pacohd 65 90 eager to exci hange e the dirty streets of Lo ndon
at this Meeting be given for the best dish of SEEDLING 130 WII BMITH Second |82 21 place where they
E Me: to be ling or o * ETT A Dove bee subscribed i| Second |00| $53 garden, without the i ineonv 'enient intrusion of het
nk forms to
may be XN Beate apy ie $us i 155 Bai. 1 RTA (a Subscriber 5 Fears). 3
den, SEIS —— 0 Horticaltural Society VOU" Lee Fume s s. ss Fist 67... | absolutely public. Its contiguity to d —
The Meeting then declared MARIA be J ulation of au ndon
add ved sof packages e im esum | together poe —— facility ^. :
pA pn m |. e 28 Nive di js it ene tH W VEL BEN CT F 1859.— Azucena, and cast by yr de North of Lon don Railway, Ek
b respec f A — 1
bo delivered Deforo r on Che repe : Dentonia, Belinda, Tr te oe, White, Il er is etl eted t 25 cg ed to bacc 2
e Eleanor, G x f the proposed garden, renders the situation
At a meeting held in the rooms of the Society of Arts, | Comet, consp: icua, S OR ai Dee 0 prop 3
on Tuesd: ay, J June 21, the following gentlemen were ele ected Mathilde, alfa Maclean, Nro — AE mi pape s EE “vicinity o ot E. quan d
: : T a is e a wr.
Ils, n. Highbury | G. F. Wilson, Esq., Belmont, 5 ] ec rincess es atanella,
Pas W iy Wet im — * e i : E Nen eposni gates on ordinary pon j a as on days
b axon oar
Wrest, Glas — 2 e, North Hul, Aden
e. | specially d npart for great exhibitions or other
1
A ballot took place for the undermentioned plants, which were ccasions of unusual im mportance, that the income
i s
3 q^ € by the following Fellows,v y ^| A contemplate will be derived, and that mu tof
inus fi petl, 7 Plants. cM [T : læ eine — — Rosali onde, qo ; dera s be so large, especially while the Gardena
Mr, Win. Cotterell | al. Fisher gots rS end Souvenir d a fanmer, Liandre, Mrs enjoys the high privilege of being the favourite
Rolle Sn T iré Kos th, Marie Itougiere, | Jo, 8h p ge ol, being
pecans as Mind. oestel Ju h, jun Een C hem 5 em P is ber Te site T 70 resort of oue beloved i and her Royal
nus Regeliana, 9 Plants. 21 Applicants. Yorben or selections of any 1 are | family, to reduce all such questions as
Capt. W. J. Lloyd, Esq. ^ | Rev.T. Stainforth a gre plants rer providing: the mM now demanded, to insignifi-
mt AES 1405 Parey, Bag pao bo ga — — That income again n possessed, new plants
ease : Tilnable for heir hatdinens. beant d utility,
13 Plants. 31 Applicants. valuable for 755 ardiness, beauty, an
r. W. E" C Ac Gladaton c, Esq. al of Scarborough The e ME viene merely ornamental, or important as addi
Fan Ours 2 Ws Henbury, E Mr Veatch, jun. TURDAY, JULY 9 to our dessert, our kitchen 8, or even our
— x — — at — PREPRE es. 3 seriis retourocsmayberapidly introduced and
C. D. Warner, - MEETINGS FÓR THE FOLLOWING WEEK, TEM, amo ng the Fellow. iety.
Pinus Brutia, 17 Plants, 28 Applicants. Torspar, July 12 e ig $ Commitee The world contains many a ix aich ond
Capt Pente d | iei Kes. LI ^ UE Ini Bae oec ri . pe eia ble e li ober bud ye
Mr. J. R. Challico | Dr. Henderson | Mr. J. Shaw Iw another column wan be found a ver 7 full |r sufficient. means ab its
PEN r nt Sin. ^ 5 report of the MEETING OF THE HORTICULTURAL | Somat the Horticultural Society will know how
à W. 5.5 | Yady C. We esley |Soctery last Thursday, assembled for the 3 to penetrate such regions, and carry off whatever
op of determining whether they would authorise the | deserves to be introduc: ed.
lants. 53 Applica € | t i
wood, Esq. | Sir F. Shuckburgh Council to proceed with the plan of wired a new
Hughes, cu de irem — rden in the cent f
B gard re of the quadra angle at| luminous — are e infested groun nd the hime — from the 9
Slow o'er the twilight sands, or leafy walks, wit h Fun of Boutin on the eastern side, "d
With gloomy dignity Dictamma stal The ample of manifest luminosity that are and exceedingly well directed; they
Routeur has com 5 ourselves is recorded in the enter "the park by e and unpretending
à volume of the Gardeners’ Seg for 1845.|gates and lodges. There c alaa el other ap-
he phenomenon by - ying — n w, x fücer, informed proaches from different e which unite i:
aan Loc ae plant emi emits - inflammable air he Royal Asiatic So iot x ; hat a plant —— . — —— d gta ps = lodges enit
: i r e ot
ee * t had been aes by a reach the mansion by rising ground on either ded
rd : h o e
—— — ascribed to it % seek shelter at night und K
: ^ ght under a mass of rock of gravel 400 fee 1
— be — very iiie e in the jungle, had been astonished at seeing a blaze med 3 180 ow —— ches e nim "i viti;
little volatile oil; althong hit may be analogous t 10 of phosphoric light 55 ffused “over all the Grass The park is bounded on the nort —
that spoken of in t o Tub 8 in the vicinity ” “(see ard. Chron., 1845, p. 243). | woods and the beautifully fern, village er
Bh di ctn eee Fungi indi A piece of the root, or tutis was sent home by | Warden, which at this period of the season is a scene of
luminous in cho dark; u od n that M Be ilk x General Curren, and was found, although dead, h interest and attracti tof theg
Acer. We again qu n Balf E to become luminous after being wetted. Having | masses of flowering shrubs, creepers, and other beau-
ee ee een .; |been enabled to examine this plant we found t z tiful plants with which its tastefully omamented
with all the vi cottages are so profusely decorated, . a 8
à e the cleanliness and comfort which seem:
whole, Near here is also his lordsbip's — aa
i ith its handsome curvilinear con-
=|
>
©
85
B
g
B
'e
LI
gg
LÀ
"d
E
B
qi
.
5
dq
8
yaz, ; gne
of Amboyna; and Agaricus noctilucens, in Man: x x »
"The ; pecie e colour, ‘ e thir dofi 1 deti be ed wood, but in a piece of a livened with birds of fine plumage, some disporting on
jer p ie ow ugh dry, appe spear and to — arii a the waters of the lake or soaring over hend, others
the : ders R . | ing or congregating at will, all united in forming
— c of the Olive- 8 (Agaricus olearius) ke 3 Bee x Wan Ey ap Ee: 8 a scene of the most — kind—a paradise nom
continued white light wit intinlatio; with which he has lately favoured us pup A alas! Mi mae wildern
when plant ai o ite
: livit 3 is a noble of white freestone in the
* ; has blui c caused b Fungi. S ground. n whic. Ene »
he vile plant of 46 len Gardner gives out at | 22 ile. rhizomes were f fond lud bean ge and conned ice he the roofs af the
osphorescent li at | T° n up, an exceedin effect,
simnila^ to that PERDU by the Ai fire-flies,| Andropogons and other rhizomatous Grasses = — ic, ad hae an facade of p pend
— 2 ue — h i F is % These rhizomes,” he adds, thus exposed | nd theve — feet; o aces and excellent stable
t is called Probably for weeks or months to the action buildings cuta Sox eastern end, and hidden
rer dio. tee ter tae of Vili 2 Netividnde, Flor de | of soaking — and heavy dem. alter-|by plantations from de ain portion of ‘the boil
0 met A i with hoi rn hare 5 would | — carriage drive being diverted by eee
—: describes two species of A. egin to decay, or e e ave become im — Ht e to giv IUe
near the Swan River, which emit * most preme with min te luminous and in that state, entrance, front of this superb residens, f
light. They grow a emp n franks of | When pad bene ae m the dark. This for the late Samuel Whitbread, Esq. M. Wen W
om such as Baria N xim paper, inia i sine 3 was led to draw from General 1796-7, ^ by Hollan de who has been M abet
Pen *
— intensi as — — dried trae e of luminosity.” superbly furnished
T —— — EY ticed Bu eee MN upon the authority of the ed or — and fue ite walls he
by Mr. Dauuxoxp in — on ara trunk of a late Que with many admirable paintings j 85
dead E dent The r surface Indian — 4 are occasio pe luminous by night best masters; and over the doors 9 bias
of the — nearly black, while the central during the rainy season we do nof — principal apartments are animals in Gin, he
r d the > gills v ere milk-white, thè stipe | stand that their phosphorescence is consequent on | by Garrard and paintings of live gamie by we
— T —— pilons. aoig udo f dit Mall land rooms and Horarios we svat
e species wen le ch being the state of this curious question, | "^ verin hae Aig inches in
for the phosphorescence which they display. These we Concur with our correspondents in thinkin northern side; the former portage Aia
plants v in dark cav y display. — "wi 4 6 inches in wi width, and i i
coal | that the attention of those who dwell in gardens and 19 feet " materially to the 007
3 be i och mÀ the subject, and we shall hope —— Sein id whieh a do np room; the T
FP feet long by 17 feot 9 inches in width, and.
tains in handsome cases a well chos eB
— | 2 vars d
the spawn S 5 | t — a M
of the Trufle —— aby Abk Po à - -y oad books E: the
are instances of luminosity in living icem TuS ini " present, worth 5
disap wit Me Dim living Fi gi, which | T ,maguitont estate, containing as i it does the either side are portraits of his clerks
2 in plants in A atate of Miren, bora principal residence of William H sic 8 iy the | Street cer d s — . e. mar
in Henry Whit r „south sid u wide,
sa p TT Xr half-decayed Pota : lies south-east of TEA and is intersected iy the | x oa en the largest is 43 feet long, 23 fet tod by
ULA made best vation D on "th light | Leicester and Hit r 11 miles in EE e| and "ee adt = doe ce Its walls ve ‘portraits
given oat by eee subtorranom, Bye property a an a Heng Railway u pya s through th | some exquisite paintings, an 40 fall 1 ;
ro roe Weg thi EL TUNE station in ilie of the Le Samuel e L aa -- 25
nE Cap fus UTER set — hos ben | pro — ty to e park, something less than a mile from | There are Pied i à
There is als a station at Biggleswade, one hand a ey beantif i but simpl
— Ti
e| Bedford by road, over the high i
` E V ground, the distance is | o a superb sittin . and :
D obtal miles; by this rout some exquisite views are Sgt come ae? wine bamn — ;
A +h A: im! a
beauties of its broad and fertile plain, enriched and mansion Er area of mo dr
| Lg as it is by the sluggish waters of the Ous portion of th Dam d on [tha north side is divi in 400 fet in
Se oe hak ud — an area aeres of exi Kell park by a handsome open balusí e, sup
mto irregular character, — adorned | length, having elegant iron gates Y ither si
with noble timber in well disposed gr - masses, | MAC colossal urns, and E oh on i, round i
ES Moor points are well brought with m many | upright Cypress. The her d nns ES ph the
e emarkable exa
and the xygen of air, that is to say, arc Weeping Bi ad X fine trees. An admirable speci- | enclosed by a sunken wall o od
;giving tion, is an object of very great beauty; it is 40 feet 1 in 150 feet, in which — is a fall
TH
asd
Juxx 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
583
Ladies ! good temper, neatness, sense, space of 190 feet i
of the house was earthed up after — n " ^ - : pace o eet in circumference. A Maiden II.
I lbeck, -— É— then just been completed. That r- d bere es hee | tree is also a very conspicuous object in this part of the
portion however t the bu ilding * was carried out His — ears stood bolt — quee — T — k been d
or of the original, inasmuch as an is brilliant eye — shining nose uarch, $ ilver and other — a Car m S E
fr stylo far superior | —— by Maltese vases, War biak: Sa were k haon = — straight, and a Hickory are objec " bm edis coer ree
— . posed, is run along the front of the He had the funniest little gait, some consider able distance afi - nies e the walk
iking its entire length at some little dista"ce With one foot up and three feet diverges to the right, and crosses one of the broad
bai in z . upright wall being (n Tte caine, gan gal x drives lending to the lake, t "Wo t of the
from ng yo u X > "do Y
carried up to the height of the lower w s »m N. fac A enl when you told him — — on the right of which is the parish
ground is bevelled to within 3 feet of the office floors. Of — misdeeds, but when you praised h chure h, a beautiful structure 3 it contains a memento
‘ait b too, 4 feet wide and having a hand- His countenance quite said you gemi) him," to Dilly, the bookseller, who tt close to the village,
A light — 1 — ot | ~ ass, S. W., 1809. and whose guest the great lexicographer, Dr. Johnson,
Ti doce mi the emi] seme i| ^ ipsa qe dant te SEAN Sail ea LE.
1 honoured in the silent dust. A 1
screen: from observation the lower or office. win: Are = bel
dows, without rendering th Cured hes aa y of
— a Welbeck. But in all other matters of — 2 ee eee — lor unfortunate Admiral
M: Mr. ues notwithstanding + his great fame as Your kindest Indy's tend — : ae 3
hiteet, fail as signally as ashe had do € 2 pee 8 love of Pi Patick Justice
— — nem in a wie His loving form yo I ae édttelofühe Bi, Tr
i i ildi i in a wi i form you there . trace. e Blue,
d h, — m ig vue from the lower portion Drink a t this — humbly Fell a Martyr to
— ted b. with With him in matchless cons Political ——
ke an pn balustrade fence, surmoun! i cr . 8 AAS 1806, me Maroh 14th, in: the year is.
a terrace, ) walk in front tico, and on which the were
= metho very bece the building at the rate of | ne group of tare an forming a 0 to the ES €
* 30 fest. "he long lin ne of formerly aren iid p a produc d to a distance of 770 feet; it » 14503 :
| 15 fee idt} ficer.”
Nog been replaced, at — 2 P andar ard on edestals on ‘ithe side during its entire length; a 4| The kitchen gar ** mething more than
Portugal Laure rels, having ack 1 — — ih] Rhodo- fing gure of Samp etos this — te, E 6 acres of —€— land. ms varied character, but well
ground is formally M quoq f — in shrubs and from which it "takes it ame; it is v ed By age ed for nd vegetable culture. There is also
dendrons and other dwarf gro romps *» introduced, and masses of Tantel "- oder evergreen ire ps trees, | a rebard es considerable size in close proximity,
i very ae elu — mh lowers being introduce and thor céliunt views Seon: i ilis mansion ig A a
Ue 8 ough th his s walk in nto s des avon x cone eee - s of fine fruit. The entra s b
The whole of the vases are » filled in the summer length. From Sampson’s alk too other | excellent ania quia Pp t Muse ii nay drive Te m
"A "ip Rs l centre of the garden; 2 bees are inclosed by brick
Sit, There ie broad ^w at — pua € te a | through Dee. — ern Resi contain walls, peas ^ — periods have — pax vera
2 some remarkable exam of fine trees, ne in with bus Cherry, Peac
— " mms is — sc her cem — particular merits attention—a Douglas Fir, which the trees, remarkable siis for health and the 3
"dn at either end are some pa —— specimens e ‘planted paoes, ten qualit the fruit the wie have produced.
of Gediirs of Leban “Magnolias, de. On the upper 25 years ago, it is now an admirable specimen, more | Within the last 0 5 wes the southern aspect of the
G má : f than 40 feet in eight, an t the trunk girths over | south wall of this garden has been three times planted
an admirable 22 of Arbutus, most in dien at all | 22 - 2s Groumférenoe i16 1 ‘walk, cloth _ with | with Peach trees, and the middle planting on a border
le- stesse; MEE especially so in the Mr Cut n of new soil and ee a an oa ee ihe these
—— i to aded with thet eir 2 Süd been a ved, There are cc some noble specimens of trees rapidly covered the space assigned t m, and
Strawberry fruit The view from (his front is a very Larch, S = uce, and Siva Firs, and the whole os unds | were for years the udmintion x all Sais — but
specimen ol — — fore eground are well grouped a massed wit evergreen shrubs, | the seasons have proved t h for them, and they
phó m 1 1 wit y others, w. ‘hich will in succession
. D ttl E et Deodars and 5 8 which TT dy begin most likely share the same fate. Had this wall been
vill, or repose th le e ift- |" an air of considerable gra ZA he ground covered witli nee when the new borders were formed,
at wil or m * ma di e the aia ag ipm. considerably from either end of the mansion, at there can be but little doubt that the trees would
with its irregular and beautiful outline, a richly clothed the eas d of which there is a priv poa oe pe — hers in first-rate condition ‘at this day ; all ex-
verdant i 1 mi , adding materially | , 3 ws rem mods He p ur Sir Francis Chantrey, som penses, too, of canvas or other spring covering, with
variety and thing more than 3 s ago. It is of. consideratio the diiy ccm te 2 z = on, wou x have been
contrast, but also Ra „ Aio dci. arose this a and ricerche peo and has the advantage | g aved— hich ina s s of years oul d go far
ai. DE wilbéti the wv ibl mc M of a game fence — Until lately it contained E
ai bel ing reflected by the conservatory of some consider wr size, which was
beau
ong amseping 8
in som
golgan, in
here obs: serve, that in a w r erection
in posi-
nected with the mansion by a of this kind judicious! lanted with sorts a nd in
ieee con the whole of which was p so to obi 18
iei — v been swept away, and a
wood which FN pom P Agee e pre bein SSAA to the enstern end of the
which — are some adm irable M
as to comprise the most particular objects e dropping pe, here
alike of Ne and interest i - this delightful domain. objection ree plant h — e z n an ex — me: is South. ww. firm county,
The south o r garden en front the e mansion is an o objec t to sitting-rooms — 1 habited, and where tlie cer — Continous supply Peaches or more e than
on either side, with their — columns surmounted by | ® ment M enge en x eru body ri rak E = for mem ere after that „period. e tm Drop
pen balus - mam have an admirable effect, The : ~ no — or
— adorned by some excellent fresco plants + Repton has la qm as P um axiom | Pines of whatever excellence could for a moment be
2 raised up to; at Suc is vau] add ‘to poor soya A — with them. The n walks are wide and
Leere d d of — lower or office windows, and interior docu. ee ark e external ora rtainly com p eve sand, which binds well, and is firm to
their tops are secured and screened by tread on, and they are easily kept in order. In the centre
the same colour as ma pavement. There i is a ow an ad pe be A questio pare gg M pretty somes m | oy e i :
in front to represent a terrace, which is surmounted by | } S VM NM do Tb e gebiton | standard Apple trees on eit!
vases filled with flowering plants. Unfortunately the 8 MA rule thus so ru M ^ The whole of | which roduce :
— " n raised | to „ Sat, and at the period af my —Hibstone Pippi
eeping and man: e period of my
E a — at once the Mw 5 visit all was gay bi Aowering Rot a rial des — — Tw — —
present, and eigen te ee of this mag - traversing walks om Posting onward by af the
residences
structure 51
26 feet high. The entrance is pre to the
boudoir, an — — that lessons a very material} j
ing immediate
E
2
^
e
5
E
H
et
8 8
$5
en
arres — — on the potete ite which produce
— the e ve view =the ot — oe i arre with ite quantities of fine fruit.“ It many ede d since
ter "T€ iri — L — ee ee outline rg noble paar — system not m dh of culture i in "these gardens me
that |! its pag frontage and beautiful wings, with p — e XS g to e. 0
to
t deae ix
E
t be fo: Y bu
rm so admira- mo:
: wem e monument sim of the genius of Holland and
Ei be No certain | m mco munificence of the great Mr. Whitbread. |? = bw phe esta = © instead
ee e walk leads on sni through a consi — dell, "me :
3 «md gore. 8 a —. by, the excavations * oi by the earthworks eoe can 2 "rud y E a of the the
nt, | Pound the mansion, and near the large mass sof stable whole — th, 4. feet in width -— 3 feet i “depth x
nt angles! haildiags partially hi iden r^ planting, and under the | a: 2 id im the bot ud in depth; a
; 2 qual Aproae line ca hich the eastern entrance passes "ide beca
and * of equal "P R ied , E asl: e vo-purté of its
Tg allo Ni the | qu this instance, however, of a much nobler character than | hatt decays
Planted with Rhododendrons and The, original, — W provided on the
other forms warf evergreen shrubs, some sim le | bridge $ for ‘effectually out the walks ana|?
M ERE E in the angles made by * | grounds underneath. Beyond the bridge ‘the ground i is |
ide circular t E
wings at either end. There is in addition at by common Laurels trained as standards ; they we were
end a fountain by Rowley, an and dea a m planted some. 95 years mats with a - to a
- e of a represen nge
Tp Uu t cx pe pu E =. —
f the late Lad — Laurel; t are, however, trained too flatly to fe has been carried on x ao
.. bread, and having an inscription on two inset Whit de effective, A proper model would be the wu ost successful result, riot. oo in secu
pen ees late o Mr. Sa uel Whitb follows chaste, exquisite . in ed Y rystal Palace, or 1 » — oes e eee
i Boney was plain, = t th : unrivalled specimens of stan ted Holli At the entrance of the ens ores ew od
E 80 — Mae uno T she raised stone beds of the nd Terrace at Chat row of Biga n mra cg he 1 saw th — last t E "wy
m P M » ga of this pe of turf there having stood th» scverity of the season, whilst t n bere a ificent
coats, fi Portugal Lanrel which eov s Basen at Arundel ba ad been destroyed during that
n permanently improving the character of beautifully shaped ? jam not sure, but I should rather
On the south portion of the gandon there i isa
s iss SAT tures, consisti 3 vhi een-
on
rang
house an ineries ; two o
which
hades of
rouill n
i glowing sl
| rather ate. Then am ee
of the old Roses ca t it in
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
think, that it was not exhibited N season, as pe blooms |
or T
[Jury 9, 1839
Horticultural Society,
A Special General Mee
Se tat
2 "s vpoon with double N. bets in the interior, |
and h dept
which i
an improvement upon La * ine ; enn Knorr is no
equalled in its shade of colour, deep | rose, and out
ttom
.
e
soil nd the a
They have broken ies w ell, and the earliest house
—
ix da most beat on Thursda
held in the Rooms of is es
4
misionera of ie
Horticultura]
pu
e, for the
Horticultural
ty’s
asing tot the
of ground a at Kensington
— ing
ore important epe of the S
"hee
and
of a better “quality t been brem for petals—light shade ; , Mada me Vidot is far ina — =
Mp The arai ere init od Es
graphs a and pla n Open M
entranees
has
several years past. Rs "the entrance to the flesh ;
e are two inclosed squares in which a Cucumber Karr is "nor o UE . 8
ce Leon, 1. Su. Rag Nes Serd Palmer-
ston, and Jul s Margottin are not tok Roses, and yet
they are not ‘equalled i in their e nies shades. Ido
e ne y Roses are not superior
tis because they are pro-
are nof strong shoots
1 ge. eM ol at a Fi
t
2cessary !
During ao visits to this Beastial pe i
1 that +}
ie cy reflecti ing much credit o nM Serogie, the | | pagated to ‘that extent x
The Right Hon. the Earl of D.
cu, g ucie, V. B^ Eu the
Pre s to the commencement
flowing Sein t was circulated
affording an oe bane of M
to feria they had been specially
e m:
son lett
Me ter in reference
OF
ARDEN A
gota
L Perth r bade whose mana e K for
of sear n s has constant ly been A rh hd of favourable | | become more plentifu ul they begin
ntati on. JD. M I es seen UE ‘of
zason n bloom, but I
when they
their apy
represen the ne
| canno
Home Correspondence in as
h of G m Sees Isabella d Roses pow ei
e 18, thes ese are g (ont south,
e 23d June), even fo r the T „par rticularly
the
| scale with great advantage.
N C OPOSED
Society h ase thought
ov
NSIN
The Council ot the Horticultural
it desirable to "a
ociety might
their views for
96 nn v1
ihe fi V.
h +}
the
The s roceed to
a: ure, in the pov hope
TEST
course
the course
Tha f
f
which the
I think the National ose ent Jet on the bot of
| pr ro-
uty to recommend
for lopt 1 f the Society, Will meet with
len
ing to be exceedin :
cured a dirty of. dem nts o called nationa
“a is es necessary to recur to the reasons w
lod th it
of Mes
derson ; some I worked on ihe Manetti on others on | | the iet my Roses are in s fi beanty, J eui 6, — it v "will
the common Briar; one of t 0
x E 77
ye ery vigorons | N
a | to continue the annual exhibitions. at 9 55
dese
T
TL 1
ich . veri pena. to:
laterale to break a ne | |
p the prin cipal | shoots, every o Cov VETS, for Vi dne 5.— ins rof your readers
ed zinc 5 for covering "Vine borders? If s
svato expand fredly. Barly this spring I pruned the spars | vin they sa if it answers the purpose or if wood
e better? What is the price ‘of zine per
to six or eight eyes; the plant began to grow freely in | ape "yard ? biis — x its should a person
February, and in March showed 29 splendid blooms. | | wh — have are recommended
m t
0,
n | for the erences on
the mo:
1225 Dean ary advantage of the aes $
thei sof usefulness as a scientific body woul
sai ae if they could obtain sufficient s
ane, seed » j
nmediate ne
eating for such a arem n, the attention of the
Council was natura ally attracted to the finely situated
l by the
eg ht ey es did
wha
m, but after they had
show bloo:
a 5 feet T pinched off = points, and at the p c-
Vas ie the laterals are siga pen
5 y y J
ndia Wa
either
ngth h nae thickness should they be, and ommissioners for the Exhibi-
made a growth of —.— sed be painted with mineral paint, or hot gas- | tion o f 1851, out of the surplus proc d of that Exhi-
tar? bi tion; and it appe eared to. them the grant by e
ah Pate Win e 3 1 23! t
Th “have 1 ee at 3
juri here, are eerie
back to v main as Lr anri of young wa
d ills e but
would be strietly ge with, d
even se largely to promote the means of enco |
Art and Sc cience generally, the furtherance of which |
their food is merely
known
of procuring Hee
USES Sit of
this Perh
foe a Sone ilarly treated has also produced an Mr. W. nowledge on the subject is so
excellent show of blooms, but it does not eet to bear varied, would furnish the i information required, but
the prunin g so well as that on the Manetti stock, | have looked in vain through his „ Essays" for the habits
as the shoots are bre d vio di Po plants | of the wa ter rat. M.
oth in a warm green have also
| were 5 by Royal "Charter 2
The Council of fho Society, 58 T
made an 8 ion to the Commissioners of zy
order to ascertain hor Er would be d dase ed to regard
reques est fro ye vigo otk for Pane |
eir
— Can any one inform me if t
ned its seeds in
ich ^
igh, has one ra erect cone cd on — of its
e branches this year for the first time. F. H. S,
n
Bu udding Vines.—Having lately seen several articles
in your columns E to the . of the
nest specimen
Sí China Tos; 11 nea — covered s es
the residence of C. Perkins, Esq.,
Chester. le-Streo Durham; : the —.—
ktree 3
j
is request jn a liberal | à
re
"the ies nieder pem f is
spirit, and it will be the duty of the Council ro
before the pr
Com 80 88e ha have announced their readiness to e
UN x first to point out the -
bee af he
lt may be as well, however,
situation of the estate, and amore
r ‘of bi ooms and Vine, and conc qe ons drawn that — will
“grai ants will be m so —
l — . before your readers a system I Javë
adopti ave not seen alluded to in any
tee on She vehe mor in conversati — €
wlio saw it.
hlag t
Perkins's house. Although in the m
It vas a treat of no ordinary kind to be
dst- of collieries
M
portions. of their e Ses ‘the
acres for the rposes
how splendidly the Conifer and o
plants were grown ; "the m ‘manner in vi
her ornamental
practised it.
ich the 8 [ex a season
prietor ; fora private grower his coton of Roses
gat, The pleasure grounds ie thickly — with
the black Pine, one oi f the mos rid and Muscat Har — — Arm en
hardy plants for shelter in untry.|a med of — — en Ha i
John Harrison, Ns Bag ood Muscat, I was — the Black Museat
Bad e e a very rms Hamburgh should € — to — that t I may any
» I made i 2 ies and w he relative mer
that it had bee — — was a
c r next to the
PUE
eri ed
had found poe
there we
which, le
bad oan
a
I did not like rem
mad lint the
ine h. On the | à
—
i
* gis
foun ‘fal TC m in the them,
e —— m July T. LW o notion what
Spongiola ee the young shoot there wi
liv ving z point p ihe! ‘thts of a roo fine bunches of of Grapes as — be desired e then
the m» inne fom ei on a ved, and. also
m each side shoo
leading article of =
aa I think. — are coming rath
Black Tambergh of two years . — |
burgh, oving | with
rted. three buds, Seat as the time of | an
and | C
pon ion, forming a
determine to exec
mae or centre of this
er certain
place at the disposal Lof the Hoi
space Aus
with whi
This operatiou has been
where there are about. T
9n the shoots of vs
in a young
hard — the new gues = -: would appear that =
t yet surpass Vines, and —
1
think the old sor ris ar sed or even | Vinery
n
aice in large numbers at ‘he late Natio ven Tos se |
That many of the new Roses sent
theee years are a deci
infc
e this to be an
of die ‘Vine not eee
should fi ay 0
and if
,
the * Bow
: ave been able £o coll
very | advance in the prope
= of te pane If it -$ e Beon, n
Bo
it gives
rape- gin g world the
p know
£41
ree eee e its reputation as the resa 7 of my e 8
pt ich dde EE
— Meal to graut i
22 T. Mie) one ms
ed, Shy Garden is fis
ve er ce
s colour delicate cmd most Rodwell, Weymouth, July A.
Daina Aldrige Devenish, | expense, the s
Arca
des open to
Jory 9, wed
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGR nade that GAZETTE.
+ nf EN OOD? « tl ro
+)
» Royal Commissioners, with a view to
$ t e
* rtoo
as to the — of interest on any sum so
not exceeding 50,0002., and as to the amount of rent to
— — by the Society, being of the most liberal
a new Garden at Kensington Gore, t ne Roy "eg Gommis
In the event of the
| Horticultural L Society ars rdiet to assent to the
The Garden will
^or — em Kensington Gardens, and in nei very
fa and rapidly rising town of * firs -class
MI "apa es
be in the rum 1 of |
Raya
sioners would treat with them, 3 on what mns eneral p: rinciples above indicated, it will afford H.M.’s
That reperi ana - mpa in January; it was on Į with the Council
within the last two or three days that an answer had | of f the s Society, ttli details of
cen received, an i “the, Connell had co n E an agreement ‘apo that gene hr basis.—I have t the
e te rms on wh hic ich the
| honour ‘to be, ex ent servant,
E ss Lir ^
be
er meeting to hear
nissioners
I ]
f
— fashionabl e districts in London. The shape mnd |
L3
and, :—
e
* Whitehall, July 4th, 1859.
North to the South, admits of the formation ‘of : sues: |.
5 then read the following
y, F. Py S.“ (Signed) *E. A. Bow
two poi inte i in that lioc it
uld be as we all to direct ere to them, as aed bts
"y important, most especially with regard to that
seilous matter, rent. There was no ai
“
a}
fixed rent E
3 Sir,—I en irena by H. M.'s C
rec
for effective and orn tal treatment, and is well
adapted besides for — ective display of sculpture;
while — e Winter eee at*the upper end, and a
colo — roi — ih will afford a promenade
of — of a mile in length, sheltered from
heat and cold, a nd a 8 The Colon
on offer peculiar facilities for the display
d Frui or ual Shows, ti from all those
ich haye not unfrequently marred
Fêtes,
—— advantages in mind, the Coun
of doubt, that with — hearty ——
nude will | so,
of the Flowers to acqua
| inve stigate how far its adoption . could be made to con-
Ft
8 eipt of your aid of the 26th char ged. In the first ou the orgy: d would be
January las e t income (whieh
Horticultural Society w whethe nissioner l any money that
would be willing to receive a proposa al um the oriety | might be borrow. | br rdum or otherwise), before
for renting the central portion of the main an of the question of reni came to be consider ed at all.
| the Commissioners’ es at Kensington Gore, and if Tho R f the surplus
upon what terms. Is Commissioners direct ne | of income, after the payment of all the Society's
quaint you in repi for the information of the | expenses, 228 be 2000}, then that was to be the
Council of the Society, ed bag ay mere del red eee rental; they would take t. the 20001. it was 5007.
ing this communication tim | only they would t rake that, and if it was nothing m 5
of their anxiety to — whe ion all the | d have 8 ſor ren ut if. o n the
consideration which its importance deserves, and to hand, 122 profits exceeded the 20000 the the Co om-
missioners s ari were to share sd was left
of the Royal Commissioners which
rally — i — ym will be
enabled, while pig. steadily i in view ‘the | cientific
0i bjects of
with the periodica
—— — it, one of oa most attractive iow Of ME
n the neighbourhood of London; and the ked ng
have the satisfaction of knowin ing that they „ha
nt
and the S S
en them This: rental of 20001. fixed by the
equ ally
for which they are hms oa The result of their etin ave
inquiries has been to satisfy them that the pr opasa of to pay upon money to be borrowed by selves in
- pape res opportunities of realising a plan order to join the Society in the adis ar for con-
"hy s to t They were to ja 50,0001. ,
the „ and advantageous
8 the one
E
ay
ral interest of science an
during the more inclement season ie.
ter Garde
2
sra - rtion of the m
pa
horticulture may be advanced, pe 2 e other ihe |
gen
8 other impo rt-
ant decis was hn ee was to ben dors rent : yr
yea Nr clear peri ei the rent was 20007. a year,
5 setting apart and tl e Socie
ety coul
Eb. s
for
of the ostate. ns desired l by the Society, to the extent of | n
— estimate of the
or the
Them sibi liberal the support which
shall meet ke and — nobler the scale o:
med an — the
greater will ts" the — not to m the certainty,
of a successful and remunerating resu!
about
war Serta character. As respects the pp
which the above-mentioned enclosed space a
li MR so far as Jie » the
e Society, the Commis-
Should the General Meeting adopt ¢ the views of the
Council, e epp nm then arise, as to the mode of
raising so l.
The 8 believe
issue of a certain num mabe of Life Me mberships; but as
the success of the unc in some measure
depend upon the vigour with w is undertaken,
e t this may be effected by the — of th
2 tle visitors * [s 1e — and a
pos |
ean
the
sioners — that the eee — be laid out an
ecessary
| and bje the risks they experienced at
as an i tal garden accom- | Chiswick from storms, which had so materially affected
panimen Traces, ea. de K., and with | their t "he Commissioners claimed a
the additi oa a conservatory or winter Deia at the veto in management on the und that if the
— wi. the a to be executed in ist the s with | Gardens did answer should not
pla ns approv oved b e Commission ; whilst es |in the power f the Society to tum — to any use
the Comwissone ers coul
r | which netion such as
Per *
3
& bein T eee |
ze Gardens, v waaa
narmonious who
m afford a
nstance, e they x were aw are Met
ntle connected vita tig Horticultural Society
pira ever "think of st "s thing: as to
prevent the 8 2 such a 58 1 * 2 ted
He
3
ig
buildings that may be hereafter erected irn du
of the
and it is of n that the is should-not be in
any way eir completion, if once determined
ei» — ther
general objects of the. —— - a
hone Gardens against any ee
at any eqs would next
proceed to deseribe a pro qp of the Gardens
om a dr te on which ve saw ie over the
head.
ecure e dee, 8
en- Dr. Lindley th
of these wor s0 intended
estimate them, moiety or abis, ae. 2 in 3 th
that sum of i en a necessary part of the plan, nor
— Aste ee and oiety the cost of was it wie — ath n which they had to do, as it was
Extend bo. tha- datina an s ania — the — D a. CE out. the grounds | not to be at the pone of the Horticultural .
pon similar to ose mem- as before me inter-
bers. the Council been inclined t ke t] Rp rm
ject a —— commercial 3 and to place it in
the h ands of a com , there
+h
obtained. But the Council felt that such a course
ld Hh
is little, doubt th rat suem
Society
aan ene portion. of the — - sce in
a
the plants
it ee re prove a et ame traction, Mà then
rang f uisite amoun t within
pr - ti
A Ls
aH
will on th part e at thes own |
he former or san ive ay ee together with |
and magnificent s
terra ces, n nd
1 Soth for —.— bbs and
no dou
of the Society ; nor would — support and 3
e the Roy p sa Vinos of 1851 have been ex-
ney speculati *
therefore o profer te "tleir hopes of suecess in the
and in the desire which will be Min
ishment of a scheme
bu:
—
whie
was chartered; and thir € pre no doubt
that their confidence in the support of the public will
be justified by the result.
to
part of Chiswick Geode Gardens,
mired to furnish decorativ
at Kensi m Gore.
keep up the experimental
and also as much as may be
ive plants for the new garden | 7
th
The noble Chairman, in opening the proceedings,
to the dien of the — and the necessity
its improvement, oing so
rief recapitulation of the eyed: of the
from its establishment. He referr
which they w ere called
to the — of
and in d
entered pe^
together, pan abaded
- offer of tho
to the par. allowed
——
— necessarily prepa ratory to the la;
ont of the Gardens. The Com
in
| — the best.
from among them that oe which might be
The arcades would be - feet high in in
ess to them would be had by covered
the clear, and acce
rental on| A
with necessary plants and materials 8 be able
> - 80 "t in any — — 18 late € W
other par e bus ae €
33
the Societ h year
— is to say) — There shall be first deducted from the
would be a — tiA = d 15
W that this 1 n a great pn ti e 260. yt
long. by 75 feet wide. It was not rap gas to = 2
ne
—
respect of ex
—
but to confine it entirely to such plan
EA in greenh onses, and only require shelter 5 ‘the
eather.
sible from walk n the ag of the
arcades, while the "other ‘level, 20 feet Tower, would be
e on any priucipal itl
POW ed
g con-
nected by magnificent flights of stops. The groundao th the
|
to
not a ing 50,0007., which may be borr
Commission, and expended on works on the
— of this ievest me the surplus receipts after ‘the
1 a yo veg And if the surplus ex-
ceeds th —.— a forth, equal to a moiety o
the residue, VE pe od of regulating the amount | to
of | effec
ne
races, and the visitor on entering the Darin
from one level to another, each
scription of plants growing on
ted, as the wi
m and Brompton Sopes wir
Com ee gratos upon suc
terms the plot of land in the vicinity of Kensington, |
— thought that the — 5 — of such gare
s those pro would effectually tend to resusci
ix perso s shall be annually appointed,
Š eee. oy "the Society and three by the Commission, such |
With respect to ornamental
that there should be a qu
of * wi aterworks,” as |
iu the *
. — elsewhere.
ite in
bad bee
Lindley, i3 —
of w roposed should be done by the
Socie
Dr. Lindley ques the subject, by adverting to a
communication having been made by the Council to
mes a T a a e
zw 5 pes
Pere ae chairman to vote on
oe i "d nality of votes to have a
rs, beari
e A
e certain plants there.“
was half the zd
ch was stated. With 8 i ae all
s of the here, doubtless re plants
t would er pev "— n » e noft =e —
dern garden ‘ould d l
out a indes d place
they *
I, = did yes believe
— P be modified in n such manner as §
Great room of the Society o of Arte, Adelphi, W.C., Londón.
the
ms above spied are
aae
e was eee Sev salad by
grounds at Chiswick, giesa experimental
rations m ight cepi ied on, and plants — for
nt to — The continuance of some
dor
bei
deemed necessary by th
5
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND —— GAZETTE. [Jory 9, 1859,
— . n be a part of the the authorities connected w ected with various institutions e legal one, and unles: s they did so he dba ED
ein de So we à x ia the "Ro wd Goede a where payment was or was not made for admission, — not ask the publie y — m
y spes x k yis at Me The next question and he was satisfied - Council had approximated as | wanted to be satisfied that there was a fair ‘chance 1
th 5 us E 2 e" id exp be closely as possible to the truth. The hon. gentleman | people getting their money back, amd then he could ei
Fin d? a the es lace, “What is the probable | then went through a "arity of statistical matter a or 10 daya would v ie felt os a delay of a 2
: » tate | bearing on this t. ys would make very little diff i
a * wie i e Fani nds E " arlwi — proposed that a circular should be Royal Commissioners’ time in trea’ ating 2
€ t umm es ir 5 tenance of Chiswick. It sent round to every - wns - — - mia portant matter.
ing 1 E — — plan. He objected to the schem r. Wrench supported the — as an m dime
is À
? the Societ was ori inall . He — The Duke of Leinster cipo his _
= yr es al hina 1000 PRI 4 | whit ie ain nh e . | EN
i i t the of Leinster moved the first resolution x ught they wou à Sat
it was difficult to — — a but king a imer P —— me Council bo antho rised to conclude the nego- E E — ee — i: be i in any
She " he — with the n whether the members who a roved
towns, the principal source of income would be at t — Ree t mee
; i at E ton Gore, upon tbe best terms at | scheme wou e an active part in it.
pare re dto ede n — X sia ts ae 8 he was ready to take & — subseri ipti «eese.
aying at th de.
ed it. The matter was to | wise assist the moven
as those Ls ers — — excite cum at | ES — e MT regards a decoration r. North's — „ by Sir Peter Pole,
of opinion that the Connell should be liberal or the metropolis, nd as regar of —.— oa by a meee
question of admission, and that the great mass of | Horticultural Society. He was very sanguine as to amis resolution was then put and *
L ert should be admitted in the most fav agers — — — — e E society. Th : ie Coupall hed a a a on dae E". carried
On Mondays the price to all persons wou eme for the bene opem mr Áo sere
y.
1 ^s Gd.: on Wednesdays, Thursdays, | earnestly endeavoured to impro h C
be Bj on Tuesdays . Batemans, . wena or some years past, but u und aiti: sufficient | answer of the a Commissioners, and now they were
the fine months in the year en would play — success. He thought the Royal ommissioners had being sent back to re- ask the question, He Jobe
d also during tl cted in aibr and liberal spi The r ae rim the vs had got into a rut. He did not know
i what tare could possibly do under preesent
now
s way, and he — — that — — ncil ind adopted eiie
n fi ng this as the — for receipts at a says vithont e 3 ard m : . — — o decided The _Duke ‘of Leinster thought that some farther
it w ulated that 17,4007. a year migbt be | steps withou consu ting their — uents. II y the Council.
EN ius gre would be an — of $4007, | fresh -— hich the Council had upon the confidence | Mr. C. aid the Couneil must have te
— 17,4007. Such would be the result, | of the Soc ty. expression vf desine "further than had iy
relied n; it — e Pownall hoped that after the resolution | press - It might be all very wellto send the Conne
8 prepol For himself, he looked upon | had been moved b; - such disti nguished 1 mo odif y their plans; but the first question
the income as being placed too low and the outlay as Society i it €: not be of him Vieni wold be = by the oyal Commissioners would
gh. If the p en this poi He differed f m the e you rea ont a P
issi - | last speaker in 1 — tho resolution did not He thought the —.— wor favourable, and they mt
was necessary to the interest on any debenture pledge the Socie ety. He thou ught the information which have e an expression from the ria "ht they val
y e would be Z. den at Kensington
etween the Royal Commissioners and.| to warrant a hasty decision — so vast an undertak- Mr. Pownall then moved :— * Tha t this meeting
Horticultural Society, n — leave 17507. a year ing. He begged to ask first, whether their pr e
each. But the cn ould n uc akin Secondly, what ton Gore, and requests. the Coi ei to continue
& what th would — the responsibility upon che members if this negotiation with the Commissioners, am md report as
be carried ow arl i h
‘a
E
g
B
E
E
Sz
2 BSE
244
P
EE
2 2
z
&
8
2
4
&
2.
m
un
represent
should be su dee b — n came measure were to rried out ? as poss mem
d x ha — 3 guineas admission fee to apply generally to the final proposals of the Commission
Deme nd ublie, or embers ? He ars’ | bee ded : er and sup
rt i Duke of e was earri unanim
t| Mr. C.W. DUE roe the
ing Aha
enabled him upon a communicat ch he
ad been entrusted with. It had been his duty t
vi dod :
*-
as M ik
panty o e R.H. co aab dk : Y
re P te seal. opinion on tia et E ‘his Royal Highness or her |
would be glad of free ay m ch a garden ai As to admission fees to the cic: 2 it Majesty, until after such resolution € em uum 4
promenade as this would be. These subscriptions n 4 would only apply ts new Fellows. ith respect | that there mi; ~ be no a ^
be issued at 20 and 40 guineas each, giving personal | to — question 1 1 the lease of 31 years it was a — ery ing. Sie had a0 to hand to the churiman
admission to the ground. A considerable sum would | serious question, and should the meeting authorise the official communication from Colonel Sir C. B. Pl
fhus be raised. Donations would also be made to a| — decuit the necessary — that question would stating which her Mages and his j
siderable extent. Upon that the Council had be the first to engage their attention. ER were prepared ti l
positive information. The residue would have to be| Mr. Frederick North ought tho > question should be arl of Ducie then opened and read the Sa
raised by the issue of debentures. „ seemed a more fully co amendm — ing spe —
sum, but from the information which the Council ^ That the consideration of this question be pos | Buckingham Palace, July 7, ue x
— pesce it ‘was believed there is a sufficient | fc or one fortnight, and chat the details of the he proposed . *My Lord,—I have received EE. de e
"m d 5 S Maj |f
be content to take those debentures at 5 per cent. with — . —— thought Prince Consort, to inform you en A
don upon the
some attached tothem. The debentures would | the matter should not — hastily, as it was plan being carried out for the
Lof by surplus income and life subscriptions if an important financial affair, and he was — dis- Garden of the Horticultural Society of Lon i
that should be a practicable tion. Then all new | posing of it so — He complained of > ws estate at South Kensington, belonging to mee
musl would have to pay an entrance fee of ness of the time which had been allowed for its Commissioners of the Exhibition of 185%
two { but of course the present members of the poem intention of ] "her Majest ro of his
would be exempt from that. He felt he was Mr. Dilke said it was d time, as the Royal d s e execution of
that had al ix months, | taking of one thousand s (10001),
. life land — were —— of “holding the — pounds (500 1.) respectively.
before the season closed and parties went out of town. her Majesty, should it be in acco
he Duke of Leinster thought it would be best to of the Society, t
x. submit the matter to another meeting, and his frien Lif erships for childr
Pownall bad a motion on the subject. e, to place
Mr. Pownall then the fi ng a ce of Wales and the younger Princes
l ollow: mend- | Prin
| ment :—“That the thanks of this meeting begivento the upon the list of pr Mem
con- | Cour d afforded, and that they be re- | pleasure of informing your
che quested to continue the negotiations, reporting pro-|rised by her Royal
E gero miha osing” William of Prussia, cess R
. Jame said that in the ome the | announce the intention of her
| he would advocate that it should be | likewise a Life Member.—1
mi
A ip's most obedient b
CC
— urhood, to the number of 128, who are Mr. Dilke said that H. R. I further co Me
'ere being elected Fellows in the event of the to say that should the meeting jing decide on raising 5
o do so in the est some of whom would also by debentures, H.R. take debentures ™
most liberal v and take = sums in debentures 10007. : ği
— — i p vx nm id that part of Gu presint was then moved by the Duke T
e i of oee hs fd the e woul te — — The — er 3 for —.— wy Me Fred North, € ^
and that there | importance to the Society, and also to those who Majesty, HRH. the ce Es! and
course they could | might subscribe the debentures as as tomhenthey would get Princess t1 a snd ir
the plan, because he aw —
thought it was a - ades ble — — plan. H e thought the Coweil should should not a
quu etre he’ Cone a The read mt a
efit as they best could. He trusted the Council would be meéting with ss most marked en
e Pownall m oveđa — of thanks to the
ourtesy vp
could
— — CI of | at ag 5: he kindness and c
ns 0 now, Pownall
wr begged to press his amendment — iri ed ois the meeting. . There cou
Dite sid that as vis 383 it was He looked upon the question of r esponsibility of the that the matter bis on well, and
dew more than a guess at them. | corporation as one that was of great import. Every|cert
— with membeg felt a moral individual responsibility beyond The resolution was carried unanimously
Jory 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 5
587
to by the chairman. A vote of thanks to the — people, and a judge’s seat near it. The horses in are enormous plains of country, covered, at this time, by
of Arts for the use of their room was also passed, a brown Grass, in which are the seed vessels end
which the proceedings terminated. horse, ealled Ethan Allen, performing about 24 miles I ov of innumerable flowers, which are said to as
eee an hour ; Ht Edward 2 nto ve t nearer EX this | was di lovely i in their form and colour in the spring. It
£ 2 * by calen atin at the rat of two minutes and
Notices of Books. en y yi which it > Se omg what
circle. The owner of this horse has refus viet 5,000 da ls. | our Serer — Reilly of Te — ria had see
The 2 —— ted Seaweeds: a History, 1 or 30007. for it. It is said to de the fastest cete in anro Palace gardens at Sydenham, in full
by Figur and Dissections, of the A T the | am but most of the ho said that they reminded hi airi n
* | were — spring. The ground is so level, that the woods on the
S meta Pi lps at Albany.—* The hotel is very large | horizon had the effect that the first sight of the dark
vol. I, royal 8vo, With s. d good; — t, alas! — of our dear darkies at line of land has at sea. In many places near the road
The old art of e fcire that i say, of Newport, e had som — aget — damsels to on each side, small farms were established, and good-
obtaining impressions of plants by using dried or An wait — "able, all dr v^" Ak e in pink cot tons, their sized fields of Indian Corn ever
fresh ee 3 of copper; plates, res as it was, | bare s much displayed in — with was a railway station, a town, or even a * city
always great advantage alls kowi — — little een. to form the short * eeves, large, | with one or two churches, and an hotel, besides grocery
senting "the n ‘intended Like s tography, it — e, clean, white arms, and short white rae not hares and wooden buildings —— various kinds, were in
could no hat Heger art in its eachin ng to the — They had no caps, and Sue veu La verd in this immense wilder t i
t the of o y showing a 11 ! i laughter-houses at Chic cago. = W *
— ch tod zu pee and most careless, — looking, and i S Ty 8 i
ly. mpressions of wes thus obtained | ; i oon at 3
fey E " much more distinct — ed and even papa could not de fend any one of t or = — . out ot "the carriage m the 2
and up oy urall badl waited upon; saili i stoc | pa —
l bester, en modem dil Pas wo a won- | mepestien very y po y Dg ildiug-
ut li
every In a y.
drous change in Nature-printing ; for rough * what we — as the niggers at Newport. did. Men. — number pnis 2 oxen, and the nt tes.
— surfaces we now p et delica acy servants a red the » be d-room „ bells, g to on these _ brought into the
ine, ile every surface- . is elabora day | y as waiters.” side of the ui ; s
e Jen and it is im mpossible not t to feel that when Mr. 3 Ms Vi — pm ocv which drew it along by imd attached to its
flat thin bodi beds at Cincinnati.—Mr. Longworth, among other horns and mmi through a P eiie on the floor. The
of plants, the human band | is wholly superseded. Those things remarkable about him, is the proprietor of the ,beast, b of men belabouring it from
who have seen the beautiful impressions of leaves Vineyards from which the sparkling Champagne is behind, and tdi. ragging it i de b
executed in Germany by Dr. v. et and in | produced, known, from the name of the Grape, as the | in and its = drawn down towards the when a
H n Brad ury * HS
tement. defi
ing, w
. sparkling Catawba; but he seems no less t 8 felled ^ instantaneously to
that this is no over statement. The defect of the art | from immense extent of his t im beds, the ees “and Tit eight ort t was turned over
consists in its being unable to represent very convex | which prr im J think he said, 60 a
i as
d i
midribs of whose leaves are merely que lines, | dare not set it down from memory. He showed papa — to be suhjected. The first of these was to
although the leaves themselves are adir exact. a book he had written about his . — and Straw- rip up and remove e the intestines of the e poor beast, and
It is thus clear that while the new art is perfectly | berries, and i inenednlede an im i m ;
ted to the representation of — — of ing Beer oe be This led to a i p } t} till i g b dy was s hung “up to cools The
plants or qe of their structure, t fails when — the relative size of trees and p the two sid itl
to other classes and other But to nothing is it the Atlantic; and in speaking of the Indian — e| of — huge an nial “thus skinned and cleft in two.
more suitable than to the isit letal; | race of tells us he has seen it standing, in Ohio, 18 feet hi Ac rocess, from ime the animal leaves the yard
seaweeds, which are capable of so completely giving up | and he — it has been known, in Kentucky, ‘to pee alive wlth the time ‘ti is split and sd up in two pieces,
their forms to paper, in all the most minute ramifien- as high as 25 feet, and the ear 18 inches long. The less than a quarter At the end of
tions, that it requires good eye to distinguish | old gent! is a imi e-looking person, — ut mta salted, ‘packed i in casks,
the original impression. Of this property Mr. with a coat so shabby that one would be tempted best parts o: be shipped to England, and the
H i offer him a sixpence if we met ipi Ls the streets ; inferior perts to be eaten by the free and enlightened
which is quite a wonder in typography; for even | indeed a story is told of a stranger, w is great continent. e greater number
the letterpress has the — — and blackness of € and being shown round it b y Mr. Longworth, of these beasts come from Texas, and have splen-
la —— is the practical him a doll horns, 3 feet long. The next
has been a pplied to its to his pocket, and it was not till he was asked to go thing they sa TE the somewhat similar treat-
One — which this E of printing cannot do is vos the house ‘that the stranger 28 him to be ment of the € pigs; but these are animals, of
to represent those magnified dissections of the minute the ow. H — a elightfully vivacious, | which for size t is nothing similar to te seen in
parts of planta, which oe indispensable to scientific | and full of date hobbies. His wife is a very England, excepting, piia X ed 2 At
natural his — In the volume iatea ye that de Es t | pleasing, primitive-looking — Wo tasted at their | least, one which UPS w hang hed. 00 lbs
addition of o the — — his city, called by the and looked E
t pE ag — ae
the structur ses, classification, | ag the
the British Alge, w — also will Pd — — little great- gra S 2 T A, 2E chil ~ mt
for the aes vation, preservation in the herbarium, and | eighteen mantha, The rr
diong into a
microscopic objects of these inter — i enough to accommodate us the ER Was | they lie side by side in a quiescent state, very different
— one they were in a few minutes before, when
panied by fall scientific description, — of synonyms, 33 gworth pouring out tea nena coffee for they were quarrelling in a most unmannerly manner
nd such — observations as the subject calls for. the wi ss party as vigorously as if she were 18 years|in the yard below. m this trough the one first
— of ire this volume for | old, "C" © being 72. She is "- y, a Pretty, pet in is, dra a — in nious machine, taken up from
its singu feel | with mplexion, and into an empty trough,
that it is indispenabl to the library of all who TE and eg poc and face. Fa 9 Aut w a minate he is — denuded of
themselves with the study of the v cou and Cincinnati hams, also oysters served ^ — bristles, and pa r to be cleft and hung up.
mighty Ko "e three different ways — be tet "fried in butter, The trough my — eight or ten ‘thus lying e
The first volume is enti and in care ut taken out of their shells side, and the moment — is taken out at one
perms or — Sonnerie; the next volume m en masse in a argo dish. Our friends were | ano ther is put i in n at t he — and tliey thus all font
Complete their history; a thi will contain ione E we m m e tl
the Melanosperms, and the fourth will spem of d the | theirs y form, w ud — Brar Ang being very order; bub so rapid is the process, that no one pig is
5 unge and 8 said, too long in; in — the whole business deen only a
eee eee t uke maki I hey pitied very few m nutes per pig very part i ned to
re New World on two Travellers our want of taste, and mented ove our ERE — t, th a —
— e Autumn of 1858. Longmans. | small ones in England. brushes, &c. In the e age ire, in ud stor
Lach ro. i uq 454 4,| Weed and autumnal tra. [vod Gflly dried — above the oxen, ther
1 out 1500 unhappy =$
preserved by Mrs. Flagg, and we also looked over an | hung ap to cool, before Was cut up, salted, 1985
illustrated poem on the subject of Mr. and Mrs. Long- | apd se off, Ther
in m travelli ing 12 on States and Cana — * a
Series of letters written as she went on her way she
records what she saw and thought of the novel scenes
of other ladies who thinks of following her route.
A fastidious critic would per
nothing newin three hundred | pages of feminine gossip. |
But that would be reasonable. There is little me ; à.
the sun; a such novelty as is t deal more e, end that :
— > be found consists tive of the feelin: of i nga ices — —— good — 1 and it was a T was y
an, who wishes h ehcp s all over America; even in very small Me escape."
hat they may expect. in the western wo | "Those who are curious abou abont Arete MÀ
How fur the tales —— E told her are or fruit ices are rare; ci Bun are almost id sl s — e win get fram npon those import-
true or the con not for usto say. We add a |. Vanilla cream. In sum a stewed Peach is ant subjects also.
few. — bu: pos * es added.
American. ringfield.—“ We drove next to b Bein November 4t. ` eous.
the Horse Fair, which was very well arranged. «De Prairies 22 instant, and soon P E leaving Miscellan
was a cteni a mile, forming a wide carriage | Vincennes Fie ourselves in a Prairie, but it was not| Gutta Percha of Srinam.— Professor Bleckrod, of
road, on which horses were ridden or driven, to show off | till after 60 miles that we got to the Grand gs |the Delft i has recently 28 a notice of the
their meri quickest ated at the rate of | wh Ped we- traversed for abon t 60 more. Gutta Perc! men Althou a. bog P RN
— miles an hour h dri ess, however, of this prairie consists in its pee — — in Europe f vente S
the driver delà a rein i each band. There | fi orth to south, in whi ch it stretches through | come into geni use, y ek M remains w be
was a platform. at one end filled with well conducted | — iole hog of the State 3 "s ese prairies! done regarding it, bwy as respects its uses and its
THE
GARDENERS’
CHRO?
NIC Dn? AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
(Jury 9, 1
859,
D ter to young | tions w ithout t delay, Those who eq
that Dutch Guiana can | and bushy. Give goak manure-wa : a
puces e foe "mL m es when we | growing specimens, aha Sept any — me intended 10 for a new plantatio on may a thie po
i asor s 7 apart, and remi p
the value of the article aud the probable|have another shift this seasor, so as to hav 1 vi
Ghats ot T it m the countries from ke » is now | well filled with roots before winter. : Me intain a "ced — rci wget 1 ft tar! ps 1 par
‘ splied The Dutch Govern t too ures to | grow mosphere, and syringe vigorously any plan Black ope 1 Praca s Ro mg, British 0,
3 the Isonandra G ta p cultivate it in at all infested with red spider. bcc TERE E there D iege o al T mi Elton
ian a y kts a discovered in that remet with these is now far advanced ; en : ot
country a species of o which Blume gives the
already diio: take po of
nts on ‘locks
apot
name of TES Mulieri, which yields a juice in every
n rage
ore ba ckward plants with P lenty of 13 ne moistur
See that pla
ather
inds
r bl d e are properl bee with moisture soil frequer tly among growin <
beu equal to that of the, leo mandra Wie . at 3 ; to pre event my n mistake in-this ma y code Pelargoniums, if an be Au ep
t 2 t once a week e cnt ido TT yaf
1 il luet. Aches: Sapota, the nar is carefu cue amine every plant at leas 4 |
— 13 ami pint lest Indies H Neesbery, | immerse any found to be dry i in tepid water until D wide of their tops. Th
yields a milky juice lik reha. Sapota ) woli SORS kle heat. Water Dahlias
of Blume is probably the tree called“ Bullet-tree” 157 Syringe lightly morning and evening, and spri 50 from y inds o gu:
the English, and its wood is known as “ horse-flesh." n en &e., in order to keep the atmosphere thoroughly | from earwi ia
It is a tall tree, yielding in summer a large quantity of | m Ir
milky juice. It appears that under the name common NG DEPAR make
PP
rowe, or Bullet- ine there have been confounded ;
of G
PINERY — Attend. desea A evi stock, }
$; hes Lucuma mamm :ertner
e Mimusops of Scho eei irgk; 2, the white Boerow we,
whioh is the Dipholis salicifolia "Á Alpb. D. C., and is
he bastard Boer a
nown in
| moist, and 1
mosphere warm and
rapid vigorous
anero, whic 3 nigra of Swa
pa 4, ds N dea Bullet tres or Achras See
of botanists, which yields on os ed best of the Jamaica
woods. Sapota Mulleri gro eai on sighi |à
elevated situations. 2 Collecting E milk the trunk |
is surrounded with a ring ay, v e
and th
cure
wth This will 9 cee — however, unless all
1 c att lie root; therefore attend well to wat tering,
|Giv = ir mod y g stock, and shut up ea
sica to grow to any size that is not ines to be
niit for stock, and, unless i — case
p i
urinam Gutta eue I
in pde of soil must be very carefully atte
ke givin g e — et oe ach application s moisten the
vh of
at Amsterdam at the same pea
'e. * New
ole body soil; unless this is attended to, the
hile
the 1 best Gutta der; of commerce. Edinbi
al P
Fond m „
" pe
middle
sm T with
z
e mignonnes, |
peculiar tar de of MS own
SE ie mia E
| heat
the
of —.— in Lade de Mar ym supply of Gra
— be well soaked with manure w
mvenient,
panions are to be f
every Fx handed to them, a p nd taste ith |
hurry to leave the spot
ipsi nd.
know ih. are » comparat
ose w
yo iis » Dia e ignorant
"s Art of Di
of Operations.
(For the ey Week.)
Kam Drama.
out-of-door flowers are
uem
— —
|; for
it plenti
er, to crowd the
erate mber |
ectively arranged, which w
ue than
lz
atchful e
Hu — red spider which, |
on the sate xd
4 pi
th plants of this i An
fal in the their various ;
use | stance, &e, pn
to the foliage has.
— always found ‘hem to hang, bett;
SES in autum
se every car
he: ealthy, = — of ins
LONS.— Plants |
t 4 44,
ys, avoiding
v9 S done
zc
to air on — a
at mosphere as far as
fi ing, |
young tat m in
` tis foli i
i — allowed oe “establish
— can hardly be removed without t]
he tender — 9
« GARDEN AND SHRUBBER
Proceed soon with buddin ng
p ers, ce ir ‘the stems of w
off. Keep a
Arkia e rding
nations on the other,
ind, andat t the sam
E care that the tallest à plants |
me contrastin E the colours |
put i
As soon as
t wea ihe
if taken up
culuses ma M be tá
n they mi c rned y erai. or sh
ight emi eo i
ey are likely to be w bres, ET :
Endi oni FRUIT jte stores
ive x be pl.
ee is * imos pl ET
preda th
the
Carrots
m
duly
A good b bre — of group te
inned.
repared for Wins Spinach; trench. it thoron gbly, and
let it x fed manured
GS DEST in
ch s as | beds
TY raton y in A pe
e ful
ghtly raised, Cont tinue
getting out Ca and
and also Sed late Caul Away An
now be MEN — th
a few
n Mu Mihi
tog aod 5 ferment: tfr
of loa
Then
}
lile makin he bed, form e i
, the spawn holes imme-
zd is finished to assist i in keeping — the heat, | V
rry runners should be procured for new planta-
For the Week ending July 7, 1859, as arie ed at
Wed.
Friday 13.
eason without Srl Satur. 13.
he
—
ry Locos: |
——
STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHISWI
s
gera ; fine ,
—Uniform yi ve T Bion 8
stant sheet’ d Are t vid E
— 3-U rx Nu
— 4 Over ry fine; pie
— 5—C — ri ans, v
— 6—Clear; hot; very fine nghout.
— * — — ule AG, ns dera sunshine; very
— E — vemm. AT Macte.
During the last 33 years, for the ensuing Wi
P ed diem temperature during the abore
1837 —
A pi box en
W.— Insignis. It is
Han d- pick your
Tree: J D. 4 to
Pop — whet Locus rhe — i
— ree, the
LS
fragilis v. «nte Blec
Filix-mas.—7 W. It t is not Sha vr
varieti — reptans 0n
least is Leont Rs rus, cali rt
Tor s
not see in
At or; but we have S
It is not enor ih
red. M J B. :
THE GARDENERS! CHRONICLE
" y ^ Mr mTY um
Jour 9, 1859. AND AGRICULTURAL GAZ ET TR. 589
PA MANURES, &c.— Man OLLEGE or AGRICULTURE AND CHEMIST RY, ia all kinds in sheaf is being provided. The local
ngaged in making ARTIFICIAL, NANURES anp or PRACTICAL and GENERAL SCIENCE, 37 and | authorities are everywhere — engaged in the
AY 2 — necessary instruction for ical 38, Lower Kennington Lane, Kennington, near Lond 8
zul efficient on, by — o aie, F. FA AR Qn scipal Nesnit, F. U. S., F. C. S., even greater success at War-
— Principal of the Agricultural and Chemical Coll tudies pursued in the College 88 every jte th 1an has been achieved at the previous
Kean on, London. Analyses of Soils, Guanos, Su hos- trend — P ebd youth o pig p annual pice. of the Soci
hstes of Lime, Coprolites, &., and Assays of Gold, Silver, and t iera- Mining, Manufactures, and the iy à
— Minerals are cxecu ith accuracy an despatch. | Naval and Muitary Si Services, and for the Universities? ng the service y hich th
Gentlemen desirous of receiving 3 — paa — Ann p and ted at = — ae me apd — de accomplish for agriculturists, is one
Assaying, t uted at the College 1e pm nd other par- i
— n ig: itas pega — ay be bad ou application to the Principal. 6 "enin nt on the ir J d un yings in sands
7 7 . — SPA on rom e meeting ie more ac te -
URNARD, LACK, axp CO^3 CONCENTRATE » [ORKSHIRE. AGRICUL TURAL SOCIETY. | : T. : an
BU PERPHOSPHATE OF LIME; guaran JY EETÍNO, | formation that is thus acquired of the probabilities
Phosphoric Acids — ble, equivalent to 40 per cent. of Tri ibesi — Doni: UNTER d an xc rial of the coming harvest. In most of
Phosphate o! The TWIN TV. SECOND. ANNUAL MEETING will be held the southern and the midland edunties we be-
cos CENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to| gy Hull on WEDNESDAY, August 3, ond THURSDAY, lieve it will be found that the probability of
the preceding. August 4, when nearly 9001. will be offered in prizes for Stock, 1 oi a
— ese Manures Dr. Vosleker “These results must Poultry, Implements, &c., including Steam Ploughs and Reapers. io Wheat crop has lately been considerably
gratifying to you, and are the best proof of the very | Prize Lists and Certificates ot aay may be had on appli- | reduce
bigh ‘ericultaral and comm mercial value which characterises | cation . Secretary. The ses on the 20th July. a
por trated superphosp Jonn n RAM Secretary. “Unusual i injury has ben suffered from des
pe with opinions of the late and N.B.— Persons desirous of mbers e Society | rains, ard the crop is aid; some fields w
Chami s to - cultural Karon fl with — are requested to send their n danses imas — . baro seen already Muse E blighted. Node also i i
lication to BuRNARD, LACK,
& Co.. Saum be, . ̃ ᷣ .
1 — T removed to 11€;
Fenchurch Street, E. C. (Established 1840), have the
following MANURES ready for delivery :—
8 MANURE for SPRING TOP-DRESSING f of
nil o!
MA N GEL MANURE guaranteed
O67 n OF LIME quality.
-—— the reduction in the price of raw material
re Co. are enabled to lower — Z^ of
me, and to materially ve the
ly PERUVIAN GUANO
i nomi E xg of
D BONES, and
In consequ
the London
their Suporphorphate of of Lim
€orn
The zu Manure Co. also sup)
(direct m Messrs. A. Gibbs an
de. 5 OF SODA,
other Manureof value, Who! Wee
118, Fenchurch treat, E c. db E
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF LAWES’
M: LAWES begs to e that uo — ‘this
I season redu ccd the price of the Manures
TORII?
MANURE .
SINERAT S BATE Qp or Linn. E
BARLEY MANURE
E — = Dr. -Voelcker hase tii a bulk M soto to
tons factories, r report po: M
in im full in Circular to be obtained on application at his office,
1, Adelaide res e — E. C., or of his y Agents.
from £7 to£6 6
„ 218
pipe dE
tured by | TH
N.B. direct from Messrs oar
— b oda, Sa N vg ee and other Chemi
ap = *
Greta — Good a Genii p 57. 3 er ton, free on
d th
An Annual —— ption of 1. enables a member to exhibit
an unlimited numbe: — of Stock, to view all the Ex date and
to receive the Society's Publications froe of char,
Kirk Deighton, Wetherby, July 9.
TASA AGRICULTURAL —— OF
ENGL BETETE CK, 1
PROGRAMME.
TUESDAY, July 12; W EDNE SD AY, 13. — W
Yard open from 10 o'clock in the morning till T ‘clock in the
evening on Tuesday ; and from 7 k in the - ning till
6 o'clock in vy Nu on Woden esday, at a adn sion
charge of 2s, 64. for each person, Machiner; will
by the Ex bora nt won, on each of these days.
TSA cnr 13.—The Judges to inspect the Live Stock, and
toa
Public trials o:
— urhood of — city, — Ca un — as Yi —
nay determine.
$t 1 o'clock (or as after as all the Judges shall have
delivered in their tree y of which notice — * —— —
Public will be admitted into the Cati tex Xd
of 5s. each person, at the Special Entra
ps 14. id dm — hese Yard of cal Ho —
eep, « 0 to e Publie from
e" in th morning i til 6 in th e evening; admission
=
— gm
FRIDAY." 15. Pme General Show Yard open to the Publie |
from 6 v'elock in the morning till 6 in the evening; adm
sion ls. € rson.
General Meeting of the Members, ín the Shire Hall, at
10 o'clock in the forenoon.
DRETH GIBBS,
AF Shcietary, pro tem.
— admitted into
mporary occupation of
the Society Aurine the Meeting, shall be subject to the Rules,
Orders, and Regulations of the Council,
—
of the Society, ty,
rac ce J
TO PS AND EU SRI) AND MILL ER
—Ó AND GA — RICE, K - sets in (Oe
5
, per ks
ton, b
ary-at-Hiil,
Tous A AGRICULTORES AL
COLLEGE FOR THE RELIEF "OP DECAYED
—— — n AND A
HE Mm M: CULTURAL SOCIET
others ted with Britis
mg tho r7 Institution, can
e lao e peer Firms,
Su bscrip-
tions or — are md r —
M Barrett, Exall orig es, Reading, Stand No. 7
Mes=rs. & Key, eq Stand No. 5.
E. H. Bentall, Heybridge, Stand No. 105.
Messrs. Clayton & & Shuttleworth, Lincoln, Stand No. 47.
dge, Stand — 147.
Stand No. 83.
Messrs. Howard & Co., Bedfi ford.
Mesars. Hornsby & Sons, Grantham.
Mews. eee son & Bon, The Queen's Seedsmen,
Messrs. Perreaux — k Co., Mark Lane, Stand No. 11.
Messrs. Ransome & Sims, Tpswich, poss No. 176.
B. Samuelson, „Stand N
Messrs. Smith & Ashby, Stamford, Sind No. 171.
And with J. J. Mechi, Esq., Tiptree Hall, Kelvedon, Essex.
HIGHLAND AND AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.
PS AGE! EDUCATION.
ETY’S — — €—
in term of 1 wing Bye-La
NS.
v.
arme!
A eure, irous of 1
leave their names —ç vm vi
who have kindly
Dona:
Edinburgb,
aminers
fro ie to time to
mend for de Society’ s pes. tural Diploma, Candidates w
Shall have attained -= Ast year, and who shall exhibit e
vouchers and pass an examination on the subjects hereinafter
prescribed.
“That the vouchers to be exhibited shall be such as to afford
evidence to the 8 That the Candidate
has a a opem — Lin the practical pep |:
period — for two separate periods
a less one each, Tha!
PERDE QU
— of not less than rem year
uel he
Ae —— —
n
some seminary recognised by the Board 1 r
5 Natural History, Botany, Veterinary M. Medicine,
—
of Practical Husband:
sy) as well as of Techno-
urveying, Farm Mechanics and
Boo —— shall — 9 — A the
tion of the Board by means of a strict examinatio:
— Report made by the Board to the Count on
stating that a Candidate has exhibited * qoem
— the ee required, the Council shall issue.
— favour of such date, a diploma bearing the corporate
h 2 1 certifying his „ in the Arts
* with Agrienltu
mina — rw 1 annually tow ard the close of th
Win inter Session of the — — ee d Detailed ae | m
on oy Place, Bal — NE. pplying to Mr. HALL MAXWELL, No. 6,
Che Agricultural Gasette.
SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1859.
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK.
Trrspay, July 12
28 —
RSDA
eee
BS. of 3 W >
r for C War
ultural meny € at «e
ow- Mi P x
9 — ha
M the Ag
the i 80
stands are diee
blem
5,
h 2 — RI E vill be ne iss on
Monday & sday of the show week in
testing their merits. The class of implements to
god deal laid. The complain
m
safely in almost
unmolested i the fly. There is no complaint yet
g Y^ ral about the Potato crop, though indications
0 the ome have been noticed in places.
these MA. 1 4 we . to speak
M. 3 dur
E N
A very
Oxz of the most interesting papers in the cu
Number of the Bath and We:t ¢¥ 4 aa Society’ :
h Mr. L of Bre "gm
Journal is 2 in whic
House
oor pas stu
of catoeding
of culti vation
4 e on DE d uneulti-
W.
eourse of a dozen very interesting pages
1 crop of at was valued 2 20, 2 te
vede cs "ADT ci on -— — a
sy ri aoe sacks and. ie ts Ei im crops of my
zl id E ar er 120 sacks Ter? ad
n improvem ted thus: Useless
Fire were gni 950 its Fu common land was
grubbed and dug, and pared, and burned at a cost
ef s sometimes Si. an acre. ,Lime s and bye ag
77
a ~ — — — of tillage,
h those drawn or driven by steam
rounds, ma
he
trial 4 e
Ashes alone were cles Mr. Lusx ote d
illustration = this
"A tate here low T w "f was misled by
| to have spread them, and
quantity of bones inh the Turnip seed, but he
e|entreated me not to waste the bo iet as he would
ntee a first-rate crop of Turn with the
hes alone, ia poe with the
s plan on
e within two miles. e the town on
— à
r
or the Board of Ex ar
e for — — and to — at
N
nd yea idm the | a
n admirable condition for a plonghing m
te latter steeper, dese perfectly eaten 3388
one or two
— t
e on the Stratford roa
0
and on d e Strat t-
seco
and it sid its Tot eam
d marl pits in it which will
interfere with its otherwise perfect
ro me The light land trial — er in
e | first
much
sce
of the field, and ud on the
t
of u
in the pari ah id t tha
They Eros me the gv that 12 bush M of pees, to
8 and for many
ed a 2 crops with as
f bones; bui
a e
yum afterwa Pen some lok
tle opel as ever i
Ves the same parties use P
peel Eighteen or 20
a change. :
fter —
piece
g | roo
0
ic
been removed. 1 se fields; Oats.
as been ploughed, in order to put clod crushers | the fi
and rollers to the trial. Leti
pane Ie. trials of field i implements will take a ly
ce on Wednesday next—those of barn and other | V
— — will bs continued in the show-yard during
|the
days of exhibition—and ample store of corn
ly
pe that it rr pay. I u
— 3 a t| dilution of its r min
——— —̃ —üK—é—ͤ—A f of three ree crops of 63 b ushels agains eral co onstituen ents į
ndon o years before and | average o so that, if I had con ntinued | appears equally questionabl in another
tried it a — Bes huis ‘ot — € "men ae * 5 whole field at first, I should | ch: — — carbonic acid e ir pos
le w yas — Carbonated 1 s 6k e have had on the three crops 1324 bus els of Oats |s the 2 is contains not only the carp Bl dune
As the nation: ‘opted v rst piec ich, at 2s. 6d. per bushel, be y arene Passing thron oni adda
was — . with vl y lite N ee till the more i 5 zo dun aod cred the field | carbonic acid arte from the de Tm
h ared,
secon de
more estie would b be atter of the soil) has the OF the
occu rrt iil s : sa dn i d cro f nae es better tr eatmeht; so I fall owed it, and soluble phosphates of the sol. Sole i
. i d commenced by | limed the ammonia, of common salt, and nt ich ef
Oats Was - —— i — 2 per a 8 per e D ght into a re egular « morali = my | same effectson the n altis qe ES
the other part I prepared for Swedes, hoe x fege - md eT 8 after s dug — meine 18 solvent an ea
drilled with bones, —— 2 qu uarters per ac since r at fA df Sider tell the ien but on tlie contrary (t ag
— — — 2. ), ^ i
his feet.” Liebig), “the quantity oft
b malm art b the difference of — to y of the
—.— pat arom 25 s he ny u n p s here and — Be up AA tena : A — [ot d im
and Tu urni ps. of the med. pa art was also attempting to ale the vids a o which | salt, - a] does mot e -
Lus has and t hese | vi th the amount o salts in 80
mg the dihti i
f the full the di : € of those fluids» Ñ
part t that had edi: limed rs sown to green erops, | extracts ill we hope —.— ‘te pages " of the | gr ny comparison da Diet a i,
and had been well trodden with nw, ji sow: se poat whi e gives pages —.— ase merely on the money o ai at
to Wheat, and produced a good crop. e par 0 rd
limed, and not — to a green edis was very light 5 have no C uc on abs
and unfit for Wheat; I —— sowed it to Rye, ON LIQUID MANURING. nor hav I been
which answered remarkably and from that Vo one will suspect me of dt i ough they u
time till the whole deno inte a 2 value the great ese conferred “on agricnlt tur ists s by | I have questioned the deduction E
course, I have iem “th on part of m heat | Dr. Voelcker; and if with a few s
field, if found to be loose and light,. which was | ee o which * „Das recently given expression, because they are openly at cla
en tee the case roi the re vd had nip it is simply i p riving oncl — s with — own interpre cause eme
own g retation Well attese
| e er a aer an à liquid manure Dr. lch
2 pe T p^ EM oy e = 3 for ang enunciates this See other doctrines: mi liquid | In the valuable paper which has suggested suggested this
40 bushels per aere in a ver nds e nures which I examin — compar — other = two suggestive "Wd rl
ES 1 th in d 4 th ye fort: — are . am and l and * e
m 844 the tenant began to vt any mar — um “fertile land. : ca th
he
annot avoid n ing the j
ill then he had not made d eoa: ym ulis te the tota’ ala t of the mind ee , line of En f
—— — 105 the land, , having s spent a t all in im- | An Ha es for oth of. ctor T hthat liquid à: “fre
t pi
ex
ava 23 "fertilis ising “substan in
ements, but th acth | 10 inches deep, wi neral and ical. only « on right soils, while on md
of corn, i the ags M well. Some further anie matters in e . which th the amount it can produce no marked
details of experiments he gives:—He had tried of manuring $0,000 gallo — Jurious
carbonate of soda d for Wheat with bad results- g “I belie m clay soils are — more un
ascendi with no results lt — the early part of the year;
— yvan discouraged ty its results, After the e application o of p manure to rere soils and fertile quantity “of water supplied i in ary 1
obtaining a lease he proceeded with frech loams. f n LEN MN.
irit, and ultimately reclaimed “the whole I must dispute these principles. — s Ts
land, making 403 acres arable. Th be diluted than even any of the p" g through the soil 203-7
te hase a profitable one at 1 th, though m produces very marked effects on naturally — The frst sentence in this e Ce
sie dry the tee -" E h — * 2 and — — A found my experience on a the fi will AL pN Tiquid manare fa il
sometim is at ey vini ich t 7 | loa The t approved appliances have been it 18 not wa ä
^ prospect tothe 1 tenant. é —.— and er follo owing | Concise facts s wil leave ! little fact of he land con
[ g is an Mi aecount of the|room for dou os the inaccuracy, at all events | truly remarks, on
— | foe danger o f the Professor" — "The seaso having it i
Most, T suppose, . it is very well 3 has been in many parts of the which th
well, chalk or malm will also do good ; bat! Pas | United Kingdom a trying one. The Grass in our
persons, I have witnessed such extraordi- | ?eighbourhood xal, Krieg, for want ol Dr. Voelcker, knowin
TP am about to relate Plate from th e use moisture. Now, by the i ion with liquid | feel grat or a jud
of the latter. In 1841, I wished to o try malm on a manure we had an excellent — - pene Rye-grass manure, be it ever so dilut
std sare CIS VN, which was covered with |}, une rel ike tao many ot h aid our cattle must — P
very short H eath and F ave suffered like those o To ers in the country. | * week am mem
m Ta with à a : little Grass of| An ds the Which I write these sentenc 23: | that that pie a -
on heavy lands, à
igh- 8 — y but am e
all "i to di : weigl ed very Mas the produce of manageable than v^
at 3d, per load ff Dive nothing oth ki 4 perches — of the — "t the irri ted | i in à my advocacy of a À
t to
e t e to and | amoun e almost incredibl : ani
ik about 35 loads E acre, ata oost ot about 5l. 17 tons 10 ewt. per imperial orti s aiiquid saj T
covered about 6 acres of t rst pa i nis fully concur.
which has i
Dr. Voelcke:
eep were tu Dr. V.
opposite end of the field, in E R at manuring, the original cost of the und nd pi
inus of them would y on - virer aloe hase, nd sim 2 "fi reg lira se . zm
CI to vi
regret the tendency of Professo: rV wecker
4e p iquid man pi-
and nice; but when the —— ~~ out em United Kin iom a sii e wok Eee en e s — ae, EL f ERA 2 5
abou came on to an applicati is kind of m. n it p
on it was of quite a di Es M
bo A quite a different | as the past H — ears a re that is
1 ‘omen I and most t unpleasant smell | river containing ta — d with — 57 — **
from co Ve it a quarter of = al matters, and found in ited for the purpose. Being
and in another ni —— "this — me [matter and as I suspected t
ot imagine — "pon a fallacy in the Professors illustration of the old adage
to ee Ys 7 ore it is the q
k e no
such a
2 mile off. [n
fact, a gentleman walking wi
3t about that distance could noe ea han
whence the sm smell came, and had
l | Im; ex ive;
chain gon, rather than to the price at which he can | ipes are nov
1 from other Spiran destruct
pe
ts of manure — i in a do not ; advocate the i brs
m of liquid manure
evin, and
; S9 um
field, a:
ut little rotted on a water i 8 ern Agr
e par rt ut malmed, 18 utterly incapable of dissol enge
su ving allt
= me it all to Oats, and the result was substances required by pl is Ta 45 e mineral
ncede
hat plants can assimilate | lar refer
0 | am far from an ^ ritheet “ite being in —— but 1 an pt of 20 mih — ae talian Rye-
with: — p * Suggestion so much at variance 2 of irrigation; a fact
p — Ysiological laws, and every day — aa — - —
View
mii — — Dr. Voeleker’s argument that liquid manure This is one — — sujet pner aa
"^cious because of the extreme state qur
7 of e considered, not on
— —— ma 9f, will it pay? b
t t Tbig, p. 546. oh M —
mme ...
Jory 9, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICUITURAL GAZETTE. 591
gress— mo ar y for making tw two blades of Grass to coming ter mnt With the introduction of the not due until the third year, by which t time the er
occupy the e place of the — leaf inry now Lun»! Turnip crop a new sprang up, vam he e the | should have reaped two crops. The climate is suitable
a given surface and deri ts n rom t from pi soils into more v general notice a n employment | for every ind of corn crop, and mene so for —
giren number of par ticles—and . still m s a means This s — — including Peaches and G The
of meeting tl t ropping. The Tu ed sent almos s, and — —
of this powerful but very Taitei country. T. B., G. N. | culture dae the mor step f for t] 1 cattle or shee D by the adjoining settlers to any
— rley, seed, and Wheat crops. Iti their capital, and at no cost
m for the ‘Turnip being in early s bring, it * » to the | for the use of the land so long as it remains unappro-
E PERIOD OF ENTRY TO AF occupa on of many new lands that n of — en ms d. Cattle are reared to — weight on these
_ THE early history a and practices | of our island. Mt yea — — with ew up the eae desire and
~ ae
spr ing
= with very naturally gov — thet eir period o
re ye upon lands that ew — * taken in band, an
thus led to certain practices pecul
hem
to each d hog |
oh consu med. Therefore, unless |
i
s, Lady- Ne
and Old Tay. day 2 y April, are en ach a adopt ted; accord
in Vith a New Lady Ay
confusion in the spring Ang is experienced,
st the busy season for sowing the Barley,
have been
ntry, a
being just
tc., and the roots and straw will scarcely
E
it
—
Thes
an — ons, * on mor Aai and now
form of t custo: It
Bec h and the fhen nale for
would
ig
that there: need be no o life-long parting
res,
| estas o -
This fine is situated in I Btate of —
gatio A i ailway
sn io om the seaboard to Chicago, the journey
rom this coun 25 sme made wit ^
z
o 201. short is the journe
at a cost of fro y
between friends
stabling an "efficient num
incoming tenant to get established, — — — for fhe
to more dis tant t ]a rem: The e here
poni T*
is a more
a
+} FEM
bein
lands suitable to the
bei mat b
h h of Bye and Wheat, that an
ore generally ad
— With it
entered | 0
abandonment of other lands that }
ouse, an off
ation is rad upon for |
crops, and t
just N yielded its golden crop to the dne
This is supported by the e custom of autumn
entries, TE the oldest
Autumn Entries.—The autumn entry
place at New Michaelmas, 29th Septem -—
to enter at Old M elm
Oth Oc also Ma ed Pere
Novem Wit
the land à houses together. pis a
of sow. sowing his own Wheat and Vetch
ploughing ais ——
tions for sprin
barns for threshing his 0 corn, m — — ey
sumption of his straw, &c., he —
takes them by vans — ‘thie Int ce i
tionable, and has been revised in some districts, b.
usua lly takes
tober. There ar
MUS m —
22nd
2 entries, the tenant takes to
ords him t
tches,
prepara-
outgoing tenant retains the
rds for the con-
— these acts of husbandry, i
all previous acts of husbandry. DM simplifies the
try to a small and 3 con pas
"The dva: antages of an Old L -— Pf E are many.
1e winter is then over, the e all consumed,
he st; raw 2 into manure he yards, barns,
l clear, the cattle and fat shee
fav: ourite. fime of M, oy ig plac
z
f his “homestead, with e
du — — vmi with ‘better
means we "€ his family, TOS ed at the public
cost, alie he Law pro 1 Ae able to — at home,
though willing to o pay for On all sides of | him he
with iri — and sc — growing r: mdi
cria am flour- —— in active operation, wa the
a in „dec arge
and gra
| sold 2 K a ha HB An the grain crops will hay
he winter ite LH ug ady
reparation for
puffing a the lar scape. The Jan
will find supe to most
fear to
nte TE upon a st range "Re It ma
T perfection, save the |
entry i is indee
E
in effi
that i in all ws d the - — he bays this y year
will become dou valua "a
tenant should plant his own spring crops. If
consider the two positions of the tw rire Y —
be worth the while not ^
but of mos ost men of limited —.— with i
| milies to
be seen th
not have been ported at a cheaper rate,
hey could
1
tn take +} 4 "n
9 &c., Pit Us
P
the use — the yards.
set-off t the en
te. to | oe the e outgoing t du upon th
tes sod Whea
od ME a e Wheat cr
Corti p if this be
agreement that
id wm tinges, half a year’s rent #60
rae
bé quails
e can be no doubt as to the
iue of a spring entry. ‘With e ither of the nm
entries e have a risk fte tenancy, and co
quent clashing of interes and very probably the two
** at full
| makes his own
enants m o holdings, ibl
the year. overcom a the |
“ays
M root crops are
= L. e g to the
in uction, rents,
i > valuations made for |
eason s
price, or s
RAD
comm
or proper act of husbandry, t an
pertormed upon the land since fhe removal
s 222 that
been — and t of the last ane
Clover ced bill is paid in in wed Um istrict, ac
ding Ace — s (merchant) — i
sowing th s
Mo cost wie
e pre- l'en
at have | tena
co nsumption and sale of the last year’s produce, and
pee of the land tha i L to be cultivated
the next crops. The processes upon a "wes are so
thut F
austed, raordin
pe done | the eph. “they — direct rail
is
may both hav possibly wide
2 for three or four months of the dreary Lern of
ex
‘aes the — of these lands are rich prairie soil,
— — or w * v 5 miles of the railway, fresh
— m — uee for
way a 50 the
— — centres of —
er communication to the Athntie,
leans, or by the
wrence to Que C icago, which is
the — teu, is the centre of more miles o
— completed and in — — London.
though it is only 20 sinee the first
i ssa it, the annual
mi nixed, that i would be difieal to name the line of
hen no that the g ect
- ve the
tions pate Glas and fo md: operation o
atl bp the arg Seva. see Geena a
outgoing tenant.
g entry Tp diet e especially for
a | young farmers. With a mae entry we get the full |
Atlant a and thus the poi
Kaste arkets can most * draw their —
600,000, —
830—is of itself a proof th this advantage of position
— been een fully mdr ofi che Americans themselves.
of her soil is so that it it
riod, and provide for the forth
8 an earlier
ing re o aid and
nt-day.
h
give simplicity city to the of t
s qune qe s
ie of the Un Cz. Thong nota —
—.— produces m
e
for, the incoming tenant enters upor.
— and the outgoing tenant is set free | (or |r
new
nearly occupation.
The —— of an autumn entry, to wine
s do be uafal we pera coe an amicable system.
That th nant cg Mm every
required ope
e | tenant of
n "ihreshed in hosbandry ‘to the aid spe ng, under | ©
bourers, | certain feitures. 3 That a proper ee for
A
4. Th
he shall be “paid lf ~a-year’s rent, sates and
and, and possit
twice as many horses, cattle, — po as the Tatter
country
"These facts are a sufficient proof of the general —
of the country. But an evidence not less convincin
crops aud manns in or onthe nd be
t the outgoing Es
tax
chemical analysis. Four — of soil ten
ferent distant points from these Prairie Lands
sale, were carefully analysed by] Peu Voelcker, the
Consulti A tie of son Royal cultural
of England. In almost every roma — fertility, the
analysis shows that these soils excel o r best lar nds.
1 4 nat Cunt is
having their homes at i Pioi * "3 x
ing
e groun ^ "e noth T EI. n
to say nothing of the uum hin of
e between 5 — 00
going ing tenan
s E auction,
ances for seed and tillag 5. That the outgoing
They >
+ R 124
'es.
Í| tenant shall first afr in re Pen ava s. to the
send millions — cual t F to i Professor
y val
That. ali fixtures be sub
a between the outgoing
mand for. by the estate. Smith
p» and West of England Agricul
E: ject to agree-
and incoming tenant;
?s Hints in Journ "ib
3338
OF ILLINOIS.
e take by 2 from a pamphlet
nd by who has visited the district
smit and TEES notes on “ Prairie epe m in
America, n the form of a little book under ne — bury li
revie columns, issued by Messrs.
sed d tM — t M.
on onto Mr.
3 Fleet Street, E. C.] y
.. WITHIN rei orale voyage and j journey from Great
z £h
important that mer
bay hg — e basis of this
poet mde for — pei nn | than for cot As
— cheaply a — —
their fi
worth to mises, and certainly o — — r^
for fi
M eit ve ploughings, "hn one would do as well if done at
— ? He ought t
n large or small lots at
„an Du. It may be purchased:
paꝝ me —— rst
PS rate these points as ad.
— ro is to — —.— — ‘Goodwill and zeal for another | n
an’s interest, on the part of the outgoer,
us
Mete reat at alan acre ——
ing a safe
To the capitalist seeking * prim
ediat
return of at least 10 cent., and capita al
ires E s rapidly pro-
would be constantly andis by the
592
gressiv e increase in the value
visit to such a property from
with as much pleasure as heal
with very little more 8 and ‘eae
oft An a
fe m night be n
land or Irish peck
far gr renter
perm |
TUE nil zuo À
RD AGRICULTURAL GAZETTR.
cann e be said? n
Eton
characte
farm, —— p risk, van like ce oe ‘hear
> The
to the cultivation ol "tho o x ea
a very
ji lya
labour. The capital voali in x this s way yieid not only 2
regular return am the crop o igo by: and surplus sheep,
but, Arvar the land would y y year increase in
valu ge me more rage
and pm table. Merino sheep in very pi e fioc M s
ed exha
Wheat—our great sta aple—
1j em nds abundant
ix ud the Colza, of w
—the winter and sy um
b oh f d
Co y be eultiv ated 1
—— bettie equally Meis
rary charact ter.
lich [eee
mer, the —
In a wide e v
ed from sj
the bes
T
it, every e care shou
degree
mn ina EAMUS admirably adapted
1 the us vi ourse of rotation.
root crops those panta, — |
ed for the crops which
rofita
I -— on these prairie soils, with great profit
thei ners,
The iret who has keen competition to contend
with in this seaun from the constant demand
for land and consequent increase of rent, Pat Bs
his elder sons there.
a view to fatur re —— on
:
for his whole 1
eed |
Wy of nourishment fro
lant we are now referring
eake place:
he
They aid also | 2 47785 directly, ae "thee
"
p^ manures cont 857 75
a
igh commercial value, ism mar
Y t an
farmer a highly valuable 0
manure, w which being restored to the soil gives back t be
e said before, H
manure the soil c
nd has been liberally
wer o manure the
those — "|
|
very moder
his, ee
is taken of the credit, terms on w bii thea lands may |
be purcha sed.
"or example: If a
for themselves un independence.
|
n English farmer desires to place |
8
ie ma
ind y
select for each much larger farms, w ith xol — than of t
is s needed t to start the one
ood sol
the us
^" England. He fixe
terms of credit, fixes
also erms for Miedo breaking up part
of the — Ur Wheat, and building a snug. cottage.
AN he es hi fairly — ed, and returns
practical importance.
B
olerglibds ps € of throwing awa
refuse of the d. -Me
es ona radiy convertible into c
t for t
England ín time for his own | ness—
cond or
e| him.
4:
reed
s last feature is of the utm nost
Ve have in former articles
howa what an important. part. the oilcake manure
ays in Flemish ENE, — in no ae does the
mer 4 Iu the reckless part—so often done with us
MEA S attempt to do so, the
the fertilising
vantages follow
refuse and re-
| ally carried aw ay.
cultivate, or tte
M
rop produ. any ad
pa
the oleaginous p ae is Fes which at
w.
Still “ther, the oe uce
all t
Flan ders is ixtur
excretæw, and of cating
ita ud in winter or in
* s. fi:
With respect to the 4 of k inthe role
may be stated that it follows 2 85
RD; it suecee phe after the I mol
goon cai,
ool
alive
om wi
recor
the sol MA RV for that pet
transcribe. The first is for undraine
system.
carried on on a
divided ;
dibbler: 8.
Atel By facility offere the far
deviation of the plonghi in be
x
e
Ls
23.
— ; to retain ‘the. ere ora pires
t hinni or 2 son
Es may —— the reader to have here a sh
à i star
ss as the owner of 320 acres of ri
and the two — —— with
pes _ Paying all our
e eds seasons, express t — oil, il, and
oil-mills and the mode by which ther
form the oileakes so well known to all
—- int
"s —— form
Et 2285 o
eave a free distan
aa nage of about 1 foot.
hn :
will do
ur
er crop.
which W sell for ru to 802.
n Illinois for 40s. or
an acre —— ught
— while the 0 of a ise United Staten seedy
hind; the first oper:
„ing the o FA eed t
mil!s
hay
, are generally driven by the
rt mide sitia Ste iid 80 sea, =
Small o
m.
mparat
e
ively. inexpensive
. — An L Res thro ongh is 34 redue-
TAM wder.
se
d
|
as large as that of th
e facility
more pete des
good—oug e ris — "udi to the mind of
^ man who has. a family to provide for, y
COLZA CULTURE
ransport is equ ally de
n oileake,
are prepared ; the
Vibia tha
suspended a
~ of a finished — —
or the
nau po the same A
ortal Shakes
Extending his jo ourney
of
le with b deem
With ba -
manding f fait eh ken in f reae. i
and abun les of ma
ing. Dem
dant even
m
the
V
from the
fee made, gi
ce to
m is —
the lower e of dian
rnaces, and into whi
— are some- |
e | cost
en
p
y are in . —
e| you
wing th
wing in fick ab ts nei
phe nting the
destined
of th Camur
Leen int
wen Hi flens,
= r 8 the
n up the pressure gets qx 2 are gradi [s
IA I ed benealh the oat
snp : vine Bags an th the
ae —.—
nature
a knife, and it
in farms ar. re of sim
ushing being e eg
true low
essels
tam
*
out i
aft working the
so those which act Ed the wedges
* worked by horse
ay now * — our attention —
ew — with the cul-
finski „generally grown in |t
most important er these, t
point
e
f the
e edges m
is | the
ids than
ected by
er termination shaped to | field which
h
trust not
ae
plan
insects—
he fleet the
e
he top; "de
the 3 —
Jeux 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 593
E zm — * $ sm prs iea at . X cera plan | tied in i nare — d | Ld . That there " ue. lee z
withdrawing tbe spa we the. earth falis upon the plants, wil mr — s |s straw, such as is to bo found on an dimery Sy I
mee. Matern tetas ER LEER *
by E dibbler, one makes the holes wie — natural rm aes m hw E od — sim manure, dt will add to +} manu ep east st five tons
idee * — ating E g tAk Kos t» conve ert i av — form all that | of the w be used as htter as ie adm i of its being
follo
the — me carth
the with the
ve
8
P" transplanting E the
and economical; altho we! it has not
always — i in mr d as the othera, — is
however the plan generally a La coe X re * race
mon in the 1 method
lanting ingens entioned. The
pened up by the plough
ants are placed
e l3 oy 3 who
follo v it du E the ope ration; the
then
e
Ae
L
, releasing
those which are in the When this
method of eei war ii is s adopted me is 8 tha
should be brought fne a E
itin the
Serves to be „Widely known n.
the ir of workin,
M. Le D octe, and
of the T during its growth i
of the utmost importauce; aud it pex that
ves of the farmer are demanded
be e
peret the plants from shooting maturely,
0 be killed or nipped by the frosts, depends thes success
e crop. ihm rs the system adopted is to make |
drai rows D means of a egeo,
nded CIEL
the more
lie cultivation of the Colza up
arvestin us points — | MA
with this important departmen Cad the saving of the
seed w to notice apy n per.
req
ts den An dou
8 2 . — ored —
€ n the straw? The pro
thorou ey satu veg ee
e solid. excrement ar the
- very encouraging; v
farmers 3 with, what a shrewd one of their own
mber said, the * company and manure” of the cattle
they fe fe e Tt is — — that the expenses
of ing be increased as litt
=| experience bas proved that a
it Seres state, and wate not,
> keep, from their. ‘condition give strong
a great —— v nutritive matter in the
e s den ng less used for
th od pr the
Mechi insists ont in b his method of —
be “properly
viz., that
— for food
n the
the straw y prepared" i
— Ee by fermentation.
tho 10se W od
property, and that it should be — only as
We have
while we are in no way tà to subscribe to
e consumption of
"aw
maintain
already. said that ther re js a con
ood and more for litter an d -— as more nourish
ortiche: of food, such as — ré been more
may be reg ape also presumptive evidence |
qualities, which is ren el more available fi
anim als by « different preparatory | We
i n to bem tabl
for Prae
e pi
in "the. , modem systems of
as food is
not fully” appreciated, cA it h
vem
. But nay F
the e in its natural de. as was formerly
i re
»
| more readily e by the animal Which partakes |
of it; = — ill xu T — ed by redueing it to
cut „ by s er
Suppose decre: it is Jj ined to consume as food all |
= " on the farm, the cattle being — mned to
n bare boards, e accommodation
of it, it
er more
0
animals on
of the proces
18 execute
t should be eut
d befo;
p: vpe: ly used. tl full
into chaff and mixed w
watery and piia food used
thefarm. By being steamed or boiled, a
s performed by the stomach of the Mixed
es,
5,
h it,
S | en on an ner arable farm in Soona d would |
e to be very Eu increased, in most cases
bled. Here, then, is a t
expense in the 1 af the buildi
the annual charge t the
repairs, is also mu
ch i
aar of attending « p the ‘cattle, of preparing
160.
"Transactions — m Highland
e p. be observed
ments that the "profit from the use
y
e
y
e
of the
up uny
"tha it may be derived from this farent of feed.
ital — $ in the stock, risk, and
all — *
80 d pM aceoun nt. not
farmer who 1
8 8
ot
had the e
great.
expense of cutting the straw,
iure mary mixin
Not
— ana the
the two together not been so
g
merely is straw valuable as containing
matter which possesses considerable "feeding properties,
ood,
is
that “science has mai . cn
considered orth o
ut 9s. 4d. n; w
You
but i
green
t is most beneficial in feeding in giving bulk to
f | those kinds of food in which the elements
p are more concentrated—the c
A € if propery prepared, realise a value of. 40s. Fos inc g most essential in 3 auimals. The
who consume all your straw an nd keep | mixing of cut ha;
of nutrition
Ik
ondition of bulk of food
straw with cut and bruising of
has been
—
that you can extrac et m
. to
litter; other wi
om your straw
raw ^ er ir the
UI à
that the consum ie st
increases the eine of "acu manure mede on
-— ho from the man i
sup; in
n is urged publie, aci cra being
n the f d. of te mistone on wor harses that there was a ;
dim ne hose where the mixture was used
a favourable opinion of the — of straw, viz.—** wei
proved by t
of both hay and Oats, as
the London Omnibus Co ompany. So also Mr.
t fro
your — mts - can by using it as | Croall, of 2 gh, has been enabled to discontinue
ise w pouli never „blame M i the use of hay in Myidiefela, ems e by
— "1 22 rise
pose,
0
Seeing then the facility with wh ean be opin Harc:
A E 5 ; to in t support of it, that it is quite a new discovery, f 1 de foin, cheval de rien; cheval de
gue in 2 ‘pip Bie! ward. a xd which we are indebted to the light of moder bataille;” which may be translated, “A horse on hay
— Peg x Fam — LI nores djs Muy Bat the t nd that it is only the reviv r *. pean | a horse of little worth ; on straw is a horse fit
pira Giu it pep dece y farmers of a former age. “It was at for battle." Journal of **
b Wh ps T one law a r arr says Stephens, “that
y the Wheat, the Rye, or the Clover—that it produces | traw dali nol Se en in ure unless ari
a.crop which at all times commends s ready sale, and jt were consumed oye eis and horses; the cele- Socteties.
E suos deg cece ewell carried this idea io such a height,
destined still farther to oovapy iu the toutine of Belgian | tht if he bad not stock sufficient of his own to OTAL AGRICULTURAL OF BNOLAN
agriculture, E. S. B. py t lgian | oo Á his —— he took in those of others for: Ar a MoxTHLY Corxclr, held Wednesday, July 6,
lived to hi Though, | 1859, his Grace the Duke of Mar arlborough, President, in
IE USE OF STRAW as wi e ioned before, what straw ns of|the chair,
THE " r * ial value eoa more me Kms — New members were elected.
most i i as e ani: on usual monthly ri the Finance Committee
lems to be solved at present in fi E traw and water alone not in, of course, all | was received, with, ite allowing ‘addition ut
fot of anime i best means of economising the 3 —— raw. A great part members of the Finance Commi lso beg to st:
in the manufacture of meat and of the for i of the ous w has been made to the e that they desire | tos s the Committee
1 — Z of daring the respirstion of the animal, and some | appointed to * ertain and
— on — fattening of ca he t of * ystem of 1 the accounts of the
evil—a means of obtaining manure; — e they lo look | wasto of the muscular We need scarcely allude | Society, perkos free, by the tender of their resig-
gms M EE a nufae rs. Wesu — à € — of E — re m 3 from ‘imal fed | nation
0 =r b »
ted ea — ri, ae lg qe a mary — — “ne —— M e ved by experiments, Said Mr. On the motion of Lord Portman, seconded by Mr
besides, extraneous articles taken from a yard in which cattle were fed on full On d of pson, seconded by Lord
— 3 What is the —.— profitable way | Turnips, with a portion of oilcake and Bean-meal, was Bere, Ea ois of in Sac e a
ming show, as food for the animals on the | worth 3 tons of that | h apparently in equally good | t 2 e Commis past
farm t Mec Modi: tells us tl i than s was in a yard young cattle h ion of Mi.
— a "— —it — — were on straw nj de a run out the F
— 3 while others : seen the living in the fields, px few Turnij in the|ho
I -—— l for day.“ We think that the question as to the value of
Sid ae Po ae t | etis is mper little | straw for food and manure has not fairly put by
ihe of LE LE We E the Turnip a | the advocates for the consumption of the whole of the
nó water, injurious to animal if given to it w on the farn food. ience b n us,,
a another ap to the ion of his says Mr. Mechi, one of these advocates, “that, ploughed um
whe n s profits in and considered as manure, its worth i 97. 44.
pes his vary o t n has — while used as food it will, if properly IL
large Turnip. would realise a v of 40s. a ie
tat ey ire bo food by cooking; "another thinks It is intended ther kinds of Ber toj
— best when the food is given in its be used with the straw. The question to be solved, —
"DM du dr „ driod ve TA deo aston i nn
naturally, quantity of cattle food 5
ere — y 70 per cent. of muscle, fat, and heat- certain quantity of 5 to know whether z m —Ó—ÁÀ 290 0 0
producing matters; that, theoretically speaking, it is|is more profitable to consume the whole of the straw advisable in farm management,
|
e process em faci —
f diff. t lities, by low price mm ——
of snp bigh price of WM ts 10 0 0 fifteen na Taal of acres of Wheat in the 9952 ^ able to speak positively, "es bata
IV. Late improvelnents i i, dairy pra: ctice > ; - produee only 2 ,315,500 qrs., whilst the 4,500,000 aer á : reaps rh to which I shal Wie
t — — maem the profit- in the latter yield 15,750,000. The above statistics AC d on — ortuguese coast, whence it mang,
* prm on of a farm dà 10 0 0 are taken from the valuable work of M. de Lavergne, | po d he 0 is countr is toi Y du
VII. On the condition of seed-bed best suited to .. who ascribes the small result in France the occupa- | -— ire from the others, sulphuric acid hay;
the various agricultural cr 9:070], f so large an extent of land being devoted een used to — e extent in the proce 51
22 — M 3 — 10 o 0 anii food for th use of man, without applying or f lime appare ct as a drier.
Mme iy he land would | its value must 1 mated
w providing those none by which the lan on the a
Iv. ba ba kde tabl table, „and recommended to rr at ‘the R ‘compensated fo for the exhaustion. that of a aver sarum. which, ind * — a
following prices :— “The bad effects of this system of cropping are | resem mbles i Mage Smp it somewhat
1d. each, or 6s. per 100 to Members of the al observable in lessening the pro irr of Water ;
1 M 9s. per 100 to Non. m ally o a vy the Organic ma ua uw
Lo igh, irman of the General OM iud food; the im mind of the soil by Biphosphate OE Nr essent * i E 2 *
Committee, ser presented the report of the Committee, in | excess of white crops a in the same proportion earth made soluble ne.
reference to ie etails connected with the War ick haw — ers, an and renderi (ing em less produetive. This is 5 44
eetin in France by the number of ca attle ip sheep Ak aline s ” Qm
r. Pain was elected one of the Stewards of Show- | ‘kept sion a given quantity of land; 1 5 m mou ppi Sand 634
yard — in place of Lord Portman, who will be oj ~ produced, in proportion 0 9.80
in y attend. $e e, &c., kept, = eompared with those yc in fon
The report of the special Committee on Fs e Kinga The following tables show the «This 1 E ES only 3L 165
port the past
accounts of the Society was received and — a pi
the honorary acting Secretary was aut thoris e| 8 S à con LEAN
siapa» melstis to a deed of ' assignment executed by t the Sheep, 30, 000,000, ‘or 1 to 23 acres. 30,000,000, pe: TT" acres. | Fish manures have usually been offered. for
ath t | Bullocks, 8,000,000, or 1 to n: 10,000,000, or 1 to 13 acres. bon. SL. to 91. per ton; and at c " OF sale at
The "Report of o c: — re 2 of | pcm ma RED. viously no inducement t to duy [us Jue there P.
mode en AVI n Unite ace the
— a ol Jo! 1 Shelle: xcd 80 Ibs. of meat dach, or ailure of the manufactur
read, it was resolved, on the
Bart., M.P., and seconded by S Edward Kerrison, |
ji rh the office Te Secretary and Editor
shall not be combined,” |
At was resolved, on the ime of Lord Faversham,
y e 4007. per annum io
reside in the 58 Society? s house, and ha
advertisements. be
e or before
The following „ e Com
were m ed, viz. :— That the Secretary "shall devota bis
e to the affairs of the Socie That he
ed security 4 the 8 ‘of 10007. That
it shall be Hoe an additional recommendation to
if he possesses a
H tha zv sit
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL
d. acre—that of the United Kingdom i is 28 bushels. -
d m
Pag
g at once accounte
competent Keine of % g
|
different results value is chiefly derived from the bi
Werber
—
10,000,000.
500, 000, 000 lbs.
2, 000,000, weighing "ids Ibs. each, or a total
"of 1, 120,000,000 1bs
rance.
Sheep.. .. 8,000,000, producing 40 Ibs. of meat each, or
320, 000, 000 Ibs.
4,000,000, weighing 220 Ibs. each, or a total of
S 10 000 Ibs.
Bullocks, iscellaneo
tal.—The new weight — e in we ,
erpool corn market for some time; and
e m mstances have induced some further discussion |
s ere, that both oxen and |
ilch sows are cpap in France as beasts of burthen
[s |
has met w say, then, that
n field labo ; the next 3 will therefore be has '
d "for
entirely ries the 4 bushel: 3 of 70 lbs, in |
of Wheat, both foreign and home-grown ; also the |
Les ws RN. «bushel ? of 45 lbs. for — and that of 60 Ibs, for
An
3,007,000, dae 7 mik. or sag | BRR Bor the 1 mplete; and all parties
gallons each. agree, now that the t
Fra
4,000,000, 88380 ing 487,500, 000° “gallons of milk, or 1093
gallons each.
“The 3 are kept either until they are from
seven yea = Ros es 5 = uec — or
es eeks ol
ill led as era his apon
for
ippers — generally . — the utmost x
motion of Lord Portman, Mr. Brandreth
88 oneur in and
produce of beef per bend.
Out "of tl
ot^ qu^ on mee = calves are stated to sí fice anti icipated : as ko ben
to 25 — But
have either
n “Acting Seeretary, until a new Secretary
(sd cows
e practice of working both o oxen
e last p^ only reduc es the TR ce in Bat
Des mowing- ma-
„ lies should be
— desit. rep given thereto |
: June 30.—At the |
pl yey mig of ts Rode, the Duke of Athol,
v members were
Edin Show. i er, of 2
ee, entries of stock and implement Sie
2; sheep, 5817 swine,
as | this
VR ae ect Show to mone
were 1 xiv aed the Council, | bs
Bea
bs., the * of — is not yet so complete.
Dr. Y |
The de fects of the old bree not being so
introduction of
the: em — uano as manure. The “Plowing ae are
T ufact; specim
dia man 5 rather greater, it appears that the market has not
ect as to these articles, passed entirel the tr
i , no icated apparatus is necessary, all tion. A large majority of the
that i re i it : being a stove or flat yt surface, is fret, a = — n fase A e ice
nea it á ll it since. ut a few sti
| bac ei io T Y a sma me pedi with flues passi noted to-ho-sotflod by the vit of the bu we Hes
—— everything points —
i of the change, and to — "il the
cental at no ne late. ct so as to flour and meal:
tter being preferable. 4
ai
ert. ons,
| these are sul conditions, and ast
or offal bei
and convi into a proper state before putrefaction
'eommenced, and a manure be produced which would |
ed
of such manures of this kind as have appeared sale trade, >
the market, analyses eral of which have at
different times feces made in the laborato: The first
of them t to which I shall refer er are e two! samples made on
x d N det
TIME a uL 2 us A d diia. dte sni EU ume His
; horses, 19:
jur 56; Poultry, 824; implements, 820.
ith tl
87;
The oscar ams
arrangements for the S ti —— I am — iy They were found to
Agri Edueation.— The Secretary ri
e ted I. II.
one examination was held on the 6th of April, Organic matter T IRE —
Bight candidates inscribed. their names for ex- Co Rive e tee
— aai d the e ee the fe etme Se ee
wing:—John Milne, Mains of Lathers, oe Sa slt FFF
William Henry Eley, Cobham, Kent; Th Us Sand. E ^ 3.84 2.14
ire. In addition to t |
Mr. Hewens AGIS td 5 ke io tiese = pune tne 7 —
Dass. x seientific| If we esti imate these — to the plan used for
2 eee is worth about 47. 125 and No. IL, 4 that guano
cannot | Sa Ms, per per-ton--valnes which mre certainly not very .—1t is alm ck. in. bo fet eem
CSI ERE high. must take into account, however, play à nen part in history. conta
— ur oee ; the large | Pay of x
; oom —— uces the 8 ts of between 25
^ —&tbiti oh ed da were possible to exclude this substance, | the effective rig P equivalent [|
— à Which 3 be done, then tlie and 30 ewt. of » OF : 1 nuré
Tie Jeu from, iiie of these samples would be a d | some other od and that, e
the ourna? of Agr uer E: atom of eee about 5“. wu and F of cope, n. ANNE
July 1839. W. B — 3 the somce d itg I have been quantity Ei "elements at fot Ty
e t number ; JUS Ww eve to ha 232 e immense value w produ
more than usually inter m quarterly perdi — ttim sale i Live You contained ad with reference to te rere of
Flemish husbandry, on * on English. ad Orgnnie matter i
French Agriculture, on Labour Cottages, on the 8 956
Bean crop, o Toe, o p = - S comu a a
cheese, 2 nage, rt on Laborato - Bero ue Y T 2.55
perience. Some of them we have — —— marked i 3 8 e
— e papers on French A 100.00
explicit and full of useful mation T The ‘allo 8 88 "The abs — id
passages compares its results with those of ou erf we of comm 15 cept toa
re in the an tal, A th
ilit oe = e possi-
wt of re eee one-fourth of the entire, and but i 1 1 px oe " pec m :
vate is under cereal erops; t ue is somewhat Ts ow to! :
whilst in the United Kingdom, one-sixth of the whole e, EM a n e£. phosphates. t' does not, Ege
one-fourth of the eultivated land, is d eber ton. Ik is zobable that in ibis looken upon guano bes then
pied,
produce of Wheat in France is 13} ehe per
case some charcoal or
mixed with the ish, with
bal
er organie matter had been im things m —
à
h the view. of its acting as an ' said that A: d since hens
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 556
Jott 9, — — M
ted States.] PAN. PAXTON ON WORKS, SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738. | 0 BE = SOLD, a handsome, well -built, and f and Baish
Apply to H. Fasan, 5 feet glo, Hicku 16 = wide, quite new.
uring & mported into o the United Sta
| A the actual pes of English 'agricultu re, America, |
by guano-beds, rules the prices of all the corn-
SMALL GAS APPARATUS, WITH ap
NUISANCE, FREEDOM FROM
w ER'S PATENT NATIONAL
land, a state of thin —
pa ÁL 8
& prese for parsa Somin Farm eem
amd should c
importati ion of guano-in nto i
try of wl
might be — Bloody wars have sometimes
causes 8 much less — Liebig’s
ism — in Ne * land.—We h b E — . r labou: thout ti I ter fe with
Sheep Farming in Ne cg a NOR COOKE'S warranted PRIZE| servant or labourer without materially interfering. with his
favoure a with the allow ing) letters, fih dhe written EI NING aT BUDDING KNIVES, SCISSORS, &c.— | DEN tote Proprietors iad rua grad — acd be had
last year in reply to a penny uem ed | Sel y E —— Nurserymen and Seed Merchants in in |° J.T. i Ob, Lineal: >
f -settling on,
military r who was "desirous 0 „ the three Kingd
l
"fe flowing I FOWLER'S PATENT 511 STEAM PLOUGH,
aj vi
e followin Letter was written from Nelson :—
— puzzled what to advise about — son leav-
r^ as
Far g
one is attended with comfort, M and leisure, the other
t anxiet hardshi,
must be accompanied with constan: and
$ act, it is a rough, wild, and re tly editery life, but at
the time o! better p ts of a good income than
can with — A: a good your invest-
ment. 2 4—— my own case, and it is one of many. I
berin sheep farming about sight ye ye ars ago by 5 e
the same — as Le y your son will have at his cm
" le one will make that sum, if not 10001. a- year
clear for y self i : short —— Then „Who has not
done so well as ex en offered and at 7000.
ing
si s engagement I have as! im am
come and — ve with me, which they do when ———
think it would be well that your son should see the ie "tore
he fi — gn up his mind, nd he would be gaining
perience —
c een
The above Cut shows FOWLER'S STEAM PLOUGH at work.
with
person he ot Pp — et
should poer settle T can say little, but I
that it should not be this o; one, às I cannot see any
whatever for his ettin a run for anything like the sum he has E purchased for STEAM PLOUGHING can be used for 7 8 operation the Farmer may wish.
on invest, an LE e could I — advise it; so long as the to field e to place, requiring but one or two
2 horses in "the shafts to steer them.
further particulars, prices, and Illustrated Catalogues apply to
JOHN "FOWLER, JUN, 28, CORNHILL, LONDON, EC.
had
if
Stand No. 30.—ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S SHOW AT WARWICK, July, 1859.
ha there whom ve him
ters, and I have no doubt they would c y afford him
"ICE EEUD E iive diat B. SAMUELSON,
investment in Sheep for < and you momod to give a AGRICULTURAL ENGINEER AND MACHINIST,
EE Pee" — I sare . 76, CANNON W WEST, LONDON; WORES—BANBURY, OXON;
tint, the party with a careful person on pi —.— — Tecos the atttention of A
88
e h ti | —— :
me Pw:
districts that will be o Balt e By the eno E SAMUELSON'S IMPROVED HORSE
those terms he would! fave a considerable flock as the propor- , i
tion of increase, while all the original stock w would still be his 2 feet 6 ins 9 0
own. ourse party he shee) e
s ed x Steeled Troth. 10. —
abore eee e PATENT BRITANNIA
— pom in sheat . —
could e E requires no
establish — — but there r gatherers), price 82/. 10s. at the
Works, Benary ; 341. in London.
SAMUELSONS BOYD'S PATENT
LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MA-
CHINES. — gp pom Machine that m —
in evi WET as well as Price,
it yo pue a € peni Se rye tting a run | 47, 17s. Gd. to 131. 138.
or aran ere, n
Er ferae Suy re, the boundaries of th SAMUELSON'S PATENT PRIZE GARDENER'S DOUBLE ACTION TURNIP CUTTER, with the new Patent improve-
SAMUELSON'S PRIZE CHAFF CUTTERS, MILLS, CAKE BREA " Impl à
scription; also HARROWS, FIELD aes, CLOD C rares erm e y de
e above may be ins ree = Mn. Sam 8 stand, N
PE ed — 475 V Pe ani o. 30, at the Warwick Show, where CATALOGUES and PRICE
Works, 7 Oxon; London Warehouse, 76, Cannon Street, West.
him as an e
Zealand, the best judge himself when he EIORTICULT
Calendar of Operations.
JU E Tr
: July 4.—We regret to state that the fine harvest
bere and look about for hi
sen bre een vate gt tm Rime ` DEANE & 555
RA.
in OLS,
ARDEN ENGINE
Prices 5bs. „ 638., — Galvanized -
o, Wood, 84s,, 105s, 1805
Flower Stands, 4s, oe each.
n Omam tal
rospects pronounced last k sad
prt dE 5 bla
T ditto,
R^ "Nec: 25 = :
eane's M
£6 175.
= cues Stools,
supe Oe ne Sende Self adjusting Seythe;
Wire un a aru 18in. 4d. per yard run.
would
e al
poor — ‘thad — - richer
and less remunerative. Maldon, =
Bey Implement for Gur Garden use on the
Wo u wn
lisp Acents: jo Correspondents.
nig There is no bette:
On Landed Property," by the late for Dow than that
TIE GARDENERS" CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZE ETTE. [Tour 9, 188 1
596 —.— === f
JJ. wI OKS HOW- S FAND.. No. 18. =
k on Tuesday, the 12th inst., and followine 1
lt al i gae 8 — at Warwic ing days ned
Mn J. B. BROWN ax» CO. will dese at dote ent ue o de, particularly p :
T ron an
nd co Mer BAR FENCING, in fiat and sid bars. IRON, FIELD, and other r GATES, ra
IRON rater variety of re vier vision ss S GF s GARDEN SEATS, CHAIRS AND STOOLS, a great 1 and
E NET ario
FENCING WIRE. WIR
ngth.
ver ke S, hee i eh ENGIN S, GAR
„ lower S is E md Em Bas E
E pid in arden ET Flower St [2 5 i |
STAND ) No. 1883, WARWICK SHOW.
J. B. BROWN & CO., 18, CANNON STREET, CITY, LONDON, E.C.
SHANKS MACHINE
; TERI LAWN MOWING E
SHANKS- PA =
NEW AND IMPORTANT IMPE OVEMENTS T E MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING, AND DELIVERING,
HORSE POWER PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING, AND DELIVERING MACHINE,
say
meten renim m n m UT RRR
ae
> >
e CIETY'S 9 AT WARWICK ON
| HESE NEW MPROVED MACHINES WILL BE EXHIBITED AT THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SO
T : "ta JULY 12, AND FOLLOWING DAYS, AT MESSRS. BROWN & CO.S VS NO.
F :.. di eel As
i : AP-B I
$0 RESTO] d = s. £27. 0 8
de ALLY DRAWN BY A HORSE) pa .. 94 0
No. IINE (USUALLY DRAWN SS EY & Hou on Hs) 7. „
fidana I TEE tii 4 T3 T arg eA
E Y A Pony)
No. t icum A508 == — py A PONY OR DONKEY) |
he MACHINE (MADE LIGHT rox A SMALL Pony or esee)
5 ADT had with t 41 i aeri
PRICES OF THE HAND MO ING AND ROLLING MACHINE "TO
er 8 H^ tcc es MACHINE. E
No. 6.—22-1wen MACHINE .. „ sam
No. 7.—19-1sch MACHINE. * ta 5 13. MACHINE I — P.
j LE
TESTIMONIALS IN Web OF SHANKS’. NEW HORSE MACHINE.
i From Mr. T. Harte, Gardener to THOMAS CHAMBERLYNE, E sq, Oranberry Park, near Wine 3 rs
its trials on
I am happy to be able to add my testimony to the . merits of the Shanks’ 30-inch New Hors N * Mow: ving Machine which you sent me. I have pug it » een a who 5 witu |
ly is year with a scythe. EE e erga: all Red expectations, as it likewise did x employer and ot iil ved, the La 9 2 "i
When taken on the Lawn, where it had a better chance of showing its othin could Dosaibly ex pe it; after cutting, and the Grass beingrenn 5 and. noto only d t, hii
looked. so Sell as it did then. Tam sure that I shall be able to [E the expense sof the. Machin ne this i E labour T from the use of t r PE > e
leaves the turf in such fine- — at a is that no Las y et — Machine, as I believe be without exception the best I ev:
apparatus 3 the Grass A — rented in
berry Park, July p :
. SHE. T aie the . — of TWEEDDALE, Tester Garden, May 13, 1859. TT — m
RT : = coges of your i improve Grass Cutting Ma achine wh oilers we got the a deg day especialy ie delivering rt a mechanical triumph. 1 parts that require E IE
acts my expectation, an orms all you say in your prospectus. We ean now go on the whole da without stopping, excep’ D:
are quite in love with it; a good EU ii z x :
From Mr. JAMES MACKIE, PHA E io His Grace the Duxz of ATEM LL, The Gardens, Dunkeld, May 1 er ae ur Machin
“ After repeated trials with our Grass Cutting Machine, as now fitted up with your Delivering Apparatus, Ihave much pleasure in saying that I n w consider 3573 osi.
We can now do as much work ; in sič hours as we usd to do in ten en hors with the old plan of stopping to e ney — * — ELI and with far greater ease both. to m E io he e Tub
well So ann MS Ae „working. of the e Apparatus, and the saving of time effected by it, t e has empty ne from Blair Castle to be sent throug!
one h
£z FULLY ILLUSTRATED 55 DETAILED 'CIRCULARS ON APPLICATION.
N AGENTS
MESSRS.. J. B. BROWN & CO.,
18. CANNON STREET, CITY, LONI LONDON, E.C.
QE PATENT ere STANDARD | quum
PATENT CAST- IRON P
2 Ts GARDEN EDGING &
“CABLE PATE Dan den
Cottages, Stable | Price at I —
28 feet in depth ; | Straight *
and Valve, which Bends IM
can bo made right- | If fitted io plans `: iam
ABLE PU: opposite e the nose by xs.Co., Manu)
are fitted à Diam :
Mee Lege pne Bucket and ene . farce Height, 2. „ d. PRIZE MEDAL A
Ea ie ora erue The barrel | 1 mm fin gere eina 1 50 — zm Arms en
to corrode, d e : » ta percha|1 10 0 ERA 1 LR
á : 3787 or: eet iron 2 40 IVE, as
n 6,, — Pipe 2 9 0
as required. 2 13 0
2355 b mim 15 feet of Lead Pipe
: atta — 2
ia bina and Pump, Wi sse ees 2) in. lo — i dert di E ditto 2 i
tail pipe, fitted with strong x:
—
If
brass ä for suction pipe The short barrel Pump is vi
fitted ith barrel of for fixing in situations ups limited
See for the supply of coppers and
ash-houses with soft water from unc n
E N or in Hot, Forcing, i ony
esired
pldvished per
Stand and wich plain
A pipe, AE on suc-
H 2
G
— W. may be fixe d, 9,
2inch patent ru ibber and can- the stage. 4 m * Z rus
a s suction pe on May be. obtained of any Ironmonger o TA v
either 10, 12, or 15 ft. lu imber i Town or country, at the abore The edere uy cs Mad
per foot 0 2 2 Jo Oroft the Patentees and Manufacturers, with Drawings and Pri
May be obtained of any Ironmonger or Plumber in | of Pratt SONS, § Rating sag de An Y at II — M T ES
country, at the — prices, or of the Patentes and Mantis Rams. — eS etd 5 ir Ae hes: Corr
turers, Joun WARNER & Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin- St., London PE 3 — alent s Lyme tcn, — À mi deem
it on applica | Dublin: J. EDMONDSON & Co.
r 16, THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. M
— ͤ—
|» NEW AND BEAUTIFUL PLANTS. NEG E ET 2
d pat
nd DESCR IPTIVE Ca 32 Sede — Ms — a —
Ju aah EX
T TM inias, uses, published, an
will be forwarded post free on phen Fong —Paradise N »
MESSRS. VEITCH & SON, |= eem
e — — AND beg to
rm their 7. — and patrons t ———ů—ů
YAL EXOTIC NURSERH ES, EX ETER AND CHELSEA, . — a SEEDS, all of which are warranted
Hes: S pleasure. in 8 for the first time the following Novelties, in the selection of which they Per packet—s.
rbaceous .. G: difora
Cineraria, from named vars, 2 6 | Primula sinensis, mixed.. 1 6
and sterling merit. Clianthus Dampieri 26 Pansy, 23 uu vars.. Ì0
LANTS ARE NOW READY FOR DELIVERY. Hollyhock, from named | Sweet William, from extra $
— ATES FOLIOLOSA. — 1 a : novelties n was — d eim Established —
This most hardy evergreen shru - | 31s. each
Lobb from California, is of à pe compact b abit with most
Cheilsnthes el
5 rir a on ged resembling — COTONEASTER ene er gero of Wallich
— —
0 6 fine
Se Siste m Hor Roads,
aradico irn ery, boven, ters and rusty
qus Ls sine Mer gp a i CINERARIA,
‘anak
om rk, J
laria Seed you — me pe -
in great abi — * beens ed partici * Gas:
resent season Palaceand Royal Botanic Society's rfectly hardy eve: — shrub is "— eilgh out so MEN Mu my pr n e — — Prize for the
Fee at both. Carma p it has received prises as a now Hilla | whence it wae sent us ed Mr. Thomas ts Lobb. B Flower $ Show. Y Tos A shee see she
hardy evergreen. It will certainly acqui isition | was originally described pt nx in his | another half-crown which I enclose.
evergreen pe ti catablished plants in |“ Icones Plantarum. * “howers most “tess, Jackson & Sone U FRANGA
——— DR interesting
ANUM (Hooker. pretty shrub. S — oe — 8 W i, is Gad t. ee
lov sige rdy half shrubby he: baceous xev was LYGODIUM POLYSTACHYUM (Wal M. 6 à *
b. A ea id
is vory € 7 pa packet.
also sent from California by Mr. W. Lo
It grows so com- This beautiful Fern was sent us by Mr. Thomas Lobb fron N & Son, 8 en and Seedsmen, Kingston, S. X.
us i and produces its beautiful flowers, which are | CentralIndia. In general appearance and beauty of habit dt HIDE ^
a clear bright lue with pink throat, so pound BE... — E — soma E the mph —ů * n SON aving l
ll doubtl most vi e are branche ith a downy y E ^ A "
for bed. Aa LA as a single bush in the open 1 ry is | tivated to sufficient size, it will m — oiy line plant upou reducing their extensiv collection a of Orchids, have
: riki 1
ly striking and attractive It was exhibited at the | Young plants, 31s. Gd. each;
Ww
the First Prize for new and rare Tanke” It is si Rr d ELA NELLA ATROVIRIDIS (Spring), ER ey 2d
—
—
Wm. Hooker in ''Curtis's Botan’ — Magazine a fine species of — introduced from
1858. Strong established "im Ta. 6d. each. mae Mr. Thomas Lobb, The branches of the re c Mie im, C esee
" forke stems are broad and well defined, and * a most meia D.
PORTOS REA ( y). distinct and novel appearance. It is certainly one of the |T ycaste g
This ve VEL. vari m Iplant, which was found and | finest Ar eh e of the dichoto ous-branched section. | G. uleheh
sent us by E — iie — —— is QUITE A GEM, of | Price 1 oc „tigrina, and the new and rare sorts. at y
bly n t, and almost Talling in ELAGIN LOBBI reduc: Post-office Orders to be made payable at
pany qune orth the 8 Tho l pops Boge age uely — . Mr Spel oe WI Kingston, S. W.
ovate in are of a green, W. very w. A most beautiful sent . Thomas
Ur c por E PO | ne E c 1 lu nare
central ious t ha e ric — m 0 of t ,
— — — €— E — of which -— — forthe Fern-like character of its branches, and — 21 6d packets. SEED of the finest strain in Is, 6d. and
admi; adapted ei! tion of these charm; lants should itho! i
pem e bas y m and TN. the roni esta of a lovely addition. Price 15 * e i SEED from the finest varieties in 1s, and
iuis, Moon, Dee n: — SPRA UMBELLATA. Wee an genuino IMPERIAL CABBAGE, in 64. or Is
ets, or * 0
r IN UL SEEDS from fine named kinds, in Is, and
This is undoubted! greatest acq to our | beauty at the Exeter Nursery, raised fro seod sown i EY m
now s is undoubtedly, ne of the Itis of EROSA as — last autumn, having stood wi: — To bin — ^ =; DEL uad ‘Cine, ya e and 1 packet. *
and free growth, perfectly distinct and novel in its chai + through last winter. It is also well ome for pot vultare, dw ons, 61. aid e * packet. packy
the pinnæ on every f. as well as their branches, having a | the habit is very dwarf and spreading, resemb t. of e ixed, 6: and ls, per p
broad central stripe of „which in contrast with | Calandrinia grandiflora, The —— which may eed 2 P
the most charm effect, It may | Am wE a beauti ed pink, with purple
justly the VARIEGATED FERN. It was exhibi m Seeds o
produces aranthine, are ifnll
— poe OE a — — ee zo 2 f this gs I jm su — the autumn,
at the Botanic ens on July 6, an ore the i- | and in the mean time a . small pots,
cultural ET poi: Floral € ca i, at 2s. 6d. es * er
Tr
ROYAL SOUTH HANTS SEED 13
Deane, THE PATRONAGE OF H.R.H. THE — E
—— K ;
RICULTURAL AND HORTICULTURAL socks
LEADING AGRICULTUBISTS or THE U:
v 8
. a
JAMES. CARTER & CO., SEEDSM
HIGH HOLBORN, LONDON, W. C.,
LOBE, 6d.
EG leave i offer Seeds of the giae" of this year's harvesting, saved from SEVERAL |w. pi, oe RED —
UNRIVALLED COLLECTIONS, and they with confidence recommend them as being of first- ö $
rate quality, both for form, colour, and liti: R Seed Growers,
e é EOLARIA, CINERARIA, 2 SINENSIS FIMBRIATA, in three-sized packets, W ee
S all * 1 same quality, 1 . and 58. eac s
C. & Co. have APE Selected from irt potion Catalogue of Seeds a few varieties of HARDY
and HALE. HARDY PERENNIALS (including Seeds of Florists’ Flowers of undoubted quality),
HARDY AND HALF-HARDY PERENNIALS,
Per packet. —s. Per packet. —s.
THE mo ge Muzans
—s.d. . d. Per packet.—s. d. F PREVENTING
Antirrhinum, — — 0 6 | CEnothera macroca +. 0 6 | Stock, Imperial, eee enue qe Te. IFO OLIUM TN Perea rca,
San » finest mixed cea c — s 716 Stock, r T 17 zn did MUSTARD RIS | RAE PES SEED?
Sè m oe — .. en
Campanula, finest mixed » 0 6 Phlox, 12 newest ich varieties. 3 6 varieties 22 ] ; s COW CABBAGE, EARLY CABBAGE,
Delphinium form +» 0 6| Phlox, finest mixed +» +s 10 | Stock, Brompton, finest mixed . 0 6 — 1 AND PRIMULA.
Dianthus — pui 2x = : : — — ES. — dE Stock, extra che no». ^ : t SurTON which he a good sto o tta e of EN
ex! mixed -- .. pedata P - m Verbena, extra v. kinds wi 2 5 now at very mi
enen nca 1 . 0 6 Silene ^ = Pe . 03 | Wallflower, 12 finest varieti 2 6 pw tioy ar List. poen free to all par! icr em d
Lupinus, mixed.. +» 0 6| Cante Bell, fine, mixed. 3 quw. finest — double 105 per cents Showed for cash payment.
Ginothera Drummondi + 0 6 of mixed.. ~. 03 | Wallflower, single, blood 03 Address, Surron & Sons, Seed Growe rs, Reading, Berks, .
— — — 8
SEEDS OF FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. a
J. C. & Co. can particularly 1 wey rr especially the CARNATIONS and PICOTEES; they The Gardeners Chronicle. ae
are all saved from veia named flowers, and J. C URDAY, JUL ULY m
Carnations 24 spi , 12s. 0d. Picos whit und, 6 varieties 33. 6. E
- 6 0 yellow 5 3 0 RAPERE finest varieties, fe t à
3 6 do. 3» 4 0 Do. ew French vari x
7 6 Do, perpeti 3 e 6 6 —— an -
40 86 |
6 6 cota mixed, okt 26
$9 6 | perpetual 79
a 0 | Pieotee, choicest mixed 28 |
“GREENHOUSE SEED
in eredi td . d. ‘a
. n grandit kermesinum . 06 06
Canna, choice mixed ae ov ae Eilan — 3
Chorozema, finest miss d. 1 0 Lobelia formen ADUS 65 dig ET.
magnificus <- „ © 6 | Lophospermum, finest mixed ^ .. 06 06
scandens ,. «+ 4. 9 0| Mau randy, Saat mixed pie „ GB GA 206 v : .
Erica, finest mixed „ 22 6 | Mimulus, finest mixed 06 06} —
chsia, finest mixed .. .. 10 Nierembergia — 2 A Set at have never before
choice mixed — .. ., 1 0 | Passiflora cinnabarina . T 555 e e
pas % Petunia, finost mige. 3 8 ME appearance which is now
„ month since we observed on
JAMES CARTER & CO, Seedsmen, 238, High Holborn, W. O.
IHE : GARDENERS CHRONICLE
aa dark specks with water- -pipes s. The XU eme
We pointed this out a the Spong
sie 2 — e gar y E unusual and Jc 2 E
Two days a root.
men. the beauty of his 3n 5
uis vn uere km 2 5 se ‘bec n n vr
was
vell as
OL UP
From the —
progress was
22 was no essen
of ine disease t o make it » blio:
— —
The whi an
jb ‘a most beaut
ntre ofa bee tse Te bor- Du blin,
E
e case
ine 2 centre. The w urf p
was e re with Hale een e — war T
qs orless in circles, from the centre of |t
whie ch,
that th
inf
n consequence.
Ds the
ary Dr. A
to the
xam
unto
n D
enen or fresh- w r 8 ee Mr,
ear p the rris account whieh
e —
sted by the gr
diseolonraton — P this nin throngh IET
AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Lr 16, tam
A NEW MUSCARI ON p Ga
ibed the Ced to
aser
which
ANN
asterly d:
a ge country, Res At fi
the action o 6 . of Renkeny a and Doumenek a m
A vine in the mel
Ilium with water. ny
used as chimneys | to the native
this ravine
E and joir ns the River Me
ue arter of a i
e ground had — |
Pinus H penes d 2 arf des of id
few clur 15 2 7 „ Oak: pe
Q. Cer: ards the plai
a the . the Oriental Plane, - Pop
age
cirrhosa and Vitalba, Per eriploca P. Cynan
* H ine, M ground was cov ur witli se
Jae dis and
d v
ers’ Chr 7
n the water pipes of
ve meant
Pm 'Ocus,
ds pon 40 v, enter pi
high grounds as vue as spen Bt. mm.
ipes | morning we followed the Nauders through a ri
pipe atered valley. By th ESA Tich ml
à rew
region iy sur waters. en "this and the 6
Ida the country w. gb arren, in
d rav vines, throw w hil the Somit or its
tothe plains. At the village of Avj =a
we z an to
mre ction for some tim
an
y the B ostonien s
rikes Pacey on foot.
y zi preventing the e we came to o
le of the water
bs neighbourhood
ms, «Dentaria ia bulbifen,
ns Hypaslossum, and Fron decora among t
nne tr
Al
e pipes , it may b
however be
lisease has aj i» ared
Lan
ut
houl
pressis centro candidis nigro-annulatis, pustulis E dex that | far
circinantibus, i —.— coccineis ; sporis ob-
ongis endochromate utrinque retra
l A plant of the MM fondé ar del
is and described in Journal, 1
p.240. We may ‘ale he to the v
production on Grapes, 1854, p. abe M.
OVR readers will doubtless wish to rm some-
cerning the state x the heec near
we e have,
been
5 Bi hbury Grove.”
been m:
Tanin ea
pipes may det
| and at the — time ex
ee as to t
ve
0 ye
n to remedy th
feared that beside e. adn of the water |
ery
h p g the
és this nuisance. n remain,
ar Sir, rag most truly, W. Bow
ope ‘that our Sele Yon med has |
= sc tacked by this 5 posee
ares water driven t| A
n now within them
pel i
We may a wo fo — = inform:
— in e subject that t Spongille o
w years. The | Ther
g | ance, RUN seems to be a new Species, P 18
have named, from its 1 broad pi. Mls
r | folium. It de n gree hat o gr i
den . to Pow if yo: hide
forest opened i» ut and left nothing but apis we
picked poen ocus garganieu rydalis tuberosa and
Sys Viola gracilis, Scilla t Or E
and fimbriatum, The santy 2
Bund up by the wild pigs in search 3
The ascent had occu
3 P. x. On our retu
pied fre ie moming S
easier path,
ERBANK. »
London water
In
havi enjo ii a nig!
to the Hop xd beo
ug
mains,
g
dere of those un- | base a
d- ts
3 n the
igtur Mats na! studi
as to t thei eir ri
r on the 12th,
the. sun at the foot of
arrear wás at “that time
ain 1 25 e id rd — since,
an old w.
w the varii
it has there fore
ter was then 9 feet 1 inch bel
aud it is now 8 feet "i Billie 4
risen 53 inches,
M
E de
tively 02:89 L DU rex
61.71. "The diff Ee
this Re is therefore very Tie iter inm MES
3
ur last Number ther
t Dublin as to the cause eat tha greed oe
WATER supplied to that city . the
ing „ conve:
ATE OF uropean collecto;
publie | Eo is indeed a beautiful s
border
New —
219. Ceanorav vas , Hoo.
Mies this gabe en 9 tö, to our tardy, shrubs |
are inde coe 55 A
in many 8 Ceanoi
f he them m `
tiful as as they are, it far sur
undance of its bright mazarine
almost varnished surface o
0
bet tit exist | in Ere s from any North. -American i
T's. aoe Magazine, t. 5127.
upper ones barren, sess
in the fertile flowers infla A
ceedings of the Royal Society, Edinburg!
— —
of the NE
E not pee
in the sam
menon.
erbe dax,
Msi plan anted i in the 1 border i in nt of the pr
— I them
t them, my attention
light passing back wa
we the other. I imm
1»|s eral members of m
extraordinary uh recs
n hour,
was arr
rds and fte
ugue op my
my fami who
Lobb. Thougli inate |
thus
ily, w
x — under — plants was * V ide ty.
- | seemed charged wit = eetrici
ion of Bev was so great = sper of s mer lightnin;
ed throughout the
h it
t Id. ugh
seen efore.
Z. PX pa Nos tage Court, ne
Dordare:
Cover ing for Fine "the 4
Jory 16, 1859.]
— UG. A proper e overing ring for
E.
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL 3
abov re, and w ith the syringe, whic his the —
as to the
rs, “ zine sheeting or boards,” induces
— Grape grower to offer some remarks upon
in — fl precept NET inculeated,—
“keep your Vine borders dry. s pr
all trees, to tree s
| in the orchard house, or to tree trained on rh ellises.
When so — one operation w uh not kill all the
aph ides, r in one of m uses full of Peach viel
+} 7 R
e
in very many instances, to
their utter failare 2 dee Four years ago
eated b anted
u were = Mace before the swarm o
them or every was destroyed. For tt e oi diam or
C
605
eous plant. The
— the corpse ; thoi .
— 2 the coffin at a
The May Queen Si
tion to petraa the
raise a con ecting i
tlemen of acknonla edged experience have given their
e, hear presume, euployed
y be su pasito to have
Gisl
on
any other kid of ig ew on Vines the
pound is
I built a lean-to Vinery, flues, , and pla: nur remedy. Early i in J une some ie Vines own, | d feel constrained to make a few further —
it with Muscats and Fr — The bo rder was | gro owing asa and first I should have em cet atany rate that bud
— — the plan of the late Mr. Crawshay ; and I| in the y tinent, and which for pared extended — are ad of s uch m as Mr. —
my operations in a decided state of hydro b 1 fG . Turner W ould ce ^ c farti er
phobia I was much disappointed with the poor has been €— became covered with the oidium. The variety
pro-
ooked at them said they had not water enou gh.
I cut rae down and the
once
summer I was devour spider. utumn
I cut the Vines down half way, and washed the house
= with sulphur. The eos being — inside,
running — — —— llowi spring I watered
the inside vedi, am d the outside
twice a m
spider, healthy foli age, and a fair E “of g
I was
general rule as y applied. T Rivers, 3 rth.
keeping Vine epe — but it must in every cas Dipladenias.—I shall feel indebte d to any of your
vary a the nature of the soil. „The Vine, ene seme or to any one who grows Dipladenias
as much as nt for a few working hints. For two seasons
d- | aat c, E are ovd of fruit.
vere syringe d the — gered oz. to the
gallon; the y see evere, as some of the
| shoots spanat to be killed. The ey have now + ontio rely | t
I should ——
| only 3 the gallo
es Ra aa ok wil, the oidium to 4 apply | it e
— 2 the detriment of the raiser. y
va zo experience tells me that it frequently requires
r three seasons to devel he — fa
— variety of Strawberry. Whe rst
1.48
instance, the
The Vines
were —
sulphur failed . —— est i
ba
t almost aep I have never yet
in preference to 4, and if o received Cuth ill's —.— of Wales, for
v wi me, and the ere not
berries on a — which were
arret by the oidium us year, and . sour, sak had no good quality — 1
progress, although years. d the
and ben of the Com ly t im — 1
| finest crop of handsomely shaped frui agi
plant annually in well Konohe, well manured
any p
saying “ Keep your o v dry," it soa ner be
“Let your ‘border be well drained; E vent wa ater
or more mine "e$ tQ n up some half n: healthy
ee begin ckly, the fo liage c implin ng a and
ound,
the Pu plenty of = m, and I have now
ble
ning yello spo!
whereby they canker
e shanking
and all other evils;
or rot, and so
and if so, you need not be afraid of
—— “and thay. are now leafless except at the tips,
which are oe ing to die — 2 wish to know the
degree of m he tempera-
and t pe
most . to their growth,
crassinoda and ps geni An id why is it
n "
lthough i is not
| discarded altogether from the dessert. 2 , the first
season I cultiva r. Rivers's seedling Eliza, I was
so much disappointed vit. it that had I not seen the
variety and tasted the fruit on Mr. R.’s own und a
S g 8 — t decidedly have dug it
up. The ud year was little better, both as regards
the first and second ; but ever since I
have ha o difficulty whatever. I have always
water. Istand — 3 feet of reddish loam, follow red proper soil, the
by 9 fen 9 — of "dive
my fruit be
— they mus M »- * wean manured
Having experimentally come to this conclusion, and single pitcher, and t
observing that the roots of we ne are in operation | it right to
during winter when beyon ch of frost, in a in —
M - I procured a quantity of strong manure | A
consisti t gud sewerage, pig and cowdung; and "Hihododendron
adding s ^b short litter to make it hold together, I wA ofsoil for Rh
ered my borders nm * out 18 inches thick. | a
The winter being m mild Iw: — e, but it
without a
the Sarrace the same? And is
grow the —ů— inoit a bell —— ;
and smaller Australian Pitcher- —
kept two years.
s similar instanc
Soil.—I am about to la —
ododendrons, — have close at —
ent bog that à Services consider — exellent for the
mple I
bottom ofthe roots. Icom — fires
— — when — Vines had — y indies
e borders etimesa week. The vult i — |
that Lh I * as fine a cd as Was ever van € 1 dou |
if 10 shanked a mode. ei:
Hi 8
U do I
e wrong; bu a
na 1 il was held to be highly ——
belie
on | season.
ra- | ance witb Mr. Nicholson, but I can readily i imagine I he
ces which w
show that no grower, be who h
I have not the pleasure of a personal scquaint-
1 j
tion, however, has led me to e to the
of ns.
"
ul contrary
the case
po usly to , lumps of clay in
ich ir
I think I
iy a say, — from my my ikram with him, t that he
Us existed "b nda antly, seemin
ent Pa
bant if ho h
good a titel ——— and the
— vp his — be Ps WE Seyen he need not be
gly
soil which is a soapy bog, “devoid of |"
"m Thos. Canson, re eee Ha ni. Noi bs rit e "
July 8. [Bog earth is no us becaus se of
man —
The — Queen I find, repor' the s Cottage
Gardener” of June 28, w: exhibited — Mr. Turner at
the Pomological Society o — the 23d of j une, a either
covering of sore Fern, or litter,
— is all that is
mmy p In ud Paper
to be informed w
asa protection: against |
9, .
We have here
ears, but
ened
H. S.
Paper of July 9, dor C.
tree
commotion. “The best soil à M Bun peat t from an e
commo
ant, w two years has
ver qms may d p v» found in 2 ro
any im mportance as as on the exhibitions.
h produce
is spring in v sandy loam,
shaw have already e. their econd g
Zinedon Hall, Northa pionshire
i — of |
rowth. G. Archer,
stages o
with 'the balloeks and the e sheep ather boss valable om throughou t E nglan Es xk dmi tt —.— ton e
might have been obtai resent desolate, p which would sav many and many a | tically contribute to the pi
mcus prices, g the é-total: dost "s fei 7 boli Ponti from the debasing influence of Union pay velop! ent of a kn o he
É pread over a rather longer period of time, but that | — "i bbit feeds or haunts, the spot is actually | things made it possible 7
if poss i affect my present object, which is to elicit | ec’ aud rendered profitless and I believe all discovered that salt wo
possible an accurate and trustworthy — the ps * destroy t this remark. “Very well,” say | eater blessing upon his
of the value per week of the actual — pings of itor = ti e" BKA pe
medium-sized bullock and shee eep ile being
be imd f y k *
=
ni
=
e
©
.
E
"d
=
n
=
cd
bo
g longer ta 045 such w vort hless | trash, bat let a tenant | were —— to do more
liber e ko cake and corn.’ ry the experiment: race to its present S
Medy mf A our readers favour us with infor-| nde an and upright edere — f quiet oppo- | than were am efforts
is subject ? n to the insinu ations of his landlord’s à the idea of a just leg!
3 pu aso aka e, ietin e "os pss m a man] The student of epe a
s ago we hich he has spent money, i ngs o
à eus ag called attention to the labour, and, - — the best part of his life, e$ — hores per tha
; hile onest and table family! ly s
, and to the extraordinary fact that they rabbits Boe in Yorkshire as they do in A ed — * — que deten t, may not
Avevsr 20, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND — GAZETTE.
699
ks of the €— and sage, , Whose name we
and
e of science of al
of material LT is
those | Ameri
of he nto co
land of — and
pointed out all this
Ith to — o but she e guard ards it now.
foods,"
trade which brings the products o
— with — of the cheap
ca. 8 — not only has
source of w
extended, that they are not, — — be, fü ly
ord !
quack “cattle ee a
ish
shaded localities, with the soil in high condition
Lu ee the Swedish Tu ra ) should never
m- [ly ji
| be singled less than 12 inches ay and generally it
| will be — ndvantag reous to * n about 15 inches.
The e la argest edes r I saw were some th at had
ciated until the know 2 y th
5 &c. , are all * I —— to flor
before - world tha
Il, or that "they did not —
from am » original — left to t
vho are too orant or too — jadice
to avail themsel ves s of her — The latter will
l
And even where histor, ory records the M A ol an
have to learn wisdom as Ben. Franklin hoped G
III. might, when he would not -— the theory
i electrical conductors, because a Tory courtier
ulti-
eorge | g
of | light manures,
I
were not v
| field.
E in comparison with the rest of the
In high Á— — Pt where the land is in
heart, or has received a good al — of the
1 — wil also be fi a good
width. I performed a small experiment p season,
but I am sorry that fro; om some
m
* — e — o — enjoy the A
seldom think — — relation to cis e form
thi g in the of i sited
ces," — j ng all t e
n
and opponent of the republican philosopher "o
ter thar ee
upper end of lightning rods to
the — fluid.
It s true that _there have been many questions in |
In a field mot yet in high edition, nor very
— manured, I
" ewt. s 2 nd
e, and at 2 * — 1
2 "^r of b
n ashes
jon opaque mineral substance
a she das not at first answered correctly ; | ;
got 2 tons
. ‘and 16 tons 1 cwt. of bulbs, or '9 ewt. per acre
of the
she has yet —
r4
iss éh m e
—
"od
her established notions.
her fut
But e from the
I. he i is now applied.
full of their bearing
rat
—
uma we are i x or seeing |
ic an ^p — a dca research has "e for |
all d emen of human progress. It is in the spirit |
of such contemplation that we must examine yere at
agriculture, and hope for what she |
EJ
=
n not particularly
to the scientific. vod for "groat ability in
— associat: "e n grea ult:
4
| mecha’
of It
r(
a Tum — — our schoo|
f| w boy at hom
ment us m as it tes to agric
another service of vast
. —
association with the daily labour of him who cultivates
the soil. It is supply ing
agriculturist to thir uk and cultivate his
hought
culture has Te and
im It is
powers of |
M:
ractical question, the develop- | more
material which must teach the |
e part th inned 9 inches wide. The pro-
ear obtained 21 tons
lined 12 2 wide
wide — should be
" on
t profita ble
. M‘Lagan in a succeeding
praetised where the soil i
the manure baa been liberally applied.
mind, without giving him a distaste for an occupatio
which, without — is aid — science, would be so —
nical as to weary out an active mind.
is a well- — fact, "which our su
popular education in America has
demonstrated than could be
— hna =
perior system
more fully
orthless
—— enters
scienti fic
compe tent &
the able researches of such profound investigators
Ampere, Oe Oe rsted, Ohm, Fa: raday, and | Gauss, who have
this subject, he will find the name of such practical |t
minds as those of Steinheil, Morse, Wheatstone, House, |
ie which the mind may
titining which
th
| for Swedes, “while for whites and yellows the pianta
y be le eft much closer, eh in the latter case v
—.— size, while it is said chat — larger we prow
Swedes the more nourishing the roots are. A: nas
found, - W iala n ing omparative
we ep
the e
T a — eher
An 1 compared with the
T qe s of — value,
8
and others mo intim mately associ associated with the dis-
covery aos ectric telegraph.
The t clans of men have spent long lives devoted | co
to able research into damental principles, which
when developed the more practical character of —
second class enabl apply. has p
formed an essential an important part; but "the
mportance of the fi
| show what may be done, and how vastly
e *
ntro t its own powers ; still, enough has been done to
m nt it
i oe yq that more should b
" We t a science of agriculture so do
relo oped as to
be taught. in our schools, a system as
rig gidly scientific
atter
the latter, z — more practical phase ‘of the 1
uses the eye almost, entirely to loso
tha t
hat science h ;
out more clearly as advantages 10
— do the researches of Ampere
erchant who uses the —
— here dw ell upon
e ten de d to the dev a.
sight of | is,
eral | the:
er leaving it agriculture
At present the farmer” s son who attends our schools
if he be at all a successful student, obli ed to throw
develope her resources, the na‘
from father to sonis deran
ATAS E
fib at
*
1 of our —.— I — Y e dw. à at
length upon the — — 5 A
ntifi
our means of sci
DET: /
of chemist
- | home, — an anxious —
— true, longer to
ous
m as in conse-
quence 9 the repulsive — of the position upon
which he had turned his
|
arge
early ‘ight; while the
white , varieties have afforded per cent. and in the
ar only 3 b per cent. of their whole weight.”
rees the results obtained by Mr. G.
me ith
Sinclai air, as pyar 1 in the Hortus Gramineus W Fobur-
nensis, that 64 drachms of p^ — gest roots of the
Swedish Tarn ip produced 110 g of nutriment, and
the same weight of the small roots Pei eas ed 99 grains
of natriment, and 64 dra chm of the amen loaf
| vi ariety, measuring ve only 723
grains, while the same quantity of a root measuring
only 4 inches has been
— 80." subject
der
than large ones 3 en ore ot the particulars
tg ese gentlemen’s investigations before us at present,
e will not allude farther to them, but will proceed to
for pist the — r the bulb is the
| diee nutriment it ing then that the
estimate of the — "proportions of nutriment in
grow Turnips
44 oe following de we do - allude to Swedes,
are of o m
oreign to the associations sri his i “with at m |
| talent — above m meets with 1 » ut
parti ccess or — fürs, while the — fa — at
oot
of his bad su.
the bills
is is no fi
-—— — me aes thaw
| foll
gra d EN is 5 6 thi
small Turnips mentioned before i
of — — research — of the
mere doll d cent view of its value.
SING LING. OF TURNIPS
„Tux "mon or thinning of Turnips is an operation
— of dum
pro-
duce of a then the pro-
But y by all the vantages
, Culture by science, which are here suggested, th
ion e su disco
and the wan nen We "s very,
This involves the he ade an of the ph Phosphates, the
attach to i not require to enter into any
condition
ber mi
most farm
ä —
experime toe
guanos, the saltpetres, th
residual products of the rocesses in the
which elonistry, like a — ioni
averag —— —
obtained by singling out the plants to 12 ne
vented from | going to waste by colleetin
out their us
these auesti ad
— — ‘to prove » that we wil get from a = of | tons s
cons; Ms ncy | soil i much ‘bulbs when
. have Eoo x i
we
afforded to ag i
ary;
ral greater differe
‘than | between crops siu and wide thinned; an a elieve
Miam shi n have been 18
tons if K. Bu t the 15
ent of he erop, esa d ‘thinning,
he mage and filling the carts before carting
wow | hte We do not consider the results stated by Mr.
; on — . we
uce
that the » larger the crop i is—that i is, the higher the co!
Mr. M‘Lagan of _Pumpherston si said, in a pay
is the = -— rieultural count;
Das gone — nu re and ex
ry in the world—why
limited territory, in
her
—
e ne she | *
years ago:
*From an extensive correspon ndence which I have had
with friends who take an interest in this question, I
free | have arrived at the following conclusion, that in
f the manure, the greater will be the difference i in ‘the
produ ce — wide and close-thinned crops. The
terms large and small are rather indefinite, and must .
-|vary according to the nature of the soil; thus a Turnip
THE.
grown on good clay-land will be more solid, or co
more Ma than os pe 7 er dies a
light sandy so But o e find that a
mr: we
lants |
ur p
qu variety do
TR
m we generally on the > ri
l pre pa ared and se es
vida n nice quality. eed sow sown sud, both
n generally under a;
more than average produce, Et
lid,
Turnip, say o of 2 2 or 3 tbs. in E though mora soles k . bnt by the ridge system and thin | carefully coll ected seed has been sher
M will punte — * acrid t Vae ts bor iip ar rah ful cultivators. 3 Si proper erly og raged, ; this rod lacta ED
Ee. the n large P propor of Kan h “A be gine 1 bo gre bende i thi V 3 — few in stances, mors balk, de pr S
ur fa la } d .
ed als Ate A Turni ay Sa dod se relished ur the 11555 found the Mangel do well on very Mr a Jarg uy any d mcr rience, H
will weet and jui more palata able to the hand dibbli ing the see and covering in wit 4 arg the quiliy e erally small in the dem
— When the Turnips sanpa an a ra gag - 7 n spei Apps 2m that i eid i. y Where vilia d.
are apt to become spongy in the heart, and nov s t off t hn wh esque ed never recollect t pastures
sti, iom Aime onta large — cni 4o. Lm 2 the |a e ni asd im the i: Gate wy. set WÀ y be also service- inte ge Von up to the end of June, Eo —
ould infinitel — 3 ido me to pon that b tits s v near , on soil nights soon in Jul
iremos e alik have attempte ted Mangel culture on the the growth in both m
ba 2 Doar eeks. There is nothing p
mall ones. Quarterly Journal of Agriculture.
aos orrespon
Hom nden
m Cultivation.—For many years ym. Hine Mem.
o bec
=
erhaps you will y nue the privi It is 12
more since I proj feet A vo reu or or u cellular
m
ich no
me has equalle
ee of the series, o
en Áo eg fem before the pulles even these do
end the
us that they are not individually so nourishing as the | p
sm
A us whilst my crops have
pu rs have drooped and died.
n Old For ni»: Subsi
Notices of aed
7
ably fine aner js utumnal ia,
tions, but Wong the tenere
fav rourable, ee a few day:
e
Journal of the Manchester and Liverpool Agri
Society A Secretary, T. B. Ryder, Esq. 2, Elliot
Street, Clayton
W. as one of the e
cial Agricultural Soc
al aui 'exhibits energetic ‘effort i in
$5
so many useful directions that
| commen nded it to the attention of those engaged i in the |
a arm Memoranda, —
D Forest. 1 lowin
ger keene of ,Whichw ood po à me
|
selves, but are obliged to
not
puffed by tis e projectors. This is
5
very close imitatio:
commencement of t
At t
fagi; yp
Whe dered i The pamphlet before us contains the rules of the In- | prised ea of 84. 2B. p^ ne was
np via —Ó— —— E a daea Fe ttia Del list of prizes for Men S be awarded at the | the rights of the Crown, the itary mre
tage of rail elling over coaching, or elec forthcoming meeting at. Liver next month—the|the commoners, t nger g Lord Churchill, of
t ile over signboard telegraphy. 1t shoul d j^ IIS o of the committee for 1858 \Guatinating that at Cornbury Park, Cherlbury. The Act for dane.
the same with steam tillage. A per’ 8 inven nchester i entries were double those of any | tion was passed in 1853, whic iy
On. reco itself at once — = d ab I he show-yard receipts much more | to carry it into effect. The survey shows that iis
—is spoken of by every . I D ) P
possible ad by every man es busi- | —a table Pi eerie woe riis Asie show- ia ó 3 me e
ness it affects. St m calate may still be na Em large balance in favour of the Socie ety—and 8 Opes dd . Spices, c FS
dered an unsolved problem, Since I invented my | kand list of awe of erg during the past year. nber und brut - Yos
eircular, or cellular, system of s culture, upwards o of these and the reports. on whi ch Ans The lodges, with their enclosures. 195 38
50,
The
the
M
„ for draining, subsoiling, irri-
subj x: statistics or exten nditu
cam i may o some now lie historian,
I will ne pa the benefit Age 1 during
a period of The man who first attracted niy
p
1 7 5 liqui uid ome tanks, hedges, green
p
€ culture. I
> not included in 1 5
“dell, Williams o
oem list the outlay of Boy- = nt
or Collinson Hall : they must | land and farming Rx us
And a few encroachment
Cope farm servants, implements, and live stock. For Clutton Ȓ near]
hese classes no less tn T were last year small quantity Un i orn
red as prizes in rina ge ; beu Commissioners was
e add here, as referring t t impor- by which the Crown acquired an all
sections oe Society" s Proceedings, cher report of * 15P., which was subsequen
the ies uer ase md Shi to. ^
1970 acr
in exciting t te
aik s range, e foren e
This fact i is shown b
| pleted in J anuar
one year and four mon s, at
| outlay for reclamation i. conversion — 2
f Bay
selves Y their great sacrifices on
5 ze
speak for them th
shrine of vmi invention. Of all tl v^ ei inventor | miles in the present year in the fulfilment of their
since 1846, t Um gere on who appro: my own | duties.
system o of . was Mr. Ha alkett, "but he broke Hs The Sa dud again feel called Air to remark
5 upon u5 ivany g
points with an unnecessar ror fatal qoe cdm h y
will have E railway It i
1
water say
New IE and buildings
m"
ontingen
daran pua i E very welt k
to carry a lot of boughs from London to Birmi ngham |o
and back N 2 day, but it h
| including | maintenance c of roads
| makin
and
the cost, in
with dp and down a 205 that is, in
— ola E short distances and after
5
ong | dou ubt the
ye
ae pexbel Tor [aad ng a
e great deficie
new roads,
| lands.
e
d
out of a fedi — by the sa
The entire esta id is confes
loughman homeward plods his way,
nm &
ie neia
bo hi
m one = ger 5 of 30 feet Tc
are laid 9 5
Trial | h oles
t e cost of nor Bas hou
re
t. on
tonal sum of 61. per be n ot the oolitic stone
Land
mesteads, which are — —
And leaves ie farm to darkness ‘an te me.“
T he raven
Really good inventions, like trees, may be of
' growth; still . Die for tat
a bolder push to t my own plans tried. Ido
an ephemeral reputation or or profi
method invades the
t, as some
farm it wil
parts of the field about three weeks ago; the holes so
opened on the porous subsoil
showing clearly
effectua i such o
character. The
18 — of the surface,
+ ni
such long Waiting, that which has been been rejected
“master” builders, should yet become - chief
stone with the “men.” C, Bur rcham,
angel Cultivat ation.—
that a s
nd
ty ede at the risk. of that not y very |
wi
ally
trial D however, rs od theother porti f the fi
1| filled w er to within e
I
ir
|that one uniform
corner | all hnds, and Aog 1
e fe
say is to 18 feet apart,
t 3 feet d
T MN /
TEARS mer a
, drains
and ti
er, though rd 1 5
also
district. The membe —
which comprises gentlemen from
inspected this great work on the ]3thof sa
the invitation of the Cro
evidence
ioe s is not adapted to
ven dts of drains are in some
rative in -textu oil, as com-
A 8 5 at peke OMM
ccording to circumstances,
productive character of the year, the
have seen great diversity in some crops and
a
g
at
aE
he about
As regards the
| inspectors
rm that I am disappointed vith your
localities,
“The ha;
general mo nde of Man ngel culture. The cou untry of cular T cases, Ae e ne s wal
the sad alternative—Mangels or nothi There the re
I wate ee ing. Some great first t crops of Clover, but second crops light
p have Barei, I ma pe ener , unl ' =
di eren — of wl whose destructive f: English- . i b roe t piss Ug res "x d of good
bu ly, as uii
~ te "bare, mes uently, m . p e the east a ii . p Sete of the
os . it is— Mangels or 8 But ing hi 8 f ashire and
ES x orsus Man; are somethin;
g.
Now 1 that e and yours is
s what I have seen,
sim ply | ti
| Chest re within the Society’ 8 lim Oats, with excep-
Yd
erally deficient i in ipe and on many
Average crop. Barley, where the soil,
iat o
scheme i — the — rapi be
tion. In the incredibly eni ort space of aml
2000 acres of wood wi fectively conv’
forming dat land ;
wood ed
Calendar « of x opm
eer
this his CIL was
BERWICKSHIRE MERSE ux RM:
specta of our Turnip crop at
believe still worse at present.
last?
Arerer 20, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 701
the cold winds f Ma Q A, A t
— leer tn brairded by tha rales at — end ot June
ma ni e of heed d ne The pum PLOUGH TRIALS AT ot
S HOWARD“ S. CHAMPION PLOUGH
sow — al
thin
ere strong, is much laid and twisted by the storms
t will be EM crop, but much later
almus rni —
ar ling in gren although the produ uce of the ewe
uch — unen] J. B.
sunny — —
—— s : lier) Gained the FIRST PRIZE as — Best Plo sme for General Purposes me t Warwi ck,
washary EING the 9 —— ee for PLOUGHS, awarded oy! the Royal Agricultural Society o Er - -
rr 2 Ciel ober . nene — uch earlier Moeting. this Prize will be gathered from the fact that the GENERAL PURPOSE PLOUGH
TX Y 1 en ones hy on — Nen AND ab HEAVY LAND, and as HOWARDS vay 3 45 4 PLOUGH proved itself 2
plaints here of the Len ^ ae 2 the FIRST PRIZE, of the HIGHEST AMOUNT given y the Society for any kind df Plough, was awarded to
has attacked the above- . HOWARD,
— favour- PRIZES awarded to J. & F. How. 8 but c Ad 7 7 ob the WARWICK — 1859,
iem i3 the LARGEST N UNDER or PRIZ LARGEST MBER of FI . awurded to Exb:
E FI PRIZE ron run BEST ror GENERAL PURPOSES, arso a PRIZE rom THE UGH
ror LIGHT LAND, AND a PRIZE ror THE "BEST PLOUGH ror HEAVY LAND; TRE FIRST PRIZE ron rur BEST
LIGHT HARROWS, THE SECOND PRIZE arso ror tax BEST LIGHT HARROWS, Axp THe FIRST PRIZE For THE
BEST H HARROW '
E
EAVY
22 erem caterpillar in cur quer qurddna c ry one ‘HOWARD'S Implements, tried at Warwick, gained a Prize.
attribut: to the mi nter, and the little kost in conse us 1 u articulars, sent post free on a ication to
ed f w wi X — wt TALOGUES, with full particula: t post fi pplication t
ce. Th ts of t t heat t. ummer
S the metropolis and elsewhere do not so much apply here as| Je & F. HOWARD, BRITANNIA IRON WORKS, BEDFORD.
———M—ÓÓÓÓÓ—M—M—Ó—ÓÓÓÓM
with the exception of about a week or 10 days early last mont xxx
valen
when thunderstorms were so prevalent (onem — 1 —
extent bere) the summer has been cool, z 2
last year 2 the "Lag Aci E We wih, atte m bem only five ve DE AN. E COM. E AN S x
miles of the ie E ich, waft puc our breezy
hence to make ummers generally very HOR' ET YU LT fa mi URAI 4
njoyable.
Notices to Correspondents.
K Mr Wells’ offer of “ Report" is declined with
nks.
ame
n 1 are 2 2
well. and pus are vantage of tle rain fal!
— to catch a crop of qe le Tornipe (o (on light land) ater
— latter succeed very well he — he rers. wen mj
i er are
^
Ditto, Wood,
Flower stig s pu dg
Cas oia mental ditto, to hold
7 A
Deane's Mo E Machines, with d 8
s per acre are the
— the field you wi 1 will be
you keep them — — — iu and un e 7 - ents, £4 17s, 6d; £6 6;
17s. 6d., £7 7s.
ttack the rpillar, they
— . seque T í Green House Syringes, 8s., 10s., 18s. 6d
ur Ee Redes | i Garden Rollers, £1 14s, 6d., £2., E 12s,
£3 9s., £3 185., 2 18s., £5 12s.,
Garden Stools, E
Garden E
Boyd's Self-ad dais Ne, 10s. 6d.
Wire Work, 18in. 4d. per yard run.
i
INVENTIONS ror TO HORTICULTURIS
ne ge the Paris RS oan d PATENT — OMETRICAD
The al e ingredients, with the ripe of the resin, are THERMO omoi iia
t ÁÁ for their diuretic and deobstruent properties, and Me instrument, which
2 — and tonic To those T $ ; Fe go Mr rw iren mens Y? FA / Fin LH oe combines: an prr
parts, or 1 per cent. To the above ingredients * t ud 1283 l f —— —
Lab i a newly-patented ^
. ee E E
The above ingredients are employ "ed for their carminat dis-
Beger, ER dele aere rp 5 | IR —"EecY SLE Mi 10 — wits
stimulating the stomach and digestive organs to healthy E A i d. Aan mn an n I L ^l | ll Mil n
action. i whole of 1 TU» wa hanes | | ill ill slip of — md rem
m hem grain bei H
convent receptae tr that T fe He ‘i TR ai fl TI placed “ina
ES “gaty y without heating. 3 COTTAM anv COMPANY, Winsley Street, W., are the —
— dried it is sifted in an ordinary sieve to í inventors of the PATENT "ENAMELLED MANGER,
he extrem matters or Pulsar chert | Tro sh, end Wrought Tron Rack; united to an iron top-plate, Monn 10 time when any chango
"e. p xture, g COTTAM — Place, and] per lon
tent noiseless halter guide and collar rein — which | is Hu MIE lii Hi) I M Wil tH h change contin Wed
taken to — back of the manger, and works with ease and WERL TL; M
freedom up or down the om e-bar. 10 0 i The above slip (reduced
in size) exhibits the
=
==
be
al| COTTA * NER bare T SEED-BOX, an important addi-
tion to the above fittings, 9 Ve lend rair light, and SHUT
* eco;
k — 2 f durabl tes cleanli di
ice t urabie, promotes cleanli s, and l cultur:
ere 5 | practi vary the mj ness, is € nomica in its results. TH "i mmn Y à queni
not i it or confine recis 2
t vary de e Mee 7 i T by
se; e E H mi 0
M ED prefer adding to the tor den Sey i ] radai thie.
cent of the tonic, carm de itious i A_f , ES 4 SILVER MEDAL.
3 of weakly constitution, I use 1-5 3 LET hrs *
deen quantity of the carminati x
WIN li yup
TT
` COTTAM'8 IMPROVED SURFACE
ae moveable cover, i amer daas evens
can be easily cleaned ou
COTTAM’S CATH e vg gh TRAP, from its
proved ves a il water paseage, and does not
hie et y y meme wig A
ubble in parts, PATENT LOOSE-BO: X YIPO, a and every article for the
2 bnt if 15 acres suffice thi Set gis cn, stock, Pista, galvanised, and 33 fa large typo e
Low acres in ips enamelled.” Iron Pigg ny ng Penny Post stamps. Sent
bec aum 8 free to any address, Direct to Fisiten & Sox, Publishers,
EnRATUM: For «^ 18e. "in the tenth line from top of col. 5 to ation to COTTAM and COMPANY, 2, Wi SAE A thee Be — London, Established 1847.
perma read 8s.” The word “root” in the 50th line should Onford Street, W. Norice.—Just Edi WW idet tend Ü ——
DE ere N.B. Corrait & Co, beg to make it known that th no methods N.
As ee es eren — . ei qvae trance to t er Bee 7 » all the Co
— A We aunt clan bar the ind — second entrance from 2, Winsley F E
. ino beg tho in — oft me acturi Siret, Oxford Stroek by the e side of the old entrance to — — an the French, American,
A
THE GARDENERS OHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, ie [Avergr 99, €
HORTICULTURAL WORKS, -
DANVERS STREET, PAUETSNS SQUARE, CHELSEA, S.W.
JAMES GR
M THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, NURSERYMEN, GARDENERS, AND OTHERS, THAT HE E
t FULLY BEGS TO INFOR
5 ON THE BUSINESS IN ALL ITS BRANCHES AT THE ABOVE OLD ESTABLISHED PREMISES.
CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, FORCING HOUSES, VINEE Gn PITS, m
VERY DESCRIPTION, ERECTED ON THE MOST APPROVED PRIN CIPLE
HEATING BY HOT WATER.
blic and priv: —
devoted his attention for many years to this part of the business, is now fully prepared to Heat every des scription of pu p
Modos pom been y as well as all structures connected with e p^ the most efficient — His system is the most simple that can be 2 E
Zong ex eriencé to be the best—ean be constructe d at less cost, and is mo y managed than those of a complicated nature which have attracted e noie. of the public,
i d. begs to call attention to his CAST-IRON CORRUG ATED ARCH B ILE R, which from its si mpliei city of con: struction has ‘not the liability to fracture to mic tos duum
complex desig: n are always subject. They have been exte €— used for many years, and have given the greatest satisfact
All business is conducted at this establishment o n the principle of lowest remunerative profits consistent with best materia! jals and workmanship.
PLANS AND ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON THE SHORTEST NOD 1
V'ELLLOILOV | WEEKS’ ONE BOILER E
BY E iP
m -|JOHN WEEKS & COMPANY,
pum TUS Mmm KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, S. ws.
HALLENGE rug WORLD to produce a Boiler
of their Upright Tubular Boiler that t will produce e like “the
SE
WAND HOT WATER —
MANUFACTOR p TS Tl Fulle indifo +}
BRIDEWELL The following q J the challe nge:—
INCENT “SKINNER "(ate
jer dir ayd: for seven: yosns Areaof Houses} Total length
CREE CES feet | of Piping.
= es, d Houses, &
e best materials ee NN — Say Aa ak ~ gm ean 1,200 5,500
Whol 8 e Raia om t Messrs. F. A. Smith, Dulw id 11,000
effectually re M. Van Houtte, Belgium eau 3,300 13,000
Our own Fruit Forcing Show Establishment 1,000 7,000
Iso the Nurseries of Mr. Woodroffe, —— ee * W.; Messrs. Rollisson,
ng, S.; Messrs. Wood & Ingram, Hunt Mesers . Wood & Son,
Tootin ingdo
Maresfield ; together with numerous Public Buildings a and Establishments of
the Nobi ility and Gentry far too numerous for insert
J. WEEKS & Co., 8 Builders and Hot-Water Apparatus 2
s Road, Chelsea, S. W.
PLANS AND e FREE ON —
„
Hothouse Builders and Hot-Water Apparatus Manuf cull
Fanuiacu
TTE ERA
these Boilers have
e i
YE dite
Sé inch Cast itto
36- pigs slit e t ditto
entlemen
Cs
s at prices lower than those of any other
house in Lo stimates for Ho te: paratus erected
comple Me ina ane ypartofih the wg — and an Illustrated Catalogue
onapplication to J. Jonxs,6, Bankside, Southwark, London, S. E.
isP. Q 1738
Horticultural Building py di 4 ed E r
gs of every — Heated on the most a soved princi 1 Heated
with — t city of construction. A Range of Houses contain ning 000 fe — et to Four b
X t. Two o Hundred Cusuagher Boxes and Lights, and fro 5
D a M Mite p ; glazed and painted complete, ready for immediate à p
S PRUNING and BUDDING KNIVES, SCISSORS, " References to the Nobility, Gentry, and the Trade in most of the Counties is
Sold. by all Locum urserymen and Seed Merchants in
Claremont Place, Old Kent Road, London, SE.
Avaust 21 1859. }
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. —
707
SELAG NELLA RUBRICAULIS qe | ehe J A Eg ES CARTER Axa OL à
OBERT SIM is now pr LI 2 ay at or 228, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C., *
10s. 64. each, "m: nice plants of this distinct an id beg leave to e their Customers that on and BERKSRIRE "n
— novelty, of which he enr eral he entire stoc after the Ist of VETT nex = their present | * —
stems are coral = ie p small. and of a shining — e Establishment will be enlar, — he ad. lition of | JN AND SONS have — reeeivi
green. In — » vp some elegant le wt Hio, the adjoining House, “ : 5 ff of | ique Collection of HYACINTHS, ANEMONES, —
cedrus or Abies. It will form a 9 F. 8 = pees will be n Sally "increas 3 m. that | Q ILS, CROCUSES, 2 d numerous other Bulbous Flower
smallish TA for exhibitio a — ‘oot’ y, S. E. ] Orders with uu" vd may in future be Roots, direct from e Xf P. 145 Ae lorists in
BU ND — TER Q favoured will be executed E W | anrlem. Prices ve gratis and post free. -
Ripert of 55 MA p iat sud anda dioe. ee HE ORIGINAL | STORE NEW INGTON FLORI-
e ** Cc C "Jn
ESSRS. IVERY, of Dorking, "produced a noble ARTER'S CHAMPION CUCUMB ER HO HOCK. AND MISCELLANEOUS EXHIBITION, ope
N 7 1 3 Sion House and Lord Kenyon's| 1 pen
bunch of their BUCKL AND SWEETWATER GRAPE, surpasses Bi d iw npland, will be bold i e Floral Hall Hare and
hing certainly not less than 2lbs., broadly shouldered, Favourite vl winter and early A ue; Hounds Tavern, Stoke d reri Rost; N., on ESDAY,
and remarkably amm set. The berries were roundish, inclining Beopotb, peny green, quies. = 1. 75 August 30, when Prizes will be awarded to two-thirds of the
e, and were " — nin, assume unn —.— tinge, average length, 1 foot. Price per packe Exhibitors, i . Five. . Dai Z Prizes
y were very richly flavo ous. er this Certific: given for jas.
variety r i itself as one icular excellence, and J. C. & Co. do not hold themselves responsible la Treasurer, Mr. HURRELL ; Chairman, X J. II. F. H. S.
i for the genuineness of the above unless obtained
direct fr
2
born, — W. C.
. BRD,
LLS, sen., 7, mre Street, Dalian, N. E.
be . he Secre of Mr.
y THE TRADE.—The arrier, » has amps
esirous of contrac any CALCEOLARIA, 15. 1
jer o UNE rem ep ee Sonn, Jom.
to D ? quality.
of 1800,—W. C. Watson,
O THE TRADE.—A fine healthy Stock of
AMES’ CARTER AND CO
GENTIANELLA, 10s. per 100; ALPINE AURICULAS, year's
above
harvestin "d ore from — UNRIVALLED COL-
* LECTION
he Exh: o the ane at 1 o'clock, Admis-
to4 o Omnibuses from the
Elephant and Castle, S., and eam "Pot, Bish Street,
E.C. to Gate, N. E., being
ER within five minutes’ walk of the —.— House, Fare :
1. beter —— AND HORTICU — d
J SOCIET ident: Tho POMFRET,
o Earl of
HIBIT ION or FLOWERS, PLANTS,
Senin
1, Sen., Tansley Nursery, Matlock, Derbyshire. an — they ca ith confidence recom The NUAL OW
T d th as bei of — quality, bota for IY RUITS, = VEGE tain ES, will take place in the Grounds E
— LIE will I please to e enclose à reference, fu eager y at ist —JA 8 Mus C CARTER & Co., T. W. Gur ney, Esq een, on THURSDAY, Sept.
Y. AD E. Saedamen. 938. High Holborn. London W.C. | under the p RANNIE
JA *- TH 5 ` | The Duke of Gratton, Bir Charles Knightley, Bart.
ACKSON erm eit an in 1T ER AND O O. The Earl of Euston Rainald — “4 Leg., M. P.
B ber l to state that thei 338 Pomfret, Colon: NEL er M. B.
. T Sov pton,
TWENTY-FOURTH ANRDAE CATALOGUE The Exhibition will be 1 * oe of last
ear, 87. zes being offered for competition open to all
h ULBS land. Then will de: 28288 aua s N
will be published on Se tember 1, p it will be | Gardeners, Amateurs, Under enora and Cottagers.
Ta EANA LOMAS andl post Majo Gu application: Will also be a Clase for Agricultural Boots.
^ 8 ne to y ween ee the
^ Holb, Tank — e Premiums for which
255, High Holborn, London, W.C. since the Schedule —. The Sweepstakes are opem to
CART R C O., | all classes upon payment of the entrance fee before August 31.
i — Premium
* are now in ovre — their First Consign- Fee led.
For the best Collection of 50 Roses, in| s. d. | £s d.
HYACINTHS, . "TULIM, AND OTHER variation, 3 trusses of = as gathered] 10 0 590
DUTCH BULBS, pr ~ Collection of 36 Dahlias, in
varieties 0 4 0 0
all of which are very fine and in good condition. | pop the best Collection of 8 Eruis nit Trees, |
grown in pots or boxes, in 10 0 400
—f 238, High Holborn, — For the best Collection of 12 Stoye or |
inform their friends and praia . CED DUTCH FLOWER OTS — miri siete nein io qn l 6
and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of the above, to which are man LAV ws ox. AND "SON, Full Band “of Ve Majes sty’s s 2d Life Guards will
respectfully — war devivel of a fine |
ock oi
x PLOVER ROOTS, |
WAND CO. hav w ready for distri- — dto execute orders |
butio: a the PRICED CATALOGUE p resent season
ot; their extensive —— E PLANTS, EES, &c. It
e — sar d 76 and contains Stove, —— Orchida-
, Hardy.» and
| possible care will be taken ra Ke
The
perform during the Exhibition.
All Entries must be made in writin
| before th ie 31st t of Augu.
- ti will be
arge , if previous
exhibitor can.
gre:
onve
otia has sens given to ig ‘Beer died
send in his productions on the previou day,
Sch dal “tr at
pens atest
e hann: cA of
New and — * Plants; UNTINGDON SHIRE
t C- ! pus 1
MANENT PASTURE LAWNS, &c. E oh eigen piemiber by ihe kind a
SURAN SON, the Ta adaa paei rm a List of which ma d
Ae nie Ke.
y all kinds of SEEDS for or AUTOM
a. of v : —M
reet, Westminster, S.W.
BUSBY'S STOCKWOOD GOLDEN HAMBURGH GRAPE.
have
1-year-old Peot
GLADIOLUS OUR Omm —An ccr nT,
large flowering Bulbs of this magnificent Gladiolus, the —.—
of which is Meter r 4 ⁊ i the best and brightest variety
known. Pri p eet on ——
Greg
rmouth.
RIFOLIUM- d . — 5d. to 6d. per lb.;
with hints on its ents EM showing how
acre of th ve hay may be secured, the
E —À — — — — that as
AyD TOOGOOD having secured a large breadth of ounced he
me quality, pre scr ay tel Ge a prom PRIZE oF. “rr
Seed, talian Rye- TH
a.
EE NCH
` | of the above Gray os to be ome * ilis Crystal * Show,
— 7 and 8.
al Exotic Nursery, Chelsea, 8.W.—August 27.
Tooooo Seed Ge 3 DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS.
D, rowers and
; and Above Bar, Southampton.
PANSI
ICKSONS ax» CO. will be
following NEW PANSIES on Octo!
— White era, with th deep purple belt and s. d.
m a decided _—— on the n e
JT VEITCH, 1 N Yxone — €—
annual
ei
LENT — e Cata 3
—
of B
y that they are een LARLY FINE and i in EXC
s are now ready and will be fi for-
cut
upon patronise
t» in the
of the eres IVO SILVER CUPS will
DAHLIAS ; t to all England.
given.
ast
made by
attend, ide the sanction of Colonel Lord Pau-
lett, G. B.; conducted by C. God .Esq., Band Master,
eg atus TG Masi ae an . on ho Gitai,
me of the Music ma al
The Rooms of the Institution
freshments 1 — and Con:
the Grounds.
will be opened at Half
a
3 o'Clock ; from 3 until
= o Clock, 6d. ;
mpetitors
— 12 years of ag
Half-past 4 o'clock. e Ti
to them. Cot ors ext 2 a admitted at 6
Free. Notice in w. sent to the
by 10 9 locke eek M RE io t the Show, by all
Competitors for the Cups for Danis and 2 Y Plants.
Halwa at the Gate near m — Gad emat
Evi bea
1 Clock" ts, ids
M quo 4 0 Cook, [x from Ty eck rer
exhibition will be closed to
st Nort
pany
Tor the Double Journey, from H tehin, a and also from
Peter! h, and pig io te —
h, an mbridge,
el Suberipclens in eye
eiv
Stations
f the Society will >
d. M. Fox, Secretary.
5 desire: s to npres those who
him di EA 'advantage * giving him their pial EARLY, as
medium size, constant, 5 the 2 mns ivation of alt oe pee in a great meas asure,
rich dark self. Tite will prove upon their MEING-FHANESR: KA OR
lowers | ‘out
orm and texture
D NEW —
S begs
ner offers — the — —
SCAMELLIAS, with VT been.
Do. nite
Do. Plants, 2s. 3¢., 48., & 5e. each
AZALEA INDICA, with fiower-buds enit
R x y 4 1- D h.
5 seven new
cluding three double-fo —— — the set. slk;
me DON. IE VERSICOLOR; grown plants at W
charming effect,
— % 15.
Tian
Í ee which i undoubted est.
mittee on July 7, and in both cases rece
welties, and was av venim a a
GUINEUM MACULA — paion to eh noaa,
to send their orders MEO usual allo
urseryman, Ghent, Belgium.
blishi hed Planta, a 6d. excl
to the Trade.
Exotic Nurseries, Exe der and bessere pes
Royal Exotic
3 1 satisfac- |. 1
T
mj “Market Gardening
m 2i have seen 14 acres of
Cuc in — d; they are
grown under glass, and en
ut 6 feet asunder, and 10 feet
.hand-glasses are put over them.
and
eet row from row;
When they
*
nulehec for them.|seen nothing more rı
d i U mulched Es selects the warmest corner of his garden g emarkablo the :
Me, to to am as ei a the fruit c When the sage th ie n fixed on two or three cir- here figured, for which we ar i 12 she
p n air at once, in w wal. cular holes a e 3 feet across and about learned friend Dr. SEEMAN i :
: vs ; g
on
prepared ground at t above distanees; an
en known one par ie : 5 4 p : s Y"
kle merchants. :
ve 9 E. te ep a EI ir ^ otato dis-|and best of the soil that was thrown out of | seed- vessels in the same state,
8 ment
i five|similar state d We
bers wil not grow T e as In the me are sown four or made with ref
ease, y Rowoven, Cucumbers wi 1855, ex y. seeds an inch deep, and they are protected by a Poppy, but have 23 10 ae to thy
years after the first outbreak of the mal just : flower xs 1 vegeta r3 » Mr e perpetuation of such a monster "d di
owever, no sue roub tw P.
alluded to fields above alluded. to, ated, of ME Vestiges will kn 59 the ingenio ate
7] rm a some F i
Sir ice ni fields ey must adt. í d Nor some | well 5 and worked, iow isto: slight vide ges, s instance before us is that of an opium p,
localities are unsuited to their 12 — must a he seed sown without a any bo ttom- cheat or | which has produced, in oiim "d |
be conceded; but while their produce n ‘so | artificial protection whatever. which such a plant always bears
much demand as it is not only in London bu Thus it will be seen how easy it is to have plenty smaller seed-vessels around th
all large towns, even among the working classes, | of Cucumbers, and with comparatively how little side. ese latter represent t
of opinion that their culture might be expense in the way of preparation or labour; and that are blended together into the gig
$ atiy n se the middle; about 13 are "m
profitably extended. At present it is confined to hey a
com arativ vely sm mall spots in one or two counties, from the fact that ground which would grow b
f which seem unusually well | Cereals or root crops in perfection is devoted in But even these are notall single
adapted for their 3 Small, however, as the Cucumbers even by large cultivators of gra n | trary are triple, or double,
area at pres y noe 8 gultivation is, it|erops. M. ser reru s of deform:
is to furnish to on mar SST IN Me RADO, ` ave no relation t
less than 600 tons a week. Of these upwards of = iin T io du day Tue oin ipis bates “at the jet by the fall of which are clearly vite
100 tons have been known to be sent to Covent e e mac vale EE ar EGEO o rca E d
Gard gl as absence of such n ineredulity is not therefore E wed Pes w
arden in a single only pardonable but — worthy. We are no the hive in the middle throm
long stalks, which have
nshire, kar whet. ue called sient facts are sometimes the
a
fa iled to have pun Pigh cats Jaden wi ü Saen dean: al d fy uv whd same kind of junction been effected |
s y when the most 8 8 : :
d o arriving irresistible evidence has aah collected that the them as in the middle, a second E
bd have buried the first in its own i
5 "apprond hed. These | world is called upon to embrace the doctrin es of times happens in the fenit of (he pes
In the it was the famous one that all the various organs, Typ proposed new Garden at KENSIN
one and 1 p rwn named a leaf ;
ne and that all the parts of the floral apparatus were final i
The soil in| interchangeable. That those eae nal arrangement with een;
g : parts named | ]
“ed jus indicated i is dor the e by botanists talyx and corolla s vedi 2 modified pe rA ubm e
in every way leaves was intelligible enough; but ta * :
The ground and even the STan and the Council are beginning to thi
é i à g seed-vessel itself "ho E Apr a í :
e planted ell prepared Garing Winton, at wu at fet tog ales a m tuta tag cro
i ee: umpkin into a carriage fo volume of photographs of the most
p say that a ripe Peach ornamental gardens in the kingdom for!
i
About inning of May, where the plants was only a Peach it 5 rsen was
are intended : equally | of
E i to grow in rows eremi arde incredible, and it was not to be wondered at that meetin ap in 5 by Royal
NC m mee diio ot it was ridiculed by en H tical logicians. this Meer of Osborne. Names have
Vines, sip REN MM S pisos — gerfet; true, | been mentioned in connection with the
ay, the whole of — know. To | of the new Garden; and everything upto
ing of Jah, BE in all direc- ras time seems fo indicate that oper
ng their growth | enced in the
rfluous shoots are | correspondents has even suggested
ou. |. debentures taken "ie some
be reduced from 5 per o
| and that being so it d he sure to find
à
.B
a
ay
-*
S
B
8
2
2
—
$5
^
et
D
Ñ
+ ©
g,
un
o
- —
á
S
support, even if it required a a hundred tl
` dai e — | pounds aik of fifty thousand.
ions are not used for this Sarbi Rye e O yi
way the ground is lants,
TOLOCHIA SINARUM.
221.. 1
A. caule ramosissimo, foliis c pem meter
viridibus glaberrimis apice an;
orm acuminate
irto.
one or pros of the others, bee Age e case iy. be, t
: 3 s its p. clavato limbo ovato aei
By the middle of Jule or E karl according to Ms. Glendin ning tow
the season, the erop is ready for a first gathering, We received this E Ý; E d
ptember fruit
e
h fro: à ches to a. foot, green, il G
is continually being cut, some- gue pe a, [green flowers about 2 inches long,
25 5 stain at the mouth of the tube.
thr rough the . ity of these col umns, plant when bruised has the heavy oP
| which have been repeatedly em: " — to explain the genus.
the strange facts now allude d to. se facts have| Although the flowers have no be wae
A irect a bearin ra rari that | growth is so graceful vd it vod be bid
tc ean afford to be foun hose who know how
table or drawing-room
fixed useful than Ferns, because the frm
them Were tho gk — * r soon. Dil
na hio pe ht needful , 2 Aem — MAJUS b, anne
generally sent to London rate kinds to the p
provineial markets, and that as soon as o signature W
or discoloured ar and ‘ata um Mos. vyh the processes of orm tat vr a were t trees i "d 3 which 1 Kees ee zu
: : = | i : P : port, w ich
s M that . to waste is eyer es iue nascent | market, under - name of An intimum
23 ot sages er are sent to paying gne uu to Maze dall pg =A rather dea TY pn
: . In shape they resemble | condition brane and perfectly natural n lindrical tube a quarter
by wine merc 2. e, A 1 condi on became manifest, Rapid x : | he limb G aui of the tube is
and they generally hold about 2 p. l in the unnatural ch: ge of one out the slightest
n Thursday e wholesale price of art of @ flower into another, ospedali into 6 (we do not find:
ex usnmibers was formation of the frui ruit-parts as eo aves tbe. p purple lobes, correspon:
t. à t; hence the necessity of e ecking exuberant | number of bright yellow
peopl who think Cu- er eho ag be forming its flowers. 6 i Bamber, As on —.—
pr ie x 83 | phologialphenomen a than the formation ee is nothing u uns ab
- me ig mer local 5 . M e ee os ves T eee . — ee NP ge regularity and sy
: „ no culty in the matter; | 4); f ores) to the common Peloria of ^*'
the wonder ought to be that Cucumbers Neg! ble many cases are known, lly among ae odi pens novelty.
cultivated out of doors | ^i x EAD SUMAR MM wh hiye ulifowers and Oranges; but we have scere
MEN The vottager Botany, p. 204. the kind is figured in Baljour’s Class-book of Messrs. Veitch, p^ the pond nich *
flowered this remarkable
Avever 97, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND eee. GAZETTE,
on ir. Skinner from Guatemala. After that —— ture: Esq. Curator of the Royal Dubli were most acute considered
veller it * — but we enn from phos ^ t | Societys oria Garden, Glasnevin. that they saw the Welsh mountains, which are said to
— y specific cha acter, because e have a str rong cou Before entering on the = tails of the ramble, it is,
il t well to remark, ie. benefit of those who
and so ach species as
In habit p is very like the first; and the universal attention that was paid to Vaccinium
acci
th , on the pia and 1 gro ow th of plants ; the myrtillus qune and more "MG to its black
bat d flow ers are larger, the sepals rn are — E summer course), ystematic botany gla vacous berries. Some were fortunate in lighting on
roundish oblong, and the lip is a, circular, deepl of t the latter, "and when the young | some specimens of the pretty filmy Fern, Hymeno-
co ordate, distinctly thed, and m ly d i Wilsoni, though apros. from the extreme
upon a
0. — * * Rossii. 1 are unacquainted with the above institution, that there — to er 15 was — S rem ets le to: notice
EA |
puit à ground of the same. gms and have had num d and lower dow m, on t the | margin of a little rill,
1 th 1 f the natural orders best — — ted for * observed Drosera Round-l d Sun-
— de) ey are the same as in O. Bictoniense ; but it i f Jussieu, De Candolle, and Lindley, they Fes and abundance of 15 stren oreopteris (Sweet
much finer plan are taken out to the field for the purpose of enabling | Mo untain Fern rn), a nd L. Fænisecii (? ) with some com-
them to exercise the knowledge they have already ac- | moner F
i }
quired, b We cannot Close without expressi ng how much we
THE pt TREES IN THE CHAMPS ELYSEES. | as to collect and name specimens of he ordinary way- | to th "i Wicklow „Railway Company on
„Tur of treatment 1 eges by the French en - field pisita. such as are likely to the present, and to the Drogheda Railway Com-
im trees in in the Cham amps "d in after life. pany on past occasions, for the N vinced in
Ete tural orders selected fo lu
„ p "r3 is tue different from the one I — Men an excellent — ted, to — —
saw 2 ractise some two or three ago. At unt of really usefu —— information, which ang
that time T pened to. be in Paris. ant-while eng | youth, — — 6o que horti culture the NOTES ON PME I PLANTS
2 “the hamps Elysces my attention was drawn | profession which he is to live, ought to know, UST ms
| tot appearance — many of the trees pre- -" few do. For example, the natural order, By Fi e , Mexturm, M.D., Ph.D. T
| sented by having one or two dark stripes painted on tains the original species from which mo:
6 y:
—
them from top to bottom of their Pm On closer cultivated fruits Jm sprung, including —5 Are "Pe d. ON a a former occasion I alla de 0 to the medical and
| examination. i, fo und. the Ph had. been removed from Peach, Plum, Cherry, Strawber rry, R tas &e,, as | chiefly diuretical properties of the numerous Diosma-
ach E the stripes, v vere for t "t ‘his alone | ceous plants, which ornament so many parts of this
2i inches wi lth 1 fill Ri up with | opens a wide field for showing * successes which have country. I. ately, ina 8 ey performed to the south-
a pian dark colo: ured composition resembling a been — in tl ts, and the p TU an Alpi I noticed, at an
mixture of tar, soap, and resin or wax. 5 could Ae the means used to procure the ain, among the elevation of mo e than species producing
conceive for what i vl this had been done, and — ciferan, v we have the 5 25 the Cabbage and the essential oil (to which the medicinal virtues of these
— friend cx was with me, although a Parisian, was nip, garden Stocks, Wallflowers, ras ms ch serve plan is to be DI wi n very high egree, and,
nable toe ighten me on i the s subject. He however farther to illustrate the i improvemen 8 careful since it is unkno nical Mero I thonght a
brief enn istie "hotie orit it mig! a —
down the dead tr trees, and was informed tha was a| which have been obta from the wild wol in n this | and I hav n furnishing it, as this
recent 2 on PE — the progress of tedis sease | order, again, tbe E Uenbellifera, with its cnl; plant will eed endure the Wie. init tm —
n n e ly
—
with which the trees were a a „ ry, ran
— — Y health. The experiment — red minosæ, containin, are Pa se Vetch, Clove, of d garc week
8
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3
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yon notice eg
altogether of their outer bark was adopted. It was not | ear slightly notched-repand, on short sa, chat and of
simply a ab ion of the rough outer bark that was|is highly ee "i trace the progress which | equal colonr on both sides, flat on the marg gin; ere
p] —but large masses of the entire bark— | has been p sing improvement of the varietie: es | terminal, and bel the apex of t ches, one-
which, in "justice to the operators, it is but fair to say themselves times. lowered, or b mbel; t = aoe
ey could sc rat avoid removing, as in numerous t may “ap esl i imagine ed, then, with what — | minute calyx deltoid, somewhat
instances i of destructive little pests with as advanced poi of the class look forward to the | Carpels rhor mboid- ov ate, beskeð ; ; seeds uie: black
whichthetrees were infested had so bored and eatenaway | excursion vad a as p» iln them to see, in their natural | polished.—On
the portion of the bark next the wood, that hardly any | habitats, many of the re whose acquaintance they the NAllister River, Gipps Land. videly-spr i
remain an was sufficient to keep it on | have made in the lecture- | Shrub, a few feet high. Leaves Bu between 3 and
the tree. It was very evident that the disease ha ving arrived at | cage (selected this year), we 5 lines long, 1—1} line bro ad. Carpels, with addition
it. fir for any one to entertain the hope of arrest- | €— along the beach, and p, among other of their eee 2 lines long. Seeds ovate, oblong,
ing it; and even if such had not been the case, it commoner plants, "Trifolium —— Srodium mos- | het longer than l line. Strophiole half as long as
ie to me thet 2 means prie to were more | chat, we some good specimens of fe e pretty Cru ed,
cale ulated to leath of the trees than be tof | fer us plan „ Cal kile maritima (Purple Sea Rocket). | y gen: ad that the Australian
, on this occasion,
A u
leaves, which soon m withered and a hth month of Jane rérer species were Fœniculum officinal nale (comm
n one of E which [genes ed were dead. | Fennel), s E "Narioram) Beseda Reseda | be transf
o instance the stems covered with Moss lateola ( s inalis (Soapwort), el
n. — TOW d wi suck Moth; but this plan was | of which we passed a fine habitat, v Arma pien tn
probably adopted — a on finding that it answered | in its normal or single — which Mr. M. *
so well when applied to the trees that t were planted to is seldom the case, it being mostly — with double
Uthe ey occasioned by tl 2 of Ph discov
"eh had die d the previous season, argle, after so long a drought, was not rich in | Species
their attempt to aire . we = indc ac dew 5 — be 3 e. genus Eriostemon.
ee He Eins piens e n I am bound ually found in Fes ants recently collected by Waiter
to say they deserve great credit for the manner in gigantea, a -— thers wae aoe, “se the n, — the. Director of the Botan nic G arden of
which they dia —— xe I know that our T— of the dell of ‘the — — from the top of Brisbane
friend Mr. McGlashan had been sent for some years e Lover's Leap. At this spot we! had oe = antage | for his zealous nr dort into the botany of sub-
ago to teach them how to use his transplanting ina g Quercus sessi- tr opical Wes stern venia I noticed an bern of
chines; and here I had: an cay opportunity of finora and Q. pedunculata, and of am the chief | whic
seeing them in operation and form ing an opinion as to eres of = ren seroma them explained. in Tasmania
their utility. A large vacant Space adjoining the Place| A merging from the Dargle woods we headed _Anopterus Macleayana.—Leaves chartaceous, large,
corde was marked out; in lines according to the | | straight across Tn country, over hill and dale, through long, lanceolate, blunt, serrate, with a teethless acumen,
n g and e (of which latter plant we have some | on rather long stalks; teeth of the calyx 6—9; ovary
h th l ith its load 1 tl y lively — fey for the Sugar Loaf — grey, tomentose ; capsule of great size, with 8—11 very
latter g to the pl 1 the slope of the river we noticed Erythræa cen- large seeds.—On the summit of Mount Lindsay, at an
tu ease be which Cie ‘operation was per- taureum and Liu ium cathar ticu um; an d in the pod elevatio: on of * or 0 feet, accompanied by high-
eric seemed to asto apis who witnessed it. | valley ste 2 africana, by Bursaria spi
In the course of puer a fort rtnight a grove | fine nest of Anthemis nobilis (common Chamomile), | and other pea rl plants.—A tree 30 feet high. Leaves
of Horse Chesnuts formed ‘which could not possi ibly | growing ruly w longer and, in comparison to their length, narrower than
reas been jones gg under any other o rcumstan As we — determined on gaining the summit of the in'the Tasmanian species, sometimes fully a foot long,
hin a period of 25 or years. et same aa Sugar Loaf, and had, tl irem o over 1800 feet of eleva- | giving to the treea most noble appearance ; their gland-
of tre iy A planted in England any have been tion to climb under a bur ing sun, and on slippery | bearing teeth similar in both. Racemes 6 inches long,
airs quite sufficient to fill in re Seth kine Grass for a considerable pies we gave little heed to | or shorter. Corolla unknown. Pedicles often an inch
about their Toots, and afterwards perhaps potenia, mig radually the unsocial feelings m c. PN , nii -lanceolate, acumin *
| but the Fre neh adopt a nother generally 1 sine a Bie travelling stole over us. Teet
3 with pe „ —— intned |»
where Mite v to have much breath to waste on his neighbour. How | de
t i a operation of of ied the bold adv fellow who was | the ova
— SIA É begin at the ground and bind the waving: his das ed Mme pinnacle, to which we |
er 9 feet, had 1 mount. And when we
w uo rit top a sort of f gel of 8 into | r. top w iet maine pleasure did we |
cy ly pours the E ii u rugged
hay bands moist. With this 9 during the first watch a — i : ur before, i ep
a a strik amen to some eam of tcp ce cer — vor ementi d ge ton .
ean utifal pros which
large trees, which I I have seen in England. B ome ito be had in the county Wicklow. ei coe the ich
MÀ e had a ark 2 view of the Po
th
ion, th
ANNUAL BOTANICAL EXCURSION OF THE an on hie king Dey? toile
STUDENTS AT THE ALBERT MODEL FARM, E sra rdg
GLASN TOME
Ox Thu — “th inst; a party of about 60 o orama. Then we had before us, towards the south, —.— yp
otani men of the Model F. isual 2 pan beautifal ifie of the Downs; and gazing over the | late, to "vid per idera © — cap-
ical excursio; m, under the guidance of their lec- | great expanse of sea in the direction of Wales, som eof petioles; calyx wi g T
EA
| tr wel London New
ifany. My charged with usn lusc
the inclosed Grapes, ar nd the remedy for it, i a pn — j
Sules of large size, with numerous a d of Van 5 a 8 eh ere man, aed ot d MS KR : comme u i xperience T have ) $
ies only the colder montam regio ; . it before. ra Db me de EN tà
im La - y iene pr rer " 1 15 ey 5 only two aches! of the Black decem 1 being s
ouse o a 3 ^ the a
— ogra de ressed interior of 1 ew: Sout h a Vine is strong and healthy, and abo e year 90
nee " bi the tite whic E | Non ' of the common Vine disease ur show Tm in the id rcp 15 hs all coll 4
attracted the attention of Sir Thomas Mitchel iru house this year. The border is a very good one o na y ur readers to dr Ei. 4
trac ing the course | of the Maranoa Biver; - tied e sunny slope, concreted he drained, and protected by | my pen po ew ne we i
Tec d 2 a a 8 1
ETUR IET lin in cold we ather. Im à i s,
pie name of “ — ted Tree." bark i "— p^ a very A Ad Men and dp en 3 5 re postage eia upon. the abs |
It ins ight of about 20 feet. Its bar E tomed to Vines before he came to xd PE D. | Tom The "i “Nearing 1
. Ae areolate, the grey e epiphlaeum Meg eed 0 mated uid their management thorong iu M rs s onde - eire ma |
s eces, uncovering üben TE ei Bat. th. _ [The berries are at acke d b 125 in p ofthe acm 8 i p: hy an i. say vt
A loured inner stratum of the bar 1 i :
E. E spot otte d. Tho is pale. [kind ave abi andant: 18 commo ; and w Ferd 2 eee kind xL d 80 dep m Said? le
it ne that was not traceable u Asse wrong wit i» — 7 5 eran ARN u er : a very ph
flowering specimens —— referred nd inse ^. d he genus thon oots, The Frontignans are mos especially lia Hoa * the rem a ^ throwing Rd
gs worts, and inser | 3
S — ah among 2 —— aculosum in Sir to it. andi Taruno dd ide ere of Grapes | riband. m ed
'Thomas-Mitchell's work on rapida] — lia. p. 384. : ution ip yee beginning of a autumn, i paner bags dern ound fr ng.— Making some 1
1% ͤ ̃ HP DAN à D
ate e Darhr » pkt M
Murchison, noticed the same tree, which ind stated | the ngae . me yrs ques gar in ripen fru da x “evenly the system — requires to be know
Eo rance first above Moninda, and ba t this € e Illus-| used, I ha endeayóiwed to give a nsina
to make 19. appeuren 1 those 2 | increased.” My master has cu u HS E qu d E x ed ie gives
urious |
in communicated, I ascertained that t
ad belongs to that Preces e Flindersia, which Im
have bs acco ount of habitual Meme * its ha rd |
is
is rtarie acid ?
w ocine of this alleged discovery. Risp
Ti
phi olum 8 Sieg —I believe this to be
et
nt; 2
a fine growth of pla
la
y
w them;
My fade. are 4 fe et 6 inches Ms
distant i in the row:
the true Crystal Palace Nasturtiu 2 ty piste is inches
Australi" E x 5 and 66, to Flindersia. t t Is D rant arlok Man ^a Sine PARE d bali
Although I fiia failed in 2 any lea reme toe 8 resembling Ca Catte e v P xe 9 ret qio Agel o
E the Lk rode dig, 7 bn Sh * hich iot creeps along: e 3 is ve E: short-jointed, and a fixed upright at each end
Due Ligen ma p^ Mitchell’s | profuse e in the north I iore it will into which I pour the water or M m
amined Ei ee sg ab in v Sir Thomas n regarding | be fou es gh seful bedding plant, and it is easily | used n freely when the plants w
collection, es a S hese ibunt o tt oliage, babe ome se cu tings In the south it bl lso when they were in blos 1 until
bet A oA oem that, as in r . ice me Je most abundantly. Very few plants will soon fill a good- | done fruiting; the cost is very trifling, |
ct es d plant roduced by the us | Sized be d, for it grows freely although of compant for 100 feet. pipes ar
MED or pail pan ae P Darling and | habit. JV D., Bradford. without mortar at the joints s
n ersia Vc Dari aL e, ^ —
EE Hamb ily distribute itself under and amoi
its * showing simple, all the tropical, com- e ginem veni eer e Gi. tek IMS dw tr rig pipes t MED
5 — 7 varieti i of [54 should publ their epum. of their keep them firm, and the number
“The lowing dimos, bar Acad en merits; it is very one who is s plac ced in "pa ae tudinally of — — pon the
l xhibit inei | lic, bat r bed, as they reach from a few
hn A cie — e mies d : 3 nevertheless would be a valuable ME o | whole lengtl have now =
fid with short petioles; with pellucid dots; er 8 3 05 ted from time to time by the fruit com- made 12 inches long to serve as receivers,
i nii 3 osite ; I obes of the 5 f the Horticultural and Pomological "Societies. much less troubl but fi
Nola ils NI te , five dedi: a indisputable fact thah great caution is now | long I use only the drain-pipes, layin
coelos ge ^u del ede a manifested by pur s of new fruits, and | end at a sufficient * to be above
ae ubercles, ; sapo s ; its m e much discontent prevails at the disappointment which | the hor may poured in. Where the
iis j tide jd sd The | in many i has occurred, arising doubtless how- | meets the level - joints are made
eat d (ted, but the dots rather concealed er in some cases from indiflerej E m ment er cannot escape, G.
t. The capsules deserve notice for the i nis Lt — i- * h, Bucka LIU
by which th ed. "Y vaters would form a safe e gui ayers. iewell known | ye
— ae mn at when an UN ee in ition tha shreds to walls
ew, in his opinion blacl is | nails, me re: purpose >of — tre
trees. The ia. of. walking under the sha
agre eable. Ta
Peach trees i is most
m how
space will e pin as we
find now if we n standard trees in small kit
gardens. In
will ation fm ors an g
years they will Rem large s suing for after all in the end truth will xd
de S| have be d to make these remarks
| holding Ivy, &e. My
ons, planted round the house,
1c | to the stu
ar case
^ but bo a
he walls, owing cn £
pai inted and washed over, I we 2 e
wall, to allow
ed
of keeping the young vy ab oots pressed i
the s to form e gain str
tself. The composition
t| whio ch glue fails to do.
be of easy ple n pe to set so soon Us
T t rins
t of I ing ate d
€ | leaved variety (o i ie
appearing —
be n's experience nd |
he
— s house if p cen
es, and Nec
vith pyra-
rms * in
a
E
upon, and I Believe with him tha
t as far at least as the
Cannon Hall Muscat is concerned it vil e n:
disa . —
, AS all garde ners who cultivate this va riety
in Lon
should trellis y your wall with
Eart: thenware-l ined pe
loved
ave it to
enter i
shall lea
n regard to the Golden
firs
banches of it, to o say nothing of the high temperature
required to sustain and 2 the fruit. Then with
ies were as green as |
b She 88 of |
ee in ourable
tion 25 ffer an
Not being how
how, and not th
opinion on the merits of those
$ ever d
seen or from wha d heard, I determined t
this Grape a trial. I therefore inarched a spindly .
32 tte
ere! from what I
i
The in
uced. | d
had escribes
of iron oe
conveying water. Could an
whether the inven - has
H
A
whi
in Battersea
*
anged by M
being
not unwor
in.
ould be 3 obliged
which has at
rthy | The bunch of th
if you| a deep ai
tacked | flavour of th
me with 5 bunch
write {j Lo p» the dmt: of the three while I
pes, and am mongs st
gh. The temperature and trea va
be inferred wi
H 7 sh
Subscriber.
—
Societies.
al he — on = j^
size; the v dim — pe of s z
* ——
abe and worthy of — — of Ge ide
e former excellent; of the latter highly
far por
Gann pee Ca yellow,
Te the first four of these
- R
Avevsr 27, 1859.] THE GARDEN ERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 7"
fica: awarded, and the last three were eom- in teresting co collection was contributed b by M Ir. N& n, well as their officers. In this will consist — —
mended” run — ju A dte named Dr. gr. to G. J. Graham, Esq., — Chase, and Sha should it ever be necessary to send them into
ey D Rp: recei a First Class Certi- | was awarded the | fir: st pren iium f Th hree s. | They will ^t riw of a most f — wang dm *
em a large rosy k — with a lemon | In the varieties were con- | effectiveness of which . ever greatly depends —
eye. ^ [e 1 Phlox, white with a well defined tribut Museat of Alexandria, a good bunch, vell the individual it is To
0 amed Mrs. Standish, came from Mr Standish,
ticed a Seedling
— el, a robust-
e
grow: ing, ‘plain -leaved sort, gc o» not different
pda rtr Prati
y 1
n +
cuitivation.
ENTOMOLOGICAL: August 1.—J. O. W.
estwood, Esq.,
— in the sme Mr.
r MacLachlan erer —
Brit Lepido
ed :—
ripened, w — served for
f
Zusk's pages we may n
varieties scat of Eschcolata: this variety “in fuel essential matter,
| Horticultural Society’ s catalogue 5 as been «
with the former one. t is, however, unques
—— xem better, 22 examines the various ye *h-lo PE Aje arrangements,
vidently "€: temperature, | which will —— by degrees put an erar
a bunch of Horie Victoria Hamburgh from the | muzzle- loading ; ther enters into minute details
|sume house — scarcely so ripe; in every other the manner and —
| respect the v. ieties are very similar. A Seedling — with valuable — pe meus on drilling and
cat, raised fron m White Syaani aud Muscat of. Alex- training. Upon n the subject we must allow Mr.
— appeared very similar to the peak for himself.
all that relates to this
He erp the vagi of Bos old
1 the rifle out
—
founded
druide
Vaterfor
m of 2 it taken
re, in 1856; | th
and Mr. Mitford exhib 9 —— traria and other
e
recen E F. d exhibited
larva of a curious of beetles, Drelus flavescens,
taken on the Isle of Wight, craw
natural h habit is 3 ever that ofa parasite with the shells
$6 a cool hous
i- | and the exhibitor affirmed it
ggin, a kind
ling upon sand; its to Cornichon Blanc, but in form o
appea “At the e present important crisis when the
the berries -— very sweet and good, jardin of these islands is preparing to arm,
a better setter than | work on the rifle N ould be incomplete, which did not
ired m furnish simple, yet precise instructions, whereby the
ng visioni may roth taught the new manual and
toon ees meo. ud by all British light
berry about half.“ “It " t mistake to su that profici
fnis ween — t * Muscat. It was a 4 im- — ie all tha that is requ aan UU oim isa — t
rom Italy, and, although sweet s thick- — er. It is absolutely essential that he should, in
e other - ki
tas
with.
rare beetle
Lu ccombe, in the Isle
hib: 1
destitute of organs of flight is also to be met
Mr. Lewis exhibited specimens of the
Chlenius Schrankii, from
Wight. Mr. West
of cocoons of the social moth, Hithyre sociella, | taken
out of the stomach of a cow.
— i and of nó value, Allied to the * ts was a additi act with precision in concert with others;
fine and. well. -ripened bunch of the White or Genuine | should Mata that implicit obedience to his officers
| Tokay. This Gra |n barer, without whic eh r p man has any pretension to be consi-
l without it he is worse than useless
a sweet and thin. skinned Grape, it is worthy of ae in the field.
th "had
oons into her mouth with — Bier tf food, be
bees ome.
ioned a
— humble the Black Ham mburgh sec
taken the mass | usual v:
- | nea: — similar to be considered = net. bete ots Black |
guish e ber
* Any b po
site cher’ ior ii OO tab might be,
variety; also one called Coventan, which was too kam me the tiae c thet. —
feet to act Eure endently
imself, would d
€ — — ane Hoe! their skill ns shots
Ham mburgh, which is ries being | h
m
of co
neath w ap tam had m e the . He also
arkable i —
umi
p
beetles. |
n sojourning |
itte
y
r ahd Brazil -: the purpose of collecting near
mber his ret to
A
e | Morocco included in the
Of the St t. Pete r's section was a bunch of | the originai
rhaps, not unfrequently suffer
e of ue friends as their foes.
* Rifle in-
y „nighty coloured approaches very stitutions i in 1 their way, hr thei cir members must not
eh if it is not MM with the Mill - imagine that, even after months of mere practice at the
amburgh. d v -set bunch of the Black | target, t. vd can a N "weh rm
lection “They tis true, lea
E their. duty, but they
nort branch
are then pets fit to be drafted
Tegetm
— tin ——. . 1 bee- —— recently practised i
for obtaining a hive of pure honey unmixed with brood,
in n D month of July. This was effected hy dri iving the
que and half the bees out of the hive about the 25th |
rifle corps. In i
— have taken
traini ng
ct, until they are so enrolled,
prescribed oath, all drilling and
A large MÀ -— that tlie
is illegal, and subjects those concerned in it
:
‘the
s of dene and Hamburgh,. with
solar zzl
zzly Frontignan
“All drill for volunteers should be as , simple and as
T— wen fon, quee comb „ by which |
all the o renani Ù as hatched. The bees
still p in the hire « with the new queen were
as en d another hive,
n the old i i
e affirmed his variety
ised fr porn ot Prespos Hill in 1851 den Caroline [A
Pine impregnated with British Queen; sown
soon d ted out d foll
ing o — cells R
à Old Dutch. -
but in Epe, sweet, and v Of the
Front an, a bunch — p and handsome,
though scarcely ripe, was included in the —
Of the eee section were a bunch 2 ters em
Royal, RS -nam d White 88
Griffin's Roya M which P
Wet
at each individual ee “have sufficient
knowlege er every part of his rifle to enable him to
to pieces and put it together again when
appeared to be a eri E thicker
eon | Bap er and — recognised.
na sc not
ack Beedling, a said to have raised —
Back — oa White Swee as a
ould be practised in
he ordinary range o
be should be able on ki occasions to take
up a Postion in nai will be enabled,
s, Esq., and he
selected Omar
Me: deseri
g in bunc h, small in berry,
full o f seeds, v very t Fy dud deu, and utterly worthless.
Mr. Ivery exhibited a bad Tn bu — of rit mre
170 K med his body teady without constraint ;
“To be careful above all "nt bs wird his sights to
8 this letter b by
a copy of the cireular whieh ¢ paene their opinions,
to show that it was not sent out without a pm
He further stated tha H he pel — kn now Myatt's EI
Hill ¢ A hi ta in T was t| Also thi
een, ica "that Mr. x
It was further
by a alae ——
fully co mpared with Eliza
Li
sess was considered by the
cercle from any knowled; ge of
ghton
find
E in port the re
uM it *o fully mai e ES "n 6th. h whe en pressing e ‘pinching’ the trigger in
ii it € previous y the act of firing, to fe particularly careful not to
en ye erange his aim
„These few sim imple rules are all that are really neces-
sary to enable any man to attain the maximum effect
with his rifle.”
st however rema
was that the — had
ich it had
RRS. OE Ara t one point, altho
Notices o of Books,
r
The Rifle and How to i aes it, ce. By Hans Busk,
First 1 Victoria Rifles. Routledge; 12mo. | l
Fourth
Mr. Busk, the alti of this little work, possesses the
merit of a ectly understanding the rifle question in
all it; s bea ings. Het herefore stands before the —
burgh Grape, the
i gut inserted on the
in the chair.
before the
ing.. Mr. Hog
pO. the past year were laid
unani
showed the ree
approved. They |
IP and
Milanese
the attention of thinking men t. t
Notv "mj: E general belief that Gov ernment | | a bullet when stated on its end instead of bein ng per-
was no est in sanctioning ood leaning to one side, owing to the base
ids * ry eem in the shape of Rifi t being at right angles with the e such bolle
teers, and the doubt — ll felt upon the. idle due oi s | iid deviate from aright line a full y n 100
lem sufficien ong ae Another cause of in
mg conviction —— that our hom iron cups
from i bullet.
insult. And, notwithstanding the unfairness of cal g | ever so Ii
Pane men in “discharge of a a great ; public duty to vim:
year, the
uo the list s was 232, being 80 more than
mber reported at the m. — —
et
E
E
2%
er, J. Cath ush, W. Da vidson,
>
R. Stains, and E B. Haig, Esquires Messrs. J. Fraser,
: Paul, J. Spence
Vox n, J. "Trison, ^u Asie. andis; Milne,
t th what should ne paid
the org population, it seems — that
body of riflemen x soon be mo
air
'To such — s p^
-
E
S
"9
ia)
E
a
rese
tay 8 * made ne, Mies
erstanding adn . the routine of be ade
is being th
€ offered for collections of — a very — and
an einer field day. The ns who now | bullet ly à
wa cu ed bullet fired from a rest is-
1 * 838 intlizent che and the is — only abe by a practised shot, strike four-
teen paces to the right of the bull's-eye.
1 work.
. Busk's advi ice eae. the relative va
times
Rather dan- |n receives sh ag Los gna of liquid
p
ially while ‘the Vines
el
"n th
lno
iue
d
arati ively dry,
h
sonal Thee superiority o
to the En * 7% had been on other occasion:
proved; but in August, 1858.
»
suffici
in Chatham manches alw
independently of on t
of the siis
ter rifle
ently | one
da E rder was B Ede)
10u:
t
The
Another Vinery contiguous !
aged ed i
turn disease E if
time in getting the spr own,
&e. A bed of Onid ons m ng Cale
to stand the winter
cro
ld be sow ec
to the
n the same way a and
a
nd an em
plantei ed at hes same tiime
:
a late supply
>
ita equal success. Indeed Mr.
than local fame for his
32%
s made. use of on the occasion were Lan- |
final uh we ve shoal think,
“The
e same
a more
me is consulted in ca
ke
ntlemen , who eep A igi
T
2 5 2 the y n and. East India Company" s
ses . EN even hes l
skilful Grape gr owing
E gardene
F
Engi
115
1 des . n bein
of f the line and the
persons selected to make the trial 1
commis ssioned officer s belonging to the
School of Musketry, Hyth
dd non-|g
Roya al Engineers
The
ied o
daily 1 s engaged; oe in another
arden, does everyth
It N him, he says,
ing in it “with his own hands.
*& with hee ofitable amuse-
je. amateur wl
Ez
d
r trade. He is fond
the depóts of the East India Company's regimen
on, each of whom had 5 er-
nstruction in the ens and
fro
. to the 2d Battalio
gone a regular course o
of i
practice of the rifle. Tw ner round ds
were supplied to each.
yards, the game being gradually rip A
rd. t again pro
D Ages
accuracy
r
the Enel rie, although the skill of the c
riies oci aie sible. The
hed as possi
of ball c ridge
50
9800
rial aga ved most o con-
ver
con tending
e pra ractie
Calendar of Operations.
(For the ensuing Week.)
Ero A
NT DEPAR
Cox RY,
pleting * Ea nee irs o
the gro
m YE. a d 4 Sag
y by selec n fro
of the impero
ES
the target at 5
good, rg
Strack, i the general Eerd of the firing such as
dein At the
0
was x 550
finest practice hie ok pee
«bat made by C rgeant Barrow, Royal nent or Aged temporary character un-
-gineers, and lour-Sergeant Gosling, 52d Light m ted md of air must be given them "da and
"Infantry, each of whom made the astonishing number | — 5 Finish the potting of Chrysanthemums, and
. Of 21 * poin =f 3 them pond as they ava The sto
“A few days later than the experiments above autumn and winter flowering plants sho uld not
. recorded tls 1 [8m trial between the Lancaster and oe after this, but hare every encourag ement to
ber iE n on-commiss
e er with the s a
iie m had 20 rounds of a
E e were fixed at different bee M
eh yards.
Engineers was 1
of the line only aver g 8.0.
1 m p? 0 points.“
sult of the AMT series
that the non-co
DIM Suis with
g ber
e with the
ioned office
m.
munition.
oned office
sey Cann, R.E.,
made the finest practice of the day, gaining the unpre- genns remov
^ 98 uit. , PIN NERY. finn off potting, both of the fru
of experiments
that the anasto un gained 15.88 ‘points,’ the |
12.6
termi "sta
+)
ach t
Lilium dili: two other
- | plants should likewise have t
neu ago
of 17
d officers fro
arying —
8 evinced its superiority from the
and maintained it it throughout the trial; m the
shen Dk EER
E 3 e
- - non-conm
| usd. at this
2
p wer- epid to
seei Da b e Ones (of different | kindy, Myrtles,
ara Sarin vii ced — r forcing should be remo
ool airy 125
Mn DRA RTMEN'
"ipe N 5 should be occasionally ee |
remove decaye
troubleso:
iani or "other Sor on
them over the s
V
Hu
Tip this shov
rs | the principat leaves untouched,
We allude t ug as w ed
adm
PLA
d niis time should be lost in com-
ho
refully tie out, afore they
e blo ooming 2 gd different varieties of |
se Attend to the proper ur
of 5 t a and 1 weak liquid manure to plants |
n them in vigorous h
ries, APs 8
iS to prevent their entrance, ta x Sun
shght trames, and place
TMENT.
ood autumn-flowerin
i like attention; s
o capensis, which are i
S.
open. After
pe
ce during the "trial was piani po been placed under protection, Whether of FEE
t an
ved |
:
=
gg —
phates of Lime, ‘probes, ec, — Assa says o. of Gold, Si and to corrode, and can be raised or lowered | —.— E tat "e md ; r MM od i for — ol onii " on
other Minerals are ith accuracy an despatch. at ee on the stand, the legs of}? St Somat nn rate — € ication. -
—— emen e suena us em aine. * wah — ew in Chemical which fold together, and may be car- | AYMAKERS, possessing the be st features of
tion at M the PT xr din n a m — ann ee ase by one man to tank or | Nicholson's Prize pry with m ag T eet ad
— —— a a pon £ s. d. peculiar to those supplied and manuf: Senes on
ONDON MAN U E COMPANY Stand and Pump, with screwed s B I DEMON ) ne it i ean Ee EN
y erri 1810), tail pipe, fitted with strong ran ishmen uth John Stre
Have the following MANURES S ready for delivery :— — win for suction pipe 2 15 0| NB. The celebrated a and Stamford Priza HORSE
CORN "aL URE p AUTUMN SOWING. If fitted with barrel of | Re AKES always in stock, with latest Patented — nts.
— — Ain ANURE ror AUTUMN SOWING. planished coppe: M XE Cu) Y ye mU ho w:o T.
Stand and = with plain A *
SUPERP HOSPHATE or LIME. tu pipe, for tying on suc NICHOLSON'S PATENT HAY? A to which w
SUPERPHOSPHATE 3 | pipe .3 9 0 oe 8 viet — A -y yal Agricultural Society o
The Lendon Manure Company also pp! ERUVIAN 2inch — rubber and ca ngland at the last contested tri
aU AN i 3 T FORD HORSE RAKE has lately been
GUANO (direct from Messrs. — & Sone) ŠULPRATE — lexible suction n Pine on The celebrated ST. gn "
AMMONIA, NITRATE or SODA, CRUSHED BONES A ither 10, 1 to» — improved, an ned 26 Prizes at competitive
Tug s EP ms n — pisi T" they warrant período 2 MOWING ann REAPING MACHINES are performing their
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R count t the above pri f the Patentees and Manufac- tting abot A M acres per day, at a of §
BUENARD, LACK, axp CO/3 CONCENTRATED turers, J. Wansen & Some, & Crescent. Jewin Bt.. London, BG. | ^28 about 10 acres por day. at a cost of W at once to
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D Sal Manch
Phosphoric Acid sol ARNER'S PATENT VIBRATING STANDARD rac, & Gay Sa South John Street, Liverpool.
of Lime, PUMPS. - — " y =
ENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to| | PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS for Farms, Cottages, Stable | / 1 LANDS IMPROVEMENT —
tho preceding. Yards, &c., where the Well does not exceed 28 feet in depth ; Incorporated by Special Act of Pa ament :
Ol these Mà Manure s Dr. Voelcker “These results mus 1 fitted with peas Patent Metal re pe E and Valve, which | 2, Old Pa lace Yard, Westminster, S. W. To Lar xb m
be very gratifyi to you, and are y^ grani: poor ot — very | cannot clog in action. These Pumps c: be made right- | Clergy, Estate Agents, Surveyors, &c., in England and Wal
high 4 rae nba and — — value which characterises | ha — Bor har — — with handle pis site the nose by TER nnd. ber devs 10 upnochés: that the: Conil
our cone ;)»hosphate mov our s aly. ^c 05 o a at | anz
e arid analyses, wit 7 ä of the late and present Z D 9 Amendment Bill, 1859, has — tig sanction of re gara
hemists to the Royal Agricultural meng with e armed i of Barrel. Height. te d.|lature. The Company now advance money, unlim d ed in
Prices, &c men To had 2 app plication to BuRNARD, LAC CK, 25 in. short 1 ft. 7 in. | Fitted forlead, 5 0 | amount, for the following works of restes erm ment,
4 Co., Sutton Road Plym 25, long 3, 3% | gutta percha n 10 0 * 1o whole — 25 and rpa es in all cases being liquidated by
- „ ditto 3, 6,, or cast on 2 40 arge for 25 yen
REDUSTION E PRICE tor AWES'S MANU 34,, ditto 3; 6,, flanged pipe 2 90 * Drainage, Irriga! — on and Warping, Embanking, Inclosing,
R. use haa ES to "announce 1 that he ins r- 4 itto 3,, 0% | as required, E 13 0 Clon: af ore ry fr Drainage any br pur-
Nn Te e p! nures manufac 24 — with 15 fcet of Lead P pose, Engines or Mac ery or
Ade MANUR fom £T 4688 ad tached, ready for fixing. t 100] 2 Far — r Tram and Rail 12 e
. m £7 to 6 — ditto >- ditto diiio 1 14 0 fari
SUPERPHOSPHATE ‘OF LIME. : to 6 6 8. ace x € posee aid on tl
MINERAL do. - 6 to The short barrel Pump is very convenient of navigable rivers or Iakes-
RLEY M for fixing in situations P limited height — 4. The v one of Farm Houses, Labourers’ Cottages, and
RSS Ew Ux Voelker have: samp! ia on : ul pores for 1 supply Ae pes ei — € other — * 1 yi ons Dar | D 4 an yr -
es, hei Es and ana ede en
in full in Circular tobe obtain application at his L^. und perdio or ^ ar Forcing, and Plant Pail uildings for farm purpose:
1, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, . C, or of his local Agont — they may e fixed, when desired, | Landowners assessed unde T the provisions of any Act of
N.B. Genuine Peruvian Guano di: m Messrs. GIBBS under the stage. Párliament, Royal Charter, or — aon, in respect of any
— of Soda, Sulphate of — and other Chemical imber i be — of — ha prar nger or €— or general w x vr or other er R EA A ntm d
T ean Cotton-seed Cake lied. umber in Town or cow the above rrow their proportionate share of the cos gi
ATE 8 TD rices, oro the Pate —— Y 9 the same with the expenses on the lands improved.
„ TS, p
EIGA SAND. — Best qua ality for ert. WARNER & sx 8, 8, Crescent, Jewin Street, London, E.C No investigation of title is required, and the Company being
V Florists, 16s. ton ; less yg — 1s. 6d. per bushel, Every description of Machinery ‘or. Raising Water by means | of a — ars al eharacter do not interfere with tbe pl: ms
delivered to any ondon wharf or railway. Sacks for sand, of 4 ar De ep Nal Pumps, dn. ; also fue and Garden | and exe the Works, whic sh are controlled only by the
ìs, 64. each, or o RD, —— — enn a Place, 0 Engines, & — Engravings sent o applicat . 33 Commissioners.
NA rc asl er esty, Swan — — — . —ͤ —
Road,
Under the Com anya er 8 for life, trustees, mortg
E London, 8 OHN AR NER AN SONS Cr Jew gees in possess’ — incumbe ne ie d Nn. 8 “corporate,
"| STUFF St., Bs E.C. GALVANISED ios TUB GARDEN certain lessees, and other landov empowered to charge
8 : Uu (GREAVES n ENGINE, —- Wan Registered the inheritance with the cost — — of the ve in:
Price provemen rthe money be borrowed from tbe Com-
"Jor. uer pa: y or advane sed by the EUN ner 2 — = void 8
Md rin Pony Site tub, n re nay effect these impro states
any railway station in London. i g? „ e
£ — bi. os. ; m ations, ei. 1 May be obtained of * ho ex wal and “personal responsibilities
JOHN — & Son, Soap Works, — ondon, E.C i qp or Plumberin tow qr yünfry, i without regard to the amount of
PIG AND POULTRY FEE
x fur ther 1 and for forms of application, T
nable W. PIER, Managing Dis
“ofthe aten- sti umb
Is SWEEP NGS FOR CHICKE ENS, 8s, bon Ex a Ae existing incumbr:
et. * s -
Xara,
SON T "i . : is for | III A GG ARY COLL LEGE.
14s. € moms W. were 6, Cross TET raising Water 7 Tog dri ü : x
Lane, St. Mary-at-Hill, Eastcheap, nx | B qaem i (aer enn foal Sgn whl rns be Re VaL Perm
Jd — FOUL ROT ONTA RNT an original mr : the operation of the Charter of the 3 .
Jons OLDHAM, 3t, of Mansfield, a a certain | n orMan- reci sare CO- AEO a that the persons who now
and safe tex mess having invariably cured when core Gree ; == Power, E Sl pear? of the New "ete
have failed. It is A at een in Foul in Cow: e i -
Cracked Heels, and Thrush in ors aw
Numerous parties at a distan: e being i: oe enienced in 2
curing it, the proprietor hes appointed M Surrox &
Co., 10, Bow Chur doanh E.C., his London pute and it ite can
now be procured t any respectable Chemist or Patent
Medicine Dealer
GUTTA PERCHA TUBING FOR WATERING GARDENS.
E e * teris na — the
acknowledge the receipt of the
upwards. Metallic String from 104. to 1s. 9d. per Ib. amination f for the Hig!
NAST-IRON GARDEN OR AMENS, tural Soci s Veterin
C ORNAMENTAL VASES, of various siz ith |. The WI * ER SESSION. js 188650 commences on Novem-
destal, GARDEN CHAIRS and STOOLS, RUSTIC GARDEN | ber 2, on which day Professor Jons A NE
EBATS a and TABLES, both plain and bronzed, also G mda
ROLLERS of all sizes. — on application to J. Jon
st Iron Merchant, 6, Yir . London, ik
—
y be
ay be learned on mpm to HN ER AMGEE,
inbu
Ne ew Veterinary Colleg
RIC ATTE E RDITI T
ù I TU RE AND CHEMISTRY
„H.“ PORON p axo co, Galvanised Iron Works, | (Orr f. e GENERAL, SCIENCE, 37 and
. „Lower Kennington n Lane, Kennington, 7
for Parm Buidhe vp S oN 885 RS ars FS
or Farm Bu and other Roofs e cheapest, most dur-| The system of studies "ursued in the Co ollege 8 every
able, and neatest inga and ot use ; alsoSpouting NA peryard. -— uisite to pre jede posti forthepursuitsof Agriculture,
IRE STRAND CABLE FENCIN Engineering Mining n TUN. and the m
| Chy Road, inis E.C., and sold by their Milita: , apd for the od
Wb lere — . in town and eon nalyses an wy of every dese ripti romptl and
Sin TENE is unive: — yy acknowledged to accurately execnted at at the College. die terms and pe td bind
eatest, and cheapest material for shading ticulars may be bad on applicat; — S E
ries, e other Hothouses, Effectuall g F TOOYAL AGRICULTUR s BENEV( EVOLENT COL-
Plants from the scorching rays of the — without obscuring V LEGE ror rur RELIEF or DECAYED FA RMERS,
the light. Also, for protecting the Bloom of Wall rom | (formed of Twisted Wires like a rope or cable), the strongest | «cy WIDOWS Ax» ORPHAN
we and Fruit 1 m birds and w: aspe. Sold in pieces cheapest, a and neatest fence in use, will resist t ae QN Noblemen and gentlemen interested in Agriculture, desirous
is long, 38 inches ^. 5s. per piece. wi 8 | y a da F
1 4 Ebo Bet at xm 3 by 8 Tat 7146 over Pri ie Ave lines of the : 1 main of 3 this object, will please fill up and forwar da orm,
‘ Hd pos an pronge Standar 8, b ie this dat. »
‘No. C retia strength, 18 yards an by 39 inches wide, — This fen is fence is far cheaper than posts and rails, or an i - Tip ten Hail, August 2 9
per piece. ron fencing; UM of so cu
gg to tho Trade when ten or more Pieces are Will not rust nor corrode. Upwards of 1200 miles of this Nim
: Foncing supplied. Eronsotrs
«c
GALVANISED GAME AND ERAN NETTINC.
IGI DOMO; e liga
, the
Wis Grave the Dal ord sect Repente Lu Syn. Tor
‘sam Mme ss 8. 712
nch mes
fessor Lindley for r* aUe — „Sir oseph Pa — j^nd Pid. per s *
erer Baling Far, e ee Soh inte, Mee. ral Gazette.
wrence of Ealing Park, and —Collier, Esq., of a
PAR DE ze E dar RAYS OF THE SUN. agricul tu Ms
“ MO,” a Canvas made of pa t prepared Hair |. open
and Wool, a perfect non-condnetor of Heat and eepin Eno any sisa, Ent
wherever it is applied, a fixed tom retur t eke for | „GALVANISED IRON CHAIN CAMP STOOLS & CHAIRS| The i: bites 3s
all horticultural and, florienttura r preserving | POULTRY FOUNTAINS & FEEDERS, PRONGED DAHLIA| -
Fruits and Flowers from e scorching rays of the £
1 RODS anv ROSE STAKES, &c. à
wind, from attacks of insects, and from morning frosts. T0 din CATTLE HURDLES from 2s. per yard. rts of TERE will, we — jndi
be had in i engths wo yards 1
s, var
: more rapi
four, 3s. por vard. Ales, an improved maka PATENT IMPROVED GAS WORKS, te a : igi shy other
Shading Purposes, Three yards wide, 2s. (d. per yard ris Pit). f dete Tor the ine of Private Houses, Mansicns, Railwa | Mem incarnatum qm — x "incid diee
— Taua a — 2 cad 2 antfactures rer, 7, re M: ‘te, Collieries, Mines. Meo os „ ée. Works frais ' recent addition ge e pla s d ele
e, y E, rserym 500 lights ne wi H t
and Seedsmen thronzhont the Kinga a bes en 10 b n be entrusted to ultivated with y any
“ j —BApp!v to m
than mats as a covering,” MM i 8 . & Co. 2 Bas ngk al Buildings, Leeds without risk, and yielding a very bulky and e
714
t fail Boxes containing 80 o
—the vi tal energy of t ng T 90 of di
growth of green food of Leg [9 Am the EL T ur m ainst the porn dein "t these 1505 a 0 esting on m Sum of 3d.
ese 4 i
«leg it cm owes ied ; and ther s [Fungi ior d e 75 Tana. "Su ch! bens the ondered a b tt fn t
is now hardly any arable district of c 4 exti ERA f th if wo can gr 0 imber ot only ta ove
the southern and midland counties j these checks in the growth of the crop there | use o them; mus Pee
the next few weeks a — os of this anden will . e less opportunity for the Fungi establishing tiay Phase wind! catia ai
not be sown for use n ay and June, Bind |themselre N a | merable may be
Twenty pounds of seeds per a - :
^ . va ra ed in are various by ee emg = which have a on their part) sett
8 w over th À sh. s Mises
after rain has fallen will, without t farther rir ouble, tendency to ehe p je dh a 1 ai be i matet rd x B i = ae
f th ing, for those which | give them to childr in derat
arly must necessarily have greater | penny ort
cleaned ; but this should be E Pr - 2 r y 0 maturity before the ae ie Serm whieh Ti
7 1 1 n: SW PP H
C eather of winter com hn SUE peor scio
,
co.
Thi
i Tope br.
: soe ; i districts, and a
i i i t the ctice of different dis i 0 d
anash to js Seem A s of mis Iz = of the so oil or climate of the neigh- penal servi
1 1 Li mbin ne t
r
=
7 th. Jus p
fully 5 af the acce ted tim ce of disappoint- | of the accused
fully in Bloom: it may be cut; but conga rom p : ine th lodi xe $9 a s
soon afterwards it becom | and c * ment. e mu f Mise r combine these | cases in suppor icem argumen
wi as
v; XH ime during whie onis oe t duty that void raise the
Sana t d pel b: ede a serious even in districts where un 2 the genera i pen Mee Ee
drawback from its yalue; and on duse is ha wily peri m A of pre paring the D ny 0. ibited selling th i i
eapable of being met by any e o be Holl 0 pei — ae fis . be dealt with as with a d
seed times throug sh the e au utumn at obtaining « a Su 0 tp h by diis entirely t cen t tess
cession of 1 For the time o 1 à the | omplish in a few e to AA the le
so early as to obtain a thoroughly establ — ge ‘tbs mar e the more imper ener what it would take weeks to accomp|
e | tillage o e poisons.
Eum r en oai pie ey pedes : avoid the mildew. Ano other importan at Such cases as the. eye are of fre
early to scythe as that which before winter » Manbely, the, weigtib ofthe oyp; ib ratios wid t is corrected by his ma
in wa The on pay te remedy must | also “une ed by the same course of procedure. 5 —— — rs S of vil
ads t disting gvished JA Thu see the system which is adopted upon thrus — * cat * ing a
: a varying habit of gh. Te this respec lend. that has been insufficiently worked to avoid Miami
d si Pt adu essrs. Vader n | the mildew eauses an inferior erop of roots, and i
announce o | brings one to the conclusion that to a considerable
‘Co, Pari h
varieties of f 75% pere 888 bra a | extent bs freedom from mildew, as we s buen * acetdbtitk
EUN wth. t
ght of t p d s u s 2
mee incarnat tardif is ge ed by -— receiving a thoroughly deep and ume Rn
i con
th. It
j E i i . roots of the hick | di — ot Inden
but distinguished by its white cannot penetrate beneath the 4 inches of soil which | did n
poa VILMORIN’S Seed List as may have been worked out for them, the supplies f, ee — d
if à fleur bla y ust li i crop, an blades, or ¢
— Leveuy whom dus variety is due,|influence of hot weather being so much more altars cutting b e
spins of it as pcr an enormous quantity o of operative under these. circumstances than upon a | axles, by Yos of which, as
forage of a finer quality, — capable of pers eut en r fords languid growth | over the land, the said teeth, ti
at least eight days later than the ordinary chee and the mildew tort twi: appears. | i
Trifolium incarnatum. On both of flies ä — When 5 s has been thoroughly worked there
it well d th tion of En E- h farme is a he r d
nton
3;m m
nachin f
the f. is so unfavoura n the case of a s vx - of which is eff in conv par
ia Supe M ng to lings | h div h trike more deeply into any suitable source of power, the same
then te, appearance of of mildew 5 ne e ede es. | the grou -: a hes re rapid growth is the i t, Sad — — to the agr
e re been the m in —
ghout the eir; 2 of the tn are tho — fear of m iw injuring the crop. Other circum- The follow pe Seige:
which gene erally suffer m ost. sev erely. Vario ous stances. influence this disease, M tothese we must | P tan
r- cause of this discated venditio lon of the cro > sas tem = — arches
Whatever may be the cause, = e undeniable THE LUCIFER MATCH. a second strong frame, made
Tesult is frequently forced u HAVING seen in your Paper of the —— ult. some The machinery by which t
thus the right hopes of n. cultivator a mean doomed | allusions s the lucifer match I am induced to offer a | teeth is driven is fixed on th
to be disappointed, ildew is caused by the | few remarks upon it, although to man —— may appear | vator or inner moveable frame
growth of Fungi upon the leaves of the crop and o signifieant a character to bring — the | motion given to it as hi
ithas been frequently observed that those crops publi n notice, bat I think those ter tl
ich have grown most ra idly under the stimu- when its true character is serious! ly co nside: red: E have ing carriage at the
" uo bé tate always been a great advocate for i improvement of every for ward. The rows to
On EE OTI dane — - whether it be tlie change from t ls driving them are caused
stage coach to the locomotive on the line of railway, | ground at a point in adyan
tion, or the old tinder | former stroke commenced.
the sailin M to steam navi Byas
re | box with. hint on and ston attached to the d ifer match— | of the dep r of Eta
they are 3 to be admired, an titei. inventors | may be properly d by t
that | the reception of the seed; the aug ie
Referring, how- cycloidal or nearly cycloidal, ar
vor mm following manner :—The frame
: 2 77785 2 its abı
nd t h conceive the necessity of | wheels ie
d these guar ard against its inereasin ng dangers n n — aking bald sik s 1
ere sown vx whilst the ein manure had It contribute to S" —— € n a duty
Mr a a crop so rly, itis more me to its importa Previous 0: March 25th
mista obable le that th litters padi suffer and the | fire Rn bete tho g generality of pret fumé on | exactly -— ed together.
s —
Top m 15 e — —.— i attaoi ia * | the: ond Fase informing parties that : in consequi ae frame carpi i3 o remis
inem eased number of fires arising Bois omar imj the wheels
conflietire in i rae exam
A. l manure were used for pe an
iarism ing
min i" gre 8 ceased to grow-—not as a mium wo ld b 8 — e -ii a ae a -|By tame te form a ape
Mu ade of the Ms k but as a predisposing| This clearly shows the opini rance com- or de obat, € the ma eeii
poe rs o. I e are well aware of the| panies respecting Gece and there i is scarcely orla or for cutti
ended distribution of the germs = Fungi, and a week, I may say a day, w ing through the| “My new or
When we have either animal or vegetable matter in papers of serions TT. T a dra apr ys by fire | mae A herei
a condition favourable for their development they in in ce T = of the lucifer | used for like operations,
deere establish th ml nfirm and t re V ‘partial vie to 2 your atten- | densed air, which
hat
y s tten K
eus rom any cause we have the great iis —— hin the reach of steam. I conden
€ growth of the Swede rtp hesked a nd its al persons, eher up or “children, of doing can readily be transported
foe er de velo: pment in rrupted— i to th e
ence ee may |wi
erious in njury pro t dangeri : y
— may whole families either fro yo accident iem poe to 1 — — | — dios — irs being
d | cheapness and easy. m mode of obtaining: € the lucifer| with the machine, the co
(siii 21, 1859.]
the machino in a manner essentially similar to the ee, Paxton, o Bicester, then menced the sales
action sten ent hem. The first lot Ames of 43 fro:
he — n Oxfordshire A flock of Mr. —
s of teeth or fork = prongs, der Sg or Roberts of nag rt near Witney, which attracted
tise marked a, arranged i in one, two, or | after an active co ition, were
rows, the said row — teetl bl | di 1 . 14s. 10d.
88. suitably shaped frame, or two or more fra b. | pe ead. These were followed by 22 Oxfordshire
The teeth @ may be made of iron or inh, à or rof — cs 3 owned and à a Mr. Charle
iron, and the frame b may | made of wood or iron. | Gille tt, of Cot ouse, near These —
frame of wood or iron c, w
part of the tra
drawn along,
whi
ction carri: age by
or is att
ch said free e either forms | r —-
were much E
D
: d ne more t tans t
1
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
E yin this ec county such mode
“Can you get the ten
a uan e?—ti —
and the rents no ily paid?” was the question. 1
| answered, “There are two things can be done to benefit
both la rd and tenant—fell the As! er on
arable lands, and keep down the game.” The Ash timber
still stands, but the game was immediately got d
d a * era It is now the remark of all who
k.
own this property for many years, they see
Tue stimulant to these
I inspecte: de
ool
, of Stanton Posi
bet aus d or — d, d, v remis
or axles wor rk i in urnals o r beari
frame c.
on, c or under ee
xles
the outer sides of the machine ; an
ranked shafts | Cot
near
a
n the months of br pi
ld
3 to my employer o
an averas c of
wold ram lam — the property of
Gillet, of det e,
raft o
4 Ox
ps
anks e on one side of the machine are at
% 1 cranks X. on the * side Ma the sai
The size or of the depend upon the
M th Lo ei Ti is dented th to — Ma 2 A
tines are c arrie ed,
ground
wards \
_ the said teeth or tines enta the
the soil out-
h the machine
is drawn over a land progresses onini E ard, the |
teeth or prongs a, after leaving 1 the g ground
d, d, are — led | 51.
m
es to a foot in the throw crank is foie Norton
As e
were now introduced and "ils
5s. 6d., the last Par gi dispo
Following these were 19 Oxfo
m the old established flock of M
This gentleman "
prizes
0 Cattle Show, i - addition
| pen of € in the class ; they r
A up L. only » which may be
fact of
private sale at an average of senex of 1
The Oxfordshire Down she T
IF eH
tore-enter i t dist th “ihe
1r,
1 1 Banbury Agricultural Societies, and
the prices of which
— 3 e Down shearlings,
x of Marlboro
jaf of for
rdshire Down shearlin
r. William
ached underneath or thereto. | w “hich, after a ver eig competition, were all. sold at
Sl. 175. 3d.
Mr.
ough,
m Gillett, o
1
the recent
he
alle an average of
accounted for z the
tan having been previously disposed of by
epe
at which they prev iously | ente ange-
t+
length = 9 of the said
diggers
operated
1 8 hl
p prongs or |
‘upon, “and the depth to which it i y be|
W. Gillett, of the sam
was unable
pri ivate
year, having
y be c 3 8 for ik
the rep of iai Dy On ne operation of the hine.
Some he forms of t
drawn A drill m may
by a gon t roll if desired.
being 9 nded of the
machine, and the moti
a cycloidal n The m
essive motion of the
achine
pro;
ion he — ranked axles ^ d, is of | n
whi ch t the 1
r.
pc varying the | John Bryan, of MSN who succeeded the late Mr.
e place, and who has usually
to be submitted a very PT lot from his celebrated flock,
to do so this dispos
contract a6 end an 55, some of which were
ed of by
2 for e season — as 20 gs. each, and others were sold
t the same pri
Willia
desi
eg rtg vía d
to which the | av
50 gs. M the 3
€ hue s
report
of m farming, the appearance of the
| stock, and ediatel;
also the impe The tenants imm
| begun to stir themselves—artificial for Turnips, salt for
— guano — TN pens the weeds looked
and destroyed; a these farms are not like the
same, m rents xo m the mide — "e
nt doing x ec rng over the estate at that tim
500 ac ened p^ land, id
lo er said, * * Look here, can you do
8 hé „
ee
nere, — + Tg eed * — medi Min
andlord got but little rent. I got consent, and —
diately set to wor mile
in length next toa "river, the high- Water mark of which
is higher
power fixed n iun to pump the
[rins when uired—this costs working upon al
e 207. a A r. The final of this improvement i
acres . lets ef T 20s. per acre, anc
rops P ems Oats
ave
“water out of the
— 7
rows fine c
LI of good Flax th
— t of acres v
show vn me fall of pit — a. geb with stunted
— ns brushwood 7 but little value X foi
r game, This land I said was a disgrace to this
d
0
pg
Cea mae s
laim
The sales concluded
atu
is connected with the — power by
drawn o ver the ja nd, and by which. motion is given to
3
ése — in side elevation an agricultural om.
pressed air or tracti i itl i
draft $ trom the celeb rated Cot
. Smith
br. 18s. RA
air
M 5
y p
e machine may be
to t.
that such is the Pond fie is
t
sales that, of 216 rams — vm th
sold to ves r
1 1 down, and 3 o
1 1
er wh
of the macl
d to be m or condensed m or
but
requisito — for turning the
l derstood, and
possess sion.
ira
2
he practical knowledge of t
il, take the 1 as à "dg. th
demonstrates they
study, the different soils | requi
ledge | man’
ri men
d to cultivate so many
eq
ent to reclai
— of this T 1. xm been Log cultivation six years,
roduces fine crops at the rent of 18s.
| ions cost of reli ing the trees, 23
I was to i di
nd, black sandy soil,
the Messrs.
la
very worst of land to ons até pro pong he ; fei: rent
was . ar * ya -— than
Suffice MIS took a
prize at the Root Club tor white accion, the —
year sold the Barley to the malts ter at t the top | p
eter of th
hem, MS W. iui
t prices
their After 98
— Sal deny that the Oxford August Ram Ma rket |
up E N bs
To show
ap e shi farms
8 of the Mun Doc fg
ir know
of
emp ploy er was offered 20s. —
acre for the home farm, gien I * * gavo up.
The a same tenant has it and is well s ed
as is
with his bes gain. Dur ioe 1 time Lely inge were
carried out I had to superintend — rge kitchen us
flower "eun hot-houses, &c. I fear I 8
*
*
R 9 E
1 IA.
opinion t to be, as some in almost every
» like a good cultivated gentle»
F.
Climate of Scotland. e following remarks
the te operations — hen broad ied ig odes
convenient t cutters or
diggers on adag the. ad. whieh is readily e A
by the crank motion. And uch turves
required to be au it w e that za row rof
ill be
fixed coulters mes
. Are the gard
great perseverance? How often do wi
La to ix ges - 2 pus othe, w
me to have for his week's
raction
eek? How
y ability for 1 18. a — what all ——
-
tim
gardener according to ability from 24s. to
com
and few ' ge entlemen will M" e to
Th
5
3
ese extracts, ge rm to figures which we are dL of fi
unable to give, will to some extent explain the idea of | i
the inventor. new.
coursi ng, ting, crick
eners paid T their —
Pd d
ate of —Th fms
Milne Home at a recent 2 of the eet
1 Socie ety appear to me to deserve pu nication
d
wanted, |
meni s Ape a |
ener to show | to
rers — *
Giv
40s, * E
bad
ards
empera t 26 stations over Scotland the average
over the hoe = Scotland for the whole year was found
to be 47°, w agreed very nearly with
8 fine h passed thr
—
zm
E
E
n Eng
rns a eee od 3
peeing: down . wages peer the
rem und >big =. the lowest poverty
eek fo
ce .
win 9s. 3
A the le n to su "uen - pe - his wife, | 22°, being considerably less than it was i land and
such a d nd Reflect on | other A marked difference was observable
woolled br c as is rar sheep to be seen. The first sales | this you who can afford into the above e sports | between the stations on the sea co d nd those in the
consisted of 40 Oxfordshire Down rams, belonging to | and pastimes. I see in this 3 men — dry *. interio he coast stations the temperature was
Messrs. Drace, of Eynsham, which were offered for sale by and an onion for br reakfast and dinner Let 1° or ith me than the — rae in jet
Messrs. T. Mallam & Son. years the Messrs ind f labourers e 3t the evil and 1° colder in summ verage tempe-
Druce have ranked very high as breeders. of this class | are eme soon to be better paid an care d for, the rature of the whole was 46.4 P hoi
— ‘The fact, however, that th li do. uj the 3 The p
arwick Meeting a first prie of 207s hi h com- | their work. the hand working man well and he
eo mus der their ran i dure. is 777 „O.
ditional And indu e ma Good Farming in Norfolk.—In a late im E
long distance 1 25 n highest price Mr. speaks of the
obtained was average of the whole gardener. Will you me to
sale was e 8s. "ws gp idein rie which Messrs. | there are many gardeners now
Druce ma elt y year was 17 gs, and the a ive employers who would
was their experience, but they are afraid
ose is next submitted 20 Oxfordshire Down | presumptuous. I, like many more, believe that
m tlie flock of Mr. John ihichmeny ort Mil- | writers in the Gardeners’ Chronicle
high character, | for the improvement of agriculture. By the
The biddings were spirited, — ee ised | ical men others learn : wil pow ellis me to say
ranged from 10 gs. to 5 gs., the avera he sale a few words on what a er can
being 7 Tl. 5s. 6d. Me E" sales c] with 18 | perseverance? It will be puni. p
f „belonging to Mr. C. Hobbs, of I engaged to present emplo;
| Mi impio near Cricklade. The highest pa. bailiff and to Pac F var the estate buildings, &e. In
Which these made was 17 gs, and the average was the month of F. Iwas
* 17. 104. Mr. Jonas Paxton, of the firm of Messrs, by my employer. I expressed my
716
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
s getting scanty from ary
[ Aveusy 27, 2
general char acteristics a are 2 invas
ather.
TAA hay a large crop, pas T ;
from NC E urs communicated to it from rÉÍ2 - Se Wu well, Peterborough: i at TA nab dà 10 lably P
The ained its greatest heat in ros dn Oxronp.—Wheat, fair average; Phe gion Pe as Mood: a ipd ary. In faet that the ae that
PEA: - ; erage ; ; Peas, 8 ac 3
Blesk aa 45 its greatest cold i in Mare h t thus a € im uu Quis — e ped d; Potatoes, shall and Show either in w whole or in part, the ost bg wi
ing that 15 was pro $ toms of disease; pasture. very mu at up. D f their ancestors 501 %% $t Titi
periods of greatest “heat : and cing in Lepage It was Syme N Anot OP Al kinds of corn wasted on i the p parent, and — a taking pore a
A that the sea was mer inter on the west owing to the shortnes 8 labourers. Samuel Druce, j 2 tet oF both, aat N atter the of the
t §
theory 0
w
non the east of Scotland, ay still warmer on the
thus " f
rth of Ireland— bearing. out the
Abbey Farm, Eynshaw.
Notices o ot nee
our west coast.
I d in th je ten
pe
contributed i inan important s
e to
mperature; and he need m refer to the fact = it
es
been found on their n airman ^s estate
ei ight
e E^ hey
had an “important
that in
ality increased.
many ailments for wid an equable
required, and invalids were frequently sent
y, Hastings, and the Isl of Wight for the
IF physicians
" 1
The mean range at m inland station ns
The Form of the Hor. it Inspec
A the 1 e s Jam mes C. L. Ca
W.
ctio
rson,
Robertson, 23, Upper Sackville Street,
Da biin
| The substance of this small octavo volume appear
originally in a series of letters to the Londonderry
Standard 10 ago. With p exe soul ofa
pages at the pea on Breeding, y
described by its title; each duc eue etis a
etailed examination of the right shape, aitoi; ad
erii
— of the different parts of the animal in n0
duo sio
mdr aba hiat
e may be,
50 nbi
urabilit
s down fone
are ether
mper, softness, strength x.
any age thing—they p
generati
EU
but, a
be
high s
this plan ‘tha
p
so a by all gis: keep
ame time, must b
st specimens of th n
suc
to the
wit
1 55 ro
The fact of its hi
the task is estemos.
“The C Let it be partieularly observed, more-
be best enjoy eii in eotland, vus nde to consult the
tables of Mr. Everett. He had x mentioned Sandwick as
temperature, and
r, that pet in the draught-horse the chest should
es deep as well as ro e in order to afford suffic E mi
ace for lungs of the roper magnitude. Depth
lbe in the
e
mperature of winter was slight tly higher
than at Hastings or En rupes d and 5 he range of tempe-
s, being only 1 But the most
peo on which this nhs bearing was
A theory was started some years since b
rs, that it necessar
oa certain extent prove ed b by the « cir cum-
+h
| cart- horse; and hence it is no unusua al thing
people ich are very faulty in
this particular. A horse with a 50 chest is not
any purpose.
“The reason E all this i is very obvi ious, for, as Mr.
Ber d
uld be
p
a diminutio
tains mo we than any other of equal girth and admea-
sureme
|
60? during the four summer 8 Wheat ripened
in i about 120 day s. In Yorkshire, where the tempera- | a
ture was lower, ook a longer time, and in Scotland
still Bere owing to the ame or bests but, by
multiply: ing the days. and degrees of heat, they were
E E dd 3
ee
ARD
es boy ‘had the pleas “oF EU -—
e
expand, | u
NIE n of them
ecause tthe pois is a figure whites con-
Boot h is now r sufüciónt to create emand
animal.” 55 i
Farm
INGLISMALDIZ, Kr We
a farm- ates 24 in Kineardin
by reyes arb of F
We should think i is one of t
neshire,
bolls of Potatoes ha d been used for 1
the season. steading covers
bein
* The for
the pastera, ar N the leg. It is com
entirely of bone, skin, sinew, and 2 There
no muscles E as he d to it, and, consequently, it acts
mer ely 53 lever for the support and propulsion of the
uL hay
be possible to 9 new cereals with advan
g
posed | w
e are
ve already alluded to the erroneous | į
There Were seve ral anomalies in this ma — which
rett
EFEM.
It was said by the writer of an English e
Journal! that i in the > south of England, Wheat wo ould not |
es nder the knee.
5 ition, sie 8 modera
— — shank-bone is the best, ende its extremities
are. _ sufficien mtly expanded for the attachment
I
muscles and moderate-sized bones are a sure |
at that height, = 5, ee too low; but i —
er tem
a poets
indieation
The pone of the A bone is jene and firm, whereas |
of | slong by
‘Lothian the average s perature f an active tem mperament, and vice versa. are al
CR Wheat detur pn SEC they — 3 In all, there are 600 yards of double
t n " T an i
which did not ripen it in he's of England, was poner ever think of — the id — * L 1
that in East Lothian the day was e dn Midsumme IE regarding the roper size and proportion of| the steading, the roof ese all sup
by 2 hour and twenty mentee than it was in the| the leg in the man and the horse ? dun „large bones | and iron illam. Te **
south of England; and that in Inverness, whero Wheat sya immediately abov ve th wrist-j taken 3 ai ma 2 by th
er astill lower e l f the strength and mettle of the man? | — peor’ Ayn s fer of the doors
wo hours longer, and the pla mit t They are "generally found — — : in | and court c. — witho s np.
8 of sola As he Tni — their men of à soft flabby 6 cpm: Let any take | the whole
noble de regen had been aten to grow Wheat at f the pugilistie c champions that one man n dată easily sid 107
above. the level of the seu ed rai ised the
tempe
| a look àt the likeness of some o
of En ngl and, and he will certainly admire the smalln ness
sta ble for 2 work horses is
— Fear AM. S.
Harvest Prospects.
—The followin |
received too late to p mis des e dere
ublish with the other
> ee legs an s. Has itno ot always been thought a |
nt of 8 ee that the bone above the ankle-
joint should be small, and the ball of the leg large?
most
et wide, a great height, with no lott
tains 20 stalls fully 6 feet wide cach, 1
centre; and a harness-r
the whole length behind the ae
RDSHIRE.—Wheat, under average; Barley, _| of tight, wiry, active, and indomitable constitutions ? from |
— Tor ea aE ; piazer, enar : gum What reason is Sapen then, for wishing to see a hed The x nt did. ot 1 is moved along o
tem Sod. William Lavender, Bülden m, Muni rit ~ — n the man, and a thick one in he horse? | lines behind the cattle to the dung-pit. te
Brew , average; Barley, average ; Oats, part pond ut what principle * e for the difference? | 130 y 16 of Turnip houses; and à
= 8 iar Beans, poor crop; Turuips late | I confess I never. could see the vantage of having the | 120 feet in extent. en there des
a plant was vbi di ange oes eee fed oe few [s E Casas win . of t this bone larg A — - there are not house, artificial manure que ho ed
pasture generall à fi Mg d Ts imagine, who would admire the human " " house. a ve
Chirnside, Beriickshir cient. Jola Wilson, Edington Mains with ei thick end of it next the ground.” tos — “opiates by Suit Smith & Co,
Down. ms aes E barely an average in quantity, quality | . ude with a p ge o ing :—* There | do its work in 20 minu re 20
of an average. a oes pa more than two- is not the slightest foundation for tl strong pre- lofts, 20 feet wide. On
av : 1 ng
* grow n here. T ed teron have 8 acl N. we the public mind against in- dee ‘sheds, Dt neatly E as We renee of
can è a fine crop. oM. as nificent stea a nr
good ond all e | clusive “of ca
xi Clay — & Sintomi med sem an
dress xed machin
r it | piste. and finished. — $ voi nship Oe
y | upwards of J. steading
wehr Tormer : i the — — tena Dese 1 5
pees P e pas N DE mel kirk, and does great c 2 to a „
quarter less than av — pu ; hay, one- any pa rticular strain E that of tbe perte. intelligence. We bad likewise Lord
E T rig ci ney arises f quently po the same boo returning fre- | another. steading, also erected by ted by Mr.
ro > spri ng and summer. Jam vi Knee, ralem. “We must be c W r, to observe that t! a —.— — when uy dicor T r
a 1 "5 | individual at the | Aucheairnie, It is
Essex, t will be a full average crop; th tion . : uals B — e breed fion are as near perfec- | former, but is built on "he same princi] ciem
Ed pe ve very variable, most of it is 3 Solemn ond We Mil -tius eo both V cpi and their ancestors d 4 — bout 0001. Ec
z is a heavy crop, but tl s secure the transmission of their good deep.
quality is sprouted and very thin. Os 2 ut th — qualities. On illac at n o heir also covered, 4 — which i i
S g ms The Winter Beans defective aed e defect, it will be ; s 0 b — i de. „any special divided into parts by a broad "ns tn
419p. . Goer A pises that were left producing a verage in- -and-in, €: will hardl pas „when it is thr own! Turnip shed; it forms two dee -
cr ans are good. Grey an n Peas a good | it i he be got rid of. I think for! ttle: the feeding cattle are t;
— a Mum UNE 3 plant well and are healthy, this ral ng, i a great measure, to want of attention to bt yontem p es "idee of the dung - pit;
at caterpillars. The Mangel Wurzel is this rule, that there i tum ` up aroun e
generally very good, and a larger breadth than usual Po. | broedi reer de pénis against close | in front of the cattle for feeding ©
all diseased more or less, but forthe — a Po-| breeding. It will succeed only when the good passage rf nothing t
i d ightly, i 8 ualities | clea t the cattlema n
absence of aln to increase. Pastures ve ny, bare o from — immense preponderance ins the bed ones, — prons the manure over 4 :
nj second math of Clover slight. Robt. Baker, reli S Reg iq breeders. very properl place great | feet high Mr. S. told us that, after Sur
Norr eme at, bulky ehance on blood. In short, this just amounts t „ by having 1
+ ut | fact, 9 the | he was convinced that, by
quality, av average; Barley, pened prematurely, 255 xu ch 1 “Lik e good and bad ere, are hereditary, dove br theos cattle; with alt the
; Beans: winter Beni 4 e | fout : "und ! 9 person ever saw a Clydesdale | and freed from rain, Snow, addi à
7 ood-ho À onal
-plant Potatoes ol ; Tumi 8 Jet lant; Mangels, go iir call M d Cis re, or ashort- | sphere, it was wort BOL d t en
Ru ek ery promising; pasture, | cow. Such a out of along-horned | not a hint here to the ff shir
d. If, then, these! farmers of Free hee and Ban
Axorsr 27, 1859. THE GARDENERS'
in general very much behind in the management of]
eir manures ?
Miscellaneo
Sheep Breeding.— hart are few M i s, perhaps,
aware of the circumstance that this is a branch, P
at it relatively, looking at it positively, whi ch is
upon the au thority of one of the most able writers we
— = with in this country—I mean the celebrated
, Mr.
Macqueen—that there are not less t
24000000 head of sheep in the Uni ci dom.
Just fancy the importance in a national point of view 8
poi
of st possible point of perfection
the i — vement of these 48,000,000 of sheep, yielding
246,700,000 Ibs. I wool. rr member again, gentle-
appears almost incredible, that t the capital
men, for
invested in this — amounts to 66,573 3 3 EING the A: PRIZE for PLOUGH awarded by th
to Mr. Macqueen; Permit me gt | SD «goce MN rer
value of the bn aos in this pee pos ut on both sols th on B m FIRST PRIZE, of the HIGHEST AMOUNT given
fractions, is not less 14, |. per annum.
Permit me further to pA that the importation of PRIZES awarded to J. & T. H
foreign wool does not amount to more than 4;
So that out of the 18, sterling worth of vo ITE veu prb nC
wool used by this c country, which employs no less than | L TIGHT HARROWS, tHe SECOND PRIZE Also FOR
1,250, manufactur nd operatives, 157 large pró- BEST HEAVY HARROWS.
portion of nae x oca rth is provided by our agri- Ever
E irasat thu |
c ipe means for the employ -— of |
"s a oe ree S J. & F. HOWARD, BRITANN
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
HOWARD'S | "CHAI AMPION
PRIZE
ND, anD A PRIZE ron THE BEST PLOUGH FOR HEAVY AND; n FIRST PRIZE ror
THE BEST LIGHT HARROWS, AND THE FIRST PRIZE P FOR THE
717
"PLOUGH
Gained the FIRST PRIZE : as the Best ES gh. 2 General e ses a at Warwick.
val Agricultural Society ngland, at this
e Royal of
. — Non thn aui that tho í GENERAL PURPOSE PLOUGHS are the
CH PLOUGH pro
HOWARD"
by the — ^ —
England, at the WARWICK MEETING, 1859,
ved itself to be the best
ny kind of Plough, was awarded to
the LARGEST NUMBER: of P PRIZES but the LARGE 8 ST NUMBER 4 Let PRIZES awarded to Es Exhibitor.
A PRIZE ron
THE
one Xd HOWARD'S Implements, tried at Warwick, gained a Prize.
ATALOGUES, with full particulars, sent post free on application to
1A
IRON WORKS, BEDFORD.
ROVED HOT-WATER
HE
inexpensive instru-
ment of — "d very
important po An
d | atmosphere may be pro:
is honours ec at a ioe — rely
tly artia
* When, sj I look — — =n
82 5 moisture. ET . — of 1
as Webb, Mr. our
for the numbe as won, permissi
` onestly and conscientiously, to say that I do believe
uch men are not merely entitled to the passing thanks
inches by 12 inches co:
tans they Det eot 25 feet
rhet cá ippo — 2
"The ye do * d Ventilating C imited
Great G jon V arming nd Vt Ne
of DeeS S 8 Mars cae ee 188,
— —4 —The no-
qe that Fyre —
they oat to or SUMMA as ard vd to their
iis N. Yeatman, at Mr. Harding’s Sale
2 of 5
description of Wire and Iron Fences, P
M e of Wheat is chiefly — m ie — = approved p and |
Hag plone the fneshing resul n augurs by competent workmen in every part of the Kingdom.
well for the main crop. EU x mit general destruction of | ram article 8 "for Lawn, Conservatory, Drawing-room, |
N eed — rats oan mice in this district, pee e they
and Garden — at the lowest prices possible.
d ed to w vith punctuality and dispatch.
XTON
| WORKS, , SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1788.
€ becom „the poor gleaner’s prospe ave been atten
28 more Pel s a and we find it 2 to have
Barley. and Men edis bes YU where Clov Rr dn Bo
pen Me c. :
e owever, r, pays well well, and finds emplóyment for workmen
and children after their Wheat rd pem mnes
acre « day Iu comet wae TD to glean
-over at half a bushel of corn . All this would
AYNOR COOKE'S warranted PRIZE
PRUNING omy BUDDING KNIVES, SCISSORS, &c.—
Sold by all respectable Nurserymen and Seed Merchants in
the three Kingdoms.
ee PRUNING KNIVES IN EVERY VARIETY.
ARRANTED MOON. BY THE MAKERS.
ices to Correspondents.
. If the mixture, as we gather from your note,
an old but poor pasture, the Alopecurus agrestis
will nitimately = of little importance, —— vou 3 —
phe phe ropes rolling, harrowing. „as than
old no way. in a good ani ‘matted 4 turf—whatever
ehe tends to better the turf will kill this Grass — ms
In arable land too whatever tends to good farming ovi
G: ime, J B.
DRILL qe W H. Drill ploughs containing in the frame-
work ind the mould-board a hoe and drill for sowing
ls sin their wake are not uncommon. A very
APPIN BROTHERS, Queen’s Cutlery CEN
effield ; and 67 & 68, King William St., London
APPIN’S “SHILLING” m Shave wel
d or RM
pa one was shown at the Hull meeting of the York Society,
y Charles Lambert, Sunk Island, Hull.
JRTICULTURIST will 8 "herein an
Orders
CLASS FOR ORCHARD HOUSES X e
AMES geri p ND CO. beg — mit their
S for the present m
SHEET grass; i 8 of superior pons
run oz, EE the foot.
E Th
E | | 7$
d
Best. aes 5 A
Tad. 5d. 944.
Packed in 200 feet cases, 16 oz. .. oe S 2
Packed in 300 — — — — $
Packed in
ORCHARD HOUSE oed as deboli by — to — Wid.
| 20 in. by 12 in. 21 oz.
— 20 1 — by 13 in. Eo
— — n. by 14 in. f
o in. by 15 in.
B
Common 4s, i
Buperio r do. i
English Gl Asi
3 ind not Rire.
SMALL X 1 on 100 feet.
4 by 44 74 by 54)
Si» 8 T auque
12 6
HORTIC ULTURAL ii ASS, in inicia, eut to Pete sizes.
16 oz. per foot, from I" to Sid. 26 * per foot, from - to 71d.
21 oz. à
Special prices aot for larg — * specific qua aster
ENTS FOR
HARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS.
PAINTS.
Genuine White Lead, Linseed Oil, Rolled Oui. Nasa us
mE Colours, Varnishes , Bru
— — :
AA
—
S d
TARIFF.
1 NILLINGTONS redu reduced "Tas of
6 4, Tby5, 16 to th: . Gd.
us Th by 5, Sheet ut ADM us
À * 12 1 9. 123 pd 107 ur 104, 13 by 11
Mi y 83,124 by 94, 13 by 10, 15 by 10, 184 by 11
11 by 9, 13 by 9, 13) by 104, 12 by n z *
11} by 20 Jar 10, 14 by 10, 12) by 115
* by 12) per 100 feet 1602. 21 02.
20 by 14 Common . . 16s. .. 24s. -
20 by 15 Superior . 18s. .. 27s
All Bo ed.
Orchard House sizes as supplied to M r. Riv
Hartley's huproved Rough Plate Glass from t 101 in thickness,
Coloured Glass in great 1 1 € and 1s. per foot.
Paints, Genuine a White ed Oil, Boiled Oil, Turpen-
2 > ue Doinini. 8 3 Lamp lasses, &c.
d is!
ne ene t Without, E.C., same si
Lamps: ^a: The mischief prol y arises
— im "(€ and . great har tae it at N.
rsi n or from impure 4 RAZORS
CCC
ä yalso t ner sparingly, the latter | F 4 PPIN’S SUPERIOR TABLE-KNIVES m
intain
their unrivalled 1 cannot Dos]
cattle foc at become dee — all of the very first quality, being | T
We fave re ME p year | their own Sheffi itum.
Ln rca mv d — Tble. Kns. Dst. Kns.
Dean Ivory 32 in. Handle, balanced, 20s. p. doz. ;
Do. 4 in. 258.
Carvers.
be worth no more
98.
i Pairs Kni orks, a
wer Pl
in m Caso..
ne; do.
80s.
- 180s.
80s.
Eon
nd BORES, in 2 esas
andles,
3 acres cat Han
— . — MAC
ry, Queen's Cutlery Works, Sheffield.
Posen Double
penne, 61bs.; L. m eum ario 12 Table Forks, bg 16 0 £214
TEC 3 lbs.; P. nemoralis, 2 Ibs. ; Medicago lüpulina? F Table Dose Foe, vert quality i - 0 214
; Trifolium pra! perenne, 4 lbs.; T. repens, 5 Ibs. 9 2 0
the leave out Aira, Arrhenatherum, F. 5, vest quatit
elatior a ^ and Phleum, and sow one-half the
er has been t on reouipt'e
he Society for two years —€— Essay has been Rest on Street, —
suppose.
tlery Works, Sheffiel
New Designs, sent
Broruers, 67& 68,
coming Mr. Curtis is € Manufactory, Queen's
; 163. P. doz. ; 6s. p. pair
APPIN'S SILVER. PLATED DESSERTENIVES
MAPPINS ELECTRO.SILVER PLATE.—
HERS,
ready for
"Lists of Prices and Estimates Faraoi 2 a . for
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN Eu GLASS
SEM and SLATES, WATER- PIPES, PROPAGATING
ASSES, _GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE GLASS,
GLASS SHADES,
ac
[ERS 5 FOR CUTT ING dj PORTE
pana other . 5 to be ha 1
he vl d G. Prices Sharp's Á
onie. BG. E T]
publie Park.
ply to FREDERICK Ransome, at
Row, Westminster, S. W., or Patent
BY
JOHN WEEKS & CO
KING'S PE . %
HALLENGE rug WORLD to produce a made i1
of i their Upright Tubs ar Boile er that w al nde: rcnt xs 2
ith tl ; of fuel in a given time.
alled 9 fully justify the challenge :—
98 gth of IT otal length
CANNON omi
RoS JSON Seg NDON
oN e
S
Ps
a -
um 1
ame effec
The followi ing unequs
CERES has of f late been said about BOILERS zi
* ori een - vibe ag anor mii s Mark the enormous length of Houses and Piping}
themselves to be sent invented. They jos : Y
adapted fo fox: he ating every doserpti on of b building, and are made heated by Oue ne Boiler. Houses in feet of Piping.
of various sizes. The Pri the . "EMO TOME
24-inch Cast Iron is ee 10s. Od. "^ Messrs. E. G. Henderson & Co., Wellington ee 1200 | 5,500
3 skis, in cuo as a 8 oy 0 e F. A. Smith, Dulwich . M. M. | 11,000
inch Cast ditto .. REA RO MARS:
36-inch Wrought ditto 810 0 M. Van Houtte, Belgium . doi 3,300 | 13,000
where’ the p xke d own Fruit Forcing Show Establishment — — | 7.000
Heferences to dente and My im. n re
i at work. MIU, oilers are now kep Y^ em n —
nd are 3 MEL: HS x E a nks — “Also, Also the Nurseries of Mr. Woodroffe, Harrow Road,N Mes essrs. Rollisson,
every description of Saddle an yli — oilers. Hot Water | T'ootin; ing, S.; essrs. Wood ngram, Hunting 2 a Vood &
D" pium 8 mas d € Maresfield ; — "eer numerous Public Buildings and Eai tmm, of
obili on.
complet
on 1 oh — — Sa ark, = ndon
MPRO
USGRAVES PA A ENT SLOW. no buston! J. WEEKS & CO, Horticultural Builders and oit Water Apparatus Man "n
ings, Hall b. ** Fac King's oad, Chelse S.W.
Dryin ms, &c. A PLANS AND ESTIMATES FREE ON APPLICATI ES
attention during € — — o hip. In
rn and n 2
with litle care. Cap | COTTAM & , COMPr, Bugineers, founders, &c
" LEY STR
large — for 24 hours,
3d.; and deserving of special
cause of its su erem rear o durability,
— extreme simplici ot =
rest approach to ial ue "by hot Y ;
USGRAVES PATENT STABLE FITTINGS
AND HARMLESS LOOSE BOXES have obtained the
award of a large Council Medal
has
5th, A pure and wholesome atmos iphere
m Hrs whole * — i — stronger than usual, without in-
Ephies is no risk of infection.
2 what its name denotes, and the most
pirit may be turned into it without danger.
USGRAVE’S PATENT IRON COW-HOUSE
FITTINGS, asa em by the Board of Works, adopted
in the Ulster Mod
and by m — ^
Farm, and by many oi
the most eminent Stock
Breed in the King-
dom, are made wholly
x ipai, very durable,
cleanly, d attractive -
än appearance. The — :
fodder is always fresh, bein ng freely peed to the air, removed — = .
i the ir het of the tuin ns one 3 ed — — the roots or A SHOW ROOM I
s can vi
water de the use 2 ofi the — for — spg eee [ DEVOTED ENTIRELY — ARTICLES T. HORT.
idemic, and the cost is very moderate Conservatori 8 es ALO 1 1 —
plicity, r — — blie trength, sim- | Greenhouses Foun — Soper qu coe Framas.
, epay pu
E Rave BROTHERS are also Mab n m f e — — tint Ornamental Wire Work | Hurdle: "
rdles, ores veria i MC em x r Conser- 1 Garden Chairs
pP: us, Verandahs, 1 s
and their works being lavonrably placed for Ee EES —— 0 iilos, Strained Wire Fencing
. ——— eee in price "rm icr aig ve
ve gained the 1st Prize from — PRIZ MEDA
ad
— L 1 d ——— and cheapness. N. B. COTTAM AND COY.
RAV: ERS, Ann Street
Belfast. » — that they have Anis a second ent: e from 2,
orks, opposite the Pantheon. mere petites pee.
HORTICULTURISTS.
scu ooo UEM URN
fe — VT CHRONOMETRICAL
Moe 9 XH num ECT ITI
dish RR e f OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD, N.W
: LE Tm IRON mE
iN i mam M HURDLES, FENCING, AND GA
r PANCRAS TRON ror
Ther- e DL M DELL
RS OF THE ST. PANCRAS IRON WORKS, OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD,
adt: OSEE WERE AWARDED THE 3
2 Roy al Agricultural Society for their IRON a
Lists per post on application. G
a Gates from n 305. to
The Hurdles can be seen in process ss of Manufacture ae me 2
GAME WIRE NETTING
n £ i the
time when any change n
took place, and jer 8
such change continued.
—
B
i
e
p
mE,
ES
8
et
oe
om
==
owes ear ve
icultural i
En — Professor Varnells Enamelled and Wrought-iron ! Stable 3
» „ Wri
by one of these instru- Beni A: s Do 1 and Stable Fittings obtained the Commendation and
epi we PN val. Vedi em. t C 1 n Bed -— and the Royal Agricultural Society of
Sir Ana. MN value Am. health agi . —— He c ornat Instit rovs states that or
This is th sl
ment that regii lam TI m TM boxes are erected fa br . do every decim of Stable Trust as tdg
SS eee
orticuiturist should |a — l
be witht i A i Ve Ul erp 8 WORKS. o THE MANAGERS, 1o,
; Gav. HH esbro' on-Tees- OLD D ST. P — e y"
POSITE OLD ST. PANCRAS CH
1 T
SrrrEwsER 3, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRON ICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZEITE 723
- ARTER'S CHAMPION CUCUMBER SOLIDE INCARNATUM, 5d. to r Ib.;
UTTON'$ IMPROVED. ITALIAN "RÝ E-GRASS — ke cr p and Lord Kenyon's h hints on its successful re eaae showing how
has proved the best for general cultivation, being the Favou for early spring use. toni acre of the most nutritive hay m vue the
most productive — „growing QUA. — Smooth, dark green, Picat - - rolific ; advantages of sowing it wher Clov s thin, and its
From Joux B. , Esq., Luddington 1859. rage length, 1 foo e per pac superiori 2 Tares as n food,
“Tt is — m p to stroll 2 — — the PAGE deed having secured a large breadth of
sheep up to their knees ur beautiful Italian R J. C. & Co. do not hold themselves responsible | P quality, offer it a cash,
From FREDERICK F. —— Esq., the Manor House, Brighton, for the genuineness of the above unless obtained Turnip Se — Italian Bye. grass, per
March 15, 1858 direct from pel ic B .. Os. Gd. bush., .. Te, Od.
“I mowed your Italian Rye-grass at Ch 1856, within 238, High Holborn, TE W. O. New Rape, do. 4 | Must tard, a 1 4d. to 6 5
three montbs after sowing; again April 12, 1857; three times CARTER C U.] Calceolaria and Cineraria, in packets of 22. — and 1s. each,
since, and am mowing it again now — 2A The cut on t } saved from one of the EE Eur
12 was 4 feet high, and a perfect mass of Grass. E . xportation to all parts of the
i: essrs. SUTTON have some edo rt now on sale; also TWENTY- FOURTH ANNUAL CATALOGUE Pad 1 Seed Gro an d Merchants, Oxford
new r 1 Sow N and Sep- Street ; and Abov: € r. Southam
due to be pown por core, £ ban DUTCH axp CAPE BULBS Ü "LOWE K o T S.
Priced —Address SUTTON Royal Berk- TCH FLOWER Xj Lu
chive Seed But bilat — € ur Kok is now pone pk- and will be — pum D HYACINTHS, best quality, to name, per
INERARIA, HERBACEOUS etinm
ACHIMENES . pion bev 9 Parsonii, Gem,
and othcr leading varieties, strong
plants, 6s. to 9s. per doz.
zy TYDZAS of VERSCHAFFELT, 6s. to 9s. per doz.
Vax HovTT e on
œ GLOXINIAS, strong b lbs,
BEGONIA Rex, picta, mi
ä Madame,
” Ra er, argente:
Dracen
&c., — x plants, 12s,
variegata,
VARI Negro PLANTS.—Croton, Hoya
&c., 12s. to 18s.
1157 VE PLANTS, 2 —Allamendas, Ixoras, Buby.
‘ ERICAS cary ges of the ating and best, 9s. to 128. per
lication.
GREENHOUSE NTS —P ee gg EN 822
&c, s
— of the Bar's LM — inda
-—Á ERIC
Quis st STRAWBERRY PLANTS will be
— uh
CuTHILUS EARL LACK PRIN — 7s. 6d
per 100.
Per 100, 7s. 6d. ;
Curums PRINCE or W
tremendous bearer, first — v table and preserving.
Tt i$ earlier and i later char em "unt of its numerous
— Ts. 6d. per 100; cw m
Lindley told E eap he never could depend upon
— Strawberry e had — — —
From Charles 100
Strawberries 7
ood size, rich colour, cone
ore than
15 pe end as it
md, Keens’ Seedling,
—— which is a great
Plants,
also lied b Le
a e us Ow ces.
"LORD T de be suppl (true) the best —
packet.
"afr Go: COSS S LETTUCE for winter sowing, ls. per packet.
HOLLYHOCK SEED, saved from all the choicest and most
distinct named vari ls. per packet.
A remittance must accom: — — orders either by cash or
pee os te Bras EY, Nurseryman, Seedsman,
Fi 14, Abi urch-yard, =
RARE HARDY CONIFERS—PICEA
TRUE; PICEA (ABIES) GR.
GH LOW
BIES) AMABILIS,
DIS, TRUE.
grea
Seedling P P of Cu
Goveniana, NN.
Pindrow, P.
; e
Me P.
grandis, Welli
Plants. —Cia:
tubers and flowering |
eJ “Chien 81
tember 7 and 8.
had * Roy
post free on applica: second ~ mized, 4s. ; third do., 8s. ; CROUUS and Sow:
DROPS, per 100; Double VAN THOL TULIPS, 8e
238, High Holborn, London, W.C. TOUR A Pr NARCISSUS, large bu . per dozen ;
and an other kinds, best uality, equail; Sad Also
J. CARTER quan tity — — an AZALI LEAS, y sot with A tower
buds, lis 186. an ozen ; E
n ti 7 i A TREES, . 6d. to 0». cach ; FOREIGN and BRITISH FERNS,
ment of 65, 98., and 12s. per dozen, &c.— R. Gre 4, Kingsland
HYACINTHS, CROCUS, TULIPS, axp ormer | Road, N.E. No connection with any other he house.
DUTCH BULBS, rus BRI N AND SUSSEX Lees
PEE TA RAL AND HORTICUL L SOCIETY
all of which are very fine and in good thoir EXHIBITIO the Royal Pavilion Grounds,
Z = MT MAA NESDAY and THURSDAY, September 14 a
238, High Holborn, London, W.C. 3501 in PRIZES are offered for Plants, Cut
Flow: and
Pret including the RAILWAY CUP, value 10 Guineas, "for the
DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS. Preia Dis — ; i 2
P ETER LAWSON ax» 80 N, ~ a similar Dahlia Blooms for Amateurs and Gentlemen
Tue Queen's SEEDSMEN, &c., Schedules of Prices can be had on application to R BrARY,
respectfully announce the arrival of a fine ts Mel dn pe or E CARPENTER, 96, St, James's Street,
Stock of
k E penn nission of Lord Frederick Paulet, C.B., the celebrated
FLOWER Ri > of fe. v; also the BAND of th M TP A direction of Mr.
d te ordi oor he BA of the 4t al Irish Dragoon
NONU ER, p a ar RD HENRI the direction of Mr. Jawes will attend each day.
oh tho liberality of the Diree f the South Coast
27, Great — Street, Westminster, S. W.
Railway, the Committee have the pirs to announce to
EDS Exhibitors that Plants, &c., for Exhibition, will be conveyed
w E . to Brighton from all Stations, and baok whence they came,
nn W Free 2 M Ly 7 — &c. — m Ded ho deli-
vered cklayers' Arm ion, low , Bermondsey,
ITALIAN RYE-GRASS not later P.M. on the day p: ng the Show, to
NATURAL GRASS SEEDS ror PER-
MANENT PASTURE LAWNS, &c.
— ransand be a, trucks ai uired, of which notice
ETER LAWSON — — the shoul be given to the Su rintendent at London Bridge or
— SEEDSMEN, pM Bri wir Arms, at least 24 bows to ent dis-
to supply all kinda of SEEDS E AUT appointment. No van for trans t be
M e @ or the best q — & loaded more than 9 feet from the b dn
reat George St estminster, S. W. N. B. Vans will be in readines at us Brighton Station on
the morning of the — to convey Plants, &c., to the Pavilion
at mode -— chai
Pj » ibitors accompa
Lai M if Such. exceed the wel
ing — at — London m
producti ons conveyed to
BEED
nying their bòxes of Fruits, Cut
ght — ig Xu book-
mee Boo LT their
ESTABLISHMENT,
eived a "eu
Gurren SONS ha uit.
unique Collection z . 8, ANE
ey CROCUSES,
"direct fre - Ae "ot the mo:
— m. Prices very moderate
D i
mit
THOS, ATTRE , Chairman of Committee.
ms dme — [Superintendent of Exhibiti
ENTER, Sec
wine HANE Qmm constructed and
T: out the Crystal Pal: soe e Gardens and and Pork, Syden-
- under the direction of S — 55 Paxton, and having
thém forthe - till last Midsum mer (when
f
years enables Mr.
and Ornamental Grounds, n . —
Conservatories and other H
lishing and thinning Plantations — Woods, th
ference to the trees most suitable for larai 11
on. the Draining,
j
free upon bing
nths, by nam » 68., 75, 6d., & 98. per dozen.
Select Collections of — from. lor bi i io s
The N , Wandswort
FLOW t R
i
valuation of Timber,
i
0 0 T8.
p
K
ILNER is permitted to refer to Sir Joseph Paxton and
Noblemen and Gentlemen for whom he has done
re dre, eve Mirxkn, „Oxford House,” Anerley
'orw: .
Tne Gardeners’ Chronicle.
SA
TURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1859.
EP
1
ITCH, Jes, — Exon NURSER
lsea, 8. W., begs to announce that he has received —
annual supply of BULBOUS ROOTS pe Holland, and is
— to — A € bon are — — FINE and in EXCE: =~
talogues w ready and will be f.
warded om m ation.
J. mpress upon those who patroni "
him the Ban: * redre
0 P.
ving — their ORDERS EARLY, TING R
the successful cultivation tage of of Bulbs epends ina agreat m vel et a e 8 FO THE ENSUING WEEK.
— Turns" SEPE g H Crystal Pale q n.
T U E. VERET VETE
PLAN N T "RA * A Lo o
ij Ovx contemporary, The Builder, 88 that
it pm much aon ey — 3 15 * 8
tat Kew, i conten
as well as scienti fical
a good one. the
0 and - à
intimate that his
$5 =
JUN. , begs to
NERAL PL ANT CATALOGUE for the present season,
oJ ‘crx VEITCH,
orm * a imr ee
VE LIST of NEW and RARE PLANTS
is now ication.
d will — forwarded post free on appli
Exotic Nursery, Chelsea, 8.W.— Sept. 8.
p: al
BUSBY’S STOCKWOOD GOLDEN HAMBURGH GRAPE.
venient to go T
com outil.
JUN., to intimate that as
announced he offers a
PRIZE OF FIVE GUINEAS ron rur
THREE BEST EIC
of the above Grape to be exhibited at the Crystal Palace Show,
I n
„which is far the most idi. of all
e inier d — would admit of several com-
meroial e such as ornamental
those used in -
al Exotic Nursery, choset, S.W. D 3.
W. P N
ES TURNER (cn Da E A
eut: aval ^ those em
M Pe ROR (T vnxER).— Rose, fine x PA crnamantal woods. cossprising, the
EDITH Ga ce pa pui ple; de AO Eren i from Australia and Ne
w
ens i gs "6d. *
MILUIE 8 fine: 6s ow Zealand would be particularly interesting. At
MISS GLOVER eA ogni 3 al Ne ‘Bs. 6d. these seattered A aen a great many
eq crm diem m beet strongly recommend tho ab tala SON t families, and a arily located in
C. Tose LS | wpe Re] "healthy and ume din often disant. an re ‘of the building.
qni 0695, 12s, and 18s | A very curious and instructive group might be
ie , and are now ready for sending
per — — —The Royal Nurseries, Slough.
formed o qx ornamental woods of the ancients,
should learn t
ood and M paik
be answered b
ne h.
f
from which w
introduction of ae
THE GARDENERS’
hat long before ka |
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
qualities of the he North African Callitri rs. It i
m rte d thatn oup of the 5 vp produce
are inclined to think that
losing the habit of th
the ‘bu ds not
- e
follow from what E ke.
Lung M
—— ,
race Wa
6 :
quite a dime
pie
requirements 0 Í
of European or Mediter: n growt This is
more lik ely to be admitted M w than ‘| have
previ modern fashion for
Inut-woo od, which was Mw old- onus stan-
er peu woo a y the Romans, as we lea
fro L, Sat 117 :—
E 3 m im resp at "us e those times beheld
Of our own wood : old Walnut that was fell'd
By some I tempest, when ind lay east.
No h gourmands 9 1 a feast
Unless the Theat be served on Citrus board
Whose ample width rests on some r nt e
In ancient times much mo ntion seems
to have been paid to the duslitins "Possessed 1 b
certain parts of a tree than to the species of t
M EM we learn that the burrs je-
duced n trees, on account of the variety
of 5 whieh dor displayed, were chiefly sought
after for ornamen el purpose s. It is only recently
i has been turned to any
Waln
exce pt a
i! gia from the Fau
y eurious vers beautiful xo E are to
en Lin "ihe warehouses of the dealer:
M
any of ou
handsome burr woods, such as the Elm, cplar,
hich bu |
modern M br is somewhat (— Mew
les of it ver, ery insign
ubourg St. Antoine in Faris |
in
r Dira trees faroa extremely |
1 Bv Ape 1 2 ‘Oak L ler sliced into t ee
and i certainly be ses showing the |p
capabilities of other Bri ^ sh tim
ll
the scion,
mel ciall
appens that the use o
arranged Y Museum p en
e cattle
e ga
spines in iy sie as
d
stunte
Nobo y
ndian
Cruciferous
d
o such on exists, lant would not ha
forme effect of thi
But how is heen object to be accomplished? That) whole fore
Qi
Sir ra
der, which, when
ry aud more than full ; 80 is the old m
o do ubt, | but W
d ill- contrived structure is full
-— To
can be
presen Be: mean an
of foreign ntle
if af pins of the raduisite oret m could | 4
often produce, from their own estates, orna-
mental materials for furniture that would far alwa
in beauty the wood usually furnished
r upholsterers. A collection etm to
te the ornamental woods of Proxy would
D
t lea
Pestana, liberal ae its grants for Kew hav
s been n, would at present look with fa seen
upon i atol to expend any considerable sum
upon another Museum, however desirable it may be,
Ir one principle in gardening is fixed upon a
of its offshoots.
grown
Bu
ER would gla idly carry i it out Dm
and st
and |a
as mueh more space, and we doubt whether i
pi 55 ues E
stocks would probably zu E
ee . young vigorous po
nserted them on youn
. LEROY'S
No change of make was there
om
a pes. Sinne helt
shoot up under thi
state they make v
almost an amplification of
et alnus tuber sectile, ist citrus, acerque.
$ which itis 88 With all its peculiarities of whats
tly distinguished |
r graft will always reproduce the variety fro
a jus
owever of a somewhat | W
1 122 n which he takes
the
ormida ble “tens, a
s (o
co
pearance. abs ate mu ducis n Pour
Some o en ornamental w oods,
of more breui growth, ich are now rarely or
never met with in this oguntey, would, no doubt,
likewise ‘prove worth i TE ancient reputatio n.
m, and Terebinth—
Pistacia terebinthus. E E e —€— "s
in the sha ample Ae
Sequebatur puer cum pM terebinthina et
erystallinis tesseris, — a boy followed krg with a
W ight-board of Terebinth wood, d crystal | y
on to po 5 out 2 Pied Stead of the
ues d by Ca dures
no
nt are
specimens of the wood of ' Cali robusta, ‘hich
exhibit, so far as plain wood can, ma: my of the fine
opportunity of correcting an
orion that a table of the famous Citrus wood was to hich form very exten: vo rie tural taken it show Mr. B
; our ory misled — rmer, only durin e ld last in Engla: — 2 in a 1857 7 to ‘gent tl
y nia LE > me WFüy: of fpe ha Ba Ui co] e aen thy N ng evill, who had specim —
Ade e thas VR B > in og fore.” p
it the ra f the’ Bude um 1 B We co our suspic
Sof t to Sinapis edil he pl distur
v-— € 72 9 apis require | the plant re! :
however, be 5 5. 5 ly 5 e 4 [teu be te especies whichis walled ra raee, IS Mustard, ani ‘ane e een ore ini
ihat instead o aeu “utterly wrong" we P dtm wil nd as à condi 3 8. glauca a be the t AE xomh | that it was on turally
The Gitrus fria A g ere y Pe eso, and 8. een the oria, IM is the
ancient writer on troes, “What 3 according to that bun, Pores e strongl 8
s ite un- l Besamum
t. éov was is quite un edi for the oil which is -$ z ext ten Indeed the vari
— uite —
as to have!signified Thus, or Frankin-
er indeed any fragrant wood not Cedar of Lebano on.
gr pm i. om
of our | we ihe look for the route by which the Cabba
it meant Citrus wood; but | t
hedge is obvious, a: nd
re Would c Aw n - e this sort of Whitethorn
n England. RE havin
pagating a E peoien with had bee
the p prised to find that his budded
plants Jost the e TS of — tase Out of
ame of Crategus | la
food.
will be seen in our a
oudly poc by
i he
| Palace has sustained a serious loss,
4 | tory to feel — Ed ps "ila de
fited by the
MUS
lants. i
Foner (e
ee
* U |
o Bal favoured by Mr. Spinner :
viele aithor this plan .
in the a dener.
^
s? Chronicle of 27th inst. the P
in which you
fa
tion
t ont
*
is no by
Whitethe rn, wit thout a trace — the . com- |
plex spines of their parent. was that ?
Tt appears
were was this: obtaini
buds fi any part except the end of. the you
t. € [od where the spines were very little
that the man — im wuk "the m. | from G
Was E | form,
aps ee
tief on that it
to sati Le J
of San
£ | Oncidium i jonosmu 5
| the enclosed rang 6 of three
hs d 1t was mor sary to cut away
n
es them selves, in order to get the b d
Mex a Ew Ahi sk of Oe stock. M. CARRI g Bi More
conjectures that the cause of his worked plants
: subject of m seed resemb! n
the
1 mes
lant Lepidium sativa, or Gatien
it
introduced into India from or P. Pers ^ Vm also
Turnip aed f
and cul tivat into India,
ou A. their way
d the g
duced —— d
Cashmere, and gro noses
The Tu grown
— in Kunawar, are described
"Besides these, which are id confined as
urhood of vi are other
Es
for
as
eultivat
he ANM of the
má or oil f. x br burning lamps,
n, and yr ention
greater part of India depend
cf Indja depend von them eei sketches furnish am
SEPTEMBER 3, E
three states ; in t the „sera nd petals are
oblong, acute, an bio gn nth b Pen ona yellow
— the lip being sparingly marked with deep rose-
2 GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
he fruit began to ‘colour. With some kinds of
is good practice, but the Peach A
725
In this
circle of t Snowdrops, and Primroses. In this
ha
ve from the Ist of January to the
}
5o extraordinarily rich and when ripened
at
1 th 1 h greener,
urther r improve ment can take bens
*
+ +}
+
hath A
r
ety
more 4 in the third
: "Although t the fruit trees of en 2 = b. drm are
| — flow ered by Messrs. Veitch, the v veins we the lip are
c scarcely visible, but the surface i is ad ipt ed w
|
THE ORCHARD HOUSE AT AUDLEY END.
. It any o
=
any d
are growing in 10-inch and I] wot
of them are rooted thro
been abundantly to; ay
ure water occasior nally v — ma that they have had |
ely | golden
ir | -t ith beaut
liti 1 a spot of ground always covered with
| The principal part in yoe flower — will be played
by Phlomis Leonurus, a gre Labi: whose rich
flowers € g whorls will furnish you
tiful blossoms for — autumn- flower
| spikes of this Tartes grow from 24 to -
In N ovember move it DA M TE
abundance a pe t home e.
me so vividly as the perfect success
E icu The orchard house — te the
Some qui 8
are pie Sade not to use it, only because it has
where vegetables ane "dee * is sw
ted and from a very low temperature.
This plant, the uf little care it requires,
uch more gen nerally cul cultivated. It
Mr. "Yo oung, who has been head ides er *
— . End many years, is indeed a asm of fertility
= beauty. It is one of the
nh a fixed
lows
20 feet, height 11 feet i in the diee.
pat the sides. Inthe centre is a bed of earth 7 —
wide and 20 i nches higb, r nch brick
walls. feet wid * pr of the
same height. ths bet w vine A the central and side
beds are 3 feel w wide anà mey pay ved. It is Y entilated
ad — lights 21 fee
13 *
Practical, T is d
it a point to follow the
foolish impulses o
r own noddles to —
this sort who would not p his P.
te se t they asked for it," i.e, till Ne ,
w a rare could
eed mi FAL of course he found
font « with the system.
that hi 4
f thei
injury of their employers. I vow one gardener of |
rees water
ered
before being
| pla: raaro ye in the open border. It may be propagated by
cuttings or easily raised from seeds, which may be pro-
cured
Leonurus*
— of Walbourg (in Dutch
Lim , th
fthe v de Bredeesel d' debe ; and I was m
t :
frost of the 1st o
r.
effects of the
his having shut u
larg
f last A
p his house "x in the o day of March
31, so tha at the e body of
tres so that wher en pA open to their full extent
In some of the — orchard hows 3 X Sa
2 is an aperture over Br door
for the — d the] — air, and no roof or other
* 2 ve ee is employed. The ir ran
Walden, the eyed d ee : Nectar
being 24 open vider in little
roots
t ated in
| flower pots, through the olei in n which the strong roo
rive abundant nourish-
rer 5 emn ete e course
emplified the
of low side entilation - to the old-fashioned mode
pling X sliding — ats to let in and let out
e kitch
some tittle interest at
ces | such
wodid — saved the iir d
This is mention as bei ing occasionally necessary
. 102 of the Zr elits of - * Orchard
ow few nded to
tory of the Andle
tach
House,” yet
on that fatal to fruit
— orchard house has
to it. In 1850-1 when
to be talked about, written about,
praised 1 id abused, as usual under such circumstances,
from the soil beneath, DT = 8 the
eror cs vegetation struck with."
Horticultural Academy
Home Mer e
——
Out. door
attention to the growt
for the London
(when they hit) which realises so much money.
season the hao uce has c
151
at a charm contrast! It is, to spe
cally, Hrs, E^ fruit; the Apricot are
— A * Pea 33 » Nectarmes, and Plum are in the
y
i
of a respectable ee ut of y
two-score and ten, heard about t them
his neighbours "earn —.—
different s stages
bouse is full uty. Sankta on the Spa tral
8 none of the pots are plunged—is w of
dd trees, from six x to eight years old, in "18-inch
ving looked a of
vp ringing 8 fruit tree
culture as childish, Chinese
t for "T ble
enltur ^] —
and fi de or i and still poorer
2 7. Autumn of 1866 the
ing umbrageous
lat. "m T nd Brayb
and * of other
think Ag v 1 un
mode
ye &c., | man
Somet
222
3, — or 2 aer apart n
vas beds
| wish to have an dtes Y xm e, um serve n not only to |
0
most charmi ees—5
| eet "Mak d 4 to 5 feet in aue IUUD
——— m y Nectari The zopa
- !
wa this central row are some fine Peach trees of the
e age and dimensi
are ignonne,
Grosse Mignonne, hese
With the exception of the which i is an
w fr E in Matar a prom
2 caiba his hoali
autumn by Me r. Dixon, the builder
bride cM n rs some extra:sized trees of four or
sin
no pert can be more re grat
and at this
ring, for not a diseased leaf is
e;
zr — LE de the ground fine Be level for
sow in The ee f are made by a hoe about 14 inch
dee eep, a man follow the
‘the uus
Led E sow a second, time d
excellent early so;
Mr.
rt, are fata sf te fruit” Among u
central trees You
out t
ung po
pyramid Plums, stout tees well foenisbed T branches
and 6 feet high i in 18-in : removed |
from the o „ IC
Early
get
the successful results of “his intelligence and
ver :
reh,
the hea with a Wit 3 > mould ti you
mbers the
ia G
ht and finished a er
sowin;
expense of a crop of Game make dou bie t s pmi
ructed, and has a li
M it were 12 feet hig
— an improvement.
t to add that Mr. Young uses his house
of his ng plan
instead of 11
very ni it. s perhaps n
repays the 2 Ms cultivation m
it bears so em dantly and gives such |
in great favour. with
beddin
the trees, and in early —
to harden them
vinti the fruit
the shade o!
t. In
.
A BELGIAN x NOTION OFA Magia a ARDEN. |
We the urnal d’Horticulture
Pratique the er which. serves to show the
"TS
rated | the Secret
trees |
well.
ave s in first-rate order
for any crop. What I state as to (be alas of the ason
may be doubted by some, but it is the truth. One im
3 pae
amber, gives it a charming
+h
perha:
is very * but 3 hA and Mg. in fact a
fect orch ri which does not require
xc ripen its fruit, as is the
“Tt does
square, out. or "ir ones in 25 centre a strong
— of x: racantha, ts handsome red berries stand. |o
the white
doors
Sicile sorts of Plums, if it is
h flavoured.
win winter will eee
l eA the Peach trees placed on the side borders
w 8 a tree of the 1 in
of the sorts raised E the late T. A.
E
i
In pos ane your Pyracanths nth a a row s
= ai
ral
ot matter whether your piece of ground be Gra
pe much trouble amongst some o
r most — — * 1 understand that man
first class gardeners have
I
Phlomis 8 IER eem Me of the
blooms as fre ey m | flowers
— had been taken
rees had not borne so large a thi
n 1858, but but the fruit was e oo the
good-sized
Miet id
h
; I have rarely seen
—
Alberge de Mon et
elicious early kind, 255 — * but
gs, forth b s lovely
wet with the Suan
domin to *
p taia e. should
be ard rom Tue ctr of €
Corydalis fi its flowers in May and
and its i delicde rcu is seen be advantage
— n of the other plan
anuary February the e n will be
1 with a má of Hellebores.
rich and excellent. The flavour he thought
. g "ed much |
improved by placing the tree out of doors in the sun
(Qu. Christmas |.
oses or Eranthis ?)
Fal all round this flower bed, full as it is, plant a
ample
2 and
say it wanted
. [The bunch van en
i 3 should
a month lon
pic Hn ae. I have just read in your last
week’s Paper a notice of a remarkable “ ———
ba
roperly called, at the present
a Cape plant introduced into
Phiomis rus is more
time, Leonotis Taros, and
Europe about 1712.
: 726
of an Opium Poppy, and it is mentioned that “as similar
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL _ DUUM
to Mr. J. Green, of Burlington Villa, if he will rh
hen ots his and what tre
but of t writer says he has s
Poppy; his the
MN By Parte to the “ brenn i do. | [esr ee Or D rilind uo Was, và
8 n Sey te 3 z 1 lph pek sae em FY i
Il ah pH mi m -- e | valuable. What kind of sulphur is g
ees 1t 11 ce Y hav M means of re- | purposes, black or yellow LU. only sulphur
stro
ccount I think I — (bu
tI
he
uit ii rie receive after potting; * any other Der
of his am . which hé may be — to
* flowers of sabe r^
m. beg
ferr erring to it here) t
ks ed fas I should seek for
Earthenware lined Pipes. c to inform your
a
M. .
yea espect t
We fog ar ori ph. "Nene
er than
any
have expressed how p
change that has taken lai
find tha t the wor rkin 3 g clases
tor
it in future years. Th
This monstrosity was pha exh hibited at
g, and is
of. 0)
the Linnean |y
pris in its Proceedings.
pany.
"s | with water, but U have found them excellent ni quit e
mon | effecti ive.
ears ago, finding the spring water which was con nveyed
from my pump from a well to the house (a consider-
y
able Vis Ne was impregnated
material through which it w
up and s ubstituted vite i iron
ham
~ m
pipe s which I y — the Birmingha nt Tu be
grounds have looked bea
has also wee good don at
alon slip on the
- | drive, consisting of G
Ke. On the
great many beds some of which 5
all of boss exhibit a 4
ompan he in question are
iron pipes of a any E: E wei - ore,
here-
geen
M hey a
m not aware that hr specim
of any especia al e beyond it
interest, but to you, with your most extended
ledge of affinities in the vegetable kingdom, it may
possibly prove of some value; I bave therefore for-
warded it. Upon a general ed in
3 ical
know-
I find perty | of setti ing in, in a low "temperature,
Me hos
be fore rant) ‘both inside and out m dat 2 —
C. LL egt"
Muscat Grape.—l am glad to see Mr.
this M 8 one, w whic h in
opinion wr its viue ie
ose at Dalkeith, may not dim a
the flowers vary | somewhat ; but in twi
1st or
I ted sideration er "with a very large class of Grape
e. as Wi Within the Erwin it is a very mater ial one, We well know how
e Muscat of
calyx and co
4 O doro the
inserted upon
and Moenia with the. lobes of the
Alexandria from the expense Which must ‘be incurred
The Bowood Muscat, however, as I
corolla, distinet, _ green above, ye ellow below vi
d any one pos-
nd EL 1
e o costly struct an
ery of the most ordinary pretensions may
f as —
united below into a tube, from which five more or less |
Vin
ibo it —— as certain
amburgh or Sweetw
inary
there was a filiform style divided seregulariy ge. attain ' ant the least c amount pe —
e. 8 enn Man l beg to
= aren: “yan and corolla as above. Within
erted upon i
nited in
rolla
yell petaloid appendages, of which one was distin
pai ; wit in
d the remai ining fou
5 a
five somewhat 1 bed
ct, | good qualities of this Grape, and that I Riman agree
these with all he has said i in its fav , In n giv my e —
e | heat,
C l
Thomson's 8 to the many good 1 of
t; but he has the
have
J Park th may hope in ben bel
meia ark than there has beent
Broo his mn ba
Societies,
THE —— STOKE NEWINGTON
—The
assurance of success does | place a ‘the F
water, by ord on Tuesday last, the 30th ult., and as
eee m ighly su
want. of flow to sustain. the 1
Thomson that he
ing
ion another whorl of four somewhat AEA bodies
which five staminal
united below zanto a tube, from
bodies arose,
house ool
am glad to see a report at Such as Bo
Ls 35 802 e ires 8 5 Gulden 1 Grape, p t
cage ee sun a 33 1
eee Grapes to. it rx
a crop whi
think it is the à sort let at
a few en iinn
Muscat. I
s Pas: M
n the centre of these a filiform style
diria abo utm into Plone stigmas. Robert Bentley, Tile-
e s
rior or Mas
— to use the expression, “With the exception of the
MR place
very Auf. act
are combined so many desirable qualities ”
way; i did not mean to compare it with the Alexan-
drian Mu than others of its class,
in a general | in
ge is distin e from a
ssible to institute a
Its advent fills up a
it mpos
none Mv a s Maik ‘that
— —
cat. Mr. Biddard" s, Gardener at Tehidy wd near 2 has long existed, whethe er we value it for early forcing,
ruth, 2 rnwall, the seat of J. F. Bassett, Esq.,
Musca nly
E
e
oO
ta
I
ES.
8
£T
5
E
8
Lollipop,
den by b
d 8
ame proportion 2s the Bo
ace other varieties d. the
does
eet
scat “of Alexandria, at
; vi
liable to | least I have not been able to distinguish any difference.
rea ist i f
ca I observ:
n it ec
Vi ul
here; true, may grow weakly under anfao our rable
rd iic dat] Anai; Goldsmith, an
— y k for
same
a superiority i in| M.
the|others. In
mon
ooms of — cies) Mr.
for Oliver Twist, Charles Per
6
may grin to See so; some e
Iam spared next seaso
garden of th "ieee tte
^4 ollowing dimensi
12 feet iri i
length, 280 feat (in the clea 1).
the trees differ from
e kin d. “Decree 4 75
t oth
ver. has nrov
uec
er.
AALS given it; also Ta
ee E ra Does
th had pu years agp m
a very
a
t, 3 feet 4 ose wa, 8 ES 6i 1
The most other Houe and | countrymen knew no better, an
i ep
— A, Cramb, Tortworth Court, Glou-
as (see p. 693).—I have not grown Veitch’s |
Ihave however grown airs? Dwarf Mam
also Lord R ms
ot less than 3
Dwarf M
3 eee
Raglan fro b ;
Marrow Dus Prizetaker, thinking I sup
W. havea
rn als con:
= v CE to veli
e m or footpath oe
inch tile resti Machos wide, and cons
ath,
e in Pont are placed at r
potes 7
iz
oe pier and i T ha
tilate the viole "Pnilding, I asked h
ists of Bun
d
stomers, causin a
eh
as the same thi ing;
dt
v noting € — them "E
em, as they are as different
itright | as as light fron dark, RE: have been in the ha bit of I":
I shall be much
top | on 1 the e same day on
Fokin ublie Parks.—In passing through
Stood- | Hyde N kn cg
much obliged | noticed that * Keni — a tak 8 —
tak
agian vd t
warf
ws from. ut er 2 mei — n height, while |
Lord
i, kia font another Royal Green
i addi tut n purpose to test ime -— for ay pot.
onse; and I may add that | way. vrac. on year I had alm hy
iption both as
et of Grapes se
weighing 15 Ibs. Ex:
- st prize in —— g of 205
6 feet in
Fuchsia was age, itoa by ar Ae
Medicis, It was struck in
— 18 feet in circumfer
This gained the extra
New Sroxz NrwiwGTON Fro on
hibition of this Society was zt
— were Dahlias from
Srerexner 3, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 721
ton, z of Princess Charlotte, Dat — Par- | their becoming full-fed caterpillars they increase vastly have given the bo given the botaui mes ot the trees be speaks
tte, vns À Salter, Fauny, and Fearless; some by | in -— and the caterpillars are therefore very vora-|of. What is Tutu, —— "Puri, ca the White Pine,
essrs. Fraser named the Flirt, Comus, Duchess|cious eaters. When the caterpillars have attained | rata, pohutu —— PA ngaio, and the like.
of Kent, and Dandy; others from Mr. Greening, High | their fall size they seek some secluded corner, or pene- Such words convey no ideas whatever. The botanical
Cross, Herts, were Orb Day and Miss Priestley. | trate into the earth, and then change to the chrysalis | names are perfe ay intel and therefore useful.—
ere were Asters from Mr. — d^ Stamford — and | state. The (rane aan no power of locomotion, — Catechism P Photography ; How to colour a Photo-
Mr. G eorge, which were excellen well as a stand no legs, and being generally av attached io so graph 1 1 the "treatises, reprinted from the
4 "ws bom bstance, or pum RA cocoon of silk. Ir News," and useful as instructions to
M also bes beautiful ; others. came from. Mr. Hodson handled it testifies its annoyance by a wriggling c of ve 9
Mr. Batte After the insect has
— Mr. Ja mes and Mr. Batten gained the Ist and 2d | in the chrysalis state a 3 * varying m Me 7T of Delle, lbs, a LY ther pl Y
— Messrs. Frase: raser had somesplendid kinds, — to the pedet, or to the See year, the I Tulips, Crocuses, and ot ther bulbs stan d first
this list
which r.
Dahlias, good. They al Mg e rest with its ing ing down; and, ina sale ; 106 pages are thus occupied, Cutbus 2 rv &
fora 1 m of Gladiolus, mri Hebe, Neptune, Edith, du time, rarely (except in large species) exceeding an Cms f il the Bulb mm und for 1859 contains s deser
and Mons. 2 In — Bate of Fuchsias Mr. | hour, the wings are fully posters xs but still limp; in a | ce amate 3 grow. 2 * anmoune n Mar
Rhodes was the most successful, showing Fairest of the little while, however, they become stiff and fit for flight, t th m n free exhibition hy — — in
Fair, Rose of r. Cotillo, ille, Alpha, Denes of Lancaster, | e insect wings its way to the woods and fields. sen ere wo > sy Wil Hollowa
Autocrat, all l planta. | * Havi sketched the various changes pcdes raf Hyacintie ds end De — mele arenis
Tien gei i nts | through w! each Shas insecte Das, the t|4 f
very good; Sd by Mr. James, and the h t to which our attention is Plants » deserves to consul all buyers of
p- — TX — Il were La “How DO WE DISTINGUISH A BUTTERFLY FROM A such things. There i "RM :
ar
— of 2 ani C — had pay limp. The insect crawls to some convenient place,
t with f : t
THES 24
ii
Jalsam — hich were good ; Morn ? a 5
— remarkable for in e foliage foa Mr. Tides, a «The e antenna (or horns) of a butterfly have always Rose
‘ore ; Liliums from Mr. J 1 fs Stok ak b lub 11 tip; those of th have not. A : iT `
Newington, forming o ne of the or nob y irc e- da P — dte more gaily f € » — — i such ˖ lante, 4 —— MM un
of the show; seven stove and greenhouse plants rend pr S Sn santa; and many imagine that the | t2 thei i i drin ti ide: a TN iip od
. Rhodes A o "e rns hne S of Stamford Hill, | Tiger Moths aia um are butterflies; but it is e advice. Se ae | (Orleans) Trade
of honey, bir ims. 1 about | n by! so: many 1 erflies are of dull colours, and man
erd ; three bunches moths are adorn eet ost beautiful and . for —.— e LES fruit oM td prof
f Grapes e Mr. Tames, and half a All or Rea (with one or two exceptions) — *
from Mr. Meredith. We must also notice the plants | repose with the wings er overthe back; very few
grouped for effect from Mr. Rhodes; they were very moths Ye e position.
sent a collect
—
handsome. There were also excellent Verbenas sent All butterflies fl i" day; the great bulk of moths Garden ‘Memoranda.
by Mr. Hodson, of Leyton, and Mr. Batten, as well as fy » night, “though many fly by day, some species] PALACE Gar Court 1 n no previous
12 bunches of cut flowers from Mr. J. George, of Stam- fiyi both night and day. season do wi aprir having seen these in better con-
ford Hill, rom rane, of : Pelargoniums, The ca illas of butterflies may also in most | dition den they are at the present time; and that
and Calceolari rvs A f commendation was awarded | instances be distin uished at first sight ; for, — al Dom their a — " es, broad gravel — closely mown
to Miss Sarah Bo the caterpillars of the first family of butterflies, allt d shady retreats are y
——— 2$ others are of peculiar forms, either spiny or with two the n ` v evident from e A d visitors who
Notices of af Books projecting horns at the head, one on each side, or with | daily frequent them. The flower r beds are just now at
n two short tails, or fat and short (like a 2 ^ — | thé eir sit 2 nd T onim bem "within a - -
| with the head much larger than the segments behind | years v creased in numbers, upwa)
A Manual of British Butterflies and 1 LX H. it. They feed on a valid of plants, from the Oak to | 100 baving E aen aided to them, make a grand display
T. Stainton. 2 vols., 12mo. Van s the Cabbage of our market gardens. - | which i — well I seeing.
The reproach that has been so often 3 * When we first have our veg attracted to All round the fountain and in front of the Palace,
English. entomo end that they have not ; produced a beautiful i sect we naturally want PUN — tr Poles x. formerly e consisted of little else than
arto here is the difficult, 570 see the insect, rubbish, that was not o nly offensive to the eye but
way us is done by botanists with plants, no longer we admire its s beauty; but, unless e kind friend which was literally kaon ing the old qur trees, with
appli
cellent volumes
tematical account it of "€ the b — ak moths that | It trit rerything has a name; but how | with flowering plan
— Great Britain, clearly ted scientific im Tio seein ce me 5 thi butterfly which I nike er —.— is regulated vs the distance areen the
_by umber of mt question; if I
trees, a 2 ad 13 feet by 15 feet. It will thus
de s An uds, a Betw een each bed
ies to the — mg class, In the two ex- | who is acquainted with the insect would introduce us, the exception of about 50 yards, — yet remain,
ha’ E re now ted
£1 all
lous, entomologists of the
st np
manner ines he has — so ca unqualified
may take up other classes | British butterflies
provide ing their variet y in
of in: 2 —— j
What is is piste they great desideratum i in the Nat difficult Eit Qo pou out in a a D which helped to ngs
History of Great Britain. As matters now 3 eei way th e distinctive characters of each all but burnt up, . — NUT so treated
young : t must ide hi Trer instance, they may be roughly tal aoa iat! | planted early enough has rbai N) excellently dw em
t f aC +D t the whole season. The following plants,
bee. fourth the yah of the head. which fills.a bed, are now in beautiful EA nl
Mr. Stainton's first volume is occupied by an account | A, Hind-wings with a m Genus PAPILIO. | Verbenas :—Impératrice Elizabeth (Maonetti), striped;
of butterflies and stout-bodied moths; the second is| AA. Hind-wings with Beg Lord — 2 scarlet; Gen. Simpson, scarlet; Purple
to the slender-bodied and small moths. The| B. Wings yellow. Genera 1 COLIAS. King and Ariosto, Andre and Rougeri, Mrs. olford,
descriptions of the — are made as short asiscon-| BB. Wings white. nera Prerts, | Conqueror of Europe, lilac; Souvenir de la Mal
ANTHOCHARIS, LEUCOPHASIA. ison, three-year-old plants, transplanted in
groups unc e species stand a alysed| BBB. Under side of the anterior wings with a small | ground this seuson, now blooming a second time; Glyee
828 ‘thet TU young student E: her fail eye-like spot near the tip. Genera ARGE, maritima -variegata, white; Calceolaria Kayii, mixed
— camur his Spe — — nes need —— if ra HIPPARCHIA, EREBIA, CŒ- with Tagetes nana; Vinca e nd an mixed with
and aria integrifolia
— In 9 yi ers before us is M Under sid side of the anterior wings with no and C. | C. omm These are an p of flower and
a scientific model; but it sadly wants an alphabetical small eye-like spots near the tip. Y
C. A pale band across the middle of the dark ur ret h have not succeeded so well, viz,
: will find an meonveni 12 r wings, Genera LrwENrTIS, | Verbena Miss Trotter, planted late; Boule de Neige,
an example of the the skill m eerta in which the PATURA. à white, also planted late, after yellow Alyssum; Géant
1 sabhor 1 handles his subject, we take the first words of cc. dine wings more or less — des Batailles; this failed entirely, as did also Victory
his first volume, which fairly — the method Genera CYNTHIA, 7 Viii, „Gn! planted after Arabis; Pentstemon purpureum, died
. throughout the work :— ccc. ND rich tawny, with black dinde and m flow ns ; Salvia patens is also unsatisfactory
; Butterflies and — are insects but bees and spots and the same be said of Verbena Match'zes
1 wasps, beetles and flies are likewi How rit D. Under ede dt posterior wings with silvery and Calecolaria 6 Del 1
are eem hrec and —.— distinguished from “other | streaks or spots. Genus ARGYNNIS. as been very gay, and is now blooming a
roi Magis being o clothed with scales. The DD. Under side of 8 wings with no This 1 fd to displace the blue Salvia, eerie t
transparent like f or spots. Genera MELIT. k
ro td sta EN | Oedipus dad thane
the
: j compels our admiration. | AAA. wind hes with abet tail. Genus THECLA.
It is from the two Greek words, Aer.s, a scale, and 3 ho luserton of the sites | mal
Butterflies and moths have al four. wi A
entire ngl : hind-wings, * species
í y wingless, being comparati: Th
Anehe wil A Mig miil radi A aas ee |
tongue, by means of which these i im the | zen i P
| — of flowers. n batteries and moths *
vious ir appearance in that state, been denn except where they :
— S a aa chrysaides or Tie New Zeala colour and xe faced eod ure Tis
Jay que: im p ri od E — eg e. e Ma E 3 eflected by clearing away the tall plants and
ä lL
728 "
rabbish from under them, -forking in leaf mould and
planting only such thi ings as Geraniums, which do möt
season wherever it is allowe d :
It “may be worthy of remark too that des
better under Yews than under Hollies. Under the
latter — make little progress rag er with what,
gh i
0 e ae e wood. rs
y t this | fruit iin s ld also his
— iioi are necessary to mie iine e thes sea gone o
a ent as some t complete ted thei pr 58 8 ae th | fluous wood, e thet e
to ripen |
they do under the former, althou
soil is equally suitable.
fully as possible, pio. wil be of ser
the fruit spurs and be
the | erititor earing wood well
The noble walks with which this garden is en noonraged with a 2 25 ture. a there IE no | winter a ears $ d a iro U below in
bellished are in excellent order and 5 din. convenience for removing to a cooler h X i EP i Correnvondéiita" elo
This is efecte never giving weeds a chance of|as have made their 2 wit these should lev: y | Peach TOA 8. Palin sa i
: | the stove. » thisshou!
ae me x ta. e en yd saves much labo ou In toge ether at one end mm xe root and gh ving air mila ifnot arent done ort the fruit seldom flay
T salt is pn ; in moist weath ill generally serve o preven w any | roots are excluded from the action of 8 tali
N is reso rt ted to, regularly rolling to keep € down freely, dr Ww aiam tb those Ns. 4 o be ———— A and air,
l ogether a STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHI
length; formerly it was | ke arm and moist should also be pla XE WE SWICK, Nan
IST „ iere r, but this is now sd orari opposite end of » house, Apes Ty E s à anle MUR PELA E)
recti The most striking improvement per iapsin Sa should be 44 5 using every care ceep the B 82 N
respect is the re- adj isse o the large semicircular | sphere about them mois st, Co. 1 e G y EE: * tie
walk i t of ha alace. is had got ver mel 3 8 &e., Med un vini ^ xà piliers — Bar
2 is to a Vinery where th g f rida
al fon i 0 feet wi e P 85 Wes N th t as these he reqn ire very little water, they will not d A
had originally been), had in several ds es } f in the way of causing damp, and ki Mon
28 fee idth, yee in Mana: rs it was only 16 feet. room will be found very useful for other things. See| wy
Busan to "contend T y trees these defects | that 3 is free from insects, and keep, the
could not be remedie ctual measurement, — n by washing | Ave
9 proved that the — had a radius of 410b | w
foli: linge of such tkings * Ixoras, &c. 694 | a4
ndy and warr a and on
vide ges 1 Boney. piire when 2 — niformly 93 very Pie
racy. The alterations in question have now red
it to to its original position, and very much enhanced its |
appearance,
In the Wilderness, too, evident improvements are
FORCING DEPARTM
2 — Partially overcast ; very fine; i rain.
lure advantage of favourable weather 39—Very fine; part TEA overeasts rain,
30—Pa rtial al) Ne overca
ni
| wil
s desirable, Frein the plants : a liberal supply of water
a th uch as are e e-
re whe t1
; cold at
s Fine: partially aS co peus PET
Mean temperature of the week , 34 deg, below
water for the aveng,
actual operation. Old walks which through time had rately wall rooted, and keeping the atmosphere wart pas te
fil ading will of course be dis See with b —
with brick rubbish and 9 — 8 ed with gravel, and, the this time—at least it —.— be, as growing plants will | est |g
peu along their sides are being rearranged. the light possible, in order to t. which it Grant 2 1
flow. Ek sight also b ge ede one with advantage p induce fine st rong " a iage and a dwar y habit. | erica
E s part of of v garden, which in 1 75 g and summer is | See that = succession — — is properly supplied with | M
€— ting. It w thu us be seen that | water at the root, as Ae ceo in this respect while |
1l "bi rig
— b of the place, Abh. ‘much has
yet to be accomplished before all is finished.
ld be liable to cause
keep
some of the phate to fruit prematurely. Also um
Ke. and syringe them lightly over-head, and shut up |
usband the solar heat |
The ee the er occurred on
ra 1840 andi isis- * S3 deg.; and the lowest on
and 6th, 1850 therm. 3i
The great Vine, for which be Tu has so long been
celebrated, is | producing a rop of fruit, whi
poke
with won er "m rity. The tie areful, however in syringing à ;
ban however, we think scarcely so good as rers * in seed as syringing these over-head Notices to Corr espondents. i
hey were e Jast year, being Seu e errat and the would probably cause deformed fruit. Give plants | Booxs: Yeovil ree We eno pul T
bha are LOWER GARDE ]
nearly coloured, but rip o fire-hea and young plants growing in open b eds will enjoy an | r gardons Mr: hovel s
believe, is ef employed, un a lite Pi it now — — | — — soaking e the same. VINERIES. —17 bright | H
1 do s Vine at the present time weather continues, it will be advisable to shade fruit |
0 tl hl a con
dcrable time; for EX eve Ag of the is
Ds. may be rather improved b me Give re bot a i
i ut a 9 — olesome
ù Aire vento | on hfe, amp sewer. Give sir freely, E
* 1 a Vinery in that borough, measur- admit. AE the late 1 . Keep | present chimney to
5 the foliage regularly exposed to light, s x as com have it
y exp
gardener.
goa
young Vine, of the y ck Hamburgi kind, v
as planted,
an ordinary bas m but
this year there are now npon it 200 bunches, whioh are
expected to average 1 Ib. each when ripe. should
also be stated that 100 bu — were taken ofr in the
early stage of their ere and th at the bunches now |
growin g have been late’ ely t t] " 4h
oft the berries,
di
as healthy ond vigorous as Led eginning MS rwise you will 8 your bed g pia
n Bg she ty warmt] Hine when ow should be a
fine weather will Wises or Prawrs: We € been so often ol
a re very superior in x y, nn n doré to hang eli — dd of dried or other p!
ndents to
ertak: nen ee
gardeners, to w 3
i M Obat, before apps!
y, should boar in min t their other s
vi them mi the tro
e,
=
than such as have to be ripen — ie artificial
init) late in the season, ie there will be compara-
tively little sunshine. Keep thri rips in ea ee at
t eve
tantly de
— to yc pene our correspo)
ne r ba ave o ue have unde
8 of Operations.
(For the ensuing Week.)
—— —
ARTMENT
'VATORY, ace w ill hardly be safe t to depend
weather after xe cnn
uld exhaus
o preserve the Rigo from red s —— Vines sa
— this season, and which are * growing freely, will
Lene € und to be getting too 2 root;
e nd to be the case, if it i — esirable
e growth for some "tus longer, give
ed "border iin » Deed os 3 ngs i moi 2 T
surface „ but by n s give
— willin ngly.
than fonr plan
Robin Ho Artemisia Dis no. di
. The
show what your e
some sort,—M.
Ivy and Hedera Ró
New ZEALAND. FJ,
soaking,”
FLOWER GARDEN A AND SHRUBBER
That the pre hen month is a ea time for
transplanting large siz
LI Take to P. Lie
Ls nih in heavy rains or slight shrubs and trees is seldom
x re there is er accommodatio r
ie plants SEX plane HON bas dioly Ara ey n | di isputed, mev ertheless, it annually happens that a great
ing greenhou k out of doors as late in autumn | the plants have no chance of pushing a few fres
hte ua without positive danger from frost, but to enable them to resist tlie cod. es di winds of 55 the information Yous | Co
De wur plants 2 to x win in | March; we would therefore strongly ad all bec find the dimen nsions of on o given in our "Hon
Sas h necessary to make every possible X lib a as 800 ence" of to-day. ¢
keep dinde ts LAC of doors until the state of reu d they will find that things Scrrosro New Farne or Cattley EE
&c., a e 83 the houses with | sl during this —.— wilt — oni but little atten- [9e — not being in an; a of cum
being of „ spring and summer, "As Tor C. Trianel it is sei said 1 fine thing,
others — in winter and h ue oen
intended e be red 2
b imei Aaa
eu
y qs 8 polls, wing à!
: he | which a re quite unfit for lantin Tre Hi AED print
N zu d i 13 uch better "AC some considerable time ex 7 — . ird culi 5a E D on o Tt 5
*. » wing influ v
Han crowded too thickly Bisher a i ee dan or Mei aie era air. Give „diligent attention to the as given Pijan pr
s where fire-heat must be used. Indeed where are su e is te
= jud ve wintered under 4 ake-shift circum- | close E 838 ones keeping fhem Tee x
, reing-houses, which cannot always | that have bee a E
n : y i ve tted off some ti n or ball sh
roba in a a fate Ne M onm 2 per | bl their pots should be rately source ‘eae — the middle to to - rm a Dalt 2
; re iss
the plants from drencl ing rains and cold winds i m dvi But Mota N rerit a XT. ay hae
mm: and a very suitable one would cost ut little | should be shaded is is beg H : hi Tike fel Ee génie E the oe
ot
be 5 Pei mes da K seasons. 8 ould | in the middle of the r^ „ 0 — wia dia Mir — regular, not crowed t z
ne plants ca a ond Pede mds mag If i kon n
any A pars be careful to .prevent their getting | fro ol water, 5 the, — appear — — p th T Sako siaj n
Miche 8 A and other winter | see ‘that po Holyoke we afforded a libera 2 je wn or Coven ^
f in the border of the conserva- | which will s
tory ms be freely exposed to light aud cin ial 2 MET "n. RS n pri sien nging Spak im
staph 8 well ripened and insurea fine dis- Any of the Peac ect eds en EN 1 Tree ONTON:
ae fo px see that all plants are clear of ing too freely should be pe^: Td to retinas bulbs among the
: _ pest is particularly active at this i stopping all the thes id K et vete |^ quM N "d
hoots, and those that were
Allium Cepa.
Szerrwsrx 3, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 729
— — — — — — = —
RTIFICIAL MANURES, E — Manu factu urers OY AL AGRICU — 1 —+ BE NEV OL ENT € OL | RI ie y LTURA
others 2 — making ARTIFICIAL — - * LEGE FOR THE ECAYED FARMERS, E n — A E piu — R. — che oe a
ry instruction for their economi THEIR WIDOWS AN ize Mills for Crushing Corn, Seed, Malt, &e. ; Port-
EX paration, * applying to J. C. Nessrr, F. G. S., Noblemen and po gaia Án in Agriculture, desirous | able Grinding Mills, Steam Engines fixed and portable from
, Principal of the M denied and Chemical "College > of proweting t this object, will please fill up and forward a Form, | 2 horsepower and upwards; Threshing Machines, Chaff
— n, e qr S. Analysesof Soils, teal Superphos- as an me xed. Cutter, Oilcake Breakers, Horse Gears, aa Tables, all of
phates of e, Coprolites, Èc., and Assays of Gold, s ver, — influe n his d a superior Aa — 5 tor — a Colonial and
other rne ape uted with accuracy an espate! Tipte 2 Sept 'oreigm t E 3 sent free on application,
Gentlemen desirous “ot receiving instruction in Chemical —I hereby eie you to place my name on the list of | IMMEDIATE ORDERS WILLPRE ISAPPOINTMENT.
m pr mp — will find ample facility and accommoda- gp Mie eim of the Royal Agricultural Benevolent CONNU, “ Q M. » UNIVERS SEED PLANTERS
tion at the C — — no pecuniary respons: — (bey: ond a subse — Jbbles) vastly improved since the Prize of the
N DON MANU RE COM P A N Y |donation) attaches to such Associs Name. ral S 7
(ESTABLISHED 1840), ? dress. f
Have the following MANURES ready for delivery : Date
o: E rog AUTUMN SOWING. To J. J. Mecut, Esq, Tiptree Hall, near Kelved 4 P al i 31, m 5
Ir OF ENG 9 see Gardeners’ Chronicie, July 30 and August 6th. “Simple,
BLO ANURE rog AUTUMN SOWING. Y 5 .
VAATE Y EST. OF ENGLAND AND SOUTH WALES ALES | romising, and ingenious.” The STEEL DRAW SHAVE
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LAND DRAINAGE AND INCLOSURE COMPANY. | HOE clears a row between Turnips at one sweep. Engraving
"^ London Manure, Comps MI NERAD ply PERUVIAN Dion WE wy ge hed in zy 1844. nt.—C. 2 urstgreen, Sussex. All Patented.
anure Company also supply OF PARLIAMENT IN 184 . PATENT «TRA? LOUGH
GUANO (direct from Messrs. lbs & Sons) SULPHATE or Draining, "Tndosing, Irrigating, Warping, Road oet and H'OWLER'S PATENT STEAM PLOUGH
AMMONTA; NITRATE or SODA, CRUSHED BONES, and all kind of Land Improvements, executed on Eptailed, has M the 8 —
ry other Manure of * value, = x hich they warraut | M or other Properties, and the whole cost can de made The Royal jose ural Warwick, July
strictly genuine, Wholesale dealers supplied. a Permanent Charge on the Lands, b or rodoemable ina oertain 1859, 501,
116, Fenchurch Street, E.C. Wow. „ PURSER, number oi Bipw DIE, Secre The Royal M oem rs d s Prize, at Chester, July1858, 5007,
URNARD, LACK, axp CO,’ C Offices : E $ anani "un Lon ndm, B. W. The Bociety's Special Prize at Stirling, Oct. 1857, 2001.
B JO SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME; 2 E DS IMPROVEMENT Y. IT n coy — wetings in tbe United Kingdom,
Phosphate pre ———— fn Incorpora rated y Special Act of Parliament in 1853.— Fo aed — ars, prices, and n apply to
CONCENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to G eee fard; Westminster, SW. gn Landowners: - Jom Powis, Sus. ., 28, Cornhill, London, E.C
5 . says :— The: must and, in Scotland. g S HAWS TIFFANY is wai ersally — to
The Directo: 1 to that the C Ove the best, neatest, and c st material for shadix
^ very grati tying to hy gr are the best proof « of tho very Amendment Nu os A, has to hy pee orga Sen the Logis- — Conservatories, "and — od RE Ef ec tually securing
high agricult: — LÀ ——— value which characterises | | (o — The Cor mpany now advance m noney. unlimited in | Plants from the scorching rays of the sun, without obscuring
P Detailed analyses, with " gro ons of the late and present — for the following — of Agricultu rely med the light. Also, Ax protesting the on x Wall Treos from
Chemists to the Ro yal Agriculta tural Society; with — — the i6 whole X pue and e son nses in all cases being liquidated by springs yer o — E voted co — er cos
m ee eee 1. Dal and Warping, Embanking, Inclosing, No. 3.— Doub strength, 18 yards long, by 39 inches wide,
ation, Planting fi 1 pure | 78. 9% — 4
pose, nes or mation, hine — r Drainage 2 — red am ea No. 4.—Treble stréngth, 18 yards long, by 39 inches wide,
ier
begs to announce — he 1 Mas t ‘this 2, Farm Tramways 0 95. per piece.
a reduced th. Ses ifa of the Manure: by farming m D d agricultural °F | A liberal allowance to the Trade when ten or more Pieces
3. Jetties 2 Lending places on the sea coast or on the banks | taken.—Jons Shaw & Co.. Princess Street, Manchester.
TURNIP M NURE . from £7 to£6 6 of na exe are 5 LLEGE or AG 7 " 5 ISTRY,
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF Liu: „ T5 oe (COLLE as MACTICAL and 5 sa
MINERAL yý v ; s other Bulldiogs r — for oe purposes, and the im- 38, Lower Kenn — n Lane, ington, Lo Lond
mei LEY MA m of and —— to Farm houses and other Princi C. Ne 8. F. C. S
dings for farm p ee C. S., de
The system of pmi N air sued ui College comp
h requisiteto prepare y: ere fort SA purerits of p erret 2
Landowners * under E d provisions of — Aa E ten
erg ainme, Manuf: re and the Arts; for the
Parliament, Royal Charter, or Commission, in res
1, Adelaide Place, London Bridge, E.C., or of his local Agents. orks of drainage or other — d
N.B. Genuine Peruvian Guano direct from Messrs. —_ bo: roportionate share of the cost, and charge Naval itary pee and for the Universities.
trate of Soda, i phate of Ammonia, —— — Chemi h the Am — Analyses and Assays of every description are promptly and
Ameri ake supplied d the Com y being | accurately T: at the College. The terms and adist par-
FOOT OT NTMENT, original | 9f. ticulars may be had NET ication to the Pri WA al,
n, by JOHN OLDHAM, of Mansfield, a — —— né des 4 EM : 7 VET A P — —
der th A sty IA us 2 Bed, under ner
ou] Cow 6 es une = ier St in imp n Corporate, Roy al § ign Manual, to Piao thes ew Veterinary 9 under
in lessees, and other landowners are empowered to charge of the Charter of the Royal C allege of of Ve >
2 — a dis! — anes venien: I D "x in na dec dare that 185 Ne
caring — tor D come Students o
o W Bow — — v gp eg ys * peii it. ean | pan or vanced » yass
be procured thro: y respectable Chemist or Patent | owners in fee may effec i h *
‘Mea — al College of Veterinary 8 8 Surg
" 8 owr 8. and e
mprov their kstate ^
wit! om —— tho . and personal responsibilities ri
x * n nu il to such Me cai e said Charto
I Us AKERS, possessing the best features of | incident to mort gngees and without regard to the amount of Al Rer. ahá eges gis Jast Gener A PERS x 97 ighl: vA
Nicholson's Prize pum, with recent 1 existing incumbra es. ML nts "IE ral San is — eduenter din
peculiar hone : ed and manu mfactured o only for ED urther her ination, e and tor 2 of application, apply | any Veter y Co lie ege in “Scotian d, authorised by e
dM — HANDLER, Salford, —. a t ble E 1 ae e shall be eligi gible foi i EREET ee
r ptem spite 1 3 OVE j * The WIN for 1859-60 commences on Ni
LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPRO NT COMPANY per 2. on which day Professor Joux Gaworr will delivor
x H 1 sre empowered by het ef Parliament to be Wb at 2. 5 t Foot; 56.
NS PATENT HAYMAKER, Land in carrying into effect the following Imp ring enprovernety a ic — — * et —
ep d Agricultural — w outlay e property we ;
Tall Works of Drainage, Irrigation, Warping, and Embank- wi LIVERPOOL AGRICUL «
— URAL SOCIETY.
NX — ts ds of Fat D acme: for icr The xc L N of HORNED CA Ho
A The 7 nibbling and Clear f Old Wi
I rubbing ani carin o oodlands, Enclosing,
Mem g oe Reclaiming La *
down
Mon pre-
te aber of ves
ed te
ATA
J
5 5 HORSE RAKE has lately been
btained 26 Prizes at competitive
1 ers by ions 8 of these Improvements m. ES
- a
| . —— are—Tenants for Lifo, Trustees Mortgagece ia AY, the Tth inst., there will be a PUBLIC
Possession, Guardians, Committees of Incompetent TRIAL of COMBINED —€—GÓÀ and MOWING M ACHINES,
Married Women 1 Beneficial Lessees for Lives or for a — € 2 hs TORS, ig r Liverpool;
— „ m h the a A. u.
u T. Aia Ryprr, Secretary.
NS
— Ber
gallons, 25s. ; 80 gallon. The Ss icd cot dieto who may be desirous to Elliot Street,
2, ar und fered with th tap, Keeping « y be dasiro .. . a aE
and clean ; will n — exponse or in ot Gis Howse ef — TAFFORDSHIRE AGRICUL 9 SOCIETY.
CALVANISED IRON PUMPS nm i The POULTRY EXHIBITION in connection with this
£7, grid Manure or Domestic Use, 3 inches diameter, 203, and 6 y be chargo 3 Society will take place on WEDNESDAY, September 14.
GALVANIS 9 for same st from 10d. per foot. for Building 31 f Prize Lists and Certificates of Entry may be obtained on
for ED IRON SWING WATER BARROWS ments bein 50 years epplication to Wm. TOMKINSON, Secretary.
1 Garden or Farm P — about . entirely required, a the charge not | Neweastle-under-Lyme, Sept. 3.
formed of iron, 8 — er ius — are incurred.
— Patronised b; T Majesty, me er the Co
re
ieaie [ela keane ty we The Agricultural Gazette.
- rtake th nti respon
z y
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1859.
MEETINGS 5 FOLLOWING WERK.
5 5 dp Sey
Fe
paten
—.— of "ht and Con, keeping,
it da applied, a ; fixed TS re. It is adapted for
Society at Liverpool,
——————
—— urposes, for preserving —
un, from
ts. T
tet
Ta: * the gh
E aya of im estate when | A SERIES of rin ito
canoe vE ls. mors
1 tural la Ie
make the Royal
6d. yard run from a
cm EUR i nary nate,
the H It is much cheaper — decke 2 o there
GUTTA 3 TUBING FOR WATERING
GARD
CHA COMPANY lev .
knowledge the x^ ofthe following
ha
rks—either submitted i be
publie . Wo Shat own tif- are V 2 d the answers must be return
on to completion, and the amount of - —— expenditure , Dr. STEELE, Secreta
Mion un ca Commie Eee OW" | Ce s re with the Society
finally Nes ot on the. Estate for the term fixed a by the Though eons” 1 an
The pressure of | Landowner. to
ot d the slightest - n us emi dents Drainage and all other Works of | com ty, we are qm
ubing to be a most| Land Im 108 Commission for the Owners of Estates expect it will be thus obtained.
muc! — as St enables us to | not Entalled fee rea 7 wish to charge € outlay on the pro- | “: : i d
erus idein. Compan i id V eee ee eee obtained by
pany's | forma
E Gutta Percha Company, Patentees, 1 to be addressed to Wittiam Currrorn, the e of circular i inquiries, we kn ow that unle ss
ad, nel RG, and sold by their Secretary, att the Offices of the Company, rag Parliament mesna oX qe
reet, Lond the que p p
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
730
ste of some of =- eap themselves or f allow ground for hoping that fatur
possible answer—unless they be S ien qu direct, T xu rir the cake by means of a little luke- the oma s to become much lenges
needing no calculation or researc yw warm water, vihen in a short "ime varying from a e Turnip — in totally
be answered. But here are nearly 200 e,
re
f them most difficult and "pore urs, the peculiar | M iet pus. 1
and many o S i
Mon the same dri
leulati Rape is a misnomer, which b, if expressed of a mechanical frien :
o needing lengthened e a e rith a guilty dint T is simply à lie purposely | The old id wield ; a"
i à i rau aw i
. bath asi threes ABO pham t W e have shown that — ewes is far too distillery, and a 10 foot 1
€ Deuba tak ‘hi — to treat them iiih much grown w with English crop w finds its way pieces of timber, w
and it would Md im a wee into the market and is an — of commerce ji The shafts are 10 feet by 3
any kind of jus 240 with the disho tseedsman, who finds th 3
good for mia o less than with the equally | pair o of t ansom
iv — S v diffioulty of the ace ulpable and men -erusher, and though 4 — p the = with idi
if the s d dioe the attention of their eorres- | the cake resultin ey met P predict be ka tt 5 square, wi ts (ni
pondents to one section at a tim of the large field in a separate = dy a bolsters oe same thick
a id t 5
i £ th ler and fewer; but if simply put aside in this sepa m m
. Ip th wu in the N | ^: occasionally 400 its quota to the engem of the bende qid SiGe
d CL.
lisposed to help th
Co ha. they ae adopted, he > can o by | T! Thames is hardly ' tenable, or why go to the trouble slips of ti
I 101 f tł y a i
ui Mi: But no, it can be turned to a profit. eri mers, middle to each end; ene
good xpi men, don't examine these matters | coc
Gre BRI Co.—This action, | critically. A cow or two may praa am die, bu en the riders, as co
‘hich s was ia ints tried t pe ls Assizes, i is so full then , as the traditional doctor is made say if|on the top of vd d instead of
0
of interest that we are induced to lay emn our they die, Nature kills them. That deaths often | them, the heig he barrel i M
readers an abstract of the proceedings with a view | take place from improper food we have little | such concentrated weight, and incony
to a few comments upon the whole matter. doubt, and we can easily see how an isolated case — eg of dis chien fill it. By
t would appear from the evidence that the may oceur, if we suppose that some of the cakes | P? :
Messrs. Bnracs & Co. have sold to Mr. GRENVILLE are got off by putting a we! inequalities.
a quantity of Rape-eake as rooD for cattle, the of them with even an otherwise genuine lot ‘The w
, result of using won is that four cow; s partaking Rape-ca fay
of it all die or are obliged s be killed in the short} That the mies under the name of Indian Ra = leis,
space of 2 ours, veterinary surgeon is one in great constant demand by the seed- | dried up; t * of re-sowing (with som
who examines the beasts N that they | crusher the e vem nce on this trial has fully esta- must be recommenced whenever we shall
have all died of inflammation, and the chemist | blished; that th with rain. Ordinary watering, th |
H
(Dr. VOELCKER) who analyses the eake finds it to| not however with the avowal that it is anything frequently in my garden, has prov
eonsist almost entirely of Mustard, and in eed | but really good Pee there can be no doubt. W. also. I — — obtained Srat eren adde
Potato d
is so pungent as to have blistered his assistant’s | believe this Indian Rape seed to be trash, very nips. In espect the
arm by the application of it in the shape of a different in its species and in its effects able; I have. used it for watering
ultice. The Professor's evidence is by|from genuine Rape seed, and therefore the ards 2m
i EREPATH, who states that having examined | conclusion is obvious that in purchasing the im- drills in. each
the cake under the microscope he found it to be|mense quantities of this, which farmers are — em eR piece was w.
composed almost, if t 3 of Mustad, MES to im. —.— have an inferior or fictitious e the we
Seientitic eviden ihis kind furthe hem for a a genuine one , wit ith a afte wu
sStrencthened by the ise da of an eminent the w
* > owed
cal farmer who informs the ii. that four viz., an increase - poit to the vendor. It there- falling from the
: pu e. ipn 2 x ot Mastar — = ehov es the e consum r to loo bk we ll about him evaporation, ad ina
he — party who supplied it paid a . m pure arohases of Ra 5 for or although there Desirous of examining the state
sation for his loss. y be a "weg y an action at law, yet we | general aspect of the interior of the
uL me defence 4 is stated by a x m ce tha at best a tedious and unsafe, | on the west, I drove aer oss the rai
Rape whieh ee lp Mine. minile BU UP" leosna teeta satisfaction. € — N [x it i
$ x 8 reasons on
Mustaid, and he considered it good as a N | above the den leve i
On cross-examination he admits that Mustard- WEXFORD AND WATERFORD. ing
cake is made upon the same premises, but kept Bue M the end of April to the end of Ap 1859,| Adamstown, I was sui ;
stairs separate, He has never had any com- n has fallen, excepting some of a few hours | Potatoes were looking so well;
plaint, although he has sold many hundred tons of e on the 20th 3 -— a light Forse — the | some rain; ww Late
Indian rt This evidence is fully con |24 of July, in the south-east portion of the county of | land lley presented
y other seed-crushers, all of wham ude cnet tet year = rs = — bs t e — in 3 Le.
mi e " | oceu in the distrie which I am referring, and it
itt d that a large amount of Indian Rape-cake mu added ihe Wand : indy the STE nc ea all . and
From testimony of a like kind from Prof. Wax
and mem w 8 attempted to rims that the boen the interior of th
i ous : :
RES
F
—
oO
1
e
f
ZÆ
?B8
cB
"d
g
4.
Em
et
S
©
3
Dx]
of | con
^, from which we suppose the defendant fertilisin —— — dropped at seasonable not inf ro ovis to the care
would have it inferred that if Indian Rape did not but this x e best Barley — within a — € of the — ts of Do Carew
act the same as other Rape the fault was none | tended pue not been so favoured by Providence. | keep wok a a corresponding
of — in dc. His PN 2 Swedes, nor Carrots have even tion of some of these 1 it
e ruling o e Court was that if the jury germinated on our farms. Potatoes could not t be gene- c ers have bene
thought that the animals died of the end the 3 Planted until May, from the bad fu the den ya
tiff had reasonable grounds for a verdict as p iling | Scotch farmers have a
ndant had not fulfill is con’ but if
ry W. f opinio
i dt y the best exámpl
. prevented their poa egeo. eia sown Barley has | of the country is extrem
4 y fai vem and generally the straw will be sh of woodland, Ey err
he cast may prove reasonably | homesteads, and especias
per erro a bably of grain be on favourable soils, bly |about Lord Carew's beautiful
ouse, and the newly er
Fhe Tent or Winter Oats have succeeded mar. | turally tasteful ul house of F.
p glance at the 5 b fitted: ete o soils, h the spring sorts | slope
as to the 2 of = in * mte and d | seldom better te . The hay erog ? The Lee. ties of throne
upon it we would remark ane sabes ere a be but is dried up. Cattle pra — renes aa 32 We in 12 married 2
little doubt of the fact that honest Rape-cake n seem to be ruminatin iur en
å a really wholesome feeding e and to —— of what is ey es NT —— — able distance, on wh
» not contain the stimulating qualities of M green crops. very "AA in many | the lime on the farm
the so-called Indian Rape; the question, there- | b 2669 and lambs are uid to have died from want of | obviates the difficulty
fore, is—what is this Indian Rape? We have res and I know that some have frequently rushed | rain
—— n before in this Journal as having th M m r ener to satisfy their thirst. Violent | expand i
article— none here. May not this fact be assigned we the — By far the gren
^ ing. in t r
th, 1. e., 3 seed. We have pro- N e € jeunesse of our | numerous kilns of
^ :
eard of season stance d
— — ea, or and within two m
ending
of plant such seed aene develope, b tube ugh che amo
pe, but Nor onE| tuber. Although the amount of uce wil 1
= ae B GERMINATE. Indian | greatly below that of last year, ub qui of — —— o Newt oe
d cnn en is pr er 2 or = am edsman. It seems | tubers will be excellent, Potato sets planted early and «s 15 tons tern constant an Nen ROS
* an article 0 extensive 5 ommerce with the on dry friable soil properly treated in all r will | stone from quarries Pimestone 0
ms = its cake is ved. both be however of more than average yield ; but neither — | The average quantity od
microscopic ver as i. as is by it its soli soil mor the spring season favoured my locality (with by them at the POT
m facilities. Th canal from’ the m
tivated here attains an early | is about 30,000 tons.
ted b maturity, and t PA is about 30,000, tene
to be that of a té pir exceptions) 2 the n
can readily be . md le
SEPTEMBER 3, Mi
THE GARDENERS'
Qv
— AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
781
brought into the north-west pa
l'exford from Ballyellin ec a menfis contiguous parts of
county o f Carlow by heavy land carriage.
rough
e Ac ar railway access to t
enisi — quarries of Eallyellin, ht ed a
— large and poor — on the western side e —
EW exford,
east $^ te of Ballyanne.
of the mountain range separating — tw
the Barro
of ra yx we rents $ be
shall be extended towards
15 to 20
uthern Setio ity
o counties,
the line
this
rom
At the so’
roperties will
Passing peren € — hilly tracts and vory is
about Adamst
of the county of, bein
e of
derivable om tlie extension |
Borris in
in the AE. E. T
o grow ngel Wurzel upon a stiff
ever to think from. what he does stain, Tanak bis -
“Ma
aghing "4 ciay we sometimes meet
—that i o be done in a very short
ing only, and in that case, whatever may A Weston Gi Colville, 1 Square, W. x eee e * onningten, Lon nd aad 2 3 2 of Si ver Fia
„0. -. — F. G. S., F. C. S. ros amount g awarded.
W Wess, Ed. d baren Com The system of studies pursued in the College comprises every Prize Lists and Certificates of Entry are now ready, and mar
branch requisite youth for the itsof Agriculture, | be obtained at the Offices, or by — 3
de E. C. Engineering, Mining, Manufactures, and the Arts; for the „„
— BELL l ‘ca Seton Saare, Naval and Military ices, and for the Universities. Offices: Unity Buildings, Upper 1
Joy CLAYDEN, E Littlebu A E uw Analyses — coeli es descri are promptly and MITHFIELD CLUB CATTLE SHOW T
Rrcuanp Hust, Esq. o Stanstead Abbot, Herts. accurately executed at t a e mee ey — The ANNUAL SHOW of FAT CATTLE, SHEEP, and
Romen? Leens, beg Edmonton, Middlesex, N. ticulars may be had on app vrlication to the Pring PIGS will take place on the Oth, Tb, 8th, and 9th December,
Lr est Lexham, Norfolk COMPANY. — | at the Bazaar, King Street,
—— ESL, nb Camden Villas, € Camden Town, N. W. — LAN DS ER eee in 185$.— "eh Prize List con ": * nme! for Devons, Here-
Groot SAVILL, Esq., I r Stamford. 2 Wbsttalnster, Z. W. To Landowners, the | fords, Short-horns, Sussex, Norfolk or Suffolk polled, Long.
WELLIAM COLLINS, Te. fos St Jobn 3 E. C. * 2, d Surveyors, 40. in Bogland and Wales 2 Scotch horned, — polle Irish, Welch, and *
Bonkere—Messrs. ARE & Co,, Lombard Street, E.C. | COTE Seeland mixed breeds. : 6
pi oce leave to announce that the Company's wools, and Pigs. In addition to the large am
Messrs. KrxasrorD & DORMAN, 23, Essex M ae T De amendment IL iro Raa mene the snnetion ofthe Lei money prizes, there are also 50 Silver and gee *
— — Joxas, Esq., Cam 2 — e followin — —— in | uo Eee fu app T for them noel oiy quote the
Mr. James Opams. | Secretary—Mr. C. T. MACADAM. — torte the ^ s hes works — com dra ier ud 1 TE ying P a ail Caney vom
Offices: 109, Fenchurch Street, London, E.C. ; Manufactory, ll cases —
Plaistow ph - 25 ears. CATTLE.
ODAMS'S B. BLOOD MANURE ror WHEAT, 1. MI EL CAM Warping, mbanking, Inclosing, | Form A. Ox or 8 Form D. Pen of 3 "Wethers.
Price 7] 10s. per Ton, delivered Trés to to any WHARF or — Reclam — ie tee any CIA pur- „ = “ated or Heifer. Extn |, k One Wether or Ewé
Fo Fe POULTRY. AND GAME FEEDERS. — ATLWAY in London. i vac fedis Tiaw ays and Railroads Railroads for ps, cee ot. x Stock. in Extra Stock.
TO PIG, POULTRY, AND GAME FEEDERS farming purposes. : 3
PS RICE FOOD, eeepc right — 3. Jetties or 8 MM = t the bank F. Pen of 3 Pigs. Fomo. ee xtra
RICE SWEEPIN . 6d. ewt. of able rivers or lakes. i on No
SCREENED ranon E3 te 55 ege 13 — — 5 ‘bod 4. The pee of Farm Houses, Labourers’ Cottages, and vit Eales alati oua at Certifi-
othe Buildings required for Farm the im-
—— int ot am d additions to D Wurm hoses and other
for p
m
o puce e pum
ly fi cl ere
and Sxecution of the Works, which are controlled only by the
PRO' É
FRIGI — hn a Canvas made of t Hair) U he pany’s Acts,
and Wool, pem -conduetor of Heat and Cold, keeping, gees in possession, incumbents of livings, bodies P
ien ande sd, Bod temperature I adapta fr | Sorian aes c ee cout God Capasso the anova s
an
TTT EX
the 4
e ng rays of the sun, from | provements, whetherthe money be Com-
wind, from attacks of insects, and from morning frosts. To | pany or advanced by the Landowner out of his own funds, and upon breeding
be had in any required lengths. z^ rds wide, 1s. 62. per | owners in fee may effect these — bilities * ction: first, the
run; four, 3s. per » p 30, e improved make for withont incurring the bil gefta personal responsibi appear necessary hat peculiar
yards wis, 8d 3 . ae formation of the seed ; n
ELrsma Tomas Pis. whole and sole manufacturer, 7, | existing incum limate which predisposes the see
information, and for forms of application, apply ros of elima!
FARM — t TII oe oe T ^r vai M 85 Sf onourable WILLIAM L en Managing Director, e development of the Ergot. In the
than mats as 9, Old Palace Yard, Westminster, S
: = BNP o eere TAZETTE, Lm ha
lieved to aids
778 THE GARDENER:
western climate of this Rumes the existenoe of
this disease in the Grasses of our pastares is by no
i year. A
agriculture. It must draw 1 $
d de ee Bare e. es, and TY pon f
piis t constitute the jet of ri.
o
[zd
B
on
B mo
cto
&
4
=
— 5
>
it is | to raise among shareholder j
: new to the "purchase cultivation (f ee term cn agn e eri Pent re, are in such a M
in the moist climate of t est i des ;
ea : : :
the cai cause e of trouble and lo Oss by causi 13 placed, can. be found lying 8 be "fi | thought — ii su of applieation so
d which has Eo Pom is inia. 90 any pa rt of Eng 32 upon all subjects in 1 life ife;
season, and even when it i is its appear- )roJeet1s 8 " Ain elle sions of science which et ws
ance d so casual as to be of little importance. The | and ou of condition, oe hanp € y
hereon $ he als t
Uu
R
©
©
[ar
-
un
g
z
2
I
E
m
<
42
8
c
©
ge
=
ar
B
T
8 8
[n]
EE
A
2
England, who ha
B i en
; into first- ding
which has subsequently become diseased. It is bring such land into first rate order, even including present. In France and German j
t 1 T ; i the erection of buildings, may be gu ey | have manufacturing owns E Whore i
clear that tion is the object to be aimed à
ati this will be E att i et y keeping aid b nual returns during a sho erm of di istricts, and wl
breeding stock from land thus bearing a diseased | cultivation, leaving the need value of the d tl
rodu This may be accomplish n t perty itself (often amounting to 100 per cent shortened, the adrantags of protection a
st price) as-pure profit.” This we are manifest, while those
produce. y i
majority of farms by removing the reeding cows on the cost pri t s
eir sum! i d is not our valuation of risks and America’ who were ruin
: : si;
and heifers from th mer pa ge, say f 1
July and keeping them afterwards upon land returns, but of the projector. It is ‘ron e à im
wh Net “been ‘ak: yeaa Th evertheless well urg that w agrieul- strongly imprese with the imp mra
argely lucrative branch quite rece
M
i
accumulations money & com- sto
monly made by the nt or the using or landed one, but it mus
to every care. As soon as there is seed formed — is this: that a sufficient br eadth is not | brace rinciple
upon the seed stems of the Grass, the . usually held, or suficently mas ped by one the category of things
breeder d his t adequately the domestic and ir“ i
elayed | ture of |*
ed, | national * the reason, pro a iy, Why? die in part t
idl
es ee in to pi- t his ims of the position in which such holdi g|for some ulterior
e u afte There are very The owner of 1500 aeres (let at our schools, n
Mey v districts mem pa m e from being dry x any of the cultivated districts of | principles j^ nal e
er man v H
does not render this D. necessary, but at, J
the same time there are 8 tracts of land i t almost never does, = he
; lim
pese: ist 5 and many important ints in
Grass seeds, and favours the a of ergotised 9 . deriving from it a clear "decem — —— m Rs
Grass, and si uch | land i is note for the diffic — 3} pe um upon the value) he is by ed means | quito extended, are > in the minds of those à;
order. of the fœtus
appears
— tt of v e for it Ses font
two upwards the time when: the
roportion the
uty. MN as the individual try draws | before observed, our gs tal ignorance
the Funds or similar sources. | number of points i — most marked. ;
nant farmer who often bewails | While such a s of € exists it is
pri v i asy nstitute the
and in one sensè truly, struction in agri icoltural institutions
doubtless dependant.upon their health and vigour ; | that farming not pay. If he be an occupier | d
i ket 60007., out | of agriculture i is yet sufficiently deri
and thus stock which are well Ley of, say 200 acres th t
- ¥ pa bie $i ^ e „ nearly aed I 3 in the-market t. p: a subject worthy iei rganisation of
AE M6 HS DEO S wd UNS | cent. Det | for its prom If we look
ose wl $n Bs : for annum, half f for his landlord and half for us this sub z gatio rer 1 vill be ata Jo
although by 2 — ng we im ve the T — would be 200 guineas a year — dte Z
general bags racter of an animal, yet at the same i ne tic vx pee 2 m
time this a tered character 3 generally accom- expenditure in goods and money to rea 4 300/., — 2 run
panied by diminish ipne., NOTE uaaa figure ern his seit in life, to construc zs or lectures for ¢
ns how the be ws an i a losing one directly. | turn to th icultural investigation
heifers will often throw Rs calves, whilst Hence the e pre — vantage » thereto ald h 2 for their object the lvi peni
een haec wou
-
some common stock about which the breed non firm — inciples which must ultimately cons
is indifferent n Md. escape, although their ; society Jy a qo of — the no pa o |of ta ition i in our sch we 4
treatment and food may be s : ar,and each ma — ly the returns usually divided Senece: distinc slowly sone iri
have etim of this ir aegon d Grass. Knowi ties, the landlord and the tenant; and such ciated; and consequently they aro not
2 Pes w n see not hi diseased 2 — returns w wo iti eseape being taxed before e they ap- | Plied v N as tnt eee don eri
rass seed, it becomes hi rtant that ar rofit : amount of talen e cause :
3 avoid à cause so molte of trouble and loss | fh —.— — — — ae £ In our last w 2 uded to the practical
many of our best b : Ed agricultural min is r
rni c ian adi The preventive | in the case we Suppose, i to the sala y e first- | rise to several attempts in
p readily availab 3 uir we bailiffs, while even such ise insti
irust that attention having been drawn ws MON ould | he spread over an world to the’ une b :
e * much overlooked o cause of abortion, it y ing the average amount. Other combining "sock panee
the elp on readers to avoid a rrence of — — are urged in favour of the as constitute an ordinary
ed. : ng sa nies smeintmeris iia we regret — ae style of business in culture, Lx Tn such — the m
as the pro owed as At on d more as a source o mor
1 75 large dealings in the manure and other markets, mind than as a means of the evelopment
iret ax part of our bus to urge the forma- and the ne —— of all sorts, whether and more as source of facts than of p
et tay oer pin s, whether on on “limited liability ” | bettered or not, must increase in price every few Ls zh = agr ä
T principl oseeution of agricul- | Years in this donsel pulated and rong the same stages oer
tuni s rement, t. Nhe nitat emess of ht iE t| scribed i slan 2 . — f —_ 8 8
ne 1 ividual owners abli | means o manu acturin
j publication here as the labours that it h
consideration, whatever their intended | that we pected from
nd skill in exchati o a rent- charos P. 0
PA e for ng operation
* t upon He i ee » 15 98 e be p er great n ge of th t vi at ee 1 aws. — 2 upon a
more than individua ü É „of the want o iged to. waste his e
EY EI. dps iei which rgo e Mei
— t — guine enough, "nd with ener 5 sufti- | to their —— ih ess, no doubt grent advantage only in prre
cient to seek to gather all the 3 : " : A
e Ei i RR adl ;
meme diio process of im rovement into. the THEORY OF AGRICUL lof the eR —
Me dem so at once enjoy the benefit of — — — as a means of n
Pire, cultivating, and lending money upon lan . Puan, | determining the amount of
selves, uc ote 698). | whil i echanics
The d Larrea Von AGnicUL while the science of mecha bay
d — —— on Pee ich — expectations Sonn P TURAL EDUCATION. — enabling men like sachin
a sed are of g the preceding lett for the protection of cities
although their scheme be aimed, as amrini = = publish in — — as we ex pect before very long | fellows. But as time has left
merely at the attainment of perso in '|upon it in connection with SU died be ees ini] i UE r p see
en are xx of a Mee e present history, we
a Limited Liability QS — A —— eas E an ——— —— rope and America, | have been realised,
tof land!” Whatever the dificulties in era ve J more than a general, Ver ero
y of such a sc eme — 1 mcn ties in | dan ural. science. when fully developed bottom of that w
5 egal or other- | brace within itself all that tho ‘several other seien, E rs
general interest to can bring to explain the f © several other sciences | culable sburces of wealt
e faets or develope the resou rces| The chimergs of the alchemist are
— —
$474 4 99.4
Sxrremner 24, 1859.]
——X 719
the Egyptia aay rem for Bu food for 190 days, from ¢ i ————
principles he — sme middle Sasa of May tothe E qu =f UE —
Syracuse is focos — for having f first etrated — teli r and water taken into
the subtle — involved in the s Wich — ds —— er "4 1 555 Eum ine voided, and this ead
his name, than for having taught others that his EN E y pulmonary and cutaneous
goldsmith was a rogue. of Cl — —— — ien the tables which he has given us, we
And while we admire the beauty of t 1 be. daily for 120 days odd on ie — hr animal the eloments which
tain:
iS i ie oe — ... ͤ ne [sre ai eicit oa d capes D
, and the tim hich a planet Lbs. ine of the animal, "The most
— —
eee eee e eR eee EXAM
straw, 5 "m — $3,600 water to Fes will give 216 Ibs. of —— o-
Wheat straw, half of 30 acres P. , 29 the sheep gi
— — A OOA fy has not an n that Mangel, Turnips, and
Dis da © us how s E the sick, —— —— — — This wil give mee daily — o abot bf this wela Cle — — — — their
of moist —
hoped it would at 1. — t t imm i
— of its — bas don or in is, in * Wheat am, half of 30 acres . ^ 82. From these estimate the of
affording a means of com snication bo Do. half of 30 acres . 67,200 manu from the consumption of at
— and - of m men, w by DEO aoe ———— and from the Mangel,
must * This quantity of straw cut Into we may estimate
and thus bring our e more mnt good-will | iter to ME — wil ie $1 f| o mama 80 of the food consumed, The
os — eren corset r mate of 14 Act the various * | may o — — — = to A
conceptions relations, ol im breeding stock sheep, it tias aen spooz being
inch lengths it — the urine ;
the study of d 1 tinea cow re ' more —41 and
principles thas developed chemical science, and that a | (weighing 100 en fit); a lan. iban. when the straw is usd in. lia full
nowledge of these principles is conferring a thousand. | Will require as L ch as two sheep, a year-old as much On these fi
fold greater blessings upon | the human race e than could u four sheep, es o-year-old as much as six sheep, a | 4; ese facts we have mado the caleula-
j, | three-year-old uch as six sheep, aud a horse as — = — the — manure which this
stone that ever entered into the conc ceptio ns T the — 5 produce uce by the
alchemist’s brain; and in the absence of that "m 122 ire this rino je we may haveasourstock:— —. n: a root and fodder crops by stock kept
devi science which the labours of —: p, say 70 re |
investigation stations must ultimately E forth, . —— All the dry food consumed by the Stock.
different agricult schools — si the world 20 -= ola Short- hora equal e „ so „ 500 bushels of Beans 1 be on
must adopt different substitutes, embracing more or |. Aena ae canal 6 „ 10 „ $0 acres "t Oat straw,
less of scientific instruction, — as tlie teachers — m He IP 3 = » D
place a nr : wile ower estima nwhat science has ue z ee icr oe, 30 mores of ‘Wheat straw, pe
ne ult S These will require h i pe
^ ei o — the name of a philosopher — — therefore have NN T " 2 tons ten 20 :
win A we the 19 mind has made so much $4 lentia us 200 ; —— 149 tons, which will give
that kron yet appreciate the full value of 94 wothers sold fat Zale ghee AWE SP ries e
principles in contradistinction to the i li 208 acres, ;
tion of them. Although no more as = calcu! —— um — — . m —
are ores by the e pr mind, it is not to be sup- fme 4. 5... 4 726 sheep 3: um. 30 acres, at
i à is idi uit d y 1. à
E at — : — pa ied ay not be Dow of Tea of Lbs, of — 105 tons, which will give
ey. Roots daily. Straw daily. Litter daily, | un 400 per cent, of manure — 4
It is not to be ex e future student when A W-. — 140 "
in the possession — esr of agricul- i e JE — 3 1 breve’ ie d food give stock. *
— b 4 de i an green ven ad the
that it f. ,, , — sas. B) M H „
of those we have remm n consider ering. A three-year-old. 120 9 8 Clover, 90. „ 16 „ 480
The fact that agricultural education is demanded, F i $ PINE ocn ̃ ͤ !!!......
natitution i to. 00 pond | The of Beans from the 10 acres at 50 bushels is | cent, will giv "
500 b : give da s. 1085
— 0 — 0 at 64 Ibs. per bushel gives us 32,000 Ibs. pp root,
— of agri- This Tons. Tons.
ral exist in our
the ng e an | Se
he i cu
inet and if a — spirit of n c de
the sympathy and | e o of — — the
peeuniary ro institutions, we s expect
taught i in our UR san 86110018.
Perhaps
the who has been in the habit of look-
ing upon agrieulture simply as the art by which he
— 1 the . and most i —
mself by farming land u a yearly ren! who
perchance is obliged to ane X ded
success or failure the Quixotic t of
crotchety landlord, may not see the full force of the
hich we have — ed to (da
agricultural education. And equally obtuse must be
any landlord, E there 155 =“ pre left, who looks upon
ee r
he
— would indicate that a
agricul. 160 days
their fettening, there is a saving of half the
— —
ee ae
20 fat beasts nearly 4
10 cows, with returns
Ro cm 57s. each . £267
188 fleeces at 6 Ibs. chch 1128 1be., at 128d. — E
£937
Add to this the value of Potatoes, 120 tons, at 31. .
Money value of the ſodder crop of 120 acres 21257 7
The probable return from the , and Oats
60 acres of Wheat, at 83 bush. = 2280 „ab.
* » — 2 — —— — m — M
vg
wing is an estimate of mo 2e of
be produced
The follo
animal and vegetable man ure which ma,
| tion of the root crops, and — straw as
ed. 30 acres of Swede leaves
at 7 tons per acre
$0 acres of Mangel leaves at
8 revo per acre . 940
0
cep
Second, 1 acre with 5 quarters of bone-dust, at Iis.
ye The crop 20 tons 7 ot.
s experiment the crop was in favour of the
+ 410
vod |
the
leaves, &e., of the crop, also e excrements,
d. | Sang and urine.
and fodder cro f
— litter for the stock, and the r * of all
the cro
By t
12 dune cartloads 2
lar
12 — YE. fine 88
anure charge dat But these 1998
RELATIONS OF FOOD aed MANURE.
from p. HE cee
ex following is a venti of of Me e estimates :
ur farm, as bega
ud wt = five stock produced
33 Lbs.
— tres T 2700
Carrots, ö aeres — 204,600
8,561,600 Ibs.
Thus we have 3,561,660 Ibs, of rcot daily for 21 days to
fod such sss
-— new
726 sheep,
the perspiration ee UE UE E Watir NONA,
| throug! lungs which yv
which have formed during the
consumption — in he animal system.
t has in way ascer-
tertained by experi iment this ion, and has shown
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE
that this association will at no distant da. yl
| the most valuable of its class i in the county.
h
he
There i is one
dite
See e
Waterfoi
e: I v» e
7 75 the very commencement of . my |
limited tour through aen of the cou of. Wexfor
ani nd Waterford, I ,hazarded some anticipations st im
*
Fm,
troduced it, cs that is,
ntal and moral — of
ety originated in a plain
d vive ea i iei ject was talked
d as the
of by two or three of the neighbourhood, an
15 became mooted abroad a desire see "ep to exist
that suc ich an experiment should b be tr ‘ied. Muc e
credit to the — Sem
Ade
iz]
e
tal
Te 1
:3
nner.
d
H1
i,
or advancing to ma aturity. At that
em e to poet when the 3 would
he 8 of the r rain
2 K
zE”
BS
M
Bd
BS
os
oc
p
gE
8 8 8.
Bog
23
2
T
3
15
z
mr on
falling on t of country to which m
8 Intel Barley —— of Skilmore and its kae
roduce is about — M nder
m
L4
— Peculiarly il
salts us had I obtai
and
the
. Whi ite
jy.
ta
Monthly meetings are held a t which — ——
scientitie and useful character 25 introduced and dis-
y the members, and e — — is afforded
je ft ociation
SEE
8 5
F
ata price,
cases €— — the farm
ort t that, t f labourers pulled it out p
De 50 ploughs ated entered,
diens € ex "ym edin nly goo
he
the Seria the eese :—
winter "especialy, “have been "abun held the sion on theminds of many choosefactors rs an
rizes were awarde
n 18 year heese has deteriorate
M mik and Couch Grass i in the Bean ek ergs Even | of | 1
"pri
+ raphe who
s shall Tea: r the
pi `
from a fock. of no ot less than 50 ewes
n to the number spat o the ram,
4) farm
assages | m
ed wor re bon there
that — care, ‘skill, and intel
the manufacture; with these, „ Ani p should be
very insignificant amoun
suffice for at least removing Docks. and Thistles before | of ewes in propocti
P lambs
Fotoet. e
and ew
instances. ly prov: dine to w
generally good in A respects, though a few | from
slight 1 3 are noticed. In the] late sort, called E bon
Scotch Do of tubers commenced
u
ot lam
all, the
Sus pt presided at the annual -—
in the course of his life hs “had
ociations, a and he
[za
ul
secondary tubers willa
— ‘maturity will 1 depend on the — P the
weather during the nsuing two or three — * The
— et price 0 Pota is unusually hij t this
llows: A
must say that the importance of cheese-m making is — to demand um
the diy) ata and continual support of gentle- siento investigation a has ber.
i ng that either the Ro
me in the 8 that if that support was Society y, or some other, will cause that Don
e.’ $
thd tlemen ed coldly on the society,
d
Season. if gen
t e conditions, of the Potato crop, rise this a did not pay M larly t their "subscriptions, or neglecte cte
yaluab
rir ures. |
good are they? some peop ple as k; “if we are to have
anything of the sort, ud sd ans it on a grand scale.”
If I object of the members of
— Turnip seed, of the later Sorts, ] has They must, as he had, have] heard a great
t deal of
this kind. What
grow, and fiel re gree h young plants, now |
being thinned oat E vith little le prre of becoming
serviceable u shall be f: eig Mc two or
SM: rA il eather.*
S
8
Ls
2
E
8
£:
[-]
"5
o
8
5
No
ya
5
ge
5 pa
82
8
e
is ety was prin cipe ily by m
ne — ae mitur to induce — servants to ta
e in Bel, s | th thei r work than je d hi
Ithink they
ever, "M. S. [The | a al
Embleton, aucti ioneer, „Br cot use, an
auc ctioneer, awic e sal
after 9 o’clock, and continued without
d the whole were disposed of, and so 5
mber of purchasers in qe dance, des not a =
last few years tried the relative value eie i in return. He . that mee tings were
* 1 PAD ETE selected sth held by this association during the winter evenings, at
ion
October p
Tang ‘of 9 — —
the result of which is as and according to
believed the proj of.
useful, sensible, and mode rate course
He sincerely hoped that the — *
—— rish, — g those ben to t ha
ady given rise, e va crum, indu time: oe ps nest d letel d.
and keeping up 2 es feeling which he was ground was irket for Lei dew
sure united everybody her s da part
Mr. Harrison, of . Court, was elected chair-
man for next year. Hes spoke in the course of the evening,
i
ho a be | subject, out of which the most stupid man mi ight pick Ti A by one o rd Polw:
rate of. was brought about in this | Fairbairn got through his large lot, the bidders
best of his jadgm petu due Hd hort, tow the
+
the
Prost of management. !
Value egg
Quarter.
very s
Grace's White..
Tibbald's Wonder Red
Hunter's White
rx Chaff, w.
Red
The yield o f Wheat this year is likely to
Indeed, my produce is not near
the very dry weather, which d, mend
—.—
account,
a
to grow, I do not intei
done so well for me this yeas 1
set in just as
ders dried it up n mg n en 80 o that the
Prices being so lo
ccs . PA
the
lest it might — Tis Un ef e
e mos
t
—.— of a ane
indifferent.
, owing to | also
Vheat was
nality
very low "x
AWLETT. +.
fitable . sort
nd to | — it up for not having
be encouraged to improve their land. It was a
- dee injury to the — to mS —.— and to the
country that the ten s had no greater tenure on Tups. Nam
their land than they —1 at present. Tt was of i vase = Right Hon. Lord Polwarth
— 0 Mr. T opr
Kx
~ n
Curs SHIRE. — At the late annual — de this
Society, — re: said he could s
on lar
Farmers?
Kivescore: Sept 9 (Second
There is no question but that this
no way of —.— i
Mr.
40 Mr.
80 Mr.
50 Mr.
52 Mr. Thomson
36 Mr.
50 Mr. Si
65 Mr.
24 Mr
i ER
e that
e benefit of ‘the — It me the dura of
ndlord to to provide his tenan ts with a good ho
The — of tu tups sold by M.
the average of the whole was 6l. 15 24d.
——
EET
pesce
bs. | leases.
Annual Meeting).— the
and similar societies
Notices of p
—
Journal of the Royal *
Part I. x
the practice « it th ue.
ut;
to give n vas seed The first
i ‘tenants in the of
i M unexhausted improve.
be carried on Pinthost such a
With the ge md fluctu: mme to which second
eat and grain —70 t o 80
— —— continent and in | Presen
in favour of annual agree-
ments, containing. diues f — aep yer. tenants for
mprovemen them, and
knew that they worked well, iving every satisfacti
| to leen ho had been accus E a" te — Withou pet
n
v is | su ch agreements he did not think t posl fr ex exten. |t e wh
n
— the i improvement of ihe lan id,
t by the in
periodi in
counties of Wa units of Waterford and
8
he port" of of t
doub th indistinctn of m hen
ormer Der perm pe A cit of. Water-
in my form y of Wa Ei brou
MN med
nts to be
o-| Mr. Hum mberston, M.P.,
meeting at Chester last
He believed that Bagel hy — *
rming interest by that perti,
had the pore d of seei:
ght from every p
sion vh Bor brongt
exten: collections of
ithin t
referred to th
o the agricultural ied
had been given to the in it
The 8 farmers of para
ng mens of the best st rv
ay oe m — ines ock | for their sir enjoyment, how how re
ht together one of the oit interesting 12 —À
om ras that ever were oti
-yard. that occasion ! the South. Eastern Railway
he ce of all re
— — inter. erest
AES po
— the walls of a show-
Sxrrrunrn 24, 1859.;
Tréhonna
t discussed by Mos * ind American
poo mm Implements, by Dr. 1 D pa by
Mr. Clarke on Steam Cad tivatio r^ r. Russell, on
Climates ; E aa 2 on "Liquid Manure; y
essrs. Lawes & Gilbert, on Grass La M y ure — and
C. “C. P. e Cornu, on the — and
dedu ill be i with interest, — = —
of
does not — to us to exceed the average merit
the serie
Calendar of Operations.
diga
8 :
UTH Essex : Sept. 12.—We are now very busy crossing and
i or Wheat and
t sowed by the
ns
mE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
781
ST. PANCRAS IRON WORKS,
OLD ST. jT. PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
HURDLES, | FENCING, AND
THE PROPRIETORS OF THE ST. E IRON heec OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON:
SILVER MEDAL of the Royal Agrieltra Society for their IRON — * m
which, by
rom n 30s. to
The Hurdles can be seen in process gy Is dis p the Works.
inter t
TE . , instead of being obliged GAME WIRE NETTING.
to defer - to pw end, when en probably it m 4 wet, — +4
r or by cot, a tow Professor Varnell' d Enamelled and Wrought-iron Stable Fittings.
sands of acres often are in this country, when it is too vac ese Patent M. Stable Fittings obtained the Commendation and the Silv. Medal of
— — iy known, selber ble Royal al Agricultural 2 and the Royal een Society Ireland, are adopted by ihe
will it be credited now . those who are udiced eterinary College, a Professor Spooner of ution states " ould y w
es "n 4 Wh €um ym ler ded as to thickness, Sealey ver the health and comfort of their horses. They can be had plain, galvanised, or enamelled.
e and early in Sej — rng will penetrate their main roots
8 feet into the subsoil before re Christmas, i in — x i rd
win! food or sustenance when the earth m below,
d
m their
cannot fi the dryness an
sufficiently deep roots to enable them to fully mature, and stand
erect, and so bid defi. to storm and other incidents towards
their final developement. We are also very busy as days
with the weeds, and
22 of the oV — on our heaviest lan
d seed c ure up. uing
up a 22
e been done a m
is useless, many acres of stubbles, with the weeds, seeds,
and insects, and in short, everything that has life o the
surface animate and inanimate from the opper he | iro
snail, and no doubt the larvae of the insect that destroys th
ya etc? none dry and calm day (not wind )by
the fo! — expedient. First, strew th all over th a
— — — of chaff or other dry short material, (we use
pow next, dash a small quantity o or
Stockholm tar, (the former is th eapest) or any other
litter uniformly Over the stubble;
field in divum
:
M t, rooks, ns,
— rats, mi ce, birds, snails, &c., common 10 W e
t vegetable family in winter; yet in point of
ihe * a and seb, and most part, ben part, being — —
we
— e See er casualties by degrees durin
w got to a rather dull
t little done in the
are
at cro, unless wi The as been
Son the y mpl e Serer tit
e whole, at the quan:
—— — even XD AU i:
eq
higher lands w r "s il bens 80 = the
1 mil be = at ew where ze e fim mM andit the Me
ces to Correspondents.
aA
lished aeo
—— — 2 "n
3 and learn
e of
— say what has been thelr practice
Subset. It will soon die o:
and is iso of little service after the semi yonr, os 8
R C. — weeds are disco drainage,
so. pasturage, a d artificial ptm and. b y per-
— ee in pudding or the spr plants at ail. Seasons
du — especially in the spring and summer, and before
be —.— If these not avail, the land must
2 oughed up, well fallow — laid dow n again,
poe — — “Cm id —
made. We mne c, E Hl chen
so the —ů of t
nts the insertion of whose contributions
the be
"er
t.
Weens: ^
Close
nade dare be
md-
is still dela n
A Show Room i is — entirely to every description of Stable Furniture, and full-sized stalls and loose
ion at St. Panc ras Iron Wo
of it | GUTTA SENCHA TUBIN
inspe rks.
ADDRESS—THE MANAGERS,
ST. PANCRAS IRON 8 OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON, N.W.,
POSITE OLD ST. PANCRAS CHURCH.
Grass
RE C E D.
RTON Av» CO, Galvan BCHAED HOUSES
| I. J. MO ised Iron wines appli 2 us to Mr. Rive:
2, Basi ORCHARD HOUS SIZES, as supplied = = rh Mr. Rivers,
GALIAN SEE Tt 20 in. E 21 oz.
for Farm Buildings and — Roots; th tab eet m ost dur- | 20 in. by 13 in. | Com - 14.8 „ WI
able, 1 st Hootng ner m Mye veape 103d. per yard. ze by 14 in. — do. oe £385 6... 19
STRAND” CABLE FENCING 20 in. by 15 i A- xes ncaa and nt 15.9 .. I9
e.
HILLIPS
180, Bishopsgate St Without, 3
Yo EH NY OTHER HOUSE 1
CLASS OR. CONSERVATORIES Ex
A 43D eae ret — 16-oz SHEET GLASS
Man t
2 formed
of Twisted Wireslike a rope or cable), the stron
eapest, and neatest — ged in use, will resist t
— will not bend or fo
gest
e — nud cattle
x s i
posts, and p d Standard „ 1s. 21d. per yard. Pes
This fence ista far mede than posts ny x ATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING
n fenci ssesses four times the v ANS, ey PLATE GLASS,
ront nor corrode. Upwards of NTAL WIND GLASS, a LASS S ADES,
Fencing alot ra to Y^ — LEY & Co., p uA [e 3 ——
GALVANISED GAME AND POULTRY NETTING.
. 24 ins. wide,
2-inch 5hd., 74d.
d mA,
sed, 24 ins. wide,
ch mesh, 4d., 5d., Ps
yard. Th
W.
See —— Chronicle first Saturday in each month.
HORTICULTURAL GLASS—JUNE TARIFF.
HOMAS —— reduced Tariff of
si d 4 Tby5, 6 oz. to the foot, 115. 6d.
44, T4 b t,
TM
82 b
o any. size.
GALVANISED TRON CHAIN. ‘amr — & CHAIRS,
POULTRY FOUNTAINS & FEEDERS, PRONGED DAHLIA
f| RODS anD ROSE STAKES, &c.
Strong CATTLE HURDLES from 2s.
per yard.
PATENT IMPROVED GAS WORKS,
f all sizes for the use of Private Houses,
Rail
way
Stations, E E Mines," Villages = Works — — gl
— . m; entrusted onu Glass from } to [CRM
an ordinary la Coloured Giass in En J
AST Td ne Bette Ooh Varsities, — . —— Cet
- E viz. — ours, Varnishes, Brushes, p
e a T are
estal, GARDEN CHAIRS and STOOLS, ] RUSTIC GARDEN | Counties Railway.
EATS and TABLES, both plain and bronzed, a also + ARDEN AZIERS' DIAMONDS ron CUTTING HORTI-
ROLLERS of sizes, —Prices CULTURAL and other — to be had of the Wax
Iron Merchant, 6, Bankside, London, anufacturer, Jom
WARDS, 20, ae 1 Wes
RUIT TREES, POULTRY, RABBIT NETS, and pus London ces from 10s. to 27
CATTLE FENCING. Umen NETTI NG to Protect the — — Son. AND PANS, in
Bloom of Peach, Nectarin Fi Seed
— of not
London — at
„ 54, 48, 40
s. 6d. 6,
d.
CANVASS, 4 Sting Kale and Pl
emp Shee 2 an unging
H ar, r Tiles, c
DE gogo 4 feet high, pto — Aiara —
wide; 941 6 feet wide, 3d. ; "—— d Bo: —
corded yc 5 yard extra, Ms, Kilns, Belle Isle, York Road, Ki
agent h gu "Nei. wi Bam bor P Pols, cx PEDE TALS, SUNDIALS, FOUNTAINS,
Pe xw Om Edm V FLOWER BOXES, JARDINETS, FERN CASES,
321 1 e AND OUR
»
Ass TIFFANY is universally acknowledged to | ORDERS SEATS
he best, neatest, Y cheapest — — for s sang Mansion Grounds, or or — private or publie Park.
Conservatories, and other Hothouses. E urin r Pri pply to FREDERICK Ransome, at
4 the 12 — Ü Cann Row, Westminster, S. W., or Patent
of Wall Troos fom Stone Works, Ipswi
n pie
CROSCOPES.
AMADIOS JOJANICAL MUROS cO ES.
d
No. 1.—20 yards iong, by 38 inches wide, 5s. per piece.
No. 8. Double s img by 38 18 yards long, by D" inches wide,
6d. per
Emo strength, 18 yards long, by 39 inches wide,
9s.
prie ae ig to the Trade when ten or more — are
taken.—JoBN w & Co.. d Stree! NG GA
G FOR WATER
of 1500 75
EELL/S
eros CKED DOUBLE BOIL
ubing, — HORTICULTURAL —
TENT WROUGH
— m
S, WAREHOUSES, &c.,
omical, ckest Er
at r
ra the E Cu) Pos EAM
. Barnes, Sept 1 | epe
—I readily bear m my testimon he ex-
and with one- dise ot goer} Boiler ; indeed to that of the whole heating
— y tas „ 00 00 DLL Ce epe UE EA
it heating power economy o
on — LA IN niei management I am, v Gentlemen, yours Fey:
holesale Dealers iu town and co untry. “Messrs. G. & W. Steell.
water our gardens
Coptestos. E
782 THE GARDENERS" CHRONICLE A AND : AGRICULTURAL GA
WEEKS ONE BOILER SYSTEM.
e
JOHN WEEKS
CHELSEA, S.W.,
KING’S ROAD,
HALLENGE 7
WORLD roduce a Boiler
bular Boller that will produco — ^ ‘ihe
AL GAZETTE,
MONRO'S CANNON
BOILERS.
Pho Upright Sec tity of fuel in a given time. — ;
same "effect with the same quantity o tee ES UCH has of late —
The following unequalled statistics fally justify the challeng TE EATING Py 1 HOT — TER por BO *
th of | Total leng emselves to be the best Beilen i
ormous length of Housesand Piping Leng dis They are adapted for Heati at present
Mark the en te ated by ‘One Boiler. Houses in Je of Piping. and are made of variou izes. TRO RE of 2
N 200 5.500 7 . Iron is i uii
enderson & Co., Wellington Nursery > 24-inch Wrought Tron is 5
ee e soo | ann — in
M. Van Houtte, — Mi 3, nor paa Men E Goxtemen EC Nun E D
Our own Fruit Forcing Sho Show Establishment 7,000 are now a The Cannon B 2 av we
t ies of Mr. Woodroffe, Harrow Road, me Messrs. Rollisson, ced tie o be of Pañ only P e 5 Bankside, & R E
Tooting, 8.5 — Wood & Ingram, Huntingdon; Messr rs. Wood & i snd Connections At acoso act ves lon di
i Der HTML = m on a 7 for Hot-water a any
T plete in any part of the country,
the Nobility and Ge Gentry far too numerous for insertion. F des am us pice
R
J. WEEKS & CO., Horticultural Builders and Hot-Water Apparatus Manufacturers,
King's Road, Chelsea, S.W.
PLANS AND ESTIMATES FREE ON APPLICATION.
COTTAM e N Engineers, e &e.,
SLEY STREET,
A SHOW par DEVOTED ENTIRELY TO ARTICLES — 1
NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE UPON APP
ories T Machines nd-glass Frames Garden ed Flower Sticks
Hot. water Apparatus Oranan a] Wire Work Hardie = * Nellen eos
- Garden Vases Flower Si en er Labels len Arches, &c.
; Iron “Hurdles, Strained Wire Fencing, Game N &c.
Every description of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought Iron, — — Work.
EXHIBITION PRIZE GATES AND ENAMELL MANGERS,
trance to their — from Oxford Street,
N. B. COTTAM AN» COx. beg to make it known that there is no longer an en
W., by the side of the old entrance to their
iut that they have made a second entrance from 2, Winsley Street, Oxford Stree!
"works, opposite the Pantheon. E
HOWARD'S “CHAMPION ‘PLOUGH |
ae,
: TA Nut e
Gained the FIRST PRIZE as the Best Purposes a Warwick
B — A CHIEF PRIZE for PLOUGHS, awarded by the Roya Agricultural Society of England, at this |
LIGHT yer VES pil te thereto the faot that BOE REUSE I GHS ne belt
RST PRIZE, of the HIGHEST AMOUNT given by the — E tees iio A r
awarded to to J. & F. Howanp, by th e Royal Agricultural Societ:
— TARGET 2 of England, at the WARWICK —
ghee — of DOUGH Du. but the LARGEST NUDER of FIRST PRIZES awarded to
Plough for General
ETING, 1859,
Exhibitor.
PRIZ
m — — ee AP RIZE Fon — E PLOUGH ron HE HEAVY RRA ^ PRUE ror tme BEST P t BEST
— T- THE ron THE BEST
€ I = — D PRIZE atso ror THE BEST LIGHT HARROWS, AND THE FIRST PRIZE ron THE
Every one st HOWARD'S Implements,
TALOGUES, with full particnlars,
J. & F. HOWARD, BRITANNIA
tried at Warwick, gained a Prize.
sent post free on application to
TRON WORKS, BEDFORD.
econo:
quirin
Esti
Blackheat
MPROVED HOT-WATER APP
" 'ARATU,
nomy
—— RERS.
g
m
OTT. (formen i in the em Men,
Penn & Son) ma were cain te
— — Water, alio Bh i
LA 992 5 AA
ors, ke, joco
on tly recommend them as; i
eati — Churches, Cha qo
Ranges of Fo oreing “Houses, &e., ees
of fuel ; ; also the PORTABLE
no bri
ates,
ang 1
be.,
h Roa i
& pplication ts to Tuoi far
wich, S
ND HU
0 X 1. 0-8
Jubilee Place, King's Bong Chelsea, S..
AAA = — az
TICULTURA Bom yz Horam |n
Bis timates forwarded on the shores
BOILERS of all sizes on Su
M
PROVE
USGRAV ES "PATENT SLOW.O A
ts sa
and extreme — A
nearest appro&
M
fodder
from "i * S the anim
damp fo
ieu Build- e
r 24
— of s
fety, healt
dach to warming by hot
o warning by hot was
SGRAVES PATENT STABLE f
AND
HARMLESS LOOSE m r ee ci
suna
m the E
5th, A pure
has
and wholeso!
„The whole fittings are stronger
in
al
cow
PATENT —
— s aoe
Mode
f 477
leni
Re Mi e
aris always fre
nge of Tro
water aa. acum
Iron
0
epidemic, and the he cost is sy d
orks, Belt fast.
Ocroser 1, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. r= B
2 Ob Ce OLGR A. - ———————————
CINERARIA, CALCEOLARIA, AND PRIMULA, TER BLOOMING
OHN WATERER'S CATALOGU UE » HARDY, F AND A. SMITH are now “sending -— mue -= AMELLIAS j CHINESE. AL ALRAS, EPACRIS,
SCARLET, and other choice RHODODENDRONS, as e their splendid varieties of the above ERICAS, of — all in nus sually fne *
annualy ex exhibited at the Royal Botanic Garde A Regent's without which none are genuine, at 1s, * o = Lm d dition. any thousands of these plan — be seen at the
Park, is now published and will be forwarded on application. | 5s. each. To be had also of most respectable Nurserymen and | Nursery of the Subserit
Faithful — ions of all the esteemed variotios wi 1 be found | Seedsmen C AME ee Ab Aal . DWARF OTAHEITE ORANGES in fruit.
detailed, with a list of the popular kinds of AZALEAS and other A d — J — LONIAN J protien (Jasmir din. un
n height and m PUE ET F ius yx “SMITH — to offer above well set ats, grafted on short stems, and full of flower 5. rian
» : ^ th flower € " dwárf, n and d tho orou . ripened SPR AGUEA UMBELLATA, — d by H. 0
the — non . Surrey, near Sunningdale off. * — en int is co ry they © most — ble | California, is now finely in flowe nith apak dial . ie: from
— —— South-Western My. LOI ck for packin, = an e. strongly ges oben uci x country Inspection respec tfull ly iny ri —
GERANIUMS, HERBACEOUS PLANTS, ETC. Amateurs — the Trade in general An : inspection invited. Hua: u Low e Co. 757 m Nursery, London, NE
— PAE AND WILLIAMS beg to | Prices on application.—Dulwich, Surrey, ee — MBRIC —
ir friends and patrons that their new PRICED | NT EW RDY GHENT RHODODEN DRON 0. " f n
and DESCRIPTIVE CATALO SUE of the above, to which are | LN "JEAN VERSCHAFFELI. pas d xD 0 p g to inum the Trade they
added Su "- ental Lists ( — a ind ama the beri “and pew A This superb Rhododendren, that "- - ch admired by — I Fear - old plan in
Plants, F. Fait Trees, de whic) pos e best ne who it in flower last zm is to be ford d . EER UNUS OU Rin ES
of the season), is now published, will be . post | or Ootob: ere GLADIOLUS BRENG " EY ENS SIS, iiia Ve co of
free on e P — Paradise — Seven Sisters’ and | Subscriber will receive post free a coloured plate of said Rhodo- vix : a ering. hee iet, the E ae ay brightes ua, the colour
Hornsey — ad dendron. All orders to be addressed direct to Mir eio P np n et x HS wo ope ety
CHO! OE CERA JEAN — — OTE. Belgium. nown. po o a Rum a acd "n A ^DTT TS
OHN DOBSON anp SONS" . DESCRIP- in dard «edd TS. Colleeti ————À PEE pO SA $ WP PCI IS ores
V win ection
TIVE LIST of all the leading kinds of SHOW, FANCY. P DIXON E supply the ollowi: g HE VALU ania. ky nd ERY aw» PLANT
IST offi
and SPOTTED GERANIUMS, with a SELECT L. e of Bulbs, pac on receipt of a Post-office TOC BASS Ax» BROWN, Svp 8 i
£s had post free on DE F SEU eds qi 2 thus Narciss 12 choi ed Hyacinth: offered at Pred oe selene: on the us = 8 rid ini
n; ce nam nths 3 »
—— offered d e Tol Groove $0 225 "^ | 100 Turban — v to pe Seppia of ve — 0 7
and High Street, H. 12 Tournesol double Tulips 12 Rex Rubrorum ips stock is 0 t possible con: v^ e Fruits,
i HERBACEOUS N 12 Yellow Boss ” d — choloost and most esteemed een , consist of none but the
Aw) HALP SHRUBBY DITTO SEED. —These have 12 Parrot Tulips 12 sweet enten Jonquils
— ner's most beautiful varieties; m Ti 50 D — 27 iro: 50 Winter Aconites AvE 2 importation Or DUTCH BULBS has been re-
‘2s. 6d. packets. imula and i por a from the newest — ATALA OGUES gratis on application ceived, kri no Eo offered ve: ry pos:
handsomest varie . ls. per packet. Agents for "T & A. Seed d Establishment 57, Queen Street, Hull. CATALOGUES or BULBS, with the Nursery and Plant
Smith's splendid Cineraria, in 1s. 6d., 2s. 6d., and 54. packets; —— — — pUTCH FLOWER | — — — | stock, furnished on. ap plication to Srernes Brown, Seed and
also agents for Dobson & Son’s splendid Calceolaria, in 1s. 6d., TIMOTHY BRIGDEN, SEEDSM. and FLORIST, Nursery Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. VELAT S SAE
25. 6d., 38. ôd., & 5s. packets.—Catalogues of the newest Flower ailway Arcade, ndon Bridge, y don, E.C., begs "Sore RGHUM, OR HOLCUS SACCHARATUS.
— C. newest cre and Cape Bulbs, 3 most — fully to inform his Frien ds and the Public gene- fm de
&McCuttocn, Seedsmen, Covent Garde rket, W.C. rally that he has just returned from Holland with M unrivalled RovAL X
Fit ARIA IMBRICATA.—The finest lot of t lection of HYACINTHS, CROCUS, TUI IPS, RCISSUR,
Ahe finest lot of trees | collection o 4 ?
A in E orid of this noble plant, from 1 to 10 fest high, | JONQUILS, . of which ¢ PRICED LIST may be hadupon| BERksuin
are to be at H . LAXE & Son’ rseries, Great Berkhamp- plication, + B. further begs to state — 21 S selected
stead, an * strongly — — tlemen and planters to dia from the best growers in Holland himself, he can
view them. This forms the most noble tree for Avenues and | guarantee them finer = frees other house in —.— pl — Gun
Plantations. There is — beautiful xL at Deo more, A large assortment of Aquaria, Wardian Cases, and Gold | fidently recommended it in their “Amateur's Gu
which the intelligent gardener, Mr. Frost, f "pleasure and Silver x = 1 are 2 e satisfactio 1 in
e crop this season.
They also have a fine stock of CEDRUS DEODARA, ABIES edes Aer d from their
p IRISH YEW, &c., from 5 to 10 feet high, for Gu E SMITH gfi sing pim plants o or the — 2 r in cultivating the ihe Sorgum —ę—
— — — — — oo — T — =. . 1 — — me: of of sowing and cutting, weight o
a E zi ONIA MARSHAL ing on. Price an r dozen, stronger plants at 86s, per FFT
TLLIAM SOLE. to announce that he will dozen, 2 1 ee s) Belle of Bdge 15 1. Lady DuTCMH BULS S.
send. ov uti: ety, raised by Mr. 2 : 1 N
Franklin, Gardener to TY G. Marshall, Esq., deer near Tom Bro —.— on, — n Hue ; (umero)
Leeds, on and after the 26th inst. Tt has been exhibited at | Excelsior, Fish ido, J Eoo siris, c,
the Regent's Park, Kirkstall, Halifax, Shipley, and. other Ex- eacock, The Delle; Eraser) ) Echo ; (Beck's) Fairest of the IPIE
hibitions, and Certificates hav ed to it. It is uni- Pur, The Bride, 1; (Dobson's) Ringleader, Spotted ‘Pets ILNE, ARNOTT, I
versally admitted to be by far the "handhomest of all the 1 Ariel, 2 and (W tes) Blink Bonny; vu p CO. are now sending out,
— and will be invaluable for Exhibiti ancies: (Turner! s) Beauty, DEIN SR. Circle, formosum, in the best possible oati, dE NAR-
$ uable for Exhibition purposes. Marchioness of Tweeddale, modestium, Negro, and Othello. | CISSUS, TULIPS, CROCUS, and — Flower Roots, imported.
For further particulars see Gardener -— Lora of July 16, G. S. has also a splendid stock of all the leadin ng kinds of | direct from some of the most celebrated growers in "Holland
606 ; also "Sept. 10, page 742; Cottage Gardener” 9 — ted. A PRICED and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUEj ust published
‘uly 19 and Sept. 13. former years, of Show, Fancy, and Spot will be forwarded free upon application.
Strong plants 15s. each, with the usual discount to the Trade. | A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE will be forwarded in ex- Finest Hyacinths, by name, 5s., 68., Ts. 6d., & 9s. per dozen.
Orders payable at Manchester. AN for one postage stamp. Select Co! X of pale from 10s. 6d, upwards,
Nursery, Withington, near Manchester.—Oct. 1. Tollington Nursery, Hornsey Road, Islington, London, N. The Nurs EN rth Road, LI &
TCH FLOWER ROOTS.
TER AON AND SON
E QuEEN’s SEEDSMEN, &c.
SPLENDID JAPAN. PINK,
DIANTHUS HEDDEWIGIL s
MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON
N 8 Ds.
FFER for Sale SEED of this truly beautiful dwarf-flowering plant for the Greenhouse and Flower-
garden, s all others of its tribe, . for the exhibition of which a Medal and Certificate for ter iso hed Merit — — —
was awarded to E. G. DERSON AND SON, the former at the Exhibition in the Royal 2 oda — Park, and A YE-G
the latter by the London Horticultural Society. A full description of this species is given at p. 722 (Gardeners NATURAL GRASS SEEDS ror PER-
Seed Packets, 1s., 2s. 6d., and 5s. each.
NEW BULB CATALOGUE,
— the best q
27, G Ste
which will be fi contains 80 pages, ing the tal sections and —:
of BULBOUS aie. nean N eti ie Conservatory and d Drawing room, by Pot, Glass, or Vase culture i EDWARD MILNER = —
their respective months from Jan to November; and also a — select and M ga eho List of the kinds best adapted for laid out the Crystal Palace Gardens, and Park, Syden-
rm) — the Flower-g: in early spring, summer, and autumn, with n us practically-descriptive remarks | ham, under the direction. of Sir Joseph Paxton, and having
upen their merit and adaptation.
* " owing to the pressure 1 3 other professional duties
An extensive and Select Collection of Herbaceous and Alpine Plants is attached to the above Catalogue. — —— — s hid de icknowldgments to
rem ose Noblemen and ng emen who quy yes =
i t mage, ani state that he continues un
E. G. HENDERSON & SON, Wellington Nursery, St. John's Wood, London, N.W. — —— —⅛
Le . of upwards of 20 years enables Mr.
his services in the formation and improvement
offer
af parks, ee s, and Ornamental Grounds, also in p:
SUTTONS . COLLECTIONS OF FLOWER BULBS. designs for Conservatories and other Horticultural Haina :
in establishing and thinning Plantations and W i
pec
RTS EXCEPT VERY SMALL PARCELS. aha * "aged Wd N “Guia: ak Tikes — Bond
— g
i y» — itted to to Sir Joseph Paxton
FOR OPEN GROUND. | FOR Por 1 8 AND GLASSES. to * and Gentlemen to whom he has Ten
COLLECTION No.1 .. £2 9s. | OLLECTION No. 8. „ neee
24 i lo 12 Hyacinths, b 12 Double Sweet Jonquils
50 Bcarlet enen nnr .. | A Pofyanthus "s ao. | 12 Bout Persian Irises
24 24 Anemones 12 Tournesol Tulips 24 Dble Van Thol Tulpe
12 12 White Narcissus 12 Single Van Thol rers 12 Rex Rubrorum — |
24 Van Thol 12 Parrot Tuli . 6 dozen named Crocuses 6 Gladiolus,
12 Double Scarlet Tulips. 12 Double Yellow Tulips FFF 12 Ixias, choice on
12 Choice Irises 12 Gladiolus E 84 bum “6 Dog’s-tooth Violets
100 Double Snowdrops . 12 Gampernelló Jonquils 1 Amaryllis formosissima- — |
6 Crown Imperials | 24Fine Mixed Tulips 1 Cyclamen persicum 3 Achimenes
LLECTIONS No. 2 and No. 3. COLLECTIONS No. 5 and No. 6.
The above choice sorts in quantities y reduced, i tsi iti portionately reduced,
> 4 3
SUTTON’S AUTUMN CATALOGUE A
is now ready and will be sent post free on —— i this icono jenem are affixed to every article. fool that the sinking Colony of TaswANIA is
— mre i — name, for pots or glasses, 9s best 12 ditto, 6s. Mixed Double HY ACINTHS for rising Psi gf — same n —— ed —
ion o nati r in e
qa None bet fresh imported Bulbs are kept on the premises. rful testimony to its abundant ni edes
ROYAL BERKSHIRE SEED ESTABLISHMENT, READING. in all that Nature produces witout the aid of man.
new-ta ang
the mise chi
n | philosophers,
Au Exhibiuon of auother kind on its own soil, in
the m of April v — us ene that
the of our cow ko : eir
[or is rapidly bringi io he capabilities of ‘of
the Co! weil — bear the . !
the old w
f | chole: era,
We
er cable ha
of coun
evening a perfec
led stuff”
ief, we had qui
each with fi
mu the Potatoes rot, and w
n the medical ranks did not furni
paene to qu
called guano at the bottom of
ite a little squad of
is € notion of what
t wo d eu ure them.
sh a greater
arrel about the cause and eure of
had hoped that this rage for explaining the Hi dei eing
d burnt out, extinguished in its
ut we see that oe Mes disease has
whose opinions
s
ge some importance,
e in the J ursa. of
you bulbs of a diri Call
=. 9 and "X also
ou must not give too mu ch w. it aucb
e
merely dam soil i
— gs. The plant e xhibited vus ds Mite mi
pen A: nd in a west border, Where fl the
wit ut any ree 3 it was a à secon fore e
arger; a plant
e Font ook BS n * also which blow! bloomed ing pe
à, which,
hardy, wil]
—Á—
BEDDING PLANTS AT THE Py
Our of doors the groun
establishment have been fitaal
— — Mice s and beds in the Ese
t tarnishe d b
TAL Palace
eiy y ong i this
though t
the Vine still. highly
T has discovered that
to the extre eme ely b
ush.
suber, admitted 424 tickets, 250 shil PP Á te dis Horticultural Society o Pari
adm The show of f m M. Cas
of soil, mede
er
and * a t me He
and or a are p^ tl o
efective ; they e filled with 1 soe m
rau Punch Gerani ms,
He orm perfect bouquets
Fund the two . e semicirc] pom
n are planted with m Mal rd
by
me yew of d constitue
pecially of M or rt the persplintion- “ot the | #
oo active; or else to its being too
else, or in addition, to the bad
of the manure ipe M. in Vineyards. H
A autumn show | es
very like an autumn
f,
adicto
t
all Tanais ‘will ‘ot bee — *
like old England, we find Hea alena there holding = old, an
e I heads when with us they are dil plus The
gF
da
“perspiration is little o
and the ea n this is the comm
kid of logic whist V
e be gen writings of t
bee Prom rep ear by Grapes, Apples,
pro:
MG
valk, are
centre is s ‘Trentham Sca;
bel
es h e 7
ave been usually called Crystal po Nasturti
ay when
leon, and Knight's Monarch Pears ellington, exhausting 1 asses,
d ; g la beautiful which
Dutch Mignonne, Court Pendu Plat, Kirke's Incom- | Noan began to be a h cw d pl nd there ich are varied and broken mia
parable, Golden Harvey, ibston Pippin, Non- | Vin ehe And yet the Vin ine É iis fa ene | Donan of Sed = ace T
pa ie du Canada and Margil meld prike year ide old. So that it io —.— apse of sum, v e ih d bes
amburgh, White Sweetwater, M. years that soil has nd. us Day, Alma iet Brilliant, nt Ver
, Black Frontignan Grapes. ts potash, round
the en of an English noblema Ob it might have occurred to him that d of the te
8 bos mie tion of Pine Apples, which os — Deo unventilated um their MAE greatly "impaired „by the failure of the
2 ut It may also i. 22 chested for an equally long period ; io 80 ccording larias, which here as
is the it has taken some thousand years to gig. — vt x —
ir ian suscepti tible of such influences. In this Yello C nat Geraniums sutromidad bya
respect, fervet d e would have learned somethi haee e 1 the gp paa zx
ce | shee 8 Sry Vinery, fo ing in the | hood of this chai groun
^ Vegetables consisted of Ca abbages, Tarps, that i in an ill-ventilated atm mosphere EO eis d T
arrots, Parsnips, Onions, Potatoes, Peas, Kidn ney | to ca ause the tissue of leaves to rise up in blist dged andi
dene ap d Vegetable Marrows, T. Vi ; e p is ers, edg with — „Alyssum d Flow
à ^ ows, To 5,| Vines are not peculiarly liable to disease, perhaps Geranium. A is occupied by Lady Mary For `
gs ettuce “Celery, Spinach, Cardes|less liable than . i The d n Pelar i i he 4
„and common Beet, Rhubarb (in aut ! mod 26 n £00, — um et m We rwr E
enel mdi Pune es (in autumn !), | would have informed him that in such a forcing| A fourth is filled with Lucia rosea
thee Qo sten ishes, ay arii runt ad bon house che ues he nor his forefathers ever saw the — edged with white Alyssum and
. e G 2
names the very ga sdg rein al these i diis "a t camo down everywhere a fow years | on othe, tnam 1 p a n b
0 rdens of Tasmania; sot ASTERAT'S noti t Fan raniums and Calceo larias, which serve to
diu finm correspondents of the colonists p them duin it uc lead to the "inférenos that. putting ar and “light them up,” as it were, a little at this eam
We — th tdi ct rend ciii; ud ry xm leaves and berries of a Vine j- 5 ——— Sue i eene dy i Mi
equ. o 1 d
ye nid. given fon fnit; ; to which must be added exquis dpa org f st ore he k pin rd 8 4 ee, ei.
Tt may interest their fri ia p ey a rather an odd conclusion it must be owned. I A addition to that sar Att v in paid u
e gea Ham s: cn to know a fact, not a notion, that one of the worst cases | pine hing in the leading shoots and removing abo
d 110 TE . N- : e disease in this country occu to the | decayed flowers and stalks as soon as their *
and 5 by ‘Archd + MACKENZIE, late Wirwor, of Isleworth, one of our most | over. i: has bn ly to invigorate and in.
8, 5 Ss, Tin ors Waar forty wela meh y „ . i — tat :
xo , -| y well managed, on a south wall, in th | time iem in this kind of work, we may :
RE, M to h partieularly distinguished | unexhausted land, ; eo € days ss ite the entire gardens contain about 150,000 plants, 1
Vidi in add Wise pi ad been hem 3 that these have all to be gone 5 Se eximii WR
: . ve been aran a tto do wills | mann mentioned not less than twice à 5
this little event as erent as ey ee proof r obstructed perspiration p Lor t "— -— — e penis en vit:
Tasmanian wa g from the N
nv are 7 as follows :—1, a square, has Crystal A
w Palace Scar lia, Purple Zelinda Dania sud 7
"un ME. Capsa P OODATA, with blue Ageratunt, yellow Calceolaria, Trenti we
à foliis o obtusd sagittatis Geraniums, an A vi e grey e
setaceoacntis scapo brevioribus, erecta tosum. of arrangement is in every
: à apiculata basi Dern wey excellent. 2, a circle, is filled with Lady
or have iferioribus femineis, anthers c c sp | Ron ox Pelargonium, Calceolaria amplexicaulis POPE,
in its action dila, Cmeatis poro duplici dehiscentibus. vertice TT Petunia, Heliotro , and is edged with blue Umie |
oe et pe pressione angulatis 3, likewise a a circle, is planted with Boule de Neige s
Esc ina immersis, ee iege geminis — up. oe Gerani 1 A is edge d with blue Lo belia, and D pi
Twist modern gents” of ⅛ 0d
2 i — With non y be bere erable i 8 skill — — part of the —.— were edged n
T demi Bo ui »80 was the on of the cases — and re Schott & Endlicher does it willy not wie RON — 8 Si pact
up like ie. E: hath ing theories sprang | type of 3 pi X Aten mew | that of Box. - Other y had their o
ms from the of perverted | being look, a“genu.” “Porn EA "Ms t pinched in in the same manner, and st
to | to place it in the old ik ii of flowering niaar In
g ever attempted epe elsewhere by ches 7 7 i ving ring itt be —.— | T beds may be admirable for the
of the subject | In foliage it resembles Richardia africana, except that | watched of introducing them into
nderstand it is smaller; and Cire are the Md Theli ight be questionable. One of the m
n who solved the | Posh which rises above the leaves is about 3 inches | Geramam edge u —
a new name to a well-known | j^» And 14 across the mo form it is bell X9 ith the old
for the | "aPed, with an oblique limb; in colour a cl 2 — edging, ny ee
wa to th yellowish g green, with a d eile : rie „ was however equally of
€ | Bladder ia M P eye like that of à | covered with fine trusses of ers, A bed
t * that | Natal essrs. Veitch & Co. received it ser vei flowers.
a inj 1857 5 with the follow: nda was literally a mass of purp! natur
ng remarks :—“ T had been allowed to grow upright in its 3d
Ocroszz 1, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 789
down it does not seem to bloom so freely. never publicly exhibited. When I e expressed my opinion in a rich free soil with plenty
3 rap. of the Crystal Palace Scarlet Dahlia was| that the. Bowood Muscat might? be ‘grows with | not too much, the « worms [as ata uri im
PP in an ordinary Y I „only s spoke from ie or M bean as would arch m carry off the rains
to sei n my own experience. , Three ts had time to satisfy themselves, and
Rou A e banks are — f| first of e, — it- | the voil i queer sdb wra vicinity of the plant wearing a
. — 2 which Lush ome places showed All I can say | sort of n dened appearance, and of * nature that
the ill effects of the dry weather to which they aas is * at ax time sor its owen which was, I think, would not readily a allow the rains to permeate or the
been subj isseason. Some of the circles dot in April, when we had little sun, and the he conse naequence was 5 that the tint of
about this part of the gramas are also very pretty. | was cold and foggy, notwithstanding I had no this tree “compared with others w
One of the best of them was filled with T , and the 1 S i of the house was | w. ery hne under the leaf,”
grandiflorum. "This, t — 4 down quite low, it set all its berries exceedingly tose bade now that “the "roots ‘asta in all penus. got
- * neatly within bounds, makes a capital bed | much better than a White Muscat Alexandri ti e
is that of a peng onga scarlet, | upon which I bestowed Ld the heat {could command ala ark green hue and bright sil th der sid t
striking, b but still by no means oppressive to the eye. vith n atural s n heat, aided the leaf like the others f that
Another nsisted of wh ite 3 d. Flower of the | E a | little fire at night, and as far as Im may! add that che seeds eh cach We spruce
Day G g ink Ivy- leaved Geranium l i variety
A third had the centre filled with yellow Calceo-| cat of Alexandria. Ihave no doubt in my own m n plenty of the “warm yellow prom
ias, edged with Tom Thumb Geraniums. A thet. it "a ns! realise the expectations of those who | vice versd. No plans have been tried to dale fertility,
fourth filled with Mangles’s Variegated Geranium has will give rial There is another new Grape, of|as we consider them ded enough, one tree in 1853
been fine, but its beauty is now over. A fifth co rhich much has 7. 5 said, and of which there was a Ravie yi yield es, which ees 51 lbs. x
tained some hybrid variety of Veronica speciosa, which Jlattering drawing in tho “ Florist "—the Muscat Ham- good seed, and last Jer 1300 cones and 2} Ibs, o
though a late bloom plant for many purposes, burgh. It has not that * know of been exhibited this | . The other tree, “the uf m. ES
is too sombre in a bed to be effective. It was edged | summer. Perhaps however to sustain 1 miden a. Bind ok et quantity, and a much
a i Inside the Rosery the beds have | ter which has been given of it, and to mal — i per i There in
been excellent; one of the best had a mass of Purple — d sure, it will yet make ed appearance, and so | great many trea al i. from deer 33 years, of all
Nosegay Geranium in the centre, then a belt of yell An inquiry is cael abont sizes from 6 ins, to n 60 feet, of all did from the
Calceolarias, — 2 were broad bands of Trent! Grape, the Lady I Downe's selling. i have it | dense e to the i an ip and yellow, of every
Scarlet Geraniu Bon net Verbena, and Lucia fruiting with me cw! I and if [ may v e to of gro dps om an } i ee
rosea Genalum, d t it is a noble mae, P excellent «nmm, in every description of soil from the poorest
Verbena called AC Ho m ord. Beds of Salvia patons, | flav vour, and in r ard to keeping ing ded e non oorland to the richest alluvial oT Tg the
though a charming blue, have protea unsatisfactory, whilst iti is greatly. superior to some in being a certa ain | — measures in every situation the most *
and will probably m be tried a oa p E- eafo rd. pose ed to the most sheltered, the m * ope
Near railway station was an admirable mass of Cure for M. —Fiv I erected on every density of level hoes. the js x
e 2 Geraniums edged with Cerastium. me Ms 32 feet b 371 16 feet, 2 "E a Vine to ev ery 40° to the level plain, from the lowest sandy soil to to the
h of bloom on this Geranium were unusually lai ge These ese grew vigo rously, but w vitho ut, I
and the effec Verbena bed p serve, th to the border, | 200 or 600 f feet, and ev. er aspect from the cold *
sisted of Robinson's ‘Scarlet W segs in the „centre, and bore fruit in due course, The dE S last | the sunny south; and wherever a free vi
edged w with Blue Bon net Holford. year, | is obtained the rin A one tints prevail pie! gh
of the best of whites. The 25 round eur mps | however, it came iih ut virulence as to bal the stunted or less po" exists M. invariably
to the left when passing gal the ra m. station | repeated applications of sulphur, to tire t he patience of | assume the “ wales
to the centre transept have succeed aS my gardener, and Mp in spite Melley's Manipal Tol "This. Y. confidently
season. They are edged with ye SEN n S | of all our effo orts, to “spoil verna of the Upt dt . Robertson, p Powersco sg to prove one
Scarlet Geraniums, and are very effective. The fresh- | this point the jate — had been kept — with Potato yet i of resisting disease. It certainly
ness and beauty of these, however, as well o many » flowers;. in the ing Camel Ilias and Azale eas in contrast he fields and gardens
2 : ewhat impai ers are qui
or
3 8
8
oe?
S.
S f
ig
O
78.3
2
Fags
fl
paire: e w 1l While
y weather we have lately experienced; never- shelf, ue which the pit was filled w h s ago, this variety stands up in full ——
on account of the grounds here lying so high in | the shelf with Balsams. This year the dis isease — riance, “bloom! ing and seeding, to
seasons, the plants 1 look well eren as made its appearance, but in addition to sulpl r | equal to what the Potato was in its most vigorous and
late as = end of October or beginning of November. | only once area and that dry, a go increase ealthfu
erent trees and shrubs throughout the was made fire-heat, the flowers we moved | have
gate have thriven remarkably well Most of the|from the front. shelf, but the pit remained f ill and | variety, with every appearance of proving valuable, and
especially the Deodars, have made great pro- | quick lime was freely strewed about and left under da I think this may be a favourable time for calling
gress, others we noticed an excellent Welling- 2 5 shelves by the pipes. The Ferait has b | attention to it. J. Buckham, Thornhill Bray, Dublin.
tonia not. less im ti feet high, growing in 8 eat tisfac meri AT a . ond 8 injure ed a ar a 1 Gee) is stated in Loudon's * Encyclopedia
lixuriance, The Ara rias also seem now to h an Whether bi f Ga: „p. 927, that “any "s nch nf a vill grow?
bli tl or any one ne firmly inserted in the groun will grow.”
la aost to ME the facts of the case, er, | In t on of
the Palace two plants of Dicksonia antaretien | may D useful to Some of ho > I Had
opposite t cipem d Court have acqu e and | remark that there is a strip e between he te
; ich is — 5 remarkable. They are both truly 3 in front a the pipes, 7 5 ej e as to * to ots sige
a
noble s en indi
might be introduced more liberally into the beds and | — — the . ghet in the eal |
borders here than they are, and with evident advantage, | part of the summer before t the
i other i warm 8
1
F
et
5
>
=
=
E
m.
—
or
a
rs
=
E
R
2
E
EN
Los
B
Di
m
e ous Musas
departm i heir a great | them
lenge svn add richness and beauty to that part of the deal of good good * sse in the remarks of your ect fail
ilding. The Aquaria, both Tp rs temperate, *H. A. M. D." ing eners and their em- | given
are reall i er ng
vilis di rd
ishi nd A indi
either white, or bl re alm ways in flower. me many years ago, w Wia ] vat nd asking his|this season it has ng e 1 e
We i rige Ae odes ipe E x ae. [aie — a P m id all osos don't have your | watch their daily and "weekly growth, their periodieal
ment of the place, both diti ye and in, reflects th the | 8 and | the turns which their Sp shoots take when
highest est credit on Mr. Eyles, whose skill as of the 2015 ih do.“ I have often ‘thought ‘of his words and | starting to grow again, and ' t he remarkably vigorous
pa 1 how sound his advice was; for I fancied I knew better|growth of some of our est and mo uniform
ledged. M. than he did, and — the same man gardener and specimens. When I walk through the Pinetum and
i ste i i «take. such plants as Pinus in in sign is, exce! 5 aud Lam-
No | berti:
lana.
one
Home orrespondence. can serve two masters.” The farm m must either be | and varied hues of s some of the br growing kinds of 57
Remarkable Conifers.— Few Iimag 151 1 But | Conifers, I am led to wonder to become
had the opportunit . imens of while I differ from your pier elena in this point I | th
the bra Pine al of Abies canadensis (the Hemlock rad with him entirely in his other remarks, [t Moe br satius ke to pee and — their annual pes
8 those now in eir ear lest in a few
berton Hall. Pinus Cembra is nearly | em: expect “ bricks without finding the 3 them away in order to iie the giants of the forest to
in and measures at eet and ployers say “ye are idle,” o or “ye are ignorant.” | extend their noble branches upwar yee! outward un-
60 in circumference, and the trunk at n flowers and aged ar * 3 uired in ibis. and | imp by their neighbours who vie with them in
— i 8 feet. Few of the Pinus tribe are more| in succession, there m e houses in proportion T colour and end 75 not in altitude and strength. One
— thas this; its handsome conical shape, and what is demanded, and ne = > Ink of hands. And again, | plant of the we possess which I consider j
Short rigid horizontal tal branches, combined with its when a large f garden and eom special 3 is s the eldest of the rug it was a seed-
Colour, render it it particularly attractive. It certainly ground is dile P^ be kept ? in first-rate | ling 6 inches es high when planted in ary, 1854, and
deserves more extensive cultivation than it receives, for order, how utterly impossible is this without a à
as a j i is the * rate order ”
with yo
the ground and formi FF hé ses it to:
a T one e most ightful | to kee} oroughly we sooner uces it to
Objects I ever saw. h specimens Bore nd the level of his — the on satisfactory for all
health be The soil these trees | ies concern
.— Equally : TJ. B” 1| than one variety of Abies Douglasii (see see your Nene |
feel some surprise that there | :
Muscat at the late Crystal Palace Hor aa 8 Pax pianta from Douglas's first ides dans one answering | of the be can usly d rua cae e gg a cpm
rtm it has not been sufficiently lon usi the | Mr. Barron's Mv oe of Phew epee and the other | made gla P heic tatg 9
Public, or come into eral cultivation. - h | that 3 Douglas’s variety, viz., dark green and silvery, | stock wa: ere
Mr. Spencer and Mr. Thompson are ther da * y. : yellow green," but uis * warm yellow | inches than i zou resent, 8 ich
show Specimens, but Ee ” must ped arisen from the less favourable be cm of evan i is Ji pn and wee
like those of Bowood and Dalkeith, DA equoy locality in which i it was planted, the dark variety being | sandy loam, and fully exposed
790 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND EI GAZETTE. oem =
an Would your correspondents who large, ‘The following are the weights of bwo or three hig aL E pes pom b.
poses 5 Walingtonis say if — T "y 10 o ; Napo poleon, do on; a —— er em ‘lean ^ and me a m
3 hd gt The Duche r. d'Angoulém as gat m vall, u icke s 5 wie EX x
been noticed in their growth during e on the Quince e stock trained — a dos w € ets issue o the public mb
J. Mi Gard fo R. E. Thom 6. The Na 8 Fe si
£4}
ng re — bas
= - st egeo r?
n, Esq. Ken-
oon, Gardene i
field Hall, near oor — abe In the report of the zi dr fee à is large, and for some yes r Dad E Narven os — deine
Caselas iuge rape in e set ol, [mi ony hern Dat rie mos of which | patane e scienee, to give an eae ond oma
roceedi i l c
5. 778.1 fs stated that this Grape seldom or never | were — 5 ed Wwe ae which h keen gere es tion is devoted, is and means, — rn t nat —
b fie à bricks — them; this | at all ti imes occupied the _metaphysi — 2 ——
any of whic h Various ways, mi i
p. 77 ^
: k t from too m at. ; M th
— seat me; Ia — m crac cking to a were reg hl m: ier imp
p artic ularly as >
of drought. The same cause produces the same effect equal to the onie Mr owe —* “ithe ‘weight af this e to himself . f 8 mi 0 25
ati mean
on on other fruits, as "Greengages, s and Gooseberr - "et UT. T in eu was surprising. The —.— ee I know, — the — *
the Grape are | of whi ch we e have any — weighed 21} 0 and w uman knowledge Hence, —
both to the ir en, to dr The aviest ( f Chaumontel was — science; and all special Knowledge, if b ie :
om Te -— t s D po ortola] warmth Greater weights FAE Tapa in its separate distinctiveness fro, a
us eie ; rought
e ht e csse I had a Chasselas Musqué in | then =k have 0 ye in $ lation 10 e
a Vinery without heat. Its roots unfo rtunately w f Large uem —On Tuesday September 27, " sn for science—t that sto say, for the 8
outsi e, and Ipl
t eof my fields a& Loughton,
hoards ove « the Dee irae A alit. ia fen | me a Mus OM ai in € in diameter, of venum circular are necessary “for ‘the ver ed of any l
> m 1 J : J to dissect andy
the Vine, and planted another inside the 2 y
tort tl od e Vine Na Pr seen a single split Grape, | it “weighed 11b.10 oz. A similar one weighing 1 lb. | into its ser gran parts the object tobii
as the roots are ye tient dry, but from the atmospheric | 5 o cut from the same eld a few days Rui. and to render an accurate account to
moisture, which I am unable to control, the berries, v^ 10905 the nid were found excellent. John Hill, 3, nature and qualities of these parts by
after rip eolour, often rot | — 17] the second, ompose
know ledge, is scienti c knowledge.
obs
t-| Moss r cdit one of t arly Numbers in|stood parts n — mon in our consciousness,
i i from Prof. answering to e obj of our in
IK. S. ears’ experience in the growth of other your Vol. f 1841, page 36, kaian is a letter g
Es 27 Vinery has led a to form an Hen slow, recomme ending theu se of sul Iphat ate of copper The la bou rs of the man of science are a
f ing. I believe it v
ri fn reducti ft the same volume, it is 1 oe for r preventing the | take. He edi. does what poi! little child inim
its fi must do
At pa t I have observed, th of Moss on soft sandstone. . — any on
the Fro have — ripenisg, if € ift a E veers i to the | what proportions of water should e added to the of its existence; and yet heaims at the ved
north With rain, they shank imme ust saturated solution of the mere An Original | m mation to divine € mes If, then, there
suppose that the footstalks a are — € sensitive | Subscriber, Tonbridge Wells. difference betwee ork of the e man of
during the ripening period, and the weaker the vitalit lity that of the =, child, what —— the .
of the plant, the less is it able to resist delet eri Societt tinet io on? " 0
influences. Hence, if a Hambur; gh or other hardy Socket etiez, 1 |Thechild observes what
rape ed in an il dr r- neon: — forms v won. of it; the seal
wise unhealthy border, the plant will be liable to| HORTICULTURAL : Sept. 22 2.—At a meeting of the ical man speci
ffer from a reduction of ran rature — it could, | Floral Committee which was held on this occasion
withstood. | se i
BE
ve
I find that bunches of F. hinned | Messrs. Low, of Clapton. Among these, Gonatanthus, Sci
are more liable to shank, da ably from cae of the — — —— — was Reena for its strikingly ws
ute afforded by the berries. G. S. dsome bronzy-tinted leave! " and its dw: 2 - h r ob . eyes
s.—Some months ago | . — growth. n species of Sphærostema, mb- | by — nor by an external cause, such
ion in your paper as to the impossi- | ing plant witb fine grey mottled leaves, was do: very | mere connection with work to
Wut; of drm Mushrooms on Loudon's plan of|ha bitte: Myrsine picta had —: serrated
inoculating lawns with spawn. If done — as leaves, purplish, — central rib. These were gen
directs i ways failed wit x i por ons from Bor
At
square i and a few inches of the soil veined Ange mils — — uei from A9 quite To arrange and
removed, and old manure rammed down i in its place, | n new, was em exh ve by the who had,
then the spawn put in pai ates. nd | ng were
with the turf will, in ordinary sea: produ babl "Along | brought into y separat !
But I cannot recommend the plan o on a well- kept fan with these ame roup of dwarf. hybrid Siento and combining those elements in which we ha
| Bes nias, jio "which the ser blood of B. enabled to — i
afterw G. S. waitesii had been infused with d effect; Almighty has implant
an Evergreens. —I can bear practical | of debe the varieties called Lowii, oti; and Zebra, all to — — - the boundlessness o
timony to Mr. Groom’s statement respecting trans- | smaller growing than the now abundant varieties of with t ws which govern — mind and
planting evergreens in summer. In the middle of last Rex, were particularly beautiful. Messrs. Parker & e — ion of science then ero cet
uly aks fri of Holloway, also
: ; s fro t
4to 7 feet in height; these trees had grown without | Begonias, among which — was the most € — separate groups of subje
ost king. Several | siderati i i
g in v ; bei fferent and
the young shoots drooped for a day or two, but with | seedling Dahlias were exhibited, but the only 2 The tendency to crea
twice sprinkling and four times watering they got Boyce, shown Jy Mr. G. Raw- apparent in our present age,
upright, and every plant su „ -— ^. dai lings, which had been Mee p ne of the early —.— — SO ra i e
that this is one of the worst trees to mov d I|meetings of the season at, sturdy, horse- | in our days ; for the a
believe that if — r had been performed at the ure cerise-scarlet ge een was shown pr at distinct arde n of] owledge enables
usual time, scarc s r. Kinghorn, of Sheen Nursery, Richmond. he newly gained points of sight, to
ions into which they divi
i k im
austriaca, la: large owes | in the latter end of p une. "These BRITISH ASSOCIATION AT ABERDEEN.—[ We condense | secutiveness and wi 7
succeed: better — — * I ever had planted before, the following scraps of information likely to interest gaining new centres of light, from whi
either in the autum the spring, mete some | our readers from the fulland admirable report in the | researches, and new and powerful means
died, died, principally through t there not being any water to wm of the At heneum m.] ever-inereasing treasures, science
with. om giving the peng a ARRANGEMENT. to the limits of its range, although
- tial in nursery next sw int of de
thi
Dents mer. | on Wednesday September 2 at . — wee the | and further from its M
rh Pos Hereford. immediate auspices of the inl quc whose | God's world is infinite; &
Ast id Fish i shoot ba ely “on Qa footing rendered sti ^ pied the evening, a ose presence was | universe, whose confines
e on the fo! lowin | sti i i i us no
Points NS * basin. huldige abot T g | render ill more Agen Xm an im invitation of the our — — — ‘tars E d of hem
LX an exposed si station con Pan eni — — the week. The old Scottish loyalty broke ont — — -— worlds revealed to
hae t , gst counties be tee Aberdeenshire Kincardin —— telescope, ti
to | Two thousand tickets w by Toes i to us in a
E : arate moak in the Nae E Re worlds of life an
rian deen QE eect On anle of asso remains of such as hav
tan they es ter? Or if taken ye ite pega um Sg aa old ta uainted
can they be kep scriber, Maidstone.
The Acherontia Atropos, or Death's Head Moth. Weit Water Pot ibaa x cines — |merey expres i T the w
This season has produced in this locality many speci-| were generally thrown "d to th san Dh s Rooms | bod: will bring
mens of this very interesting insect, both in the la arva | Non- resident member £ the a d s visitors. — e
€ pupa state, many of which are now forming th e e Nailin os t, wl ill
stage of metamorphosis, the imago The place | without the f: d tl ]
9. f A Th
sought for them was a Potato field, havin iousl dm nda ion. e committees of | all
: he iW there g ples d — Atheneum News s — of the News Rooms,
v
ect inse The ense act in their natural | t mes ens all members of | thi i
history is a a faint — 9 dier make like unto a young | — UR eed ——— — ei ae —
e
mouse, if interfered with by oid them. The — their tickets, such as The Baldi of Historical — the — —
T. F., near Newbury, &. p* — — ;
dj
opt. Buildings; the P
Large ptm D T^ past summer has not | Hall Buildi i d
- T- all Buildings; Collections illustrating the Geo of | him at least for se
been — — ourable character for the growth the North of S tland, in the M. Marshal
ew have b 857 Co
this h er has been the exception. In point of fl i
1 - In point of flavour | College, Marischal College, Free Church College, i er
Homo Ma say such nennt s Peaches, Nectarines, Figs, | cates’ Hall, Medico. Ce gien eee dint Library d end re a fe, E int
NS pubis. wes neighbours tell [us — | n — à rece onan considers itself the .
we possess were likewise opened,
88 s sprinkling; many are pretty | manufactories, — — XX dE —
OcrozzR 1, ae THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND — GAZETTE. 791
science appears, and n mediately showing a return | subsequent T Deluge with the appearances presented to e beds were planted — with Tom Thumb
in pounds, shillings, — pew ag should be posty , can bring conv weg to any y mind already 'alceolarias, and it
least, to others which promise immediate tangible disposed “to doubt. The wises course we are eon-|is impossible to estimate p too hig hly the value of this
results? Is it to be wondered at, that public vinced i is to state the case plainly, and “then to show 9 — of yellow C north of England.
men require an effort to wean themselves from ger 2 g! rally p ber
subjects in order to give their attention to science an to disturb any sensible mind in its reliance on e| The interior of i's design consists chiefly of
men of science, ata it is remembered that scien adr. great truths of Christianity. There is no “ig for tru, parti-coloured walks and Box edging. The beds or
the exception of mathematics, was until of late alm ost | but dis tortion c of truth is always dangerous, s it leaves | rather divisions that require floral decoration were
systematically excluded from our f simple ‘confidence | — chie - with — of the Day Geranium, Sapo-
que. — the traditions of early life are those on the part of those who distort it. No on is dis- calabrica, Prince of Orange Calceolaria, blue
which m d leave the strongest impression on the|turbed 1 t Lobelia, 9 5 ple King Verbena, y Um er Verbenas of
human —+ and that the subjects with which we to our present state A tnowle « of the planetary b 1 This style of g: g it may be
become i and to which our energies are | sy ong. n who Should be | remarked severely taxes the . of "the gardener,
devoted in youth, are those for which we retain the t
liveliest interest in after years, and that for these | justly be thought a MA and the same argument | choice of — A portion of the design is fil led up
reasons the effort required must be both a mental applies to the difficulties diss geolo; pretty white spar obtainable from the leai
and a moral one ? A deep debt of gratitud these remarks should lead our author|mines to be y Akey t Lothersdale, a district of close
is therefore due to bodies like this Association, | to take u up. the subject — an especial matter for future | proximity to — . and this necessari ly excludes
which not only urges the wants of science on instruction. Meanwhile we recommend his 8 white Verbenas and other flowers of the same colour.
the Government, but i jt at once with well- to our m as one whose ns a are sound, and | The blue and purple slate also interfere with the use of
matur how to supply with the greatest | from which, however e peann Me y be n E rd purple Verbenas, and the yellow and red gravel divisions
certainty and to the public advantage. We|deal of instruction d entertaiamenit | plain! — that care must be exercised in contrast-
T aequ qucd in hoping, however, that by — rived. M. i | — 80 as to create — . Another difficulty
diffusion of science, and its increas easing recognition as a N. e e A PA EO rises in the necessity for preserving the outlines of the
> — | part o of o ur national edu ucation, | the public i ih 'atural History for Beginners. By James Owen. | beds in this style of — without which the
l I
"qm. 2
| (Longmans) Parts 1 & 2. — effect is — or less lost. warf. growing plants are
se the claims of G. R. —— ser They are abundantly therefore indispensable, and course the range of
— — aes 1 he ! engi 1g | illustrated with s quie 8, —.— — only a colours * om 1 an. D FH
box, but t e, like il ossary, — we be soma. J f technical gardener here, has however surmounted all dificul-
parent, sure of his parenta solicitude — its — — | words, but a good index. uppose they will be | eas of this oe, pe a most er: itable manner,
| that the State will recognise. in science one of its found in most schoolrooms. On the south seco
elements of strength and prosperity, to foster whichthe| The Biblical Reason Wh y (Houlston & Wright) is|
clearest dictates of self-interest demand. Opening Speech | one of those question mi Ae compilations which | a m
— m al Highness Prin nce Albert, President of the — favour with a c class of readers. There are and steps rising to a terrace, on which is to be found
ssociation. ; 24 pages: of this kind of matter —— Miel men- t i
Humporpt.—If the activity of this Association, such | tio we have LE
as I have endeavoured to describe it, ever found or in e before us the fourth v volume t of Mr. Stain-] Ist row, Variegated Balm; 2d do, Geranium Tom
eould find its personification in one individual—its in- — C of the Tineina (Van Voorst), in Thumb; 3d do, Calceo laria e ire 4th do.,
carnation, as it were—this had been sari in that whieh, — pet: Sivan of — — 2— — Beg Dahlia Zelinda, the purple variety ; 5th do., blue Age-
distinguished and revered philosopher who has been | Frey, an oes ouglas, we have the of | ratum. as we have e said, one
removed from amongst us in his 90th year, within these | the eee of the tiny — called Coleophorans, the elites of ribands, in which the purple Zelinda
last few n months, [UM qa von Humboldt incessantly | whos e grubs mu e in the interior of leaves or seeds into Dahlia played a — part. This plant should
str at universality of human | which they mine their way in the most extraordinary be universally cultivated, being dwarf in habit, an
— — "aser siasii) in în need of thoughtful 8 manner, eventually cutting — " two skins of a leaf abundant bloomer, and standin does quite alone
e its integrity ; ve | and — them to toge ether with a degree of accuracy | in its peculiarly rich shade of colour. Nothing could
nothing but t tinet renders possible. | be more beautifa l than it was at Broughton Hall; all
— in pem He —.— all scientific men as i — of these little creatures are minu utely | that is necessary is to get it forward early and to k
me — of one family, enthus iasti ically directing, cribed i vom im. rion oy — 8 and Latin, and — from “drawing” x when = B icons are young.
ng, excellent coloure engrar in In all ing ab hich ends a the east
— de da the willingness dor $ b. His protection respects this is sa publication that does honour to even the an south terraces are scu of Rhododendrons and
of — aa * led m: many to Success in admi rable es of works on British Natural History | other shrubs rainy 3 autumn-blooming
their pursuit, His nal influence w d Ww go intelligent enterprise of Mr. Van plants, forming altogether e fr most effective
and governments of mos a ira in Prope enabled | Voorst. flower gar rden
him to plead the cause of science in a er which Not
made it more difficult for them to — Fui ps grant Trap: Lists REC
hat he req All lovers of science d mourn | bam) No.7
à i addition to | of.
S È
the least — 3 of this fine place
egant and s spacio vatory. By m eans of
TH
Il
S
i
n
fee
d
HE
-
E]
ence "vci very here some very ory E
assembled, an thus giving expression maa our admi- — , among w
ration of im should be the anniversary of his birt winii, a new fea ture in
The P; rinces a Opening Speech ge te —
(To be Thi
an
Tabrothamnus elegans blooming
t deserves to be more generally vated i
` Abutilon” striatum was also in great beauty, and
——— inest — es — any | Orange and Citron trees 8 clothed with ——
ption. n will find in it plenty o things | o blossoms. This con i
Notices of oth '| worth their attention. Wm. Chater’s s (Saffron Walden) 3 feet in length, 20 feet [EN and 20 fect in
ist of Superb New - 0 —— of hei of 30 fee
Geology in the Garden, or ebbles.| eleven pages of a. with a full description of the
By the Rey. — So Eley, vw “pall 25 Daly, 1859. | col f each sort, and concludes with excellent e
o. 219. Tab.lith. xii. tical instructions f.
C Flower Roots imported. A 3 — mes was à capital of “Orion Melon
"damn persons as n ly read | — useful things.— J. Linden's ase) variety which Mr. eil esteems ve ery highly. In 1 805
ogy. It contains in fact far more than it | Supplément extrait du dies oF e No. 14. On two | of the greenhouses was a plant of annd — in —
Promises at first sight. — aoe may b t , whether sto t, a8 and deliciéusly flavoured. The colour
nd otwithstan
— 5 85 well known to er .
whom alone the catal
ot en from the mansion is ^s ite pe i with
flued „on which a moderate bnt stil — prone
ge
2 5
*
EIE
dE
E,
— i — — are tuo unexceptionable. The new Golden Hamburgh, Bowood
and an Muscat, a - M
5 ode i Parinariu M n m
a — in the fint iom es or to surround them | Adansonia and Lecythis, whieh do. do not — to othe here. er devoted to the trial of new bedding
— form of a The author in his | class, if by plants and — a ſine patch of the beautiful Linum
im to give a complete history of his favourite| plants, new and rare rns, Orchids, and Palms a: and grandiflorum rubrum was in full beauty. Mr. Daniels
an enters into geological questions relative to | their allies, of whid- — is a great many. Buyers of stated that the seed of this had been soaked for 24
E formation, the strata in which they are contained, | rare rare plants should always consult Mr. Linden's lists. | hours in water and then sown in the open ground.
" have been dri trans- — —
over the surfa
ph the soil, whieh are directly
œr indirectly applicable to other minerals, and which — m Memoranda. Miscellan
contain a portion of the general facts pre — nted by| Brov N HALL, NEAR SKIPTON, YORKSHIRE.— , Sale of Plants at the Crystal pori ace, Sydenkam.—
had he 3 em the subject of the | Few — travel tg valley of the Aire on their way ^ of Camellias and other plants,
eration of the primitive and volcanic — little | to Scotland dream that one of the brightest and t the zw. was sold h e
wanting to mak d» work an excellent in- | beautiful of pom in the north of England lies em- other = ^ Mine de e & Morris.
Tuten rang to bosomed amongst magnificent Beeches and time- itm ias, which varied — 6 ft. in hi
Pars Observers "nature i indeed as may chance to | honoured secin of Yews, eris quite out of sight large portion consisted 81 Double White kii
gis cts | flints DS say nud employ- | of those to whom the spot is furnished with bloom buds. They reali
E er ani years in the study of the various organisms,| Broughton Hall, — ao Sir e R. Tempest, 17. to 27. 156. per lot of — mi
or ; i x :
a handsome t ;
iess degron F perfection: We suspect) portico in front, and — — a pot, fetched 37. 10s.; others from 3 feet
lotr d char Naam members of the yegetable world are beantifal scroll- -patterned garden designed by Nadel, height fetch "
Bidwi
are
Ded at all, and as most of the fossils which flints | pla This
^ play a conspicuous paga Part occupies an area smaller
ron are marine, unless we suppose that the habits | of 13 by z y sunk in the hill side, and has a a | Rhododendrons fetched from 7s. 6d.
nis — — "Alps in year: days were different | handsome stone — at the north-east corner. i n rieties, 2 diem. Bio. 3o Dk
ey are dod assign to the| This style of gardening is particularly suited to the hybrid kinds in “i x r
b thidia some origin from that of the T dom of England where the pei so det Standard Bay trees in tubs, VAS pti e —
: no
ni
B
SEE
t
T
F
j
T
E
F
"Eg
Ht
E
25 8
Hi
i
Ht
1
8
E.
È
g
| only
hes sense upon the to make up a telli cvs highly | sold. : lefielà
oed are te Ae | teresting decorative 1 rden for the wanes md I _ Important Saleof Plants at Cooper's Hill, Engh £f
b he gone a little deeper — re stri Holl - Snipers Green.—T!
Lau a — 15 have e | Auc my. Bhododen drons, &c., move readily x intan }Assiem and other stove and greenhome plants ir
on geologi 'onsidi orn per spring, and can easily be riaa available f es winter brought to the — cum 8 lese y Bill, y 3 feet
" y i: past when ar i any attempt to|gardening. On the occasion of our visit the garden Stevens. Of in b, fetche Fill: x
Scripture account e Creation and pes alluded to was brilliant with gay flowers, the out- | 6 inches high and a8 muc S ,
EE
ag
re
E
BE
TIE!
i
B
382
i"
p
gi
i
'g
— Y4; Perryana, 7/. 1Us.; optima, 61. 10s.; Ghd in Seem plants, it soon disfigures the finest oda ke UN be proceeded w iis
LL Tex variegata, 6/.; lateritia, 57. [em ; alba a
nmm 51. 15s. ; pies ni 51.; and other lots from 21. 2s. FORCING DEPARTMENT. me Tak amor FRUI f che KITCHEN g
to Bk 10s- OF other pae Acrophyllum veno- PINERIES oe showing ue 30 . err E X kr ary ue
feet hi t m bee „are so valuable as to be well w S n heay e
— 71. 108. «os "Willow eate ne- decidi care, for they will afford r ecd at a season | times necra sary to surround the [^T :
t tegia, 57. 10s. ; Aphelexis ‘macrantha rose", be the best- fírnishe d gardens cannot supply muc ir rottin
— of the finest plants in ("qc try, 9. ; A. m. pur- | variety in the var i fresh fruit, While favour rable mh water, to do if surrow nded 4 bet P
purea, 5“. 10s. ; A. m. iflora, 47. 5r. t y will however Bios no parti- be ny E crops of T
speciosa, 44. 107. Tet a ericoides, 37. tt bu y the event o In x din T p ay ii
Erica jubata, 2“. 4s.; Mara s " Et 3 setting i in, "e shows must be RE protected fr sol de i osely toge
Pandanus ni Wan variegatus, 37. E and should be kept rather warm an nd dry until oU 110 Bre E grow ng crops
grandiflora, 37. 5 E. m. t 2. 65.5 ; Pinclon after ‘blooming, when they w ix M be readily injure he erris v win ‘be ben weeds, Recently ma its d
centi 21; "Henderson 27. 6s.; Eriostemon a c rather low te emp Those who grow e Ge apie ed 2 Occasional Sm.
buxifolium, 2. rp ; and A ena ndra speciosa, 2l, HON ese ird df i round —
ther lots, of h tl 11 202 t bl to treat them more judiciously | 1 thats or aot er od, 1 time "i
10s. to 30s. per lot; „and the produce of the 95 p dia. c an be done when g at kind of work.
A second portion v Plants that “have been ke ept Ol and | attained reiki We „
we understand, be sid on Thursday the 13th inst. dry for e past, in order Aes prepare shen for | For the Week ending Sept.29, 1859, ECT NEAR LONDO,
Large Me lon alate me eetin ing of the Paris Hor- į fruiting, should n ow b pl ced i a br risk h eat, wm ng — Gees
ticultural 8 on was exhibited, eed h to in ELT moisten tl ts, S0
Ro amd 244 lbs. It was produced by a M. Pageot, a o get the fruit fairly me syi safe before TUN unless |
cé priests at van his is the largest J Continue =
we have any account of ne mentioned os the sink a warm moist temperature, with plenty of) manure uude
Rev. T. Phillpotts of 1 v ar Tru and avoid | Nen
| drawing the plants by a l igh mum temperature. With | Tues.
The Wan c or Wild Dog In the Wild proper management and convenience, 70? will be iari :
which ranges Nepal and the wh ole of Northern ma | safe while e Suec ssfu l Irc 8 EE
the guine type of the dog ture Sept S od 7 5
This "y iom, Denn presents many p "T Eye and warm; “at
e Dhole, and is said to rival the "ter Season, borealis, E j
s tiger. ns propensities. Like the
aa inter their d this was gw
ut tan beds and is finge have x |
Len p ace to
8 N »
and n teal willingly permits
take
of glass, with |
h
1
MASS I
8
but
days would be an unpardonable waste of means.
ha
s
Su. a ray of light, and to M Sa the practice st Tonner
i
ardly 1 too much to say that with modern facilities we
ito distinct fih the voice of the domestic dog, au
yet has nothing in common pad the prolonged ee of
Mi the jackal, or the fox The number
necessary i
and rar but. this cannot. ebe done, ay those whe are
ividuals in each pack is not very great, from ei ht
‘twelve 3 the mx "Mss ELE are s possessed of
decline o
g
the season, Those, however, ho I t
th 4}
wers of sc e tallow et more
than by the ne
nsuah readily attaches itsel to i its kh wit this m
uable the
late the 8 so as to 400 Ta grow i and
ust also be attended to under any circumstances.
1
Fine; densely ov
2 —Cloniy and dies ses
Zap fog; fine; very ee
29— Clear; low white ark + E show datik
Mea e ure of t ch deg: above ene
RECOR 1 penitus " C
During the the! last E im. for the ensuing Week, E Ue im
[CU
122 —
EL sd Mea! 88. of
October. |EZB|EE B| $E ton in 8
s Se e | which it tity .
RE 44" Rained, | 9f Rain.
Sunday 2.. | .
T 3.— 1.01
4. .06 6
jas pe oe le
The Viet premens pem the above n T
1834—therm. 80 deg.; and the lowest on the Sti eee
puendaesdradebsddh ;
ion, assistant in “Take advantage of fine bi eather while it d id
MN. "Unfortunstely. the e “Will too often refuse | lasts for getting the wood of young Vines well ripened: | |... fein dul dir ae ails
confidence to any one except its keeper, and there-| use moderate rith a free circulation of air, an scored amd rubbed wi ith
Ms so useful as it might i rendered.| where the object is to ripen the wood keep the atmo- b M
is probable that the keeper himself has some hand in | sphere as dry as ble. Late Grapes not yet ripe ripen t is
conduct, wilfull i repel|should also be assisted with fire-heat and a free circu- not to be needed after "sich T he applicant
t * > tá 4 p the dish is foun v be bitter the app
he advances of any himself. In the chase | lation of air, in order to forward. us ripening as much |
the wild boar, the ter of tl inns Keep. ripe Trish Subscriber in is
Í i fruit cool with of a vent. a an he would be likely to obtain ER nis, in pots
j Ress plenty o any injury ports AF Hedera Helix. He has hither t
of sudden snap is more destructive to its prey than the | from damp, i cut out 1 ure berries directly to procure this p lant, as nobody seems to fink it wi
‘bite of an M y hound. For other game this they are perceived. Houses in which the wood is] keepin
‘creature is but an uncertain assistant, as it will often | thoro rip hard i ept l, sod the | GARDEN Eus: Egis. Tt is impossibl en
` give up a 1 just at the eritical moment, and i | ventilators of these should be left open night and day satisfactorily. In rough reckoning i but et
« apt to : E fi i : J| garden requires a man erue
ipd T aside from its | te quarr Y s will prevent land is covered with forcing houses pU
ating a tame p or goat. € and is allow 20 men for it. On the E had ara
molat
e Tiesto Natural History.
e best aon pi getting the Ms. into
mant es ready for ing.
largely of rough plantation,
Calendar of Operations.
(For the ensuing Week.)
Yom wet; for although there is no e h neces- |
sty for this it will be better done while the border is |
a dry, healthy state.
In report of the late
M ome it ‘or ne e Los *
— — Pd bees AND SHRUBBERI W.
: PLANT DEPARTM MILDEWED
any scarce plants in 55 borders
CONSERVATORY, &c.—Many of thes stove plants which which they intend te pot n must be careful — »
have. aen Mes ‘the principal ornaments of the conser- | the ther; ure being safe, mus
vatory will now be np ds tof Di boom, and foresight when there is ‘the ‘lightest ‘appearance of frost. “Give
arie
flower to E their places, Some of t ost forward | sturdy, well-rooted plants are much easier to winter
enu ers os een ae a rather close | than Jarge plants with long. ane ie weed, E oe — d T 9, Jersey
uce open giving and e d to and a 3, "of the
oe of manure-water ; and the most . as soon as it is well established aerating into the Real d'Hiver Ap lbs. qx ne do
wintered. ith conve- i
areta maiden blossoms; as also Da phnes | nience late-rooted cuttin ngs may still be po fied off; but
many other dO Piece! their re Sa rim unless eu Shey are very thick i pH e cutting pots we would
ier at keeping th orem vecti of this | prefer sexes them pe. to shifting at this
yong ust uffici t fire-heat on damp eT Been space in the cutting
air ddr ined M Ther 2 Berk ae
prevent require
those that are a
15-inch deep pans are very sui for
in possible. “Place specimens ripening. pints, an poe
in the coolest y of the the house, and water sparingl ces ier being b r ees
at the root. Achimenes, Gloxinias, Gesner: &e., er as well trekted | in 1 this fare by dat potted d sl dem
are properly ripened of .may be stored away in any|pots anda vast qua: may be inte wh
dry place E dag be secure fi but space. Where pig a this kind have to be wint —
iuba chro rot where they will be free in fram s, the pla ts should 3T t
damp, and "ley should | not be exposed toa lower — singly, a th id ses ag PS f, desit ac
rature tha bout ae 50 ; many valuable p qu nier is "mun 3 CRISE 1
ost
sheds, &c. Hard- acad lants, such as T ke
— with amen EE roms, M
zy ere It itu may be impossible to give air for Mena
ther. Let us, however, protest against the ay
be ati r: g mp sepe fop — mistaken. notion
t ly nomy; air calculation of the uired
in inthe rn Get any growing plan is that t require | toattend 5 plants wintered in this way eer terion d a
room shifted as soon as convenient, in order to | and all the losses co., ta into MAS x eee : è
ea well —— into the fresh soil before winter. found to greatly overbalance the trifli f fixi
— ai ivl — especially thrips, a proper heating apparatus and a few bushels of —
l t this season on such | or coal annually. A the majority of the parties con-
wing i a See warm house, beu ne of eee
ove the "se: and would be Mns, in 5 d
clean then i v immediately this pe
if qe way with grow
din vii &c., and the
ei
y the
9 E o of space which would
erations are projected or iu
ffected. Where
a ata, ni :
rthless. 005
we E. "o 185 * P
3 A lea
We must also beg
ts the insertion of whose contr"
t
x * Ocronze 1, 1859.]
— L MANUR
LES, — Man
and others engaged in making ARTIFICIAL . URES
obtain instruction for their economical
and efficient on, by applying to Nesbit, F. G. S.,
&c., Princi of the tural a emical College,
Ken ington, London, S. Analysesof Soils, Guanos, *
phates of Lime, Coprolites, &c., and Assays of Gold, Si ver, and
other Minerals are executed with — and despatch.
Gentlemen yv of receiving instruction in — ical
N R. J. ^ — manufactures the following
ANURES :—
TURNIP MANURE £6
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIM 6
MINERAL SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME :
— MANURE
Genuine PERUV IAN GUANO “direct fro
aii, NITRATE or SODA, SULPHATE or AMMON we —
Chemical Manures.
WHEAT MANURE.—PERUVIAN GUANO is proved to be
the — and cheapest Artificial Manure for Wheat, at Autumn
Cotton-seed Cake of best quality
Bidos
—
—— ced eS
Offices : London Bridge, E.
2 TERT Tivv Th Gouri at
(Esrantmmxp 1840
Have the following MANURES r delive
CORN MANURE ron AUTUMN SOWING.
ms Re ANURE ron AUTUMN SOWING.
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME.
— ERPHOSPHATE MINERA x
The on Manure Company also supply PERUVIAN
GUANO. (direct from Messrs. Gibbs EOM D BONES, a or
AMMONIA, NITRATE or SODA, BONES, and
ery :—
every other Manure of known value, all * ich they warrant
strictly y gen uine. P" n supi lied.
M6 F. Fenchurch Stree’ a Secreta
NARD, LACK, AE 3 * ENT TRATED
r. Voelck * These must
to you, ipe — "y^ “best eih SE [^ very
and —— value which characterises
trated superp! hate.“
tcr of the late and present
with Testimonials,
to BURNARD, LACK,
GUAN E present = of =
valuable Manure is Y per ton for 30 tons and upwa
"s ton for 1 ton up to 30 tons.
order to protect themselves against the purchase of
adulterated mixtures and of inferior — purporting to
— to. Peruvian, consume
ose honesty and 2055 dealing xd
can place implicit cocddéane- ANTY. GIBBS & Sox
15, — Street Within, London, EC
i mw
T Ni :
HE PATENT NITRO- PHOSPHATE OR BLOOD | wat
MANURE COMPANY (LrxrrED).
Road, Pimlico, S. W.
er Cambridge.
'errace, Belgrave Square, W.
re Cambridgeshire.
GENERAL HALL, Weston oie
Joss BRADY, Esq., M. P., Warwie acne
Chairman—Jonas WEBB, Ba, Bal LX
8, pea Kd iden
5 — . a ae —
IHE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Se
Ens IMPROVED LIQUID MANURE, AGRICULTURAL IM
yy anNERS
MPROVEMENTS, LAND DRAINAGE
R GENERAL PORTABLE PUMP. ROAD MAKING. X FARM BUILDINGS. j
These Pon are fitted with NV R. BAILE Y DENTON maintains a t lange staff for
Warner's Patent Bucket aud Valve, the execution of these works by commission or contract,
and cannot clog in action. The barrel He also — ares Working. Plans to enable — —— to curry
is made of galvanised iron, not likely out such im prover ments thems nsi elves.— 3, Parliament Btros t, S. W.
to corrode, s e raised or lowered > * x
at pleasure on the stand, — legs of AN XD IMPROV JENERAL
which fold together, and may be car- are empowe a Mes A we
E ners
riod wit ith ease by one man to tank or lanai in D che "into effect ‘the folo wing P Improvements and
and expe
£s the whole outlay nses on the property
Stand and Pump, with screwed ved.
tail pipe, fitted with strong
brass union for suction pipe 2 15 0
If fitted with barrel -
ished coppe:
nd and Pup with dct
—
mpro
Irrigation, Warping, and E:
Cottages for Agricultural
i and all kinds of Farm Buildings.
ô The erection of Farmhouses,
Sta III. Theconstruction of Roads,
tail pipe, for tying | on suc- IV. Grubbing and Clearing , Enclosing
tion pi 29 0 Fencing, laiming Land,
m patent ru rubber and can- The Landowners by whom any of these Improvements may
en suction pipe, on be executed are—Tenants for Life, Trustees, Mortgagees in
wires, e her 10, 12, or 15 ft., 2 2 cierres Guardians, Committees of Inco pen nt persons,
per foo bo 2 ey Women, * cial - Lives or f * erm -
May be obtained o Ironmonger or Plumber in tow: in years, ns, Ecclesiastical or Municipal
— at pos above fo or of tho Patentees and Manufac- Incumbents, ee Charitable Trustees, æc.
turers, J. W. n & 8, 8, Crescent, Jewin St., London, E. C. The Owners of Esta entailed, nas may be desirous to
* o U : E. void the expense or — oerte co of a Legal Mortgage, may
Esq., 1 n N ?
den Villas, Camden Town, N.W.
UN orpe, near Stamford.
22 2 — St. John Street Road, E. O.
Hoare & Co., Lombard Street, E. C.
olicitors :— —
& Dorman, 23, nee ve W. C.
. CARTER Jonas, Eq, Cam
Manager Siir. J JAMES ODAMS. | Seercta: Secrctary-— Mr. O. La TR
: 109, Fenchurch seen London, E.C. ; Manufactory,
E wom Marshes, Esse:
HAW’S TIFFANY is uni 3 MM E B
be the 1 ie neatest, and CMM Mà material for —
the —— f th Stout obe — rig
— ie sun, without o
the light, Also, for p Es Bloom of 8 ag eye
iec
eing limited | to 31 years, bx at for all other
0 o! sion to 50 years.
o investigation of title being required, and the charge not
being affected by Incumbrances, no legal expenses are incurred.
any's Act are ed into two
h re th downer designs a
by his own Agent and merely
he Company to ge the Estate,—the
Company undertake the enti -
sibility of the Improvement and obtain by
Charge. In the first case the plans,
: Cc
AMES'S PATENT LIQUID MANURE DISTRI. | Agent are fo! ed to the Oompars tt
Jen WATER-CART, warranted not to choke up or | for approval to the Inclosure Commissioners. As soon as the
otherwise got out of order. t is thoroughly adapted for for Drill sanction has been given the Landownerp to tethe
ture Land, or for Watering Street — and the Company havin, F
e N X FIRST PRIZ Uthe official forms, complete the charge on the te when
NS Particulars and Testimonials may be obtained of the E — — the Com "m ay
atentee, ISAAC — — Waggon Wor ks, C! — mo part of the-bosinem ka th — contest e 6 Laudi
1955 roved LI MAN PUMPS supplied. T except tr the — ure Commissioners, The Company
pro QUI ine
EENING AND “COMPANYS PATENT WIRE never interfere, bo gr ^c special request of the Landowner
1 e -— such extent as may further the
—— he has
In the frog — “where the Company are
— the M a report and estimate of the aed
nent are sent to the Landowner, and having been approved,
the 3 are 1 prepared and the works—either submitted to
Patronised by His ing —— the Prince Conso
No. 16 variety, Double Mesh, Italian Pattern, for Gardens, ke. mired.
Cmm
f HEET 1
mnn nnn DDR.
HA e
fü
eee
commission and "n Dota Minati ex
on the
nses,
Estate for the term fixed
y the
The Compa: ny also execute Drainage and all other Works of
Land — we! ement on Commission for the Owners of Estates
not Entailed who may wish to charge the ere on um pro-
perty -— 03d the simple and inexpensive process the
Company's
Appli
1
i
to be addressed to
N me
POULTRY, ^
MONDAY, TUESDAY, an
and 30, and THURSDAY, [dee nie ge 1, ci
other Articles of Silver Plate, and Gold and Silver
mount of 1250. will be
: od.
8. 6d.
The Si Iver "Medals o permette Dublin ed the Manchester
Botanical Societies ity been awarded — uen ENING & Co. for
the Pede eg of their Lupe to horticult: p
Esq., Dunstan House, Moncax, Secretary.
NE E. ggg ^ ildings, pter Temple Street, Birmingham.
** Your fence for my flower — g I could have
FI OW, 1859.—
e ANNUAL SHOW of FAT CATTLE, SHEEP, =
Iam — content with | the price, and en: isos on the Gth, 7th 7th, Sth, m and 9th Decem
Street,
— and has met with thi ion of all _ qu
seen it.
a s hene dà the amou 1595
e contains descriptions of the contains separate
ire Fences for Parks, * — fords, Short-horns, Sussex, Norfolk or r June E s 7 —
reru a Ve) — D». also of Iron | horns, Scotch horned, 8 Scotch polled. 1 Irish, Welch, sad ¢ cross r
^ Pos t free on application. mixed breeds. hort-
GnEENING & Co., Victoria Tik and Vie Works,
81, Oxford Street, Manchester.
Geek PRA OF rtr plat gd AND Ai — mi
mington
CTICAL and G
8, Lower Ken NO 8 Kenning ey Lond pion, $
Principal
8
tate how
cari.
rm A. Ox o
B. 2 ow or Helfer.
Form D. Pen of 3 Wethers.
—— imer ran im outh e the E E d ^ C. r Cow in Extra „ E. One Wether or Ewe
Engineering, Mining, afacter , and the Arts — in Extra Stock.
Naval and Mili rvices, and for the Univ rsities. Pic aw
Analyses and Assays of v e tion are promptly and | Form F. Pen of 3 Pigs. | v: Stock
accurately executed at t be e terms and other par- rate Entries finally i mber 1.
ticulars may be h: to the Principal.
Prize with rules and regulations m and Forms a 2
cates to pe. Obtained of B.
| corner of Half Moon Street, ndon, W.
N.B. All communications ah the Club's business should hare
EST OF ENGLA ae SOUTH WALES
LAND DRAINAGE AND INCLOSURE COMPANY.
Established in
V
1844. * 885
No $— Double strength, 18 yards long, „ by 29 inches ii ar ch crn he eee pe a e: ith&eld Club" outside, to distinguish them
conte aero mere > ; T
No, Em Treble st strength, 18 yards long, by 39 inches wide, all nds; a ‘improvements exerted "1 pss | 5
e era. 1 e MU nr, c ada £1
TTC ee
“ — Patronised by her the | Offices: Ex F 0, on ES S. W. ph
S Queen, the — Northumberland for e the HIGHLAND AGRIC! zt v ;
is oo the Duke of Devonshire for Chiswick Gardens, Pro. puris “VETERINARY. $ 0| LL L EG GR ; ed. He
for the Crystal Palace "Society, Nate Mrs Den athe Veterinary C ural Society has asked advice from one of his neighbours, who
Lawrence of Ealing Park, and —Collier, Esq., of : hereby tipa that t x^ SESSION WED. m s him to go to the north and obtain from
PROTECTION FROM run G RAYS 8 ESDAY, Novi a colder climate the change he needs: he has asked
— — DOMO,” a Canvas made of patent prepared rures of e includes the following Classes :— r of his neigh and by him he is
a perfec fect non-conductor of Heat and Cold, keeping, 1. Zoiatrica, Veterinary Medicine and } professor Dick. another ¢ obtain his
— 4 — s applied, a fixed tem ture. It is adapted for urgery ended to go to : ale.
git horticultural and, floricul r preserving 2. Zootomy, or Ve Anatomy, ur. STRANGEWAYS, K "n —
— — and Flowers from the ¢ rays of the sun, from and Anatomical Demonstrations is three weeks earlier than it is in Scotland.
— ed attacks of insects, and from morning frosts, To | 3. Chemistry, embracing macy” Jo. As hh harvest is ctc bow pty y
any ired lengths. arms wi e, 1s. 6d. per Materia Medica, E Pharmacy e — ao is pt
Vater four, 3s. per yard. Also, an improved make for | 4. Practical Chemistr: Dr. ALLEN DALZELL. Let it, in the first place, € admitted that a
: Phares ards wide; 9s. 6d. Le yard e 5. Microscopic Fate Dr. Youne. healthil 1 roughly ri seed is perfect
EuisHa TmoxAs AncHzm, whole and sole manufacturer, 7, i ge eed ted b; rr h dit tio n sion fa filled,
Trinity Lane, Cannon St., ity, E.C., and of all Norseryiden 6. Practical Pharmacy an nie E Dick, assisted by of its kind. and that, these vem itions being
ä the kingdom. “Tt is rauch cheaper Instruction Mr. WORTHINGTON, V.S. it matters nothing whet ther i be grown n chalk, or
Edinburgh, October 1 Jy. Hart Maxwett. I
day, or sand, A “ change T from one geological for- Ai svo
Puta
, necessarily an advantage. | and thus cp ms
t you ean rm Healthy grown and cu ishing d
e
V sec
grt p
e this we must
tns
dy y a portion
push forward iu early grow gio
€
cad
ma
botanists ant as gr 3 distinetions of from surface weeds,
species, th
or less permanence which plants acquire
rai um : To ri mildew yog
rth un
8 will be
y combining a n
dy the 9 hoeing the soil must as aot psi “It is the
f the cultivator Ur ch fav
of habita
hi
climate, and which though and it may be confidently re lied u upon
Mas d of alteration 9 ultimate N by | “st "ver of ke M — 85 onltiyation of la d
sono canssa cdi sqm ge aai uae eil su be ws EI 5 ale aem ee —
"n m PT f the si 5 will be far less liable to be im peded
lity or season are favourable or otherwise. | than pren p our best farmed land when worked |
Thus we doubt e s Ms id” distin guishe d by horse labour.
for several years under g The influe
ordinary productivencss wi ER be more likely t than | and the results are almost as depen iim. pon the |
one of inferior character in this respe ect | to yie eld | mo i
one of |
nd
nce of manure is also very E |
which we should offer to our cor ena sa would comp ier ie 0
our various artificial n manures
ual
rowth of sat,
: hydrated or
eontinued working of M soi
tribution of the man sed T
. Maca
t Qe m
nie matters
— 8 in an eq
tion; but the will be. materially influenced
byt the mode in n which the plants * their sup-
plies nape: i or example
manure ead between zum s, and thus
n from distributed. Td ui pu the ground, it is clea
h
be, yayi y! look out for seed of a sort which has
been
ri
ere are, however, characters which
armyard | a
—.— Te
In va pe the ingredients again, *
t 561. a ton, is so valua ble only vin
organic matter which yield
r | kinds s yie
the crop
diei se ra it,
a search are . mpeded. There e is no induce-
two | ment for the roots to strike out od mri soil around |
and draw therefrom additional su This isa
3 objeetion to E —
1 he
Sussex and from Aberdeen — are re likely that altho
to bring with ‘them in addition e quantity | manure thu
or quality of rs A an uce i
e: must be betw the
upon “the relative pons of those
espective climates of
ae ave encouraged, and | m
s hardiness and E ta to
: an
‘ust hinge
Murit risties
a
-
the land and more generally “distributed through
the th in following after
i en to the vene 8 vd up — ania h
» des probable that ms din ;
qoe rar untry the m
ofthe two, dad Un hab if our c ore
what he wants at hand ee agis better porum to
Wheat grower in the so
| In
raise ay
are very
ch the manure is
9k 2 before
t to *
a general
not get evident in those cases in whi
some M — in Mas autun and plon
ng . 6
l its powers =
| addition to the excitant itself, The advantages of i
origin is of e. li
Dr. Ma 2 referreil ps to the sale d
adu — — He said: —“ Darin Nee
season I have had forwarded to me for analysis
and valuation a — number of Mes
o which had sold as Per
ure thus exerts its stimulating powers
gr creates ady vadis 1 ecause the ex e t action is
panied by supplies of food ready to be used. |
o not pretend to sa
iac
the essing the
ge generally distributed pada. t the ‘coil — — the | i
arket town or
r
the farmer’s s
io "Nis
| there on, are all m pla six 1 Pa
do:
portant vers — 8 suficient to ce aside 1 the |
such eir reumstances
calculate the v
ee xs i the
armers oppose
saving of Turnips and —.— ‘from
former and chafting the latter? Again
operation there Pag ty . —
bu
me ee — are wt]
any ed t 5 hi
c
piping the | ab of e cst a are > not neces —
ong the crack men of th
believe there is one establis hm
ent
— — these operations 5 system
colnshire
We com
those
atically — ppl
art
ur Norfolk and Lin
mend this subject to
t—a co ontras
feed iis
ias ftem wi
hose experi
HE a
| Von in the s raised with it, as
citm
ARSENIC IN SUPERPHOSPHATES.
alleged discovery of $$
icle of the 10th i HE »
or at
vekindP
— apprehension, hed in the minis
e can de no out t — e EM |
hines does be
: Straw aj l'urnip ar 0 : 1
method of preparing food, and tee W
such as our correspon ndent rr where it
necessary to save both straw and Turnip as much
> possible ; adding viet phen: they can
M wee labour involved in this additional work to
| dista the : supply of food, for “the
strike into the soil they become dependen ges An
The result i is that
y
healthy growt ani of ou
ye hee h of our edd ; crops appears to 8
careless
the prejudice but — —
ti
ore
ey T
rsons
— is likely to be presen
be admitted b
be sources whence
ment unproductive of satisfaction "
With the view — ings T to wha in
likely to suffer from Sirio of se
of this —.— 2 € le some may po
of which m perhaps be interesting, wen and ‘ano
tend to allay anxiety W.
ment of euch — n spparentl startlin aten
mentioned is not unlikely to —À
"n examined for arsenic several
p
ves iem at iag
— virt by a sm
to mildew: In
oO
p less inju m go om this | has
with some . examine | the mildew o giis
isease, but we may
more fully oth
this result.
| Swedes
e
mid air in some dis
The great wp to be attained is to rapid — of — re Vim metr checked by
eng up to the commencement of fro osty y nights coming between hot days, such as are
|
10 wel
— adi is prepared not "ony fin iy
also e iron pyrites, a
and "which i is therefore n ily
i 1
pyrites commonly used — this is pr sed
so much arsenic as is
4
| SEE = — n:
k I have manure makers | that chemical chan absorption of — — tho Jor o s in them. All they require is to have
I — of . I need scat prepare the 8 It is we ‘al known that deco ara | — e — and — ager arci
P$ “require in the manufacture of superphosphate), | disin iion of any object is the result to or n" n them. — means are the
and others, 9 have contained no 3 o under conditions that will ad inl. ofi ite ra mineral and — constitui that they
f bat traces, and fe — rey to tioii. XM * A pure! form found in supply to plate made soluble. They a are naturally dnd
E or super- 2 subsoils” is but little y consider ed, too porous—and air is * freely through them
phosphate o stained at different t times. fom some e of diae by ex e to free air a MT "fal ll of rain an to dryness,
t m ; r thr when brought up is deranged by the a f sun, fore, the less they are ex ee to free air by
H — e from very large quantities of "his wind, and rains, and frosts and thaws, but the chemical as the better. A = cession of green crops is the
f article roduced in it is little more han would take | on method — ese soils can be economically
; arsenic ; "d Riva contained f faint traces. In order to bonaceous su TASS, followed by white Turnips, or
— the correctness of t negative results I pre-
place i in the still, or
calle
T5 > oe
t
1,
d ;" or winter
which small 3 of the
P 7H to the materials employed i in the —
to —.— oxygen, when yeu Seria or it, E the t * f th
I may whi va; e on its fertile, and nce — largely of what is meant by
ures was the test known as * Marsh’s,” but should | re-exposition to fr d e t utumn cultivation.
— ed to employ oilit tests 500 the results e ‘strength of ‘these views, I make a point o When I, or one else, shall be able to hire a
obtained by this one been positive, or seemed to require | breakin my exhausted land once, in pref cultivator from near by, one and all of the io adeant
farther evidence. I sho ald a lso have examined a larger e onth's labour on half ot " -— attempted to t forth above may be practi
btained ving remander untouched till after Wheat more bee i and efficiently, with more telling
is ing, T do not mind seeing ed iis T4 | end at a less direct cost. W. G.
By using the solution of arsenic above noticed, strong | green in October, from the corn a
react arseni — tained from quantities | what annual w may grow, know that — ET:
pe smaller than jd; of a grain, and this in — vegetable substances were turned in are de- 18 NOT LIVE STOCK A NECESSARY EVIL?
the p V of nli e E so that any and — the. — with. organic acids, | 1 when you say in rum — ng
tat» might Bed raised from the reped occurrence of — rf oxygen vr a a in the spring to article. — August 1 There is however neral
or retard know that the germinating ar nd living gabi 1 4
rating additional
the elimination ‘of arsenic by this test might — over-
come.
But in order still further to be > secu à this
plants a are cling carbon and elabora
volum of o y
mpo
8
the winte
This dapat will act z a — way, and
+
and minut — es tested in the same manner in
.
dE. if there be much | sh elled co n, to the roots le ft
i of PER and
n. 1 1
There are
ren
are exceptio to the
was made at ianure wor n where pigments. occa-
sonally containing arsenic are known to be used, but the |
to be made
as, for — where — or fields are,
what is commonly called, sour. The
are — the
.
was fur
a quantitative de determination n, and vd have been. ex- |
above person.
ly minu ven supposing i
heir mineral atoms or cr
Eve
« per Tent. (although 1 the copa experiments |
liberated vem — which is all t M require "te
that plants are m of takin
in "le same ratio as they do phosphoric acid e matter |
nly requires to be further inves oa tart
we may . that the quantity of arsenic
be present in a Turnip crop is by no means formidable.
ng an acre of land to yield 20 tons fad Swedes,
wl 3 bid has 8 ate, containing 38 per
cent. of qum Bes (yd cent. of à arsenious
roots wo ould contain
“arsenious acid |
arsenic
or —— — —.— conditioned —
produeing car bon- co m —— crops.
land is very foul, ton
to be |
— this — at the presen
be said on m int.
— eavy land autumn cultivation is —
t be grown her
about halt a gr
than .00006 per cent. Alfred ‘Sibson, Royal PE
tural College, Cirencester.
as p
s tage TOPS, — as Rape, Mustard,
white . dd * rages isd themin. By introducing
xygen
uten of deep ploughing at —
once is objectionable, — as — is not expecte
t time nothing futher il
has often — the largest source
2 even
he ir food ?
ter of profit on a
ow my opinion as to em
him that there
y, he wou
in
proceeding. A —
no profit, — on the co
on the hased
o way | E obtaining $ it
stock, and
ity of in
Valuers — charge two-thirds of t the: ———
[me of hay, &c., to the incoming t who is to con-
me it with stock, knowing full we oe a stock
d will hardly pay him that amo
vegetation it bee which disintegrates it,| Mr. John C. Morton in his able orn i * — 358 vol .
Ma. were e 8 our Supplies of Animal Food,” says at page 3
| ON CUL food for as 10 i called Society’s .
. By aut that c which | of a field is cn reer re e e
must precede restoration to has deprived of" ha - p —
this ch: it transformation, pulverisation, €A— now exists in — subsoil and which
ion, or *mellowing"— is more efficien ` displaced decayed vegetation,
i in the ents of September and Oci that mostly exists there in the form of humus,
at any other time of soil is | giving to this staple qn darker colour eA which it is
better tille this practice, many —.—. of time are distinguished. IM was l its last denm
gained. If soils bi being broken in the autumn can 1 position, it was of the same 8 even
— ey order by | Christmas they we would | to the top. Living brii made the staples or janima wi
] b tid. ^ one ed Ib-soi are so two reasons;
t more largely produeing crop, as Mangel, | the * is, they of an earth that has a
l een whe this method is impracticable. | smal 1 peepee of. — or —— us matters
l tice tivation because I have|in them; the second is, they ha kn no —
ng t no of harrowing, rolling, scarifying, — aegre cm — ick the
| loughing in the i compensate for | or of a deeper — e. Autumn cu tivation, th t
vegl : — ie lan abs Bac to harvesting. | growth ar 2 vierge them in t requires no conjuror to prove that we cannot grow
M governing rule is, when fields have been sub-| tutes a method pum soil or dt Mafie « — teh rots at 35. Ad. nbi is a nearer
peus urse of ing, them up at once; d darker, an — more corn-productive | es e, Mr. Morton roves indu-
| August if I can ; but if the season and napi han they now pcssess. When it will be bitably d "e Te ae nd evils ils profitable only by
machinery of a allow — advantage, I more profitable to feed sum ps on the soil witl f of
make the best of September. I soils too | sheep, than to plo - ‘in, must depend on the depend u 2 and as an average
u deeply as it is EN to plongh them dnring tl they are forced and t they will grow. derive a rele on their TA invested either in meat,
B Tillage and green desi va, for I do not like to I have pressed the ane point, "because there is evi- butter, milk, or — Mr. paper
the fresh vegetable substances contained in T ^ —— t misconception by n — as to show the of a mix bar dry. 1 —
Toots of the last crop to the heat of the autumn | to the process whereby clay soils
du and made as tough as whi but I turn du | latent —— developed; s no “scientific writer my book, page 2870 that no animals lose so little money
a few inches down, when they remain moist and quickly | that I am aware of has done full justice to this part of as pigs.
Rercise w. ganic qualities of a fermentative | our subject. Turn again to Mr. Lawes’ “ Experiments ME mes
kind ma ost cases I h ectly| If autumn cultivation be practised on mixed soils, or Sheep,” Society's vies hy xii., page 440.
after the plough, and if the soil be light and the season | lands end 5 end for Y eim: Swedes, les it appears that the prices:
dry, I foll with a middle sized UM d that | much of the use for ent failures of v valuable | of the fat sheep and d wool covered within a
ths plan that of crop may be 8 Bub en bn than n shillings their eost and that of their pure
de last crop is sary to id and autumn cultivation is now required for this end. As|In cases we have ther t
te e It is not “rest” that restores | e wn after food and of the Turnips consum
ellity, or to a condition that will produce restorative | Rye—tha lection of fe Turnips and for attendance on the m
1 it is a change or ion of what matter aas 1 recently Sem mast ern, has been 7 itock
" — — né and their | made clear that this system must be extended. mn | bred, consider its u
— ce vi they De eiiam when agai: wat st pplyir res | costly and worth taking every care =
brought up and to free air. Ta iece of land | in the winter, or in sowing | growing corn and crops for market,
be sown with end * these be fed of m a erop of Rape and M for pong no ein | ee — hak ee
April, and the ne feeding, then | off young, is the next part, for the reasons same price for the they ec or
harrowed and roll iigh y m sot Het ws so for a fortnight | given fold the land over while feeding sheep sold it to go off the tarm. Having 3 for
orthree weeks, that land ‘will become — ode with Mangel, will supply that organic acid to the soil| hope there will be 1
alter another loughing oe two with which will idel e deny Stubble | the fature. J. J. Sept. g cattle B
then a neighbouring D would be by the end Turnipe, too, sown in the autum the lend is| PH. TR od Ded by Ms. Hors viz, by a large
May or beginning of of "Tune, after a Tu Hue clean, is good practice, and the Mod Al b. be more deve- heuer Pp erem erc with a moderate propor-
— effi rcs rt Mud 5 eii cttm etc — ag * d E M 2 and malt-combs. We 0:1
verising ciency Hiren presi 1
the last corn m when Soca and the — — power] With light — or o soils the m iae neces- mere a can 6 :
"rings about a state of perfect tillage T.. 1 "Rods FRE asini i d nod tes leonsider pigs the lenst profitable of their stock when
796
y have to buy food for them, or give th em
ther own corn at a well-known meds .
opinion I quite differ from — em. ru ho ope that
correspondents will furnish a
question.
how many Ib. of
t. of pork, not dea id w eigh t.
o make Ist. It wil
Barley meal it | ew
h vil
Mr. a shea
siete above, but
| flock at this tim
Hom e Correspondence | as s raised in 5 5 ane article of the 20th August. d.
Implicit. ee in a Bai ailiff.— —A sensible farmer J. Mechi, Tip tre
I am convinced farming is never learnt, and
I have been often guided by the hohoni ofi my |
men, and 1 saved from loss. The fo id
incident occurred t the writer’s knowled ge.
rook, a — t of I t.
F. .
LEY, YORKSH nual s
Rr» At t a e
ty, Mr. I. D. Dent 5 * Don to
[Agri i vim 1 Society," Pep doing which he congr ia etel
comp on the fact that "the ese meetings were for
mutual intercha ange of tho ought,
of pra
n his own à 8 on
a most impor ant and n . to
supplying the
1, and N
the odit In N two onthe after m return to 3 would surprise su clin 155
e yo pc irn directed their attention 15 the subject.
5 of butter an one they
of foreigner, according qu the returns o
millions per annum ; for bacon, hams, lard, an nd pork,
625 were paying b à 0002. ; 'and for 6500 pena
and qui null, 390,0007. n, lie thought it would be well
bete
E sent n were ping the
f 1857, t
bree
e small farms throughou
wel adapted for the purpos
them, and the know ints of this large expenditure for
| foreign produe e, it was s surely wor th ‘their v wh ile to try
whether their cheese,
| bacon, and eggs could not be increased. * This, however,
a4
ffice envelope. The landlo ae |
a little, ea EE the bailiff "liberty i in
such a case | “to drop him a line,” convinced as all wed
ond was befor » tha t there is no rale wi tho ut a
exception.
a
ow of A
bull
ctical knowledge as to agricultural operations, m
In the lirticles 5 5
universal u
© | tions it
to gra.
extent,
pn fat is per year,
sold I presume C d
perhaps t
o give
le of applyin na the manure
with it from
Hy di m i.
tons of guano were use bit. vah
147, per add and 330 quart ers
ground,
hal finch size.
2
(ws hels
5
Between 50
at a cost qf li
ordi
abbit Nuisance. Te: a concur in all t
written on this t when
same return
think it is imposs
Sm
13 manures
„074“. for
at rw were, paying 8 for f
th
ES 396,4967. in the form of bones, and 3,613
1 making a total of more Shan 6,000,0007. for agricultural
uce and man ported into this country.
8 Englist h farmers were paying
e for manures, cattle food, and pem
‘hile estimate
Ilions os as the amount expended for the
articles ordi to augment the „productive power o of o.
oil alon
my cottage door in 8 evening e
the hundred. The s a
eek
six months’ notice to quit. This
guns, e ge and nets and snares, so dusily to work,
Mer ta f extermination was waged with such ven-
có, that in the apres season a party of six or
wood
The e in m country
2s. brad Per day; the men who care
are taken u
are
Hos
taken the Pasten in which they were placed by the
doin of the corn law a and were prepare e to main-
n their ground, but still there was scope for further
to xp rovement, He had 5 had an GR Si s
| examining the farms in the Post Riding of Yorkshir:
5 and in Lincolnshire, aud he must say that in this par
fof the country they were — — aes de ongra
lated them on the mut tual confide
eight gus ne be at
f land fo
mi Speaking
story told by Charles
5 fa inen, 1 C" freq 290
a Pore for the 88
ana 15 here no doubt Hen
hich
$
Min st
shire
led to results equally as e as the
system of leasing, and said that when
tenant farmers introducing the stea riia
who would qua. lly sane: the steam threshing machine, and the various
d occasio nally sacrifice a keeper meci nical means for facilitating their eiae he
of extermi inating the rabbits. ig |1
ntly to and which
of then N Midlothian
e hundreds of tenant say
joice if
es = 5
ted |f
he ti
gh, the!
IT
it: may d rather AR the gh 2 M
Mr. T.’s land, with probably the sole 725
* Riby farm,” is ns bip Ress to, if
included i in what is pesi
ot requiring her the nef of ir
steam to — 5 ee » = : does on some
+ the
ran
sf
la st few s hav
times 8 aing 21 Ne was pee
ached wherever circums "E
E
—
he word
dos 3 th ‘i ;
Farm Memoranda.
AYL ; NEAR GREAT GRIMSBY.—Mr. Wm. Tor
d Sirpis "ent farms, inall covering an area of
2100 acres, and supporting, among other objects of in
managed, that will retarn, a fair eo
Mee t crops rires with anf sit
allowed to g uch a condition that
that t mediu
terest, a most eters and valuable herd of Short-
horns, and a thrifty flock of Leicester sheep
The land he occupies varies N in n character,
is generally rather Fielding underlaid by clay o
or| —Or 1 if the
the fullest sat thickest hea
salt per acre may
the “straw, eo i thoug! ht best, E
and will del r it, 2 ewt. of guano i
ih larger a aot ‘of salt—either pt
but
chalk, and aces 5 yielding quite pian le
under good m ment. e system Monet is,
generally speaking, the ep shift, a h Mr.
T. n not bind him a on-
e
"n
finding his own ammunition and certi cate.
ne the tibia of breeding and selling d ogs.
, and th ter for a mere trifle the
cause for
ved, and
comfortably i e ero
agi Bes miss in os distribution Upon his] lend. he . that to manure for the Wheat
— ao a game eater uch ee of growth, and
^x tenants by Mang d lee he consequently 3 to manure ma
the purposes of sale,
neither honest nor Mais
a Barley crop, thus increasing the area
“the a 25 without ever taking two white
e case | for 2 root crop. Not onl s h
ble. | straw which he converts into ae wealth th
e MN 1 f
lot the two latter, a Hind qr
acre | seems to be n quite
d he told me,
n ce
ly adopt the sam, e ? plan of
use only 3 pecks of seed
of
*
m bars T averages 48 bushels -
throughout. I sold immediately 10 d E zt prega s
I . avera ge yiel
32 b — I shall certain!
planting in future, bet Tshoutt
instead of 4, which I did last
Kent.
Cinde
The wool he cli
sufficed to cove
„ for he
pped this spring, however, would hay
yos Mc NITE T nO decay im Aa pet this lange
ers for Pigs.—A lon
that pigs 45 2 fond of co
that you ca dly f:
— t eng them
— a er the "Vel
ör brick dus
g ee has taught me
ashes r cinders, wes
permanent Grass, and the other
o Wheat 500,
eeds 335.
moderate supply daily r^
div id
is ar ulia ivi "i uk
ti
es burned clay | 415, and s
if ou do not yer
k walls of |
cause of | a
dealers, wh
— generally een
that 2 eir pig
_ Progress favourably will do vell
es consume quite a | basket = burned ¢
mE ug ie average
32. Two
g 67 acres
i of the Barley |
3 quarters, that
Whea tagih
es full 48 bushels,
ere were 28 acres which produced 1
is, six and a-half (52 bushels) to ea eiio
o N y |
hat ^ — of fat
lay ashes daily;
8 vor to p^ with the irons above n .
—the prize 107. Its dimensions, 8$ er g
ds 8 feet
at bo
corn
for the past Eu Mor these materials was |i
the ! id 5 f seeding Í in the autumn, or sometimes $
Ex hg the prize at Mie for 1
1
1
that at the hinge a
by 21 inches; six
" inches Mes pec “the d
w
further
taat E
n opene
nt
ower hinge is put enough fu
upper one to let the gate $
of course the end rises w.
enough to Walke the rh close
| The bars are all of them
the heads— the mortice
pin a wrought n
Te
"
tainly se
bre Ath, a hot my descri
nough to car carry the same
e, m
idea to
E
ÜcroBxn 1, e
think, are cu to fasten the sag
w taken
—— there was sa tos ——
at least look right" to practical
’s predecessor at Aylesby Manor was PhiliP |
established the flock of Lei —
y bred e
n 1818. This year at Holm
hirer of the 70 guinea ram, the only one which
THE GARDENERS — AND
te has been some
by * — Es: 5s. pe
| LEANOR (Tun per pair — Rose, fine; 55. per pair. i
EDITH (Metran) —Reddish purple; Sa 6d. per pair.
LITTLE GEM (Macrrax) —Red ; 3s. 6c pair.
MILLIE (MacLEay). —Dark, fine
MISS GLOVER (Tur ea) Pumie; E od. pe |
CHARLES TURNER can ‘on ly recommend the — as first -
class Pinks, and great acquisitiong for — Purposes
C. TonxER's general stock of Pinks E. 2 and
strong, and are now ready for — ou ut 4 „and 18s,
per dozen pairs.—The — E ANE , Blo
FLOWER GA AND GARDEN
R.G 8 will present every — [m will
"aie d P — non House,
— ——
n qium. SWEET WILLIAMS. waned ty ant
AMES
private and eminent he Mimic and ment of
csl aa p — F to the E
we stroll
t high de ck
e than
A
try.
and this
ed in geni
to paddock where the rams are grazing, 0
shall aud that Lr are 22 a little larger in
ay floc
eep of. Lincolnshire as they now exist
doubtless “almost universally tinged 2 oo
” Vanguard,
e and . there p 12 eleven
ch do not trace back their origin to Boot!
one * them Arz included in the d mentioned
by na
especial
olden Hope,” both 14 months old, and a
younger, his blood
y pr
eological mysteries, for in it ate odes
WM of a ree. quartet of Boothian bulls. Albany
ost delicate white,
crimson avd black, beaut fully hot cy —4 Cy and
; clear cut edge of warf babit with oy
he great acq pee — Dias nthus, and us se possono by
offered In n perfection), 2s. 64. per do zen. A limited quam
air of ecd, ki sve v sy acke Neo wn now for bloom next season), | y
free by pos' st o ceipt of stam A or Post- Lc ‘Order, payable
to James Ew =, Springfield 1 tereress Ground, Wandsworth
m | Road, London, 8. e Trade supp plied.
rm 6 E R
* the
e fo
D
Per doz. .
2 Pears, standards, p. 100 75
0 | Plums, ditto itto 75
Grapto ** vem rd 9
9 | Gesneria cin:
100, 408. ^ UB
12 0| Pit ttosporu variegatum 12
Croton or.
0 | Cissus discolor .
0 | Torenia pulchella
New Bouvardias
jo m pots, lea: leading
12s. to 30
0) Lobelia fulgens, per * 16
0 | Arbor-vitæ, China,
0 18 n per 1 ey — 25
Cedar, red, 1 25
0 Laurustinus .. 165, to 40
Ee rel, common,
7
Per doz. s. d.
the | Begonia Miranda ^ .
N " ve T
endida ar-
Begonia Madame Wag-
Begonia Ri Rex, strong, ver,
00
26 Begonia umbelica
E; ricinifolia ma-
wel
A
g
zr
s"
=
ta
Begonia grandis, each .
Virgini: ^ each..
Isis, each
— each
3
per 100. . 95
Ligustrum japonicum,
per 100.
»
W oO az
cos
. 7% 0
AG S GAZETTE.
r
1000 , 16s. to
Welgela ros ʻa, »1 100 16 Viburnum, S Hion, 0 25
; r D
X. abilis. p.10016 0 100
d.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
am 0
Ash, ‘weeping, and Elm 0
MARTI
EJ
>
WBERRY, RAISE:
NURSERYMAN, Nortbentyth.
Price 10s. 6d. per 100.
The e Strawberr; E a ha later than British Queen,
and ed hardy. The f 8 in such dence
t ilk. that it id å from it to the centre of each
Boc The "The follo
bulls, &nd Sinon cultivators of fruit are
is the father of a tribe —
poe mois BE
rants of the latter,
1 “Booth Royal” and | yon
rt
rvant,
erki
ber 6, 1857.
icularl; Ashby, Octo
ide the — of 100 plants of
aaen
gas to increase as to send i Sean, lbs
a very abet hak fruit, so good oe ye flavour, fine col
atoms onderfully productive.—I tese a
a a a
** Gardener to the Most Noble the Marquis of Northampton.”
8 to Correspond “ Moulton Gran, (duly. 31.
S At Mr. — cud Chev “ne at Beat- Sir, —In justice to you as the raiser I must a rm that your
the total proceeds were Dd is a ee seni . * as — p
y wonderful, whiis! "vour pa es
M — k $ xi » Mi fine- 8 sugary Pine Apple, heightened with that of the
year-old do. oe 559 0 0 ld Bri: een S! — a "This ari ll su
55 two-year-old do. Y T 435 15 0
28 ne year-old do. 2j 99 15 0
mbs è F 4918 6
P FOR Roots: Hard:
E M requiring som.
cover,
Dot: oo pe
'G ON
one of
with
His
, about
He
I
Total
Average of 170 rams $5 n 16s.
9 was 10L, 2s. 9d. ; and in 1855, 7i
y & Son. We do not see in what wa;
e degree
— TET
e a mont fore
ing sed
A dum
hay, straw for n^
some good Carro
and to cut (a quarter
sworth Garden s, Nort ha Sept. 26,
wn your Wonderful See, or t
id for atoae. size, and colour it is quite eq:
— and ſor productiver e it far een an th:
er grown or seen. t season my ts were ve
of skill to erect and more fine, 5 and I can tray sy be gathered o 2 — rom a — plant,
8 o p my
£1392 13 6
sp. ; in 1857 the average
17s.
ruly sa róud *
with my crop of 2 5 . rrie
1 ly, Wis
4 = o Sir,
M Bawourr
d
Iam Me La rd o o locom
1797
—————
x =e ORNAMENTAL FOLIAGED PLANT—
ears
which was — p^ them
ft the July Show of the Royal Botanic Bociety, wh " a AA
| fics was awardei to it, but the plant was then newly
ported, and was consequently sms L 3 bas " ae v deve 1—
— and proves to be the fi foliaged
an
f Lon
to it the
GLY BEAUTIFUL
iption can
convey an adequate por of its E beauty, and
vite A dita ve
m
)NIFER EAR — this
m € — aa
14 Dore d
— —
gees! Be
Many oft
These are
which ORARUM Roni E fla
with any in the kin dio lom,
above will find the Nursery only 4 ef minutos walk rom the
Su uuningdale Station, South-Wes n — is one
poet 171 from London. — Ne OBL) e t, Surrey.
CAM Rr. ted 74 LOWE BUDS,
AS AND cen
AND OTHE FUL
VAN GEERT, — — Ghen Bel
following :— 5 gium,
best and showiest
begs to offer the
Fine "CAMELL XY PM ^ie aad of the
New French and Belgian Herbaceous PJEONI ES, 25 vars., for M.
LILIUM guia sns UM RUBRUM, strong bulbs, 3 per m
å En
UNCTATUM, 3e. 6.
JAPONICUM om) ba.
CORDIFOLIU
ASCLEPIAS TUBEROSA. flowerisg roots, , 1. le, per
GLADIOLUS GA VENSIS, — rea 10s, bd. rs 100,
collec of 25 new distinct
varieties, for 1), 5s,
Ghent aud — jeg rex RHODODENDRONS,
plants grafted, 6l. per 100,
GHENT AZ ALEAS, 8, with flower "buds, 4/. to 5l. per 100
fine young
The new MEXICA 3 50 varieties, öl.
PIN US VEITCHI, | bs.
DON PEDRO, bs
TIL LIA EUROPEA folis arog o Sr each.
UR
ubmit to the public
"E begs és
the T «an synopsis of his pd Ee Rire. peni
which he Mime he — will be f mspectio:
comple te
The D
USCRIPHIVE CATALOGUE FRUITS, which
„ most select 5 Drs
Ss pages erp ene e and will be sent free on
receipt of six stamps; „ — >
of all é x
I ORAS STOCKS --Bandards for orchards, .
in a bearing state.
APPLES ES os PARADISE STOCKS, ron GARDENS.—Pyra-
77 cepas for espaliers,
and dwarf bushes
APRICOTS.—8! ed, half standards
trained, half standards in pots, d' dwarf bashes for potting,
warfs trained for walls, and dwarfs in a bearing state in pots,
for orchard houses ; Dwar in
— — K CHÉRR KS. — Standards,
s Awaria pois bei trained, strong pyramids in
a sole e» dw:
STOCK. Bo
HERRIES on THE MAHALE 8 8800 —D warf bushes for
potting and culture as cs, dra trained for walls, dwarfs
c enm mids in — and pyramids in a bearing
"CU — ANTS Tiwarf bh shes, 1 Audi g and fine
POSi in pots in a bea: state, and trained trees for walls,
GOOSEBERRIES.—Sm: all, high-fevoured, old sorts, and all
ler -— Lancashire
ron VIN ERIES, | —
pnta, 2 and 3 years old, 8 to 9 feet
ushes for orchard houses; ditto
ogg Pors.—Stron,
— zm in pots, dwarf
rts from the open
ground for
MEDLARS. —Standards, 8, Arad dears
MULBERRIES.— Standards and dwar T
dwarfs "trained, dwarfs — ined Te epe por dwarfs in a
fruiting sta 5 — for — r for forcing; pyra-
midals in ren bearing tre
LN * AND rp€--* 9 er EN bushes, and standards 4 feet
— Hazel-nut.
eee has about
; half an acre of ccm
ROBERTSON'S 8 Wiz ARD C agi PNORTH e — NON SU
ANIEL OR . Horer, nid
is now sendin;
63s. per 100 plants, ora
North
very fi
ne straw Koons Seedling
arne Wizard ©
141 Ae boi
857, when a Certificate of Merit was awarded to it
—45 the N en — Soci —— a drawing made
Plant then um ome dca in the hands of the lithographer,
which y will be sent to the principal Seed
the coun’
shops in eg
Non such is — early Strawberry, of fine size and colour, a
Berrios wal , juicy and rich in flavour, swelling oft its later
pr fine varieties were raised, by Mr. olin, Robertson, at
Linde = 8 h r character has been m ost satisfactorily
established years cultivation. They are confident];
avaliable open to Strawberry growers,
— eat scale. Strong
* —
ready "orders ll be Ens
- in favour of these fine Straw
vators in the west oí
th on favourable terms.
2 DANIEL RosERTSoS, Linside Nursery, Paisley,
ho
of 2 trees.
n the
X PE ARS STOCKS. —Stamda rds, standards
4 ED
a or
bushes yramidsin potsin a bearing state state for orchard
sce, dark horizontally trained, and ne creel GONE,
dwarfs, dwarf
garden len eulture, „ trained for
es, bearing trees in pots for
— for .
CES —
a Portugal
RASPBERRIES.—Canes of the finest varieties,
STRAWBERRIES. — n of the finest varieties. id
3 —Dwarfs for gardens of the Dwarf Prolific, other
irr orchards.
rts. 1.
LVER SAND — Best quality
n ED ; less quantities, 1s, 6d. "m bushel,
mg pares - wharf or M,
in large or smal
Is, 6d. ED, in large or small quantities. Ša
2 'KENNARD, ri abend Majesty, Swan Place, OId
Kent Road, London, S
~
798 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
“HORTICULTURAL WORKS
DANVERS STREET, PA ULTON'S BA FM CHELSeg Sw
S GRA |
J. 4 O INFORM THE NOBILITY, GENTRY, NURSERYMEN, GARDENERS, AND OTHERS, THAT HE CONTINUES 14
eee TON THE BUSINESS IN ALL ITS BRANCHES AT THE ABOVE OLD ESTABLISHED PREMISES. Y
CONSERVATORIES, Pacae e, FORCING HOUSES, NINERIBS, PITS, E
Y “DE SCRI PTION, ERECTED ON THE MOST APPROVED PRINCIPL
EATING BY HOT WA
having specially devoted his attention for m: — er to this part of the business, is now fully prepared to Heat every a of public Em
> "ri em
"uses, &c., as well as all structures connected with Horticulture, ro the most efficient manner. "x d is the most simple that ca:
Em rm the best—ean be constructed » Ta cost, and is. more easily managed than those of a plicated. nature — have attracted Ew psum
J. G. begs to call attention to his CAST-IRON CORRUGATED A ARCH BOIL ER which from its — of p mstruction has the liability to fracture to:
complex design are always subject. They have been extensively used for many years, and have given the greatest satisfaction.
All business is conducted at this establishment on the principle of lowest remunerative profits consistent with best materials and workmanship.
Pene AND ATA ER FURNISHED ON. THE SHORTEST NOTICE.
emm = B.
H TRÍALS AT WA K. IRON 1 ES, FENCING, e., MADE BY. ws N
HOWARD'S "CHAMPION “PLOUGH
OTTAM COMPANY, Wi
the FIR — Plough for General 0 ay Neben
MM the CHIEF PRIZE for PLOUGHS, ee by the Royal Agricultural Society of England, at this — — s of superior iron oni
eeting. The importance of this Prize will be gathered from the fact that the GENERAL PURPOSE PLOUGHS are the | those made by hand fro:
5 iis on BOTH LIGHT AND gay Y LAND, and as leg hes CHAMPION PLOUGH proved pel o be ws 12 est | frequently Tired Iron Fen ben. T
oug
th FIRST PRIZE, of the HIGHEST AMOUNT gi y the Society for any kind of Plo kinds, both Plain and Orna
A paratus an Garden
to J. & F. HOWARD, 5 75 Royal Agricultural Society of England, at the WARWICK Medis 1859,
ien re The] T ARGEST N tg of RIZES, but the LARGEST N UMBER of FIRST PRIZES awarded Exhibitor.
HE FIRST PRIZE ror THE PLOUGH ror GENERAL PURPOSES, ALSO A PRIZE FOR THE BES PLOUGH
gor LIGHT LAND, AND a PRIZ Ero — THE BEST ure am A FoR HEAVY LAND; THE FIRST PRIZE ron THE BEST
LIGHT HARROWS, Tae Ee PRIZE atso ror THE BEST LIGHT HA RROWS, AND THE FIRST PRIZE FOR THE
BEST HEAVY HARROWS
ry one of HOWARD'S Implements, tried at Warwick, pan ed a Prize. AM? ENT INVENTIONS:
CATALOGUES, with full particulars, sent Be free on application to ae ava e pe = :
d patronised by the English an
J. & F. t BRITANNIA IRON WORKS, BEDFORD.
REEMAN,] Homovse nanan
—
A Lud
VENT IN ESS.
HOUSES, fixed i any part of = hie
long by 13 feet, 901. 21 feet by 13 foot, 90; 715) feet by — foot
301. A first-rate —— 80 feet by —
—— — —
eS ? PE at' wholesale prices, with
T , Syphons, Tee Pipes, and every other pace at
T G. MESSENGER, 3 Burrpan ptt es bere Boilers, ni Saddle, b, Conte, „Cylinder, pe
Maura and PATENT. V E DEM ARATUS and GARD! agr 245. — oilers 3 a — — with-
_easexorn's
Divisionless Horticultural Erections, . — Cisterns, ‘and Builders Castings
Screw mechanism
of every description in stock, at Mr. LYNOR ped a
4 of he house sop momentarily, Wharf, Upper Ground Street, Blackfriars Bridge, London
numerous C P.
COTTAM anv COMPANY,
vi of the —
e ATENT WROUGHT IRON RE
: and : E BOILER, Magy yA age
TS ae RAL BUILDINGS, pp — &c.,
‘tas proved hs PATENT DOILER to be TT
can be i TE once with this h bor of houses Nurseries, s Richmond, Suey, Y S.W., the only Dace whan teg
he ating aie sepa rately, ; , with the facility of ean be procured, un ge
criptions and prices of his Patent and c . arnes, t 10, 1859.
Gr A D Es nurse S | s e d s Tdi ies ny 8 a deua
Se-arimenr — — r Heating. apparatus which pei. Dos ing
OT
heabove fittings,
bm — „ promotes cleanliness,
TESTIMONIA
** Rei
HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS AND HEATING By | ™®
HOT WATER.
TTA eet PATENT SADDAM
ene ui
orks
others to the ———
d e qi c 1 x- GARDENS, 58.
mM and at RAYTON MANOR,
ciod andor $ Rag oec Phere — or his Manager,
and also to his BOILERS fixed at the RIS.
TAL. AL ALAC kW. ROYAL BOTANIC M0 REGENTS
and at several h the London and
actores in
Roofs, Houses, and lain — e
mental Strong Iron Hurdles cing, p ornas yo AND COOKE’S warranted IZE COTTAM abli:
| B bars), 4s. Sd. each; INTE dpt d reo and |S PRUNING and BUDDING DDING KNIVES "m &c— longer an entrance to. Tow ay
p: forwarded —— reece eae en and Seed Merchants in | but Er jm: ad ad
their w
E al
Ocronex 8, 1859.] SMS ah GARDENERS'
BUCKLAND SWEETWA TER GRAPE.
IS fine early WHITE GRAPE received the Premium — by the Pomological Society for the best
tra Pri he ace
d 9, 1858;
T. Seedling hardy Grape, Sept. 9, 1858, also received an ex Crystal Palace Ex bi — Sept. 8 an
it was favourably fetid a th : i by 4 uy — — d — is recommended by the
It has been aintained the high opinion previously passed on
— from the — Gardener, ies , 1859.
Ivery, of Dorking, produced a their amber tin, They were y richly
klan hing Bs — Tos tha and vinous. Alto ther this riety has — Be’ — ons —
Ba ibe Svbet water ore — — 4 8 parti cular when 2 and as a valuable addition to the 2
— 46 f White Grapes which ripen perfectly in an ordinary-
OW menti -— jardeners.
See report as follow
follow
e S aD. a
Buckland Sweetwater, growing with
4 very desirable — White variety,
than that of the Musca
h larger dine,
e, the agree nor Gardeners, —— ya ew Grape called the
other er varieties and — the fruit thereo zi "T. an "Io berry — 5 E d
— likel —
to supersede the White uera 2 general cule
and the resembles that of the Hamburgh i
JAMES, ..... RoBiNsoN, Mr. — House Gardens, near Reading.
Dore, Hall Gardens, near —— Rowy, THOS., — 2 Dorking.
Hirt, 85 m Gardens, Staffordshire. BSiwwoxps, Taos., Mickleham II. — aa Dorking.
Hi J., near Dorking. Snow, S., Wrest Park Gardens, Silsoe,
Iwonam, A., Highgrove Gardens, Reading. Unperwoop, W., Broome Hall Gardens, near Dorking.
, W. , Albury Park Gardens, near Guildford. Wutrixd, J. B., The Deepdene Gardens, Dorking.
. IVERY anv SON, of Dorking and Reigate Nurseri White —
ind et o ‘intimate that nice young plants, in two — are now rm at 21s. and 315. 6d, ev 1 Fi ade of Sh the new an
old esteemed varieties of Grapes at moderate prices.
List of Trade Subscribers for (Ivery’s) Buckland Sweetwater Grape,
h
Atlee, Mr. m Road ey, Mr. S. & Co., Gateshead | Jac! — Perkins, Mr. J., Northampton
A nnd J.& 2 Bon Y York Foster, Mr. W., Stroud & C., mith Pope, Mr. H., Gib Heath, Bir-
pum Mr. W., Camberwell | Fraser, J. & J., ston Lucombe, Pince, & Oo. Exeter mi
Bell, Mr. J., Norwich 8 , Bristol | Marshall, Mr. G., Leamington| Rollisson, W. & Sons,
Butler, Mr. D., Widcombe, Bath | Godwin, Mr. F., Sheffield Maule, W. & Sons, Bristol Shaw, Mr. J., Manch
Cattell, Mr. J., Westerham Halley, Mr. J., Blackheath Meldrum, Mr. J., Kendal Spary & Campbell, Brighton
Charlw vent] Henderson, A, & Qo, P Milne, Arnott, & Co., Wands-| Sutton & Sons, Reading
, Apple Place, London worth Bosd 4 T :
Clark, Mr. R., Manchester Henderson, E. G. & Co., St. one J. & bun Fury tie | EPIO ^
Cole, Mr. W., Withington, John's Wood, London Ban en rry Bar, | Veitch, Mr. J., Che
r Henderson, Mr. W., Birkenhead Lu: tkinson, Mr. H., Manchester
bull, Perth Hurst & MeMullen, 6, Leaden- m & Sons, Fulham Wheeler, Mr. G., Warminster
Dickson, ? & A., Chester hall Street, London Parker & Wiliams, Hornsey | Wilson, Mr. R., Warwick
J. & Son, Chester Ivery, Mr. W., Road, London Wood & Ingram, Huntingdon
Fisher, Holmes, & Go., Sheffield | Jackman, .Mr. J., Woking Paul, A. & Sons, Cheshunt Yates, Mr. R. S., Manchester
^
DORKING NURSERY.—October 8.
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL _ GAZETTE.
AND OICE
m EORGE 8 SMITH offers
x ing, selected from those sent out in the Autumn of 1858.
The plants are remarkably healthy and fine, and now require
potting on. Price 30s. E dozen, stronger plants at 36s. per
dozen, viz Hoyle's) Belle of the m, Excellent, Lady
Canning iathan, Monarch, Prince of W , Rajah, Star,
Tom Browr Foster’s) Criterion, Golden Hue; (Turner's)
Excelsior, Fisherman, Guido, 74 Sp xadoor, Osiris, Pica,
; (meer
I — mona,
change ſor one postage stamp.
's) Echo; (Beck's) Fairest the
; (Dobson's) Ringleader, Bpotted Pet;
Captivator,
odestium,
and (White's) Blink Bonny.
Circle, formosum,
Negro, and bo và
e leadi of
, Tollington — Hornsey Road, T London, N N
PAUL AND SON espe invite the e
2 M
Many thi — 22
invited,
Abies alba, e"
1 * 2} feet
di
» Clanbr asilia other
„ Menziexii, 14 to 6 feet
» )2 feet
„ Morinda, 2 1 10 feet
” — f
„ ru 2to
» 20 other „ feet
Araucaria imbrica 4 to 6 ft.
Arbor: vita (see —
ode sm
Arbutus, 6 sorts, 1 to 3 feet
nr Japonica, 1 ee 8 feet
Box,
— BR Darwin, 1 r^ 1
Cedrus af, us, 2 to 10 feet pa
, [cw 1 to 12 feet
Cedar of Lebanon, 1 to 12 feet
„ Red, to 5 feet
Pac
of Cedars in my
cea 12 sorta, 1 to 3 feet
— Zu.
» nana, 9 inch:
BUTLER & McCULLOCH,
2 GARDEN MARKET, W. C.
COLLECTIO NS oF BULBS.
No. 1. A Choice Collection of Bulbs, for Gree "a
Border 6
E "m" "T
idu Qo — 358 Ri
x do. do. * do. 510
* 0 A een d
LUE do. 3 0
E Bit ul
2» 9 do. do. in 50 very fine sorts 2 2 0
A DESCRIPTIVE AND PRICED CATALOGUE OF DUTCH snp CAPE BULBS now "mu and
forwarded free and post paid on For Contents of Catalogue see adv.
weel's Gardeners Chronicle.
AGENTS FOR TYES REGISTERED HYACINTH GLASSES.
No. 1. BOs No, 3.
No. 2, 48, Gd. to 6s, 6d. each, No, 3, 3s. 6d, to 128. per doz,
COVENT GARDEN MARKET, W.C.
No, 1, 10s, 6d. to 25s, 6d. per doz,
$ "Knight, 8 to 4 feet
mberti:
11
„ 12 other sorts, 1 to 4 men
Daphne pontica, 2 to 3 fee
Furze, don Bible 1to 1) toot
G 3
2
, japonicum 1,
; ovalifolium, 5 feet
ev 2to4
An inspection of the stock
dae s
IL —.— to trans;
py “rnin and
eae terms to the Trade. An inspec!
| Pinus
ressus Corneyana, 1} tos ft.
eir Estates or forming
monticolor, 2 to 3 feet
25 mone 3 to.5 feet
rical a to b feet
s years
» — — Pine), 14 tob ft.
„ Pallasiana, 2 to 3 foet
» pinaster, 3 to 6 po i
yrenaica, 4 to
» Exbiniana, 4 to 5 feet
. e gr sorts, 1 to 6 feet
"inj Fen
Nc 4 to 6 feet
"
d 9 to 6 feet
— 2 feet.
Sees ft.
—
Santolina
1 foot
distichum, 3 to 6 ft.
2 to4 ft.
7, atii, 6 fos
a d. 2 feet
common, roumd, and
2to7 E iue
„ Irish, 2 to
12 de 1 to 4 feet
ya americana, 2 to 8 feet
aurea, -1-to-8-feet
2 to 4 feet
fair,
ie ia
Limes, of sorts, $1016 fet
‘| Maple
London Terminu
„ H D ‘See K A
| plani ait nip aer
Prices, &c., furnished on application.
Hi ie de or T et temm Mf a ton weight or
J — — 2
—— bh; Hits.
13 miles N. E. of London, Eastern Counties Railway.
804 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
Mie PN POTS anp PANS, in quantities of not
an 20 casts, delivered to the London Stations at
the Aa dko prices :—Nos. Thbs. ie pi 54, 48,40, 32, 28,24, 16,
per cast, 2s. respectively. 12, 3s.; 8, s. 6d. ; 6, * n bs.
e EU e PROVED WROUG HT IRON RUBBER
quare Propagating Kale and Plunging Pots,
Strawberry and Border Tiles, rx pirm to order. 1
J. & W. Ap: ams, Kilns, Belle Isle, York Road, King’s Cross, N.
PAXTON WORKS, SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738.
U AND COOKE’S warranted PRIZ
k 2 PRUNING and ved ion FENIS SCISSORS, &c.—
Sold by all Dx micis d d Seed Merchants in
th e Kinedo
ERS PATENT VIBRATING STANDARD |
PUM.
F PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS f Ns Cottages, Stable
Yards, &c., where iag well does tah amen E feet in depth;
fitted with WARNER’ tent Metal Bucket and Valve, which
cannot clog in i “Th Pumps can e made right-
— at aiaia ei ie handle opposite the nose by
[Ocrongg 8, m
MESSRS. J. B. BROWN & cog
BEST STAEROROSHIRE I RON.
— 1
WEEGLEHGATIONS ANY Bak nee
4 a two si ide
MEKE poss 5 lbs.
about 5s.
onger and more suitable for fiij dod 3 feet 9 inches high, five bars, top bar $ i
Df
hes ligh,
3 feet 6 in
prights flat ba lind
Present. price "delivered i in London ui
3d. each hurdle of 6 feet 6 inches long.
ch diameter,
a decus standard 1 inch by 4 inch, Weight slag
oving four
Diameter
f Barrel. Height. E. 8. d.
zm o ud Fin, “gutta perch dh 50 Wo: 1. —Very tizefal. for general
„ 35, ai ria a 10 0
3 » ditto 3;, 6 2 40 six e ars round iron, top bar H indi 3 five under ud
34,, ditto 3,, 6,, flanged pipe "ji 90 by * inch, and mi iddle sape gnt B by 4 gee
4 ,, ditto 3,, 6,, leo eie 2180 £4
24,, short, wi! : with Eper of Lead Pipe ki.
attached, rea y for fixing . ne te gru No. 8. E
2h in. 1 ditto d ti 2
e d itto — ditio2 14 0 four under bars $ inch, ME standards 14 inch by $
very convenient 63 Ibs. ; —— 6s. 9d., 6 feet 6 inches long, delivered. d
The short barrel Pum
for fixing in 8 ot Mantel height and
e, for the supply of pe and sinks in
— houses with soft water from under-
ound tanks, 2 ku ick Forcing, a apa ae
ee HR they e fixed, w
Ges Ironmonger or
ry, at the above “Ss 14 inch by 4 inch. Weight about 39 lbs.;
ight Sheep Hurdle. 2 feet 6 — s high, three bars à inch diameter, standards 1} inch iii :
85
umber in Town
rices, orofthe 1 — Manufacturers,
OHN WARN ^ —.— v: 7 —— * Street, London, E.C
Exery description of Machinery for ising Water by means
of Wheels, Rams, Deep Well Pumps, &c. ; also m and Garden
Engines Se. e Se ae ne tio:
CES REDUCED.
H. J: MÓRTON AND CO., 8 Iron Works,
5 2, Basinghall Buildings,
eM GALVANISED IRON. a bn
.
and neatest
STRAND CABLE
Roofs ; igni ven dur-
o. 8.— Li;
Extra strong and high for heaviest stock. 4 fee
bars z ets end and two uris standards 1} inch by $
and the price 8s. 10d., 6 feet lor
No. 7.—Light ‘Hurdle for son and lambs.
price 4s., 6 feet long.
Weight about 24 Ibs. ; price 2s. 9d., 6 feet lon
koag Wrought Tron. 5 Round Bar Fence for Mess Cattle, 2nd Shep.
aml y joing à thi
rmi double
d ea fon
passing upon T i
iron m
sts and — or any kind of
iron 5 and possesses four times the >, Strength of solid
— not rust nor corrode. Upwards of 1200 miles of this
eni
GALVANISED GAME AND pied
of Wires, and depende
expenses of tho
oro
upwards. Thes ue
into the eme
with six bars in 16 feet lengths c
em by Wrowght 1 eA — Pang —— A t
24 Strong Wrought p 3
830 fx in dn. pre)
t ine six bars, top bar $ inch diameter, five under
inch. The weight of this strong Hurdle is about 8t,
oints, d with strong . pex able prongs
recommended as pr ge
e proprietor, under the superintendence
Fully Detailed and Illustrated se gd of Ir
Garden Roller:
nected in fou y an im
he — and ha bars. The top bar is se 4 inch b diameter $
strong Wro 13 in
aght ton joining standards,
wide by 8 inch thick, placed ev.
i „14 in
" feet
peu xx — or 16
per yard.
iiy 8
and Wire Fencing, Hurdles, Gates, Wire Wetting,
and Engines, soe Se &c., on applicatio
A
3 feet 4 inches high, five bars i inch "e standards
proved fen
ard RE
de by #3
vides —— and Cattle - 88 h, with ive e: f six nigh tan every other L
the ive specication. 2s. 9d. per yard. -- vit > ry 22
being furnished
rie
wide J. B. BROWN & CO., 18, CANNON STREET, CITY, LONDON, T
g .
eX XO
"oot
soe Ag
2 — ^ 222 - s 26
e? ose 2 925. 2 2252 25
» 25 m 202929 222522
N 9202.
22222 222 s 2222028
K =
8
DNN
Reyers BISHOP, Ax» BARNARD, Market
Place, Norwich, in peor oe of improvements i in their
— — manufiictu f the above article, have been
enabled to make a great red — in the prices. Ja —
been 24 inches wid AR 4d. "y d.
e.. oe ryd. 4d,
2-inch strong do. dë ve © - ag 43 reg
» te,
o Me 7 " 55 i
— S
Pun 53 44
7M.
5d.
53d.
im be
renz description of Netting warranted to give satisfaction, and if not approved " i
exchanged, or may be returned uncondi ly. 221m
Ja. B. BROWN & CO., 18, CANNON STREET, LONDON;
the pt incipal ] Railw: way
Pots in ag and 200 ‘yards or . — delivered free to most parts of Scotland or
ons and 8
Stations
Treland. T
od. | lid. 114.
IMPROVED PREMIUM WIRE NETTING.
|
E Ocroser 8, 18
39.
IHE GARDEN ERS’ CHRONICLE AND
AGRICULTURAL
GAZETTE 805
ONE BOILER SYSTEM.
WEEKS’
JOHN WEEKS & COMPANY,
KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, S.W.,
H. n E WORLD to produce a Boiler not made in imitation
peir Upright Tubular Boiler that will 2 ace anything like the
ue pien with the same quantity y of fuel in a given time.
The f ollo »wing unequ ialled statistics fully justify ! the eh: allenge :
Sark the enormous length of Houses and Piping}
Length 1 | 1 otal ‘length:
heated by One Boiler
| Houses in feet] of Piping.
fessrs. E.G. Henderson & Co, * gto Nursery 1,200 | 5,500
fears. F. A. Smith, Dul 3,000 11,000
2 Houtte, Belgium 3.300 139001
t Forcing f Show Establishment | 1,000 | !
i E ne e Nares ries of Mr. Woodroffe, Harrow Road, N T ; Messrs. Re tis on
ing, S.; Messrs. Wood & Ingram, Huntingdon ; . Wood &
Maresi« a ; toge poe — € nerous Public _ dings er p st Rit orla ete v
le Nobility and Gentry )» numerous for ion. M
J. WEEKS & Co, "achete Deild and Hot-Water Apparatus x"
ing' Chelsea, S.W.
PLANS AND ESTIMATES FRE E ON APPLICATION.
COTTAM & COMP?,
2, WINSLEY STR
2,
Engineers, Founders, &c.,
A SHOW _ DEVOTED ENTIRELY TO ARTI
CLES OF
NEW e ee CATALOGUE er Vx ncm TION.
HORTICULTURE.
anservatories pe Hand-glass Fram: Flower Sticks
eenhouses youube Game Netting K pto Garden Bordering
vater Apparatus Ornamental Wire Work | Hurdles » Bolles Watering Pots
en Vases d wer Stands Garden Chairs Flower Labels Garden Arches, &c.
Iron Hurdles, Strained Wire Fencing, Game Nettin
Every ^E of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought Iron, and
ITION P PRIZE DAL GATES AND ENAMELLED ias
1 t to th stablish: t fro: treet,
3 soóond entrance from 2, Winey Street, Oxford Street, W., by the side of the cid entrance to thei
| J Ss 4^. CO: |
zothouse Builders and Hot-Water Apparatus Manufacturers.
ue a Sg Work.
EXHIB MANG
J. B. COTTAM Axp
2 a
Firis, opposite the Panth;
<=. aA
ultural Buil Trung of every ey dest pa Heated o xai the most approved Pada combining —
z xc of construction. A aa di containing 20,000 tet = te Heated
smallest Pit, Two Hundred Cucum te ned and 8 Three ui e Light of
sizes kept in stock, g and painted policies ready
References Pa the Nobility, Gentry, and the Pere, in di: bon Counties in England.
ee a v
t Place, Old Kent Road, London, S.E.
V K I N H U RD,
Jubilee Place, King’ ` Road, 1, Chelsea S. W. 2
À
—
frikis ULTU —
MANUFACTURE
BOILERS o fa ll sizes p
$ IMPROVED HOT- WATER ~ APPARATUS.
n ues ILDERS $e Hor. WATER
AFPARATUS
sf :
1 & OTT (formerly in the employ of Messrs. John
e Penn & Son) manu fac grag and fits up « 'omplete wn
ratus for Ho nting Buildings ir. E Water, also Bath a
Kite hon Appars atus of ¢ every desc wig:
ces, &e., on application to THOM
Road, pma mwic ch, S. S.E.
NRO'S CANNON .
M TOM has of late pn: a about BOILERS ron
TING sy HOT but these Boilers have
now —.— themselves " — ihe 1 at present invented.
They ^ m ted for TA 85 75 heri ocn of Building,
and are made siz The f the
. Ar
plete in of th See
an; country,
DERI 4 6, ug ETIN
IMPROVEMENTS
RAVE’S PATENT _SLOW-COMBUSTION
see omer di
ops, Conserva!
Diar Boon. 2 —
warming by hot wa!
aie aks PATENT cu 1 FITTINGS
D HARMLESS RE
t waste the
ve cut or
ay at pleasure. 4th, He
has din water aret betore
ed.
Modi in-
crease in pri
The Loose Boxi is [urs what its name denotes, and the most
may b
spirited Hor: rned into it without danger.
USGRAVES proved bythe Board Aun
FITTIN
in the Ulster 25 e
Farm, and by many of <=
the most eminent Stock \
Breeders in the ty
ials, they 8
e Field Gates] ed 8 the 1st t Prize im
the R. I. A. Society for — im bility, and cheapness.
ie E BROTHERS, Ann Street
306 THE G AR RDENERS'_CHRONICLT AND ACRI JLTURAT, GAZETTE,
„. ͤ— : PEU CART ER as AR
wd
AMERICAN PLANTS | : t CATALOGUE or these Horsory, CO, 237 ao
7 DFHEY'S 8 | CATA- | HAR ALES "TURNER : 4 N, Wo gra! M
ESSRS. W eese —— ee 3 and. ins hs, | The Hyacinths, Tulips, Croc
— e or American Plants ae — e ee T the | the greatest care from the best growers, and have arrived in| Ê i
4 fine condition. Mie
general stock of the most extensive Nurseries in Englan 5 iue to hha TM. T
The Catalogue may also be had at Mess W E GST wil be al The Royal Nurseries, Slough. | colour x 8 dà preneur HACEN
. — PLANTING.— as t arly
Knap Hill Nurs rsery, near Woking, Surrey. YACINTHS, &c., For PR ET r NTI PLAN p m hes y and late, tall and dun . .
HARDY RHODODENDRONS. The follo wing collection (H) for N or | decided colours 0 ering ix pe
xéd Hyaeinths, 6 Polyanthus arcissus, : : nal h bn
ice oath tgs ue tni n At 47 Hyoc — cdi Scented Tulips, 50 Double simp un CUBLOIN Cts Wal oe enabled to atat 1
S
our
) D 8
D I 50 Border Narci ý 8 i ve
AVE tention to their Seedling RHODODENDRONS, which 100 Double Snowdrops, 12 ve a va Iris, | will bet
they aro selling without names, and which they strongly re- Lug deed se 15 Double Anarin es, half of the lio ab 8 bi pi — ig RE approved met
'ommend as bein : 8 108. 6d. = Gai ers SREST pv Pe and upwards sen carriage should be immediate
COLOUR, and GENERAL — Ess, They are from 14 to 2: feet muri —BUTLER & MCCULLOCH, C t Gar arden Market, W.C. inchos; ‘seals finished the beta d
a a paid.—Borier & McCoLLooH, Covent Gare e le :
x:
i;
4
res
z
8.8.8
2r
g.
Ej
4
=
5
u
he
B
w UTC o
3 IMOTHY BRIGD EDSMAN and Fror
Knap Hi ll Nu ery, near Woking, Surrey. F 10, Railway Arcade, London Bridge, London, E.C., - some
Tone BHODODENDRONS ri ost — s pire bag e cabe the Public gen back over them. Or without — has
DY, rall that he has just retur : beds as before, an.
T, Aeg dd gie RHODODEND RONS, as collection of HYACINTI 4 8 TULIPS, NA munus old-fashioned Tli planter NN E
«1JO ILS, &c., at wt a PRICED LIS E p d | deep and 3 inches wide; dr mai
P.
Faithful EE of all the es toamad vel be found gua f 2 or 3 inch :
detailed, with a list of the popular n so other covering o oak fore es of ALIS
AMERICAN PLANTS, as well as a selection of CONIFEROUS | 4 large — of e , Wardian a Cases, and Gold of the bulb a red *
"TREES, with height and prices. E 50 1i SU TULIPS for edging H |
The Americen Nursery, Bagshot, Surrey, near Sunningdale or G s yacinth beds and
Station, South-Western Railway. i E. DIXON M supr he following Collection Per 100
E
also fe dea
ES
Post-office | Tournesol, red and yell
epee GHENT RHODODENDRON ORE 0 8 package inch ipt of a Post-offic Re x rrfbgorini, See cc 76 2 —
N VERSCHAFFELT.’ 9 i
12 ch Pol anthus Narcissus| 12 choice named Hyacinths COMMO - en INT Es for i
This superb Rhododendron, that was so much admired by ail 1 — sico Polan 20 varieties T Turban — porca JR Prem m Sle
who saw it in flower last year, is to be sent — M the 1th 12 Tournesol double > Tulips | 12 Rex = ibrorum Tulips |
of October next. Price 20, 30, and 50 franes per p ant. 3 12 Yellow Ros 12 Pæ a LILIUM SPE domes
= e of said Rhodo- | 12 P. ips 5 sweet soonted N Jonquils very effective for forming oF ree te hy a
dendron. oo — to be addressed direct to ‘ 50 Double Snowdrops 0 Winter Aco ALBUM, ors ange ae M W.
VRAN FFELT, Nurse ryman, ; Ghent, Belgium. ATALOGUES Wis on applicati em P * m ITI
SCARLET RHOD ONS, IRISH Y „Ac. Seed Establishment, 57, Queen Street, "Hull. FUNC TA TU WW 20 0 2
DUTC S.
„
RO
— ee
Od.
H
e ha &c. rtm e can be had of various sizes, and are in
ri irm AN condition for — removal, e ye bey
cda trans —— Prices on application (ca ee to
Belfast D. Toples 0 ee: il — Com Down. ae owe = TCH, Jes, — ExOrTTO —
Nt E s Chelsea, , begs to announce that he has received hi:
d annual m ‘of BULBOUS ROOTS from Holland, — is
T. DA AVIS — ns — e stock o 1 and 2- year ne tos say vie t they are — — FINE and in
- o SEEDLING THORN QUIOKS, which 5. 22 at 55 Catalogues w ready and will be d i adi mers
— a wr of 3-year sibs — O
ASH, oem depre Caiman a war Y. on apo mpress upon those who patronis BULBS, ‘(ohioh w in bo forwarded
les Grove” Nursery, H illsborough, County Down. — Moe —— of giving him their ORDERS EARL — itih pravita emi eium nds
MAIDEN AND CUT-BACK FRUIT TREES. e suc — — am — Bulbs depends in a great — New large-flywered PINKS from Japan. F
STANDARD AND PYRAMID FRUIT TREES. pes n their ARLY IN THE SEASON. culti Price sls andi
EXTRA FINE TRAINED venie IT TREES. EY 7) T. = a BULBS " ., 237 an. :
CHARD SMITH season 23 acres of the
Clot! — of Gold —
C
er
Blue, ligit ^ "AZ "x
1
1
2
Scotch
Striped
Varieg: ated .
,GLADIOLUS m
W. ptT
—. finest t possible condition,
lants.
; o — —
TENA SHRUBS, AURICULAS, BORDER NMI m the best
AND E
FLOWERS, ane PRENS pred Tia. on application to ae
Wa. —Oct. rect from some of the most celebrated growe'
A PRICED and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE just published
EPRA LATA. l| be forwarded free upon applicatio
Į po UGH Apad 1 have pleasure in offering rosse Hyacinths, by — 53., 68.,
s. 6d., & 98. per dozen.
established in pots, of the above-| Select pe ‘of Bulbs from 10s. éd. —
named pe — ae by them from California, Nursery, Road, don,
and exhibited at the July meeting of the Royal — Society
in the Regent's Park. price I er dozen. IT DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS.
4
ETER LAWSON — -
— P Mc umm. RAUCARIA T MBRICK
— AND — i — the’
e to offer a healthy stock
22 lants.
DUTCH —— ROOTS, GLADIOLUS BREN
aud they are now ra to execute orders
for the
A
HARLES TURNER i is now NI LES out the 10 fine
new 8 So successfully reca ag by him last
of t * 50s. Strong best
— —
C
respectfully announce sg nea 2 a fine
Prices of the al
Roy: En
27, Great George FAREN CORN S. W.
WEW E ERD S
TRIFOLIUM INCARNATUM
ITALIAN RYE-GRASS i
NATURAL GRASS SEEDS ror PER-|JOHN HINES the *
MANENT PASTURE LAWNS, &c. orange yellow, low, top petale petals very —
oe — Merge the | full-sized flower wih Ve very dense e|
&c., are prepared | Certificates at the Ips
Sw at Ends “Of SEEDS for AUTUMN | Societies, and prono
SOWING of the best dual best ae
: st quality. locality to be — 0
t George Street, nster, S. W. 88. each 8 discount
— Il, Great George Strest, Westminster fW.
THUJA JAPONICA.—Scale, Linch to the foot. RAIN 20 P CACHES,
COTS, APPLES CHERR
be had of E. R. GREENUS, Rau
| the best quality 5 o
80 as to insure success.
STANDARD asp DWARF ROSES,
all sorts of NURSEI ERY STOCK. oe
| Gash, or refere: — Ef —
Nue Y
for d pa
VHITHAN, ot p^ Gough
LK. — Selected. on . — img
TRUMP, ROUGH T achete
AFF, RED-CHAFF WHITE,
GRACES WHITE, TALAVERA, RED BROWICK, RED
NURSERY, GOLDEN Ps oui sal all ti the —.—
e y RAYNBIRD & Har of Basings
et, Mari ark Lane, P PC. — qr ade
known referen
SPLENDID NEW O ORNAMI
GONATANTHUS, 80
H LOW AN
ion.
zee HE VR NOT
LELECT EA ARDY 8 PLANTS at
very reduced prices, and a further dis
according to the quantity c of goods tak x A
200 Plants in 200 fine sorts, Wee
i : 588888 :
J. WRIGHT Ax» 00. "id to inform the Trade and ant an — oer lup te (o the je present zr
and scarce £3 10 0 Public generally that they have a large S the Horti
cuoio pom E Gas ofa ae ae ee "SEEDLINGS, savod trom tel is award ring it a Fitap CLASS 10
AL in 100 fine € :3 i E x i$ 1-jorwtee fous ove, — oral that i d to per most beautiful — p —— * put;
s 95., 128., an per dozen Also TH AUREA, 2 to 8
; 208. or per dozen, 5s. to 0s, 501 250 — m En 2
CATALOGUES sent on a) plicaticn to SrePueN Brown, BOX E dne LAURI Ln Us LAURELS, p ta in
Nursery and Seed ent, Sudbury, Suffolk. "Fatis Mill Hill and Edgware, N.W D visit eam
Sraner, W
— on LEE,
ffered
io the Soclety'n * DR
AY PEAC SHES.
he wers
best and se cond best
he best and second be st
any other kinds in season,
best
ibited |
a the gt
|
|
gowember 17, when ol :
special sabjects exhibit yt * —
Half a Guinea (by rn r the best dish of COX’S
T.
ORANGE PIPPIN APPLE.
Guinea and Half a Gninea 2t jte best and second best
also offered for fruit in season of other
Apples, in
, kinds — Culinary
„gbe n of October 27.
y Copies of for Forms to be
‘tle! or "X Lo aar
“gation to | Bevan
d [E Randolph Road. Maida Hill, London, W.
— its ne
arly
for a nid is found where i me
. i and where
the others are scatter
till 1 — reac e
where the me
an n;
is never cooler t
such a climate une on
a Schomburgkia,
an tempera
it tangy re even
ed o
"ga rises to
55° r hotter
ure is e
doen;
fo od ga
In th
do
den
e race is
a B urlingtonia, an Odontogls. | a
sum, and au ee x lan vel
hids
| ith ‚the sea Ore aa seem ms ‘jo e nia to
TS je th +} w these
>| plants successfull t hav ory pon of in-
— as s well as t us proetied skill of a gar-
no ng HA say to
rohid Bie * Ki mi. effo ctiv ve ì Or ehid | f
Wing g, as many a costly «
One
The Gardeners’ €hronicie. 7:
SATURDA Y, OCTOBER 8, 1859.
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK.
Tosspav, Oct.
up pn (Fruit 1
Martin's
uction TOO!
native haunts’ are re sold.
ing, however, is sonant amidst a all in| effect of substituting ignorant practice
the | gent skill.
| diversity of nature. Let
mueh, eir mann
same.
E
c
$
8
8
e
Fh cp
ES
©
B
o
ae
et
8
B
il terrestrial species, whie qui
nature. ay pni or! Orchid
s| FENDLER
on vod
se gardener will fi
^ belos ow tha susface [n
0
8 thro in the
ere species imported 2 thei ir
tmosphere dry dry e enough. lor auo-
jore is ps to * — plants „whose I —
in thei
pom rad df a " “suitable
hat this rw potting has
zy grow n the case
Mew and edes ot similar E habit, wh
use (4 or mpelling
"Nat ure peremptory forbids,
ad
ing analogy is
of the most ‘striking 9 of the fatal
or intelli-
on
———— 80€
FORTUNE'$ YELLOW ema
Ir was only the other day that
the
growth
mination of many
uM nearly 40 years, has
e fact that w.
da annot do bette ter mu alias ihe state of som.
nateh of 3
"Gongora —— form. a
M
superficial | "hort. spat
tioned by Fortune in his “ Journ
tries of China," and
259, an
t I opportunity
Ke ev famous pe ‘Camellia, men-
he Tea Co
noticed
allowed
. | leaf-buds, pet
japoni
—— leaf- petii petioles, leur
| C. ems ers in the — and has
leaves, and aw.
ah m
may therefore
pet the leav:
ovary. The — of the latter
Fortane's Yellow Camellia; and it m
safely referred to
var
erow.
was more
Now, go w m
0 much aboun d that som
orming
man
e than
Nevertheless i that ome
18 inches
lai
à
ont vo yriac ads c of lit
“flat upon something, and like
ttle conie
an entan
long without leaves ;
Ivy h.
al root:
as *
ied mass er fiat
apon bari mixed with Hypnum and Jun
ev
“Liparis some undescribed species ; stem slender, | seen
it had | Re
chr
rowu
£f
o
ature his genus,
attention of Worst
to
ern | t. 942, where the outer es of stamens
displays the stent i — to the Yellow
I may add that th
S
t be owned if s
8 dine ed most adasini ims ‘fail deplorably, ead
we mh Sha that Epiphytes
treated
the form iiinis a ponchi the plant under o
ing to res from. every part of its tion the pp g P con-
to be with some a hanten to 8 to carry no more t ce ^n iia ere amellia always |
n v not enough to tie them | than seyon or eight thia Te ves. Den v y whi uet gins of an even rose colour, hollow, sweet, perfu d high | amongst the ‘lanka which belong to
e ee delicious; late. Thi t XS EI T flavoured, a strong and prolific variety, velidr i In fact, some of the species of the
one of the ve nest, and N best of the large- | Keens’ Seedling. It appears to be well suite Men d l and drm
ited FETU E! ult of being delicate in the forcing. ongitudinal vessels, are not capable of
ground ; ^u *PRINCE oF WALES (Ingram). i, red coloured r3 — * wm Lease: are almost
aes _| berry, most frequently conical, red co esh | called nodes, which form, at certain
y Canet 5 [NS px pir es 3 white streaked with red, hollow, sweet and m, a kind of partition or network compe
Y ei 1 of a delicious Sache: e ug flavoured, early an: Met p imt interlaced in every possible manner, B
like the Bzitish uci, but stronger and mor Princess ROYAL LAND (Cuthill). aili node s roots never make imus x
early and 7 e its fru ruit j is large or middling | are to be met with so :
ttim dE
AE dated foin a e rel nats of ra x 92 — ES = ange red colour, seeds pears which by their organisation, ap appear nibe = ni i
fles * fui md obs d nir: E avery late nent, fles white, sweet, very high e such as :
and ver 270118 v ariet: s odis r —. a slight m mus ky t aste. Colocarias, a TA 1
1 ce Pave (Myatt’s). —Fruit large, firm, fl *Princesse ROYALE Ca vilain) ine el all these cases ae ih gravel-pits of St. Acheul—
ne at the depth of 10, and the other of ig 1 below b
p
A second premium
rze
ay awari
E.
t oletin a
B.
Son, of Berkham ste, f a
la
of m Let an
ror 1 i eg Races, of | g
Aare
r of the x rd
man
extreme, „To escape
| ing
his o
iei ie a
of 1S
e tie TE
atified gravel taitióg ines
hic h these rudely fashioned €
belongs to the
and land 2 which accompany "dn m being o
post
uried | a
a fresh- Miren
-
D ecies, eat number of the fossil i
3 ivo beet hets iussa, |
es is tr rful. Ay re than a thousa
ve 10 d drainage of (dE jm
chan es in the dete
s whole physical geography of the
and, in short, the
edg onde:
of n roca ‘realy been met with in the last ten
years, in the y of the Somme, in an area 15 miles
Th whom the
that would alone imply a remote antiquity for the
infer
poe in
H adian Mound,
use of i iron was unknown, made a fondi
and I am depo of a large
was old en ough to have co-existed, at least, the
mammoth. But, the course of Mis last |
have been à in |
—
z
8 8
8
et
of | throug
Lang PUER a
n Georgia—a
avera ht
ich bi saw in Ne ond's Island,
h ge heig
dud or
and
whi
mound 10 acr
nd | ripe
this | ver
produce s — Mame bunc nad i
vola t appeared me
er, the Bake or tlie sea nd,
First, so long ago as the yea a E
should leere sweep
ieh is at ha
away, and aft the contents of >
ie ive nishabl therefrom wi
Hamar rgh ar po) Ashbri va à
w
as the 1544, M.
eminent i paleontologist and antiquary, pated s an
d, analogous ac
an w rk unmixed pe erhap:
France of portion two human skeletons (ihe 1
skulls, teeth, and LAN imbedded in a volcanic
in m mountain of Denise,
u Vela ay, a breccia anterior in date
to one, at least, of Ine ps st eruptions of that volcanic
side
in the | Abbe
I believe the uity
P ER Ha
. Although the rag eme siens are
cies, ve S
deed if compared to the times of istry or Editio
I consider the gravel to _be of fluviatile origin; but 1
mourtain. e same
remains of
ysmal iiim. nothing that might not
8 catacl
aeneis in
mu
be due to such river-floods as We have w
Scotland during the last half century.
£4}
t have | v
hall + h
their own qe the e bier gt ecimen
um of tha Among othe
n E hal
w . supplied the broken flints for the formation of so
h gravel at various heights, sometimes 100 feet
iios ve the present level of the Somme, for the depo-
sition of fine sediment including entire shells, both
Gers and aquatic, PE Reny for the denudation
m the entire mass of stratified drift has
e, 8 having men swept away, t
remai s of it often terminates abruptly in old
n
ca
1 er-
at
skinne d,
nown
river-cliff: en
a,
r drift. . To explain these i emis d should infer con-
called Tool. "Mr. Lane Le i
which, believ e, essentially
at by MM MM. Hebe rt and Lartet, |
-— — that arrived
na
well known to science, who have also this ye
may thus be stated.
E
gone are H no means prepared ‘to maintain that the
ear | ele
Bae, [deinde Pa wholly: 8 . course ne, the
ancient rivers. Lastly, the disappearance of the
uld be Son: atl ohan oA hoped othe
wid be obtained i meet the U
the Soci el
rmine
ir general nomen
3:
ephant, rhinoceros, and other genera of q
now foreign to Europe implies, in like manner, a vast
was never seen in situ by any scientific observer) is a
fabrication. On. the contrary, we incline to believe
rom the same hill w
causes in their | gel matriz,
hey are entombed consists of two part of which
s s compact, and for "the most Del thinly "laminated
re really imbedded by natural
1 — ee in which
lapse of agen Brie. the era in which the fossil
l e framed and that of the invasion of
Section.
(To be continued.)
PP ch POMOLOGICAL : Sept 22. —Mr. Hogg in the
air. Twelve new
“OF Sp = ey eire 3 collection was contributed
Keele Hall, Stafford
l by the Piane Sir Chas. Lyell in the Geological |!
in
elakare.
‘Amon apes not a in com
premiums the fo owing w
Fro
ii
B
very different in this respect
— side branchlets be. i *
n that it appears
oral, vextren ely lar, pn
ls Lon dedi; xod T "
nd f
rne. into kien p hed the hum:
ning the bones is a ee and much
ile, comprising ag fo ‘How wo varieties
ngos
k ivr in ry few,
Musca
ries ve i huge; White
uite 1 berr
dI ado — — ne rover
x: M that this more s porous s which
bles colour and composition,
ficorh E in structure, n o E the genuine old
breccia of Denise, may be made up of the older rock
e Monae me very ripe; Royal ee no = Muscat
mos
; Chasselas
enea
Hátive
Museat v
hm — this, like sf * ipn p
of the French, cadi
but Mr. Hill ‘reports 5 the nc Cech w was ‘very cam
much * 4 ar i
o M 5 fio ;
2 5 2 to - gw; r^ van a ab Al vinous. Tis
artifici ial hea’ W. e wee
say remané, and, therefore, of mueh newer date, an
UE which well deserves consideration; but I feel
À dev nter resent, so mt of the precise cir- |
ignorant
t 8 which — ve = — |
8 "uie of i
—
e
But,
es evden
of the remote origin fain the hum
ble of he Puy, 1 am fu ually pre epared to corro oborate
riety for walls in th
The bunch is ym well- aner ed, rather thin in
berries, which are medinm sized, round, very sweet,
and solid in flesh; Gold n Hamburgh, over-ripe, but
ei and tender in fle sh; Sahibee: this was a lar:
l-shouldered bunch, but the oval "berries are ihin i
Met atery, an
and deficient. in saccharine TUE:
eae exists regarding the Tok
that, at a later Meeting
see . will be — dl aera end
-bune ed, shouldered, o a ange
thick- denned very sweet, and s gu fleshed ; Ede
Hamburg e us sl e; ; Bidwell Seedling not
3 ripe; 2 QU fleshed, very
ood
g the autumn, they
, TO!
prem. wo years , and ful
maintains the opin E más yn
ably tender, very sweet, a
wen n the
nd leaves a most agreea|
e palat Sas Ki bunch exhibited, how.
fess "ans by m. [i natia — regar rd to
of the flint imp
an
Abbevi
assigned to them by M, Boucher de Rage in
vi
ere first
noticed at qnis ph their true geo logical position | ab
1849, (a
ellent in ferons The
Ve were 8 . ripened, excepting those
i. ao Celtiques,” while
i ere afterwards d
zollot.
er you to the
ne, well. a based } 4
dis pl ayi ng well the: peculiarities of t tive
varieties. All the Grap es in this collection wane „how.
Socie
ion formed ofit: the — is — |
the
respect to Más t from
are oval was
end both varie
did not appear g
worthy of cultivation, ex
st meeting, i
ssh formed like t e Whi
roundand of a pale-yellow e
the Chasselas Musqué; bu
that v
ever bein able to
on the p m hand tha tha Lo
eme mir a qe
> fi e
he Proeeedings of the Royal "wii for 1859,
only 'to add that I have myself obtained |
that they
liad been syringed with somethi whi
Ah ring ething w ch
From H
taste as if impregnated with highly-sized
(collection of seven kinds,
Ocroner 8, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. gil
berriel, sol — thin-skinned, a ery sweet- 2d, M . Wood and Ingram, Hu tingdon. Fancy | have been better belt the names of some
flavoured variety | the Toka ay — wiih varieties, 24 blooms: lst, Mr. Vier with Baron | of the new kinds Mis rn rather bad to be
with another Alderson, Co of Derby, Zebra, Charles Perry, | told that the Peach v a by the French was
riper condition of tw Wortley Hall Seedling, a Cl t liver Twist, Leopard, Flirt, Triomphe de named - its raiser, unless indeed he bad a beak
large oval-berried, thin-skinned, weet | Roubaix, Madame Alboni, Favourite, Mare Antony, | instead o se; o o disguise their Déesse tardive
Grape, which is very little known, bu "e Bayadere, Duchess of Kent, Lady Paxton, Conqueror, | "ramas the" eer name of tom tardine. It is not,
the large sort mentioned above from Mr Coo ooper. portsman, Miss Frampton, Jessie, Pretty Polly, Rev. | how , to These — matters that we take dcm.
From A. Scratten, — — P: by L. Richardson, Joshua Dix; 94 urner. In 12 Fancies _for som uch as ane practical directions with which the
Esq., of Eltham, a of Museadine, well swelled, | Nurserymen not exhibiting in rad T" for 24,
though not ine of very aw to E r Mare / Antony, "What we are told about borders and soils is all v
i iss H
re than once ways after their
,
3
t, Triomphe d 2 N
er
ron Alderson, Cleo
vell; and the addi tion of. aes 1 e em o^
ich u oam, free
If nurserymen vere ed well, which they did,
amateur growers were ally well represented. The
ize for 24 varieties was awarded to the Rev
of manure, not pul ve erised, but en derer — up with
turf or cut straw,“ is doubtless advantageous. We do
not, howe ever, see much use int the cut straw, for if the
> the | last two buds, in order that it might produce
wood for the
Mr.
ing, of the ene, for a very excellen t dish of!
Brown Beurré, from * i against a — wall.
— fruit was larga, very oblate, just ripe, melting,
eet, and very delicious.
on Swinerd, gr. to Jno. Swinford,
Abbey, near Ramsgate, sent a dish of €
would — have taken the fi
Esq., Minster
a kenn
t pri Pee
» that, in _
ripe
"Bes
"Y
we one, decay | —
fruit — — deliciously pone. uts hig nd
flavoured ; — me ger ntleman a dish o
markably e Willi iams's — Chr — —— of pint
wee nce in length, ey also were, unfortu-
f Marie Louise, from Mr. H Miers,
80 — wall, soil rich loam over
ét
"
to | Sir Robert Bruce,
, Lemonade,
Chairman
ot pn
enoug gh;
Jy open
r
fcm for — Cina Mentor,
| Touchstone, Peerless, Fanny Keynes, Sie. J. Paxton,
Miss Pressley, Triomphe de Pecq, Pioneer, cam
Miss Caroline, Commander,
Knight of the Bath, tioiden |S
Rosebud, Lady Lec allace,
op
and if i teni beum
adhesive when the Fae Sed. in — course of a few
Nor do we E Rt what the —— n
inged”
| jer of stocks apt) i 2
d pas 1 be fo
s. C. J. Perry, Birmingha
to Mr.
llowed, particular] ly for * —
+ nf +}
Drop,
ston, Mrs. Church ;
n 12 varieties, the firs
m.
J
1
the their s
»
t prize
| Loftey, Brigg, — i
pe Y" aving the inexperienced to imag;
is of
warded
Pando -
| Dundas Miss Watts, Church, Lord —
Gold . Commander, 2 Lor 4 rete cm
To Keynes, H. — m us; 2d, R
that consequence on. what a Peach or NE
rine is 1 provided it is a Plum; han which a
| Hopkins. — Brentford. In far
vi st pr — sa Mr. C..
bited 4 tess
| Charles P. — Flirt, "Du m of
e "i Butte erfly, me 2 Inimitable, Countess
2d, Rev. C. Fellow Six Fancies : First |]
—— Mr. r. Hobbs, — Baron n erson, C. Perry, y
Low 49 — Paxton, Gloire de Kain, Jupiter;
The author P n proceeds to express his opimion that
dwarf trees wit are not desirable, because “ the
atmosphere the surface is always some degrees
coder than 4 4 feet v up the wall ; 3 a hardier
tock, sa; dard P stoc not beso
e
TREGA but I have
2d, Mr. Coo
|
ft in 3
said to |
a both n numerous an | good. Not less than
n: "My EET
Seedlings formed an interesting feature, they were
Y n.
B fi
subsoi] of sandy grav vel fruit very fine in size
colour, and vito excellent flavour, but not quite
TD
to Harlequin . a spe z^ — ground,
with _ bright 1 red marking,
— ling — eds pe
= very like ths cause! in appearance, less agra * in
texture eem c; ough very melting, acid in flav
ae lilac, finest fi ; Lady Tau
oe with bright icine full size,
pity that no one should haye given the — * —
vice.
That the atmosphere near the foot is a 2 is rever
wa is
rant), |
e | some degrees colder than at 4 fee tou
unless,
uto arn) |
the lower part of a wall is shaded improper — p
; Sir J. Radel — — 22
ark fancy, maroon rie wi ite,
* be adi
An open wall, fully exposed to. the sun’s
and voi
Of ied ren dishes were exhibited, one of w
Queen Mab (Turner), fancy, scarlet and — large
2 Fancy or Summer Nonpareil (No. 4), Bour Mr.
ed, Mori mripe, and of t
n Pippin, that. which r
r. Whiting, a e —
Both dle T lange, te and
rich in favour and it it w en
a dificult | lings
and fine; Mrs. H. Vyse (Church), white e — with
le. The two latter received second c
ys, is actually hotter up to 4 feet from the que
than it is above that dista ance, Te is true that in w
asons an uit situat ec ata Foot
4} »
urp.
— The above were — ted by Mr. "Tame, E
Slou im — ye ai n d-
gs. d y
cde (K ien ae cx cl Mrs Wellesley Piggot
ted Belgium Purple, in
oh thie is generally esteemed
same — Very a to
j from a stand
#) Williams’s Bon Chrétien, fine, large, very melting and | si
m ee. in flavour. H. W. ebb, de brought from a
(Keynes), pure white, very fine flower; William Dodds
( ne deep yellow; Sir Geo.
yellow. ipped and veined with second — | Ins ra
De (Rawlings), buff; an vem Austin. ( —
lac. Mr. C. J. Perry received a first
— ductive trees fr
are higher, but that bas dne oe to do with te
ture. Nogood — thinks idu ger - ry branches
of a Pench 1 * lower than a foo
ground; is a gard remo 8 e take —
that ali. idus this should be osci AA. 8
and that cannot be done by
branches
has paid the Tree be ong
e
d—a pan ree
ed with its cultivation
Bonne; large and sweet, but decaying at th
| E were fully —— - poa Beauty, —
but
""
art | Gos a L9 yWolvcrinupion — poe a — —
with fine petal and o
int
FB — is oue cin
of the P.
te hl
circumstance w re than
rs ten ds r^ the fruitfulness, ba E eee
n general, bu t
*a1
wall Quince stoc small, melting,
Ee ed and n sspe Ha
t branches of a fel handsome
t ee md im v
sis
» ‘free-bearing but itle own known variety nat Tás
Jn Ween confounded with th Gate by nomm e, but
ij rc distinct, and westiy dur cm — —— culti-
yor 1869.—This exbibition took
e | been very ha appy.
ra and
ws:—1, Lad
; "S Lady
Pennant deme v a zz erem COE, 5, Dias. be
W. Piggot (Keynes) ; 6, William Dodds (Kees) 7,
Miss Chetwode (Walker) ; 8, Sir G. Douglass (Dots).
Nottces of of books,
yg i tena Ce
M‘Ewen
vy P
ree 1 reg
Taunto
ae re aac By Georg
€— the Horti — —
die pe X, . Octavo, pp. A S rsen
me ork, informed, was in an advanced stage
ect the "Meath. of the author took died: ; b
not 2 ar red more diee 27 pages of it
writte the t has been chiefly supplie d L by
M
1
D.
and ‘ot top, where they are
, late S
a acd s Gardens, a at t Chiswick. Edited and enlarged
H.S no
ts in the paas
— ntly permitted
rise, like a series of y ms, above the top of
the ec whilst — dower 3 prt is so weak that the
branches ‘there occu are lan-
nepote rur strong — shoo!
-
the work
y a 2 repre-
p of
| before us is illustrated at p.
che to
T.
We exiit say that iis wir ee of 5 -"
The author much o
to publish
riis At — Mie Mr.
2 bsurditi as talking can
1
ie “the ae of a plant heen ing wi
After a reful examination of this thin voli we
| which branches ddl in all Ra red pie
those kim mus ja int down
Md, pr pn. en
tbink E Gur do weil vel di, i Sas
horizontally 3 rae 80 phy os
d rarely
bwawa B 3 ies stamped wi
Goláfinder, Midn night, Emperor,
of the Day, J . Franklin, Si 1 Na X
Shared, Mentor, Seanad Lud Cardi
P
Q
n tl
ian tom oo wenk to ba
—— Lon Miss
! ley Plato, M — Rawlings Bare
tant
Watts, Perfection,
nes,
finder, Admiral
Rawlings, Hon. Mrs, Trotter, Lollipop ;
atirist, |
are best
or the e objects wish to attain.
as the Citherine. might have been dispensed a iid
ed melti yi rines — ted for
Newington, Early * wington, and Red Roman, all
| ingstones Ina Are Cathe such as this acti |g
to be ENT peer = overcoming the
of growing t pm nes—the
—ought to Ae — e instead of a
paragraph teaching nothing; — it would Ws
miserable
the Old sid
notorious that frost and drought
depth than loose soil
ra
at p.
* Where fant soils abound,
p ings,
| Bis oe i aia ‘oul be en Sy ox growth of
and the state of the weather, It is most
812
THE GARDENERS’ Oars M AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
useful when the tree is in active grow wth, and during , rather l ure, ld dull cl oudy days dE off under a wee
e veek
if they were
the prevalence of a dry and arid atmosphere. This | will be rir able
madig is in many un preferable p mulching, | the day so as to abr ine a ee ivt tate of the vertaken by severe w. 5
inasmuch as it does not intercept the sun's rays from atmos} phere beet: night. Use eqs Vends sparingly, | sufficiently established must,
the border. It is easily accomplished, and no o! only when it e be necessary to prevent | what more kindly, fo
can apply | s HÀ for if the composition ¢ 1 of the soil has | i risp Ses or to prevent the — 7 5 falling uel ing such things over a severe
been al 7 ticity whic ch | below v 40°, r where things are brov nght t from on rme: at least W. vell rooted, and these den, Unley
na healt vm t acti on will cause the pr to evene Lene p! will hardly be saf Ba e ap t with
1 vis were, yt ‘ts nre openness.” The meaning of | tu e to average vet 45°, but in houses conta a | the roots "bot t db nob "keep the * heat to ena
all this i not very clear; but the vite its E d of plants "there is more, dan r to hes amne for growth should not bee —
I atering app hended from a high r Seasor encouraged aftar
e y to th il p 1 xxx q 5 lower. than may 50 de Toe ARD UIT AND KITCHE
eerie eners, . in order e watering, E very some of . ibid Where MAN are troublesome Rar. GARDEN.
dry w eather endeavour to doe) p the surface “of the soil NG DEPARTMENT to preserve ripe fruit from their rs eans must
oo by plying the hoe and rake. PINERIES. — Plants swelling their ‘fruit must be frequently over any varieties of Peake
(ped the. [uem of “disbudding, t " pt TX Wave koe gather those that aie ns for if allowed
1 n" h h ripe wasps are sure to find
“I usually go over the trees three times * dé
final thinning, ö is when | the young Sey woe are
ne at the base
have been : *I usually go over the trees three times. At
the final
ey have
pruning.
eec Sape it forms a part of the
prope
with ith
quantity of bearing s shoots er ought certainly ee
the
o get Pines to swell properly after this season u
my circumstances, and unless the atmosphere con a be
atta ck the fruit before it i is 5 p
1 d the | 4, hid
of the sh oot.” What was meant ot esr of at least from m 63° to 705 and 75° by day
, and adm
“fre
— 1 115 * mild, ** iin fire-heat to A of eu. this
without lo peik the temperature, an ift is the |
fres
1 inning which is whe en the young shoots are | little air during t the day when e ia eà 8 [tno to Mae ps Ed Er prevent Eel
y gain to close nets du ig
expe th
e
` the ground is in ong ec to take u
ake advantage of dry
hir apparatus so that it may get warmed before
e e for admitting fresh air under or against the urs s, Beet, Parsnips d stack t
a
place Wher re pe vil be convi
for ust,
nce be removed at the winter
$ Ps ord e m ke room for debe shoots
ise the bea
en, pim strong, | manure water a. necessary ;
P 1 CAPAT N N sy 1
yos "x his statu
atti but enough has been said to show the general
character of the volume. We shall therefore only add
that an operations has been :
appended by Mr. Cox, who will we trust in future stand where ripe Pines in winter are in deman Cayennes,
on his own stout legs
si
worth while we should extend these uel ie
"
have e found € them to swell off . well, Dod
d
Blaek Jamaiea, and Montserrats should be grown to
instead of the crutches of other e supely mdi à
only t;
coming into contact with the plants, and with proper when wanted
t t ay i
ect Pees Satu
mys ery of | not require much water for some time. It is very | Sw
t 1 but to be | difficult however to m . Pines to swell properly Tu
dealt with by “ * the final touches of the master” which after this I and any pianta of ie Mero eden a
Sh now u
——— x
STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHISWICK NEAB 0
For the Week ending Oct.6, 1859, 3 Ted
BAROMETER.
MEE
(^| Max.
day 30 4
d 5
$
8
9
10
30—Rain “cleat and fine
I B elo louded; boisi 2 5 fine, with Aurora Boreal.
—Dens ely overcast; very ye throughout,
clear, quit uite. cloudless and exceedingly fine.
and o clouds from N. to S.
Xi me
RECORD OF TEE WEATHER AT 22
During the last 33 years, for the ensuing rd
Prevailing ,
ov A
oe winte EE
e Baiar, ee XTC MM be hard HR
(Ghent) Prix courant pour l'automne 1859, et le and inferior in T Fruit approaching maturity | ———
printemps et été 1860. Mr. Verschaffelt’s nursery, N niit €; the atmosphere should be MY de 5
which is 15 minutes’ walk from the railway station, kept rather dry, admitting fresh air freel z s
ap m this catalogue to be rare and | favourable opportunity, for anything like moderately | Tn 4
valuable plants countries. Among others he 8 ae ill no E his season | Erga 13 p 15
offers, without naming price, the Tree Fern of N. Zea- | V thou ral use of fire-heat. If any o oun i
land, Cibotium Bi adi 25 8 and 10 feet high, a very |? ots appear to want shifting examine these at The hen temperature fuir td
ock in pots app
— — collection of Palms, and at 10 fr. each a new once, and shift such as are found to be at all —
called General Totleben, which is stated to for Saiten plants if ee — of po rough ces to Correspondents,
qe f the best in the world (un des meilleurs qui the winter will be apt to start into fruit etc Of | AUBERGINE: Pea What —
i i grow wth i in spring. But in repoting e at this s n be | ^ state of the common Egg-plant. TI The former is exe
MUT Sere la ble. ,
state ns to moisture, get
5 Miscellaneous. nh aede s using it, so as to avoid 1 checking ng t|
Whitaker's Mowing Machine.—A sub-committee, —Use gentle fires when the 5 |
which met from time to time at the Horticultural | is d but only just
the sight Tr e E anger, i lit is a very paree Tote md nion ariegated Geraniums will not bear much
animal; but a most determined | s
spirit. In fois ys, when wolves 21 Md boars |
infested the Irish forests, this dog was used for the
purpose of extirpati ing those animals; but in these days | winter if the wood iakt aif tonshadlby fos nl
it takes i onist by the back, > 3 the life
„ | cut back, as is usually done with th Scarli t
out of e 5 trength. these dogs should be kept over thie winter j ust as th 225 lifted
in total lengt ; 281 hes from | fro and ce bak [^
girth,
th;
the toe to the top of the Moses and 35 ie EA in tating “Mise :
v
CONSERVATORY, &c.—
time
s Garden at Chiswick to examine samples of 4d gi hep the atmosphere e dry. Use brisk fires
vegetables grown for comparison, made several trials of in hous e the fruit is not yet ripe, giving air
ane patent lawn mowing machine, which had been freely, and 15 pi to guard the foliage from insects, |
sent to the Society for the purpose of being tested! where * PM has to be kept for any
the manufacturer, Mr. J. Whitaker, Bedford Mill Iron length of time after ripe. PrACHES.—Às the
Works, Lancashire, After repeated trials the] trees will now is ad to the air day and
had been
or by:
en roused, exhibits
ory oe
eld be taken up e they are at all injured, as
they will be much more liable to d
frost here — have to be w :
tuations which ar suitable for them they
k early in Spring | after
es Ii em into growth, wl
Routledge’s Illustrated Natural Hist ery freely in heat, and in the ease of Flower of the
— eth y, or o! er free growers, ill make useful sized
Galealiar of of Opera’ e pe by turning out time, and even the *
ers of these do not cover a bed ickl n»
(For the ed Week.) planted thick, and the plants should therefore be
5 in as large a state as the accomm eee will
PLANT DEPARIEN Ls permit, The autumn rooted stock of
Whatev may b kee
84 done early in in 73 the dy » so ds to | greentiy, w = 1 N freely to on
H x XE
r there eremi N 5 from 8 er dr ike gion ee after tl fos anit) mt my:
flower at this season than from aj hard, in l sabe h e this em, and keep te planta
eeping them perfectly € clear |
sioning a
| Mer, oe
Ocroner 8. 1859.]
S UF ENGLAND AND SOUIH WALES
LAND DRAINAGE / AND INOLOSURE COMPANY.
an kind of
IGHLAND . ise “AGRICULTURAL SOCIET
—The — 1 — will be
d in ter wing Bye-Laws enacted by
— t for the Board of Examiners
e to receive for examination, e to recom-
mend f = the Society's Agricultural Diploma, Candidates who
attained — * 5s who shall exhibit tle
and pass mination on the subjects hereinafter
ouchers to be exhibited shall be
— € d idence
afford
sal
hs and been e
tions — — a period of t
pete
date
ngaged in the practical
two years, or for two separato
not less than one year each. — 4 o the ou
has attended, for of t
not less than one year c" . —
ee some seminary recognised by P the Boal an auticlants
Agriculture, Chemistry, Natural History, Botany, Veterinary | 18
Medicine, and Surgery.
“That the Candidate Hus ryt
and of the foregoi ing Branc
— 1 of Practical band
hes of tudy, as well as of T
"andidate has exhibited the vouchers
xamination required, the Council shall issue,
in favour of eriam — a "jr bearing the corporate
seal ot the Society, an rtifyin, Arts
and Sciences — ae wi
Examina5ions a
int
tion ae be pr ba — ng
Alby 1 gh.
M '"HEIE CLUB CATTLE SHOW, 1859.—
The AN? WUAL SHOW of FAT CATTLE, EE and
PIGS will take place on the — 7th, aa and 9th Decem ber,
at the Bazaar, King Street, Portman
NM Prize List contains separate or Devons, Here
fords, Short-horns, Sussex, Norfolk c or Suffolk polad; Long-
horns, Scotch horned, Scotch polled, Irish, Welch, and cross or
— breeds. Also Long-woolled Sheep, cross breeds, Short-
and Pigs. In addition to the large amount offered in
there are also 50 Silver and 5 Gold Medals.
ifi Ww ready, m intend-
uote the
lett equire.
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
assuring as to the exceptional chai
cumstances t of which this 3 has arisen.
here recom me nd
acter of the cir- | farming ?
thi
uce them
that the instructions by | occupations for a new
to effec
How are we to con
em, how
lik el
ds o anm [onem in — W
They are belan in the last
Journal of the English Agricultural Society,
Vol. XIX., Part II.
is an unquestionable fact that i
number of the b
| none so likely t it as that which operated
Norfolk farmer, altho’ i a lon
| wh hile = px ocular mew web
eat Cox Establis
afforde:
y the eae ‘the length
breadth of. the land aa simply conducted
mple farms as shall speak at once to b the wok inds
of pep masses, throu gh the mos t sensitive of their
Ir
economy = i tillage of farms, with e —
tion of so eral no ia m Ae nds of me
| cerns—thei
r pockets; throw a net-work of these
6 vii e whole land,
ri rty, i
to the Board—Ist, That | 2 "Candidate
opera- | w.
cap ital, is very d M E EM — eva sling quom
is still as it was before the n of the Pota
n of Providene m
Irish agriculture. s in
or | Oats, very often in successive crops,
continued till the land, at least Sod Anu . d
scratched over, is found u
erop of three or four tim es thé p^ “ot "the
seed, and pu IE the bye, - — er to keep down |
the weeds compens for the want o
e tillering, i is — a heavy, The MA is Marl
n|manured for Potatoes,
left
was
te, | syste
very significantly called’. yn recover an racine ir
fertilit ity. This waste is the last stubble left e
h
| instruetion to their neighbours, men whose capital
ach p
regulated by that of the
= ne reer
yi
ive
| shall not n nu that of those to whom they
are
their farms, p^ ise men em * the
capitals of their masters, for then t quip
would come in, „that money does it.“
t the cows of the — depend for their |a
—— T the rent an s having to
be Pu be out of the land i under crops, supple-
ow
N who,
nin eatablis We ect se ster and
them, bu t the great d 33 for carry-
y little butter
may yield. ‘When restored to a sufficient fer tility,
oir e pn is ruere for pecu with such
straw and coarse ha
vided by the landed
proprietors under the 9 and
of their agents, agriculturists, and stewards. To
£4
ca ges he d as the
ean pick up in the an — with the Z2
ep n digo ed = straw imei: in a bye lane or
t
Thi n observation of the present
; * it D "sustained by a. recent statement, of
da
the Professo
ey |as augmen
ting the wealth of the country an is
pro ving, y. condition "i their ^ and even
even easing the amount their own
the farms we contemplate oe
M ual
0 8 . * g hat would not shock existing pre-
A. B. ru Heifer. 66G ky 1 We vy Agricultural Review. Judio! k M E which more or less the minds of
„ C. Ox * Extra , E. One Wether or Ewe | His are: The s of prepared, one that ot very
Stoc Pas in Extra Stock. Potatoes followed by two or more f corn, | widel Pini from long established practices.
Form F. Pen of 3 Pigs. | Fo m G. One Pig in Extra Stock and the land, when ka deg to yd s more than | Th owever desirable it may be to cultivate
The Entries 1 d on November 1. Foren about three times the amount of the seed, is laid | Potatoes in drills would not insist on it, for
DE or B. T. BRANDRETH Gs, Hon. Sec, down to ‘rest ;’ generally * anti Grass 7 ople are not prepared to adopt - : cleanli-
corner of Half Moon Street, Piccadilly, London, W. seeds sown with the last cr op of e Very many | nes tillage so essential to bag we
N.B. AB anications on the Club's business should have the old bed
the words “Smithfield Club" outside, to distinguish them
private letters.
The Agricultural Gazette.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8,
— Tue recent terrible Leg ph 2 a loco-
which
einn
to their man
The — whic
Tr Pies anal
buta very d we do not believe.
he verdiet of t
W. . LU. e explosion
n the Uands, d pe
e non- fg uma of a
" ptu nang
to - oder
e coroner’s jury declared | bec
of the fields so ean which I end ean over,
| Bre roduc ce in the firs year, off
ble
e a goat; ‘the herbage, three-fourths
s composed of weeds, a be i£ oes pet in the second
affording , and | i
yeu In the third year yee dela sheep; and d aig 1 by this
125 T zh is ae ed, vens TT the land
for Pota uch manure
is produced whe when sud » iar = and the | wi
shockin
system of digi uch i —
to individual and — prosperity, Aa T
to have to "—— r alm very part of |
this e county" (Co
not such a state rot MAE ane 8
Ed
hay ab simple
abstruse publications bond; all with fede i if E
effect ; vain have been the efforts to
HA Giliate d farmers eyond their means. |
ior quw and construction, and not properly
xamined before it was used. The
jary fa E their i dats fe 8 that every
-engine should have an indicating
present od ^
. — persons.“
It is plain ps the accident has arisen from a
very badly construeted boiler, and such ill-
The evidence of it as onud ii in excessive pressure.
The eviden: s. is sufficiently re-
on after , we i a to
substitute for the greater part of them ** Borecole,”
i
he MUR cattle shows, 5 d no do
give a taste, are ga
with str t by the
upon *
ubt to
ith indifference, even
l
[1
edd ic
attemp it pcne
ople. | on the pae of their Potato ves found oi
d to — was a good substitute for that
wou ud continue plan. uo eor
their ‘rest,’ | desirable an extended system af 3 sitomo
An not seek to institute it
consequences of it; much le:
uce the Pergi advanced and [
of Lois-W.
the most simple form
artial green feeding i in
OH
ban
way t
sommo . M | Clove E although rar
mall patches, is somewhat
A e conside
dis them
| suitable t to he habits of the people and the existing
ul state of the land
e Po of
| vau a Ai 85055 nei! m are Cabbages i in .
S are E planted and which we do n
propos alte:
fiora
Cal
tis is asserted not
under Pota
closest proximity to “he
Jabbage, and a LN the T" of the disease,
fo ang out of sii - enirn — is a
so
uninfo
eulous or suspicio a light every innovation,
who pique themselves upon their 8 wit,
winter feeding fll the Rye was syndy:
toold fai e
| who will not read, and mah have ‘little ‘res
for the opinions 'of writers and for woke os
ecay very — "tm
3 soon "o t vov: e air roo them
|selves, and poss the earth a
notwithstanding t de. early oppression i of the Po
the iil ceci state of the
plan
. — how well th
ma;
abbages succeed; there
are O eed very many fine s . them.
t The Cabbages most generally plan are the
. but as these cannot * o
afford heavier individual weight.
suaded
may sueceed Winter Rye, Winter
Red Clover, or aga sown Vetches S
and, although the close-hearted m ay ed may frequently
we are per-
Vetches, | genera experience, that there is no econom
all in such
not in perfect order. There is, moreover, apar Xa
this risk of explosion the further gs especia nig in
in| marshes
straggling trees, and t
and ditches all
these with the peat
eu and it
2 is danger i incon-
ble, — in gust 5 weather. When
siden 2 dude Y risks zm. fact ascertained now by
sis in the use
y definite line of se
thai ge Hos most cathe — ee between
The crops that were growing upon X
entirely n of the land int
places wher e the latter is s not cultivated the
f these engines, and that the only ad
wirds wa
E E establishment of it.
help tothe ordinary
ge t
onfer is the saving of time and the ee » of
potting grain threshed out rapidly to tal ke ad-
| vantage of the state of the market, it is surprising
soil and prevent the wi nd f
Such is the character of the land
square miles in ian n Germany,
d plains on first aequ n r
S
TE
SEE
Ei
d ngh wou ep e any great extra-
y M 0
e bene fits that would result fr
ae ot Abe green pos a
1 ou +h
a the: Gites hor 3
r far es
urces on T. ie Ne er now depends
t + + +
has not 23 come into use in England, and | the more 80
prairies of the Mississippi i vall
n
when it
safe and economical, which is most 3 used in
e United States, and has been favourably recom-
de — — . —
Royal Agricultural Society; this
ilway {
to report
not
cro
difference between
and the
55
and efficiency of it
known and thoroughly £ appr reciated in America
ame rganip
d
sult of We icu matter
hus preventeq
1
either improving vm physical eerie ^ E y
versio o ensue, and the shame of our back
wardness ^n be coy ered. G.
Wer
page of an article On CATTLE Coo
nt who defend
U
cannot iow the} publication i med
^
B
AL HO
rs of aiv tated N Tess and teachers
of sound agricultural practice, witho.t adding a
ord of comment. The
conceded
both. advise sound practice ; a one
et
—
is pur ely disinterested. Mr. Hor
in this and other jo
bining dairy — n
by rieh and kill fe
reward to conside hiis * — ra or Pes
publie good, and d ad iti-
at very system of adverti:
eh below the price ab which
nutritive value of which d
issued Saee «laborate
sg penned by a straw elevator,
f
| LETTER VI.—ON AGRICULTU:
steam power
on almost all the northern farms, but even by the rail-
rom y ieldin
, Throu ugh uy Weis of Pro
ant
y catania for wood
fuel for the loe
per hel ; —
motives. One of these two-horse powers!
a will Mns E winnow M bushels — Wheat per day,
21d. y manual labour |
roduce i
Plath ty
a
at a
| required pede such as is necessar
n
pee by the
ith its horse
skilful
heh is
»
No
s
untry by Har of
Hughes of the Fa leon
C. W. Eddy,
THEORY | [3 AGRICULTURE.
T n 1 0
ct ar state
er which qn aan in "the es
also to allow. me to visit a mann actory fi
and non
manure in the ne eighbourhood of Berlin, i in Which he had
an interest.
for preparing portion of common salt, peat, and the |
ufactor
pam man. excr ements from the town, making a mi
=
lil roe and 1.5
Here, as in England, prs
ably og results upon
2 all
this ma — th
course orn Arar recommend i y one, er
2 others who "therefore e e Vr no her:
The consequence was a loss of confidence on the
co
— rt e the ted in the
was finally
which
- * niece NENTAL EX
d force are incre ‘elements in
oes
everything os have to do, and the first instanc ce in la
which t
ammon
is gradually
to ente
RENNE
dus which relates to when, how, and
route a sare is transported ‘from the
just
poni sp stes almanae
of which Pepe er is t
cattle feeder is dependent on
ven to the stocx "E iin’ — my
7
in almost we
that his su ccess as a
the —Q gi
seasoned w.
0
muddy, stinking cesspool that passes under I.
Bridge to the quai town of Hamburg.
charged by the sem and cheated by the 19 zn on
the river ] = usual, I i n boa rda|]
Sueeee
that the
to, comma sand "rien
claims A pai ence and regard of a,
Let repeat our recommenda
WhO eiie i 15 — necessity of
cattle foo nsult a e
tion to any one
eondim ent! for
Er- s advertising, and Mr.
HIGH-PRESSURE STEAM v
v. THE AMERICAN |
8 HORSE.
idem
di
ae as "e e à nature “of their last Neap , and in — — :
agrie
ondon sit
Over-
that confide nce which the e turf, e 49
t
the — id e
a | Pel low London Bridge ing in the ate e of
— of an hour r we
ewe e eA urney . — hames. To sa
of 47 Mee in "Germany i nof 9 ama
Notwithstanding th M mature of the A
an
r jo Ux
— PCM e enm would be
erybody — must be the eh on the
mie motle
— va ev
German
4
et
d enables it to E
2 " N
‘ood crops, as s the Potatoes
0 | go ps nae i
tables around this.
Lo
Libo] J4 Y
t any kind of [o
dug nad pen Engl
and part Frenc
in Ne or even in the be of the EL
on teri urg
Pana get rid of all the was to get
leasa ny | vesteti in and dan not e over 3 bene T i» uH
assert an eqnally seltevident truth. And no doubt that Z2
mbur; u sag
e owner in
very frequen a, .
away — — all, to leave ps by the first
train for Be rlin
noro
such inves agrieulture
ts “nd b of the IE the — of how to
a questi
ties. is is — — ne be brought
y
tour. that mi give. T€ 80 p an —— of
—
table explosion of an agricultural
and will the
[i^ would give a stronger contrast wit
Tar r
ementi s £ oe by which six pv have been
th t
ture of Englan id; the week before leaving Toland i
total of Teile viel the free. 0 e ofi
ct routes, The richness of the agriculture, | p
a valve
tightly, or
has got rusted been screwed down |
" got. stuck RIT
22 up in the boiler, aud Pine to inside ra i
boiler TE cleaned of the co oating of “fur,” which if
| the water contains certain salts, is apt to accumulate
and burn tl the plates, and that all these sma ul but
momento
— deg qu of the 5 the miniature senle of|
! combi
geology which
ndscape
Berlin
these re- |
creat.
plains cerit
lyin A neighbourhood of Hag,
the of a comm unity has reached
ain a
per centage yielded by i
Obtained from da hee in
€ 2
mar s may not apply
distance on the road, sin inée here the
lan and i
into Paden and these
vided | a
to the care t gon who, to say the
and experienced 3 but bes ides all this
a from the
no’ t
aecidents are
ue then most careful man
reported to say A
boilers the press
45 Ibs. to the * inh ‘that i in
increased from 50 to 80 lbs.
timed source of danger i
What an
least, are not trained 8 ac the land;
mos
e areas giv ma
larg
Rest, and On the other *
is this, if the "— valve be ! i Worked, patches that a
es, full almost i top de Sater which has
are surrounded e open |
d these g ns produce
a t 1
en the
upt, n requently in these very limited
diy mn D" "enn destitute of organic
ates 8 covered with stagnant
bast beds ‘which are used for fuel,
See patches of land that are
re left fallow, portions with
m t: and
and
in
to | th
ge
large i investments ^ "andi in G
amount
Several Germans who o hat
d who. are
differe of
8 fault of th
that the , Superiority o
ef the E Fngli t and t
e e English agriculturis 3
i WAE as Pins money w verer mi
-
jj
of interest at all commensurate with
EEE EEE ———GG—EGEBBBEERRREE
Ocrosen 8, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 815
9
of the capital invest A: and that — c — s supply the 5 orig indicated. Some of the | the almost im oenetrable
arming of Great Britai not practicable ermany. disadvanta ages under which this class of institutions | to arouse hir s to a se "d Ei — *
On visiting Prof. Mitscherlich I was pleased to — chat must labour will 1 evident from the advantages | age, aw i
the old man, who for 40 years has enjoyed a European enjoyed by those in connexion with the univ versities, them, and show him the necessity of giv his
reputation for Bes purely scientific efforts, also hada As to the relative rekon rm oh * the two, 1 education. evags
np i interest i iculture, and was well acquainted a wide difference of opinion in the — f different
with its edi e details. Most particularly was he persons in Germany, who en e been — n the
mmn .
i
inter in the source of ni en to plants, and mets we mm have occasion to refer to this CATTLE COOKER RY.
the question of the assimilation of gaseous nitrogen by differenc There are a number of these schools
—.— The large r of . — obta aine ed from already established i — — any the
urce by leguminou 1 É l . ols,
ty white te Lupins * a Bean) w = en growing upon — 3 these — the — bey ad
aroun rlin without any manure, an — —€— M much more promine ntlv than in
— he. unity a combined nitrogen — e either of t above eria Their object is to - "du ently parched both h stock irem — for the
the soil at the same time, seemed to indicate that | — the children of the peasantry and others the stock for breeding,
to assimilate the gaseous nitrogen | best methods o M em — al farming, the various improve- me — er — 3 ET
of the Aem He did not feel that tl 1 ments that m roduc ro reign EN ls-ho-sniremmi -4 " 2 on m
Boussingault thi lusive, but | and the best means of adopting them in the German — - M. Wer hoste
he did not attach any value to the f George | sy f agriculture. T) ils 0 f —
Ville in 3 d to — — form mamani, labour during the principal part of each | ^. — :
estion uring mer, ai ith | 4
education in the University of Berlin je tn fo ts infancy, | the nature of the work, during the winter. In some |j. Cooking of their food, or nn
has examined Mr. Lawes's ment from a
fair to dev itself into a distinct of the schools they are not € ted until they have | point of view U A: that h pam
and well-established branch in the University. But been on some farm in the cou ry long enongh to learn sete à ú dei * d^ agers th zi N feodi
— going further with this subject a few “general all tha t can be learned an E: ordinary Agricultural heep—for thi ist aii lies erir XE ing
marks upon the character of German the country. W | Mechi, for this s experiment of his, quoted by Alderman
institutions w ill not be wo of place. These institutions — ch day t of el inst — ve ti eto Loi mae pu ay that * —
of three distinct kin tion in the principles involved in the labours they a are | the rans "onde i tbe ai ec ne
Ist. ———— in “which the object is to teach ane v t This instruction must necessari iyt — e very 1 7 at ^ pem irme nd other organs of ‘the
students and young people generally the facts and can neither serve as a mental training for — des em fr: L other il — great labora
mp ii nor enable him to fully npe the value | attenti — t im "t der perd bes Votes little ——
24. SCIENTIFICALLY INVESTIGA ATING ; the object of of agricultural — — But as such schools ure — deren on P ioe
which is to develope the principles involved i in agricul- | often in connexion with the higher school to which ee present is not —
by scientific inves m cg chemical, we have alluded, it is possible for pupil to y tock wi
physical, and physiological investigation avail “himself of the _advanta ages of — in sue- Pay 8 fair et price f r their food. Against the
14 Porviar.—E racing agricu — unions, the cessio He is much stricter rules than truth of this propositio 2 cannot allow Alderman
object of which is to bring e aud the peasa the higher institution, and has much less Mechi, Mr. Lawes, or amy one else even to throw a
try together to hear — o iculture, and thus — as to how he will employ his time, and is stone. But when we enter the market to buy well, how
to infuse a spirit of progress ant 3 intelligence into the | o obliged to rform manual labour in each of a great | eW, animals do we find that will of pa for their
* s ren nities. mber of departments, until he can do it skilfally and | fd? And when we visit Tiptree Hall, Rothamsted,
ONAL INSTITUTIONS.—The end prop He 1 fo or his labour, or any other crack establishment, how far is cattle
inotitations T to fi whi bei cookery and management from what it should be,
quite distin be?
ALLOW take e Mechi by the horn on
subjec ot of —— hue stock." In the English
ir "largi
| +
h
"t
E]
f the student ^ "
any pene have Points r^ which in the — laboratory, à source of ex me to be micht be, and we hope from what it soon will
d A itio * one to the other is not abrupt. — as that of the other tuition, and not a source of | Progress is the master spirit of the age, and certainly
e shall have occa: ege discu M part | no branch of husbandry affords greater scope for
(2. "Educational departments in connection with of. ‘the qu uestion more fully in connexion with th cookery and the general ma $
universities in which — ultural f the professors — — in these | ment of live stock, so as to enable animals to turn their
ally taught on the assumption that the student has institutions food to a better account than they now do. In this
availed himself of attain advantages of the university, d. Ma nual labour Institutes 88 — deccm ent Mr. Horsfall and Mr. Thorley* are making
in consequence of which r * be pan that he | Perhaps to the Anglo-Saxon mind the G rapid A in . € of improvement, and we
already certain kind of hope t ample will receive more atten-
of th 52 —— ithout a difference, yet " origin ‘and o Ern the |t experimentally than it S yet done; for those
od enable v sete 0o presen nt differs in a marked degree from the last, who are thus taking a lesson of them find that animals
of al all “the well-develo ducational ee although owing to — difficulties these distinc- which did not pay for their € on ‘the old system pay
old institution, and iA bombis them — are falling away. These institutions originated | Well for it on the new. Ought not Alderman Mechi,
epared asc hax enable din the philanthropic ideas of G: d Swiss | therefore, to season the food of his live stock wi
i ment tô co who to bring about a more inti-| “Thorley’s cattle food conc W. 2
himself more particularly to hi depart ly | mate — 2 ur ee s i; a
conscious the student mil neve am The
a knowledge of
the moc sciences stantly with the igis de: ‘cal de tesi th „ moral, improper mismanagement?
ersity course. "the religious, social, and scientific truths from his own! Alderman Mechi’s question, 2
knowledge of t can be more lips while wr gne at manual labour, &c., with ded: which we fear is not m ell understood,
thoroughly and more mieally obtained "than e shoul to them as a parent, and they and we dare say little less can "sad
where special professors must bo appointed for — Should lire with bim in his house as children. It system of cooking food for live stock to which we have
each one of them enon in pode to agriculture. | is needless to say that an idea or rather an ideal so fine | just referred. Both branches of the subject have long
The n with t ersity is e has scarcely found a second person to the one — engaged our serious attention, scientifically amd prac-
i nce a
are, as it
y esanei ith such a diversity of circum-
conse- ltural | st t enter ape M details of
of HN Fo rgo deem more, than when his | schools inor importance that are devoted to Pepe either poy dt 80 as readers of the
attention is m istracted by the ical affairs of —— of —— Mo as that of the | Agricultural Gazette azele the 1 benefit 1 - experience.
more popular institutions The simpl icity of the arrange- | ¢ dai airy, the brewery, n — of flax, wool, &c., 2 ur object in taking the to 3
men deut uitless opposition being yo . wheel
connexion with every universi y, and thus offer a B. INVESTIGATION STA — object of these i is T Progress, and cit co-operation in "de ex-
grat vari ety of 1 m stances E the | distinet from that of the last, in that they inves Her eg of this most im t
“proceed wi h his studies in ped to the — of knowledge of what we are to subject so as to extend the benefits which it is calcu-
tral dati 8 of to teac hin ing. The necessity ¢ of such lated to confer with the least possible delay. Land-
Kar morality x^g 5 institutione will be ble them t t proper home-
that he 7 dues „Such agricultural institutions | last letter —— —— undevi Tape of agri — |steads for va for unless stock pay for their
science evoted entific experiments to|they will not pay for household accommodation.
Bein as Göttingen, and Bonn, while profi - | develope our — of the dene that govern the | Tenants require this to enable them to invest capital in
ships of en are — at several ode — which are manifested in the various pro- live stock more rofitably and largely than they now
Universities, as Munich, Vienna, Brunn, Gratz, and |cesses ya agricultural practice. Such experiments | do; and the publie require this so as to procure a larger
urt. require a great deal of time, patience, labour, and supply of butcher's meat and daily produce than they
b. High Schools Sor Agricultural Instruction, the expense, 80 much so that it is difficult for a pur rely | now do from our provinces. Too pose progress, there-
abject of gendo is to give a thorough ! that tl fore, directly or indirectly, is a national sin—nothing
tice of * for which purpose | with the efforts expended to obtain them, and the con- less; but a helping hand the reverse— a national
the Thatta i Joen n agricultural district, sequence is that most of these Nene i 80 | blessing.
1 dun which all the v s | poorly presided for that they are incapa leaving | he first division of ‘ate a ornant gala
processes e best iltural practice SEU. opes such results as the e wt ten os ect to which : wi
tion. The student is at liberty to leurn how to pon Perse these food, may be resolved into the practical quesion-- mu
in which evervthing is taught, and he gets a more |moral al and intellectual qualities to carry it ou
of the im of ples,
perform | they ere are of eene ts nia
doing it himself, or Investigation Stations | in rnm " they animal which: dots: no gay"
most of these | quite limited in their efforts for want of pecun Mur i Temi tao dent of nma cs
u owever, previous to admittance, he must | Some of them are in connexio 80 Wiik ———— esta- per urine
vein some way made himself familiar with agricul- Pme — eren are not. These are similar in
n |aim an w
34
sical h the the :
are arranged, as a collections of|apparatus requisite for one is n necessary other, that the waste the body is greater
models of the different kinds of agricultural implements aint BY titin A teacher and the ee in the €— itshould be, and from the nauseous brenth, the
machines used in different parts of the world. | same e person, is rendered better qualified both to dull yet troubled unsettled eye, the hard coat, the slow
Political and national economy and agricultural | teach and to invest iga feeble trailing step, and want of muscular —
Jurisprudence are also taught, but the ancient and C. Adn RAL SOCIETIES.—À great number of ( generally
88 3 &c. are ‘not | these are fe long time Fem in uem their oat of order ; the nerves and — muscles u upon
Studied, so thu urse is not complete p or the|object is partly social, partly practical, partly educa-| Those ac on healthy vitality so much depends com-
finished education of a a highly intelligent agriculturist, | tional, and to some ved intellectual They serve to 3
yet the qualifications necessar enter these institutions cultivate a more general intelligence, and to penetrate | leading
816
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI
trea special attention.
Look on this living pic.
se
adoro apes “these
the p
Lacan muscles, c.) in
2 our 3 of ca
suggested. V. B., London, Oct
little on it.
at
result An om
oars wo.
mes cooker.
THE FEEDING
E by Professor T.
A TSO!
chemist to 88 Highland and 828 Society, wa was
this ciety’s
s subject in the S
Ban recent Edinburgh 3
He said: — The feeding o
th
OF STOCK
Anderson, of Glasgo
e kind of pt having pointed out “the seat of
Mr. Hors-
is bee is ru
it, or a
and to
5
y as above
um durin:
of the Society.
f stock, and its relation to
e on | which, as
ents of Lawe es and Gilbe rt, g
hitl It has always s bee
far the larger proportion 0
matters; but that is quite a
animals the = A ange prep:
ponderates
rod misapprehen
een B ens th at
ted of trogenous
CLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
es in three dit
su
deters the eo erm
xam
e that of t
f- | examine in practice the vario
[Ocronzg 8,
| different province s of Belgi uan, has an a a
ee ity Į
g thei
ı the Musée de P Industrie de B ming their
the middle of the Rue Mo wen "x
Ln <
pe
Com d ee
ven on lean
and e
oyen, 97 e
SE
A leans eep,
£a
as
by
E at Es.
other three M English t edes ME i
n presentation of their eis ra 1 5 zd
e at its
SÍ >
pally employed in the grand
2d, those in the petite culture; ;
pound of dr ryn 155 enous m r, and
may contain six
obviously i is that „the food must
matters.
og wh
times as mnc s Pe as lean. The inference
t contain a very large
The
mi lk, which
of these are subdivided ie sections, fe “ay
up the ee of the t divis 75 e
A peli
| contains a number of each of "the
e matters, ses affords
are our mor
young s Mock, when
conc sid are
those existing in atur
the m animal.
ived from
be, they are less 1
saat feedin Meam
ng pod — 5 rn
su
in which
4
| they o ought to ex xist in the
hat
us “instruction, although,
e especially as regards the feeding of
the from a
wever
th hese 5 may
than those derived fr
I b
differ
ent
Bat, ho
t
ry highest practical Eds
mediums for the manufacture
"ipud d
w poin
ect of my addres
Those matters, however, i in red to hich dobis a
on
rna of LM exist, are,
to discussi ssion, fo
relied upon and hie t requires to be e
farther
e, and o one
the o
m
in | rine and fa
one- "twentieth, of the n
itro; oge enous compo
stanc
with
that Se are hil 5 as I Ib
of m Even re-
7 doubt exists, d th ere are — |
which absolu
O | assi imilat ed by the animal
road ge eneral principle arrived at i
r
atty: matters are assimilated by the 3 only
and on
unds,
4
neidated by
Ma 2.
4 a Lae proportion of each clas
substances. But there are other matte
. there are many — on which we are very imperfectly |
—.— Sind others on which statements
been
ts of the most
waste
—a quantity contained in about 10 or 12
flour; and it is well known that
r Turnips are requin
successfull lly ad need
going through th their
ciples are being g y established. The
stock is go rs of those shelving” which beh
by st
g the p
now |
prm
of them within the na
most saving of food, The
rinciples on
up v
for the maintenance of these etone
amis measures
st i
inution of muscu
ird
which an
partly e:
its
food it loses weight, owing to t
substances sto
complex and 9 . we have
heroe - usur on which E _The 8
mal co
remain perma-
nently in the body. If, now, an animal be — of
8 ired to act as fuel to
animal heat,
T condition is
uch as to um
there mus
ration and the waste of the tissues. Thecus
the
oily, which su
fici footy o obvious
and res
mos Advantageo
eous food will be that wh ich,
wo great functions of nutri- |
ELA Pe piel were paci the
tritive matt
question Ks
mining h
As a a practical
peres are restricted to
food produced on ii en vx e mos
used to feed the cattle x es bis and
much requires to be said.
best made use E when
on hay only, es a waht of 90 ) Tbs,
when Rape is added. The
ow that, of food Ror
one-fourth of the money E ri
ble matter v ovre
but
(Continued from p. 531
description of the
RESUMING our Flem
we have to € She! next fe ven. in its
mber which is re
regard to th first f th thera: it
vite are ne teo Soiree et co
A m Boussing:
ex xperiments that i ina cow 18 oz. of iet enous matters
rs that t
s of notrit RER
ers also to be
ault’s
of the
lbs. of
7
zm :
an ox expires
5 Tbs of easton daily, to supply which 100 Ibs. ot
red. We see from this the large |
whic ed | manufa
i roura
an
restraining | |
, produci
alar 1
* 25
| i" keeping the ie warm, so that a small quantity |
the
maintain t
pay t be id p
loss; and there is no greater fallacy than to su
UP | that are 85 ed
ers in
*
very
TEPA H
the staj
advantageously
on Spr
Acn t fill up
—
— ͥ — —
BELGIAN IMPLEMENTS.
h plough,
construction,
b by the skim coulter of Howard's eg
n dese escending from the
8
matters, but i in one they : are associated |
— *
y of
1 1 4
*
cessi ity
solic! wi with
former than.
loss.
e Eds if nutritive - eonatitu
Obvious; for if, for example, an animal be
a a large qnantity of ni
f respiratory elements, it
Pe aly of the lat ^
fo
ituents i
the
now under
T gh utility in *
planta to ho 5 — by 7 the action of . —
ian
int by a a key. The
fu. mete e
me
—
and roots of
mould- board.
| Pin
n xhi
à pied, pue ctured by M. D
The p rice of this implenes
and 25 In breadth, with a steal
in strong land,
1 plone manufactured by M. Delius
Brabant. It closely vasti in in
of parts the xw pope which
ed. The es plough,
arrangement
we have already describ
g 150 kilogrammes.
at by M. D'Omalias
ds
the | price i is 53 francs, te Of d
: LE a small wheel substitu
]e at Sil, Wet
ri e]
— once worked
anders, the price of which is
rrow > icd in light land ond we 3
2 and b — 25 ce et
ogrammes. A 6 plough parori
for ee 1288 th ib nds A 8i bited :
ocroulle at Esneax, Liège, the pri 14
amometer, the oe
francs. Prove ved by the dyn dap Bhar iudi
furrow taken x and breadth 23 centi
210 kilo
oned. Th
ird |a is, we believ
mei eed that where i is
plicated, mo
e diam
duced by the differen
siue 4 — ttom
tter, consume a
to
ust, fi
much | doubt of
it can ansimilate, and | foul cho —
We may determine The stranger
it is di
its uti
enlt to say with what reason, as there i is little
— — wenig the land of weeds and
ants.
wil little time or opportunity to!
the
land . — whieh oh they run is very simply
e have before mentioned d
1 on Nen ifi culture,
! pulverised to a great t depth, this holding.
Ocronzn 8, 1859.]
of East and W
sid in in = i P pioaghings t the
implement of growing importance.
+ 2
West Flanders. To
A
| places
torto whom Belgi
indebted for the introduction e a E
plough was M. D roe ud of Liég
estined|regularity which is the soul of all manufacturin ng | prese
by A ordinary plough p processes in which machinery is employed.
As a necessary u of these expensi
above. TI cesses, the cost of the ure x on Avg ex
ply of fish
achinery to be
is sufficiently la
worked
ice, ‘ed t the irregularity of the supply, ‘and the
rge t
with p;
ber aban
tion
e year,
i) puro — e it impossible to carry on the works with that
yg — nfining the process to drying the fish fal, it
might not be possible to produce a m:
| be sold at a price sufficiently low to create a demand,
The cor on which this must mainly depend is the
price at which the raw material can be obtained. At
an
f parts of this subsoil plough ait Put sik re Et — and farmers, contras ~ seme Me it with e
— h; it takes — — ble power, two — in manufactured manu and Riding V hat e A per which would be increased, b retailer's
some soils — being able to work EN easily. Taking a materially cheaper, naturally ev eie a prefe * profit, &c., to 67. when it came into the
depth of uM Le iy it requi ir — had ges tomed to ls * farmer. This price would exceed the value of any of
355 kil mes, - si are of wood refi s price lich w — remunerate the the samples of which the analyses have been given
bound with i iron ; the 8. p" carries above; but then it is probable that the quality of the
it soc or dé resembles that The fai lun of these processes, however, should diners : ould A er be any o "va —
"Read bsoil pl. by th had tó the conclusion a it is impossible to con — if properly manufacture 3 scarcely ou
ot s sui X which y the way enjoys n into a dry m , but — rather m that a manure fully equal to that value igit be be pro-
ited to the 1 to the vance of simpler and easier | duced. It is extremely desirable, for the interests of
iron work*, Ac from the dd of this to aght | processes. The truth. 15 that there has been a grót agriculture, that some trial should be mad — 80 as to
regulator er ae m is requi Él ascertain whether it be practicable to produce such a
porci —
AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS
The price of the im onl of misunderstanding
m imple 3 y.
Tun CE —2 Mr. ogee d ’s figu
—
art they — and being strongly i Supe
anufacture! m profit, thing, i i
familiar with de — of tie that if it is to be done at all, it ought not to be taken
ressed wi: e| up of man
on be
carried by the fish-curers, who ought to convert
made treatment with sulphuri
have most com
mo nly acid in so
r other a 33 part of their. process ; refte
| their on ph he into — Any other plan, in-
2 — 2 z^ crease. 1 volvi ing, as it must n ssarily do, considerable cost in
Wheat .. .. 546, T 7 1,407 in this case, at least, all that is requisite is to p her,
x 904 465,4 » q
M 35 a 1,981 EL 1,981,197 5 E the water, and to enon the dry r vd toa 23 is not likely to succeed. On the coast of Scotland,
. 190,768 .. ,519 d lent state, To effect this objec places where abundance of fish is to be
Bero a — fye —— v leet 1 " sem 1l that is eq btained ; and it is much to be desired that some enter-
— — or flat t drying surfaco, heated either pid a "e P cna prising persons ns could be found to make a trial of this
TU. 2,748,380 .. 2,652,296 1900 .. 97,990 990 wik flues pass rb ns | manufacture. Dr. Anderson in the High Aland Society's
Decreas : ps in 1889 96,084 acres of steam, the latte ter bein: Jre d ‘thin layer o f | Transactions.
= um. — Decrease, the moist fish or offal Ubi ae n this, * be
P -JGMOTO D. LAM .. api e | rapidly dried and — a proper state before COTTAGES IN epee a
Turnips.. .. 338,203 322, 266 + 15,996 putre action comm on n 9 be produced | i the Inte G Free Ch
eiue sn vie which would rea comparatively little smell. As ec y : $ 1 Church of
Cabbage eR 182 31. - — regards ite value, there is some difficulty i forming an d "ad
tul , Z make the follow wing ex —
Carrots, Pars- on; but some guide may be affo by reference we
nips, other | position of such manures of this kind as have — attention of your Committee has been
green crops 223, 299 22,056 1343 | 4 in market, anal of veral of which | Particularly directed to the rural districts. They ha:
Vetches and : . | found that although a number of good cot been
Ra: 33,860 33,207 153 | have at different times been made in the ratory. | D ough a number DUE
— —— — | The first of them to X I shall "^ are two samples | erected of late, this is still the exception, and not the
Total .. 1,017,531 PAM 18.880 acres 007 | made on the east coast of England, by a process with | Tule Even tages exist, th
Low crops m O th t f ain very — 2 ha: int mm
From — 1 may be deduced the following |: id to d — 4 ich am pd poe Ba ^ partment for a whol ]
general res ^ L m" i ting te 1 ‘of decency and proper M rear — eni
: cres. í 9.77 12.15 whee equally at de lance, and resulting i
Decrease on cereal crops Vidit in 1859 . 96,084 aww ae ge of social e vil. This i is the state of the ep een
ncrease in green crops - 18,830 —— fli SO 1.68 171
Dis ditto on Flax .. 44 15 in 1859 75,698 Common uit iia gar SÉ oe 26.49 92.99 | districts of "Sootland, even where matters ar supposed to
Ditto on meadow and Clover 12,185 Sand RETI r 3.84 2.14 good footing. In this one a part
tal decrease in the e of land under crops in 1859 . 20,886 100.00 ment the whole famil ly must remain, in health and sick-
nthe uma table cendi the total number of nes
live stock:
1858 611
1860 em. it
fatio.
"di 17,595
——
Increase r .- 98,363
st 3 value of the live stock in Ireland is esti
En a US '
72155 .. 8491008 .. 1409 yt
3,810, D HM . 38,588,356 .. 1,262,873
acai
142,832 .. 147,010
imated
Cattle. To
2 7 *
5,061,898 24,765,884 2,047109 1,575,501 35,3
581,082 1
—
£
tal.
£
22, 20,022,095
597,284 15554 100,585 2,200,517
— — —
Increase. Decrease. Increase.
ile theses according
ion I. is worth about 44.
ust take into aceoun
ts source
cL LM IL 3 8
Line PER š st as
Carbonate of lime : es ss M
Another sam 28 of whi been
unable to ascertain, but which I pare have been
5
id" vm
The 3 of Sonam salt i in this
ch I
g to the Til used for | P
— in EN and till the 2 in death. To this it may
ad hat in e districts what has been
ed, tha
called the loughman ta fuod. node
does ery een i
have
, except toa =
very small extent in the alkaline salts, shows the possi- |
The entire number of holdings in Ireland, from all of | sary d of bcos the a os without that substance;
which returns have b btained, is nearly 600,000. pa e is somewha
spe
e last sample to which I shall refer was manufac-
t ;
in - some |
tpt
Assembly, to what has been en calet the bothy system, or
a — of pss! a num ber of — and other
MG — iet
rende Mir "M the MR influences of domestic
life impossible, ‘ r Com mittee issued a series of
a effects b * ^J | tured on the Portugu
"Heu PP | ese coast, whence it was imported
of com: ** into this — Te is of a totally different t mature e di all erae chy to prevail, which were Mesi cor
Rus erting them into a È perta able for orm so as to insur * | from the others, palpi acid hay ving o obviously „bee ex lly “responded to and from the answers thus re-
diee of ta ego prop 1 existed no used to some ext sulph 10 lov d, an xis — sources, the ey beg to submit the
rox and it was pointed out a ees ntly added as dre Stor nbn os n its value | eei Dus 3
N M could be b eb the * of réfuse fish must be catimated on e principle as rat of 2 3 ah Mar
ad be dneredsed, jt coal pe superphosphate which, d ewhat resembles distrile iue, Aberdest, Pai A E
l among fishermen W int e : 0
br them, inedible fish, whereas if a demand existed in COMPOS! 5 * partially eren în ofber coser t
them, they would all be brought to shore. Th, Organic matter 1. ous o er astrietinquiry in 1841 that in 30
Fesult of this suggestion was, that a large number is Bipho&phate of lime equivalent to 7.00 bone bounds of the Synod of Perth and $
EGLI HNEEEEM-- vi
taken; but few, if any, of have come into| {oszluble Phosphates. ~. zo X0 smi return which this Committee has obtained,
Operation on the large scale; and, at all erent the alkaline salts FVV the superintendent of
manufacture has attained no extension, and the Zend : i 950 | that in that ebunty
Sects of an abundant supply of manure from Tuis 10000 bited by 569 males and
rurce are at the present moment distant as ever, that in East Lothian there
The principal cause of this result appears be the too This n — is ee i only 3I. 16s. per ton, int “this 3 girls lodged in bothies. a
great complexity of the methods of manufact hicl hiefl, he biphosphate of lime it things exists in connection wi in
were suggested, and which h required in in many instances, | con prevalence of some-
expensive and complicated mach inery, or too costly far manures have usually been offered for sale = times very great even in sin; single Some of the
materials, The former of these is a difficulty of the from 8 to 92. per ton; 3 os - price there is | returns mention that there is ripe fou 8 farm.
Serious character, because there are few, if any, iu no inducement to buy t ence the In the the parish of Monikie it is hm m
ang NES, Fond ton, ra e e of the manufacture. But itis is still a question 20 bothies, and many additional in in 1 for the
1 | „setting aside all complex processes, and sim simply accommodation of shearers, In the parish of Wick
THE GARDENERS’ CHRO
NICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
818
hall be j arsenic No. 2, zr grs. and
h architects often im sist that cottages s / No.
there are vag ee containing 77 young men and 65 2 a 10 : totaly umen ry where it | andis thought v f c
LUN pars PERSE TUE convenien one, Im e sums have no doubt cin the detecti of arsenie if absorbed by
truth, in districts it is being now 1 | lat 1 for the purpose of erecting bl — s thei unm Viren to look health e
for the fir st I Your Committee em . beautiful greh by some of the Med Ho hes jer 0 (dies i d was visible
that one or be bothies have recently been introdu 3s England. na TO Di he = : oponen Pataya — telle dnd ge
17 A 14% me into . o eed A ku r «y — j bore and ilie Duke — N em mberland showed pre uncommon, mb
m
Unless arrested, t they are likely to mu ultip 1l these | not less than 100, 000“. Many of o js ip bue. | aeui vacui p i 8000
and other districts, and thus thorou ny 15 piu alise | have lately spent con siderable sim or nis urp 3 i ; è these three pla
EN f lation + fo xdv dn rings on to believe that the | But if the object in view is o be opp Pe , | circums — Pep help doubting
3 of dion have sprung up in Scotland during | cheapness must died, in km ati api gre —— he wae dud that
fort, and the necessary weh.
the present century. age ier |w vm a or G t have W à very y nuts “e i - for VETE that they old aa
introduction of bothies at first. In many of them the | munication from Dr. Macke nzie, of Eilenach, zt eret snae y M ios — x 2 * of & :
cause is said to have been he introduction of i: TE » : ne at "this view of s i qma
ral farms into one, sp ds with three or four apartments —of whi — — es ai so —— d y Cho inter ae
the throwing of sev
old e. as being no
farming,
demolition of the
stem of husbandry nay.
necessary ander t the new Sys
4 ph an—the owed outlay
s s| carting and s of t the
"d be of w
erials, was much rand s
m genera
ne in the way of poor's rates. Bothies for
arried m A EUM the lack of cottages. and were
pur
E rand dijo ‘to be aimed at is, by gettin
mouth, October 3.
" St. s Day
to secure the "restoration has been realised, of the continued dr
ame effect. 2 S. Kensington, F. C. &., F.
— Under the m
t. John Rye.
Ireland
pose. The
separate houses Sor the Papa
f the family s syste m, and that in
nm
supposed to be E dangerous in
gor hate Se e
on
It is also frequently UM in the “return:
cause of the bo
position of the fipa: aig of hi
of which i va time ible fo
any 2 rh sit at the same -—- me in m
e times. And some
servant
primitiv
een the
$ servan
eeab
thies has been ive na of — Bho M seems ines
additi
irit "of the sias that
r
drew attention in an Irish paper to the! & J br :
Byes
oax v
reason to doubt
effort » arouse co direct vadis ai —
ay, ot the blessing of God, be
see a post during winter. N Eq di
d, and under high e culture Ey id on
res the | e Trish houses
e ginis or pin 05 shoal Be |
ng zi
mixed wi ith
lar
iare the cottages, tu that small far
lar arge. WEM give
| this country-— replied that there d no
elieve in much ignorance of
to be thrust out i
buit E in all these suggestions.
of these reasons, however, will gend
| fing marke v
the goes: of his family. 155
should be entire dr abolite d 4 y t the
m, — and that at all
account for
and demoralising alternative as that of bothies.
ste as phe as post A the
introduction of wot |
fear that the real reaso n for this met? — and that * ien
frankl 1 t be fou ud in ceasions
me p of the returns, that a Saturday [m may probably be ride to
cheapest form in which servants can be housed. TI half-holiday should begi 1 her J r, and ther — n a casualty
1 is often non - Eo * d tl t t t visit | under "extraordinary circumstances. Is this st
the man who offer highest rent, and ma ing their fr ib and engaging in other TI
smallest e for bili The farmer is tall occupations on the Sabbath day. A better and more periodical as wo ald be kind exei à
us to have a good ho or himself an nda egard universal system of education is also tr og recom- | experience. Indeed, I would beg for
iio Y 5 ty Bun lly carefi an d es specially an educ atio: pei —— our they can give about this interesting vai
m d, otherwise ‘hair d dis ga ain we a tter ignorance of it
rofits. Ther cre
uildings, w
nete ian induced to an
their bre ad b
| mi
n-door . One
inisters has aiio enced an undertaking of this bat ara
and with dec cided success ; but t obj ect wi il on y
pl
stat A
t education.
1
1 from the want of them ; hilst th
been widely spread that the placing
| widely spread of m
thies, whilst it thus saves an immediate demand upon |
the OR Slee neo more: suction for el
of econom y, such ideas are
but, what is infinitely worse,
such caleulations have been made in defiance of all
Lcd ral c . t for the nearly unanimous stad
urns that alm
“Even as a matter
LI!
pee Correspondence
tion 0 aor nic by Plants; The state- |
known even
be | thro p. on ia ority. to. mon Rye by E
ned | Mur ya pain dave of P ure MET pr^
1832, „hav aving go E
says:
apart, Biv ing a t the
quantity of common Rye i in —
had a heavy cutting of bot th i
ments of be. M
article of the Gar ^ Chro Te of Sept. 10), to —
effect ire certain es er mets he had watere
with cold satur
ony o of the ki» be effect ost
ung from the bothy
Mrs
syste perfec
t foster-parent p Í other — —
on, and matured seeds,
of the è pint arsenic ps be N
ated solution ol Arsenio us Wed: ot equa
ex
Day Rye was not at all superi n 10
either cutting."
Pme ally t + it "
Sabath-breakin ng, a ann, and illegitimacy in the | de A et as In justly observed, of so sta N
dist ricts in which it prev nature as induced at once to make a few |au louem A
* The 117 ion is as yet PRERE understood ; 1 cu n tbis subject, the results of which I | of its premature
bably a Govern t Commission of intelligent men, | now beg to ] ore you. The late peri the | is to afford
i Peas, but in default of | plant, as being an
t publie attention pari the existing | these I erent my, two Brocco epe two Cabbage | to disease, and giving a
cry and secus th their remedy. Jn instances that | plants, and four Lettuces, into six se rate pots, and ee sight d follow winter Vetches
aC „and off the 2 in time for ei
7 some of our noblemen and ies mtm includin
Lord Kinnaird, the Duke of Buccleuch, and others, E
allowed s ue until th
witha saturated T then watered all these v various finta
t
everal days to elapse,
— ee s arseniou: vem — ade Me
a hou
BA. emotion ection. of suitable cottages in. connection. w wit ith
in suficient. nu numbers in any case, , Your Committee dropped their leaves, sheen
rega 18 th
—
sace.
41
all
2 to
or rw ver o plant
3 — he Vetches and —
Aire en
Cs Trish soil in
„ Granard.
crops E 1 therefore
and to
e solutio:
ment, and they co dal y adopt t he sentiments embodied |
inthe Report to the Synod of Perth and € to
is ee: have already referred.
I did not water them, but they did not wires to reco
at all. On the thir rd "ala a se second d ose was given them, |
Y
tha M. tet o E^ And
a ann e hid w
ine Comat says— All other air a pgs
Jum uve ^ e: Er for ation of fr the evils
cr e. remm v a small piece of
pem in considering them
shared t! — I n
servants | wii and. that um € — Rose bush
n H
| course where they are so dune
nable
they have are
conviction "that t he bothy system
those evils which are connected w
of farm serva hey
-
avoidin ng the c expe nse pay er vg P upholding s
— many 3 cottages for married farm servants a
i
e main
the
sa) peradel that when that omis a foot high, and very str Thi
with the view of on ei gom Se tae and after x10 bóus —.— —
0 | fate
sd
10 hours it fa - es
he other plants. I continued to
plant « era other day, and on ub 6th day vas ; little of
poets It appeared as it were burnt
e
T Considering th ti t.
land of te years, th
pau and c and the great e to to all
— that won — from the erection of suitable
ae it seems not unreasonable to expect that the
landlords of Scotland w
in
dere — 1 it is 7 7 sible to bu rden en-
ection f far rm cottages, whilst
they
em presenting e black morbid
earance. Per — exper m three ot other
thet BD i to
I fancy they are pretty
roccoli plants ing
| ae th Zik mentioned, and planted a at the same time, |
fix their cro Suferod m
hacring mete Pat totis
1 was watered Mm a solution made of 30 grains
ot arsenic and 60 oz. of water, ‘and this solu-
ion was divided into six parts nl one t
xl other da 9x the r the sae
80 pif ma
This z Simo m E be swept out of the way.
Another difficulty in the expensive style in
oots of the Lp
of
— They accomplish
as the eto rs
orated yea
found out their mis
e
d
say this
Mor nature —
port
dilute Paid of 71 grs. of arsenic to 60 oz. of water was | ns a —.—
applied. I consider therefore that No. 1 had 30 grs. of miss them from the
* - ` ARF , * * * 6 1
Ocronrr 8, 1859. | THE GARDENERS’ sett he AND — — ULTURAL GAZE ITE. 819
as would tl e table; for — Mr. Walter, M.P., , Mr. t } uh | very important fe ature i the relation between a land
the dictum of “A. N. > d his admire to | great feeling upon the p great « of the | lord the — of their cottages,
these animals having no merits as ae of | tion. With r respect to one of — * must venture to He had very strong feeli ings upon this matter, but
— I venture to hint, “tastes differ,” and | differ 1 him. Associations of this kind were not that was a ing v huh associ ations of this kind could
a rabbit “smothered in Onions," dressed my eminently useful in bringing men arr but as not under do. "There was one thing he had
— stuffed like a hare, is not — Fae ; at a mea rewarding public trials of agricultural skill. | th Werke nd that w he her, for the encourage-
wit d instance, he might mention the ariii of rewards | ment of labourers, they could not gi »em a small
that the tenants might be uel; game prese ers| to the best ploughmen, for the best skill in any agri- | holding of land. ^ — ed to be within the more
instead of the inferior game keepers. By all m — as cultural operations, for the best specimens of erops, and, legitimate le arding serv: — It was a
“Judex” says is the custom on an estate in - — 2 he might add, such proofs of. agricultural skill as were matt er tha srry wig — between a master and his servant,
bourhood, the winged game be pr implied in the f any description 1 y this association
landlord and rabbits and go — the tenants, and very x 2 for any public society to encourage. SE Pe: y madea very brief r. reply. He sym ised
(I would add) their labourers. n them o hen, | They wards for merit of skill. They | in many of "the views — — been ex — jate nd it
but do not hunt t out o ray —— nor by ferred . no ‘obligation which ny way could|so happened that he — ) take those e views
ilessly destroying the whole species take away au humble a man or diminish -r before the committee, rere "ir oted.
Charlock seed, which e is of
grow a "yt long since I so
second
seasons old, SH quite would, "nd it grew bare well.
observe
disait fu function of the rel:
| his hon. friend been. an active » member of the
tion
appeared to him it was doing that which no society |
could do. To his mind it was interfe ering with the
i E
social fabric, any interference with which he was ex
tremely 1— of. been i 0
u great r of men, and he had never
that by bo it ould procure a nice inous
mixture, but my surprise the seed was not at all
affected the hot water, nor was the water soiled;
afterwa: e between blotting paper and
found ticle of oil. A friend of mine n si
n — Charlook for 5s. a bushel! For what use? As it
coat, it would ly do M ‘or mustard for the
table; did my friend re-purchase it for“
numbe
found ‘that there was any necessity for the. encourage-
what
2
1;| The Journal of Ag trorum
, they
a probably have produced a very different bill of
what they had had. However, he hoped some
would come out of the discussion of the topics
which had been brought under their notice.
Notices of Books.
he
Tra — ^ oe
hig
a Society. Octo 1859. Blac d & Sons.
one districts
necessary,
n r thot or "that an
artisan was tl eing intrusted
with the good offices of "is AE. But rt A-
pen ned that about 25 * ei was
this ea untry th cultural L'une
This is an. unusually tine resting num og The Report
of Mel. Lagan on the Sho ow at Edinburgh, and of
more — the =y which has att — kd official
wn a cie - ann rt, a
poesien 3
en t
a el
Halkett's guideway m em
e paper by Mr.
and instruc tive V ee d on the Absorption
me | whichthe Feier um War Liebig, aedes and W. 8.
Johnson are diseu
ssed and —" w —
give me 2s. a bushel, I did not trouble to soing e bad, that — — d to be the|
send it to Jaz Sainfoin seed will not clon — Dae b d of the day, that the land was to be illed,
second season. The growth of broad Clover is un- *» eia. ouses to be filled, and the N b |
— the * year, unless, it is m it been | h It was though, ie ver, by some that giving |
— — Wa pone it from the Sainfoin — lie ion such sops by associations of this kind, and
1 Wurzel are both — “the fiel eld, as no rewarding him for bringi his family out |
Aa — ijah either, but I find — are very fond ‘of parochial relief, and for moral conduct, would in a great
t „and will eat out the u k the apprehend lt
= It
of your
send a more pion list of the Mes d of seeds, as T d
ything of £ the kind * «
not remember having seen an;
very —.—
Whe en the Mangel is in bloo n
or nt ‘ould be
iat
Mm
or. es most probable nation of this
phenomeno n, to which Mr. “gas si Kirby - —
attention, is that the soils to
upon
simply that ES beat aa 0
e in that opini which is more a mechanical t — mical pheno-
him, and whose opinion he had a great t for, menon. A so soil possessi ng organic” i matte esent in any
never 2 — ar Sane — d not reg hjg of absorbin
specia ial e eh as necessa th f 1 | retaining sows. ammonia. And t has
t ] f di ime, E — deoom-
Bean 4e.— y, being wet,
folks are cutting ‘up by steam a large supply of
Straw, as stiff as small walking sticks, chaff mo
to be my bullocks; when moistened with
hot it mes soft and mucilaginous, | ©
ir
—
bare
a general rul
sacrificing three-fourths ofi its v value. J. J. Mechi.
e, thus | ever,
the merits of
Tt appeared 4, hint that. ve idea 72 giving prizes yr
ral conduct muet ki nd of moral superiority, or |
stor on the
set fi a, this
dodo ana Ce comes into A wem for the
| retention of the ammonia, w whi ch i
f lime — pr
wh:
ht to 1 be very ip established before it was as-
— reed.
t
natever
tt 1
2 it exercises none over solutions of its
14,
t
utility.
i Certainly i in "ome. of t the objects of this y agreed; but he as
ut
- child, ofa * — and her army
n the affording some sort of eet" c
elect themselves as
—.—
zm
e losing extract gea “the Feel Note
ufo
made by 1 trom
ina — e
ve dipped 4 as man
In warm weather, however, and especially if the sheep
f unquestionable
of than half that ) ha
which he pa
-|as not being —
interfere wit z i
w that a proportion of e prizes, more
A pemde fell viti that class
gerous ; so much, that in ome instance, on using, during
the summer, a solntion Xm ee 2 drachms of
7 to the 10 per cent v the sheep
at wethers) died. I have always had a few dea
dipping in an arsenical — raro warm
weather, although not to the extent just men ti ioned, as
with—prizes having referente n
lah
rey Sue In the ease of s ——
individuals, I have known tances where d
said he looked upon this
association as established for
The — way in which he could — his
ee
as by asking what would be ied ed Mg of a
ins
| seas to a dreadful extent dirae — ineau
ations in warm wi an niente +
J r
y May soutien - za me ighbom, i in 1 December of last
to character sho
parish
rewards to yardsmen,
‘the mee upon Y d
imi
uld be
-
purpos e poan — on each other's cooks, |
| ewes and lambs s in an arsenical solutio on, the stre ength of
of c
locimen, housekeepers cre gers or gamekeepers.
want ted some shov wh at was the difference
had lived in his house 30 or
hard his master; | he was sent Tini, and i was: it nota
dship
d the —— w
ho worked i in hi s fa voe nds
I do not know, and the result was that
ed.”
| 1300, being anii one-half of them, di
remarks to the e
“The pcre of these
sI think, suffi cient obvious. Thet paint
of whi ieh 850
v. - Elliot
+h
or other work | pr
a great | wo
It was said ‘hat pe
urer.
rson | in
E
In the e
itr iret — n —
srt wai
book
certain es rather shrewd i in his way, and
‘of Genesis, cay i found ‘that a
whose
of la te years
farmyards, stables, and other buildings
systems o of draining and ventilation had b carried | a
—— ——— N e vocem that
e r, hard-worki
labourer had to live were not to — with d.
excellerit condition of many fa
far tin Conny d “alluding to 22
^ in remedying the e
isha - gentleman, in construct
m
cottages
be compared with the
rmyards,
he Me
asd Mr. W;
vils 2 nted out b —
ing for hi
2
vant, not in bandry, but ne who had led a
— — life. Thy ey would find that his 75 15 had
po iy his dang ters ped Siig and the best part of om
e for He, of aa
it’s, no ensued, I am
surprised at this either ; 33 rs am agen arsured "hat. 11
the witnesses alluded to will aps the trouble of
repeating their experiments during the hot senson, they
will arrive at _ very different. conclusions from those
men n» side the articles just named,
E, arable. me 2 "Pro essor James, of —
on Manures, and a full waer of * 3 Address
Cattle Feeding, of which a is given else-
m
servants, Mr. Morres b called their attention toa
on ag
|| houses and factory schools. He was vine ir w the
K day
5
tion
to s ne
ester or several days, and was suffering from m indispo- lent suckling powers of the ewes,
| sition when he retired to rest. The fol ll owing mornin ng, tende c to ey of maey imp:
220 IHE GARDENER CHRONICLE AND =e GAZETTE,
| heep exhibit du by 56 1 11 can MAN U fs;
Miscellaneous. Wenlodk, | in a Yorba — by Mr. Holland, of Dum- and ot ous gaged in making A
Death of the Rev. Charles Thomas James. We bleton, at Warwick. They are excellent nurses, i Mg gres her ee de
i great] th of the Rev. xa S prolific, and attain heavy weights on 1 "s e., Principal of the Agri Wt
a James, well known in the agricultural world. He The flavour of their mutton is surpassed by 1 ah 9 sesof Soils
j formerly curate of Ermington, and had been recóntly breed, and therefore in markets where they are found Cece Minen or ves E v
t
: : ffi f sale. For x
ed Government ins be of model lodging- | they render the white-faced sheep difficult o Gentlemen desirous of receivin ir deque
ols. k 3 fca whose object it is to produce early lambs or Analyses and — v angle feat tion in Chemin}
at the ty and acer
i
n Tues tl of large size, it is found advantageous to put
ext morning ^b or ‘Tiverton. ile ha à been | these ewes to a Leicester or Lincoln ram. The excel- ME J. B. “LAWES manufactu
i t s, ned with the
by the nid Fo
offspring, Side a combin
his room and found him Jing on the bed quite dead
"m
ed, for crossing with long- -woolled s
Inde
«ca liniment e castor ail, 2 the sediment. of the EL are superi
ixed prussi
d heavier fleeces. an bee
cid and almond emulsion
gth. |
pers
fo 2 and on
E 5 5.
les D. James, 36t h Regiment, ill doubtl ever. Y ear in o new Nistricts, id sowing.
t: quee to
a Am
at Devonport, was immediatel dvantageo y put a certain nu )
Thu ursday T inquest was held hefore Mr. Leicester ram oe the sake of producing wether s which |
le^ d d for mutton of vm quality, thes the best and c
res the f.
MANURE ‘Ollowing
TURNIP MANURE os
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIN £i
ERAL SUPERPHOSP $
„BARLEY MANUR HATE op rmi 5
us
. Genuine PERUVIAN GUANO direct from
eep,
ns as Gibts , NITRATE or SODA, SU
ARR to the DIY other t Chemical Manures. LPHATE oy AMMONIA ES
EAT MA NORI —PERUVIAN GUAN
apest Artificial Manure for mabaa 3
merican decorticated Cotton- seed Cake of bet
oor
supplied E na "mee price.
Offi
Adelaide Place, London B:
A
nekton, coroner. d wool ; s Bridge, E
deceased took prussic : acid. under medical prescription. than any other r In conclusion, I will hint at L E C ONT uj
day night were read. e of them, 8 to his namely, to e wit e unimproved mountain
son, said that his in disposition almost mastered him, breeds. Of these, the flavour and the hardihood are
but inted to meet his
another pur, o which these sheep may be applied,
son at Plymouth on Thurs- | the principal pere and their smallness, slow growth,
urned a verdict that the deceased | and coarse wool, the most prominent defects. The cross
ects of an overdose of prussic acid, usually resorted to for the purpose of improvin The
(EsrABLISHED 1840
Have the favi ing MANURES — for deli
CORN MANURE rog AUTUMN sow t
= nid MANURE FOR AUTUMN 80 NET t
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME.
oi wees ee MINERA k
mpany also supply PERUVIAN
ju
the eff rp g n Man
n to relieve himself from pain. The deceased was | mountain sheep has been the Leicester. The first cross GUANO em from Ness Giwi & Sons) SULPHATE op
ircles ers i ;
MMONIA, NITRATE or Retr A, CR E
ry other’ Manure of known value, all i qun M . m
supplied,
se wool,
not only in this co but throughout t England, and and earlier maturity, without losing the mountain strictly genuine. Wholesale dealers su
f l| 116, Fen
nty
had always manifested a deep anda in the “welfare of favour and the lean flesh of the dams. The second
the farm labourer. Western es. cross would, in a great measure, obliterate all Mp of
The he Shropshi hire Sheep.—It i s lf nd, a rather general | the mountain bre ed, leaving a tallow-producing, heavy
ression
imp g pe
sheep, that they are the result of a cross ren the districts, and ndestitute of the which attracts | Phos
South breeds. far, how
en crossed with Leicester blood; and, although | tivated on the hi ills of, the Nor th Riding Mes shire) | 5
t s 1 cea it
amon Tsons eee with these sheep, wantin g in the hardihood requisite for wlan |
flav
xe Ver, | customers of a superior grade. But. vilis the first the
ing the case, that it is probable that no cross, for instance, between the Scotch black-faced
flock of eminence has, within the memory of | sheep and a Leicester ram (which is so muera xA cul- eis
E
i7
urch Street, E Epw. Punsrg,
ch Me
»URNARD, LACE AND CO/3 CONC CENTRATED |
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME; guaranteed to contain.
Phosphoric Acid . equivalent to 40 pe:
ate f Lim q' ent, of Ti
osphate o
ped 'CENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in bi.
ceding.
Of these Marines Dr. Voelcker says:
“These
very 8 to Se — are the best pur of phe
igh agricultural mercial value which characters
your concentrated su perphos 1
ospha
etailed irr ce HR 0 inions of the lai d peel
speak e
se of Southdown blood, yet, I — venture to » cross of lambs equal in size and value of wtb: to Pat Chemists to the Royal Agricultural Society, a N
resorted to th e Sou thdown e cross wit thou
at
—— — ae ve a assume it to be value, while their hardihood and activit
— to the 3 of Shropshire sheep, eminently fit them for hill pasturage. And the variet;
a distinct breed. Ot their origin, this is found in Staffordshire, tracing its origin back
ice to treat; but it may be casually flocks which have for ages flourished on the bleak hills
ago the sheep of Morse Common, in in | of Cannock chase, would 8 to this
& Co.
dm A nt ee
; worthy of remark that the sh of the Shropshires a GUANO.—The present price of r3
to reir the error 3 deer disci > T p presents a firmness of texture and richness of flavour 137. 5s. per to
necessary EN 80 paipabiy distinc we ey which are not attained by the half-bred sheep above And, in order to, protect ee against the are
3 — mei Ni t ec “stein, acre 3 vade they | alluded to as prevailing in bes shire. The Shropshire
have their merits, ts, eminen they | cross could not fail to produce sheep of great individual | prod
m B
, Su tion Road, Plym
4 that 1 no man ee a good flock o f Shropshire produc ced by a second Le icester r cross, and of a qu ality Prices, &c., may be had 1 b pplication to Bury.
ried sii
aye ve 121. per ton for 30 tons and upwards;
p to 30 tons.
| pr : uie ere celebrated the
f wool. It is probable sn mg — 1 found on the W C Reel T Me Th T —
high grounds of the e been gradually im- ec amation of and.—The uu C f e has $
proved into their pre 1 like manner the | fF the la 5 work of some HE PS NITRO-PHOSPHATE on BLOOD
unenelosed hills o ot Stora, Cannock, Whittin gton sapi per "in piece ve , the 8 from ANURE r
Heath, and elsewhe: B. en ine imme the sea of 700 acres of the v ast tract of low mar!
possessed a grey o. 8 faved mountain sheep very landë near the little port of Wells, Norfolk. For this Avet Surra,
similar i Gatut to the Shropshires. Like dccem m, Purpose a great embankment, involving an outlay of ee P at M. P., 8, Belgrave
they rdy in constitution, their mutton is of first. about 12,0007., has been carried from the Hookham | Gexsran Har. LL, Weston Col
rate quality, and their wool fine in texture. in —4 E rr d a I 5 cni e x „ Which | Joan Brapy, Esq., M.P.
110 50 th x . | has been, it is hoped, effectually shut out by this means
losi i c nen Po ad — — | from the land sought to be reclaimed. The bank forms] Chairman Jovas Wess, Pn; ‘Babrakam, —
ion improves their as has lean the case à marine road of considerable width, more than a mile Jonn Cors, Esq., My oer quare; ee BO
with nearly every erii oa mit i the British agri- long, i nd upw. of 20 feet in height, and it is stated | &pwanp Brut, Esq., Tottenham, Maier i
culturist has deer that the cubic content of the work exceeds anything of | Jons Cravp
r — hs attention, * T kind attempted in England, although there are | ReaD Host, Esg, Stans
Mr. Coxon, near Lichfield) took the first prize at | Some longer embankments of lapiz Pagar re With | Ro: eRT LEEDS,
Warwick in the class of short-woolled sheep n of being | £ the view of assimilating the niis n ordinary beach, | Koperr Mond A
Sout i 15 fet of the height eee E i uem Street Bona, EO
Bankers—Messrs. Barnett, Hoare & Co., Lombard Street,
which ‘ith several others have long been sloe on
for purity of blood. It may be yere has largely Supplied. Prices are 2s, or 3s. lo
whether any sheep of this class are superior ose| than last yar The following figures indicate the | Payable to Henny Ap Ar, ‘Dorking
exist in the neighbourhoods of Bagel, Lich
rhampton 84 ed wi
" while for the remainder of the ele vation
tina iti is is only four to on
the five a p Dips terminates ; but as the tides
times attain an ext
business don
TE
Manager—Mr. James Opams. | Secretary—Mr. C. :
2 r. Spe London, K GC; NE
laistow “Marshes, Esse AT,
Price 7l. 10s. per Ton, delivered Free to any
n don.
e : : may be had on appl i each " S
Fair. — The sheep fair on Wednesday |’ SHEET IRON POTS ro FOR Li e dms
wii rig
gon :
d
s
T
„Little 1
9^.
Loon i jet Lexan, Norfolk : E Ü
AN, Esq., , Cam en Villas, Camden Town,
ns Street, Strand, V. ne.
ts
rise higher than the point at 3 Messrs. KINGSFORD Esser
Krxasrorp & DORMAN, :
Auditor—J, CARTER . Esq., Cambridg Joanot
ODAMS'S BLOOD D MANURE FOR
WHARF H
RAILWAY in Lon
URSERYMEN SUPPLIED W
com — — — N GENUINE TOBACCO PAPER Tue above.
locks, it is my impression that the S Stafford. —— 4 Se riesen Ba 2 than powt o Roe ties 7;
e, with a 84 67,985 614 M oe 2
The latter is a point of no in- 1885 77,390 4096 $1486 —
ac: 3 1856 s 91,774 5570 7,344
hire flocks have 1858 60,849 924 67,773
3 Hg nebo 81,318 15,131 04,449
: e ws 72,065 19,854 91, 919 SCREENED RICE, 1
eed not dilate BISCUITS, 14s. e
hat the rams 8 il
of late years |
those of any other treed. Cir MED p eter saree! a FOR P
: catt be kept f :
ly extended since the | their food by the mangers o that the shat hinge MUELSON'S "celebrated $
Adn d v * or nd CUTTERS, OPO
3 ey over a “ er end upon the uprights which ich support and PULPERS, CHAFF. RS, O LIS, all
as — over bottom u upwards when not CORN and MALT.ORUSHING be te or
er have bun CES . Spoone ——— — ia the Pei 4
k of importance, and 8 * mn toll MR d Baer They are generally exempt ales ese feplement fe the Peary, Oxon E
Shropshires are » and | fratra Rye- -GRASS ; deem er Rud" n eee eee City, B.C.
ze nd nd. to faulty The failure HOE Mah y owing Warehouse, 76, Cannon Street West, ODE ation,
Ocroren 8, 18593 THE GARDENERS
OL LEGE or AGRICULTURE AvD CHEMISTRY,
— — = mimm London, 8
CHRONICLE
ST. PANCRAS
— S.. F. C. S, &c.
rsued in 'ollege omprises every
— — yo cath . Agriculture,
. En es Man and — r the
Mu ar.
for for the Unive: M
HURDLES,
I" ther
al. | THE PROPRIETOR
IN * AINING. “Sidious and gen
— n who —— Building or Draining, and bó
ing Bricks and Tiles upon their own
SILVER M
which, by their peculiar
AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD,
FENCING, AND
S OF THE ST. PANCRAS IRON WORKS,
821 *
IRON WORKS,
N. W.
OLD ST. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON,
MEDAL of the Royal Agrienitural Society for their IRON HURDLES & —
ad
by a —— of a Firm extensively en
m.—App aly, Terra Corr otel, Furnival's
eu un
ed in — — Be = Sm and Tiles of every descrip
H
HE LANDS TRAON — — COMPANY.—
Incorporated by Special Act of ament in 1853.—
Old Palace Y Westminster, S. W. X: o Landowners, the
y, Estate Agents, Surveyors, &c., land and Wales
d in Scotland. mrp
The Directors beg leave to announce that the 's
mendment Bill, Tho, hae received the sanction of the Lagi
E now advan: unlimited in
owing works of prie Improvement,
ure, hig
pount, for t!
^ le « —— I — in all cases being liquidated by
sharge for 25
Royal Agricultural Society o 1 Royal
whol
. on ee Warping, Embanking, Inclosing, value f their horses. The
Reclamation, Planting for any beneficial pur
—— or Mac hinery y for Drainage or Irrigation.
2.
farming
Professor Varnell's Enamelled and | Wrought-iron Stable Fittings.
tM " the Com
yal Ire
Re yal Veterinary College, and ‘Profesor Spooner — — — states that t they should 2
n be had plai
A Show Room is eat oted entirely to every rdg of — Furniture, and E 185 stalls and loose
pection at St. Pancras Tron Works,
Lists
The Hurdles can M seen in process € — at the Works.
GAME WIRE NETTING.
mendat — and the — Medal of th.
icul aet Societ, pem
by al who
galvanised, or ena
Farm Roads, Tramways a — Railroads for egredi tura] or
$3. oops =
é Tio red f Farm Hov Labo ' Cottages, and
other Buildiogs . s y — Mods let and the im-
rovement of and additio m" to Farm houses and other
bodie for farm pu
rS assessed u
4 places on t
on — — or hes
ADDRE
ST. PANCRAS IRON 3
5 MANAGERS,
ST. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON, N.W.,
OPPOSITE — ST. PANCRAS CHURCH.
nder the provisions of any Act of
, or Commission, in respect of any
age or other improvements,
share v 15 and e charge
EAE the ex ‘pense and
mortgagees, and without Jui $0
pi ing incu rances,
c - * C — forms ** application, apply
ie — e WILLIAM NAPIER, Managing Director,
Old Palace Yard, Westminster, S.W.
F[AYMAK KERS, possessi
Pod Prize Machi
tates
nal responsibilities
of
the best features of
— recent m ES
"PO the
eim nce of this Prize will be ga
hose supplied a nd m actured only onl,
“RICHMOND AND HANDLED. Salford. en oth e
ranch Establishment, South John Street, Liverpool, + & Fea How.
i T1 The celebrated Bedford
AKES always T n latest Patented Improve
i — ER S.D
NICHOLSON'S PATENT HAYMAKER, to which was
ra mas . Prize of the Royal
ngland contested trial
The — STAMFORD HORSE RAKE —
nu E improved, and has obtained 96 Prizes at competitive
w NG anp REAPING MACHINES are performing their
ork most satisfactorily, and fully justify dlic e
utting about E22 23 of bd. per
—— for the al machines should be diea a. at once to
ND & Cause, LER, Salford, wen ger
ron LIGHT I.
LIGHT HARROWS, cor SECOND P
BEST HEAVY HAR
PP
bo OON
Gained the FIRST PRIZE as the Best Plough p Gen
PLOUGH
5
CHIEF PRIZE for Haee un awarded by the Royal Agricultural — of "pog, — DE
from tl
es tried on m bork riant AND HEAVY LAND, D, gum as HOWARD’S CHAMPION PLOUGH 7 itself to be the best
— d FIRST PRIZE, of the HIGHEST AMOUNT given by the Society for
of lan:
BS awarded to J. & F. HowARD, * Soci ty
eing motoni FOR THE BEST PLOUG: PU
, AND A sini BEST PLOUGH ron
he fact that the GENERAL PURPOSE PLOUGHS are the
r any kind o!
f Plough, was awarded to
K
on * F. HOWARD, "BRITANNIA “TRON WORKS, BEDFORD.
LASS FOR pt mah ie at HOUSES, TT — a "d MACHINE’
Landscape Gardening, 23
20 in. by 12 in. — 21 oz. Drai: ^ „ &c. og ye ea
Branch Establis ent, South J — LVE 20 in. by 13 in. | Common .. .. 4 0d. .. £1 1s, H. Rrunorn, Grange, Tunbridge Wells.
PERCHA TUBING FOR WATERING GARDENS. 20 in. by 14 in. Superior do. .. ..16 6 .. 15 GREENHOUSES.
T HE GUTTA PERCHA COMPANY have 'the|20in. by 16 in, Bnglish IE PVT ENRY FREEMAN, Hornovsz Burr DER and HoT-
pleasure to e
eid rS ledge the — of the eee SMALL SHEET SQUARES, in 100 feet boxes. boe —— penc Good eesti iniy falce
Jrom Mr. D ett one 6by 4 64 by 44 Tby5 1 7 n 6 HOUSES, fixed any part of th
we ur’ st ” 9%» TE) long by 13 fot, 00h £ 21 DRIN EXE En
ii, 1174 ‘ A first-rate CONSERVATOR: ‘ORY, 30 feet € IX 1
JAMES PHILLIPS anp CO. ‘ood or Iron or
MO, sn tip St. Without, London, 1 E.C. HEATER PoE aí wholesale prices, wi
OTHER HOUSE IN ant emm i a qv lag * 3
s * CONSERVATORIES, m MNA fom - qoe tg aie en -— rhe ogee ma
Mannfactared the Gutta Percha Com; Patentees,
lade Road, d he Gi London, E.C., $54 acid ‘by that
Dealers in town and country.
Ses TIFFANY is universally acknowledged to Its of 0
mabe, the best, neatest, and cheapest material for shading P
and other Hothouses.
many „* of
to JAMES
See
hite Lead,
ishes, Brush TM G
Siret Wi thoat, E.O., sans a lasses, do
sacra TOT a ioi
LAZ IAMONDS ror CUTTING HORTI-
CULTURAL an other GLASS 9 had of the Whole-
o, Prices
3 ^ hee West
Senna Lender, B.C. “from 104. to 27
ARCHER, whole and sole mam urer, 7,
, City,, E.C., and of all all poe
kingdom. It is much cheaper
Wrough'
spot AND CO. supply 16-oz Ver. 11
of Bri!
GTON of
GLASS, &c.
- 6 by 4, Tbe sms 143 MM MEAE M. app
Mali Pay IAO Sh SS ^ PES eri Mu
10 225.9. 124 be 10, 14 by 10h, wu
14 By 9,13) be 10h Bun "gn
$716, 14 by 40, 194 by 14
ar every description. in Shocks at Mr. Lyycn WHITE'S m
pper Ground Street, Blackfriars Bridge, London, 8.
5 S PATENT WROUGHT-LKON DOUBLE-
BACKED DOUBLE BOILER, for HEATING CHURCHES,
ager gs — — qu WAREHOUSES, &c., is
ost powerful, mical,
Boileri in existence, F. hs — T^ ve
— — Surrey, S. 2
can be procured. TESTIMONI
and quickest actioned
y for use at their
e only place where they
& W. R.
HORTICULTURAL POT e
Joss e
[ OOMES AND xp CO/s CABLE ^
L PATTERN GARDEN EDGING. PARAL |
may be obtained
s (110 in number) NATURE-PRI HENRY
g e dre . BRADBURY. The es (110 in num by THOMAS Moore, F.L.S. The
uiid Garden Manot, eiit Eee rk will be a Two Volumes, price 2“. 28. each.
R SALE.—Two Lean- to > GREENHOUSES, 12 12 | Also, a ppb lait, 11 py o pura 8 Spa t, I., con-
feet 6 long by 10 feet y^ wide, of the best manufacture. aining Seventy Coloure á ,
Uu be ate Bow sta nding at E. Devon's, Patent ordcul. HE NATU 5 BRITISH SEA-
howe Works, — of Granby È treet, Hampstead Road, N.W. h Engraved Magnified Dissections of the
Will be sold a b whole cioe eseriod in de ed The te - isum by
Tilla £ G. JOHNSTONE and A R CRO. Nar
RANSPARENT SHEETING, nearly 2 yards wide, | ppryren By anton Sn
1s. per yard run; Thick Canvas ditto, 1s. per sq yard;| The NATURE ep British Sea-Weeps will form four
st second-hand Waterproof heets, 1s. per square | handsome V: — in royal Svo, consisting » about: ag 2
fresh dressed; Gardeners Wa oof Capes, long enough | with the e yy letter-press, extending to about 900 pag
ene Paliee 1 — wees 113 r d m gero ^ p * Vol. II. will i published in Novem. er n
os rs in el i N ting is exactly a
Fornes Waterproof Loin Cloths, To. p shaft horses, — 9s. “tor'| °F oy sd s Hoty di of w tabla Proh ng i 1 5 Miren
for ery delicate an em able rai
e ECC 5 1 ted. The fifty-six plates i m this volume
R White and accurately rep: y-six pl:
St temps 1 can scarcel and have not, » Ee
FENCING AND HU
H'S Patent riso cain IRON
eere en is
of
IRON
ILL AND SMIT
FENCE is Mery forevery variety of
much superior d cheaper than, Iron Hurdles
strength.
Many miles of this Fence have erected on the London
and North-Western Railway nM t Camden Town and
Patent principle is applied to Iron Hurdles, |
whereby their stre eased and the cos'
lustra!
ey; or 40,
ty, on, E.C.; i 23, Enoch
——— Glasgow, where : Specimens may ay bó seen; or to Mr.
SAMU. w, 76, Cannon Str eet West, London, „ E. C.
„ a bn a Pig ae 2 an tor
MANURES |
SHEEP 5
PETROLEUM ‘OI, 88.
` LLS, Colour and Oil Wo; rks, Saint George Street,
( PEET PATENT THERMOMETRIC
CLOCK, rog KEEPING A PERMANENT RECORD OF
TEMPERATURE, &c.
An etic
— by Mr. 225
nal | ho
TURE-P YES "FE RN
On e 1 inst. will be ied dies Vol. L, of the o
N’
London: nebst 25 =
me or at the sea- AL
acad illustrated, we shall be glad to welcome them."
Athen
TED BRITISH FERNS.—
ur to the età er-
For
v
If the three succeeding volumes are
eimi 5
Part I
HE EN SOLISH CYCLOPJAEDIA OF
ARTS Ax»
tcu yw being the Lr ode Division of the ENGLISH
CYCL
B. mro d "Q
OPÆDIA,
his Part oF OTTON Ao b the nod y COIN ” to the com-
CT E.
feci ed ARLES KNIGHT.
TTON d
eady, pele 12s. each.
BI
Six Volumes, price 3l. ;
moroce
GE
Four Volumes, price 21. 23. ;
Four Volumes, price 27. 2s. ;
m
j uem EDIN BURGH
Cc c RA P
= us Three Nohimes half-bound
o c R 2 P N
A Volumes, balf-bound
moroc Os.
NATURA
ORY.
Volumes, half-bound
21. 108
be bad separ: rately.
A Jouverie Street, E.C.
REVIEW, pi CNN.
Will be published on em turday
LOGY. EN'
I. BAIN'S PSYCHOLOGY.
II. A VISIT TO ENGLAND IN 1775
III. SIR EMERSON TENNANT'S CEYLON.
. CARLYLES FREDERIC THE GREAT.
V. THE
VI. TH
VII. THE
E VIRGINIA
9 POMPEII.
S
ITALIAN CAMPAIGN OF 1859.
VIII. CUR ND: CORRESPONDENCE OF MADAME
IX. SENIOR'S JOURNAL IN TURKEY AND GREECE.
. vene o ORGANISATION OF TRADES.
D TE & Co.; —— Avie
C. Brack.
Y ETT:
y doe 18 Pp., Imperial Svo, 1 3d,, post
4 Month.
free, Ad., contains useful information for all interested in the
Garden.
JAMES ALLEN, Warwick Lane, E. C.; KENNETT, York Stree
Covent Garden, W. C.; and at all the railway stations
respectable
booksellers.
um —— should be sent to the Printers, YATES &
Horse-shoe Court, Ludgate Hill, E. C.
HARD HOUSE:
- [os TE
publi 8
E à
bridgeworth,
SACCHARATUS :
LONGMAN & Co., or per
HOLCUS
“A VISIT m
ci
TE Nimm; CLARKE,
ost, 28. 6d. (no o catch] i
DEE E SIMPLE, PIP "yd =
E DRA, lus
Alde:
im: Ee — 10
uL
e e op x
dried Speen Specimen, f
collection of this ip
rt IX. or Vol lil,
PECIES FiLICUM, buy nor
ALL 1
Suv JAGCKSO! ps
mad TR, eg DDR Royal G
LA XE am 45, Frith 8
055 Bic ae 3» R
th unl Fri 5
e — 0!
i T i hw, AS nee o
1. Gepe enge tor ther Seda fl
2. Fallow and Root Crops (as Turm
3. Forage Crops as Clovers, —
4.
2 |
Each Part will consiat of Pig t
* "n complete in itself, as ret
ae Be i
i >and isi
Mansi 3o four aly,
ur s 10s. 6d. ;
— ad D
Macassan. Orr, r
"Price 33, 6d.
will be published, in in crown Svo, price
THE “GARDENERS YEAR B
ALMANACK, sip DIRECTORY FOR 1880
By OBE
Vice-President xf the British Pomologi
RT HOGG,
cal Society.
work will contain, besides the information usually
This found in
month in the gon —hNotices of and remarks upon all New Plants, Flowers, Fruits,
2 à
Select Lists of the best tion and plete Directory the
Britain, Ireland, the Conti 5 "
| quarter of à page, 15s.
in cultiva:
Ameri
Almanacks, a
Florists, Horticultural Bui el Builders and
To N.
To Narserymen, Seedsmen, 1
N
F. S. ANGEL, 162, FLEET STREET, BC.
History of
Borders
— gd —
j arks on Peach
| Budding. Culture.
THE CULTURE | OF THE TEACH AND.
By m Lare GEORGE MoEWEN,
Late Superintendent of an poem Society's + Gadona ot Dee MN
e Duke of
Gardener to William W
Ag AND ENLARGED BT CHE cox, Buss
Wells, Esq.
ON TIE FS.
en an recti of 48 stamps
c
the Peach. Glass Coverings. Door
Treading over nn | Lar sa ag a pom
Mulching. || Insects and their Cure.
Mai adding, or mer Pru-| Mildew.
Final Touches. i —.— of. -
Out Door Training || Calendari: > ani
Rivers,
To Which i is added a Descriptive 5 and Valuable Varieties pf deten
By Mr of Sawbridgeworth,
——— ee ee
SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER
LONDON: GROOMBRIDGE AND
dii EE ES bt ln... Ü .ͥ̃0—ͤü̃ 6mm
* -
Ocrosxx 15, 1859.] THE — CHRON ICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAL ETTE. SNNT
Eo oe —— — - - ———
SE NTS, U TI MOC UL b 0 CH. BEST FRAME CUCUMBE!
PARKER AND WILLIA ANS Y . ce. ADESCRIPTIV EAxDPRICEDCATA. UTTÓNS BERKS SHIRE AMPION
that eir - E. — with practical Cultural directions, for Ama: eurs, sent ls. per
hich are ost paid on applicati Orders a — to 21s. CARTER'S CHAMPION, - INA
Su ntal Lists of Stove, Greenhouse, — — — -— paid. The following choice collection (A) for IMPROVED SION HOUSE, ls. per ket
added Supplem F pe
Plants, Fruit Trees, &c. (which include all the best — Conservatory and out door Culture, for As., or the half for| Free by post e Sutton & Sons, Royal Berkshire Seed
of the season), is now p pened ss and will be. forw: post 10s, 64. ;—12 Superior named SIMA € mi Rya el — —
free on application] — 6 Polyanthus — oe 0 Border Narcissus, 95 Sweet ted G PLANTS. — ———
Hornsey Roads, Holloway, London, N. Tulips, 50. Double 00 Crocus, 100 ETC 12
se ROK K AN 55 Ke. beautiful Iris, 50 Eater 95 Anemones, 12 Fri s. ees 5 its ee
> V ualv fine
| ESSRS. WATERER AND "GODFREY'S n . n thousands of thesé plan
M 3 is now ready, and may Bn JR AND MeOULLOCH * DE SC RIi TIV. E Ner) — A
be had It d fully all Rhododendrons AND PRICED CATALOGUE rr DWARF OTAHEITE ORANGES in fruit.
worth — —— and — ul a List e y Yam BULBS, wits rFhACTI — enit T m — — CATALONIAN p res vend fal of ower bt
, Plants, * i POST PAID o ICA grafted hort ste
— most —— Nurseries in England. A "ALL ONDES AN OUNTING TO 215. AND UPWARDS SENT CAR- ETIEN UMBELLATA ie introduced by H K. L. &
also be had at M. A -y | RIAGE PAID.
1, Wellington , W.C. Tue lovers of the Gladioli will find in guo PPP groun
MAS y Ra 9 NS à sition of the tal ofthis e cames _ Tivo low & On, Cpton Numery, London, xx
ESSRS WATERED DODENDRON Fite at. |. For the contents of B. d MeC.'s Ca Gardeners’ Cine te Bate EAT "
~ | Chronicle of Oct. 1, e begs to offer very strong
tention to their Seed — RHODODENDRONS, which For collecti Ee Gardeners’ Chronicle of Oct 8, R plants in a bloom of his y
they are without and which they strongly re- Budd di vlo OLET n 123 0d.
commend as very — in Of HABIT, FOLIAGE, —.— for Tye's new registered Hyacinth G see wood-| Small Plants. . 4 0
GENERAL HARDINESS. They are from 14 to 2% feet | out up of lasses 103, of Gardeners’ e Very strong Plants of the’ Double Perpetual "
high, and as mach through, and no plants can possibly be in Tho eariy a Actor im ^| age vint in bloom Los pd
finer health. ‘They very liberat i peck. — " 40
NE — —— 2 Kidney, the and du C 40
SER, Wok or very superior I" Se s — K. White Double Violet "A 4 0
N S. nt 8 n et, VE c. Spring Double Violet » 40
gom vati WA ATEIER'S CATS ALOGUE or HARDY, 0 - Nonpolitan Viole — el wo " A 4
other choi n ns ES TU Ip " " r n, per bunc re s.
annually — nrg at b the R yal Botanic Gardens, nt's CH - Mes 2 "EIS CAT TALOGUE D “ot of these Lock ck: sb rook c Xi or 5 noni Bath,
Park, is now published and will be fi rded on application. | free on applicati 110 g f , QU QU
—— — 9f all the viar kinda of AZ *. * ar | _ The Hyaeinths, "Tulips, a em &c., have vin — | ANTED, 1 000,000 SEEDLINGS, one-year-old,
* M $- the greatest care from the t growe rs, and have arrived in | — Price and sampl vd to B. Warn AM, Clough
abi EE selection of CONIFEROUS 8 | ane condition. Nursery, Mottram, near ma inde
TREES, with he Pp | €. T. will be — a execute any orders intrusted to him | ———"———-2—
The American —— c ong Surrey, near Sunningdale | A
Yu L AND ov 85 GENERAL n —
TIVE — CATA
—— —
Lists o 1 house Plants, Conifers,
Pd Gwe Sowell de n as D — E — `. in Boft-wooded
Plants.—Royal N 'eat Yarmouth,
ier GERANIU
f CINERARIAS and FUCHSIAS, o vrata and may be
'had post free on sp — Ds inc didis new varieties
mow offered for
Woodlands Nursery,
recommen
—
CA!
HARLES SCH IOFIELD dos *
W ia tota p the above Flower at 127 pe
do: tly hover on
en
n M ete UES may be had free.
'iends and the
Thousand
TIONS. PICOTEES
of, at 1s. to 18. 6d. per pair. The stock
ith well rooted, a CATALOGUE
FLOWER R. ke
prices aed —.— 154, Kin
from Shoreditch Church. No ——
y 50 species of f RARE
for 5L, pac!
can be had on application,
above can
Royal Nursery, Great Yarmonth.
OUR A AU ERRIA IMBRICATA. He
healthy
OUELL avp CO,
The Royal Nurseries, Slough.
» SON M die Y offer 50.000 of the
un:
An n jns een inv is
RUIT AND
dea, Manchester, Newenstlc of | ROSES of
DD 4
ETER LA WSO 3 "SON, . bore from ?to 6 feet high, extra stout and md wal Soe
AND 30,000 Seed vergreen Oaks ;
zn P Laurustinus, 1 to 24 feet, Price on ap —
Salvington Nurseries, near W ctober 11.
y "ee of a fine SPLENDID NEW ORNAMENTAL FOLIAGED PLANT
H LOW we OR CALADIUM US.
** DUTCH FLOWER ROOTS, s F em AND CO. have now in their Ni
and they are now p UEM Pene ers —— — d of the above-named new
2 o nto Boctety wh cae
a edu ow o e tanic ety, where a -
27, e ue Siret, — B.W. dete was awarded to it, but the plant was in, newly im-
SEED S. ted, and was conseq tly small. Tt has now developed
e Nor plant genen to we pee de, Ornamental ulpa
ITALIAN RYE-GRASS ! The — Dyno trn of or cob of a
NATURAL GRASS SEEDS von PER-| in awarding IRST — mes to it the
following remark :—'*OxE or TH NGLY BFAUTIFUL
ren, z PASTURE LAWNS, &c, r On —— FOLIAGED P t descri an
T y uate conception of its s rp
Quer: ig Pes — — ogy rin & Co. invite an inspection “they "um uu.
to supply p — y SEEDS for AUTUMN | Pleasure Ar dieit it to any gentleman w who may favour them
SOWING of the best quality. | with. a visit. .—Clapton d Nurser: y, Lon Aa N N.E.
27, Great George Street, Westminster, S. W. ME, EDWARD MILNER having const e ucted and
SORGHUM, OR HOLCUS SACCHARATUS. laid out the Crystal Palace Gardens — Par M 2 —
ham, under the direction of Sir Joseph Paxton, and having
* — E ago ed them for the Company till last 3 "o.
R
0
ing to the pressure of other professional duties his 6
terminated to express his acknoy
l), desires
Pans Ado.
fidently tio diet an pate Cage
ge +) ? ; "eos
ive | .. eas "
ae — in of 535
1 bliced and altural Buildi
tie ror dee pal yan omen yita fa —
ions ^ Wem reference ^n the trees most l
eir su in cultivating um this season, valuation ber, Draining, Road-
including the kind of soil, manure, time of sowing and making’ ges is permitted to refer to Sir Joseph Paxton and
cutting, w. of per acre, &c.— Reading, Oct. 15. | to several Noblemen and Gentlemen for whom he —
UTTON'S CHAMPION SWEDE ax» IMPROVED b ²˙ ͥͤ Anm
MANGEL WURZ ELS. MORE SILv: UPS and
several other prizes have n awarded THIS SEASON ORTI bee SOCIETY OF LONDON.—
— a — E 2 Mangel — Notice $5 " to
NS obliged by any additional in-
form: as to Prizes awarded to Roots raised in their seods. appoint ed INTENDENT to take entire charge of the
NewSecds are now ready for delivery. Champion Swede, 17. per gton Gore and Chiswick. Persons desirous
Ib., 458. per bushel. 9d. per Ib., or cheaper by writ Candidates are requested to apply
NB m Royal Berks Root Show will be held at Reading in | A EPIATPLY by letter, 1 Ke All im eng ihe
0 ow ai d
November, at which num will be awarded as . 2 jd selecti Aly ä should offer,
gg roots of áp ls, Carrots, Kohl | "AT P' : f `
&c., from rt of the kingdom. will be 3001. a year and a residence, or in lieu of it.
Hoyal Berkshire Se ed Establishment, Reading. No one should apply who has not been the
AMPAS GRASS.— t is the most favour- weg xe
able time for planting out this charming Plant. No one St. Martin's Place, W.C., London:—Oct. 15.
e M 2 — ^ a mass 8 wp engin hace —
see it, noris its value con —
— is likely to become useful as Cover for Game. "ws 1
. Eiee C= Che Gardeners’ Chronicle.
juantit; E, Bagshot
Ex PRAQUEA UM BECA rr RDA, OCTOBER 15, 1859.
GH LOW anp CO. have pleasure in offer ing
healthy plant: ell established in pots, of the above
named Si introduced by them f omi Califo: ‘a, subseription to the New 5 AT
- exhibited Az e July meeting of the Royal Botanic c Society o GORE has now arrived at
n the Regen s Park, n 2s. per dozen. It ca n be seen leaves no doubt that the sum
2 rms n he open ground at the Clapton Nursery, N.E. large as will. be s
OBERT NEAR VURSERYMAN, Wandswo 50,000 ^
Common, 8.W., begs to call the attention of buyers to his :
large and well-selected stock of EVERGREENS and FLOWER. | esti
ING SHRUBS, ORNAMENTAL TREES. SELBEN P TS.
F FOREST STANDARD DWARF
ey: f BOX-LEAF
A
from 1 to ; GREEN
feet; RICH BOG and LOAM or American
ew eA is 10 minutes“ walk from
New Wandsworth Station, Crysta
armouth, 6 he M We: 3
A ine rond JURA Chet lot of trees | stan psy rie Me es It = Ex i — Lit d Meus Ta intend to
2 e pl to 10 feet high, le Regent’ * Hi bipley, &., and T
Seto be seen at EL Lax . ͤ | Gertifcates bave beon awarded to t. Tt 1s univers anita | daret E Bet 6$ probable that hax many of
— = recommend gentlemen and planters to be by far the handsomest of all the Babe, and. will 1 k ded for 497. ; and
ON epe Cbomntalapeinen at Brom | peace Exhibition purposes, Driwingi hy Mr. An- these aro in reality ren who hse siouneed their
m
hich the i the intelligent gard rost, feels gront pleasure | ^ Por ferthas aA aer cuins! Chronicle of July 16; 4 mtm
* Si br eo cron DEODARA, ABIES
im di „Ko., from 5 to 10 feet high, for
‘intention to support th erally
not omen in what form. E Sortit uir sabaki m Acid
2 i things considered, it may be
also Sept. 10 ; 0: Kino ^ Cottage nep mc s e 2 —
Strong lants 15s, each, with th
Pos — Wit
EE
yable ——
anchester.—Oct, 15.
828 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, <= =
= ia,
cholesterine in water. On
d y phial a few "duy s since he a irid that they $ eii to dri ew
of Sar arcina, a Apel men of which is now being engraven in golde
eld of our mieroscope. This observa- | es of old and young till
tib combined with that of Dr. Fox, tends to TEN 3 ps - molestie:
vs ry clearly that the de e no ee — p n seldom fallen to the lot
y b wi
assumed that 45,0007. out of 50, 0007. has been
ady secured ; fresh subscriptions are
announced almost daily.
1
tions will soon commence, ied that re resent
omg Ws not pass ipic without progress having
in th Something | b
work. e mere condition
Mis o is
f ely to r rem iti inate ;
* Wee . the direction he Garden under e^ — e
hav the: (ti er e" € » | eertain from ana logy t is | 0 :
Committee ene ae bn hen | form, and t hen i m remise that n iM bad example,
ti h hea Sarien a closel allied pr tion of a bright orange the intoxicating character of
ceri pou e . fta hod of | colour kek been Found on putrid bones by Mr. yes costly character i
T oon i
kh
E
:6
etter me
i loyed just now by | STEPHENS. 8 0
moving adopted - that employed jus M The subject is not without its bearing on vege- | Wise red eee Pr
about to be added to Chelsea Hospital, where, the table economy. If the paroka pines which do ike the tree of fire j
t abo i
gin, : * mune the necessa
vain to get some old Lilac bushes on a truck. Four such varied forms, we may be prepared for similar | pein g gathered into bar
nd a M‘GL history of th :
men a SHAN A sn »-— — phenomena amongst vegetables. The Äx : e bread corn; I beliey
88 off in 10 minute s five t as the Hop and Gra ape mildews indeed presents - seven years old upo
hea granaried there b
Matters of this kind obviously demand the bids us * our eyes open ` when investigating ng of the Eom. one * clothes the
direction of the objects of cultivatio the offspring of Eve (the m
th
it will excite no surprise to see in our advertisi ing | Again, if the elementary organs of plants are y Ae
as tom X
tural Society, announcing their intention to pro- | the oiu die of so many species, and the uncer- anh | l
ceed immediately to the appointment of a inr dero nty which a deba itself to so many of the the 104 ad of this species of drink;
d wil depend p hy th ne leaves vs certain plants has
0 perso
duties the Council hi now to J. He dese extent of them is generally felt, we shall have hunger and thirst craves so lo wil
l ted, and let pu
be a thoroughly practical gardener, versed in yis overwhelmed with a host of forms, of wan d le
every department of hortieulture, pen known to be which the authors tł Ives! definit y for t resi ee >
so by his works; not a eman who notions. M. J. B. harm any more than if they sel
imagines that "fruit growing is ry great art an them a stone. d
whole duty of man. He must be a skilful ground — 7 any of our correspondents lend a helping e hig T
: bau: and experienced manager of men, young j hand to their brethren in Tasmania, where A Tea contains “the ing”
mand. * the strain Wich v. PL or TuisrLEs has invadéd the land and Tea and Arabian ;
uch a Superintendent ne render | treat as much mischief as clouds of locusts ? mile ly manufactured and t
inevitable eh at least the few first years. Nor is We learn from one of sp principal proprietors in all — AM |
ay.
all; he must be Popular wit his brother this importan nt colon ego acres and acres are views upon this Peur in the letter above
deners, fi overrun, and that th e mischief is spr eading | I would only n ark tha zeogra!
exhibitions, and with such an appeara nce and at such a rate that the la — wners are seriously of the Holly is perhaps without a parallel in the
address as will enable him to receive visitors of all alarmed and — v legislative interference. | bution of plants. ies o
iin a manner becoming the magnitude of his But what shape can such interference assume? into this country and k
0 These pests are not mere dy in „open plains but 15 85 parties a
1
N
the C Council to be satisfied. If they can ged
a higher standard so much the jue The enter- take n tp tit reines at 8 head Mur own MCN TUE ps
prise niar Which the Horticultural Society is now | Carduus lanceolatus; 2, C. palustris; and 3 G | to ail the the birth of — s
e De Apre patum, rig aD i talent that annual, a 2 "inda biennial, the second an the argument. that the plant be boi esie
this Meier d is able to supply. htt oon to | to be dea m with e "Tha atis th sonia. i me 22 — pee 1
announce that a Superintendent equal t It is evident that continual destruction of the — rae gift of God, for we see Y
flower heads before the flowers. o n fully would | to admiration in pc and situations,
KM ae „ ultimately expel the two first; but it would have | it will hardly ripen a nearly —
d worst, or perh: ight | to vuv u - delen 80 5
ease bo ihi in the animal and lvl Wan is make it it spre ead faster than ever. N woul E MA] the vit ea (Thea a), Coffee oan
pan. acknowledged by alm ro. rson who fore seem better to depend upon mechanical con- Tea (Ilex).
has made their pathology a specif e s In the | trivances for clearing the land of all at the same 1 have prepared Holly Tea in all sor d
vegetable kingdom the Fungi | which — disease time, care being also taken to destroy all flower | 7°". a and have amused my friends wi
ce flini he — they are distinguishable —a qualities, I hate ses ME eT
— T os n eee Qm the contrary, | business that would suit children —if children | to be the only safe way of
ertai Blot 15 to Üe By has poni there be available 25 uch work. In a com sent state of information and mani
^ in e mos ear where we are * arvensis : articl to
almost disappeared 2 r the influence of geese, the highest qualit
e | donkeys, and horses, e . 5 the turf has for my brea
d off for nding garde thus
been skinned off for the surroun
such it places it is as ram m as evr
ob
res | have thems lves had to deal practically with a i
e Thistles, would have the kindness to iti dean dn
dom y p Sour ACY Bood 3 for un: 9 a
roce
even Yorkshire friends must nml when such
ig a duty devolved upon them, an venture to Hal, vi a be late at M
1 befo: d men for al thanks of on our dis- | made now (before Oui at s margin
for ay n|and even at this low figure à
| the subject as may be communicated, — realised as profit to the
i-re — it
—
E BOLUY m
h e Tine Soar ago I w a letter which was published | old und 4 the decline f th
surans, a very unlikely „ for the ee a. the Jone nal of the ee "i aae. ety of London | when they have years
after
ment of a stomach fungus, except there he k p- on i rof the pr that lett
som copied into | th
closer relation perce, these Psst i than um mu of the provincial nes wspapers, and may —— the ‘ach inks wi
generally supposed, s of labour, t
TF t boron nd o our p communication. Should I 1 to succeed i tti ina
^ d observations Tak e lr ete air — liquid f 1 4i — e 1 this | cate — t speak of th
8 as the people of the fi ing
= ee identity of parasitic ve d affecting the I of * Paraguay are “addicted” 5 o the e use of say Te Ht d that nid [bo purcha
J
Fs
— 1 istinct, as it Hier Sin 1
0 Which belong to medical | ° every v the besett “habit f inte
which would necessarily be unintelligible | What would the m thet an d fam - cote Sly "y 3 nature of "ollis
majority of our readers, the husband and father of the — addicted to drink- | of dearly} ei idforex rience, Imiy now » os of
Dr. ing the costly Chinese Tea wit ith al Bae: Fay! Eu and | that T sect pite t reason y the lear
- ene et pum t But what shon y if the — e. = han) ag 2
Ade got red the flavour
He of the hi m
ghest quality as a Tea and without the heav uu u s Toa vr can assure any the
of] duty and sea-borne s ipe nses of the Chinese Tea ? The | p he a las Te t worse Tea fron the
EEE ES Ee
Ocronre 15, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Holly Tea leaves should be ; as brown as the crust of, is renal the wafting of of the creature alo ng the e air, of evidence as t 5
well-baked bread, yet not burnt IA like — and givi it an opportunity of pres ring on gnats, and botanical rel relations ? lt “was phe. 1 p —— — then
31 are n ot fit for food They hav: | many othe
baked ; ft
ny other means. — window on ur o make e room for
age fusproves the Tea. Tunt leaves DS ema ntial iall Summer senke ing of Rl and T; : M den velvet. like turf, = n
E old leaves, and when very young have little I have been much interested in the notices you bave | more than satisfied that it will
noflavour. Holly-leaf T. published relative to transplanting trees an ni shrubs | predict ed of it, provided it be fairly dealt by. My circle
— not strong tea ing summer. My rite and shrubberie
will a nd no queues — "bat etter | men E about 920 feet above the level of the s, dnd are | a feature of the Spergula. Th
ituated on the north slope of a hill which” rises toa bed 1 3 feet across, and the ring * Spergula measures
thelr ‘nataral lives, and ene God for ‘bestowing it | height of 1237 feet, nland 4 fee! "der * whole of the
pon t —4 ut ht say a great deal more respecting be nearly equidistant from the Atlantic and German ground was newly mad 3 feet of maiden
the p pm re propagation, and the like, | Oceans. ough common evergreens are difficult t f, well | n up, v^ in levelling the ring
but my T of the 1 a trade, and particu- rear in this neighbourhood, they all grow with me in 2j M" Spergula, 22 ‘half a yard of Hyacinth com-
larly th nurserymen, need of m ice on the wildest luxuriance; and having occasion to trans- used for a surface dressing, on the principle
"uh t ^
ibis hend, and I i t to fi i pl l at various or = in forming new cM as all w about it
the good work. To the landed proprietor I i g old ones, I experienced so | sand and leaf. mould would be the right stuff in which
of 1 him to plant Hollies of all sorts for their e many uem x or onem to, valuable plants by trans- t Pe it a start. Five shillings’ worth of seed
fit th plan ting th em oats winter, that three years ago wn in pans in rich sandy compost, and the pans
will one day prove an inestimable blessing. Alexander i with lass Sa 88 ut on a to vonage : —
Forsyth, 13, Islington Square, Salford, Manchester summer, when t wth was vigorous. During the | the minute cr dota
om 2 1 Tinted — "wit 2 young plant varying | then then etm J rt ei when d "iba plané
ve years old, includi ews, Port: | Jo ring
P re gesing pii tg busted, to | ferred toa f E i very slow in the
Abies Douglasii.—* Knollibus“ commences „his re- | deciduous shrubs — trees of the same age, as Ash, | earlier an
“marks i in 1 Number for August 20, t thus— ** Notwith- | Lime, Horse Ches snut, P ane, Guelder Rose, &c. All before the Tut ps Mt a pam
sta 1 t balls, with naked roots, nted out on the 25th of Apel aig th "the first ki
for opi nion on all matters Coniferous, I think he X at as in winter planting, as the ob as to compare the "y plants dist the edge of the Rose bed; cold tring
ro in n more than one variety of this Fir be A Lr ee ze winter. These | drought followed; the plants were allowed to chance
2 n takes a rather pla oved at various time: i from the last|it, and in four weeks all had perished. Other ones of
hills, walleye and forests of his own California, and LA of Máy “till the A of August. To my g great | which the plants had grown | about an inch 22
tone, he tells us outright that | delight not one of the 88 trees or s
* wherever a free vigorous growth i is obtained the dark failed; all took root readily ; and some eve the 2d of J hen th }
g iu i E ee re Es inter. e ey i ma The eth fe seed niat mne to
uccess, this der ong a t un set e one —— er de circle at poles es apart all over. Duri
— e Mr. Barron. Knoll bus" we have Made for the purpoe, I transplant ted many shr ubs the whole time the cre o of S rgnla was not supplied
doubt m. succeeded in convincing himself that he is a from years o ipe was determined to
Gah e s, Chinese Arbor-vitæ, frei Box, ee nl Ds. id p^ the drought of *
tree
loca
— A —
have . ed to free and stunted growing | common Tarte and a, hododendrons; also ral — rr it 5 Ane but promising, for though
s of the same e kind, varying in colour, owing to| Spruce Firs of the same age, a Walln at (which just some of the early plan pieces “9 grown to
l circumstances, it still does not follow that all ives at this height), and be Lines EUN Silver Firs, | patches 3 inches diameter, the bare ces be-
of usareidentical. We are here many brethren, and he eodars, from 5 to 10 old. my great Me » — very t esc pa of the peat generally
have ond og — i — in — same — our | surprise ) not. one "has failed ; "all appear igor a and o pro of a speedy surfacing. But since the
will perceive by he new soil middle of pese the ronda ha been so rapid that
ie of latera) ng sett Ger eight trees, four | fi an ed with vigorous new rootlets. W inter » N. has | exc cept on one edge, where yg rains are kept off 2 a
e dark 3 and four fi from m the Ty warm | never had the same success with me, a and so my it is now a thick close turf of mossy
* pl 1 Laurel of | felt, the separate plants ing exten dod a
our leading Es ts of both kinds running fi 23 to | any kind t lf lost 50 horizontally, rooting at every point with great regu-
4 feet est yearly; generally speaking, the foe” "yariety plants of Portugal Tare) which bad bee n planted | larity, and when meeting mixing eek grants: ord
makes the longest leaders. Our cones are winter ot having a McGlashan transplanting in the fashion of some textile fabric. Som the
when young, à Ye form or size when full grown. machine, vd plan I follow is this: Previous d touch- pate h les from „single plants s from the seed pans M now
Such is our experie A be * to 3 might be ing the or shrub a pit is prepared in l
| of service to * Knollibus, it has been to m" whom iti is e stand from 18 to 20 inches dip, and the | rooted patches from the best places to plant elsewhere,
| him. Dougl as Fire, Baton Castle. [W bo! Xttom i is iren about 2 inches «2 with fine loam | My experience so far enables me to advise intending
Species are
- Almanack—Almanack with wet orem eei urious Eo os uite. These aromatic and | Messrs. 3 OBLE. :
Account—Farmer’s Account Book— ence e the flavour and quality of both , zeen Won R
= Mak a beginning iir e£ pear cH nt of pping or peter meat and dairy similar to what Sweet-scented The Sixth Edition, cloth
Produce Table—Outlay and Income ptt ine de o Year inventory, Vernal Grass doos in spr 2 COM
. Qus Stock, &c, ending of yeur—Summary of Outlay nd | THORLEY’S FOOD rom CATTLE can only be had direct für —By Mrs. Lovpow. Being
«. Income—a great many useful Tables, Stamps, Taxes, Licenses, mom Mr Tuontrv or his aceredited rl ment of all the Ornamental Plants
: de buen reci Jor F. Farmers—A complete List of Fairs in — — now mes epi * — much N
- m, &c. ent, purchasers tious; for altho oe
water vos ould recomm mend ta un eer application | so some those patent foods contain mineral substancon, w ch aar :
um Diary, great many were a favourable effect upsh ruinons MO S x
— cis fr 180, afer e S was sold of and too animal, Beal To a fraud and disappointment of this A Nes Bon AL so le ol Panta
B kind ar Tony epe be Rud E eum comune | phone Nanton Hug and
unt-books are simplicity packages, cach packet having the sig feud; uid locos — Teehntel Terme
slssving nothing for for the farmer to do but to nthe . having his signature burnt thereon. : BRappURY & Evans, 11, Bouverie Street, EC.
mir the each day, when s cm containing 448 packages, 56s.; and of cask,
Mr. Gis are Pus Tn looking over the * isl die tas dee Orders to be accompanied by a remittance:
Meam M rep ety nner dan Braon by foa er Ordem mado pere te doner Tote, Goer Nes of the Terk
mating himself fa ti the various headings, may settle | Post Office, St. Martin ele Grand, P, EC. Mam *
mna d accounts of he farm ina deca few minutes. os. Wo Offices : iine, fan Rood, N.
Lane Repeat tion in recommending it to our readers.”—Mar 16 Consignes for the Uni United States, B. Tuontar, 174, Green- SIR 2 Dixit LEWIS, ome
old by Srurkrs, M. London; WzurrT & | wich Street, near Cortland Street 3 tary, at the Lord W gt dinner on ens.
— te ert, £0, Dublin ; 90 8 M pre Sole Consignee for Upper and Lo $
and at the | 26, Front St., next
T, Thirsk ; all Booksellers, ae Oo Tub 6
8
day, responded to the t f Her MAJESTY
THE GARD )ENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Novem 12. un
Li
; castle. The Princess of Salerno and the Duke | France will not ha ve to adv. 1
1 . or FATHERS 4 pur. s of Aumale visited her Majesty. On due —
Joun RussELL, and gave a brief exposition Sunday g the een, Prince Consort, and the am vhi the stipulated un ae
of the state of — affair He congr atulated | Royal family attended Divine service in the private d Sardinia, it says that Fray
the citizens up the fact that perhaps at chapel; the n of Windsor o iated. On Monday 1 ni
no previous is f our history E our UN d üeen, ac apo e ign om “athe propone tolin
: : ihi i >} walked an rove 1e
internal affairs exhibite a M yir An ame Consor visited the Wellington . aer
prosperity than at the present moment, by M m on 7 esday morni ng the Queen and Prince Cons E
ever standard that apagam $ o be tried, | San ub theicautle, e Prince GE
whether we regard e eat — of the Princess Frederick William of Prussia d from tr inisty ben
revenue, the condition of cats e diminution Majesty. The E ce of W ales pie aby ths ic finances ie means
f throughout the anam om e ved in the terio from Oxford. si the evenin
ee 8 : cun Guten e — a b er panty n W peo morning ite epee pare in Par
referred briefly to the recent strike in the building | the e Queen, P tun sort, and the Royal family, and | piègne, and proceeded to ihe pe ae
trade, and said that, while the 1 nt had | p e and Princess Mae eriek Lc witnessed the pay un d us EG
en no unconcerned spectator rbance | de of troops i Ho Par onour Ahe first sta unt a dim;
3 irthd: ihe Prine of Wales. The Friday. he Emperor
hich is now, he trusts, a oe ite E HE IA E = LIE t shooting, | Maj esty, in hunting costume,
tion, they had p urmned w e accompanied by Prince 1 William, the at 1 o'clock, the imperi 2
policy of consistent —— With regard | Frinoe of Wal * Prince of Leiningen. others containing the "
tothe Reform Bill, hesaid heGovernmentrelied | E The Duchess of Kent paid ped Majesty a a v 224 of con ES ed se
n being able, early in "ig ensuing s in the morning e Duke of Cam- | r
redeem the pledge s which aor had given d intro- beatz e, the Prin qu ier and — 1 Er ore
yos STRA | hr
ate of dem ees sre ight hos. biden |
eas
F dk journals
that the French and English eee had
arrived at a
among " the Italian qn
*may come when
re
o Oxford. "The Count de Paris visited
E PRINCE OF Wares attained his 18th y
Nada ast. m ur pe 5 1842 his Royal High-
ness is now old e z
Cro own, to govern without a a "Regency; Ag hg will not
considered of a is 21, and will
e time
used for the purpose of dictating
people the. choice of their lt for
iem of oiri
which, after mature deliberation, they may pr olor? -
X
hree Treaties of P
S
a
be
8 Ttalian
ete — his seat in the House of Tors till ‘that period
The Prin Tuesda:
morning the 1s
Gre rae Guards paraded in the Hom
of the nd
ear on over
e of a demise of the
m
forwards marched to — 5 ba rracks.
ning the Q evening party in
md a
obsery a
*13* ns
8
rhe, of the occasion. In the metropolis the m was
ed with the mur end the theatres and
, and s; spread t
e them, and the people aloe d
this officia
ess for th
means of founding
t
pris — the
pl 2 his Royal Hi ine terne to
ik n At Oxford the . was as celebrated o on — ren
dia
of blan
ittel
ong Fr ren ach army, and tha at Colonel
cnet the cholera has com
The Mo
hes: is 3 M^
adult poor, and, 1
r n the Town
THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS FREDERICK p
OF PRUSSIA landed. at Dover y j D Hold on Tues
| morning and proceeded t Hotel, where th
passed th
ee his
e night. At 100 0 lock thas Royal Highnesses |
ukeof Padua, the late Mii at
for t] h
ed with — activi
pou take their ws
the
the pacification of Italy on doa: an
past week
bases.
have appointed
CARIGNAN Regent of “Cental Ttaly
cousin
in
aur able
the National
PRINCE DE
F Sar RDINIA ;
rom Turin was received | an
KINd
spectators, the road from the hotel to — station n being w.
lined with 1200 s, and the batteri roy
of loyalty Bare respect,
dc Wi lliam seemed esp
;| veyance of 7500
ecem — have ben
with some Spring tous at Marseilles for
tons of coal to the ns ae
Peu Mag and Cochin China,
ts of Marine
opn ,
onel de aiat of the i
with pre — Favre as second in
Sralx.— Despatches from
but a de
in town yesterday stating that
Eura br, in in consequence o of a very argenta ES
anmtaot:
wi
do grant permission to the Prince to meer
Regency.
From the United States we learn that
bas addressed a to Mr.
a Johx Mid despateh to Lord
tone of which is said by
“Es :
met p. the
the|
letters tial"
and decided in | EE John
amen ‘itself to the | Office.
T It i
7 — sm of the iV TEES de?
QR aere [s owever that General Scort's
tions are peac
the good intentions
ment, copies
Harney and
*
or communication to the Briti
-Rome News,
xs Tur Covzr.—The M Prince Consort,
a Boral minting at Wi
of the Dechy md me Moniteur a also publishes issued
a t
mi cere oe ine is 3
e Maharaja Go
- ed Princess iud Bag abroad, of the fol following is an me
y
instruc-
cefal and sonata ; and, j^ ei
f the Am er
of al l boch to Sener
eneral have been forwarded
sh
and the | 35$
ssi
Ib NAM
At — oum station the Prince and Princes v —.—
Que = Prince Consort.
who had driven. page ui the
and Princess Helen
eet ens ^
ived at
Teide 8 in at né n passing th t at the
emn d E ge
Genera] | Dover
DALLAS, in — Hotel, embarked on nd Emp for Calais on her É
expedition against Mi onte is far
means of transport are and 21 4
—"
TM
IAN AMBASSADOR had his first interview
Russell on Wednesday si the Foreign
ui Cabinet oai . was held on
Maie the official residence of the First
T Treasury in Downing Street.
held on Wednesday.
Paim,
Lord ot |P
Another Council was
h
| Mo erm Keese ài 0
the younger T brother o 55 the Bee 0
the Princess Mary of Cambridge.
day the Wend Chamber was to pass
— — — s an address
Ae RANCE a Moniteur of of yesterday morning con-
ins an announcing signing of the Treaties
= Zaric of of which the followi 5 i
3
are three treaties coi in the spirit of the
agreed upon at Taiana, d on ratifying the
Lebe un the two Emperors have agreed to bi pe ines gra
mbling ofa Congress, which shall have to
it the Treaties of Zurich, and deliberate on fes moet
mac 9f founding the pacification of Italy on solid and
d stating that |
cc
r propose ed
of peace; but at the last moment o
delayed on account of Austria claiming
mont in
5 — and demanding exp
—— m ce de 8 as President
receive 102,000,000f, inste
Novemper 12, 1859.)
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTR,
which she had previously demanded. In eor
age the three treaties Ww gned o
Aaria ps the Hotel de Ville, amd M. Aes. M.
Hoffman, a and Signor Nigra left Zurich yesterday to
Pienipotentiaries will take their departure M cn
ay) It is believed — e: convocation of
be held at Pur —
ands
-Prussia AND pre is > ated on "reliable
autho rity that
of Russia and the Pries Regent of Prussia determined
not to consent to f 1815, nor
a t
— ice Constanti "s ple, to represent
ice imme- |
to the Sultan the ad-
o be der ived from the —— of the
the Russian
the tw
this and other serious news, the. French admiral had
sent the Duchayla to Nangasaki. That steamer was
to visit the different ‘ports open to — and
enforce respect ne the French flng. T
Government seemed
Tan
Government and t
showing that the Emperor h has
— friendly
ment, and that — are -
tended — — on the part o
rs | ne
f| Har
0
| Brown, whe
- by the court, made a bold and disdainful speech declining
m (d that
stipulations of the treaties e with forei igners,
but kh was s not med tha t reco se to arms would be
ecessery
Unrrap uum
rper's Ferry cons —— ook place at Che arlesto —
Vi uis. on he 25th ult., before a court of magistrates,
called upon to accept counsel named for him
the Moors makin K activo military prep: rations, and
14
posed by |
T
1
1
5 in presence
: most st distinguished persons
in Berlin, and — Beethoven’ s Funeral March, a
— we work of the late earl, whose com net were
well known and pne in the Prussian capital.
HorraAND.—A despatc Mie Hag
the rifs have H ly W. — 2
p large bodies of: men are employe nd
e towns Tut
7
di intends -$ colle ect paler stores ** to — le troops
learned t
— 2 | Rabat, when the authorities
aesti with ¢ — 3 mi nent, * i caused the |
famo!
Med
us *keys Ji be carr
f with a defence the ground tha’
)e
his case was 1 The court, nevertheless,
— the duty of defending e prisoner
to two ‘counsel, who accepted the office. o-
one. ^ pe, c state that the despatch
of General Cass to Mr. Dallas, in d to the despatch
of Lo i John Russell to tet out by the
iy which left ay 2 on the 2 It is said
to decid tone, M the: same time it
isu nderstood that ds dn
; whilst, to show the
t
ibited
of C
n ^ the town, — "after wards to
good int
the Ame rican Gov ernment, copies of all instruc-
Ha
| Silver v for —.— — — in the ^ mosque.
| Eoft The h General
that Prince Alexander, — a phi idis Victoria to Said Pasha.
"Netherlands, — "best — E wich serions | The English au authorities — aaa vec ee at
illnes. Her Maj esty, who was at Toulon, has been | pev the transport to China. The
— to the Hago tempt to lay the — s 44 a Constantinople cable
cele
Ta. The Bé Schiller Festival at Vienna —
both t rney and General Scott have
Mr. Dallas. The Walker filibusters
s e at LX 8 have all been acquitted.
Professor Lowe has ructed a pipe an balloon pe
a journey to —.— Ar process of filling it with gr
em Dee mg - rn vit. Nod
or the
A when
ese on . "Tuesda ina most brilliant manner in pre- The Austriam engineers foretold t. would be very ly
Sence of immense crowds of , The tod 22 HARE to construct a ree —— in “the It is mid T six persons will accom
— numerous and well attended ALTA. — Accounts from Melbo — eof he 17 I
and enthusiasm prevailed th * 2. — Bombay mail has arrived with news | Sept. soaks — the K ap anars - — ha —
Siy. Ane tibbin was exe ly fine until towards | from that 1 Praideney to the 13th October; and a tele- nst Mini —
— of the festival. The erdi- graphie des - € — d ** Mr r. Reute ors cum of Mog de )on, a
Maximilian and the Arehduchess Charlotte have special T dian Pg rid return e .
Yit Vienna Sd 2 sy e m intend to sailto|to the 14t tober et ime: our dn lays later than the — * “Treasurer. The Ke Asien Toren had
the Dalm n pur- date of the departure o of the mail, which — 1 ht | been si Trade was dull, and there was
«chased b; — . — mma the dr — — — tails : considerable vpeeulstion in —— Companies; 40 of
‘their Tap ai Wen will i emburk in the steam- x. — which were in the market—some of them mere
ood,
h for Madein, where they intend to | Bom
‘remain Archduke will re go to
Rio Janeiro, and is e to return to Vie in
n It is not yet arranged yia the Areh-
of — ing
ted to the grant Government
National Assembly of
‘Monday naibu vó
de pages and invested him
day the
he Romagna on
Ext ‘of 2 Prince
the same
jority, a proposition to scopes bm
Anie e Governor-General of the
en
775 the National Assembly of the Romagna
legiance — the — — and betaken them-
he xm — — of their tribe, for the
sup) — 2 "of f which t itions e been fitted out
from Bombay ord this ee . has — ht its
a successful close. The fort and island of Beyt w ed
on ‘the M — — The expedition Y — = island on Yo
8d. ing of the 4th, t med. ke —
steamer |
" Victorin,
e Indian navy, Wem sent to cut off “the boats belong
the enemy, On the 5th the Feroze, the Zenobia,
the fire on
21
killed or wounded.
cheers wounded, 13 men of the 4 Ben
EIS 4A. men of the 6th Native T
ics
6th
Provin: He v. hold a
‘about t the he 20th u ur. 155 which all th
invited. He
ice Prince <
d o — *
EE
boa:
th oe hr cem is the first instal-
troops from Bengal for service
Nepaul.—It is said that Jung Bahadoor had iur
tive rebels from ban Med Sahib i
pa on
— DA
o Beg
8 i mái duis s ' Central Aea
arini, however, the Meo Modena and
been pro
d moderation should be of avail, soon
= — to the yoke, * would be ‘advised Fd by
duty t
Naples
Abruzzi
Sa p hanes
ter. Sum » € tranqui
Works — betomm
d
- the 26th October, it
Rendon Mf ie
the 31st for
oir it is
suppose
he Hannibal, A — Jean recu and the to
— that a € in mp has been es
exce nt position at two miles from Pekin and that the
is best
consecutive ts.
arii tnn e the . of —
- — arie ish - the Chinese authorities continued
g. oe
that * pecie “tree "y^ Cochin | 1
a t had been
Chinese dal stacked th — troops,
ere
e ^
ing to eum have been murdered, an
"T instructi
etl di
a, Thurs, the — — * at consequences are no
— MR
t improbable. In consequence
of
: bubbles. "The T of gold — g
d
| | de ceply important, to the best
1
Public à Addressts.
Lord Brovenam, on Saturday, at the distribution E
rizes to the pupils in connection with the Eas
ancashire Union of ots — e
{following remarks on the Maine Liquo’ **
Nothing can possibly — highly i
education and general tra * — of uc T
whether the 2
have
tho
veut ag, more
8c — * than the
U m 2 nda
* .
— Hie:
2 *
X V
—— it—nay, — je
lawful, moderate, eiers mal
for
aine Liquor Law, bu
lied to the sale of intoxicating
criminals and our workhouses
well as um
the telescope
— the objects
ze
A1
sg
my Denman.
1 —
tho retest orator of lato times, who ice
have been no more, is greatest
has been known in this country.
a reverend friend of
Z
X
iss Ee.
uter
$
$
T son t s subscribe a small sum to the fund
hase of arms to be fined di the dis — of Garibald
e| Fall those v 3 wali to is daois olia *
s
Hy making
upplying the Italian:
An, id discipline
a e 3
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIULE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Norman n un
ulation lio: this |
f l In proportion to | obvious means i
Mat e engt io the respet it Duk ja Upon ' that foundation | and to facilitate Ax "oper ration 8 the indust c though it T TE eet only the S ponies v ot the vis X; |
of eally rest. Ija great indu: try, i E E |
:
ight b
Parliament, s and is À is wholly wi withou fact just sata in ee
ent of the country. e Parliament (I p dee.
Ton uses) is a Parliain ent of the rich, i: i — th
eie in ae ae Okie or in equal taxation. It is "i. inis,
0 ch it really re Dough
thee emoluments which are to be dis — Lo N :
of armies—those of and of RABEL d
All Sti i i ly of his s and two n protes est—I can descri
Upa Awitan Lr adag iae pee pen in the coined on ere wa ape with 70 or 80 of his progeny, pet qn the wrong! I can say that y Corsten! 1
; ; athe ho pon unjust will some day be overthrown. But all this wa"
: : h e | more will not loosen the of the insatiable and
has he: a
art whieh telle him what is right. That | tion—to d
Let the € fon 3 — he leads, and | among
e the hon ich
n
s been so long | perty which he possessed. prietors of the soil in the one case, and the power of men
W y not Money
cute, and a he
— is Garibaldi.
y
they will at least acquiri 5 = <> de nos ap Fy gars z
3 th eople. e has Me supe es ery
with Fra 3 IT he should o ecess, he will not consent to | p: iru a che in th : gs PM ES gp AM S poche
i ibera he F: h Empire. ald go through a variety o in ta i
He win ise iic eae oe a " d pfe the idea of the mon ha rli ntoa consider abie position under my eye, and so long as the millions of workmen, whose d 4
First Napoleon, that France should be surrounded by weak as it were, and with nee, and I have found | produce all the wonders of which our national
p tates. If the Italians should obtain no change but n that if a man Das z head u his shoulders, | boast, are purposely and insultingly excluded from un
that of substituting the influence of France for that of Austria, | whether he lives in Lane hire or Buckinghamshire, he gene- and legal influence in the election of members of
th ill have changed the — form of their humi- ge! in the world. T would the 1 impress u E 55 n eed ern “re Lx st bear " in ri
i h have the honour of addressing this evening, no ey m uppo:
3 iid F 2 1 N uppose that all that they obtain b the | mean and singular ere in the manner in which
of this country has and is still levied.
the fiona, in Euro 12955 = the ote ministration Ibn
eaviest
Ssessing
ay
ane dE of
wo al pes humbly, E I P might pre pre-
sent, I would say this, ‘Take this as an incontrovertible
- principle, P accept this n. s oem ^ — can give
ow, 1
it ^w xw e opoo aa 4 y ; bul Ri eer stitutions uncontrolled, to rich the rich; and an
it i to and w you hav orking with and t * a mock representation is the
i spo e is to prepare y Votum. for her 8 When don lete i
y that every man has his opportunity, and venture to lay
thet down as a principle which cannot for a moment be ved
ment, to to | troverted, I will admit to you that many men have their oppor-
deceive. I willstilltrust that the Italians may prove them- tunity and are not —— — availing themselves of it. I will
— XY 5 of their fortune, and may be mindful of ou tw nces occurring in my own expe-
other and higher traditions "wn those to which France has | rience h
e $
0 later be the x i
i readfu ly: alarmed is his | purse is taken from the custody of a class, and i i
own want of ability when it came to him, that he sed to | the safe keeping of the people. I will “than you oe
ac —
ye
demption can hi i rovi 8
rest their sucess but wil — em in their hands they may at
ry he nad been
least, instead o! diris ingly transfe:
foreigners, fall nobly ike solders in the à and acquire
glorious name wh corded by the concurrence of
all ages to how sn i
eun e, e
As | but b: el pt . 1 Te ry M BID
ere sols closed at 96% for — and 96] fo rt
man Tus an ert: nity, and t h may n equal to ,
the Tas er opport ders, it is not t his gny that E ought to Reduced and New I per pe: 943 to 953 jn
condemn, but his o n in ence o e 9 ce. Now, it is} Stock, 224 to 226; New Padian 11
said, and it is a very dangerous saying, ugh a very common | 1041 ; Ditto Scrip. 103 nn to 1043; an per
one, that ‘life is a lottery.’ Life is not a lottery. Life is a T T
science, and certain qualities and certain tures of 1858, 964; Ditto 1859, 963; India
handled a and Me D naged, m tust lead. t6 curtail ults.
Depend upon it, that p is a truth which Kae must accept,
which, if you believe in, you zn find a very considerable
i ife. No man has right to be disconte nted
ition i
follows on the enen x iii pauk and 21 "the
opportunity which comes ery man once in his life
of bettering his con x —
* Tt is generally the h those who occupy the
position ik I fill to- aight n Wilate upon the advantage hed
knowledge in itself, and to e all those whom they addre:
that ‘ knowledge Sha ows rater nnd, End that its ac Bess uisition
a sufficient to compensate for all [ih = stimulate
Pig boned ae rts. inly Ia on Jed uld for
mai — contrary 0 inion. I "Eno om ex well
vantages o e that no’ te e is i xceeding | prepari himself for
NN and that whatever. may be the positon of the | of 5 war | is a minor phrase—what a source of Three per Cents 0
individual, the of a certain amount, of knowledge | interest and excitement is the co continual preparation for the | cates, 5; Tur Six per Cents., 1854, for
Ditto 1858, for Acct., 67.
inevitable occasion,”
be 8 to 2 most, ae A Hine that zr I m R. Briaut, M.P., has addressed the folowing
mad titutions of this kind, a e great | letter to an association of small house -owners
bour of love in eh many are engaged for the advancement | Birmingham :—
f their fell and the tion of knowledge— 8 ** Rochdale, Oc iai 10, 1859. ett RC CMM
— e hard assertions which would maintain that in a coun’ “ Sir, —I have to thank you for sending me t e pamp hlet on | Notes Issued s vs ernment Debt s .
e thisit is cok tel or almost dde for a man to attempt to | the income tax. You ask my 1 Auen «d that ead ab ced —— Stuer Sr erte m
raise himself by o culti üvating his mind, the obstacles to advance- | expressed it in public, both in the Hou: of Com out Gold Coin end Bulion
rable. Now Lam of 8 a 8
ent being so fi i r for
Opinion. Ido not se think thats e nr fallacy greater than that 1 5 te he p p d gros with att eit m
alitioat every word
I may ho I agree said £30,692,905
. i — you pamphlet: n the longer I know the tax BANKING DEPAR
Msn 8 a pb bed . oo. itis anke to *
or
rhe uM and the examine it, the more I think it hateful and | Proprietors’ Capital.. . . 4£14,553,000
imd $ that in a new country, in a 1 for example, w intolerable. ^ "ob "this t ww mue agreed, but here you | POP di cs 3175285 Kc e g
d is not a pner and Hipiai isa eet Population, leave me in the dark. As one of your Ha Chines ahh P p m includ pius s
Coarse Physica me to do something, and you wish me tI) B issi 8 —.— AM Un ee
. "which Tape arapid and ben Mens rewa hose | will oppose, at all be any re-enactment of the it ron tax el Nat. Debt, and Divi- Stele b 3
] h obvious, are of a monotonous character; | laws. 2 ie let me ask you how it is that with a population | dend Acets) .. .. .. 6,997,259 st
me is only one means, and that means often es sooner ly i ed, and with wealth „ even Seren Tr other bills — 55494 —
a —.— e is expected. But, in a country of ancient | beyond the increase of population, there is so much and, as
oni ths o: c: om Aor according to the — — . Nae we all feel, such just dissatisfaction with the amount and with 100 dag of Mob, 1968 "39,025,225
portionately increase—! e our tion? Is it not use the nati 1859.
a gre tege K ur gm which allow a qualified ure co: tly and rapidly, apparently without
2233 * acc laat vanced. | any d to the real necessities Government? ‘There is no
Ire pray bead E department in which the expenditure has y in Gazette of "e egaeck.
and he said "That is a very able man, from wh contempt of economy on tho part of the Administration and | , URS DAY-BANKBUPTSR. Mirauax and J; Io mi 2
something may xpected.” I won't m. n his name, not The Russian war thre e open the door | Brid: fe Hoel’ Ghose and, Co, Paris, Merchants}: OF" t
because I wish to avoid IN, for, alas ! heis no longer | of the national exollequéb, ane since 1854 the great fund SCOTCH 1 —J. R. Laine, G i
anong us; a terrible and unforeseen accident took him from | gathered from the e industry of the p e has been an re ‘Doveatt, Glasgow— I. T. e Glasgow,
— m ut Lord Stanley said, That is a man who has | to those w ~ on hollow pretenc every kin agi ^ E po NENUPTS-T. Anim Si
E n. ce ed h nents in England —I ber : live at the expen the paye ot taxes. The House of|Epwans, ‘Birmingham, Vietuali we sox, Brook's Mews.
ig o avs nes. — and he has three perso Commons does nothing to check the extravagance, it encou- | Gardens, Livery Stable Keeper—J. Jeres, p
„1 Fi M. G. Waite
Kwyarron, York, Iron Founder—! H — :
ployment who ha l risen from t E Who" e es i not sı of tax-
P a gehen 1 i * aid n my noble the se The come Fás, d hey chi a ——— . —.— , On: ae MR
ona b. E Ward vanta Pio nenes o of Com- | re ani d pee families have for generations considered
private conversation during a dull sp Ve eap ging rod ed. ore NA Lr Kent restate n laid, aad 5 icing
phan ane" j eldest o; amily takes the es in " e rest of th
Ee cP’ ea E ime P uie eir eem ime inr emunt erae | fftttrepolis amp f v
yan in a esi , contributed yearly the
of State,’ eg as * oe tS Be te ve pee with | ex — — f the i irei ea of the de put nt cki t mp MAYOR'S Dire o pn a
— - I bed know wine — in the world not he taxes with any refe 12 what is just * uu at Westminster took place on W.
Miei on ihe ona t9 WEEET um for " elligence and | the imposition of national burdens, For it has levied | the usual ceremonies, the unus
Vu thas this e pom e id A vs ries pe d have 8 [oe from which es giving additional interest he
Mgr, mr vue — Nene of — 60 years it levi pee —.— ee ig the princi ;
füshionable epitet, and t at it 15 exceptional to use a | perty, from which ad p uc were exempt. the c ary banquet was given
England generally that ia th you "s ot pretend that in | In the year 1853 : pre retended to correct thi » usos regards Maj cate’ s "Ministers were repr
comm dr irre m affairs. Now, I | the ft proper duty, x on land and ented he Exchequer, the;
— tually brought forward to damp ese are opinions | freeh porty at i it did fnis im a way to chargo land and | dhe Chancellor of the Fache f
mag le of kc. country. Ilive the irme e | freehold p: net more e-fourth of the ein. Me. Sidney Herbert, the Du xe *
rn S cin which ù m a part o tho world | which is is charged on her A o t wopety. Tbis su Lord e gi but the a i
by% 8 * an those sion tax SMS ied two millions sterling a year; up te nd Lord Jo le ussell de prived d the La
3 waa ‘present surroun wag wn of | this time I b [Am ura not reached 800,000. in any one year, | ^ would have g"
no grea the | The whole taxation of the country last year exceeded 60 ami. | portance whic ir speeches vo
Novexsrri12,1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
S$ MÀN
Tet e toast of lier Majesty's Ministers was acknowledged | A Alexander, and other gentlemen, Sir (x iling Eardley j De La Landa, David Thompson, Mra Kennody and tw
by C. Lewis, who spoke as follows on Public | having addressed his lordship in a long speech, and 2 -— n 5 — and party, C Jackeman,
essrs. Jones an ie ister . Oul Stu
* a bar ‘al the pem to him, Lord John Russell made and Lyon ; Charles Conway, Mr “Kir 3 rhy — ^4
A
* My Lord Mayor, the portion of public affairs in which the
inhábitatits of this city are more immediately interested is our
estic ar and internal oo concerns rae I may congratulate the
peri
1
* and "o s Mr.
| Kenna » wife, and three cube; William Banks, David
belie vd iss correctly understood the views of the | (ae ENS R. Ross, Fenis (sav M*Cappin
ingen Wi n ard tothe case Meu lf, it is, as you have | 36 x
7 “properly 0 bserved, unnecessary ument with any
i reign Afai
Tri "e,
eet > i s, Thom ra cett, William Bowden (saved) James
lo dg ees consider ita gross violation of parental rights SE ny oo E 1 A Jobn Buchanan,
k i its parents, ] y oM
at N
a
EE
3
OE
a Ss
gi
=
g
g
"p
-
—
?
p > eed be 7>
argument. But as to the conduct of the British Government, — 5 2 Charles "
re has been ow — — that I should woe — the wishes ol re- | and Rolla, Morelli and Ca John and P. M. »
uestion between employers * 4 12 — workmen, but to I
E both parties to adjust ir differences Nis do one has n the laws ar ^ etel M 8.
to the natural law of supply A e [o org of fo nations the mai = always D wit - Crowley, Mrs. Ross, — and infant ; D. Travers, T. W
n whe: difficulties. In the first place, one ought to have a very strong James Sullivan, James Turner, Mr. y and three chil
case of violation, not merely of pr notions of freedom, whether B. Bladier, Mr. Padar itte, ian Bishop, Mrs. Willis and
political or religious, but of the common sentiments ‘of justi — two children, John Gillespie, — Kell’ M r. Mitchell and
which all European nations entertain, In the next place, the wife, William’ Fleming. Joba "Bor Xt, John ze A
peculiar laws of the differ nm a nations — — question Parkinson, John Par — 7
might come must be considered, aws o! Davi 1 p n Manio! e
such as we can at all approve. In France there is com- avidson, H x . "M'Leod ar — baa ape Wind, Par,
plete toleration for the Jews, and has been for a con. John 5510 Richard Davis, Joseph Potts, Frank Hoyland,
iderable th ther Euro Willray, Miss Susannah Morton, John Mason, T. Bakewell;
it is impossible to say what view they may take as bear- ai — Beratti Vin, wm
own legislation with h . A
I can € say, therefore, that the matter must be well eon In TTA. — An official
sidered before the name of the he British nation is put forward in loqui; instituted duy the —.— f Trade, into the cir-
re m r
I admit the case is one in which. all our feelings of what is due ate Paes ding the loss of the m Mail Steam-
to parents are violated, and that must I think be very gene- | ship erm was opened on W. at th
not | Tally felt. It is, no doubt, part of the legislation Pons Gesenwieh Police Court before Mr. Traill, police
ew of to th agistrate, an r. The
m ntemp.
try. Ineed only say that rnm has not asted or
ntion diverted from thed: "ier of their Public d duties ;
redeem
f
n what has beon a d adi will Cake — ii | from Souihampon t St. Thomas, in her first and
of what has taken em at tbis is interview." only voyage. After the examination of Captain
“Scum Pen — ba Bi an and ot — hat the com-
The emre! festival of Schiller was — on | adjourned to Thursday e on ib appeared thas the ine
Thursday at the Crystal Palace, in the presence of vate -— - — ^
ns. I mme r. Traill and Capt, “Harris ex xpressed thei
— that they were alrea
grounds on which form d ju ——
ultimately determined to — ourn the p outils a
^ as | day, hereafter — be fixed, i —
unveiled amid loud cheers. This was followed by — Tux Coxvic T SMETHURST.— y
cs PS Aces i — €— T *1 had been disposed oh, and that d had receiv red a free
with a torchlight procession in the 3 accom. | Pa — n. The Glob y
play of the grea! fountains.
eed | Musical formanee, followed by an oration on the
genius of Schiller delivered by Dr. Kinkel. A cantata
of Schi
ed to cam
2 in Italy, and in res which her Majesty's
E A tain EUM all eR mae But the G
igne erior
panied by a dis t ment is not correct, No fre pardon has been granted,
o: Sa Rove’ — The in. And the case has not been disposed of in any way.
ques nated o n Friday when the uy returned | sion of scientific and men is to be appointed to
the ‘ollowing verdict:—* From the evidence ten- report upon the condition of the bell and the causes of
dered e unanimously of opinion. "that the | its fracture, and that nothing will be decided with
d PN ing until they hav their
any
time suc tation should — sent to them, it will be their
duty to deliberate pies. the matter with a view to maintain a
ple which w. ard as i m „that no force shall
c
t N report. An officer o
: pe in 3 power Taylor Pt 5 rents sh al sion of the dey at the belfry, is denied to
ed | had done all in his power to e ship every person, with the exception of 5p gi pointed
of passen The Board of Trad since to ud up the clock — eighth day. :
instituted an N into the loss of the ship, Tus Great Eas que Mayes and Corporation
it i ed m =r ny ga an ffi e
, an
pe | contributed. Anot ld has b ered roll ich was running
from the wreck. From the advices received at Lloyd’s off the Land’s End. She will remain at —
the wreck - not — - i materially changed | until she is refitted, and i is to be exhibited to the publie
in bit a sree dar d hop rtained ty * * the | daily until further notice.
r part, tif not the "hdd, P the will > saved, COLLECTION OF „ ASSESSED, AND INCO
hs connection with the melancholy — attending the | p, x XEs.—lt is understood that the authorities dare
unte- | wreck, it may be stated that rd Boston, as lord of decided upon a 22 for e mem i of these tax
the manor of the district near which the disaster took | which w ill be m economical, i partial, and safer than
place, has sent ina claim all property or treasure —
effective m:
think it is the wish of her Majesty's Goren ment to coun
ce or encourage any 1 — or groundless alarm. We are
against not merely a probable, but even a
Whenever probable ir dn does arise her
tha > m- in the spei distri
plete list of the passengers on board the Royal Charter, | — the ocal tax — primom * * tho of A mring
furnished by Messrs. Gibbs, Bright, & Co., the owners:— next will be filled up by excise office after that
Saloon, —Mr. Hugh Bethune, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce, infant, — i 4 i
Meeti of the B ‘Board on ara fa I eek 1 5 ad s — ma Me wo | their duties handed over to the excise
resolved by a considerable majority, after a long and | Mis Fowler, and errant ; Mrs, wick and four children, THE LATE FLOGGING CASE AT Woo —The
angry disc ib i Mrs. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. S T Grove A pm Mrs. xu x 3 Davis, who me ** Mo at Wool-
a s Mr. Gardner landed at Cork), Mr. Gun 4% mstances which exci: amount
Soners of Sewers one-third of the estimated cost of itom, Rer Charles. Hod pe, be, Hat Mr. S Henry, ME: SEX. iral D c T large mount
an rs. Robert sons, è alter r a i
ames 2 and Master 3 da; his release from and has not since
d E tr stu dio Murray Me agorat ar Before leaving Woolwich he stated that
: HH Ne . H. and der | he had such a dread of the
Nahmer and mere na eid ihe QE A Tot then veio x adn
Pitcher, two children and servant ; Mr. R. Mrs. Tweedale, | ho > K
Mr. Henry E. T lor, child, and servant (Mr. Taylor saved), Mr. | tion was paid to the man after he left the hospital, and
Welsh, Captain or oe cee on » . unbealed state of his back he was
Watson,
ih
[ji
;
h been referred by the
it, on the prou ü
rupis that die improvements in question
The of a purely and not a 1 eat
E of Pda not only rejec ca
mo affirmed the principle dab all "the pero
treet 1 the metropolis are liable to contribute towards
Improvements within the limits of the city.
a det Mornara Anpvorr TION.—On Monday aftern 8
Foreign tation waited on Lord Joh n Russell at the Pers. stating |
Russe A ‘Samuel, Mr.
Roath, and Cork); Miss Elizabeth read at the meeting of the Liverpool ber of Com-
Mis E Dor a SH, Mr. John Wilks, and merce on Monday. The Chamber, on the report of a
mi on i 2
. Watson. y, | special com
rri and Third MINE NM Cr two | ment for the ; 1 of * Elbe
0 ta
Street, The Works and Im 3 Committee,
this * ad
nd three 8 irse or m and
„Len, Henry Burns and child, Na D * John EcL M —n of S * ne At tn — imag ret
Newton, J. Churton, Jobn and Catharine rell W w consecration of St. jew's c on Friday the
(aed, Mai — gin dE d and child (ma 2 P. Bishop of London took advantage of the presence of the
Moss, Mr. 3
ent, in should take
Cas the in the settlement of the pm “question will
M net ES e Papal treatment of the nse
of {ape before the consideration of the .
The de nsisted of Sir Calling
+ Mz, Samuel Gur Gumi, Ie Major-Geneeal | roca
THE GARDENERS’ = AND AGRICULTURAL
endeavour to bring about
— be rangement pers might be satisfactory to bo —
art
in the the . "After heari ing the statements, ma kA with
grea at temper and forbeara nce on both sides, and on a
the time given by both parties
to be bound by his jobginelt, the Bis hop decided that
|eage with six or seven me
at the same ye
s going down
. See
E!
As the ae 5 drew near | waistcoat *
ne- room best clothes Ae non
the
E
servitude
Novmathen 19. 1859 |
ster Agric :
pore and a ji
ched. Am
1
i
| dered woman ix
e on engine iai W
ever, oo late in attending A His
signal, and thè. eee was tha cage was
v
went
13 4
tenta and that the service of the latter should com
ce at half-past 3 o'clock. vA is lor 3 also ted |
sed s
cage was drawn over the d the whole 14 men, w geri
i tee unusu: ae Mer sip whic d ca
tisfactio € ne
Taft
were precipitated ben eath, | Si x fe m dov
n ^d
to the
sthe ascending Whit
à of Wilfal Mu rder against —
or persons 1 wn.
Tamwortu.—Sir
mother has become —
tehall Gardens and 1
— — 50004. E ear up
pian. GHAM.—The
na
ek anaes s — ail
y eon th
be dis
— ma that tl
with. In accord-
d
continu
nies church should be re- e for
n pave-
nd on
ment and was Eid on spot. were
the
the church
— ith this arrange!
Ae Fou who v
io received pes T hurtes
al
n Sunday,
s ended i in "nothing coun decli in dang a fiercer i
display of passion on the — of
the seers — has hitherto bein x experienced.
The was — T. the Rev. = Bry
his
—
gle —
nd | en
of the
epe their fi all, m
engine tinge Gall whose — led to the
nto eu usto ody, an nd t SM vernment
uesday that
by his “not egi ginning soon
‘Ys after consulting
ae ng
werdet was nag
gh to sla oken peed, =e jur
Walsingham Br idewell one AME P ase
ihe awful, almost mere le, ecm edema |
“the awful, almos increc ible, i
cultural — in M" — Strict eur ET
240
gi
say a word o
b
| Christ was, sta
an hour,
*
ughter again The jury at the same time
their opinion pe if two me
| were “to a in
of t
| mid i
| [hi im and diverted his attention, the id
uy who yox
again
therefore, Sas mu this holy
Galla
a most excellent character, was then committed to
Stafford pact for trial.
Hvrzr.—Mr. Jesse Arbon, the rate collector of this
to ve has been committed for trial charged with. em
Rev. Hugh Allen came,
hal
either now or stole, and performed the econd servi ce.
ing other mo ney belongi ng to them. a Soh lost
— — — amount to nearly 3000
fatal cene of 3 took
ay week. Mr. r
the ove’
Tn he in
In ord
e fr re was lighted, but
service was ‘suspended by desire of the rector, and e con
‘trary to the wishes The reetor
he had done, and |
has since issued a notice requesting gent
willing oh act as special — Dien to, 5
with him immediately, intimating pe^ strangers must
fo rward a clerical reference. In — uence o of this
ion what
the consequence was an explosion mph broke the leg
is wife in so shocking a t she p 2 m
| loss of blood before it was possi sible:
LivERPOOL.—The pue
view with the Home Secretary Perg the Commissioners
of Police, the result of whieh to be that the
enrolmen
Sulina, went ashore Mon y on the Little Burbo
bank, the sea makin E a clear breach over her. Life-
| boats and steam-tugs went to her assistance, but their
t
| effor ts were ofn pes the ship rapidly went to pieces,
t of 8 constables will be forbidden,
RC body of police be 2 to the e to-
— 8
_ THE TBT TO 3
.
cor-
d
-PryuoUTM. fe coi
» 92,
eek t
responding Ard "i the — ears 1
- 28th of Octobe
prisoner
P
as 1088; w . e=
e 1141. om return "of
. Duringthe | H
in all 1
corresponding weeks of the years 1849-58 the
number was 1570.
Provincial.
average
Sal
= previous night, and had not t had any rest for the ni ight.
e drank but very little, but, having received a s
n him. In reply to the Court, the captain said
| the hs i not offensive, but, on the contr e “his
jd The redi —
T at was wedi to
blow up Mr. Joseph Wilson, of Headford
treet, saw manufacturer in this town, 2 ile he
ily,
CAMBRIDGE.—Àf a congregation held on Friday the | St
Hon. and Rev. Latimer Neville, Master of Magdalen his family, six in number, were aslee n bed. The
ae ee d Vice- Chancellor for the o explosion tore up the floors of two Steig rob
Since th se for | smashing the marble man telpieces in each room, a
promot ing the mission to Central
of the Oxford, Cambridge, and — committees have
he
destroying portions of the furniture. so blew
— a wih ate ym wall, forced out the light over the
mt d
was held on Monday h.
for e trial
stroke some time back, a small quantity Me words took he
and | comm
n named Benjamin
o of tthe Cottage Spring beer- ani ni. ow
nhi s
| younger. |
and had lost there à considerable ‘sum of
s return he € his wife in a state oi
| drinking in the
An alt
peop re present tha N she began to |
weeks before, that — bad respectable —.
he rised that she harboured such |
Sheets hab he worked hard to I
but if she conti nued that course he
her, — he was willing to die with
inquest, after several edes i
— of the coroner that murder had b
rned a verdict of Manslaughter, two o the
—ů holding out for a verdiet of
The magistrates Mn — taken up the caseant®
he T in for trial on 5
ilfal Murder. ;
ge +
is now contemplate:
adn) clergymen, with a — at their —
consecrated either in this country b;
bishops of Southern Africa, and also to
Same time a medical
n
es
d | care
“supporting. eorge
nee with the — of Fern, on the b ere Dorset. They resided
0
nmates were personally injured. The
attributed to trade disputes, Mr. Wilson
uèntly 9 0
acards for eres Ae compliance with union regulations.
2 e age, the wife
o clu 3 has been obtained to the perpetrators of the pu
| and are „making every
conimiitteos to collect money for the pu
and also in a lonely spot known as Ashcombe Copse, and on | outlaws, and rebels and a ea oe
with the great centres of manufactures and — —— 8 e man went to his * y t g and —
for the purpose of raising the Hoge os red funds. The about 7 o'clock, leaving his wife h n ver given to Engin , or to ro
Bishop of Oxford has requested 8 ewe return about mid-day he found her lying on the floor he slightest de of compl, be
a Pieter-Maritzb in the co ead | with her head leaning against the wall and one of h > always acted towa
mission ; and rev. Er proba ly do | arms resting on a € Mte moe or gi wounds having — part. 4
80, as for some time on the mis- | been inflicted on different parts of her body appa- | the Pope holds his territory be seb
Sionary work in Natal without fee or wes rently with 5 razor, the — of whi was | the nobility or gentry of this country
The church of All — in Uu fond dn of the room and the blade|tain their om ^ .
t th st in — E that desperate struggle the agents of
Ackroyd, Tate ra for Huddersfield, € — mS — . fg Th . e teaching continually tl
tM € service last week by the Bis ishops of Ri a i4 x was hanging in the lobby, of 8 establis
. The —.— * of the burial- with iss ‘he clett the poor woman’s head alm at ever. can resis
„is estimated at from 60,000. to 80, wo. ormation was at once given to the Lari 2 — ue d by qeodaisa that tr
Deme. — been provided by Mr. — — —.— active inquiries; but up to Satur- lion — ente bes
1 t Po E eir princi P
parish of Haley Hill is vested. he pherd un! an adjoining hill saw a i s
man pass u the nate the inhabitan
rit ws tok of tears rday pre on an accident oc- i with a bun de, bi t Peyo nd this n body 8 of Great Britain with
1G lle at tive for we not fear that ex
— € nby bitb- 1 10 men, were ki killed mo — others the perpetra of th — — — cien soon rule througho
re” containing 1 was | Several tort ee of wearing apparel, h id t
e e wah aes addresses, with that of the
have been stolen, including a coat given for long
Noveuser 12, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
1 «x
of the — prs The following resolutions were | —2ā inst, at Milliken, Renfr rewshire Lady N NAPIER | do., 70s. to 100s.; Dunbar do., 90s. to 115s. ; Perth, Forf à
unanimously adopted :— — a — d ims at at — rr — “Oana all, * Fifeshire do., 008. to 90s.; Kent and Essex do. x yk" 116
*t Resolv pet i this meeting views with grief and abhor- — 50 5 E ace Poe ern de oos P eda — |
rence t — “olent Ery sacrilegious i reru of NON territories of A iust, at the 8 Horshs € the How | HOPS.—Bomovom Marker, Fri DAY, Nov. II.
- vue which is now being perpetrated, together with the Ars Ro bis LEY, of a daughter—ist inst at Wrock.| „Messrs. Pattenden & Smith report that in consequence
eto rts Yi unceasingly oe ae — the legitimate authority wardine, —— of Salop, the Hon. Mrs. RoBERT Herpent, | of the old duty eger y been declared at a less eum than many
à of a 5 hill Park , ^ e | expected, namely 328,0 T0. 28. 103d, the market has ve
of : > mpt 4 x a t
and | calumnions the E y^ unsparingly uttered by | E m. WiLLIAM eos of — |: | cases advanced from ls. to 28. per cwt. inet X
22 M. . . EPIS E ERN
the anti- Ca i , agains i overnmen e “a HN AnNorT, M. P., May or of Cork, an atter deducting 10 per cent. for 18 ewt. Lar. 15 Ibs.
e Pontiff. 2. That the temporal Gover: — x the | being the largest average acre 1 gross
Holy See, most venerable for its antiquity, most legi te in the 10th AN, at Am Saints’ * burch, | av — was 15 cwt, 2 Sh lbs,, me m deem dw — was
its origin, and most providentially secured an — oves Viscount FALKLAND, to jc charged 13 cwt. 2 ars. 2 2 Ibs,
man for the benefit of religion, is justly ess Y Sr. Arnax's—bth inst, | ‘OLD lor nn 1 ED, Nov. 4. 1859.
M dum P nS Ner eros a "ud anms; Th — COURT, ARIE THERESE LISTER, d — T Fa | Rochester ` - £188, i d
on is ment. E , there- " S daughter c e| anterbury .. m we » 68,194
fore, upon the temporal dominions of the Church is, 1 a re Pca ow inst, | " pis.
not so much a violation, however unjust, of the supreme poa OUGLAS, | Kent .. . ne MENOR
i a most ust and venerabl Douglas, Esq., third | Sussex .. ve ot d E ?
— 3 of the venerable temporal TP M Charles, fifth Marqu’ Y ee al up f Worcester T - ws T 22 9 if
the whole Catholic body thro oughout the wond. youngest — m t the late Sir Joun Scorr Farnham TE * — 3 21,028 12 34
3. "Tbat an humble address of condolence and sympathy with rt, of Springwood Park—gist ult, by pec Veg RE ˙˖ T eS 2085 6 64
our Hol me» ie : nder his present severe trials seat sd the Hight aoe the | —
f this meeting, aud that his Grace the TEWAN, oyne, £328,070 2 10
pani — ae * eco 3 ressi A Mam third 3 :
call upon the Catho lai of all isses. and epatis | the present peer Lut d peas ee
we c Y oi "
our Catholic representatives in Parliament, on gentlemen of | the Horace MEYER, vicar of Nort eadow Hi ay Tosto nunapay, Nov. 30, x x
S d on the members of the Catholic and — Cana, eldest — d of eec eadow T m s to” drm +» +» 058 to 105s
beral press, an who possess politica social, or literary A S — las 3 on
influence, to unite with us in defence of the unjustly assailed M. E Esq., of M; des nd | M ede. . 2 2
character T nd prerogatives of their supreme Pastor, and in V pel En oh of Pate daug - wm e 4 00 | * Davis aw
support of the sacred and inalienable rights of the Church." d rboroug h an SU M. Tu " T e
ERLAND Market, TuunsDAY, Nov. 10.
— obe Meadow Hy. 2" p Inferior Clover Tw to 9»
ng — ve
am —6th inst, 2 — e eco — |) Straw .. 33
Lorp Rec HIP OF EDINBURGH Unt s VEREL Dan. | Superior Clover ..98 105 — uin
In addition to » the office — Chancellor, who i is selected E wai dun a Eat ee Dex ai n WHITECHAPEL, Tuunspay, Nov,
the gra dowd hich has " E, Esq e i9 on. | Fine old Hay .. .. 808 v € old Clover - -100s to 105s
for life by the graduates, the w ich 'ollemache Col. | Inferi
y or do. +. 65 Inferior do. OT 90
iuto operation gives E the students the ditior PS a ISTED, aged 72—2 t, at the | Prime New Hay oo Fine new Clover ..
Lord Rector, who is a member of of the Uni iversity Cour 4 pv a : Warum | Info et " 2 -— =| Fine Ae — =
h D — ao — * Stra 7 32 [ Inferior do. —
seven members. Tlie el 9 akes place to-da — — Bog Scholefield, Esq, M.P. —
y» — RANE —
among the names that have been tec e at he: ence in Exeter, JANE, eldest daughter of BRITI WOOLA, —Loxpox, Fray, Noy
Lord Chancellor, Lord John Russell, Mr. G the late Franom Rovp, E i, OF dietam M Ni —— — e sours Aa LA being
eaves. It is however tici that t the
demand, but others, in n expectation of the large Government
gm will be between Mr. n and Lord N. qeu
mittees which been formed for "Lord
to
nico red ditto. Id Combing Skins — —
E and N s “Tos having united with t miri re a = | Blanket itto vira
dido: Farben Ken t Fle — ol 7— | Flannel Wool 12—17
who at present ; fills the oca of N. N atural Philosophy at ET AER eT ETE
H METROPOLITAN CATTLE MARKET.
Vicar T. "Leckford,
the 13 ity of Premi nd has bee - * tatprakan adi. 5 H. Hu —— Han —.— — MoNDAY, ‘Nov. T.
ir David Brewster as mAr the United th ult, in e wreck 0 the Royal Ch arter, ELLEN, The number of Beasts is ME 1
y less than on Monday
Calg s ": St. Salvador and St. Leonard, in the Univer- together pica th her four earn 855 of Melbourne, Cris last. i — is rink at advanced prioes. Although we have a
Fs much sm upply of Sheep the demand is so limited that
t. Andrews. — . — topeth Goor kd E M oe m — trade is not much E i Nether 5 is effected, but
iron we 1 362805 mpton, t the wr of —— zi Cha ay | quotat ions remain unaltered. Calf trade is more chi
Haw. JAMES, Adest son of iliis J Bac, | From Germany and Holland there are 1110 Beasts, 4110 Sheep,
: at 4 and 102 Calves ; from Scotian Beasts; from ireland, 400 ; 400;
Spie 0 0 € ult, in the wreck oft ek oya Chart . Nuran, renn Norfolk and — oer an and 2600 from
f Mr. Bisuop, of Book remet Villas, , Hallges ay, | and mii dland counti ,
lar borough Street t Police Court, s 24 4—26ih. * in
the R C s N, wife o 0
OTi mi i —
of in the arm 4 ps G 0 a hi a ^ s ER 8
a Pier om : 0 4 inchesti |] : ; ;
rds — E Pod lee e Fok — — $ coi 6 [S quis * . 6
—— Tete ife — second ogre ‘Do. Shorn
Willaume, Esq., of Leinster G
f
Y, Nov. 11. f
The su; br M Rok quia as of still it
exceeds tho demand. ‘Trade [s dull aj 22
— wong ond few purchasers. —— CAR
— — i e proportion
fo appt "Tum non owes cuis
fore — o
Davee: supply co umber of Milch Cows is 125.
ere- — to 4 10
4 8 tos 0 Do. Shom wh yos st
4
8
8
6—4 8| Ewes & 2d ality 4 A —-. Og
4—4 0 Do M
— -
GARDEN.—Nov. 1
.. Court or EXCHEQUER: Swinfen v. Lord e ee
Ff Counsd.—The Lord Chief Baron yeni delivered pan '
"judgment of the court in this case, ile h was argui
sinee by Mr. — —— asa motion for a new trial in the j
v. Lord Chelmstord, for having,
— quet eq ——
—
—4 8
110.
bad. Cucum-
. Cut — chiefly consist of
iolets, Mignonette, Chrysanthemums,
MARE LANE.—Mooay, Nov. 7.
ish Wheat to this morning’s
rna bien pas taken quic T millers at j
| Pine Apples, per Ib., PT poa 4 sieve, 6s to 10s treme ricos o E ine cdd t; foreign was
Grapes, per 1b., 2s to os Oranges, per doz „od to Is d improved request, but the sale ; we advance our
that pi
ene — * of a . if com-
3 Hahn that point,
Rule nisi
‘Melons, each, 2s to 4s doz., 18 to 1s 6d quotations, however de. rer descriptions. For
| 8 [bert on i, 50s to 60s | Barley of naam egre van m rie rai ——
jay | Amnis per bushel, 8s to 10s | Cobbs, do., 100s ae — eire drm, —
VEGETABLES. — 1 is — ae the prices lately
PER enh n Aed
Waar, — A Kent & Suffolk .White 31—46
ne selected runs.. ditto na
8
m his ieve, Porti — 3 —— —
eee re oe | = Norfolk...
y : ‘Potatoes,
brag has, pein aire e i U
igre et Be
Por the bridegroom elect, been postponed to a | rots per bunch, 6d
8 Henry Loraine BAKER, Bart., C. B., died
at Dunstable House, Richmond, in his 73d mbers, p. doz.
born at Nancy, 1 and married each
with 8
Williams Baker, formerly of —
now vicar of Monklands, in
originator of the Zoological G: — in
and — of the aquarium, w.
is with the — — dvd paient belong
PPP
Lady me BEAUMONT, “989 daughter
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICUL TURAL GAZETTE.
| Novemsrr 12, 1859
on | passag e to this king: lom, and include Taganrog |
cargo till on
Shire Wheat at 45s A. Odessa, Ghirka at 43s. to 41s. 6d.
sided and Berdia at 6d., all per 492 Ibs. ;} Galatz
Maize a at 33s., I Ibrail a 9d. 90
Odessa at 28 "oid. per
b
As., Dai ube at 238. 9d. both per 400 . On passage were
sold Odes: 1 at 9d. condition guaranteed, and at
32s. 3d. not guaranteed, Galatz at 34s, 14d., and both per 2 lbs.
Galatz Barley at 21s. 3d. per qr. imp. nett, without guarantee
fcondition. The arrivals of grain, English and foreign, thi
eek have been small. bo-day's market was very badl
— The English Wheat fresh up realised Ung which
ay w nobtainable, and the same may
+ — effected "of foreign, which however were ite d,
although chiefiy confined to speculators. Barley of e pred A
tions is in full dema a 5 NP Monday's prices. Oat:
fair request at late re
? IVALS FROM Nov. 7 TO Nov. 1
Baier. Ba ee n E "mo
Los geal 17 ae = d = sag
Xd. 610 ,, 1760 „ 6330 „ 500 bris.
Fripay, Nov. arket active E selling
at Id. to 2d. adv: La "Fe ur Fig pees 8 demand god. Indiam
Corn in active request at 6d. P4 Is. ad va s 6d. dea
Oats and mea l steady at late rates.
—
Oct. 1.42 ld 35s 9d 205100 99s 9d| 39s 7d 388 5d
K 3 0
— 15. 42 9 8
— 99..| 44 10 35 5| 21 99 6 39 2 37 7
— 29. 48 1| 35 6| 20 11 30 4. 88 9 38 2
ov. 5. 42 9] 35 922 1 80 2| 89 3 38 5
Agg. Aver. 42 7 35 8 21 29 10 39 -o
FLUCTUATIONS IN THE Last Six WEEKS AV
“Prices. | Oct. I. | Oct. 8. Cet. 15. = 22. | Oct. 2 Now 5.
43s ld y B oe
44 10 z si 25 2 A
42 9 zs di i Í 25 m Yt
42 6 2 e r — i zm š
42 5 | f 35 e ne è ET
42 1— — zx 85 es E
rii md OF THE LATE PROEESSOR HENFREY.
x &c., of King’s College, London, reccives M
— — f BOYS between the ages of 6 and 12, to
EDUCATE with her oie — Terms, from 60 Guineas per
ANTED, by a ee in the usd of Oxford,
an ARTICLE d ade A limited n: of Bo: ardors
Apply waa Aidan. Oxon
required to
a perfect ropagation of ov of Plants
outer elas as well as their Cultivation, and must also under-
e Grafting of Camellias S, Conifers, &c.—Apply
only, statin, g teris with references, to
Hurst & McMullen’s, 6, Leaden! hall
character
en of unexceptionable
vera sox yore
D, two Me
s HEAD GARDEN
_ to act a: ERS, and s men
as UNDER GARD ENERS. —Applications, stating age and
qualifications, with testimon be "x ressed to Mr.
ials,
id, (Re Lodge, Corstor-
ANTED,ag od KITCHEN GARDENER,married
at p tih children přeferred), I understands a Hene
n Agricultural Boarding School. The Wife t
séhold Work and Cooking 152 the boys. .
Poet house, fue fuel, and vegetables.— Miss Cooke, Montreal House,
eat
AN TED IMMEDIATELY, an active YOUNG
m4 MAN, to ay in Potting and Growing Soft-wooded
— Tod by 0 ey 5 personally to Messrs, BRET Ir,
25 the Plant Ve by an
e i ndon Nursery, a — vo You MAN.
who has been aecustomed to Pottin ? ind one DA for
London or the Provincial kets will hav en reference
Apply by letter only, stating where last emplo; oye ed, w a length
of time, and e e .—C. B., E A Aled, C.
treet West, We ae ens à
ANTED, a few E JOBBING H ANDS; con-
stant employ
e and Se
Road. St. John's Wood, N. wo
ood wages.—Appl at Mr.
dun, 14, Portland Place, Circus
o EEDS
3 pee 1 ie of the oldest
J ouses, of m le active habi
address, whose qualifications ale ago, mds pee roe — ner
8 hy sgt sable that he be n
trade. of Mr. Henry Lam
active young
conversant with the Seed , partic E m
of large consumption, such as Clover, Rye-grass, Turni
l, &c. must ——— a fair knowledge of Book- keeping,
E a 8. W. SurrH, 27, Great George Street, Westm
Lond
WANT PLACES.—Letters to be Post Paid.
“On November 2 21st t will be published, in crown gy; Ee
IE GARDENERS’ YEAR BOOK, ALN
AND LEM
—Age $4. rari, | ALY Price
AND DIRECTORY ron 1860. By Roseny MANACK,
Co-Editor
without
profess: all its
Ga 1
incumbrance ; understands his
—A. B., Mr. Fo
branches. ster’s Nursery, Edgwa idgware, ` o IM of Mn E itish Pomological Society, and 09. 000, Vigg.
ARDENERS (Hr $ A) IWO a a ; and one c E SE eili co wd besides the informati
Under Gardener or Foreman, at liberty to pun wi 9 ion usually
any nobleman or N requiring practical men.—A. B., n » Almanaces, a der cer end remarks dT for every des
the Nurseries, Saint“ t Johma, WO Ss aure: huic s, Worce owers, Fruits, and Vegetables introdu pon all New —
DEN ER R (HNA D).— Age 28, single; has a. Select Lists of the best varieties in cultivation, an ns the year
thorough practica al knowledge 5 his une lan including | Direc f the Nursery Seeds; d Florists
he Forcing Fruits, POTE W ables, 3 s Culture ot | Britain, Ireland, the iam t, and rica.
e and Greenhou asap ood character.—H. W., 4,| To Nurserymen, Seedsmen, Florists, Horticultural i
Marsh 5558 m. api aid querar e Advertisementa fr od abore” aaia x
D DENER (H SN —Age 40; thorough practical "red adi De uso my e page, 4ps,: 1
page, 258.; and Gace i Pie
London : **Corraa aoa n peer 162, Fleet Street ie c
xperience in every branch of his profession, Euri ular!
n Arranging and Laying-out nm ground, int in 99 m
monials.— D. M., Bedford Nursery, averstoe i
London, N. W. s ANNED GARDEN NE
Preserving RD Trees from Frost, Blight,
yard wide 142,
Mick — 2 — for
ARDENER (HRA D). Age 27, single; thoro ughly t, Birds,
acquainted with his re Sa ooh ast its * branches Hen rdi y ng gre d 5 bs. e yard wide l à pet p
Late and Early Forcing, and the Man ent o tchen and bo had at C. WricH?’s, 376, Strand, W.C |uantity.
Flower Ga vh Has ag l great ex dg wmm in talasa Pine Al l neice 10 N
3 gom Pot V &c.—A. M., Mr. T pre Gar- o Nurserym j
dene: . Bailey, Bur. X LE N Park, Aberdare, AINTS OF ALL OURS, ue ra "m 1
Glamorgan. from be Gd, per gal, will cover II y 2
LITY AND GE MANURES, equal to Guano, from 5
E NTRY.
E rores — Age 33, single;
rience ; is bih = practically aor e
t, Flower, and Kitchen A and
eu re" of Pines, Peache
Many yns — character and
Melons, a
1 , Eden Terrace, Rotherhithe,
nd M
8 3 —Mr. JAM MES, 3.
E.
1.—G. S
x pgi gal
ondon Do: a.
ROSCOP
?
x emà 30 305 eren ly under- s. BOTANICAL
s, Vines, also all kinds of fruits in
Thorou ghly acquainted with
bg on: ands the management
The Field, e 6, 1
ed, 2d Ed., geg o: pers
6 stam
ENER (H EA AD or SINGLE-HANDED).—Age 30,
monte no incumbrance; w - understands [i pro-
ch: m eee ntleman he is about to
he 6 Hyde, near Cheltenham
—Age AE child. Has
a good practical knowledge — is profession in all its
baa with 24 years good chara F. S., Frog Grove,
near Guildford.
ARD
mendation.—WALTER BERDOE,
W., and 69, Cornhill (north side), E
W., and 69, Cornhill (north side), E.C. Ta
EAL AND voir 9 this Ru
ew Lon
and RE^ “List p Bedding —— a bu
Tottenham Court R Nas
RA — PATENT vA MACHINE.
SIMPLICITY AND Nate UM EFFICIENCY.
—A. Kay, The Gardens, Lillesden, steads ai
DENER.
Hawkhurst, Kent, a e Wberly to engage with any noble-
equi es of a thoroughly
ae servic prac-
man or gentleman r
tical Gardener.— S ras i A $
L LANDSCAPE GARDENERS &c.
scriber C ae 3 Bl Forest
West
With some yee
Gardening, &c. The hi Eton een can be
need answer this advert isement who isnot thorough yc
in his profession, and has considerable paoros: —G. Frost,
Nurserrman po Seedsman, Brushford, Tiv.
—'|he sub-
Maneg in
t rom all
land, sd Scotlan
very far ee d
ÉLUS BRADFORD,
hes
My S alway’ s hiva a
EON NURSERYMEN.—Age 21; is an expert hand | , N. B.
rafting and Budding, and ones ai hein the if desired, ore "— prova É
adi out-door pa re — Nursery wor! to and Price free by pos st.
bove who require “hia services.
himself to of the
Qood. T Mr B., Po PRIZE MEDAL, PARIS EXHIBITION. [73
ETCALFE, BINGLEY, AND CO/S New
and Penetrating Tooth Brushes, Penetrating
1 We. em t b
escription of Br
Brushes irs he
de Office, Erdington, n
mingham.
T AND STEWARD or BAILIFF.— Age 40, married;
a native of Scotland. Has had conside € “experience | H
Property, Buying, Selling, and
Testimonials ot the
, Wat E rd, H
in the management of Landed
f Stock in general, &c.
A.. Yer Farm ont
— and Ca
sold imi Tiii ponen thei
pation. — celebrated Alkalin
id attending. Mar Bo 5
Address, st d we
bove
Stock AU. imo
his last Ago wem hating salary, S. B., Post O Office,
Halstead, Essex
HOPMAN. Ag
Houses.—E. A
31; 15 years in town and country
D NAI Office, W.C.
or good
= and fo
— or — “Christmas —D. B. STOCK, „ known, Row
Somersetshir — pr inguish
the nobility throughout
it aton ce announces the fa
pi —
On the 24th of November will be published,
HE BRIT 1 FoR 1860,
ice ls.
THE COMPANION d m ALMANACK,
HOMEOPATHIC
y fi
The first, publication of the — 1839, speciall
provide them with a Deve
Almanack,
Yea 1 500 ks.
endeavoured to maintain its
most com and accurate registers in every department of those icons "Ra 2 offee
Government and of public (— — a wider object has Pm pir gra
been 2 pursued in the union of the British Almanack and
the Companion. These bound together constitute the t publi ‘generally pie pment at
coniplate and at the same time the cheapest Manual of Current | and Ph 3 te.
twort!
In omnim; and the most trus hy record for future
fere
THE Lo ee e cu ^d Ner c
um th boards, le
p copies (HzaAp)—Age 42, married; under- | Contain, i ite t Almanack,
BEN sa Vines, Orchard House, p has a thorough
9 noe 3 ger Hr Flow — e 3 n Gardens. Good NGST THE SUBJECTS FOR 1860, ARE ns on,
——, y Surrey. Necessrr ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION in POLITICAL JLLOWAT: =
e dip pde (is BRE ous LAUDER, With VIEN OFFICE, dud Career KOOI By Gronon Dopp pul. pueda a .
Ww " .
married) to any lady 8 e rastvorthy |T Tun Navar Force ofthe U KINGDOM. : pi ane al actioned ts ed ts Use
servant ; is N 8 — his profession. . B., Witley HE 5 mp COLLECTION of SCULPTURE. By JAMES THORNE. | hospitals. t pen netrates to the sources
Court Gardens, esters’ Histon re — of em By TS Rose ree F. R. A. S. corruption M 55 the *
" ISTICAL mali
Gene (Hean). — ge ET proficient | in| THE Nar — ‘Dust: aoe, y — r een
vation of Bs Fruits Tp A THE
zn ze
E WR — 3 and M — — — INSTITUTION.
THE LEGISLATION, Sra: enc A and Pustic | and gra ealthy flesh
IMPROVEMENTS, and CHRONICLE of 1 discharged ‘matter ; this process goes id om ate ad
London: KN IDT & Co., 90, Fleet Street, he and Sold by all | until the orifice is ‘filled up with 80
is cally cured,
Booksellers in the United Kingdom, radi
n 1553 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURA! G*7*TTR
! kir 7
The Gardeners’ Chronicle nds are incapa acitated from a acquiring real pro- | next. The following is an abstract of “the conditions
perty either by gift or lega without a pr on which the enrolment will
thosisati t gacy previous 5 vw take place
authorisation "seri Svery volunteer must be a i 5
rin ap p i y a sovereign reseript to that effect. | years of age. He must Also! beg f r id und
S]. A eireular has been essed by the French | within the 10 years previous, and. have served at least
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1859. Government to the Powers which signed the Treaty pantaiage n A able séman. He must further
ici pe E » VF Wait, 'ienna and e three principal Powers of body — to pie, A ord
3 erly; and a pension of 1 dee <
ESTABLISHED A. D. 1844 ; 3, L MaLL East, LoNDoN, W. Italy, inviting them to send enipotentiaries to | pacitated from earning a livelihood ; 3 3 ‘of a ge, i
CAPITAL 1 "00,0000. the Congress. If these invitations be accepted the | Ot Pre" iously incapacitated. In consideration of these allow-
desirous of INVESTING MONEY are Powers represented at the Congress will be France place of Grill being ther come mil i oach Feat, the
ested to examine the Plan of Tur BANK or Derostr, | G erm ‘ 4 d on shore either some ship of war, or some
by whic La high rat eof Interest may be obtained with ample reat Britain, Austria, Russia, Prussia, Spain — os 1 rp whens - —— of volun-
secur urity- oos mide by Bpoçial p may be with- Portugal, Sweden, Sardinia, Rome, and Naples, "| mnie for ring them — por er where they reside ; — 9
* A uary e olunteer 0 equired
and = S. Aes aai — Moye m xs Managing Din puso rA ad og and Im be allowed to — to 8 —
preme y TR E n cases where he has lakers home to attend drill his
DELICAN LIFE INSURANCE " COMPANY. Home = els. travelling and other expenses are to be paid. And, in order to
Established in 1797. 70, Lombard Street, City, E.O., aud |. — de "rust nent fre Seah Wed ia permis =
bei, erem een a must not, wit special -—
BONUS OF 1861. ZAM policie 2 effected Prior to the Ist July, Tux Court.—The s Abos n, . Consort, and the — Et calle voyage that will occ than sí
9 E A months. If called out for actual Soe, be wil "1
uh RES vica ree La of Premium, will participate in the | Ro oya 1 family continue a t Windsor Castle. On Friday | with the same necessaries, era eerie be wl be povided
For eee i us and Forms of A ‘apply at the Offices | morning the n, n, with Princess chi William, auees, and enjoy the same chances of promotion aud prize-
as above, ny of the Company's Age: Princess Alice, e Princess He — phi in — will 10 "equally eligible e. the n pear 8, he
mie ASSURANCE ——— ridin ng- -house. The Prince * — out shoo wich Hospital s 2
N pital, and, in case ds e
HE BRITISH MUT UAL RIFE. ASSURANCE ing, accompanied by Prince Frederick Wills, the entitled to — e pension Pi 5 the regula r seaman
SOCIETY entertains prop osals of any description involv- | Duke of - Cambridge, and Count Bernstorff, of his own rating. At the expira! ration c ota every rears
ing the contingency an Ife. Dnohem of Kent. visited her Mas esty. Mirza AN Khan may, if not actually called out at es time, 22 k om de
"ire AE the Persian Ambassador, was » to the — . i dee Keen ee hd "t — —
Tuomas Hamber, Esq. io W nE eee pad ; he should
Ralph E rit Bea Bev. William uin N. x 2 at an audience by Lord John Ra Russell cres of State | rise in his profession to be master or mate, — "obtain em-
John S. Feltoe, Esq Joseph 8 | for Foreign — and d his credentials as | P109 2ent in that capacity, he will. be allowed to quit without
J. V. Gooc George Alfred a Walken Esq. | Minister from the Shah of Persi om e Duke of Cam; tao mative service by rond DOWN: Get f D SAPAT
The c pide invited to Ver mad $4 3 wa e, the 5 Minister à ess Bernstorff, — that it is intended aK. £e p EI power po niy cake
granted by this Office ord and Lady Palmerston p the pen Th Che oo er pem E E fequi S, sudan tn:
~ Premiums to Assure 100/., Payable at Death (with Profits). peo ing after dinner the ween and Prince Consort uos a Kan "^ sca M "Hin Royal High tl
TTT — His ighness the
p" next Birthday. | Annually. | Half-yearly. | Quarterly. rer etd Mie (ou Ud and P een 25 rederi — William | . ee Chief has decided u ^ establishing a
: an ist p
30 £2 611 | £1.4 2 £012 5 Duchess of Kent. On Sa arat — — the Queen r of soldiers, — the p s of m mainteing
40 L3 11.421 1 916 and Prince Consort, accompanied by Prince and Princess | meme, betwons: Me 0 M regards liability to
PER 3476-8: 3 En 9 8 | corporal punishment. The following are the leadin,
138 4 m, Princess Alice, Princess He — t 8
Pea culiar ne —.— aro ated ctable an a rolle r ANKE weit Put] features of this arrangement : —
parties who would undertake the places where no All
agent bas yet been appointed. , 10 5 ze ber an Satan ditt | mouth b gs apecial train, and were present at thelannch | dn and" edi Satine tneparmy rll ma te feet
references and fall partic x OT — ied: of the Victoria line-of-battle ship. The yal party during — of war — liable to corporal punishment. They
i me Secre returned to Windsor Castle shortly before 5 o’clock. In | Will continue in the first class unless they should incur a-
17, New Bridge Street, Blackfriars, E. C. th y tion into the second class x the — kroa of crime, and for
| this purpose his Royal Highness has classified the offences
i beri 0 ing the Q Y "ab. ted by soldiers under i he effec
P n ay mornin 1e Queen and | which w. the virt: abolition of corporal punishment for
Nels of fbr ateek, i [e ‘ y eric Wi all renee except those who have degraded themselves by
sntations which E . berger e f. 2 rince | mined that after a soldier has been disrated from the first to
e
represen' were the second. class, a year's uninterrupted an d D €-— n
iced last tek 2 € gres Government to | ser — e d ph a s showing a des
that
tion and amendm In m -—
acceptance of the | ley p : = . the | the Commander: T ‘Chit e — g bis hope thet y ke will
Regonoy ot l a by roe vct DE CA- Quee niedby Princess Frederick W illiam. ror give confiden © qood soldier by securing to him, on
near ea Prince Consort, | entering her Ma ^ ^ service, an immunity E ME
ave led to Settee for ry rud D with Prince Fr 1 punishment, which immunity it will be in * to
preserve to the day when his engagement Ae
ae nid rh were unprep abr s
in ieation 8 the asa m e
differen
Syäney, Sir "Georg i was held at the — Conrs.— An € medius
ua e om TES eta
and
Franee the pha ag:
p Ailesb
assume a more serious s diiit between
and Sardinia, On Sunday evening, on the
arrivalof the deputies at Turin, charged by the |
T
Assemblies at thé Romagna, Tuscany, Modena, Pe
Rege PRI Princess Frederick "Wiliam, t he Prin
a Tarte; E — = eed 8 NCE DE | Princess M, ary of Camb ridge, walle din the die Home) Fark, a ns,
* his Royal Highness told them that and visited the Duchess of — : The DT Agent a a p by Earl 1 ting.
weighty representations, reasons of political Prince Consort went out shootin nied by ires sn. din Hey. Admiral —
: i Pri t E
propriety, and the approaching Congress deterred Prince Frederick William, the Prince ce of eninge, of Lichfield, Sir H. De Voeux, Colonel Charteris, C.
š i f the Marquis of Ailesbury, and 1 Spencer. X „Charteris, Capt.
him, much to his regret, from — 2 dit 46 í t and it was intimated
i a vi her
their appeal, and accepting the charge offered sit A by Lord Spencer that d
him," n at the same time he thought he should ffs dais ks morning Queen, with asd Qa sup A - movement in any way, and that the
by designating the C er | Fr eg "Wiliam, S ined in —.— icone 15 — deen and his Roy * -
B signating Gere quii hootin. ji xs rizes for — if the associa ould prosper.
TONCOMPAONT as the person who ought to . b Frederick 2 the He r. disi t was resolved that Mr. Sidney erbe U the Minister
the Regency of Central Italy. The prec oy hens c " of itary of War, should be the first president, and that
"Prin ry
í ted à U . | Prince of Hohenzollern, and the Leiningen. and
ad to this transfer of th i Ashburton, Lord Eversley, and General Peel should be
y Mnre s NI ine -— uchess of Cambridge re re aio vd the trustees of the — Twelve — —
Ruonco n hein è 202
offer, mw gy Wows te, he of Wellington, the Portuguese Minister, the gen lemen were elected v ice pres iden nta, with a cou neil
a ee ee pencer, and Major-General Wylde left the castle. The |^ fn, a bor ing sommi r. George Russe
Regency, expressed his willingness to accept —— a ona ob banker the Earl of St. — 2 as honorary secretary. On the same evening
the honour and responsibility o: office. The Germans, the Earl and Countess of of Malmesbury, the | General mn of 5, of the Les the — of Musketry, in
tates of Parma, Modena, and the Romagna | Countess Blacher, Count Gustave Blucher, the Right — — Vol „ e A ging tothe
e since tendered their thanks to the Prince on pr and Mrs. Her! aan , and Colo nel the Hon. El ho, MP. : to the Queen’ i f which
virt seasons and have informed his Royal Mrs. Gordon PT a visit. On — — „ an- A n's Volunteers, of w
tit oct morning the * rincess Frederick |
lig s that they hav ith gra iliam and Princess Ais, Walked in the Home
regency of the Chevalier, r BUONCONPAGNI On ark, and visited the Duchess of Kent at Frog-
arrival this n Paris the French more. "Te ue 8 accompanied by Prince
the act came to town a special
of es Wi The Pri
one — their dri
nd that the volunteer
which would re
RR „ Trent T S TTO eT. eS
1 ; : Samal >
Regent, has alised the approaching N Go- | adopted by Italy
close of his diatatorship by summarily abolishing | | ont havo giren otis tha under the Act of Pai quently, by the Royal family of Sardinia in
the isition as “incompatible with modern Tia t of ion, the d v the reserve he Regency have given great dissatisfaction to
ag i v 000 seamen under the the Royal 8 t, which has made known its dis-
rud
civilisation,” and by issuing a. decree by which | force of 30, et im Re TAS.
the Church and dign establishments of all force of 30.000 Sil commence on the Ne Ist Sot ka approval to the Sardinian Cabin : 5
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE Am AGRICULTURAL ——
The Moniteur of , Baturday
+A
nments of Italy.
tl e Federal military | o
has — its vedis to the special
concerning
constitution
Gover
in 8 the e proceedings of the differe ent
offering e Re egency zi
“This sabi tted, especially eii the
and
. —
—The Berlin journals pout a great im-
{ Novempen 19, 1859
lay that a Ministerial er
by p» à. june of Fu reae 1 6
cially denied. Council of
State ho owever id
is to be re
pue circumstances of the i sone of
Opoa te on
King,
taken
ia foie of high politieal s
Eur mea e he affairs of Italy his Majesty continues 1o ER pil long walks and | present aid that the Sardi Were
nian i
— becuse it tends to prejudge questions whic h must there be tides in the . hbourhood ed Potsdam, and that e be medie, AG assemble before the C e f
d. Th i i Rae meets f
The 333 e 'Tuesday in an article signed by ner of observa ation are also much improved. On he question of the Sanat of Central aly to Se
its chief editor s: ecasion of t the „Seh iA “Bestival the Prince Hebei dinia will be 4 ully disc - „ and numerous aher i
“The acceptanc Regency. by the Prince de Carignan d Sadia nni, al prize of 1 1000 dol- from the „peop le of the hies will be Presented, i i
would have caused te open intervention of Sardinia in the | lars in gold, a ae gold a —.— o their cause, & i
affairs of Central Italy, and the en genia could not have pre- n the best Mon ‘of 2 man dramatic poetry. The Farini, Governor. b Bologna, has - Signor: |
vented, on Rig C hand, the entry of Neapolitan troops into following is the f the reny of the tribu rey E the Inquisiti decree
the Roman territor E quisition as incom.
A -offi ss an of Wednesday contains the fol. | Gazette to cer rtain ale ega atio e Augsburg Gazette patible with 5 civilisation. Such p
Pu seini-officia org y 3 the recent inerview bee ot Ge Emperor of | tho f the Mortara e
Mes ie message received from Turin stating that the Prince and the Prince Rege Prussi ser E I api m
— Mey 7975 an did not confine himself to the refusal of the espiti t de — PM our M us assurances
but undertook to offer a substitute in bec person of itat r3 relations: oy Prussia and England could not abundantly supplied
JJ... ᷣ in conmgnonce, of the mesing at Florence of the 13
followed the wise counsels offered by. t the "Goveram gak of | its Todos believe that that meeting was directed against baldi, with s À i
France, as expressed in the letter of the Emperor to the King. | England; that Prussia, at the instigatio [of F e and of |.the frontiers in cons
It is questioned by what right Sere 7 seme to praedae Roms, "thd entered into the views of those Powers to isolate | tuy] had tal
th us f the Cong Eae in naming a Regent for Central En ngland, and. had 2 he eng ent, in the n of ness na E
ec gen 0 1e CO; AUR
Italy, thus by his nomination assuming that the. Du 3 ar between England, to. maintain absolute T.
Sa 8 This proceeding is con-
E aie a annexed io Sa
ccordance with the rights of
M os to all custom, and n
the people.”
The — of 9 in an article signed
by its secretar
e Frenc rm ent, t the principles of its
TRA has recommended the Cabinet: of Turin to annul the
appointment bs the Reg which the Government of the
ing of Sardinia has de e Chevalier Buoncompagni, as
— ä — 9 c5 the questions brought before, and
— ach upon the competency of, the Cc his advice
is ba side x ^ ‘oof
for p Ttalian cause ;
field of partie, and the Anal settlem ent of whic 27
only the decision of Europe.’
e Moniteur of eran contains a note of which
act:
ou improper. motives,
— of the Bishops, in order to rponn
body filled with. mistrust towa
the Government. Th — papers — = — — to
all those circulars, notwithstanding they e: en
i intentions of the Em —— — Folio
General Montauban has been named General-
in-Chief of tlie — „expeditionary foren to China a,
It is unders po pular
the army. The Ge — senses
celebrated Doineau trial. The Senators Roulan
General L peines REN the 3 of Br uges
and W „ and Bishops o m and Li imoges,
rnals,
rie ds
WT sio e]
e
enumerate tenn
n:
e
B
| ot. the oth, pios near the island of Unie, i h
ran
neutrality. The Augsburg Gazette finds support for its bod
peur ers in =, — — ns and EE pus of the
o hawi in
ct of the Go eee — E sio attack d it
Augsburg Gazette, by adoptin EN uch a line of conduct, places
itself on the same footing a: nó wF hte urnals
turn to — ene ee language c as A 5 opposition. pe in
Prussia, and s Se e but malicious falsehoods.
uch tactics oe p E aregearee ely in kee team E W
seütiments of German Patio
—An Wii autograph letter has been
“a the Minister S ET Baron
ruck, expressing the desire of t
che the deficit in the 1
rnals
8 every ai
E of ihe year
which | the
ith the
€
1860 to i
2
increased for the discussion of this subject. }
+7 T. AAP
asser
eneral Mezza
restrain their ardour.
Pope intends to send Car
Order
ongress,
an
Pe
who bar M permissio
TURKEYX.—Advice:
inst. as
tional political Ey social privileges.
ler Festival a
trations of a bra character too
1 RIATI — The Au stria an "Dias
“During the recent |
(o
"$
re
tof ane e to th
The aramis d
Berlin, has be
i T *
Moustier,
appointed | s
Bourqu retire
e Mennewat pos dei res from
a
The
nated. in a soma of. Not Galley, the jury
Denim henti induced b counsel to believe e she
ess gan m. — — W wrong, and oug «xr
acqnitted on the ground of irresistible iple To
produce this 5 he read a senti-
are, Vienna | floa:
GA
rnerio, in. ae ian Illyria.. The pas , Speci
ME le iene asp sav "d and w. 85 vow of
seyeral sienne from Tri sel en
sted off
rir — unts from Tu ate » that
letter o s diner of the French to the King of
5 a he Regency of the Prince
intimated tiol if the King should |
be dra he
arignan,
rds himself t
could
t. Vienna several 5 r demon-
k w
the recent the
3 the
E Quer oh of Widdin.
tied
mental letter which had, he said, dome written, A her
to her lov ver, but the Chariva rints- in parallel |;
et
aux Came ii
Tes changed save a “hackney coach? substituted. fo
“ Seine wherry.”
Rr sn sie Morocco. — Marshal O'Donnell jus;
to. Cadiz, after having effected a survey
coasts of Africa, The military. operations
ad 3 de Olano,
Ech
in the 8 are now K Cadiz
have nominated. a
the lat in favour 0 P pos ian cause, a
that the King will leave to the d
he Prince de Cari
his —
am deeply moved by yotr offer, and tender my thanks
to the Assemblies and the tiele co S
given m 1 believe t
ce.
ced less by my Exin
"i the
ing ecision of the Con- |
di gren, all that relates to the r decays of Italy. W
0
lished, in w
of
in -changes War vy heir costume
It is asserted that Vely Pasha is
- sentences of
ps E the Treaty of P KJ E
has ed from Crete, It is said that
ve been settled. Said Pasha has b
works
"dines T Italy who Have French to the English Gove mente
Mar: ‘seilles
of Ll
explicit "i Bm disagreeabl
n than b gem the
of the me The Ki has offered to serve in the e your feelings, which n Tul oui nationa
dition if nec 3 the Queen has presented to Marshal those of order and respect for monarchical institutions
O'Donnell, to be worn constantly is neck, a Du Leche m ions, s eiim of of ae 8 ty, am
Se don ith: i e approaching Co: ter ley much regret,
Mee which, with to hand, she has atta from responding to your ‘appeal, a eso the charge
the E m possess miraculous virtue; and offered to me. This ior bearangs on my part, and the sacrifice
A ontpensier Peri en the expense of 24 Lam thus makin dug wit prove more useful to the interests of
rified cannon ä of Seville for r eee n ke iue |t
ae Anden valier Duoocompagni ae the person whe ought te be intrusted
states the E Regency oP Con Teye Return y thanks to the | report say:
Madea a a 1 0 — attacked Ceuta, | People you represent, tell them that their erance and | p;
and that the besieged were ae ing to make a sortie | their general conduct MI pan pgs ump eins NE
"px . m
to repulse them. The Christian population of the sea- | wishes, and who will ney oe kaini e Eos TA eat | S
ates ave been exposed to greab danger ge the iren ds loya lty.”
fanaticism o e Moors, vaca nothir ee but the esence | The F then 1 th li
s ships
100
ba e, in
t the ]
reply intimated his readiness
bro ought
hake.
and t na have sin
=
—.— ae e of that office. he |
the Romagn |
ee hers in the ing with degree. ‘own
his bed at the time, and, on — n
arrest of judgment, both on. "account
indictme nt and errors in the verdict.
number ff
from = place was “stam women, and children, tendered their thanks t o the Pri rince de ead for |
Plenipotentiary at Z rich, will lea fü aliet
Caur 2 ey day) n ralifications of, the Ts m ot Pe. e fae French Gerrit winner rad
d Dp t r against the. nation, aud ud is nett who
ne from Turin that the ener Buonco who
115 E e d ing of the Federal Diet on | was on iei poiut of leaving for Central Holy t m " enter |
STAR. Hen sed of: 1 sep n Sop, pe Hesse sire assel to sa his fu netions has postpone ned his departure. It is
i 2e, ssia, Thuringia, Olden- Idi has sent in
burg, and the Ha inue "Towns voted for the re-establish- e generals o 5 b Contra Near a dnd
i Amh of Sio comand on of 1831; the representatives or | is qd to wd to 115 island of Sardinia. The Kin ng,
"ul 8 Y voted in favour of the constitution | it is added, has named him a Lieut feiert $ in his own
others abstained altogether from voting. | army. Fifty: Wege ate belonging to Garibaldi's
The committee id u i si the proposal
corps
have returned to Venice. It was reported in Turin
the prisoner Was Uus
M "be 5 on the dae.
pi composu
+e Nee = Te
stated that ho. ientin Mi = 2 to n
m Vir wants m the same m iet ima na ed
V et Misco A that ne: "ad "no int š
ding bl
counsel, gave UT
of Virginian 3 f r
nounced guilty o consi y, t
The case of Cook; ^s second in
NovemBer 19, 1859.]
daring g the hours of business. raffic of the streets
iously im ! cabs, om dis uses, and other
ide — ing grea t difficulty in traversing the Streets,
while pedestrians were almost at a * to find t
way, and the link-men rea na Be ich
conducting. persons ‘OSS the roadways.
with injuries received b y being
“harvest y
At Sev
run over and in yos
a riv boats a
n during E dan and
In spite ‘of the pre-
2755 taken to preserve order by lay lest it vas a body
s again |
Enl
THE GARDENERS' C
and the shipping i in the river a con cae.
mag * bove | ex
ru the
CiTRONICLE
AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
1 of his g s guilt, After ra very c areful and anxiou onside:
tion of all
the facts of th 8 very peculiar — : hav r
- * t th T
that there is — doubt of t 4 ie M
my
day was s fully committed for trial at the assizes on the
rid = W. tu py
te rector's serv -— and though t the presence of the
t al rioti „
] A hi hissing
o lou
excite the Avi of the congregation whil lida
aght into the church to to the disturbance
HH
y
stody for hissing, — were ed A
Monday, ‘the one 20s. and the other 10s. each,
© j
Wn
— inquiry
e nced o
— to TY the — tobim ota. free perdon, whi riti | TON.—A few days ago the Earl of Seg ann
tc D
victed it È oe ear offa rj of which be — | ina d his qi at Eggesford, North
against him for bigam The necessity which I have felt for won, with » gupon ospitality, house was
advising her Majesty to grant a free pardon in this case has | „ attired in fustian or scarlet,
not, asit appears to "^ arisen from any defect in the constitu- | and a sumptu past was provided for about 800
from the imper fection of lind mà vm noe and trom the fal. ts. Advan cg iis en of the om
bility of judgment, in an obscure malady, of skslfal a a testimonial to the Rev. John E of
rienced medic: Lond SOR ave C. Lr Sunc Swymbridge, who for many y : the
ERI s or THE Pon sx MURDERER, A r duties of a master of hounds in the n — i
pite was received b oy the Sein on Satu ae viag senting the testimoni uc 7
for the peisoner Charles An nnois, a Portuguese s seaman, | men many frien
w ted of at the last session of the welcome in every r -— ue it's datas
— * | Court, and left for execution, the day that M had shown an attachment to req plan
for " eing Monday pns but he ha id never heard even
— lest. "The" ted for clergyman
respite bas been. grant
he murder in confinement in a m" atic
F THE Rovan Cua — The Gove
into -— loss of the R Roy al C 2 com-
y
e chase a
charge of — SY
Mr.
mpa
4 it was stated that the | Rev.
Rus sell had received a C — from *
LN
that he
upon *. on ——
rm ng
| east up and at the Frain eld
t Am rdiet of Found Drowned was returned.
officer of R
— weh, a ve
ended anniversary of the | aro
Yen Chapel hich W. 5 pa have been sene Y ag |
by a
sermon
min: 142 has b
parish, at the ache of the Bishop o vf ndon.
Sr. PHILIP’S, CLERKENWELL.—On onday evening,
at a large meeting of t the committee of the Parochial
by th
aba ndoned in the present state of the | presen
Londo
ared to be an
is — was a leather
sovereigns and several nuggets — gold.
The total
amount of PIA “recovered by tl to the
e divers up
ey
80 nie esteemed by his present e. chat the
had also presented him with a téstimonial of their
, | esteem.
Bs
ral serious incendiar es have taken
place lately in this pen of Cambri dcn. Willingham,
whi ch Was 80 sev verely devastated a few weeks since by
esent time is 5
HE Nu An BALTH. — The —— General's
official report states that. the deaths gistered in
th 051
12, — 1
Schools, in Amwell stri ome a ell, it
unanimously resolved to attendance at
was | In the corresponding week of the 10 years 1849-58 the
the church of St. t. Philip, "Granville S quss e, Bagnigge | to
Wells Road, tha Umen of the charity children w
had been in the habit of attending that — for |
Divine worship, “in consequence of the 2 ractices |
carried on there under the ministry o e Rey. W
Wroth."
New T HAMPSTEAD
RATION o CHURCHES
gent’s Park, an
Tem , erected in Belsize Lane near
n all 1848 children, were 5 y^ Ri ty “3
the 10 13 = of the years 1849.58, t
"| average number was 1
wiss CaMBRIDGE.—
m
68 ; * h, if raised in proportion
the i jmp of pop ulation, will — e 1174. The
pts urn of last week was ther efore 1 121 — vis average.
Der the week the births of M boys and 930 girls,
vinctal.
Archdeacon Mackenzie has accepted |
several stacks of grain were consumed.
e been the act of an
fre, in which
» pet hee of — rel
e of the most brutal assaults ever
trated in the West e d -
notice of the
the t e nei N of Brighouse 22
shaw, Geo «ob Chappell, William Scott, Charles Cook-
son, and — A n, were charged w with a scan-
dalons Mind upon two young women of hie
— 2 * Martha and Sarah Purro ee Dy
both reside in this
— by the Bishop of Lond nr for
which is from 25 designs of Mr. Teul of Craig's
Court, is Wes seating n persons, and has —
erected at a of about 3500.
diapered, s
l et, and is said to be an original Tere of | €
ture prevailing in the briek churches of
and any. The latter, which is a
structure and eruciform in shape, is capable of accommo-
been erected from the
— FovxTA INS.—On Tue esday morning the first |
public pillar drinkin; ing fountain in the metropolis, which
has bee along anc in erp f erection, on the northern |
side o Circ —— Street, was — by =
ts donor, with 25 ch ceremo
mission to Central Africa, The f
0 officially. . and has been
satisfaction.— Bishop
* oy integrit;
go bot
n received with sah |
ea
the sweethea
The ons of
80 3 ws oti er
has been ts — —
re as Ah su
T Saturda;
Chatham « dockyard comp! — — (sic ing
am us frigate Lawrence, eer ly cal
Shannon, Py as made the galla
cap ture of
lage concourse of person This
= ae any te yet erected. in the |
again piele to the Aie of sitting at rali
in nh public s streets of the town insane | soldie rs dis-
ftal ot E. fa ^
esp: age pgs
mit
got 200 or DT from Brig
MEC Rg Eai further on 1 9 5
KE however, that ed cs at
shocking ith th
their
—— ropolis, rese
| that they may become Ti to the parish. The
Ep Tema Pe. ut 2007. "m. le 3 +
the — de useum — completed. The basins
— ga from blocks of grey marble N
and streams of water issue from the mouths of
lions carved in bas-relief, forming a highly ornamental
e on either side of the principal entrance under
ier . It has be
- Gavermment. are justified 3 "de. pier they ha ve|
Jar ted.
writ ab Bosto
re | | roceedin arie 22 — the 3 p».
kie gy ast to "e it is alleged they
have rendered themselves 8 notice that
effect been given A arish authorities
| have 7 to defend jose ations, in order that it
|may be decided by the co f law whether the
— The committee appointed to make|
into a neighbourin n
One of the „ was at length rescued by the other,
who 88 fians wi ge
and li
ran off for ass
ected af a an more ‘ireadful urn whieh wa subse-
uently repeated in Elland Wood, into which they
dragged pm 4 1 she became 9 Th
nate sufferer is of spotless character, and is now in a
of health. Frida
— ng — On Y, „when som med ad
HA
P or the wife and family of Dr. H
determined tbat they had better joi
nit, rs. Humphreys and E
| children. p^ A by a recent packet and arrived
on, after a very stormy passage, on tbe 23d
Dr. 8 then in prison * his
ult.
of the
change of
— to cee
f bi
hd
H
sg
2
et
is
:
P
qo — d 1 o^ jut
ainted again t ment she saw him.
prisoners, said this w:
acts he had ever heard rx" next to actual murder.
Virtually they were one as bad as vraies and ¥ fie -
Mary Dar time alive. page die aye e ungoy
Was proved by beu cai 3 The pr urdered his wife, an inoffensive woman employed
wee See defence, ze w fe com mmitted for E trial, and in the Be ise d trade in the town. It geen isi
k monger Lane in cha; arge of the Kings 2
wife for
d the
had, in Morti - E
e fe epe eom has
b hee Sera of f Sta he Lord Chiet |
violent —— ca^ obliged to live apart f from
n, communicating the grant o Abe p pardon:
ther she meant to live with tim again. She
* Whitehall, He then
ee knowled the roceipt
M pos "ee ls — — report, o the 18th ut on the case | a knife which he had conceal t him, and aimed a
Canem 8 burst, as convicted x abe e blow at her breast. She cried Tustily for help, and a
— — de cm murder, v ced to man and a boy ran h t arrived à moment
ESSE Zour Yr ap suggest i that report that renes late. The knife had on! — is
~ DE LEY paper site “pores turned the ‘knife completely Any leui ilo p wie ia
Taye teinte. e case, to Sir Ben 16, om 5 ben fel 2 m
Who y crt’ letter, of which r 'enalgse l aud from er body. Kingston was evi y T os.
xi p uere se frei VEN [Net nd ain tire te aget nd on Mes
„into ber throat,
| her whe
that she did not.
e" of
Ja: * hold of her, drew Bos
ideas is wholly a ps: hand
8
without founda Stanley,“ it says,
ina other English gentlemen, - P ra
itants of the coun er ud
D to become thoro
their manners, iin uage, M as 9
his intercourse wit i
costume somew
any w
ad become in their religious
*
—
—
GARDENE
OHI
Gli
DNIOLE. AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
RS WAN [Novenpep 19, 18
M.—Messrs. Hall, Sons, & Co, of this
hg at to light — ingenious "ewindle, |
€
7757 election the witnesses . themselves" to be at the 5 8 sS Colle ege, and in the
town, have
They had been applied to for stare
Flood, of Man
rant. He now appeare person, e citizens at : eni ning wr ES
keeps an upholsterer’s aoe 2 Br adford, under the —— E Gusen E NT
| name of John rwr ad. He said that : he in been Pr engen: — Robert Kane, the "4
brought. to Wa kefield by Mr. George > Moor o ke ept address, in (the course of which he $
drap aper's shop in the town, and who hou 1g
to have SS hi do directly, with the election and to the
i e | Roman. Catholie Hiecareh
tion genera ally
>
the
ecounts, but choice dh m on K
a its, f
received 207. from Mr. M for his services during As hei is hims elf a reals mem ‘bi bee. jota
the election, and his expenses would run away rédtést in Church, y.
half that sur Among the other witnesses examin Wan sea: iti is o e aint aa
were Mr. — E Charlesworth, ‘cousin x = defeated th absoluto mu and of this the
candidate, and Mr. Fernandes, the Aai whom | yalled
rec ceived ‘from his cousin the sum of —.— A to be spent i
the iatter,
who o proceeded soe the — of the * «Ma midalaand
Moon” to do the —— f bribery in the most |:
business-like mai were n iet for 25“. 1
vh tta
ribe
by a Mr. chester, ee ‘aectined sending "n
not knowing — A few days after they r ed the
half of a 107. Bank of England note, No. "BH 05858, a
sand the starch was immediately forwarded. The other
half of the note was not, however, sent. "When pressed
for payment, Flood said his wife had m islaid it; but if
Messrs. Ha " would return the half lend forwarded it
should be made right at the bank, and a Post-office
‘order sent in payment of the bill. Suspicions were
‘aroused oT all was not m t, and it was subsequently
ascertained that Flood w of a gang of s pea 5
who had obtained the pava “of 800/. worth o te
A wa: arrant was issued for the a apprehension of Flood, but
“he had left me and could not be — for
several days. He has, however, Deen fon: in
2 — — is now at Nottingham in custody.
lain ve j^ m night, vef 2th inst.,
10 ievi led the gravey yard wall in Ca therine
Street, broke fou tg "seated glass — on t he
-Bouth-wes ndr Church, and
not take a b
lowed it to be sl ippe —— their waisteoat pockets;
ve would not touch it "himself but begged that it to
might be given to his wife, so that he might be able to
[say he never had it; ano other wo ould ta ke nothi hing, but
d of St. Andrew’s
ld frin
the cover and cushions, but the greater —. 0
Was dropped, apparently a accident, in the a
eas Were found in the
of let
s A
intus e adjourned the inquiry to Monday next in
Lor propo
another effected a mock Joan, un othe er a mock sd; |3"
| while others less — too took bribes from both sides
er examining these witnesses the Commissioners on
CESTER A county meeting, convened by the
utenant in compliance with a requisition, was
€ at the Shire Hall on urday, “to consider the proportio
fi f the — xe w pate
method of improving “the system o hirin ng agri-
3
G — it ati sely
_Lord Lyttelton took "- im 2 laus UT D DES inmense ¥ prop
eponderates, |
y from erin the e
to be 5
immediately offered for the apprehe nsion or i
e demorali-
gre > and 2 Tuesda ay four sea Ten belonging t
FE
t h. and
ti
4 —— ies ring
rings at Rr and — [he had
E
T. Lad +}
fro
fom the great platte and . 5 high ch:
pipe ing,
a
stom of hir
n loudly — these were evils
Sni s par a piece of plush ett The prisoners, H
"who said bor had found the property, were remanded. |they were necessary evils, or^ were cow
PonTswoUvTE.—The new ne ot. battle ship Vietoria, attendant advantages, Looking a — as applicable
of 4126 tons, 1000 sint ad er, and 121 guns, de or the object which they professed—the engagement
"launched on 1 this dockyard i in I most | of agricultural servants—he could m
Su ful reis er in the présence of the Quee 3
Consort, and Pri rincess Frede m William
Prussia, th ntfi 555
— and ae — — er causes, which
e tho total mimber ;
bee ced. "That mops
was beyond — — ; the only —— was whether
ye balanced by
no nown that
were either convenient or oe means to a end. | Church have ey 3 a strong
4l ser nited
to'be | form of u educatio
an imm mense concourse mony 0
. the ship was bbc by tb the Peces Frederick |
Queen and Royal
t
f | previous iita d aequ ae qiie a
the respective character of both iater and servant,
SIOpS
Viet.
Aa LE CU q
: er the launch the which e ould not exist under a apa te of hi ring at m
family honoured Admiral Bowles with “thei e pi | imply | proposal from s Ens weal
on, and then returned to W n Satur- ab d be found — be, and has Dia, poter with pro
pons Td d ames Ro oyal, which is as in ree crt. It was omer presi to | educated ee er iei eem
t 58 out pos open mutiny | do this now, but to à system em of i aid d ihe pastel ron en
N Any ae that E lien of statute hiri pie AE a Tha eral our git
| ers,
the laun of the
eitizens and as
no YE r duties as
not 8 us our co
turies by the hatreds ar
untry torn asunder, a
si ^
‘allo aie on 198 for the day, GHA that there had bee : rax er it mi eee a 3 a
neing and other enjoyments on deck. After t i at its alt .
visitors had left the ship, one watch of the cre sl ion inj juring t baer pe cia Poya is mo ife
ved leave to go ashore for the night, upon which | desirable.“ He Laid that 5 bad heard it argued that ce muet be. pI
th 5 2 Ji aid at Paci Ar This was the abolition of the statutes w vould de eprive the ? agrieu ul- community, and er
m hich the I —— feelings and o a of beoe
leave had noted t arriving at ‘the Quid gates, | they enjoyed under ¥ e mop sy: y system. Now he was sure erdt ch e. N Rows
M aba not ect of those stance n MA than risk its
. E Es ER: this meeting — debar the working — vet any | ideal, a splendid trem
oe gos MA : E Ka uch A ional amus x r. recreation. If a holi- EDT the
a y put out the lig H the low ay wns E le bor the working classes up? some
uttered the most discordant yells, destroying | other mode joyment be Nem which would Pius tic who cone by 2 8 5 Sho wer
ir mess traps, tables, and stools, on bod a n | be free Bs tii ‘evils which mc the holding | grac ci
i ae ra Bone i m all is d n —— he his in
Me Vietory oa d a ere | tha fial T mops or —— would co
sona e Victory an on in ir omen ial benefits, not onl th ffi e
INE ore Mid bled E rhe Äng elas ^ EE: : mio ede my wil hae
oyal on Wednesday to open ng in s fite B. pall, a te enm t farm 2 the resolution, d
the cause of the disturbance do. as A75 C Hali A ii pdlied “tiy Had). bs le 00 do m PE. ame rom
en offered | = ja gece He likened om to going to a fair to bu uya
has be
ns concerne
of dr
for m tpprension of te
recent attempt to blow u
the
.—The Wolverhampton Chronicle conta
ci that ther ther eis now living near this im
a Ur : It sa bed that
he
- In this Gk
bear him any, his fo od, 5 — isti g chief
fidus and milk, being a supplied by his — 7 N aga fe
myy
to whom the secret of his desolate retirement |
ds a ia M
g in eyery descrip-
‘tion to reg ps en Breer Of. Mrs. Trowbridge at |
Asheombe Copse was apprehe ^ Pih at Hythe
A bbmm pton, a ad is gh in 1955 of th
e is a
i called
29 years o Pu Se of Spaniard oa bond fm
cottage were is possession, and h
TE Stained with blood.
WAKEFIELD.. —On Saturday last the Election Com-
thé inq quiry w
for E years without
ts to
e
0 three 1
LO On of 1
Man » v
the
escribed
2 age of t as the immediate
Tr ini pens Y
1
has dnt nw
one bua ible
thes | :
+ +
E
n servant.
n
t * F
s| The res arried unanimously, Mr. as
. G. Curtler, po Ad — oles moved, and Colona E 85
all seconded, a reso — affirming the propriety of
ration in districts, with 4 J
suiting themselves with the least
This was also un — d
2 d'ou res Een s for forming
cestershire Servanto ” Registration eei or ee ich
he
3
lent. t
Sir 2 . 1 d. Lechmere, seconded by the Hon. T. grits 4 Sige
BEES thanks were voted to Lord Lyttelton for con- was the mos
vening the meetin ment of his dominions far
ublic and private happiness and
p» pits >
openmg of the Cork and You E recently purchased ‘property, viver
| line of nar. At Middleton he Ya 1 edat and w / ah ri d bys n assassin who
hr og
utor of the money spent in bribery, but or p
Sty and connection with the chief persons in
iios away after firing the gon
Monday his í 9 jm. at the neck, arm, 5 body, but
prizes rano at the June examinations not fatal. In explanat
in | n of
Novex»En 19, 1859.] THE GAI DES CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
mored to the United States District Court. Som mon who are large-employers of labour, | stupidly; but it is th 4 —
i ts took pl at Baltimor the | me 2 aps are — and men who are looked u is gonios ot Torta, and they ct
very serious riots too , PA v e | to in the At- in which tl le, wh "1 b | — * ctl, We bad a Coppock, the latolo —— ed Coppock, but
lst inst., on the occasion, of the Ma 5 election, | earne ed their r or 20s. lam, * "we [n the ve pe p" f|N D xi ub REN MEN RE —
? — a t D
Several ns were killed and a large number | | which they P had — the owners. There x , the : refore ; the Wiig nobility ‘into 2 ten — T - T — —
nded. The W ashington corres pondent of the L —— — — for ali —— ur is but à — no doubt. dor e —— 2 n
in reference to thé. 8 ent men must doubtless- fail, and Ly no fault of a ple rise in th — y
E n ted fie; wear at of ^a dub an Juan | their n while in the uncertainty of human affairs it 1 : " majesty and — “4 Per —
diffic E say: g ry M us | | happen that some who have not equally deserved fortune l rotten borough, to disenfranchise himself, but he will join that
dancer are pen ndi ing betw ween the two Need 1 eue, and even un edly, succeed. But what- body opposed to Reform. There is — vut ‘eo guo ple
| — mM mes X quee ems of forino, it is uenit: d at | — and insisting on it that can carry it. 1 nA not — —
cited and intelligent men the door || they are ready t E y do not ur mer
with Engla nd Me is generally supposed “Tt the s open, and the course is cleared. It is somethin 8 to | to believe € hey — ta that position idm — — — —
ut the despatch o Lord John Russell is neither | know, as was lately said at Manchester, that to every man the * o stand by us. If they do not do so the thing will go on
j iliatoryn nor pacific, andthatit 8 y demands | | opportun ay. — once in his life, and something still to be in the old way; the Whig lords, the Whig landlords, and the
full explanation ns of the conduct of Gen. H f^ The | egy the k io emu i i erp le E i [eser s — de „
it will no! missed throu, ‘0! wi ha
New York an : Albany steamer New Yorld | ignorance, or apathy, - em ud he T unhappily, E — franchise I am all for it "de c j Mi hing * — —
md foundered, with a loss of eight or nine pica fail Wer we at leas! nsolat wing me. Ido x " VA ae in for that quation which I think of
The ous yacht Wanderer has been stolen and carried that ege failure arose miy — dde — permis your | such infini mportance, and wi ui come one da
pr Ši 4 pena 00 and that you have not been ‘Unfaithful to your own | but I donot a vou will find eril pare of 4 3 Reſorm — ad
is a slaver, she had been sold to Mr. Lamar, and fitted purl — ju MÀ dd — — qud z
4 , : , Lorp Brovenam has addressed the following to the | Piiwatstics — e
‘up as a pleasure yacht. uid seems to be no doubt Earl f E ng Intimidation by the ballot.”
T ; ; pef Tus udi. x 0 EE in answer to his letter on the
r affairs su D, M. P., at a meeting of his — pia of
Dr " a rinine made the the ^ vw. g remarks on
ny and packet cont;
“ Durin
Av
m
E
z
e
"
O
o
Be
ic]
5
Pp
£k
o
E
o
—
+
z
©
e
e
z
t
3
e
=]
et
A ~The N N 725 Bri BA arrived with the y
n pm s of the 29th A ae. the passengers | repeat what T wail at the great Edinburgh — the ot
are the 9 cricketers, r Canada mem- -— at, N Mg my — — — canso tracta, Tho Saas ere was a debte i. this 8
of the Parliamentary O et ** b nir ener Ae wily given an to | these — i
bers 8 y Fa u ve pu lished a of things which affords the Italians some p roapect of | thought necessa c e to. — to ym es into the
ith out i 1
Sardi h n m the
way ened arnia, on Lake " > ,
Huron, on the 21st inst. "The city council of Montreal e of A 2 TE eneral eral p aldi, ee my | Eros e of Dover — ere was s distinct contract entered into
has decided to offer 50,000 dollars to purchase a site | admitting, as I do, his great quatiiies, Qi M- ab’ Ne Mie | Ka c che Ton Vero yearn on conditi a mec
within the city limits for the railway terminus, on the | acquainted with his publie conduct and ‘connections. But — en Mem! f
y vay us, ely that those Pow lah whi a wo Conservative members for Dover. Members o
: made L4 the 2.5 aa aR cor authorities, | I recollect e», uii: wham 2Osio Aaron rd Government were not directly — in this, and tho onus
day otida] at battalions, and I wish we had.n
ursd n
way arvest. ;
Fellowes, member c the Provincia Parliament for mireris — peace of Europe at large dis fn. fue question of avy estimates a very interesting and
obtain hy
SAADA with him that the — — — try 1
country in —
Tun How ERKELEY, M.P. at a public | ments was the navy, and that — 2 4 never md
dinner a t Bris à — Monday, spoke as — on the | necessary ture in making jt thorongbly ʻe: 4
Mp er made before the Election Commissioners at re it ma A. ^ by men who — * the ashes, 1 2
* a great money p. . — in ent
— —— — yt gimen efield ben the navy effective which was squandercd in a silly 3
that great question which | and instances were given in thee — of debate whieh proved
think essential to the liberty of the, elec als bene I need | this. It was shown that in 7 navy yards where
MES tell pal mean fhe balio 2 peeing the that. ta ques! ton on the | ships were built. by the Gover: t the wages expended. in
ouse o! ommons it has n tw my fortune o 80.0n
E ih of a general lotion. T fiti t eie duty tor int them varicd as much as 50 and 100 pu cent., while the rate of
t
S, al
pog on authorit ty, that” d i Prince of
Wales will vis t Can ada in "une nex e Inter-
national Bank o Toronto Suspended 5 on the
28th and the Colonial d x the retur to Wie doa u
It was quite evident t that some irregu-
1 1 8 age the
wages was the same. q
. out to th — larity anaa: but it was also shown that the cost was twice
"iram. was about to be plunged. I laid before m4 icra or thrice dearer than what it would have been had the ships
em position, the ed position in Mich th in | been built ry strong point was
ition gui San "Luis. various boroughs. I pointed out to them that Male "intmida- brought out ind the
4 5 ter place, Ampudia at | tion — aei — — — gh the laud druukenness would | difieulties
Mech an inactive. (stagger — MM, Salo
ioi xd Arun
y —the beaut fal working syste
world in theory —to eu — ds g thing P possible i in nas
tl B ions 2
a ca Addresses. : i ed oe inet
harg
eing dead, and 25 sectoral “body being in Ripe pete
position, it nev degraded one. You have had
D STANLEY, at à Aeerington, 2 — follows on precious — mi a exten i foliit 1 Bir ——
Education and 1 biogra; ph A of self- us e. mci mow, I oe Der Derby. " er of a | were beth t ni ave of; inland Accra ç> who pethaps t by p cident
b UT) A es eee : 2 lese bo we: y 8 ins nit but. con uld n n kno EA about
pe:
of
o ceri, Bit Me od Vt think it
d a
“do itall justice, and I do not A then i the; aekenl votuti, lamp shar Rap a of hin party a reg 73 tring te Tast
gets fair play. Parlament votes about 9 did not - s committee
million for schools for the instruction | exactly that state of 2 W — now? There is Sin J ‘oun BoWRT NG delivered sh rm on
a of the working class. Nearly twice as | nothing new in — Corrupted and debauched in e tet week at Edinburgh, of which the follow-
Vires crum — more, is contributed for G 5 other eity. "in for Lord |+ an a gx.
by the themselves, and in | Derb; *3 will pot grant Yon a 6 "€ rong ing ies puo :
Fag benevolence or ens ky of ers are a bad lot.“ He knew what t *The eter ty ene very anda
A very | b s s bought,
Glen er e
— fi tA 0 de comaphical ex
- ilie 2 P C yd > a 3 what
4 | ens length je 100; ind thei n-
i t| dent and ir DASS he die
1
hing $ HIE up er 30001. as may be peed eem ant o wee cen — — d
i ly f ; and. Dr å : that he d now u bc a of climate, e the sno pon
case if j aps o W. v T fates, what | down to the us — istricts in the south, RR EY p 1 i im-
iat athe than or : „ set my bribery ; T | mense varieties of animal, mineral, And v vegetable
5 are able to — — [ ‘told 3 that I would not ha whether they took into account its population, on, at prenent
3 — emsglves, only one can: twn as - y^ fat high tit — more than one- one th of the human family, tor,
3 ara QW, en e m is Die mann I » i pn the — cen ere was reason to PER ped at id bres 7 2
eu cles v 0 jo oe voted by 5. of men oS — be da ation of 80
ment, — — vate exertions, a — as lidates, an to House of eu books last 40 pens
rüctieal Td x ate results as should be — ve a vast ented. with
1 — 45 15 it had been thrown
pe ou cannot prevent that state o
, and lads who have their bread to earn may
"but they must work. From a
P hie
om nore
1
ave | 380,000,000 tion t pgs iral of semine
a 0 een ue u-
on epee — ere mde tion had been tv x ae
re aware of the fact — nemen — China-
D
He comes the House
A tok ao ea Wis i we
w
icu oft [ree ev
my Seo fram qoem vues ds a on serving-
IT nay ow aa 8 and py L i l f Si
and a — My — peaking | the isla o ers hich form o one df 6 able — of
drags 2 politely, Harr: b | the Netherlands rsang pim the Philippine Islands,
— "m 5 — ch a ch anan under the dominatio; lot of the Bpaniarda--p M ATE
hi Ta , la his and ‘on his heart, an ag tad oe Ju Vo found he had discove'
Lea hees ak — — Si Harry mises his land to i ‘Chinese race intro reat habi: EE med
en bis h | à! "Now that is | those employments in v :
Bia ——
ci gels ey As to the ee
cel Ea them. ind
ht be in the reco! Mectiun o eme that aes n
oda — e : i r *
pe EE i ty omm h ade ore — i y wae willing a buy canat 3,001 copie
£d m : —.— ied hia a : i 71. t
o rep
decia " i r f roduction,
n the
2 - times than : wd xy 2
per ere to Li d fim, v COE E. = cs mente ray r= ad
m " ater Fest d- « tege to drink tea five
“SHERI ryt una a se ng | ts aT poc
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZEITE,
[Novusa 19, 1859,
for the Exhibition of 1851 t
— hat tity they pleased for each » gm
oe Dua win far cpt of Ching must a4 Jeter ae and us Vicintty. = n of th eA euient por
He believed Ch n a condition to dou! reble th surplus tul of th e Mus of that y ati
— € tea it necessary, Dd he m^ farther d ion WICH HOSPITAL x. Conso —On Thurs sday | next and future bb ces
that in course of time China ann help to solve the difficulty RE , U her Majest Boy M. i e
which is at present embarrass 0 tton distri ts. er | mornin 0 missioners a n Majesty € neil of if ie e Royat
some remarks on the — of British capital en — for inquiring into the internal my and manage- | have awarded a Copies “Meta poda
E MN ME = 7 2 — — Specialy th the | ment of Greenwich Hos ospital, assem din the library | Wilhelm Edad" Weber, o Tegen us
P :
d ol d the greet cona, and p = to nant ce at some M v^ reed for the mir — zn for Aa e iig iy Electricit Us ie A 17
length the cha: — of the Chinese — ipe, ich ‘had inqui The commissione . Hutt, J n the 2 Medals h as been awarded
. pon 2 centuries, vie (Chairman), = iens "M. P., and Captair George Bentham mportant contrib ma
there was goat ya lan uiga n me whic cwm in Dalryr , UN. M hbr idge, "solicitor to the | the advancemen 2 s and Des iptive D
. — © — 5 rts and sciences, "he stated that the | Hospita ta n was vm it called, and —— at great length and the other Royal Medal to Mr. Arthur Cum
Chinese deified one of their kin, TS ben u vate the provisions of the Acts of Parliament under which € Me rer s pu ublished n the «pp
mn ted thelr orokan — m Pad improved the sna Gree ich Hospital is founded and mainta — — o "e tions” and in English any —
weaving; and wLlile our ancestors were wandering about, | expected that the vem will last about a week or orei uma 8. A
painted savages of the forest, even the middle classes in China iy and that the report of the commissioners will be| METROPOLITAN Boa * F Wonks.—At a ines
— — * “tee Cep e — | re be lai i Parliament at the commence. | of Mp Board « — à Friday t was r bya
: e ^ P
out being abi ia throw à silken garment over his shoulders. bett of the next —— " et 17 e after / gis | dis „
A Chinese author of E third century gave nute desc — Tun NEw BRI COLUN — n of the great southern outfall
beer — bees Liu. = €— — tore up the end Li) was numerously attended meeting was held at the "Man nsion Creek i Crossness P.
ts, them in pulp, and m. |! y
^Y duoc e Y burning Pissen 2000 years befor House on Wedne „in aid ofthe fund now raising ibn 1 nt pet t i rpm
the use of the mariners' compass was absolutely — in che the support of ta "mission to mitn ew diocess. 1e | it into several con 1 8, a enders are acco
darkness of antiquity. The art of printin — s Tord Mayor, in opening the N. re re be invited, to besent in before t
8 . Te. Dui sion 2E * in the babit a among other „donations, that her Majesty, w with the ben . ExPLOY ENT » Nos mehr
i A p there might be a contro
versy whether it had ad ed to th t of human felicity or subscription of 250/.; the Archbish hop of Gantirbury, committee ‘includes ‘several eei of title,
— — AA i obi on P that there was 201; the M s ot — 200L, Ke. The Raynham, M. P., is the treasu As 5
—— i io een, to all = —— Bis hop of Col — then addressed the meet ing, and been pub blished from: which it spams YE
re wi , i
pray for. He set — notice of the character and = that the new sers including 1 s Island, | intention 07 b society to establish a larges
writings of Confucius, whose aphorisms had tended so much to udin. clad ko vena and Ira put together. girls and young women, where they will b.
inform the Chinese mind e stated that Confucius was eq ER ke * ere welt in dase. being the
severe in his tr nt of inferior officers, who then, as now, The mission first pro — Bs A i 225
were too apt play ‘the insolence of office The re- European 1 by — A — towns as they | instruc in acco ing,
mainder of the lecture was occupied with a brief notice of the rose u up. „Alr eady there were eight or ten tow ns ma rked to | old and t tie up parcels, and peru
superstitious and ME — v — — „ and an — i
i t t a n ina, e i m
— d wan he described their decimal system 22 — at once de be planted, and there should | The necessi ty of polite "Y m em om Dim momen
which he thought would be valuable in this — a ba itinerant missionary clergy con- | constant self-command, will also be duly imp
r change sian * = itin jte unsettled districts. There them. Gi rls edacated in this school
manifested by the Chinese, he expressed hie grai arrir ims that | Stan T. x g f Chi t less à
the law of England is becoming a progressive thing, am vir large — — of Chinese, not less than |
all parties are now happily agreed that there is in future 000 of bom might me be expected, and these, |
cee Ba oi, Lern e me ara A to ba ter i wa ho with |s
rene ^ v — d try something better —
ho proclaimed so important a truth, of which » | hoped them into their own country g
he woe enjoy the fullest and — jo elopmen! the gold which | perisheth." he It wus proposed, besid wo
cen ill d there to teach the
bourhood of the Indian villages, and there to teac
f workshops and the variety of phe be
C teer. . iim "i struction to. ‘th | giri will bo admitted to either school ewe
Tur New INDIA he Court of A l rship, and impar ristian iris e do Tensi
: * chil nd those adults t ben v wacker; nor, on e
in Chancery on Tuesday, € 7 fe — and the it " "For th —.— ot ü gt e
Led Justices gave judgment i in a case which had been | - ar wil move V te. T
8 to them for the T staining | — sough er aden ving LE very Bm d | E zer pro
Pe M en A be « (scri ECF vod be that t| Hovszs or PARUIAMENT,—Th
p — m ee sd — 1f- — Church. No Sta — d. E ihe: ci of St. Stephen's Hall ars sow *
as tha Act — t now stands the new India | Of self-supporti . uL Tio labra in the
| granted. m the they the | of being cande
tock 2 by trustees, but Court E — the tly The stained glass vi
i nd such in | voluntary ple; . 2 y permanently fixed.
ch Lo |i ipio dead l in th allotted i pation
‘proposes | call forth a i Tm liberali he people, and train | Kingdom are placed in their
2 tat he 7 — * um Sp to « t th heir own . — instituti, ions. | only thing ‘remaining
e Hon ive
POE MM T. —BRrrisn Fuwps: Con
closed at 96 for Money, ani and tay to dy 8 the 6th — |
Dank Stock, 226 to 2271;
Se
R
15
YU«
egte to ri) India ix Bonda, 15 les. dis.; MN
7
Na ATIONAL, GALLERY. —— -— recent al
ctures at
e pict
abl inted as companion
y Foot ot from the same locality.
a = for sincere and
mission The Bishopof Oxfordin et e
dum Cuvee: HOUSE aT WE
en heildi
nadie
fi
224 ; | fi
to 22}; Peruvian Four alf
per Cents., cy Acct, e Drena —
451; Ditto f or 1856, 1857,
4; | second resol
E founding, a new
tness of Dr. Hills for
— of Christianity.
carried unan
fitness — — g md — ladite ie Mie |
y. Tue Suber Lon 8 Mal
— as the British | nation | di
of à mission
to the
m areas pas
2 v the
monificence of |
a a Christian untary
Ma ite
runs | round the "walls, wi
Mank. of England.
DEPARTMENT.
w. * „ ern: = 2 * 8
E
ee be va
$^ bs
E
os,
her Se 18: En
No otes , 9, 714
Gold and Silver Coin
É T
of Net. Bebe aad Bit
8 a
Seven day and other bilis
6,425,066 5
14,642,617
862,053
4&39,663,592
863,592
£39,
17th day of Nov., 1858. M. MARSHALL, Chief Cashier,
sette « " Meek.
FRIDAY — BANKRUPTS—
, honsemen—J. 3 ANDERSON, — 2 — sot pace, City sis v |
Mine B ciens section | — Bond Street,
Torres) e “Kent oa Paty, Den ttes aie
AL Waben, Broker.
xw, Baling, | . 4
EZ
ently required for vat itt; i s and Ali a suf.
€ — onary clergymen, His hip
eg aan ‘from Sir E. B. or ond when |
ra
cv Goat
ten of ‘of Mis rien
hine" ^ oen
meeting there
ford aei at which t tue Bishops of Lenton
administered the — wa and the Bishop |
€ who has sesion c "2 :
“rey the
—
2
bie —.—
| — ring de
i ue peers to ascert
rishes of districts will con
and qualifications will secure t
t stint of the Morte, It is intended t o seek | cw
ce of her pon a 3 — hes to
vens "the friendly of
t
oria End oe
nd city cffices gas was
Neuss 19, 1869) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
y 8 t Stackpoole | aoe vote raising the pes of a
ee wh itl h the e. pro
| Fitzjames intended to direct their course, has m" ed | Esquimaux. until the Tepa de Cap
e ich Kennedy, who command former — expedition
in seareh of Sir «Ra Tri, supported Captain
ome e particulars of Snow’s opinion. Sir rehison in closing the dis-
eid t that there was no doubt that Sir Joh
ships the position of whieb is cane ascertained ; and Franklin went further —
them hav , British seaman — he was speaking. of the search
z : and direct ing its attention to the special object, made in Wellington 8 and then he re
Scotland. Captain a . eor without much diffie ulty. turned and performed that tr;
ow, t Cornwalli
ELECTION or LORD RECTOR or EDINBURGH UNT- ir the Prince bel cider Ca aptain Forsyth on of his enterprise he proved it to be an ian
vERSITY. * of a Lord Rector took E 555 Tay Franklin's pese expedition à in 1845, D 8 Ar nd it it was a 1 fact in which all the naval officers.
à x Win mm ; ; Deb
116 over Lord Neav ibl — Bo Ty" ition ma —
There was great ex tement ang the election. The He considers that th id
ts voted ne arly unanimously for. Lord that they were all lost 1 that it ence: : 2. conclusive
e
"T
E
ee
m
o
B
©
©
zm
ct
z
*
"3
5
^
+
ta
ZH
E
na
22
=.
oe
<
8.
8 3
2
5
o
ea
c
<
e
A
QW
3 perd ed by Harli in, e PIS ecame | ‘the are ll d à, h t i
Gael tral 2 Hi. and was therefore fired at. LUE re EM 5 tus te
Four men were den Ech on suspicion, but three of
ir 0
marine Misit aon e Captain M*Clur
r making
ort j Lu
y Mr. Gla 23 The ers were more equally | meeti Mond š d aia Y s m do diues Pf aoe wae ae
vided. The cor ontest it is sail was not a polit tical one, Captain MClintock ‘read & paper on the results of his * which FM n M‘Clintock made his r cout explana
the election torning upon Mr. Gladstone's:] as sold l E week by public auction for 2825“.
on and influence, while the str ier i PR Lord Neaves some of the 105 survivors might not be living among cost 65007, and VO was expended on her 3
J ja 2 e tiva o sqmi — F pe said that the various gc to the expeditio
gry.—The election of — Rector of ‘the University pe i-o self, Vue phe 75 Y za
all agreed
é BIRTHS.—On the llth inst, at Spetchley Park, Worcester
of Glasgow m place o it of 5 ‘te Rati Lor ap El N in saying, “No, they all di Qi The western. shore of | | shire, the Lady, CaTHERINE 8 of Arma i n at
was chosen 4 a majori cn 2 ions; the p^ a D William Island, along which di were compelled | Norwood Park, Lady EpwiN HILL, of a son--Sth inst, at Brun-
numb r Mr. Disraeli, 4 travel for two-thirds of their route, was uninha- | tisfield House, ibn bargh, the Lady BixxixG, of a daughter—
bited and all that was known us of the mouth of ROM 28515 s dd „ Mov Meo ko Mss.
A : dé F : of of a son—S8th inst, at Brackley, the Hon.
= aalen. — $ River was derived from the journeys of Back, Hav ¥ ARQUHAR, of a daughter—óth inst, at The Lim
New R YI z Cm fth Simpson, Anderson, and himself. None of them had | Horsham, = 5 — eee — v, —— a oso s
EW, ALUWA a meeting of the emn rE there, consequently it was ne fair t EV. ann
` à y fair to con- o s dasgbter-9th iust, at New Hall of
po ie on m Pham a 1 was read from | clude that the Esqui ini bat. atda deposed ta so | E. te ae sana di Weights
n, Dover, and Chatham Railway Company |;
h x
Lo
est
er Lu eed ich required such long trai — E — Duchess of Rrcpmoxp—th inst, at St. George's, Han-
CMM M EA EM alg ing Ue ee |e a vice Ne ot, Sao
En d: of the late Rev. John Brownlow, to — ÁNNE, youngest
e XA Far rris ir Rus me A h * "e * e late Lácutenant-General Sir LrowEL SMITH,
e received. and was at Ballot Strait, yet d not succeed; and without dogs | Dart, G.C.D., G.C.H.— 13th inst, at All Souls’ Church,
Vah toa trai ined to scen t out the small breathing holes of the — MA ee laco 3 pean erage
L1 rege ier Guards, son of the late Rev. Sir
The - of the proposed terminus will be one of the th h Walhampton, Hants, to GERALDINE pneu only daughter of
very best in the whole metropolis, within a few ; 5 W. J. R „ Esq, of 67, P ts d Pla London, and
Mis walk fom tho Pe ost Office, Newent Market, lays: the ice and Poner them from observation, !. he did Ec Sq., 0 or AA ee ees on ^
3 e Oak Hall, Wanstead, Essex —10th in -on-Sea,
Sk Pa u b an d -Gheapside; within sight of. Fine not think that even the Boothian Esquimaux could live, 1 Br ev. Jonx K ARTEN 5 Omm ES wes of Great Y cl dbam”.
ex, ARY NE, aug ro OODB! ‘
ax t ard roa ds, and close to the el deg, but that be himself should be so well trained in | K.C.H.—ióth inst, at St. Mary's, Hemel Hempstead. GEORGE:
site of p Metropolitan. Railway. e only successful mode of seal hunting in this locality —— dest Lieutenant-Colonel, Cape Mounted Rifles, to
1 ep TIR — . ubsst, It th fi ide ly | Henrrerr ungest daughter of the late BRANsBY BLAKE
in order oe was therefore evidently an error | CoorER, RY B iet 8 at Christ Church, Mussocrie Hills,
to s — ppo se hat where an Esquimaux mh live a sot fe, = ng Ryg f indie 8 CMe = 8
civilise man eou ld liv ve there A i i S
t | aaier, or prre G. v
pgal Light. Cavalry (retired 180 Lion inst, at moody rral
n OPEN 8 p , of Lione © t MARGARET, fifth.
ndia of Sir Tuomas BLAIKIE, of Kingseat, Aberdeenshire.
a 5 tolerable DEATH 2 5 — the muria at bis Remum 15, Cambridge
& kay ith | Street, Hyde Park Banat HENRY SWiNBÜRNE Missi, 1
* to the he sini 0 QU ihe in en i. la Majesty's Consul-General— m. Sept.
L — ra e a na 1 h Septerabe
Er — in the . of the Uni peat — what was shot by his own sledge part; s. Do sated ê
ncm as the eldest of the — sons of 255 on, | Jost a chance of shooting anyt! tieng dion luring the journey | a
ag and along the lands in question, which occupied them for 79 5
days and covere — early 1000 geoptephics €—
istauee. The
rn
father in the barony o
not five years of age, eath of his maternal aunt, | On A us Ist inst, at 8, Royal Crescen :
the Countess De Grey, in 1833, he sueceeded to the earldom of f t wife of Lieutenant-Colonel C!
f Au Min * i h mnes pha changed uke fam 2 untrymen been found It can py true a ouse, me afan G
0 i 4 1 cession
f -De Gre Wr 8 be be ac ug UM
Henrietta Testes ‘Cole, fifth aughtor of ifthe first, eed
m, who died in 1848,
puts 770 r; and Lad
yner. Hislords b
e . | ipee there vanished with the summer t of 1848. =
ma ei was no many relics. still remai dined T. eile Par!
Sir | strewed eer the — memi of od William 5 1 E surviving. eon of
indicat e where xA were à Jo M pn Le ‘ate "
| have — hew m, oe edna discussion followed, ak St. Mar ex EU
anres — explorers ne — Street, Brunswick Square,
. Pu 3n ult im in the wreck of-
of Yeo avalry ;
British Architects,
1 ind their two infant
8 "Sore Y pe Mary Louwa LEFEBVRE
ropu are i s Pe hal x UM ck ofthe Roya charter 2 N er
vial mpossi enl inthe wreck ofthe T
dr Oonrper: robable rate at which they €" 12 5 iios - sigs » = dv ra of e
lf Y. orkshire, and formerly of Justus Town, Cum
20th: iUc al | would be e và tav, Seen ed - ben 3 Te T3 Son m ult, in the wreck: of the Royal Charter — — GE
Bis agis in Paiton Bret Hermae sick, WI fac or Pr. 5 E EX Beg, a of Farnham cl
had hogn. dismissed by y the eed |) journey, Hiat they could Te G reac ed ftr h an th VS "intendém: . t Em
. This treatmen: ttom. estuary of à
-— E ds An M ome He. 2
hen the jury ta
i artist at Manches he en
f gastric — "Though Rx
f f high Iti tast —
"e i gane, Me was a wont * . — 2.
ich a d fi cie mtn e lea die
i mme of ‘Gabriel Tinto cred for T was € donet. He ad read
Henry Cuult "4g Wien coe ibo ang. — to arrivo ab
um India; m ay, WH i di
Visa Mons — 25 ere qme — ,
arvonsbite, au he felt th er the track Franklin and nig
denm after abandoning e pA e
Journey upon earth, and that they ished. | 292 5 W
ie par Heugh Hal l. 19s; Walls En
1 Trinidon yr Vel
s, 6d,—33 ships at
Tach
Saseler. |
Puri prrix,—Dr. King, ac- | whether he be
de George Backe ce ER to the Great bent next spri
er, the point to which Captains Crozier and | whole ground, and,
be — — EIER
ly of vegetables. still continues
T me 5 ye —— Te. and Seakale have made their appearance.
ve not altered in price sin e last
onsist of Glou Morceau, Bonté
Pr se Colmar, and Cras-
to * 8 are King
Ping’ Se les and Grapes hav:
Chesnuts am plenti ful.
Carrots, and Parsnips may be obtained
. cen i scarce.
— a. 8s. per Mushrooms can still be b
tolera! my. zb undant. Cut flowers chiefly
Orchids, Garies Violets, Mignonette, e
Heaths, and Ros
IT.
Pears, per doz.
l 2 t és 8s to —
Pine Apples, s cs o 6s „ per doz., 3s
kn P Oran nges, per 100, 6s to 10s
Grapes, Le. wr ?
Lemons, per 100, 5s to TA
Pomegranates, poche Se 4d to 6d 8 d Tbs., 50s to 60s
Melons, each, |
Apples, per bushel, 8s to 10s Cobbs,
VEG BLES.
aragus, p. bundle, 7s Artichokes, per doz., 2s to 3s
Sende Lined basker, 3s to 4s Beet, p doz., ls — bs A
z, 28 to 4s Celery, y, p. bundle,
Greens, "Per — ^ bunches, | Onions, p. half pd eT ^ p^ ba
2s to — Tortugi Y iy , 2d to 4d
Cabbages; a Is 6d to 2s 6d Shallots, per rie. o 8d
Potatoes, ton, Sd to 100s Garlic, per Ib., 6d pn 80
vé bar, oh to 2s 9d Lettuces, , Cabb., er score, ls
t 0 6s to 18
bunch, 6d Endive, p. — — vu E
'Turnips, per bunch, 4d Horse Radish, p.b
Spinach, p. sieve, 1s 6d to Mushrooms, p. Pott peer 591280
Cueumbers, p. doz., = to 1864
Parsley, p. 12 bunches, out 4s
Savory, per bunch, 2d to 4d
— ARK, onini:
past k, e Ther arri coas
— . 14.
During the have bee
more pest c towards sr end of the — prioes declined
wey ON wing are s
tati apr to HAS : Lincolnshire
do., 70s. to a: : ko) E os to 1138. - b s. den and
Fifeshire do., 603. to oo and Ease ex do.
Fre nch whites, 70s. to 8
—BonovoH MARKET, Fray, Nov.
m & Smith report that since as decla-
28. pe
cwt. advance. Other sorts remain v
2 Load of Thirty-six Trusses.
FIELD, THURSDAY, Nov. 17.
Prim e Meadow Ha Hay — to 80s | Clover .. .. .. 95s to 1058
— 2 ^ (old) .. 85 New Clover — —
Inferior Seco!
New m PA
160 70
ERLAND MARKET, THURSDAY, Nov. dt
. Meadow Hay . 80sto 88s 2 — . 75s to 90s
AT uH — —
New r; — Bowe E 280 34
S4 198 105 ne BAKER.
PEL, THURSDAY, Nov. 17.
Fine old 5
do.
Fine new Clover ..
Fine 2d cut ..
Inferior do. ..
Sia VS
-sosto . ae as
18
86
72
- 84
. 63
Inferior do e ly qum
Stra ko 9. 29
- BRITISH WOOLS.—Lo
Our trade redegi — a mediis Te HAMA, um
s emay, gor
5 their trade . iderabl .
considerably ovi
the farmers. —
the supply from
South-down Hog- s. f d. MM Wethers : iE —
gets as s. uri 0 — Nast
Half-bred ditto.. 1 8 — — ding ns — — —
Down Ewes . 6 — — | Blanketditto .. — — —
Kent Fleeces .. 7— — Flannel Wool ..1 2—1 7
COLONIAL Woot SALES.—These sales are progressing at the
opening rates. The attendance is gout and the prions
vemunerating.
E.—MoNpav, Nov. 14
r it — — and Kent to this morning's
HOPS.
Messrs. Patten
es of the dut? fine samples have been in — at fully | 45
ery
arley. The few sale the
irka Wheat at 488. to dos. p per
f
ley this v Wisk kava
been toa fair. —.— large rley, and small TE
Oats. To-day’s mi ket was p "tht ttended. Englist
Wheat n fair sale at Monday's prices; the inquiry for
foreign was limited, and in the business transacted our for
quotations. wéra fully N Barley is a stegdy sale
Monday's pri Be and Peas bring the extreme rates
— ee "me Oat t trado is ve ry firm, and good fresh
n board ship is rather dearer
ARRIVALS FROM Nov. 14 TO Nov. 18.
m
heat. | Barley. | Oats. lour.
npe 2520 qrs m * 140 qrs. 2060 sks.
ish 8 180 „ 740 ”
Bana 16090 ,, 8760 ,, am Bele
Liv OL, Tuesday, Nov. v.15.
and Flour 6d. to 12 dires.
m. full „ Oats 1
— Gra firm. Wheat 2d.,
Indian Cort: «nd Peas i firms,
1d. ——— — — rley
Fripay, Nov. 3 mar ket very Sin buk without
recent activity ; Wheat selling freely at extreme rates. Flour
quiet but steady. Indian Corn offering more freely, but prices
maintained. Egyptian Beans retailing at 37s. 6d. Oats, Oat-
meal, and Barley unaltered.
AVERAGES eat. rley. ats. | Rye. | Beans.
Oct. 8 49s 5d 35s 8d 21s Td| 293)0d| 39s 3d|38s 0d
— 42 6 35 10 21 29 7 9 39 8
— 22 42 10 35 5 1 29 6 237 7
— 2 43 1| 85 6 20 11 80 4 38 9 38 2
Nov. 5 49 9| 35 9 22 1 80 239 3 38 5
— 12 42 1035 11] 21 5 29 7 40 3 37 9
35 21 5 2910) 39 8 38 4
UATIONS IN x WEE
8. Oct.! 1 ot . € X OT Ner-. NOSE 13.
43s 1d . . EE — E I
2 10 | 5
9
METROPOLITAN CATTLE MARKET.
ONDAY, Nov. 14.
again shorter and trade is brisk
vanced. There are a few more
the demand has
y ho
foi
selling about jhe same as on
hursday. From any and Holland ther 1170 Beasts,
5 Sheep, ind: 59 Calves ; from Scotland, Beasts ; from
c 600; and 4130 from the northérn and midland
nene
€: 5 0
Le tee d ats 0
Shorn
Best Downs and "t 2 E uL 2
Mia lf-breds 5 Ctog 4 vee i = ee
o. Shorn Pig:
> sea 5020; Sheep & Shit 23, 560 ;
— | Nov.
8
ente 80; crie —
number of Beasts is about verage; but choi
ts gute are scarce, and . — Nan "find purchasers at fally
late rates. Although the supply of sheep is mek short i
exceeds the demand. There is scarcely any busi los trane-
c is no “diterationn 4 the cut trade.
any and Holland there are 210 97 t ind 134
Ode! from the northern and midland E 600 Beasts ;
bm 126 Mileh Cows from the home counties.
it Scots, H
Best Long-wools . 4 8to5 0 as to ci
2 oris, ae .. 4 10 to 5 0} Do. Shora s Fw
FFC Bese bSiqudlg 49d € guum —
Best Down Lambs .. — understands his professi nt and
Half- E P" 4|Calves .. AE 0 ey `o | useful.—B. —
Do. Shorn Pigs 8—5 0 Guildford, Su
«8
Beasts, 1340 ; ‘Sheep 41 Lambs. 47 10; Calves, 202; Pigs, 170.
arrivals being small, and AM rchasers a rm
— advance of full 6a, per -—- top price complied
made Flour is unaltered, 1s dearer.
ARTER, p a
E xd vides. bt
46—52| .
Red...) —
Pes Esser aud . 19—24 18
— Scotch lans incolas - “Potato 23—29 Feed.. 9—26
— Irish. sentire Potato] 24—28/Feed.. 19—24
— Foreign ...... Poland and Brew 23—26 Feed 1724
„ oreign . —
RYE-MEAL, Modes — —
Be, or 336 to dos. fie 3341 Harrow .33—41
iud Sa SEN „Winds. |48—54 Longpod| —
= Foregn........: DER Small 38—46 i —
Peas, whi Deke Kent.. Boilers|36—39/Suffolk .|38—41
s . to Veveov Eod 30—838
Foe marks delivered. “per sac sack 8743
3 —.
Y, Nov.
und t past a as we dare — —
frosts and eas ble
ty ha rovaod i the Wheat nd i several of the
kingdom, restricted Others by the enhanced ra
8 *
^y ora er L
— 2 Te
the east coast O s to ui — CAR 8
higher than with us. pring Corn of * — s has also
E. E ot M AM Pre most markets being written
s. and Oats 6d. dearer. Flour in several markets of the
Interior is la. to 2s. per sack higher. The arrivals from
Southern Europe this week are limited to 1 cargo of Wheat,
sp EIE
don,
de RTNE
ANTED, well dis ^i sad. active Man
PARTNER, | in a well he Nurses and Seed
rst E eaport town in the
The —— may
eased by the 1 — a persevering man. The
be pa bu oes with if preferred.—G. G., Ford's
siness, doing a
south, aiusiad ma bain 3
be greatly iner
— would
Nursery, Southampton
Ns den by a gentleman in the County of Oxford,
- 8 SIPE: Re ie e number of B m"
ALPHA, Kingham,
ANTED, A — — to look after _
ig ue a small MK M Wer
Ran e — Vague
a! a — M ecd b vel e not
ing * who has d to thet n-door
Department of a London or ans “Establishment. — Address
— 9 . J. Hewitt, Esq., 23, Abbey Place, St. John's Wood,
or | Good s
Ram
PROPAG =
GATOR, PLANT
of
ee engo, itai. bae Leber e
es
s in
ov; OF THE LA
E of Kings | Un n
small numbe f
putres W. vit her o 21 1 EY r Rd mit
rnham Green, W. EIS
NT PLACES.—Letters 9. Letters to be Post N
ARDENER (isis) aa AD).—
incumbrance ? A800 = 2 fena aie
branches; two beg? Fere —
238, High Holborn, WG. r.. K, Cm das
AD).— Single; in
horough practical. d
G s zu
nials B
ssion. Unexee 2 testimo:
Hol i gen M.
Hra EAD).—
— muss vds. of ap Rame
uim due —
DEN (
Lees Cottages, Nighti
hasa
H. C.
r DENER (HEAD).—Single; ae
and Kitch Gard E. Im
's, and P kinds sof Vogolaies, ul : Foring — . —
Dickers, Wester
ARDENERS mx. single,
nder Gardener ere Pn prn
any nobleman or een req hn
the Nurseries, Sai s, Worcos PRAM
ARDENER Eres doit d b
S Nas lived with biam fon to recommend his Head
* with him four be EI
x s profession 3 in s its branthies: =T. T. 155
Gra
G.
» ,
ARDENER (Hzap).— Epwarp Baym,
G Gardener at M eri, Hall, Worcester, mise
roug
to recommend a tho: hly — qu
gentleman in want of such. ived in first-class
Five years' un exceptionable Pod xao
——— D BENNETT, Osberton Hall, =
he |
g
t inte n his el
Sonar a — ‘exhibitor of Plante km and Y
monials 5 ma late employ: er.—T. P.,
=o y -—
ONCT AD)—Age 35,
knowledge of
ches, | the Forcing of
general routine
Highest
n-Tham
es.
HEA . NR |
Ju
"
Hou TT can with confidens
mend a Young Man iini 275 — has a thorough &
prof ding t t mid
jl
of. As. pen, inclu: $ the Culture of |
y ani Late Forcing, Stove
Bente the — of the Flower and AME
—Direct as above.
ARDENER.—A. Kay, The Ga
Hawkhurst, Kent, is at d
tical ont qoe nay 1 as iem aiiis à
( Dedit (SINGLE-HANDED, OT
: x, Gardener: ¥ the Rev. H.
2 toed will short disengaged. .
i u s y
10
HOPMAN.— Afer; Maa
'ears' experien Messrs.
TO T T CORND DEALE!
PPRENTICE. Ingeot,
son of a esmaj
Business in the shove uA Hi
busin
rally fond o : -
— — Lad (age 16) desir s.
ess.—W. DELL, 39, Pars rd, Sa
s 6 Si Ha . 2
Me |
of Land. "The Me et 5
P Neus fds ens
quos 25 DE
v TED As GARDENER, a married Man to d
mall Garden, 8 agr pica aservatory, in
ara goed F with the assi e of a lad, — 3 —
en required. Address M FLowen, Stratford -
ANTED, = d ina erai ea —
SHOP in S on app the South of Englan
n ap ation by seem qon sm "to
Lon Cammins, Covent Garden,
ANTED, 4 . eee AND FOREMAN,
in the Plant De
HORTULANUS, at Moers,
Street, zc
London,
wishes
BUSINESS, either in
F. S., of 3
bet 1
Res native of Sco
Lose
manigement o dh a
highest cha
SILIFF F ae ona
LAND STEWARD —A
— ^. =A
— tional
wquainted with practical ag —_
fairly competent in the ter ot Tea
t
& Sons,
NovrexBER 26, 1859. ]
*
The Gardeners’ Chronicle
Newspape
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE:
On Mote the 28th inst. will Le published, price 1s., Part P. of
QNSE SR E E K,
T
W
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1859, —
No. Jd I.—Bradmere Pool, by Louisa Stewart hte or 0. XIX. -How Ibecam aH
— Ana—An yt
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XII. The Bird has Flown. By P. 4
XI. The Mastiff Guard.
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È P The New Prima Questia, By H. Sutherland Ed wards.
ITI. Birds of a Cur . By John Hollingshead.
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——
D — Y all th
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DICTIONARY. Com. E Tan : onday ed M. Bir-
ü
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Prem S BOTANICAL noran orem did Fimo hia
— Hams a ful Explanation o S. Minister ao the beet, to snd to
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Tosi p & Evaxs, 11, Bouverie Street, E.C.
sing regret ze the d d 1 language of | °
expres
England; and
NS
THE . Cie in AND -a eic GAZETTE.
d Earl and Coun er s of Mal ury,
1 Hons "Colonel à Mrs. on the
ae Herbert left the
eru ueen and Prince |
"ewm ^ d illiam |
Home Jm
d fro xford, and the Prine
iliam visited the "juo of
arl an ess of |
9 Ar
Novrarhrn 26, 1859, ;
of 12 years, having a i Gravesend END 4i
Adit: Byrne belonging t 16 hoi Do Bri ea Ee
ere rei and a par 2 of 10 non- commissioned ©
ie c A j Voolwigh, na been sent doy, teme ;
i g up toh Mec
dis n.
E ILITIA.—
addresse ney Herbert
ed of
m anding disembodied regimen nts of ^ Com.
10 à militia ia stating that
B
21
a
e Lady Raglan, arrive ed
f St. Sanna ns left the “castle |
Princess Louisa,
visi
Prince 2 Pri
um with
ae proceeded
he comme
nt at the nex + annul EE
minute instr eri k 1 the a
thos
Enfield rifles of the 1853 pat attern, and that ie
epg of ho permanent staff is to
ith as soon v9 qua alified i t
freni Hythe, i in th ihe eee
for the whole "regimen
The cir reular giv es
a proposal from
simultan neous e ament by England and
Fran
Bur
n Monda
: A: the birthday of * oe Frederick
and rds p a ed a
F THE FRENCH has withdrawn | Prine
depu: —— ed the
the Hon v. 0. x weg
sermon. ay m t 7 o'clock, the day
g suppl
THE VOLUNTEER CoRPs.— n Weds :
the enro lled p os 1 en of
the vol untéer Rifle
nesday di
Wi li iam,
the of the 1st € Gua
h €K t
the Lords Teds
he D
mas Princess Teningen bre
The MPEROR 0 ‘ j
t it The nytt with Princess 9 ‘Wiliam, mittee, and of making th
his iti n to the nomination of the Chevalier | watked in the Home Park. The Prince Consort went | commencing drill forthwith, Mr
BvoxcowPaAGNI to the Regency of Central Italy; out shooting, din oki ed by the - 7 Wales 5 yore — a considerable number of
RICAS OLT, P. dent of the National Prince Frederick William, and the Prince of Leiningen. | o ie bar of n n
A apt STM t Tux i ho ha sent a de tation The Countess Blueher and Lord and Lady Raglan left| working committee, elected by the enrolled
* y Asis vh p thecastle. The Duchess of Cambridge ang Princess Mary, =: d E
the 2 of Cambridge, aa E — of Saxe- g ns, M.P., Mr
accepted the — —.— This result has — pro- Weimar, the Prussian Minister and Cou d Parker, Q.C., Mr. Rodwell
duced by the e t | Viscount Sydney, Viscount Valletort, pe Lor and Hon. Adolphus Liddell, Mr. Leigh Pemberton,
of Sardinia iier has uren the Fr rench Cabinet | Lady Bloomfield n on a visit. sdale the four first bein:
that the a mis of public order was thë sole Queen gave a dinner party in the Waterloo ne à — mem oe of th
R nd afterwards had an evening party. On Tuesday | and Mr. acaulay, Q.C.,
object and aim of the delegation to M UONCO) morning the Prin msort went out shooting, accom- | Mr. J. H. Patteso
PÁGNI, that the concentration in his hands of th ied by Prince Frederick William, Prince mS iss medie. of a site for praet
Governments of Central Italy had in no man of Saxe-Weimar, and Viscount Sydney. The Prince o e ion o
the charaeter virtual Taste . and that it Wales left Wind r Oxford, The Prussian Minister | Whateley, Q.C., left to the decisi
was intended to reserve ie es Co 85 and Countess Bernstorff, he Parland Countess Clare ndon, | committe: A : po
x ; E Ladies Const nd A ili and Viscount | course o ic was
definitive settlement of the Italian Peninsula. | Valletort left th le. n Wednesday morning Committee considered
al GaRnIBALDI has issued a proclamation, | the Queen and Prince Consort, accompanied by Prince | Common united in itself the ra
d f Chairman promise
Pleni a dr
s
illions
the Surre ender of — o
ewm
e day | Evi
th Sennen) to the French A Legato
e Austrian Plenipoten aft
3
t Hon AE
ed by Pines Alice walked in
rs visited t the Duchess of Kent at
D.
ty.
the should be assigned to
choice of a uniform ae prr for the p
order that the members and subscribers might
their attention to the question. ember
Chancer: ar, who i of th
teers, appeared at the meeting
that corps, which, Lens principal
tunie, relieved by no other
join. the
quart
rJ
instalments at short intervals.
The first division of the Spanish expedition against |
Misteoso landed last w.
eek at Ceuta and proe
itself. e giga alread
eeded to
attacked both
and Ceuta, but n — n * an
pice has yet taken Eig The Fre
i rocco has
"passed the lim mits of Alger
ited to th
ogmore. The
Frederick William, eame ‘to town ty a ‘special train of
eaufo;
being within
~ — Scottish ins
e bee
20 me aa am
Christmas, — E. e
t HE CAB A Cabine
Thursday" at the "official xd of the First Lord "E
-|the Treasury in Downing S
“ore Vauxhall, to on Westminster Palace.
ce Con oh Sab went — Marlborough House.
Wi visite Taylors
fa
HE PRIN
indsor Castle 5 de Sedi at the celebration
-| berehday of the Princess Frederick William on Monda ay.
His Royal Highness return Oxford on Tuesday.
Euryalus, with Prince A Alfred
the Pireus of A the
CE FRED.—
on board, arrived at the
inst. It is iex
! to Malta about
afin a ar
t Council was held on
E
0 € ONE, after having |
te m has been conferred 92
oe many years rector of
S
y orps.”
: thorough effectiv
he
Highness will no not | i
essful,
tion ‘of a rifle b brigade 5 N of
— — under the — of * —
to render the
the Irish nobility and
—
—
^ and the
— Earl of me — othe:
consented to act on the TF
th
and the
On
Fred
t M. Beckles's views are s Evangelion and in orsi of
d e. eclesiastical disei
pline he is said to incline to the Low
party. der
TIAMENTARY MovrwENTS.— The election for the | five other gentlemen, were in
seat at hides visit by pan Sauar of Mr. R. Stephen- | from the Cou
son has terminated in of Mr. H. B. Thomp- | Mr. homas Da
son, the ‘Liberal dein „ qe a pars of 39 over | Lord Mayor,
Mr. Chapman, the numbers MS to 1 Lieutenants; and
Army.—It is un the Government | as nsi
have decided on maki ing a —— inerease in the M Y well
army by the formation of second battalions to — of for . present, the Cour
the sediments up uh to v 5 the 35th. Regiment, latter that Captain Mida, v W.
= which an to 11 regiments will befor it being at presen governor
t d d troops | obtain the consent of the, Cot oA
their own request after the allotted term ' s
See n
w ve 3 | before $ the recomm
stated to the Court that
y R 26, 1859. Ü T i
Normann 26, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
—————— —— i —
jeation for the use of the Artillery Ground i in Fins. liance with aisit; :
— ury for the peu a —- the P an requisition ‘signed by the prineipal |R
7 f dhe brigade on College havi ving become | and the — parishes on the Surrey side of the
too small be "EE d e a oou ws bn of Thames. The Richmond -— has received such
new members but the Arti m eim, iar accession * 4 — that it will soon have sufficient | The Moniteur of Wednesda bl
fused heir N hat Eh i shoni discussion mem bers rolled as a — instead of a sub- | statement on the subject, d — — d
cial appli ti ü vds At a crowded meeting held at I it has | the m rar at it is the only political organ of the
f Clapham, | Govetn
miss oners of Lieutenancy 1 might forward it oficially to Bat tersea, Wandeworthe and Pong neighbourhood, : in con . "Am
legency of Central Italy, the explanations of the
the Add d
the Re gency is to maintain order until the C Ongress
the Artille mpany, and in the event of this appli- nexion with the Ist Sur The 5th Surrey has the — Pee — a believing that the delegation of
cation failing that . should be made to Prince selected Wi mbledon Common. or its —— an — i | | diee the. questions which will be submitted to t
‘Albert as Colonel of the Artillery Company. For the 6th Sur rey h — inds— Congress, had looked upon the adoption of the above mensure
H 1 e T^ ow m
* is ress! lana-
upwards o . iven by the Government of Sardi ch declare:
Lord Mayor has give that the Guildhall} 1000 yards; and 9 at T War dra = of | the maintenance of publie onder was the sie chjest and. —
shall be mers tor the drill — — 7 lighted. A Mr. Charles Buxton, or the convenience «i | de n e ** qm ko M. Bucncompagni, and that Ahe
residents a . sri, Byfleet, and Cobham. | had in de ur Gin odd Governments of Ce — Italy
non-effective Maci lba Volunteer | —In the provinces and i otland the movement is The — ifeur announces that the Pl. ter a
Rifle Corps d Has Tome ha in "the Pavilion of the with — 4 rapidity. A great meeting Frau, KURAS URA MEID hat the enipc n! aries of
e nd, for the purpose of electing a held in the City Hall at Glasgow on Wednesday | Zurich the ratifications of 1 a treaties of the 10th of
vice e-presidents of the brigade, n Radstadt, 5 evening, in compliance with a requisition addressed to | No vember, and the Marquis d — ill p ived it
Pres 1 Cap of the Corps presided, and an- | the Lord Prov: 2 * to consider ie best means of - Pari on Thursda r in nth Ayr ed
— amidst loud cheers that General Hay, moting and encouraging the volunteer movement i reaties, On the da when ithe n M ti a ee
who had been mainly instrumental in urging the Glasgow.” “The hall was: densely | crowded in dI — ed M. Armand deli » indio Ao mtn Plaipo.
Government to aid this m moe as well as Lord | corner the most mee LUE draught N t for 20,000.00 T "s e.
Elcho and Sir C. a ley, had consented to join — | aside on — character, ‘the "volu mteers nin 0,000,000 yf. wi b v id dy f : y
Tt was then unan mgl — ie-p that Sir J. J. Ham rm, oceupying ine The e Moni p ved = iati ue ni
ton, Mr. Raikes Caleta, r. F. s P Dan, Sir pow the galleri ries—a magnificent body of young men. Thel; ti ü peste d rem S
n, Mr. H. Dark, — Sir ner Wilkinson be meeting was addressed at great length by Sir wherein the Austrian vessels captured
elected the Council ; — that Major-General Hay, Lord - lang Alison, Sheriff Bell Mr. Lawrence Oli- during phe late v - A not yet adjud ed as m
Ticho, Lieut.-Col „Sir Charles Rowley, Colonel phant, Sir James Campbell, and other gentlemen, stipulated, N e wilh on op ed eei
Barlton, C.B., Sir 1 n ae 1 C. B., Mr. and resolutions for poe h the or of held onthe 15th of D.
— Hankey, M. P., Mr. Keith Barnes, Mr. W. S. | volunteer o. over the coun try, and raising nau h t b dd Tm
Mr. Peter Graham, Mr. Thomas Little, Mr. Sigo for their support at
1 „but Count
Join Bentley, Mr. W. Debenham, Mr. Octavius us Wigram, | In addition to the cities and towns mentioned in nary Persigay Mons — en (ode Russell. Kk formal
Mr. Richard B. Wade, a Mr r. D. E. Cameron 1 ege invitations will be sent to the differen
elected the Vice-President the Marylebone Corps. districts have held meetings fo for Pow from the Cabinets of Medi, dnd pus
The Horse e Guards have ane of the site for a butt those on the coast a adopti ng either “artillery ioa a N sly. ‘The notes containing the ` “invitation
2p d NR — — i will not be identical, but Austria will that
stan An im import ant erii — sey Bolton, — ar $ pee Mt Bridlington, | tan, oom paca ih France *
trates, burgesses, and other — Mbh ts of the Burnley, I Braintr urntis- has P be de eed to Count Pers the letters
city of Westminster, ee e Lond Lioutenan t, |land, Brierley Hill, Burslem, Tilston, € Chippenham, from Gove rüment, an these invita-
was m " Yee —! on Welnesda: orma- | Carlisle, Chepstow, Dudley, Dunferm lin d v
tion of e IT for the City ‘ot Wat. ham, Dolgelly, Dundee enm fries, —— - Forfa: similar i The
5 r. Miller, M.P., as mty Lieutenant, | Greenock, Glencai oer ng Howden, Hartle. delay in the delivery of these edes nts is attributed
officiated as chairman, and among the gentlemen pre- pool, Hanley, H "apa ngs, Harleston, Had- | fo rd objections at the part of rh ste
sent were the Dean of Westminster, Lord Ranelagh ington Havant Xem Kinver, 3 the. nomination of M. Buoncompagni to the Regency
m — B actes 1 reign ic rt n - E) r while it is asserted in "eter quatur that an
tro us, 8 n ettsom ot T. arter | isk objectien made by Russia has caused the delay.
Wood, Mr. Rose, and Mr. Twining. At a| — erem — ee n —— Sir F. G. Moo " k
im meeting, held i ibe same place, a resolution | Stewart, Tae Newport, Oldbury, Poole, Reigate, | &
been pr for the immediate formation of a| Rowley Ryde, St. Leonard's, Paavo i S
corps, and a provisional committee had been | Stirling, Ede n- on- dn Southampton, Sandwich, " 7
inted ^ make the necessary arrangements, one Bf A., Silverton, ede: Trowbridge, Tunstall, SUE DECUS * — i PS homas
f the inhabitants ‘Tipton, Wareham, Word oim, Warw arwick, Way.
Wr 'orcester.
EF
= 1 the city of Westminster tree,
in carrying 7 proposed obj The res
that nmn as sated on Wednesday, eRe that —
Out of the nine parishes had sent three delegates eac "
to represent them. The parish of St. James, another of For reign,
i eeti the electi
Its obj been limited to the
> E de. ish. FmANCE.—The following is is an beiraet of a letter —.— of the frontier tribes, without the French ex-
had already formed a volunteer corps of its own, It from the P aris correspondent of the Times respecting a geg Gene a dad r
e i
the
Duke of Northum nd (ipee ibuted apari of France, with the view of obviating the effect pro-
T 2 the expenses Ne $0 She e ed ries be a — i aped eps language of a con- aby the — 0
1 AROAN ears reine i 5 eee dential communication of an important nature has at the French troo The, € a ditio ha
at all the p i etings, the subject had been Ai the Prefects i D ame in which the Minister e pm e diti ny ies E 5 e the
entertained with great enthusiasm, and subscriptions | regret that such e UAM should be used when inst., Ad was then to be 2 up
opened for defraying the expenses of embodying the e T Accounts from Madrid of the
corps. At the meeting in Si. Paul's, ent tendeto of — ihe enddenes and emitter he ee dur inst, state that th k tio "let divisi
- suggestion that a united effort should be made 4 5 those of whose opinions the — the 18th r Algesiras, and was
a
d
4
Senes
3 xn the several parisbes of haw: ipa was coi 1 fe ae — E cer = hal ret in | leted in * course — the night. The first
pted, M fee a MN api 3 "e a * viia employed journals usually — diim “he policy of the division, "pee d 'hague, lan at pod
e rest o parishes wi at vie I i o ment d which is made d te oceeded to intrench itself at
i Bt. Mary-le-Strand it was resolved not only that a sib ut dix don suus. ee PAAA ipt bie MERE D. MAL P Le wick the, Moors poe
corps 7 — formed in n parish, but also that one | instructed e request the journals in question — bo errors, | resistance, but they soon tel. enibarkation
should be for in e injustice and ivisi
88882
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the Principal and College authorities, y the rights of the country, they might easily | Madrid journals contain articles blaming the Govern -
Pig aes City of Nig cr Corps. The gentlemen sn ties of a great ple, ment with the concessions which the
etropoli ermi 8 this line of conduet the Minister recently 3 correspondence with bs. land about
way Clearing ^ haye formed themselves into pun E Phat. the dignity ot th the Im — P oie Moroec that B t has E s uu Pow: —
i WAY | may be recon —.— med a make id conquest on the coast o
Rifles," and upwards of 100 have enrolled themselves — = maintenance of peace, an: 9 2 this e ey s Prefects 2 Str its ot Gira tar. Tha latest, news ates Heb the
members, Ras eral — Melilla, as well as C
— in Gibraltar
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E ested to use their influenee with the press, oh zm
in Md drills have already taken place pu public. opinion. The Prefects are requested to com
2 E the o ground at the Metr Cattle | their views on this subject, in a confidential manner, PN p
ropolitan
which hs pe m by the Markets Improve- | journals which usually ‘the Government, and not
st Middlesex (Victoria Rifles) | re with the others l
s
apeos accommoda simultaneous
e winter edie. "fecum South Middle. The following memini
recently yea all the veo erie of France on —
with its drills i Westminster Hall, un nder t he | departure for London, mestion, an
of three suit Meda " Fusilier Guards. nood of Fine aai he Italian question, and fing
[INE and alr corps in the neigh: |r oficial organs of the Frene hdrawn its oppo- Ministers was
rate; m i wn
d to raise 9 = w artillerymen. em the dC . y ee the Monday at 8 Sas solved that
meeting held at Bermondsey in i
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, — [Novenner 26, 1859
the President of the Cabinet should tender to the King from = to Tarento, of which M. Talabot is the or ne s mais E ng one of d by as many =
p npe of the whole Ministry. M. is * i^ four ader. m SRL s the o e 6,0 bte, ae e pa 85
s been summoned y his Majesty to for ne REECE.— The i ernment, oniy stipulating t that they should be
" cta mbers was open * on the Ko inst. ae Si Otho. | the sum eir . It bisa 0 on owed om
Administra ation. ith all EONATE nale dee or uous tax which a
Bav. —A Conference of the Ministers of the After atine that Greece was at peace with a 8 ceeuta ly 50 out of 1000
States of ptem e ed also of de; minor States of ia a on Tes — ROMS i 5 ta dodi ru V CAI Eta E vE hir * he 3 Margot
5 es * Gentlemen, Deputies, and Senators.— or — the 21st hina,
Germany, was pened on the 23d i a NA overnment, always anxious to fulfil its 3 bo tiba T cite aie two he Ee Service are to be grates
n the invitation of Bavaria, in MES 80! towards the Powers who guaranteed the loan, has proposed to ge, us 80 dA — 5 rmy : cei not taken there
agreement ending questions of German them to make a final settlement of the affair ace nding to | XacsiVe n Bounty of 50 o enlist for China;
£ ; 1 “tI t mty o r. on condition that t| wh!
p. The Governments aria, Saxony, Wur- the resources of the State. They have claimed, for the present, | years, Radical changes are looked for on M: hey enlist 4
ur Hes sse sem Yes zon Darmstadt, pa erin, an annual payment of 900,000f., convinced that the payment of | including the abolition of the — Cona, Milan's mim)
"n and S that sum willnot create any embarrassment tothe parci. ment. of Secretaries for the Civil, Military, sand and a Gore,
e-Altenbur 5: are takwa My Government will ask from you the grants ere z e :
he this sum, and will follow up the negotiations relative to the tina.
8 5 r doni m settlement of this question a settlement which is indispensable RU HIN ‘A AND Japan.—The foll g telegrams kar
consideration are ierd] ts of justice, the | to the consolidation o f public credit and a healthy system of been Dean e in anticipation oF the China mail
the establishment of federal courts 9 jus ur finances. I entertain the hope that the kindness always Los Octob mail of the
national 3 ation in favour of unity, reform of the | shown ^ — by the P otecting Powers will facilitate the Heg Kos hé bi
ederal laws relating to the army, the Hesse electoral — f this negotiation. stell 1 an
E 28 ` mer Canton 1a8 As, Tost i ina gale of —
and Holstein questions, and regulations pra an unifor — Advice rom Tunis to the 15th inst. state | were saved. _ sree has refused to revise um
system of weights and measures for all Germany. ' that the new Bey i is about to send an Ambassador P" ed o ee n Mr. ao pe * UM
.— ections of Burgesses which nd a religious angha. ese Government has :
2 xm ape Ser Ser TE „ [] Extraordinary to Constantinople to demand a relig Trap Am pons Unit — on ag ee uae *
ook place on the 1 inst., ne Seat and Taiwan, as stipulated: by tus en the pen.
was so far recovered from his wounds as to be ab
arty nor the party of the Guilds sueceeded be bringing - m t to the 16th | H
party pa ate _ Torx EY.- Advices. from Constant inople o the Ho n 8 ean
in their candidates. ane bas leaders of t and haderrived at Shangh M
B y "v
Liberal party were bea y the. leaders of the inte e, and many apreta have taken place in r^s Tello, «nd hero found a favourable Salt i0r Un
extreme Liberals. Black Sea, melia. Kiamil troops, by which the may be taken in t, andi d
Paussra.— The health of the King of Prussi a has | pacha, President of the Hi igh Court of Justice, has | obviate the necessity of 1 the river a mouth, jet
so far improved, that his medical attendants “have been suspended, and Saffetti Pub; er Minister of | 78 Mie tea gry nin ghai vy 1 Chinese were
advised his Majesty to remove to the Isle of Wight. | Religious Institutions has been appointed his suc- ono. -omha ug fh o entrance ee
It is believed that this advice will be followed. ssor. Circassian emigrants — to arrive in large | of Ministry favoura
Count Pourtales, Prussian ‘Ambassador, eri returned | numbers and 700 ‘of them have been sent to the island x erac Marifat, e 7
to Paris, and visited the Emperor an mpress | o es. The editor of the re aed’ nt has | dered by the Japanese. Atonemen:
at Compiègne It is stated that his reet is received permission again to publish that paper, but Se b We de e
finr dt pha 2 : t D t ‘he Pri Prin tie e under c ertain conditions. 2 ava. Th Governor Ge is seri
oy anations of the late in “iti etween rin ion h at he should be relieved.
nt of Prussia and the Em y asam October, The mail has arrived w it news to was to leave in October H
eren Letter aie Malta of the 15th pe d Wines Wd M in di Sir Robert Maclure, is in dock at
a slight shock o uake on the day Lo psi e 1 .—A despa
tended by a Kolkon rai bling noise. There was little y
wind at the time, although it had bee n Moving fo or portant despatches from
| relative to the San Juan di
heavily
eastward. It had rained 1 E on the 14th, after un-
mcd dry weather 2
A. — An Imper vial ‘autograph letter orders e rning j i j i
Ministers to grant a full amnesty to all persons c | 85 Clyde nsted throug —— ben a terride the two countries. The
promised by the Ma they have taken in Ta lian affairs — of shot and s soa | election is we great topic 5s :
This amnesty will apply to 5 il as well as to mi itary — rs, | nion, and fears are e
dota l length le
93 T imita bene of no political character are her M 5 ka EL, Foot, M slavery may at len
to be ex pted. The Reformation festival was celebr ate d Toft non M ande du nder rn the guns, about 2 o'clock o | Northern and Southern 5 and the o othe
at Vi enims ty courti c1 i n landing, although the Be en nemy kept Aus upa F prisoners convicted of bein pit in rr E
J was 8
in a very solemn and impressive manner. ong Mn re o 9 b Die ga N rela ene tie 22 Harper's Ferry had — sentenced to
esent were the Minister of State, Baron ek Mrs ht of the he alla: Them M the 28th a 2 the ret Native arlesto|
her: and many re conan of| WEST La ds ara
sively loop:
had been | She was six days overd aving b
t - | back to repair 1 in "hoe steam aj
8 has rage ed very badly on board
51 cases having occurr
high staff Rice. the representatives of sev otal
foreign embassies, and a considerable attendance pi the
publie, among whom were numbers of s udents from
the academies. Luther's 5 ibo: * Eine feste
Burg ist 5 Gott ” (“Our God is a cae castle),
was sung with great N feelin
Rv - iar despatch from Nice announces that the | in
er ed, | with p^ "offer rrender
—A — 5 from Tuscany, Nim te of Nane OE, EY. EM cares EP x
chi The t — t and PERU.—A terrible earthquake
cs bend no se case for
com i, arrived last week in Turin. deputation
was not received by the King, but the Prince de Carig 23 : in the harbour, and ships sway
nan received them in a private audience. It appears if in eavy The Cal
that their objections were removed o m being assured by suffered remises damag
the Sardinian Gove sowie? 4 — the cy was only a no — ould pass over it.
e he pres order — on the ni;
in ral Italy, and sje o to the decision of the at b Chorillas. This is
or this ch Gove nt has n | has been — in Peru wi
also withdrawn its feet, 1 5 it is said that A a, HILT. un from
through the medium of Prin ette: » , has pro- nian announce the assassina atii
tested grep the nomination of a Regent as being red by the sackful. Moreover, when ere | Leal, Intendente of Valparaiso,
contrary to the conditions d z treaties ot Zurich. oes np the temples were unay oidably : destroyed, Lining tember, the anniversary of Chilian
edmontese Go- | within the warlike enclosure. The c td
. m the Hindoo C cS ot eo — crga
India. wit, not desecrated and | the principal church, at whic
M^. tole X our 5° and we won't up up | immense concourse of citizens were
i" They have ap populace attempted to e
instone, win Por told them that all va public loot vd
Poi en but that what the soldiers pocketed is gone — Nati — med
nd recall, front chore v,
Allahabad on the 14th aid 4 the General wen the heres
on to Cawnpore.
‘be “tthe recognition of in front ot the S arch when bo feli
pup sree with | by né of tlie i nts” balls.
Beene Address.
many of ques ures o
Princes of the Punjab and others,
as — who loyally lent theiraid to 22 ul tbe. British power,
d the Lahore — ree of these services, and for
inspecting Delhi a Oude. ts chief of note is commanded
m were continually impedi
of action al the rank I ccu m the appear before the Gov seas r-General and Commander-
Army of “Central Italy, and which I made in the i -Chief.
endeavour nicus the 2 ect gren every good It i : ucknow.—Rajah Jeyloll Singh was hung on the Ist ult.,
view, T lea leave for military se ‘On the day and, — Hussein and Futteh Ali on the 12th. They were
plicated i e f our — ton
executed at the scene of the wy:
when Victor Ermanud hal shall again pit his. soldiers — arms for
1 cM : ee Y Jeol Singh ofa — tr ep any amount—from upward 5
: ev sentence. : The 5 King Ti d is 0 E
9 a pension of 12 120, 0001.
— all on e. : T
Nepaul.—A postscript to the Lahore Chronicle of Oct. 13 says abs
that it has 3 from its Oude corresponden: - thei rtant
news that Na: in the Dhang valley in the Nepaul
— us back again in frontier on the 2d , and that his followers had all dispersed
in several ere is however o doubt the truth
He lett Nice on Monday for Genoa. Before his
he addressed inhabitants of Nice, and
h had rms,
been printed by the Nana himself, in order to prevent the 8 amon:
; | Winter campaigns, which would be sure to puckerow him ; for, — — - is is
e except
Tartary, and at this season of the year it would be impossible t of di
for him to cross the high i i very un of the snowy range.
; 0 s yswarrah well, and it is appre-
and | “Bomba eoting
y.--On the lth ult. a great native rn was hi back woodsmen, and e
at which a petition to Parliament from the native edi, vi | weave could not
NOVEMBER 26, 1859.]
to Hesse, to Hanover, and to Denm: ark for riflemen to bring
sina the —— and i in 1794 the Government established
the Goth battalion of Rifles ras called the Royal
2 Richmond o that in the Penin
salar en were pranks F ith u tight. -fitting bullets
that ld [^ every plenty of small o —— ae p iss, —
order that they might have the pleas It w.
eng h discove: pae t the bm ann "supplied to the English
infantry was t the w p the est, Pa vod
e la: stery ba ll, the greate er,
Sin he ge greatest windage, the shorten fine andl r powder,
y. Itshowed what the English soldier must be when
he — gain — X victories with Brown Bess
and inglorious, and public attantion
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL
GAZETTE.
of the factories, i J i 1
of the fac ei order to insure a greater degree e of
angle of elevation. eard that the trajectory in the!
Swiss Federal rifle ry low, Perhaps it would be more
correct to that the improvement made of late years in the 5
rifle eg n row na mel na in the ball. He came public, The War Departm ment. have issued a most
assure them that accurate shooting could be acquired | stringent order for the exel
mess om in a pleasu M ——— if — Re — ed |w ithout exception, from visiting the A Ey
k in the same ng w: the voluntee: ; < 4
had recently been at Hyde Had Engi we peer 3 nothing P of the strictness with which the i junctions are
to defend? Had we not an excellent Sovereign, a glorious ved, it may stated that a few -— ago the
Constitution, a = — T — thoug! and a free press? —. dete of the Royal Defence Commiss nested
E vi — —— ich — ribat l vata and 4 | permiasion to visit the establishment. "Their request
liberties ied: "ki to ‘defend the’ Volunteer Rifle 277 — st 4 was telegraphed to Pall Mall, and a reply was promptly
i he “tha
ad a rep
Mr. Secretary Herbert
veras could 7 ot be
nstance.
become a national — to-day | receiv
uid bs r to do e move-
X ot think that our — dai would main- regretted that the n
Mh A. OP qi uia NERIS ES of an v» pecu
met yar for 800 years, and in the words of Lord Brougham be
abe even in ilar d
s ago given to to the pcne p"
3 che
inglo a
e Utd Ot ming of our firearms. General would make it an impossibility for an enemy to ir o
"heart was sent out to the Cape with a carte blanche, and ET, W CHA atte 1 — = “5 Acum ——À E 9 of © "General comman
what did he ask for? ,He said to the Gove: th Mu ed ould, under the blessing of God, prove the garrison at Woolwich. is stated that, as a
"Send me out 4000 Swiss. He wanted soldiers who could vation of our land. e men of England rally round the | Consequence of the inte of p i" — being
objects at long ranges. Brown Bess was clearly QAM Queen that s ain + remain the 22 of a free and united — an for the manufact w. uL E
to bring the war to a close, for it was upon record that one | people, a evil-doers, and t! raise of them that do the shot and shell dn M. and the
morning 80,000 rounds of ball cartridge and only 25 well Most heartily. did he say to the 7 unteers of E e Neu 1 oun -—
ged. George LV. very anxious that the | the members o of f the true Peace League, ‘I wish you — todk tendence 4 the laboratory will m sitimately bam “handed
cuiras should be egeo. 2 e Wen y, LT that o pe- | in the nam: e Lord. he same direction, which will
riments shou ri o show whether it wo resist
— à Was intordisely fixed ete and 2 ‘Of no small importance in the 8
Bro ss was set to work at it, with the e of ex €—
‘rest.’ The E periment poula have 10 very satiafac City TUNE. ^ ux rer AND IxwsonvxescY Law
„ only no! 0 e S cou SUAM * J
— : t last an officer put a musket to his shoulder, Moxzv MARKET, Fe —Burrisn Fonps: Con. eotumerdal 1 st sire» welled uran Lard Pines "x “the
a by, a ur good luck un the aem vin an M of — closed at 964 t ney, and 96Ẹ for — 6th ercial interests waited upon Lor merston on
-—
rough it. He beli QA
in oun v^ 200 yards, ad "let a ma
y with Brown
er than they
to ‘waked the e enemy y think r
e andag the m 5 at Cawn
od
und like a wall.
ich a soldier came to the front, fired,
tance of 300 ‘yards.
think.’ Our troops
„ yu was the best
had e
m cies
Bess pon of ndant value ——
Upon the b i ges at rne. — E when Sir. John —
a target was put up, 8 feet by 6 feet, upon whi
on horseback. A detach:
calling. What was
ing dn and 'position
“in necessity of Samen ie
— 22. eaps and firing blank cartridge. To begin with p^
ball cartridge was fatal. The volunteer who did so would
—— 3 2 pa “4 for hea
y
spor
their Ee os 3 go Shean h à course of *position
— M let them fire blank ca s at swallows or other
the
ng
rst easy, but gine
Were certain qo at which horses
—when flesh could not be discerned, pg
have no —.— when I 9 — had no pcan: — Vilis en
med to be of o Sa could judge of
— wich great d th aly ru required
to be cultivated. The gallant colonel then to
"ere grams the line of Saher the d the line of
— d the tory of the Enfield rifle, The whole difficulty
ring bullets s was thst hey were always travelling through
the airat a „ 80 at long ranges it was necessary
Titerall A. Armed with the
rm a Top ad
rised. The cavalry might
not a man would escape the aim of their
ey talked of the * common EX" but we did not
Idier’ in these days. What was wanted
E
e po
a n a longer thee oe increasin,
w
ce o!
roportion to the magnitude of
in artillery the 68lb. ball, With a ge r^ 161b.
Mace of aim
bullet from
hy reg as — Enfield. The oe the
requires the more skill was wanted to
just phere it Ma ri hit. E — 11 c-r the
e better and
pe 2
E
È
1
ier was
5
z
pig
e the dinci, i af foe No
van: f ow
t be laid down 8 Sale tn
of hitting was just in nantin tothe uA of the
iE
ES
uced
al New ‘nian Loan, 4
pes B
t | Proprietors’ — "uu
mi New ne per i 941; 88
to à; r per "Cent. Deben- e ba iall
; Exchequer Bills, 27s. to 80s. prem. | &Pecia ^y in t
or —— Brazilian Four and a Half per Cen nta, M
858, 961; Buenos Ayres Six per Cents., for Acct., 81};
alf per Cents., 89} ; Russian roer
Spanish Three ^E r Cent
Cents aes fo or
nkruptcy la aws and suggest a remedy—the more
the reductior
„ AAT 5
Ceto 773 Ditto for 1858, for Acct., 651 to buo vinti ee
— ions has been introduced by Lo:
Š Imerston assured the deputation
»- 1 : TUUM. ject had engaged the attention of the Ca
assv torney-General, who attended with his
Notes Issued s e ELS C i
E
D 2
Other Securi
24 -— and s Buna oe
mins
intend
upon the meeting ‘of Parliament.
th at it is the intention of her Majesty" s Ministers to
£30,505,080 —
ANKING mta
MENT
ernment rities
ics ped on
or Seoul ties” s
—.— B m
Gold and Silver Coin...
and to limit imprisonment for debt, except in cases of
cealment of property, 3 of books,
which
in reality belong
«+ 10,925,157
19,058 503
9,640,125
655,584 | abi
Rest
"me Deposits "tinelud-
ng Exchequer. Lid
Banks, Commissioners
of Nat. Debt, E E
dend Accts.) .
—.— Deposits , .
en day and other bilis
Tue Lar
The recruit William Davis, whose aiv a t Wook
wich was recently the subject of agence and who
deserted from the artillery on his relea m the
* i „has been officially 2 -— the
Gazette of the Reek. esseri Are ver rei iP
DAY—B SJ. B. urslem, Earthen
A Bunar, Whitechapel Roni fiis ond ue Dealer—M. F. Biased.
SE tere Ur e . d und dy
PORK. Cutler-J. mb Mane paue Yam pire Bda — and D. Su. ae,
RATIÓNS-W. Cricuton, Hawick, Bookseller—
Edinbu Stationers—J. 5 Achna-
Cattle Dealer—P. G. Mixx, Edinburgh, Grocer.
UPTS—J. A , Deptt
na, dien sl K rA Xe
5 È = mi E. 5. Er — en niin
ard -$
ire Inukeeper—T. HANCORY, — Tim
270.279 50 369
24th day of Nov., 1859. M. MARSHALL, Chief Cashier.
speci
x M birds—
mpm Hip PR o
5
. G -
asa renewal of the ri
om gentleman, who gave
| Cornwallis, was taken pled a o by the the polis, charge
for uL disturbing the e ire
Emp F Women. — The council of the considerable uproar and hissing during the ¢ different
àee | Nation al ee for "the Promotion of Social services, but t the rector's P anr Arma assembled in ene
e voices of the malcontents
Metropolis and y ttg Vicinity.
districts, will be the
to | stood that the
t 2 tak
ewi 6 Whitworth Ps ya 3 on this . —
ae Farde range this rifle co
ften
arrangem
e
s
e| addition to “that
ars Science git appointed a committee to consider and strength to overpower t
port o e best means which the association can poli o the choral rion.
dopt t their que seem:
industria 1 erred ain of women. te tk
ts of the Earl of ge eget ba hg A. Kinnaird,
MP. Mr. E. Akroyd, Mr. Hastings, Mr. Hora ce Mann,
Mr. W. S. Cookso son, Mrs. salen, Miss Parkes, Miss
Adelaide Proctor, Miss Boucherett, Miss Faithful, and when’ in consideration of his 2 erd Br xr p
Miss 9 xs d 9 d acting as secretary. eight hours the magistrate disch
REO F WOOLWICH, AnSENAL.—It is an a pology to the churchwarden, t. Bae 1 m at
t th had been od of = in nthe
N for which he was liable to eccles
services E c ros
away without Bing — — Mr.
brought up on Monday to the Thames P
e ) the prism anomaly of having only one national
war laboratory and arsenal, and that one close to the
hat a new ni is forthwith to be w
oné o f the inlan 2 nties, | i
a the
pegs force. It is thought
from its central situation, its facility of communication
with all the prts, 1 ph, and its
convenient position, in the heart of the iron and wors
place selected.
management of the i arsenal wi
feu ians instead eremi e
this
ivil d i te gm tepa;
mili to the civil service,
er Armstrong, C.B., and | after stat
" "
ui
l ted, according to prese:
William’: , gre . ing od, at 9 lowest catia |
bad Wit:
as a mhna fee for
EA as 1 1 in 1 e dw hs ngng be at liberty
to practise as a barrister; and that € — cases in pend
he should hold briefs as counsel o: Board i
1000
in case of actual d
epo at Woolwich is are
regulation having
portion only at each
These wa
sent to Blick to be completed, a regu
been established to manufacture a
THE GARDENERS e AND sire mde nie soie m p
superior courts, before Parliamentary committees, arbi-
[ Novemsge 26, IN
39 n bave since been found acide W
ibas M i fied :—Fran
trators, and the like, usu
sional fee 2
: d
b+
}
s F.
Hutton, pace $
ra,
on the somite a the new clerk. Mr. ag
M.P., having moved the adopti ion of the report, Mr.
v
D the re
port back onsider: th
Board would be establishing a s nd e hat would -
judicially interfere with the due transaction
ie b a
-|Le ewis has given n his consent to ca conversion of th
eat 1 aks
0
David Bel, Anthony "Belt, 65 s Morris, Mrs.
No rman, Dr. h, Mr. Édwin Fowler, "t Mr. M. W.
h 180 EL
boues from Sebast du es of cannon and
b h had
will be wered.
SMITHFIELD Marxet.—It is stated that Sir —
pose of prov
establishing a E rin f
by giving the adviser
ied interest in n promoting itigatio n n by the Board.
A long and desultory discussio ee in which Mr.
E.
"Ee
Pa
"E 101 HEDRAL ng he ENS
st of January next, on which
ned with a
of Wi lian
timidating one of Messrs. Piper's workmen. n a
cation was made on Wednesda: to the Court of Queen’s
Ben , with a Mad h
the hri, but the Court refused to gran
toth
It i 3
0 e the bie ber at |r
L DESTITUTION IN —A
"hg s been tke b
an im ieee: report in case vu um
found during the etm of i. v
interfe: erence ay been four T
NEWOCASTLE-ON-TYNE.— urday wi
meeting of the Teading inhabitants of tist
that
orities to ey
e
SPIRITUA 2 Ms
large etna was ep at the Assembly Roo ooms, i Batis, W.
on
Mor ida zn enin afford an ortunity to to the
laity o ferring E ith the Bist ix of London upon
of c
the spiritual wants of the diocese. The Bis shop presided,
and t
ae
in the
S
.
N and ox meeting was a E
the H. G.
um
by his lordship, the Right Hon. S. Walpole, M.P.,
rehdeacon Sinclair, Captain Sullivan, yet other
re adopted pledging the
the Bishop in promoting | §
and expanding the N system hn jugho out the
t th
Hon.
Ma ud of Tyne — Rev
—— and resolut
th
iocese, v declari e spiritu:
he rural » deanery of Ealing h as ia
— — erections, and pro ovidin nk for
uri association, consisting of
t.
the peers m laity of the distri
CaP me sey p E Woops
Kaffir, inay tate, a
effect,
was appointed t to carry e ed E m
e ur magistrates of
12
Pons 5 eek with hearing ee
E Ter in the borough re nst Mr,
Collins, ^ Sai ics ont for unlawfully conspiring il
E
oel Fox, a member
Vv ai
own Council fo or the
even ching
1e offer. until the bal halves of the
id id on and the naika ers of the remainder yep
WOA, ns assisted ie a number of the inhabitants, but as |
soon as 1 Messrs. Collins and pes MM
e wood, and his movements were " — that he sulting 3 complied with di ndition, and afie
as more like a wild m onke ey than n, and it was|receiving the m Mr. eat K . om
Const of Exc chequer, and after hearing the case argued
he Court reserved its j Ey Jes until yesterday, when
ihe Lord M — on of €
urt
s|on | Wedn
mor bui ng t t he was sec
taken to — r n h
sheep he had a na 2 of arti cles of clo th-
g. e
Pk.
ace, and after — exiting the. iiia
voted for the eight Liberal alderm
t pe e ems
A — and one of li
tolen
ing. The prisoner vec taken
haved in a v
esday be y wild manner, yo was
tlem ro — jo; pro-
positions for E? Boome adjustment of the existing dispute :—
3 maso; l to resume work on the sam
apr ten “locked out 6. 2, The masters —
8 with the — aea 3. The masons are willing to
Mr
who had bee ned to give evidence as toie |
, | payment o of the “notes, retail p? answer kar
stealing from C
e and ae it to divers
whereby their lives were endangered. It appe
After some discussion on this point S
€ the inquiry, Mei Mr. Colim?
Ol. each, and himself i
we left
of the inq
unes Work with those of their o vm meme or ee who meri pon. Butler & McCulloch, the herbalists - | Sergeant lantine, who appe d
pi gre nformity with the law of the land. 5. The einer 25 tto
London are willing to enter into a discussion of their bye-laws,
with six employers, and
not aj — to the satis-
dome na, to be sent into the country to a err r, and
that while it was deu at their door 8 Es
the carrier, xax oners, who were w
thiev
they
had got some honey or a preparatio liquo:
— — eel then — to other Ma fora jin eac EU
th e of the eve ning, i several of the e boys w who had
ell kno |
e strings -— 8 * the jor, believing t tat
of
on the ground t Y
had been issued des pies partiesin ior berae ;
io 17
arliamenta: ction, the yes i of which h
ai Wer! that A some discussion the
—— tra ed to
acced
acc Marly postponed 5 Decem
refer rr ed to as hav g been e
be
men: harles Ba Mr. P. wick, Mr. Digby t
AM J. Vulliamy, Mr. G. G. Scott, and Mr. W. Butter-
d. 6. e — es mua it to be distinctly under.
te y have m the erence, and th: t
ve Sa the strike | at Trollope’ 8 for the nine hours, it van ng
consider ered zn eed — tend lo upon
quesi erts having filed ring about a
— with, the, — rà (for all es) wi
ci e em dis with ibe 2
Em the masons. ua ried u behalf of the masons of
Loss or THE SHIP WELLINGTON BY FIRE. |
—The ship Duke of Welton of Liverpool, was burnt |
a sea on the 11th ins miles to the westward |
iari
p he pke -rigged ship of
£n M.
e, bend P" of them are still lying i in Charing Cross
= Middlesex Hospitals in a very dangerous condition. |
The Wag remanded the prisoners for a few days,
nd see if any of the boys died, and expressed his inten- |
0
n to send them to Feltham Reformatory, if the
should not be removed bg his
verdict of a perio inque
MURDERS ON THE HIG: C —The Sheriffs of Lon-
don and "Middlesex have received a further 3
December next, for the err pen con
belongin
ty 0 Capta in John | Gi bell. * broke
5 o'clock in the morning on the 11th inst., and bd
viet under sentence of d di eath in New
-— bier Boland, belonging to 2 p Medina,
jurisdiction by the | sons
seaman |
ave been iss
p Mr.
e Conserva tives,
vative r her
eeded with on the
was ted for trial on Thursday a
Police | Court, for the e Wi lfal Murder of Edward yt
y be proe —
The gendi impression "seems to r nr the
pov aad seaman, in
n the bere : J oy last.
F Dr. SMETHURST. —On Tuesday morn-
X
dee
time, with a
seem probable that ‘the hoe “ath
ing in the boats 48 hours
3 up by ale ir a French rr ge Idée of ae
board, With * kindness, an:
"n
E
ad-
IS n progress
of uiry being to ascertain
p was constructed on safe principles |
The bod the fee me et
Bull Bay o
a piece oreign esta.
is- inerease ahy populations will becom
agr
of 8 Lane gaol to Newgate; there to await
his trial for mal Co at the forthcoming sessions of
Central is looks are said to hav
e the eto of his 1
THE ao Hen he R Mosi als
grum Return that the low — which
pgs inst., an continued Tu 11
poe sed “the deaths in London to rise in the week
ening "Saturday the tev inst., from 1051, the number
returned in the previous wee ek, t o 1233. In the e
et cor Be — * the 10
mber which, if — in pro
of last wi ath
were "registe In the 10
weeks of the years 1849-58 the average number was
Provincial.
— Er aA us: — it ‘December, wh
of a Royal Com
PORTSMOUTH. ial
apprehended prr
suspicion of — the paie
Ashcom as sont
— vhichs
if on Mon as been again
en it vim
in
‘Wor orvan ante e Frida ight es
at the extensive 2 iron
was washed anie with Pans ue D
pins, and two pairs of
32 A ta fT.
Ha:
^ meme] after which the proceedings were again
gi ^em
, has arrived
E
rred
Gibbs hne at Deepfields, near this
» Novewnrn 26, 1859.] IHE GARDENERS' ENT E AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE
opem Der qp ORT e ADR -a —
a large iron rolling mill was levelled with the e ground, | riages strikin 1 rokon. the skal!
one man killed, se several others se 8 injur fractured, an — * „ at Cor sul
- 4 0 of the workm n had gone e to Supper. r, and others injuries nc 2 ep spine dislocated, i addition id russia — nsu :
is makin intende to get out a ve w station,
the rolle E “en vide 8 the large driving- ia occurred in
me tons in wei ts, which were | window of the ca =
propelled on all sides with great force, Several of the | and while he Eo s was o x A. T open i
iron pillars ane — rted the roof, the princip the passengers made great efforts to Mlarkets.
beam, ch sev oot D d ds 2 n" — ken, and pull h r 3 —
the entire "or y afterwar ell down. Of the to a por on the platform, who ran up and tried to | COVENT GARDEN.—Nov. 26,
h herin his arms, As the train had now gained | Vegetables continue tolerably abundant arag
insensible, and died shortly afterwards. Three others speed they were both thrown down and d Seakale make their appearance. Pine ane and Grapes
sustained severe DEP and other ie pae and two|the platform by the steps catching her —— D in pripe since last week. Poni
fe I o!
or three escaped unhurt. The they fell upo n the 3 way, the porter as well Winter Nelis, Passe Colmar, The be
about t 30001. as d ie vere injuries. The e jury, after | dessert Apples now to be obtained are King of the Pippins,
a brief deliberation, 3 verdiet 8 —— Fs 25 impr Pendu Pi «on ibstons are very
^ carce, re improving G `
— D. „That py tra S with her death on the North London | realising Sen an. 1n > 4. 64. tern 15 de — fal,
ilway by a train being set in motion without suffici are | Cabbages, Savoys 2 i 7 i
Tar Carmoric UNT —Dr. Cullen and 28 of being taken by the company's servants in secing after the ssen. uan . de er dnd re Bela rale um
tho Boman Catholic bishops i in n Ireland — issued a | rity of the pass engers rs before s starting ; and that the coroner be | 48. pe xn still be bad. ©
adopted at the recent m eeting of the rer wá hp the com EL painting out the | Bors to 2 85 tindant Out Sowers —
testant -universiti
Heat! —
„ third E — — f B. Hu» Esq.,
M I! a A. Portland Place— “20th inst,
R Esq. of 8 ake Holm l
| aged T1—9th. E E 8 cecus, Des E ^u ——
*
one w
r
F
aa
*
8
*
E
E
T. Ci Y
not suited for a Catholic people, and that in order not » rir ws bá dus. = eek aith Par — ree]
to expose them farther to the danger to which they | y €—— | Pine Apples, per Ib., K s, 35 to 6
d — Vs ME. or mixed 3 or new railway through the northern part . s ay bey y wl | ent i ù tto "| ES ae ^W ^ S 7
- des É s be t . with ¢ ge ec elons, each, 28 to 4s emons, per 100, 5s
. sally ter 3 8 ra i venient terminus close to the Bank of England. It | Pomegranates, each, 4d to 6d | Filbe my P100 lbs., 50s to 60s
y will pass by the — of Gray's Inn Road to Apples, per bushel, 8s to 10s | Cobs, do., 100s
nance of the Catholic University and support the move- | Gra ta — 1a60 to 4$
weakness ri — consists in its | Spinach. s 6d P.
armour, he prefers not being encumbered with the sword or | jeant oA stirs | gpinach, p. sieve, 16 6d to 2s | Mushrooms, p. pott, lend tolsbd
the buckle He fights with weapons of a different kind, | d re of 22 paray CD e eder — „
n *. ivory, per bunch, 2d to
released the first and Nd of his | ee d from prison. F
may pe
the thies and supplications of his children all o MET ATTLE MARKET.
tenor. "Tho most ea vs partake of the Obituary. Lu
1 Le eig icu Er * di We have a | t ch t qualiti
late battle-fields have poured their united prayers into one at his ros a Pak ne I ee |nike whet uu cs qon pete oe v md
e po! — 1 ue wood Park, — Lim: DU vene & not much more ple Y ices aro fully —
common "mate for the safety of the successor of St. Peter. No| He mi n = oop — number of — s rather sm unter v uta large supply to
sooner has erfidious blow n ai a c
i sent
er
X n the mpany at omen I. Ho | tk e dead ma; — caves a slow trade E and prices on the
t distant di fe that = in 1827, and acquired conside erable average a cely as good as — Monday last. ; alteration
1 eputation for his work on Cabul. ue Calf tends. prom Germany and Holland there are 920
3 eir rep; F. R La £, M.D., Professor of Surgery e Uni- Beasts, 4950 Sheep, and 96 oce from Scotland, 80 A
h d | versity of Glasgow, died a forr days since at the ridge — Allan. | T i Ireland, "i Norfolk — ao Ik, 100; an d 9700 from
youth in ancient story, whose ton 8 bythe | after along illness. He was son of the Rev. Dr. Archibald | the and "" » *
horror of the attempted cide, the voices of millions have La 1 is d 1
broken forth at the tenour of the indignities —.— on the - st Scots, wee Best Long-wools. 1 8 5 0
Holy Father, proclaiming in intelligi om 8 that the most contracted p disease which has now Baste atal. — = fords, &c. 4 8 to 5 Do. Shorn
. rmevered m h in the f — b 4 seede Dr, Burns in the Professorship at ~ pe Short-horns : 6—4 2l Ewes & 2d quality 4 0 = 6
Whilst we 1 with - 2 of — Holy ii in 1850. nality Besta dined, | Do. Shorn
te the tyrannies that ares s o overturn ed | T dig
= 0 * ok T PROFESSOR GEORGE WiLsow, M. D., the first Professor of Tech. Bes D ambs
e cannot forget Keeper. of | +2 5 0to5 2 SQ : z m " -
TTT E EIER, KAMERA
was es-
BVO feature t that distinguishes civilised fom s from savage li — M e — an — 2A e Ped
itis not mU M understand iren claims to the extension of — en lecturer ani wel We hn > ov. 94. 83
civilisation can be possessed by any government that leaves the | ^ 3a. Fani Broxr, K K N., died on the 18th inst. at his resi- — — eden riy m Hn p ds a
— che industry, a and the tenements (if on ents — pre- dence, Russell House, Tavistock Sq e NC originally prac- = ; consequently ptions m; on-
ous dwellings can be called) o ire people, together tised in water colours, and as late as 1846 continued to o e A Steep „ yet it exceeds the demand. Trade is dull
with t the fruits of of ‘that industry, 1 as — at the mercy of a member of the Old Society of Puinters in Water Colours. He for an aT analt, qutd Germany and Hollanti there:
; M andering tribe was ever at the beck of a bar- first exhibited — Royal Academy in 1837, and was ro 305 B ts, 770 Bh sh aah and 174 Cal i tie
S IN IRELAND.—The Belfast Har the home aie 180 Milch Cows from
sioners have received a letter from the Best Scots, Here- Bit Tange 4 8 tos
War Office stating that measures will be shortly taken „f Aas mOn agite IN im fast, at 19, menanda Scare e|. fords, do 8to5 0| Do. Shorn
for preparing ‘Carrickfergus Castle to receive an arma- | Lady Brgenrev, of a da m inst, at Veitch’s Hotel, A4 E : mid 419 ROOM 2d quality 4 0 =e 6
ment of heavy guns for the protection of Belfast Lough, | Edinburgh, Lady = the A dim mma de — i bet Downi and PFF a
aud for the security of the anchorage of Carrickfergus | Leinster Cheddington n Rectory, Lady Fww M eroe. SA om 2 EM. 77 pe =i :
Roads, and that early in the ensuing year, so soon as|Qvsr, of a daaghter- 10th inst, at 55, Portland Place, Lady | D9, Shorn 81 1 4 me
the season. will permit, it is contemplated to undertake | Axsox, wife ui Sir John w. H. Anson, Bart., of a lor 1 p & Lambs, 3050 ; Calves, 257 ; Pigs, 180.
efendi m the
Hr pond
HOPS.—Boroven Market, Fripay, Nov. 25.
Packer tafe pe AT QUEENSTOWN. —In ac 1 — Wakefield, the Hon. 8 ofa| Messrs. Pattenden & Smith gepot t that. the market for
- ance with = ee ent already announced, 1 du hod Mb «i DL Quorpe over | fPe samples con Jim advance, and such are very
Cunard rs now call larl « Queenstown — "Acn ye s Han scarce,
as dra y Square, the Earl of Datkeira, M. P., son of the Duke and
an assen for fax an ston, 23 Buccleuch, to Lad uisa HAMILTON,
the mails TP p gers Hali: d e 75 and | pu. euch, Lo third
3 the Australian p ackets belonging to the firm essrs. — nest o the Marquis and Marchioness of iene A HAY.—Per Load of Thirty-six Trusses.
Ee — in to call at ow inst, at st — Ch Án Gerard Napier, R. N., SMITHFIELD, THURSDAY, Nov. 24.
‘their ie x "Quest n ON | to Erta third daughter of Colonel Sir J. M. uso, " Clo . 854 to 1056
to M Pe ers. Prime Meadow Hay 70s to 758 .
m mails engers. GB. K.H., of the Hos th inst, = Bu rior do. bach » 15 A 1 New Clover... = pes
à nz i e also making for the i York mails | Norton Church, Yorkshire, GBY, metta — of Inferior 60 70
hrough Queensto' y 8
Bart., of Brompton 3 30
d Australian mails. E Walk youngest. daughter of. Rosin? | By mE — i :as s Davis & Co.
iin hci T EP
1 of the mansion, THOMAS
uring the 70 red ANNE, only daughter and
HONY,
th eri ; Ms
mi inst, i j p MARKET, THURSD. De. 21 ..
at H i or-G - $
Maus. relict of RIoHARD WEEKES, Esq., F. NX 8. re Ei Sup. Meadow B Hay “gato 86s | | Inferior ver .. 708 to 92s
Ra } -— orton House, Hurstpierpoint, semen Tih toot, in the famil y | Inferior do. . aed ps enr 4
THE SOUTH W. 'OUGH 20 ney, . 2
Piles of the Kean | Superior Clover 198 105
the morning e from sns MAI J.P. e
s train which was wen The | Fe 171 N
nd 'sfation i in order to allow i pass.
3
he Express, worth upwards of at daughter c - of RrvEnspALE W. G I
Dies the tender an Er 5
UR RR several trucs of the Moc Hema ay ga er
e be passengers were severely shaken, an Somy | burgh, Imi.
were more or less bruised, but stmt — Captain en
^ :
‘of the + south. Navy, son of the late Thomas De
1 th inst, at
Times met d and | Manor, Guernsey -10
— picea: University of St
deem i uud
bon, 9 cone
ady of fndependast means, aged AE id inst at Daily Mail ; al; und Se
nal to the demand, with some
n The trade
in the T enue Road, Bow, who lost her - sm Sent bg Cheshunt,” € fan, Ber, RA- a and Le E tolloving are tis, € s
on the Bond i The body o e inst, at Berlin| CHARLOTTE ton, 80s. t : Lincoln:
l » shocking 1 po the back and Sous, Boa, of Sorlin, and only daughter 5 90s. Fdo, one to 1108; Perth, Forfar, and
cut by the steps of the n Solly, Esq., aged 30—1 7th inst, at Upton
THE GARDENERS’ CI CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL ae
| Novrwsgg 28, 1859
; Kent and Essex do., 80s, to 100s. ; ;
Y rene "i W ben fon v byt * Belgian do., 65s. to 75s
ARKET.—N
Walls End Brody's gore 205. ;
2is.; Walls End Belmont, A pom Walls End Bells, 13s.
Walis End Heugh Hall, : well Gas, 14s. 6d.;
End Evenwood, ita. 6d. ; Buddle’s | "Hartley, 158. 6d. ; Nort!
Holywell Main, 158. 6d, — s at market.
23.
7" Walls End Haswell,
9d. ;
Walls
26 ahi
LANE.—Monpay, Nov. 21
PROPAG ATOR
ANTED, A : PROP. AGATOR, PLANT GROWE ER,
&c. 25 e will be requi
have a 1 t knowledge of the Propagation of all kinds
2 Plants under ERR also ei Ó— Grafting, Budding,
&c.—Apply with reference, tatin ng ag experience, and wages
cted, 10 J. SAMPSON, | memes We , Pilsley, near Clay
Chesterfield.
poo wets ip N WORKMEN, com-
withou ard to the
designs
locate in n which 1 their e are 5 N by letter
urse
o W. B. Pacte, Hill and Sidford N ries, Southampton.
The supply of Wheat from Essex to this morning's m: ket | 3 ANTED, an industrious Working GARDENER
was moderate, from Kent small ; and having no distant buyers | pam understan ds. Kite hen and Flower Gardens, Vileby:
RUEDAS WOO disinclined to purchase excepting at a and Conservatory; also ave the are of a small Farmyard
decline of ls. per qr. upon last week's quotations, which | and a few acres Ò ages 20s, per week with a cottage
factors being unwilling to poe dd few sales had been effected | aud fae Assistance e the Garden. c Apply first by lette
towards the close of the market. In n d directed to A. B. S. Mes s. Larkin’s Librar; * Egham, Surre
business 5 Noise and prices remain ally — = t z rrey:
before. t malting cies . the prices Dp this "akg AN RDENER and his WIFE, without
se ‘night, "cet d ualities are 7 sole 1 — ipy à Lo ; the former to have
Doe eaper. Beans Mg an . * mpet an of F owers, Grapes, Pruning of Fruit
naltered in value. The Oat tetas is quiet, p^ sales Trees, dod apt arden; the latter undertake the
are eye umi at the rates of this day week. In the value of Flour | Washing. The family consists of four, and retires maid servants.
there is no alteration. —State full elici fe by — big W. K., Terlings Park, n
Pi IMPERIAL QUARTER,
445K
Harlow, Essex, stating te!
DEL ex, Kent, & Suffolk. White es
fine selected runs.. dito
Talave era
46—48| ned
%
— Norfolk
Foreign 38—
Bantes, grind. & dist. 24sto 30s. . Chev. SS Malting. 34—40
Foreign. grinding and distilling 23—33 Malting. 35—41
Oars, Essex and Suffolk .............. 19—24 5
— Scotch and Lincolnshire. Potato 23— e age f
— Irish ard cm 24—28 — 19—24
lan 33—26
eed....
— e
ite 33—43 Harrow. 33—43
nie 48—54 Y iib at
38—4
Bollers 1 — Sufolk [88—41
Gre: sd hae % Yellow.. 30—38
ite l —
Peas, white k xs ne dn
Movies N
Mr.
"um marks delivered; per sack 3
27—37
80—37
ditto 2 —5 Country.
arrel 18—27 Per sack
|
RIDAY, Nov. 25.
During the past week, with the ppt of several very
foggy days, the peer has been fine, and the latter day or
two milder. citement in the n trade had attained
its height Jast eh, and TUR since * Dung the
pa — m Wheat has been d e: pric ier ib inr es
vie of the kin; de and Dior n whic um
chases — — — — been made at fully 1s. par qr. decline:
The v g Corn has been better supported, but
Flour has a'so allen
peared i Moe on ‘the polit of ng The
this w eek c e to be
has
of Mariono-
poli at vals of foreign
Barle: m e large, fair and all other grain.
The aitenianes 2 to- dap s 8 was — and the p nd
Wheat le: 2 from Monda; bene chi = hess sed
We tee uk rato d . ble on the pre ke
aad on red sales a to-day Wednesday’ s prices were fal ly
upported. For n Wheat is held with firm t for
es, but busi is limited, With the 33 of inding
Brey, which is is -Á Det qr. 8 Spring Corn of all deseri ip. | an
nday's pri
WANT PLACES.—Letters to be Post Paid.
ARDENER (Hza»).—Age 28, married, no incum
brance; thoroughly understands his profession in all
— pace Four years’ spotless character.—A. B., Pos
e, Pea: e, Berks.
C ARDEN ER (Hzap)—Age 37, married, without
ine 3 ; has a thor: ei knowledge of his business
n all its "We ence.—Y. Z., Mr. Carter,
Se
RDENER (Hrzap).— Age 34, married; has had
good practice and experince in the g
great o in his professi and. has toon
Grower and Exhibitor of Plant, . dno e Vegetables.
Good Testimonials orem te employer.—T. P.,
Street, TENE
( X ga en
infi AP famiiies D — England. and Ireland.
= late tar writ he happy to recommend him as
fo our years Foreman in s
24, Sussex Brixton,
class London Nurser
arden; takes a
a successful
20, Frederick
kH TUS Age 36; 20 years’ experience | §
me; athoroughly f
ractical Gardener to any pa enti eman in want of vom =
—S. D.
B E 0 N 8 W A
8 of mechanism.“
GOLD, 4 5 100 GUINEAS. | LVE
Send two Stamps for Benson’s
Watche A sent to all parts otf
Wand 94, Ludgate e He rd froe per pan S
pisos s WINTER Dy
effec Ha 1 M rain, yet free]
sive sale he t class carmen XC
mendation. OW sed X BERDOR, Tailor, 96, Ni eir
W., and 69, Cornhill (north side), E. C. New Bond
RESSI^ BAGS
highly finished elegancies f
variety ; Ivory-handled Table 3 y bi ion in A i
Toilet and Work 5 MO AZIN 112 Tequisite tea,
4, Leadenhall Str C. ; and Crystal Palac ERLA
EAL AND SON'S BIDER rd
HS Guinea to Ten Gui 3 bo UUN fa
quus Teo pm Ve Wi to 24s. List. d aizas f
ox’s New Ill Á Catalo eat
pe yz List A am cated tas te 75
196. Tottenham xig. urt Ri Road. W.
PRIZE
0
and address
celebrated Alkaline Tooth Povisa
and of the New Bouquets.—Sole Tom E
Oxford St. 2d and gd doors west from Holles
H TE 2N D pics
onal attra
TE te
M. nex Dass duxi T
( ve 8 (HEAD), to a nobleman or gentleman. |}
rried 2 — — ; has ha e xtensive practical | Prie
pe eire in eet depart t of Gai cdi ing, Laying out and |
Improving Gardens and Ple — 5 een the Erection vd
Hothousos, S dem ork. First-class f 9*9 9y wen
stimonials —J. D., 24, Earnest Stre ns ark, N. W. RY anp SONS?’ 87 *
n ARDEN ER 5 5 55 Age 40, ried, no ineum —Victri rend - Bons, v" ble oe 1
brance; has a thorough s Fees knowledge of the | — beve :
management of Pines, Vines, ons, eo , and every descrip-
tion of Early and Late rantings the Growing of Stove and OM ATH Ae ‘OC
Greenhouse plants for —— also Fruit, Flower, and | ceptionable quality. FRY'S SOLUBLE cocon, in He:
Kitchen Gardens, and can take charge of Meadow Land if | packets, and FRY’ PEARL COCOA; ai restron
req k-s Satisfa „„ FRY AND SONS, MANUFACTURERS.
cm en years' eno OWNER CIA — Liebig, the celebrated Chem 7
Nursery, ET PC seen vac | essential to ‘the health action of the bile, and the
GA ARD DENE Kay, The Gardens, Lillesden, | sustenance, and oe ind Cho m UN k
5 E men ation 0 ocon an ocolate can there! el
aces is at liberty to engage with any noble: ö Caffeine and Theine ea)
man or gi o requiring np. services of a thoroughly pra
tical Gardener, —Addre
( à ARDENER. Miei d. single; has had co
siderable Mariners in the —.— ng, Training of Wal
d Bush Fruits, he general ro ening. Wou
tions is quiet at Mo: rater an _appoin
RIVALS FROM ak 21 TO Nov. 25. Gardener: E., 54, Britannia Row, Lower Road, Islington, N.
( ; ( X ARDENER (UNDER), —Age 23, single; 16 months’
ey. Oats. lour. ( X g g
i Wy. ccc pro > c pma d charac’ Mr. Buckingham Blackheath
English .. 1850 rs.| 1340 q rs. 1160qrs. le, Bla j
Trish .... os - 1900 „ ina — - ee eee, : ER (UNDER) rand dsH
Foreign — > DER). — Age understands Hot-
i E E1630 2 vei. 2 » 2250 brls. ( Houses dss fee DX on 1 5 Good e e
LIVERPOOL, Tuesday, Nov. 92.—Wi i f rom last situation.— near g-
country millers and déalors At our c cei EE unm
morning, but the amount of business 2 in Wheat was only G ARDENER on GARDEN VER AND | STEWARD.—
m. P at a reduction — about iac tal on iin A Men 6 ow - p moet
Friday's. a ar ers were t of Lan m and Stoc own a
ses v tes Phat N E in most — D CENA 2n London and e" Exhibitions! — gera .—
1 nly a moderate business
Oats i ea ea 33
Ss teh tex BE cna aclay TAE APOE a XRDENER AND BATIP age 4l; married,
Friar, Nov. 25.—Corn market languid ; few sales in ve. - * nd; Mess understands ie 8
prices in favour of buyers. Lim es in any | Good re W. K., Scotforth Road, Lanca
war BAILIFF cs E rienced ai wh
eci
farmed understands Buyin
Selling, th difere and “Feeding Stock. Reference from ti
eens Lu co ving up his farm, with whom he has
five . Mr. Chandler's, Basingstoke.
Dias x x UNDER) « na a Large Farm, or rei
.
EM
to procure a
near Dublin. He is réported to
ied and its principles ;
Farm Accoun
of Gard: ald
Mot der a —— s or gentleman's
ession in all its branches: ha
lived
ISTANT
8 for the last two years
— erp tional
ts, Su rveyin
nduct are spoken of a
eut POM 29 per "gen whilst ae (or
Co coa) contains upwards of 35 per cent. of nitrogen.
ast, lun
sold by 2 — € rosé. at rPe j^
— 5 hut epe Bog paos et is lal
Paa me the sole publishers for
ee to any address. Direc’
don, N.E. Estab!
and English Cheap fruit dei
DIGES! 1107 Strong
"s TERES d
n
ai v.
bilious headaches
debility, diabetes, cough, as
leen.
eom
Map meten and co asthma, consum
the highest terms "the Advertiser recommends the candidate Canisters 1 1 28. 9d. ; 21b.
ook rather fe mfortable place wh may hope to el 1 iage on recei
rise by good conduct than for a large immediate salary.—
S. E. S. R., Mudie & Sons, 15, Coventry Street, London, W.
n WI | FARM STEWARD or BAILIFF.—Age 3 rri
* [ d * rr ed < 1 LATE PnorEssoR HENFREY small pes ; has been for the last, 10 youre aximissly WITHOUT P
eke pig of King's College, London, reco: engaged in farming operations on both heavy, ight soils. 1 oe an
: cat number of BOYS —— — . rtd o of 6 and e to " S Breeding, Rearing, Buying, Selling Stock, and | covered 3 —
ATE with 99- Gaticas pit the management of Woods and Plantations, and of this wonderful e
— W. pes * Wiſe can — Wet de Poultry. Un- address on 1 — t of 2
NSES bya entleman i m à the Connty of Oxford, aapi erences given.—G. B., 14, Coronation n Street, Square, „London,
an . E of Boarders ~
4, Kinyham Oxon, ed eid or otherwise.—A yo 92 Man, with a
5 e Apply to. ; h knowledge of High Farm management of
ANTED, D, 4 WORKING FOREMAN of Wood. feng Draipin 8 Alen ot
ving experience in the manage- Mi eg ede itur. “The i nighest ref eg
ment of. Woodland, as P as 7 Press, P Felling, rer Clifton on, Der
fences, fo address, stat
references, S
found), to W. P. AYRES,
TED, in an extensive Forcing Establishment
rohit wing acted Rs Berar Pela . No
Te NURSERYMEN 255 SE
S expen s Man; has had. alt sign |
A 00 P., Messrs. Stuart & Mein, Kelso.
RSERY AND P es DE ble diminution
8 82 seat mA — 4 Salesman; great experi ience, | the trouble of robbing,
ts; vast ngoro ously to
their alan. G., Gardeners Chron
experience amongst plants } the —
icle Office, | wrought.
— òX Z RR
- — E * cc
r ²˙ lu E K ⏑— VW m
Decemper 3, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTU!
RAL GAZEITE
The Gardeners’ Chronicle
Newspaper
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1859,
BANK O Pa DEPOSIT,
ESTABLISHED A. * —.— Parr Matt East, Loxpox, W.
eux i 100,0001.
ARTIES deines. of INVESTING MONET r
ted to examine the Plan of T
and J ETER MonRISON, Managing Direc
oae for opening Accounts UR ese 'ee on — io:
LIFE ASSU
HE 1 | MUTUAL ams ASSURAN x
DT on
continge t 2
ne M Di ee s H
Henry sq. om amber,
Ralph Etwall. "Esq. 8 Pali, N. A.
John 8. Feltoe, Esq. Fons h Stain
J. V. Gooch, e Alfred Walker, Esq
ace
The public are i invited to examine for themselves the — van
tages gained for assurers by the plan on pa wd policies a
— = this —
Fre s to Assure 100/., Payable at Death (with Profits).
Age next Birthday. | Annually, | Half-yearly. | Quarterly.
R ESERVE — e or ROYA AL} hag dor» ¥ uM r
| TEERS.—Her MAJESTY'S Gover Aving with t
Sanction of Parlament 9 — establishing E Reserve
Volunteer Force of Seamen trained to the Use
ia 220 ena NOTICE.
That any Seaman possessing the following qualiSiéitions 1 may
be enrolled asa Royal Naval [MA in the Reserve Force,
ub-
ject to the obligations mentioned
QU imc Wt FOR TRE 1 E.
um, and will there —— be entitled to advantages and be
ith- below
—
no’ ge:
He must within the 10 ‘years "E to his joining
Reserve have been five years at sea, one
week * deer. RESER
will at on an at payment or
T quar!
e fulfils eee is in the Reserve the
of not less than 121. ipe
— Be- a livelihood, |
— on
2. He will, if
requisite time, receive a
whenever he rren —— from
or at 60 years of age, if not previously ‘inca; ted :
iet He may pom y either to take the whole — ion himself, c
take a smaller pension for himself -— A — life, and 55
RM sion after his death, for the remainder of her
the |.
year of that time as
provocation, Admiral 2 Desrossks, com-
anding the , Algesiras, proceeded
t the Go
Tetuan has given satisfaetion by ordering the
— r us Moorish officer who committed the
United States we
learn that the
Ch
the i e Soon
of a ak of. "Abita - were to com
from the and rese ROWN and his
confede; — —— ee „ were under
arms at Richmond a and Alexandria, pts Charles-
A Mau! was so stri to be reall
artial law.
not, on account of belonging e Reserve, forfeit | — in M. present
2 -— : = — = : — id : any ais. in any MAT or Benefit Las. : es N dx T iau
: 6 4 1/2 § | 2: His travelling ex to and from the place of drill w n
ER —1 2 8 hen n. 1 provided comm RESIDENT 8
culiar advantages table and activo , S He wil, diring drill, receive, in addition to the — de robe “ot eat ^ —
Agent hae yot, pae odortak t E he Aden — m plac es where no | fes th pay viet etualling, a aud allowances as a seaman of | forthcomiug eni and m à simp 4 be m
agency wi s vti —. ing to
references and full partic N. . odd T Ey will, if cal ed out on actu — ce, receive the — | tioned as a Mad 3 e uh
A IOKE, Secretary. pay, allowan an: Wer m ve the same pros;
17, New Bridge Street, Blackfriars, E .C. promotion LU asa — — service seaman of The with news from
EXT or KIN WANTED, Or the Flee his rating, and he will on joining receive Bombay to A de M N NR Tord CANNING has
have bade Advertised fo tees sc a who + — s clothing bedding, a and moss ess traps : talook f Oude in open durbar
Advertisements from the Ti nae! ening "Post Sa ^ will, If wounded or int actus! service, receive the z = "bap 4
— E 4 Ü "Soci ‘ost, Ai n Abas on as A seaman 15 — Navy of the same rating : t —— i effect. m n
^ rous, Sydney Herald, in News, 9. He will be eligible to the Coast Guard Service and Green- :
em ud, dndian Mail, &e., for the last 60 years, | wich Hospital : | against the rebels in Bundeleund has been opened,
all asos Entitled Med howe aot Descri poe P 1 10. He may quit the Reserve, if not at the timo called out for | and n Chumbul is ex . The
— - P 9 bog Sn ite - Me er actual service, at the end of — 4 five — ag ned he — 7 uit $ M " 2 d d
Hae — — — © te — — * not iis IX. on payi retainers ho tation against the Bill for licensing trades an
Vi A * an examination as
publica n. Tis sent post freo panpe: ofthe United King. Master or Mate 1 22 — ad Maur pne continues at ay. e Waghurs
I for 12 pom F — . — ont Bow, er Ma have Dwarka — several mai bom-
HAT WILL THIS COST 10 PRINT? is a eee bardment, "Which redused the town to ashes.
thought often ind atn l. A Volunteer must attend drill for 28 days each year; he
2 x of benevolen Uu A ms. * 80, 80 far as the 1 — Sd - sory te "will —— —
; 2 it, we time and p convenient to him: ut he can-
diate answer to the inquiry may be obtained on application to | Pert «f
RICHARD BARRETT, 15, Mark Lane, London, E. C. R. p is enabled “He F Tn erg men Mews,
igne: : E MM r1 th pas Ap eve mand that. will occupy more than six months:
9 Steam Printing M. hin x rede Pnt tater e must appear before some Shipping Master on
P hds is — d: "the Pri and other every six months, Reve <4 has leave to be al souk get, | and| THE as —The . the
ome Book of T — 1 1 — he must re A of residence and employment: Royal amily continue i- Radat Castle. On
pecimen is of Types, information for Authors, s 4 q^ o - ind dei —.— he must continue in the | piq e Qu th Pri Frederick
bs pf jon, 5 13, Mark Lane, I. E. Reserve as long as he is competent to — and he | Friday — ng een, wi rincess Frederi
— PANRETT: ark Lane, London, E.C. must'aleo have been incite b 15 years if engaged above 30, or William, walked and vere in the Home Park, and
E Does N : 8 un A 1 G H E 8.|29 20 years if * aged pod anae 30. HC Aegis, tbis time actual | visited the Du de of t Frogmore. The Prince
perfection of mee! m."— Morning Post. - i p ] en shoot-
/9 to 50 GUINEAS. ab. Volt fo service in the. F. (i 55 .
Send two tamps e foe PORE. fee 2 wince Pampaier. | Navy by Royal to exercise this : pg Duke
Wetehos me all pa: X ris of the World free pe per post. poser onim when an et 555 req sudden increase in oce ted Tady Bum, — Clinton, the Earl
: P 6. A * may in the — instance be called out for ^
HU ry B's PATENT DETECTOR A amens three y f there d actual war, and he is then urchill, and Hon. G. C. and
CHUBB'S FIRE ann BURGLAR-PROOF SA piers dm mA one of her Majesty's ships, he may be required to Theresa Lewis, left ed castle. In the afternoon
SIRONG-ROOM DOORS.
A I
ditto, with * rmolu ornaments, P 15s. to 18l. ;
Chindy Pieces, toa 11. Bs. t to 80l.; Lr e e from 2s. 3d.
set to 4l. e BURTON and all other PATENT
D LAMPS.—
S. Burrow has SIX LARGE SHOW ROOMS
en exces ale to the SEPARATE DISPLAY of
Lamps,
Baths, and Metallic k of each is at once the
— most varĩed eversubmitted to the public, and
at prices pro with those that have tended to
B PAPE: distinguished in this
md E meer to e »
- 3 ” x yy
Lange cua from 6 0 , TT „
Cal i ioca kinds at the same ere
ISH CO RS AND HOT-WATER I KS.—
great vari d of t! ewest
Linee matori in ea 0 Dish Govers; 7 “a, 6d th —.—
Block Tin, 195, 3d. to 27. Te u the set of elegant
353. 6d. to 62s. 6d. i Britaumis Metal,
without silver-plated 83. 0d.
Ẹ
A
Britannia
Sa Nickel, foll size, 11i. IIa.
6 GENERAL d
m
11
sE
i.
E
8
zh
TIT
see
ile
D
1
bs
i
Pe
ab
es, Fenders, = shear y cmt eig d
Gascliers Tea Tea
à eei "Toile BEW,
FERRE
1
#2 Hr f
f p
m
5
Hi
d
:
lished 1820.
serve for two years longer ; but for the additional two years he
= ll receive 2d. a day additional pay:
mee me — on drill or actual service will be subject
m ard e e to fulfil the obligations of the
* A un
Miete WIE edat Hs Viabus io PATE aud Pension, and if he
fasi. join when called out for actual service may be treated
a strag or Deserter from tke Navy.
THE INROLMENT WILL — ON 1st JANUARY,
LOL mation and sd condition may be obtained o
rre et to the Sion M Mater stent ort in the United
Kingdom, ort c est toph Customs in the Channel Islands
News of the Meek.
HE official T: ations ie oss Po
the Court
ha
apta the frigate 5t
ar
mouth of t
der of these 2 55 having can-
fri St an
Princess William, the Princess
Princess went to Eton es and
memorial windows Jately erected in the
chapel to commemorate Etonians who fell in the
The Queen and Cr also visi
the college, and libraries.
morning the Queen and Prince Consort,
by Prince and Princess Frederick William
Princess Alice, visited the camp at Aldershott,
to the castle in the afternoon. The Lord
lor and Lady Stratheden, the of
Sutherland, the Countess of Dunmore and Susan
Murray. Earl and De La Warr and the
Right Hon. Sir Charles and Lady Mary Wood, arrived
on a visit. On Sunday morning the Queen Prince
Consort, Prince and Princess Frederick William,
Pri Alice, Pri Helena, Pri Prince
Arthur, and the visitors attended Divine service in the
ivate chapel; the Dean of Windsor officiated. The
Duchess of Kent visited her y. On Monday
the Queen drove out in an carriage
accom - by Princess Frederick William. The Prince
Conso: ri Frederiek William came to town
AL a nis — * of the Great Western Railway. The
Prince Paddington to Mr. Theed's
studio; thence to ^r South Kensington , and
a be art returned to Winds Ti
to E
of "Nerii. Majesty and Princes
. William, The . "Chancellor.
Lord John Russell the Duke
Right Hon. Sidn nay 3
siesty.
Argyll Me the Earl of Flein re
Duke and Duchess of Aum
un gin
morning the Que with Pri
and the 2 7 5 3 ge walked i
i Duchess of Ker
Co
Prince Frederi
arg party was i
performance,
Queen, accompanied by P
110 Princess Alice, a
e Park and visited avs ue 88
Prince Con
Knollys] - the castle.
— MM —
p. PRr S mE
will ere Windsor C Castle to
return to
f Mar
Wednesday, and spent the
uke’ deo —— the
pus : wee quet arty of 36.
part; A to whi chi 9
Paris zb the
Duke rk
on Sunday in the dos jan Lloyd's steamer for
ouncil was held
MALA residence of the Tirst Lord
Dow:
THE C pado —A. Cabinet. C
Wednesday at t
of the T
ning Street.
'"EERAGE.— Tool ih
of Earl Fortescue, be 40 Je Poit.
Tun ROTAT eee rb eum
called for a Bs of the ages, As Yo
cle rks on
* Come il wen
re ned o
^t Dal
Duchess of enis m —.ä— of a 2 the
f Elgi risit 1 Wed
ess iroderiek William
s m
ck
The Duc liess of Sutherland "eft Me caste
ing t
E
nd Prine cess Helena,
et r Dov
erlin. E Royal Highness vill proceed
Cal
E — and the
C. Magenis had an |
ke of
n the Hom e
1 ady v
THE GARDENERS' CHRONIULE AND MM GAZETTE.
— hi 3 be
Acht
‘most suc pa ya the ngmbar
ne pen addit
2 P $ ission
the Com of committee
of representatives. from is
t the
l ittee "um hA tob iy be yw: to
t Frogmore,
5
J affairs
the s sec cond
ut
y ne, brig
. | was mig on M onday in - assed at
ton, Mr. H. Cole, C.B., in the chair,
resolved t to beads an e 8 corps, to
nd others [pamanna with
eo and Juliet."
geen to wit-
of Science and Art,
neighbourhood as mig
e ca
esi
eting broke up 75 volunteers signed the eir
Rifle
~ Aberdare
Birke aces *
:| Blackburn, i
port
"Port tsmouth,
ool, Pend urst, P Penrith,
ee Sunde rlan d,
th,
worin
i E. in the
f Ker —
DE poa Aude
- [afternoon drill on S:
s held at Camden Town on Tuesday eve ning,
Cattle Market —— as at present.
also decided to form a cadet class of youths from
14 to 18 years of age, 3 prepare them for 1
to be Lee b — members o
unteer movement at the Vi
mda d with ‘singular success, and m
hus been dis ispl aye ed by all the permanent staff Ki the
who have
first moeting it was announced that the es
utfit for those who
of voluntee ring. or ommi
the loeal magistracy, the senio
of the ve estry and dir Fe
duke
, and an evening
wards of 300 were invited.
FRANCE. N Count de
e Chartres emba
on gt cary ou
e | effective — € for the establishment
for Fan The wo
with some of the clergy, is formin
and meis
une consult
ii is determine to stai dla St. Paneras Ri es upor
a mo e liberal a nd p ar basis any other
ge St.
gv aet
oc
e.
Another Council
TS. -A proclamation was
5 € —
than yet
O bee W m held on Mon-
righ i at Battersea, at whi on B^ resolved to
bout x asures for at-
anaes D district; Mr. Baker; ; of T Cedars, liberally
offeri ing to guarantee all the —.— required, or, with
d friends, to > lighten the merid
Corns
e >
Mr. Beattie, a -— ate fo
s | Su $a notie
O Were
t
ed, nac
den whieh ee wou n
A large meeting was held on
. E aS son, the penes in MS
| it was determined t6 or
-Mo nday at Putney, the Tov.
-—
heir|and fo: esa ds of th
The Richmond corps
ave l'subdivision, is my -
company
1255
civil salaries, with the view it de of ot
men connected: with a at m has been held, at
1 to
salaried men to 24 M: 65, instead of 70, as at present.
"wp in Clerkenwell,
out patho.
et-
which it was r
and circulars were pedem
to
OLUN MENT.—An influential 8 persons favourable to the movement — a — — me
meeting of the ba of St. Fe cadil y ing to be na future day.— The members of the
was held in St. mes's Hall, on Wednesday, to take | volunteer corps of the Inns of Court, of whom 320 are
into ier tapes the propriety of forming a volun e enrolled, were drilled for the first time on
rifl te bows Viol al parish, to act in concert with | Monday in the fine hall of Lincoln’s Inn, u
those formation in the eight other | which has been granted by th chers. The drill
— of the city ty of Westminster. Lord Ric o, M. P., | commenced at f. pasb 8 in the morning, and
took the chair, y the meeting was addressed by Lord was repeated twice — = da; ae even-
1 Hon. F. Byng, the High Bailif of West- ing, lasting. two. hours The
Kempe, Bi name of one learned judge. figures in "the "ist
Grenfell, and other gentlemen, it and another is expe to join ad
resolvi red to form n connection. with, the other | to AS: is 1 5 with the rest of the volunteers.—
ot. Weener
esday- after-
adstock, the com matiditig ‘Beet of the man
ath
p
is
umber of. effective members i is
co
s
at whic h
crease, and will at š
eliminary meeting of 62 0
.|a piece
i p
daily. Piho n rs of the corps rill in Westminst
Hall on Mon
Saturdays from 4 ti and the committee have secured
ofa *r t. bigs og orps have huie te -
Lieut.-General Sir Harry Smith to become their co
manding officer, but the gs genomi pe, 1
that bis position in the
bridge,
or the eo
of the following motion
Voi a
and such pt dril a
under legal "Po aiaa
ould enable the a body,
7 — ergency; ‘ang that t the chief consta e be
on 0 being
a E
is. Court do take
posting, the xpodioney of- having "the
zg qued in Lu the rifle,
port - 1 LO. M
ues det: t to
dut
Poreign.
fS RAMS
FRaxcE.—The Moniteur announces that the
emer eonvokin
were sent o
Austria. 1 *
“The Emperor of the French and the of
ieri of urine an end to She pum en aA
wal of the E ae aed ale pe TS
and durable
r capture, and on pay
ors; no indemnity can be
do inen e e ib poem.
diria ui nee for"
e e
account of prizes E
chandise, even not co:
understood distinctly that ned addis
[Art. 4 declares the cession of Lom y to
French, with sand - 5 p^ T
Art. 5. "The Em
handing over to tthe: King of of Sardinia the
the prede iole. Art. 6. The territories still o
virtue of — of :
reciprocally PEDRO by
troops of which — aes ene
line stipulated 7 to
verbatim the
dice — 4. — which ‘are hha
e and Sardinia, relative
reat the
progressing in a most satis factory pud
bets g red th
day ta and Wednesdays from 7 till 9, and of peut
of ground at the € Palace for tlie parposes | exist
range."—Th
ent his mm
Rilati nd den
contracting
gy of the States of
her assured ;. convince ed th
t
his ess
n | Administration of i States
Shall be taken
dis ot the ractice ground | accepting the offer, adding that no man in
a suitable butt.— The has a higher opinion cas ov rile và e^ sn , | chan aged
Trish r " i d the well.a at t
1 pt of gets a gallant nation more iar idealen the field, „ —
similar to = a e Ist company a de 14th qM (Highgate) Wah
"London, is corps is nearly approaching its full complement, and it
ad y the vomihiltes is proposed to take steps to form a Neon The com-
Marquis of manding officer of the 2d ba ttalion Scots —
Mfg Guards has permitted t!
arl of Desart, the battalion drill at a .Wellingt — y k —
Mea M P Cubic O'Brien: e 5e d i. ellington Barracks. - The E
ie movement have| which now salsa) rs p^ effective members, lav
er distinguished Irish- | accepted by her Majesty. The members have for e | sable
rward to. ime past bee ly engaged: im light in yd m
as pra
cable.
— 15 9
the Croydon and corps now excee
requisite for a c te company. It
n decided to ed at once am the formatio
1 Croydon y.— ie meeting w
at the Town Hall Cher eed on Saturday,
attended by several infesta ,gentlemen, magis-
trates, K., Mr. Briscoe, M.P., in the chai , when
r | resolution ere — for the formati 0
a rifle cor thee’ Pi hund Godley.—
im the provinces rn that meetings in aid of
e | the poets or for the Menus of local eorps have
been held during the week at Altrincham, Aberdeen, ;
m d
eventa — the Peninsula,
of or e prosec!
: uenia
or proper ty, accou
Art, 22. The —
with
d fixed their sea
ber, 1859, —
ui" d^
TIONAL n a —The — *
the "French pes Aon toli 1 to make,
Imperial, Ro ani ostolic M.
tbe new ean A t ot stole AS xc cis
j repayment, to pay to it 40,000, 000 florin
a OL t€
Dresses 1859. — THE GARDENERS’ GHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE, .
—
has refused the office of Lord Chamberlain, | cluded under this day's date between the Emperor oí the
she Tih article of the present treaty, instalments, as "
M rm millions of florins shall be — cash, by a bill ial 1 F E
; Paris, without interest, on the expiration at the third Which hac - — à tö ** * à that he does no * i rench and the Emperor of Austria, the French C. werhment
ith, dating from the day on which the present treaty was | in to par the present political ice og — — 232 wards the Austrian Gx
signed, aud which will be handed to the Plenipotentiariesof | mov. ET miake, E count of tbe now Go overnment oflom bardy,
his Im and Apos degen) bange 1 of the above-mentioned treat "
cations takes place. The payment of the remaining quarrel seems likely to 'oecur between à outy, King of Bardin à, incon-
$000,000 florins shall take placo at V ienna, cash, in 10 succes- | Prussia ndi Electoral Hesse. For ome time past there | a — co — cr — he — — the p
4 : v wo m jo Franoe in
sive Tiamana 27 e ze 3H * m hs, — — has been a conflie et ubject of a constitation | ù the ee — erdum Government will hand
be made two months i the p m pigment et of the bill of 8,000,000 | between the Elector 2 EN ace The Prussian — — enin ge — the Emperor of the French Bardi.
ulated. date, as for the other follow- Government 10 years ago lent its weight and authority 100 00 r de per o e
ing, e at th pi be Wess —j at 5 per cent,, dati to the to: im an — Ó— E
T
ape:
to — te the amount of
t
c em
m age of the is Bourse the 29
ratifi iti y incli i i z f o , 1859. 5 *
al of the present treaty. The present additional 15 is now inelin * this ce ud s art | of October, 1 — €— ET scrip will be im
rance
the -ratiñontions of the present
ch on t t — UENEY, ijan consequen: " — of EE. , will be — coa pg od
„ | tach the Tw os co ny between Austria and 5 of the public debt of Sardini scrip will be handed
* sy Foreign pone is t with the execution of the Pied mont, which en interrupted for the last Add — mach Government, Which s ove ha d
resent dec Done at Compiègne, the 27th November, 185 — will be omelitely re-established by the | handed o over, w within n Pad etme neal
Been aod. sealed with —— Me of (ola: 7 — "Counter: mal nomination of official representatives having | cations. The present treaty to be ratified, aud the
Fines Minister of of ee Affairs.” EGO eR: the "rank & jok 3 Plenipotentiary. Count Edmun ate tate m MM crit ME E — —
; , À ý w ve plenipo-
It has been currently rumoured this week that the pico of an pas of Lombardy, is to | fentiaries have signed and affixed their nls beu Dies
nch fleet has bombarded Tangiers or Tetuan. | en ‘Austrian Minis at Turin n. urich on tho 10th November, 1859, — JogrEAU,
planation of this report the official journals state that | I
B French squa lron has . neither of t
PIA, 3
à and the pa
respective pleni, n
The Moniteur st doter 2 the following «s 1820, with a A solidate our nee AL by a | affixed " - Turin
ccm n the efinitive ent, the results of . in the late the 17th Novem
at Zurich on
fart. —The Pie 23 of the 23d inst. oq d Baxasyiax.
i hose | publishes the text of 2 two treaties concluded at De trate. end Andall e
dis tions it s or Ov v på fc *
e forts at the mou f the Tetuan — rica as follows :— fete Nee — —
tor Emmanuel II., &e,, to si "hem the present iion firmed = — ane present approve, accept, ratify, and
ting. * treaty been concluded be- confirm it, promising to observe it and to — it to be ob.
ror of the d u, and signed by our | served inv: ola ble In faith of which h od
t at Zurich on the 10th of Novem mber, | with our — — me le ne et ratification ard have
and regulate, tho of ou — Done
Ea ed at th aae n line. wik dte bi ip Les r
oceeded v vith fou ur s
"Te Bre
me Bs pos ras, Nov. NE
Yesterday the l St. Lou onaded iby
led the —— of of the river — Informed of that the
same night, I have — morning, with four — — destroyed
pene pation
the name of an (Connie ALORMIDA, ‘Minister of A moo ;
nUTTI, viget ^d General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.”
d Treaty REN Prep D AUSTRIA.
255 "lire dune d E ES = sr hac ied Emmanuel, 2. 1o aw whom. these presenta may
treat; "e. 3 of the preliminaries of Villafranca pre, of peace —.— been concluded
FEMA cession of D m A to which pu betwee us, the the Freneh, the — —
they appoin as their pleni — for the King Austria, 5 igned at Zuriph.on the 10th November, 1859, by the
tere becoine notorious third Sir Robert Sbefüeld, Bart + oe S$ Daves On.
It was — — St de — “Hanover Square, Bir Binsa-
| cem 4 the j MIN Pure, ant Governor, Bt , Kitts to 222 LARD Manner, Tuunsbav, Deo, 1.
— ldren — AR A A ter of the tate Colonel — N W vw . Clover 7 to 00»
— — Sane Pastry, Lieutenant in "^ i| New do. T — : — ae -
with the : p= Rear-. dir MEE ur Superior Clovor .. 98 105 Josuva Baxwn.
ek place X54 ult, tat remington, EE Doe Xs unn. Tronspay, Dec. 1.
E in; Soe — y ment Hes ind X pol oon "d vs ———— ae 0h
mand neri .. for „ „*
-— by er cle a dang ding Nan J. Verra- | Prime Now nay ——_ — | Vine new 8 _
this corr, Beg, of As! qoe Inferior do, 2 „ Daor So ei 2 a
Lady Wiitsame, | Stew s» „
h ult, at Sali isbury,
lama, of the PU ig
mj DEA —On the
uay widow of tho late 8035 Bir Richard Willi
Marine Artillery, K.C. and theretofore widow of th
Pere — — of Berwick 8t. John, W da,
90-—23d ult, 1 — the Hon. and Mrs. Hexny HowARD,w
Cay
w 8
of the. late tain H. T. Howard, — Ses denter | e
of Sis Joh Hart, of Rendeombe Park, Gloucester
legal proof
is of Pin. ‘Smethuret.
these dot.
p the S ecbubitity that *
cm ad — vd — e T e
was
BRITISH WOOLUA.—Loxpox, Pawar,
— 1 had a fair demand for most ene end at fall
t fleeces do not roaliwe prides in proportion to the
— Xam
re Hos and Rew. Ones Piren MA Hector of | Wonth-down flog: e dL
eee en
son of tite | Kent Fleeces ..
£
B
mu
Hi
ACA
2 iy’ 12 we" m
eee
i
100
T
E
i
H
j
8
A
E
125 75
fiu zi 83
H
3
i
: > of
9
it
ick
d
ETETE
—— igh character.
up said d that it certainly was
should have comm
the
Lj
HS Sod | Bodice. sm iu isto
oo i e. | Pies
anus al vory, por bunch, 2d
cucumbers, each 4d to 64
ce would ee
Cornhill, was p guilty of Cucum
THE GAR DENERS ee a AGRICU JLTURAL SI.
——
it is a direct viol: ion — "baie e economie princi iples by
whi ch the administr ation of: —— Metropolitan Board o
Vern
ORTHERN
by engineers, app
anteater, "but pai wd the la er
had bee n partial y exec vien discrepancies were
Bo
m the land-
by her side and partly covered by a pi llow,
the child was lying on - e side wholly un-
mae 0 5 — In one
orner of eontaining a
— Fiy Separate
‘ak or died y the Admiralty
3 out . - on board the
ourt n Baturda 4 9t
prisoners on in ‘ell a e s
the “abe
quantity of ood — reldthiany while the ‘boards
eviden having been recently v washe
^ Sa were — — for à considerable distance with
ampness, only partially dried. The prisoner
d to appoint an ind
pendent ms to test these quantities; and the
result has been that —— have been found of a
are agreed 2 boe differ-
v
of the
— the . — that he had not the ;slightest idea a as
who liad committed the murder,
re only that "-— gy it on returning home
The landlord asked to go with him to the police
Ist. For hp. a mutinous ass ecmbly
to E 80; 3d, for being preni at a
Princess R loyal, and not using their mi a on board
imei ; and 4th, for disobeying the lawful —
superior o 8 be the drum had beai tento quarters .
going on t r deck whe:
Heli do when the well EE. |
e inqui cupied the whole of
17 5 when the Court After r six hours
ie
professional members of the Board tit ne amount | court, which entes did {without the slightest objection, and ^r ii
nd 30,0007. As this is only one of | stood quietly by seemingly without any indications
bu ie wet eae s that will be 820 befor the | of participation ‘nt h cris; while the Sidi preme found four
f os metropol completed, the|the frightful particulars to the o fice-keeper. » e
main D ed the subject 4f serious discussion, and | r however on looking a ner's trousers | i Vm cann. " and in pL of. Eh
it was at first ordered that the bill of the engineers saw stains of blood upon poe a — — — ^ e, 0
ho had made the errors, Messrs. Roberts otto, | duty after examining the room took him into custody s
should not.be paid: Afters everal divisions on Friday it | a dodge him in the Old Street station. then a DES aac ; one to 12 month
was resolved.b to l by th =r that the prisoner, who has | nc — aol, W
dent s urveyor, Mr Pole, did not contain a su t ition to the one referred to, n end ir n
j f the Board | but — were not at "home — tlie time ol this sad hard Jabour. e
“nat. E pay the claim, and that such ord ht to iolently | Separate hay er ai, with app
: T ssaulting a woman and bitin ing her -sevenily * n the | 9f M Mene ede
Ec oF Gas TO THE MeTRoPoLIS.—A deputation hand, and sentenced to nine months’ “imprisonment but 2 t. F
from the vestries and district boards of the p ^ son he displayed |" E
ednesday with the President
T was transferred. toa banat sy at — from and
th ? N
Home Secretary, to call attention to the whether he was filme A dis- years’ imprisonment,
weich Oy in in dividing the m 1 into districts, and charged or or r escaped. After these facts had been proved | — "x — been y
fof sk. the intervention 3 pares ent, as in the magistrate remanded the prisoner, — — 7 i A wich the
2 witha view to secure the ‘summons for the attendance of the surgeon " [fs d den kz 8 T
Pasing of an Act for de e of Ga companies penned to hay 8 — det ep: * 9 E
and g the quality the gas. HE Registrar-Genera 13 — dh Dead uon W
= Gibson ines A id that s subject | weekly return nator hat the up in "enden — x imprisonmen we ei i N
he attention er the Gov ent. The | tinued to increase in week that ended Saturday, alt ur Aw pric a js Ein
setter ae that * Tnd been asked to receive a depu- | Nov. 26. The atai ee nd in the — — — — in - pam la
tation mpanies, and after E had heard | weeks were crm ad 1051 and 1238; las k the Court — ded with th
their bus be should vi able to. state was 1 g — “of e Ki H 28 mm ity rf
Government woul 10 years 1849-58 t the average number was 1210 ; which, — t » Eim. EA
Sr. Gzorar’s- Wa Xa —On Sunday night there if Disel in proportion to the increase of population, sentenced mum t wich
will become 1331. The deaths of last week were there- | 4% ré imp dol io tr I tha lai
congregation at the evening * in this church. The | fore slightly rt the average. uring ine en pFocee 2 p. ist, with s
attendance was scarcely so e as on m of 904 boys and 881 111 ei Rede —
occasions =. the pls though there were | were — a London. In thè — the . Per aon d. with d
mot less than 2000 p present. Half of them, at maeke of the years 1849-58 the or — soca n of rud deine ug e
least, were very bem: iex ps ‘women, p aig the | was 1548. — ae — the m
ce of — ii: , and on
— e fem hi ed not subsequently go " dum
3 men ped Sen to
E Ice as Board of
Tra de i inquir — € on we the last witness
Derpy.—A shocking attempt ee
has been brought to light at rag ha Hall,
when the Court rose.
‘being ging partner of the Mersey Iron- residence of Mr. Jose 3 of ni:
ve die ios sa aid the ees made as to the (nh strength | — The coa achman, wh had been engaged ed
of the iron pe that the plates wer e | marr Ft 5 g which
. eld then made — er in théy "drank at supper with —— and after-
reference tothe gallantry of the um and crew, and the coffee with the same son. :
repudiated the QURE which had as to | Fi maidservants were first taken ill and morning mass. cat of 4be
the sobriety of n Taylor. i few then the whole of the servants, as well as Mr. and Mrs. Roman Catholic Hin ct —
days several — saliore dt Moelfra, | Paget and their - unt. who was stayin with them; the chapel, which xw
da wu TOA of he Isle of Man, and e o lives and Mrs. | Mr. Waldron, M.P., who
„Among those which have been i
Davis, Mrs. Foster, John Mawle, John Rober
‘Evans, J. C. Ellison, J. Potts, eg Wall. The
he
prepa
wreck of the
in doti
bos"
i in was taken
into eu and identified as tating tonght an y —
of 3 at Mansfield, He was taken before
es at Chesterfield on Tuesday, when — a
e the presiding magistrate, Ne, E. G. —.
nard, decided that there was no criminal law to
3e. The ne ur was therefore discharged.
ne of - hay deliberate murders
which h s neighbourh
out
Wisma, Vie President of thelayal Olio:
Committeeof Wool: Ward,
t. er, de of ammu-
EIE were sre with .
H
er bee this ood w
| eee on Saturday e pe E at North Niles, The
murderer’s name John Shephe wi bo:
32 din of age, the son of respecta
have been farmers and were
perty, but the mys med or mg so, has been
3
D brel K
from a lunatic
stunning her with
ng up
the son, who. has a a bad character, A is
very He has been in several
ico forces, among Hoch e oct county police,
as discharged to at as For some time he
nothi 1 E It appears that
Sate only
Nibley, bu
head and rippi her
the evidence p at the Rt on Tread ay
had the murderer.and iiem with one ne child about
wo years and z a half old, en
ir lodgings on
were tou ar des landlord and
landlord if
room. whi. he was out, requesting him
re ndo e as something very dread
emis
dy ex n
** m i ar y that
; bu ti was * vest va fhai ho woul
ay nb
earry o put bie thron On Saturday even
6 o'clock, he observed near the otia oy the |
Smithams, an q^ the inmates hearing A noise |
outside the young. an. looked to see
what it was, and finding it was Shepherd
said, “What! ar Raa there again?” and imme-
diatel y after the of a gun rd and
the unfortunate girl "fel to the ground with a scream
never — — ards. he had in vel
through the hea t 10 minu A
the discharge of by. . — * was ^ 2 Sh e pherd,
next morn
ve but “with half of
uc. pes €—L S manner, havi
A in a — — 15 yards from the
fortuna
Paget were ‘taken d ill while riding to a meet of ——
circumstances | to
viter se et pr not to
ung
ed by tes poliee ina
of his face
v pl we him- ESI
llowed
pie
Peter is
tem
—
e to be
SEN peia the Catholic
the troubles which
fom SL y
Catholic
rality —.— by his Fp paa unde Pius;
hrone, Lee that I — „ for the
cts is o paternal so 27
— T
a err
| his test productions he D m lihro
|on ih
possi
| the United States
granted.
Treland again, but
will. It would
fe or Gc vernment without —
should — conspire, co
a — Q rsons, 3
Lady the 24 —
4 — str uld again
ta,
n Leiro? upon my
|ui "tbe detectives and“
under my children, u
back to.
go
fa
mperor Napoleon
—.— nor to rush
e o or^: ive
| fiy i rit he oan) tol
of e France
th greyed other 3
DECEMBER 3, 1859.
à la bonne eure /
will be a war.
But this all comes to
PEL England —— stand anning r Pagan m n entrusted to his care in
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
a journey to London ey y^ 1 i (Nos
this mighty Power growing to proportions wh E e righton Railway, and w ame —
ET see a 8 an d Asia, à There will je aang? o ae ihe Nd MA s Ay iraa e in Newgate. 5 — e = — —
that England wi the first to declare it. a as indicted fi T
cr wh, will make the pounce, and the guet-d-pens— aa ns i m murder ». Edward Hyland on the high — K. 8 Tu Ey bes A ch smaller, consequen:
E nbagen style. 1 bereby prophesy that Bogland will was. * ease: of Manslaughter, and he|so many Sheep as — do å D ptione There are not uis
moré pursue — —— —— [^ make the st| Mur t Hackne; Saro zeem, Wi nal servitude. - ch,, | much advance. : 2 however trade isd dull
ean, and burst on France (for you k Tiles iggins, 94, was indicted | laud th German M Ha
2 ä —— yo iy e for the. Wileat afar er of James White, a child mt. 8} yeaza| Scotland, 180 m bios ‘end 110
— e 7
Clarence Cotta Hack his o children in | counti
T to this child Pr amr 1 the 8 teo — e
St ART 1, cruelty and t ks : ing it with great det 2 Here- Best L sd 8 4
September she carried — due — cy 88 110 3|Do. Shorn pars : "T M
EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY COURT. e: Cha — kamiy child-was left alt ght — ii — rei en Best Shor ped de : N * ase E
upright position, and 2 — last i i 55 Sb
Lord — has appointed E 5 Melville. late 0 ming exh , his] Best Dow: d
Lord Provost of the city, as his assessor, and the rector, dere. the child. da quis coe ra apoplexy, and | Half — uos 2105 4| Calves ee ta SOB. Gs
Mr. t —— — — Brown, ^ edic - voter ei found 4 prisoner & Guilty of Mans er AU onata iA 4240; She 4 Ta 2 i 5 0
gentleman of high li — standing, as his in The learn assing se — said there could be ep — 20,620; Calves, 127; Pigs, 480.
| the University thor re h i she entertain — eru — —— Acne The of Boasts is coer la
el ac
ECTORSHIP OF ‘Sr: ANDREWs.— Colonel Mure, of had caused its death. — ue sentenced er tp r tm last; there go is howev a fai i e at Monday p.
caldwell, has s been elected Lord Rector of St. Andrews) Ponal servitude for 10 yea Th s supply of Sheep is small, and bost, deschiptinne ee noah
22 over Anst but trade is iblerior,- ‘Good, Zalves:
LE ing 73 t 5. Sir Ralph iruther, the su AB o — pee! o are wn —
rs being BIRTHS.—On the 20th ult, at P. — M
FA TAL COLLI FIRTH OF Crypr.—On E ed at Poltimore Park, the Lady | the p omes mid =
Tuesday morning € About I 2 o'clock, while the steamer T Mes. | im ite ofa — Vlt, Pn Ghee ~ mane a cad t s ms "Pe der
Eagle w e —— Arran — n her passage from e V eis fa Arn. un, th ult, at 46, Charles fi * a a 10 to 5 2 Do. Shorn "- -
n w erry, she came into collision with jy Square, Hon, Mrs. ON, of a son, which | Bes "
"hrs tibor- dn shi Pladd a. only dU Ned its birth a short timo--94th ult, at 3, Spanish | 2d lie Boats $ i 4 1 ued J 4 =e L
g p She: was | Place, the Hon. Mrs Launin RANDOLPH, ofa son—26th ult, f » R . 1 7
ruck heavily pum the funnel, an t ero 77 1 Park, Ches' the wife of Sir CANIAS Wa 2 i elt bro rode nee 6 2—5 83
our. assengers — th Seco LEY, of a son on aud heir 99th ult, 5 Reddingto: ton Man: witty Calves 1 812
ere beliov Pel — ned. For : noia eas oar Notting pee ce UO Fart, of d 1 — Shoop & Lainbá site res m"
fading the ca — € crew, were —— d by the Pi Pladda 8 ME. p — B * oiie e = e, rne
N, ughter,
conie t ie had also 200 sheep on board, MARRTAGES.—On the 22d ult, at Stillorgan Church, n HOPS,—Bonovo;
which ME Cii Wars, a € vo ut Mes of rs Tate Mesers, Pattenden & wie 3 — Fin Ne con
i o -
P pg nee: agin Puede Mm me TT RC nm
in— ult, at the Church of the Holy Communion,
à x den 9 ires pa RING, Esq., MA. Fellow — HAY.—Pe
| Omm, RIMINAL ee Trial of Dr. x Pt at nose x eldest son of the Lord Bish per Load of Thirty-six Truss
Pide psdnesday mo E rning VET iiia a — Bonner owns More ristol, 8 e daughter SurrurIELD, — in. 1. T
on-the c exi arge of It ed. — ult, at St. Meado
ienes that the — was pera — LT a Mary n Square, Apa So ine t St e ord A cud 0 we Ug Newt i sia ae
person called Mary Durham who "s ton. ie MA ARY aeg Syl widow of the. Tate ” T. E. Cox, Esq., of 25 1 — 60 New Glover -. AI. 90
Zab ht yoa to Isabella — — mas mar | Landford Park, Oxfordshire(Captain ofthe Is Life Guatds), and 1 ae. ee AER.
D veri — — — rial fo for the murder of ped N late a v. Sir Robert Sheffield, 50 1 wee
a was proved that Mary Durham, before her mar- o hureh, Hanover Square, Sit BERZa- :
the prisoner, had. lived ! Laporte | MIN C. C. Pixx, M. A., Li ant-Govern UMBERLAND
MES re him, — de name of 9 .GARETTA ANNE, Only deugt liter of the Nate Colonel Jom Museen Se Sup. 13 — 12 868 itor Gover fo 758 K. 00
Laporte, ho was brought into | of the Bengal ‘Army—20th ult, at Belgaum, Maitland, W. B. | Inferior do. 60 n 3
to the register of her —— saxi gif E n jor pE 8 Artillery, third | New do. 2 2. 80 s
o was not aware until that reAdmiral Sir Thomas ne Pasley, Bart., to KATE »
father's: name Laporte, or that ird Fimo, youngest t Premin of Major ioe. lute 78th uu Superior Clover : 98 Josu ——
his: wife, On the other hand it was 9 — 2 t, at Fremington, North Devon, Gon WII HITECHAPEL, T AY, 1
nad a fainilv. , Capi h Regiment, eldest son of Major-Gene mal * i
Laporte oain 15 lady Sir 6 Sir Cornish Vile, x. C.B., commanding or Field. Di Divi» inferior. L * inferis Qo. as oy T 55
of both; d t tio: eons —- India, to LAURA, youngest ——€— of the late J. VEL Prime New Hay. — | Fine new Clovo 4
to p father’s: Con- TT, Esq., of Ashford, North Inferior do, .— —| Fine2deout .. .. 80 m
1 N m TEM perce the th ult, a 4. y, Lady WILLIAMS, Straw * b> 80 ferior do. .. .. 60 75
egal proo! ate Colonel Sir Richard Willi am , of the Royal
maiden name of Mrs. Smethurst. For Marine Artillery. K. C. B., and theretofore wow of the Rev t MELEE a T
nce taken of these circum- | Peregrine Bingham, Rector of Berwick St. John, Wilts, aged
order to set up the rr uk that wA 90— wer at Bath, the Hon. and Mrs. HENRY HOWARD, widow „ , BRITISH WOOLS.—LoNpow, Ramay, Dec.
otherwise Mrs. Johnso the wife of|of the late Hon. Captain H. T. Howard, and eldest deugbttr an as hayo hace demand for most dereriptions end at fall
Poe was tho” a id. E^ was 2 33 of Ren deombe Park, Glow fre — s in proportion to the
9 — W aud of Meriden tos a MESES. ! 2
m in summing up, sai ere 0 i.
, aged 60—2
Plats, the youngest dat
Mrs. Johnson a ma ter of i
S st — with nthe pa Prisoner, sand th that a ab — 2 ILLIAM n iat : Ton — — rof te Kent Fl 3
Ae asd point Hon. and Rev AM WODEHOUSE— E 7 F $
jury almost immediately found the prisoner Guilty. Daran Fetter Hanworth; Lincolushire, the "ripa, Hago Ie Wook Sau 3 T - wool will termis
Bramwell, in ng sentence, said that there could be no „ B. C. L., st son of t ions the Deanof} the Amati Gl tes have been all through
doubt that Miss Bankes knew risoner was when | Chester, aged 42 years—23d ult, at d
—— ette iib arde Lesa T: BOE CL, OF IU Arme k, county D et s
was ofan age to ww perfectly well what she VO rk, county Dul i
E- about, aj as she con ther sister of the Right as d the See mat at u POTATOES.—SovrHwARE, Monday, Nov. 25.
Ced not one that, called for savers Ms ts 2z I “gra » dior Generi e: Grana, | During the —— past week, in inia both coastwise and
e however, one fact in the case —25th u rand — more liberal from France ani
Which. was, that the er, in ord nag carry out the} Brown, widow of the late Charles Brown, —— of. y,| Belgium. The week's 3 we been .
marriage — ha 1 lady, sped made a false oath prc ane eier La. elate Sir Felix 5 maintained. following. aro E = —r quotations +.
Swearing tha! ere or i imp ind to it, when í E" „ per ton, Lincolnshire
wust have known this not true. LBEMARLE BERTIE DEWAR, Hants, 65. do., do., 90s. to 1108/5 “Forfar, and
not amount, perha; 3 to the peen of 26th ult, at Florence, CHARLES BANKHEAD; Esq., M. D., formerly: Piteshire do., 608, to 85s. ; Kent and. Essex do., 70s. to 908 >
e lave kansi at he faa doing, and he eons ete | raven ult, at is x soon Aero Lime, Briston rue C HOM SOR MAKERS BERN o
Om) us e own wi was — „ Acre * V .
Ix sucha p g. en, there re, he took dato “Hick, — a leading a of the Court ¢ on
; t he had deserted his first wife, that he had taken | Council, and forthe last — to poema LANE.—MoxpAY, Nov. 28. 8
oath, 7 ne he had 5 to im e first the City of Lon don, N So eod LE
crim gamy, without an: tion, mings ma y
istad come to the conclusion that the case r a more unm 125 ay te qu ty MA m poor, ae sales
Punishment than was usually passed under similar cir- eme rod GN ed 8 tae der
Gmstances. He had consulted Mr. Justice Byles and the Mlarkets. 9 y se mig, ow the day
officers of the Court upon the subject, and they concurred with fortnight, The attendance was very small, and to have forced
in that the he was about to pronounce was a proper — the sale of foreign Wheat lower priest have been sub-
e and this was that he be imprisoned and kept to - ENT GARDEN.— mitted to, but it. was generally held firmly at former quota-
labour for one Th. i h t ord .. | tions. bene T f 3 secondary
Y th y e 8 who say & W Asparagus Seakale now make their appearance 2 — p un gri last week's
Arent 9 25 hen removed from the bar. Apples and Grár — have M pore in price since last w * w Beans are 2%. per qr. cheaper. Peas Là
the Wandsworth H 5 oy fone Heich pe rd witha | o — — and good dessert e scarce; the latter consist value. The Oat trade ts quiet a and in some instances 6d. t pé
ind E basso Correction, bet: a wit Glou Morceau, Mié Piel, eee Winter Nelis, qr. less money is accepted. Flour remains the same last
. ¿Wears old, the dm pon two. little. girls, of i Colmar, and Crassane. Oram are improving in| ee
‘tune residing ee Mr. Plummer, T Sender quality. obs are realising from 18 to 1s. 6d. per lb. PER TMPERIAL QUARTE K. ES Boa
ire, who had un Chesnuts are. plentiful. Vegetables are for the most part Wurar, Essex, Kent & Suffolk. “Whitel40—48 TET
ee — hyr: hinn ak Wondaw sufficient dem abbages, Savoys, Carrots, and lected ru ditto 16—4&|Red .. ..42—48
oa ed: gave: their evidence ina arsnips may. be Sees dr in A uautity. Broccoli is M. ie Ma aide cd e
m ese manne eri and dotted the c conduct that 2 Potatoes realise from 4s. s. per ew hrooms can R$
| ; m e prisoner, even in the. erably. al !
| — Sie ven aae ee to a severe cre ate b iad t, iem ts, i
rjeant Ballantine, but vei ; Heaths, and Roses. zou
moy, T that in any way tended to i val testi- Se E o a =
"lel to speaic to the pn cete — * hn es Ib., 48 to 6s Pears, per doz., 3s to 68 ^
i ; e prisoner's high c. : n Bram- so a di ee ess PO
iy tha aing up said, that it oortainly was 3 pute" = - o iid — |
e prisoner e commen ch a course | Melons, each, 23) — dd 5
poder yer ve the mother of the children was Pomegranates, each, — are
"is repose, uid Still more so that he should have acted as Apples, per bushel,
enge wan ied Whilo his wife th who, if the VEGET
Beine believed; must really have been an e, 78
ee Jary ee e anhon dee
Ally beissen convicted of about as hateful ah offonceas could Gautiflowers, ne 7 ones P
fit anaagined. Itwasimpossibletoconceiven worsecrime! Greens, à — !
E e 8 1 8 ad ad of his position, and act in such o ae (0, 13 6a to 28 6d ts, per 1 — . :
warde two poor little children who had been placed | Cabbages, do., 90s to 1008 Garlic, per Ib., 6d to 8d sali cy
: Hvtection, and he fore felt it his duty to pass | Potatoes, p. ton, 908 10 0098 | roth b., per score, 18 SEE.
| Mh was, Qux tremo sentence of the law for such an offence, — ber ADT to sini
b Years he be imprisoned and Kept to. hard 3 W $ d . score, 15 The weather during the last sit r^
722. ðÿßV DM OU Por tom
Alken and. e (a — e ho; rione fiat e Spinas p p. ies sd to 28 Mush ees je Ue 2 eral but considering the —
— Bad been ene Deb, and that the t p. half sieve, 280d to | Parsley, E Mr bunch, 9d to large 1 into Mo ich ports, and b Black Sea cargoes
ed gne vie vien hie f ny dre would be made 5 Nr deu bad to 6d ise Mol f off the coast, the trade evinces very great firmness and confi
Tr, of Cornhill, was found guilty of Cucum rs, CAC:
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETiE.
e. Spring Corn of all kinds has also declined slightly i
In ded markets — is quoted 6d. * 1s. per ok
vals of grai —— the coast
o 178 c W
11 Rye, T Maize, 2 Parley. 9 5 — 2 Meo
sales comprise Odessa Ghirka Salis at at 4
hi 478 to 485.
492 lbs., Ibrail at 30s. 18. per ide
400 Ibs. ; Egyptian t3
NURSERY PROPAGATOR
Km A PROPAGATOR, PLANT GROWER
&c. He will be required
to havea Parten — wledge of the Propagation of al
of Plants under Glass, also to understar nd Grafting, “Budding
—Apply . — reference, Ratin age, experience,
&c. wages
expected, to J. S. * , Nurseryman, &c., Pilsley, Clay
ross, Chesterfi
ANTED, UT-DOOR GARDENER, a
er) Man, of active and orderly habits, who has
lived ur wegen fes avis before. His Wife good
Laundress, and no children. ok OO ttage, ~~ 188. a W uc The
Wife paid according to her work.—Address P. Q., Post Office,
Alford, Lincolnshire.
sh up
vi
ited extent at late rates.
ected, — prices must Eo
Rs ered nominally as on 5
ARRIVALS M Nov
. 98 TO Dec. 1.
ea Barley. | our.
English 2490 qrs. 2550 qrs. m gp 2080 sks.
Trish — „ 150 „ | 1970, m
Foreign 760 ,, | 12670 „ | 81020 „ |f he
WANT np to be Post Paid.
eee R he EA nem
. E pap
TISSU 15 . no iue
— — rt |
ce; npp We e his TE in rali
Four DX spotless character.—A. B., Pos
waned, one child
ie * refer-
y, S.
OLIVER ERPOOL, Tuesday, Nov. —We had only few buyers at
29.
our Corn Exchange this morning, and oe beg for all
articles was quite in retail. — rege be d 1d. to 2d.
per bushel, Flour fully 6d. per
Corn 6d
per load
eclined 6d. ces 8
ket clos es extre: Dyes
Corn a turn dearer. Beans steady. Oatmeal 6d. lower. . —
in and of buyers. There was a limited attendance at
mar
AVERAGES | Wheat. Barley. Oats. | Rye. Beans. Peas.
> be 225] Ee. ita 35s 5d} 21s 9d| 29s 6d 39s 2d = 373 Tå
85 29.. 35 20 11| 30 4 38 9 |38 2
Nov. 5 12 $ 85 9 22 1 30 2 39 38 5
12. 42 10 35 11 21 5 20 7 40 3 37 9
— 19 43 1 35 21 11 28 4 40 9 39 6
— 26..| 44 1 36 1 22 6 29 ] 41 2]39 0
Agg. Aver. 43 1' 35 9| 21 8 29 6! 3911 38 5
Ju MUDSON S 9 RE ue Creditors |
asemo re, Ber
ARDEN NER (HE vss —Age 30, married, one child ;
indertake the charge of Stock gi Land. A years?
first- cine e on ecrit to J. Terry's
Fryston Lodge, near Milford Junction, Yor
ENE ime D).—Age 37, single; practica
nowledge of his profession in its various branches, "
forcing ‘of Fruits, rhe i v 5 and p routine of
A — * oe rdens, Plants, 2 * E
chara Burdett's, Wa Iton n- tres
ksl N
le
G A aa —Age 30, ingle
thor ical knowledge of his obs M including
Lud Early md Lo Forcing of all poen of Fruits, EN
tables the culture of Stove and Greenhouse Plants.
UNA "wl. rictest investigation.—A. Z., Post
Office, Sutton,
A Hzap)—Age 30; proficient in
F ation f Ex otic Fruits; Tropical and
in Hor Can be high!
€— ae by his late — € ability, sobtioty, —— —
Seem VAR. Mr. Veitch, Exotic Nursery, King's Road, Chelsea,
555
ER.—Age 34, mar
X meres Can take charge of Cows i —
Messrs. DEN 5 -
e 23, sin
i re sd
8 ise, s ndi Flow
—A. B. "Post Office, Nottin, E:
ARDEN EH.—A sir our Lal w who has some practica
knowledge of Gardening ; can use the Spade, and —
quired.—A. B.,
ane 2 understands oe
e
of James HUDSON, No. 12, Hanover Square, in the | a small — —P. O., Mr. Smith, 15, Ledbury Road, Nort!
—.— unty o RR X à wee to the Royal Agricultural | Westbour: e Grove, W :
ut now
notico t that shortly a 3 Joch day of December next @ Sem ARDEN ER.—Age 40, married, = ge 14 years
— oe AJ DG such of the Creditors of the said JAMES old; unde ds Forcing Fruits, "Flow Ber and
— 10th day of etd Flower Gardens; also a small Farm. Good c characte
eter dos preci of Ria e for the benefit of | Mr- J. May, 1, Wellin: ington Street, Strand, W.C.
D ere sg of the said W Husos, dated ee — Hd AHDENER.—A. UR The Gardens, Lillesden
Indenture on or [ase of reis 5 will be W . 1 at liberty to engage with an ny noble
excluded from all t to be 1 „under the E nen ti is amar Bury Eye mg — E,
ture, and that the same is lying at our office for execution. ion Loser adm Pore Sees
Dated this 28th day x? 5 € 1890.
v, 7, Furnival's Inn, E.C.
Wasabi NER in f s GENERAL L SEED
an 8 ¥ first
the South of Ireland. nowioige a snd Business
Habits more an object than C Capital
the
prietor’s present delicate a, Henan “Apply by let byl ister’ “ith d
n
ntleman in the County ot Oxford,
EE A limited number of Boarders
LL i m, Oxon.
N. bya
an —
recei ita
e duties io REGIS-
n RIS
their à
LM or
they "what amount of sala ary
"TT ys : ck ‘pplications must
gi 2 2
ad Of Desserts ic yr e after sine of
dris. i
pe. forwarded to m
TUESDAY, the 13
Dewsbury, Dec
om 4 “FOREMAN, a Bri ‘Tile.
— knowledge of his. duties i in the
Stea; 3 othe: : a
LANE Mr. dur Y, ,Post 0
NER AND FARM BAILIFF.
Tea Stang e AND FARM
h Lan
DERE.
y and co
iddle s eni ie
ANTE , Post Office, Stretford, rd fae
TED, = good GARDENER, and his Wit
LAUNDRESS; without i; eye
. iors ‘out incumbrance, Oros, Wee 30 — of
respecta!
A married man of
DENER.—Middle-aged, married, without in-
nce; 2 Practical Man; understands Meadow
mains
Land, y + if requir Can havea good character from 15 5
ave.
tuation he is about Sed —J.C., J. F. Muskett, Seedsman,
28 Clapham, Surre;
0 i ARDENER.— Age 46, married, without incum-
brance ; for 16 years He ard toag man no
deceased ; in any capacity where implicit trust and confidence
ugh knowl ccounts. Testi
Security if required: ee} MEA
J. POTTER, 5 Rod tham
a Dair:
ARDENER DER GLE- —-
; Mr M You — — ento
LIEF (or in either —
pneus b xe ^ aving de ent
re px ae e of the death des mp Te His
wife, a halbes of mv „would take charg: required,
being fi PE —€— M petes. —T. MIN . Berdter Gh Grange,
ien: S
N (ina -— place), or JOBBING MAN,
eren iddle-aged ; is
AND PROPAGATOR, Tiy. is at
iberty to engage with any Nurseryman EM 3a
business- like a with excellent character.—G.
Bowood, Beamin ster, Dorset, —
UI-FA FACTOR, or otherwise.—A you
3 e of High Farm mene
Sheep, &., , Levelling, Barveyihg Break
Impr proving mg eep ping Accounts, and the eme 2 ‘of
Chemistry to Agriculture. Eade hi ghest references.—J. Dickso
hire.
agian, wi
met Oe
8.
Clifton Bank, Buxton, Der
AND STEWARD on BAILIFF 2 40, married ;
native of tlan has had considerable iens
the Management of Land; d "Selling, y 2
ment of Stock in general; Dra „ Planting, &c.—.
Wright's Duildings, Watford, 2:
Sootland ; — England
good
Prop
»
w
as
7 Glenteld Patent Starch, see that you get n
| Decramer 3, i
RRN
sag S business; — pac
and Boot Draining end improving of Eagle
and Scotland, the aa
monials.—J. G., M 7. Ellison, iy ee first de —
Ws T.— An e
"is th
AD, who
ata branes
mal its
Leat the rhead, Surre
—
had ip uu of 12
Can well r retome
Gardeners’ Chronicle Office, wo
o M
ATTLE SHOW, 1859. 701 will
NT. e n
find ere
economy, and dene:
EQ,
uy i i
T: =
and 145. AR
Homeeopathic cre i
rried; understands his wh
Chemist, Southa
. The pulli Mo padurt —
y worthless — — de a
e test of experience has b
Gentle Winter w
scription of Scotch LEE Eb y
artan Warehouse, of.
LEN'S
the cong mote BAGS,
Ladie Trv Dressin
— — Waiting and Dri
articles for Home or Continental
New Catalogue for r 1869. T
ALLEN, Án of Offi
tary Outttters rs (see
— for
rs’ Barrac!
ften 5 tituted. Sold b by all »
THE BEARD, WHISKERS, OND!
OWLANDS" MACASSAR OIL i
een repute — —9 most success
wth, restora and in i
nal pro ren be ‘ond question
esalta for more than half a cen aint
other specific — failod. 8 t pro
trengthen a pair, à
"and — it beau derne
ba:
havi
—— Europe;
of Royalty, and the high
are the words, ROWLANDS’ MACASS
and feed signature, b i ROWLAND &
pee 20, Hatton Garden, London, E. C.;
sn HMA.— DR. LOCOCK'S PUL
moro
bc Ae oughs, aa all ers of
Lun ey have a most pleasan!
and Dn r box.
Sold by al
ERFECT
Lungs, and
* aede "Ttt restoring
imes its cost in o!
at 182, Piccadilly, W.;
150, Oxford Street, W.; 4. Chen
— m Ag ge 30,
rienced in the
2 x
t Soi
„ Purchasing, and Selling 2
ce and testimonials — —
Mr. Tho — Land Agent, 18, Parliam
t, London „S. W.
of i»
'ement
an * per rityiz
the s glands, *
Pills. . —
form a — N
December 10, 1859.]
The Gardeners’ Chronicle i.
tin
er.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1859.
HE SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM, vith the
NATIONAL GAL 4 — La * | PICTURES pr esented
pshanks, &c., is now
of the ien
By order
by Messrs. Verr
OPEN DAIEY, and on pny — res ‘nights
according to the Regulations of t| x NGA
Committee of reds n Educatio:
BANK OF. DEPOSIT,
ESTABLISHED A. D. 1844 ; 3, age hy East, LONDON, .
CAPITAL STOC.
ARTIES desirous of INVESTING MONEY
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL oe
Monda wer
Teu the Congress as the representative of Great
from Madrid inform us that
Sram nis sh expeditionary force has s
serious "*em
n
he
ustained is
th the M
It is report
LL will shortly return Á Spain, and that
n Africa for the |
m Italy we learn that the separate Gov
* of Par ma, Modena, and the 1 Mns
abl
POST
mple
al Agreement ms — 5 d with-
anuary
anaging 3 tor.
and July. ETER Mormon, 3
Forms for opening Accoun n application.
ELICAN. LIFE 1 A rene —
Established in — 7 70, Lombard St:
41 5
e
Premium, wil i m ate in
For 2 and Forms of Proposal apply at tlie Offices
as above, or of the — 8 D
erm iom
Treas Another ee was
erp on
Tu e er n has ordered a writ to be
did. under the Gn Seal of the United Kingdom
mp P Vi iscount Ebrington to the House of
Pee T , of Castle Hill, in
A y e ning Street.
ea
x Pr
EERAGE,—
at Dévin.
Tun p HDEACONRY OF Surery.—The Rev. J.
an
Utterton, Vicar of Farnham, has been — Pee
deacon of Surrey, in the room of the Rev, J
who has resigned,
HE VOLUNTEER RIFLE MovkwENT.—AÀt a meeti
f the Court of Aldermen on Tu wad it was atng
i ow G ontagu Hicks, Gover-
m, and late o f her
ant Colonel of the London Ritle Brigade.—On ] em:
. C. Hoare,
rior to the Ist ua will
ill parti e | ran
k o vernor- rome of the League of the
States 7 Ti al Italy.
By the arrival of the Indian mail we have —
STAB Po E AP
ICTORIA AND LEGAL gris COMMERCIAL
IC ASSURANCE COMPANY, 18, King William Street,
The business of the Com pany embrac
risk connected with Life 2
Credit allowed of one-third of the premiums till death, or
— n for flve — on 3 5 out for the
wi
Advances in connection with Li
Talookdars or 11
ee of Oude, whose estates
es every desorption of | |
had
rebellion, have revived
beneficial lessee
gra
mi the cum Crown
onfi
6 Aven are made
advantageous terms, either on * * personal (Rees
WILLIAM RATRAY, Amis
HE BRITISH MUTUAL “TIPS € ASSURANCE
.
SOCIETY entertains p y description involv-
ing the contingency of het
H [^ Esq. ER as Hamber, Esq.
enry Currey, d am
Ralph Etwall. Esq. Rew’ William Palin, M. A.
$ 8 Feltoe, Esq. Joseph — 1 — Esq.
teg Valker,
their heirs on fixed conditions, which give them
such an interest in the country that they will
. be deeply concerned in the maintenance |
of British rule.
rmed i in feudal supremacy, and their r posses- | Thu
y to manding officer, m
men resident in in m metropolis was held at the F.
masons’ Tav y resolved to
Volunteers, pie
the "Hah of € [^
Arran
2 pert Lilie, Sir Sus Shiel, Mr.C Cogan, M.P.,
gan Jo n O Con. it in the pr i
It w was announced that the — of 5
Earl of Donoughmore, the » the Marquis
= donderry,
Earl of — — h, Mr. Justice Hill, the Attorney-
mà for E 2 D — rt Captain Agar
| Ellis, and timated their
3
corps, and stated t t a Govern
about to examine de value of X the "Knickerbocker fr
MET and, if advisable, to recommend i
by allt the ki ingdom. "The
The United States Secretary of W
a despatch from General Scorr, dated ‘ Straits of
Fuca,” stating en he had propose ed to Gov vernor
adoption all the e rifle corps in
R company of about 60 rd from their establishment
for this cor; vun Recruits a — in oy! e rate of
about 40 a
ooch, Esq. George W
The pubis ad are invited to examine for themselves the ad va
in regard to the island of San J uan, on, - basis
tages assurers by the plan on which policies are
ee Ge o
ure 100/., Payable at Death c th Profit ts).
Age next Birthday. | Annually ually. | Haltyearly. | Quarterly.
30 '| £2 61 EE
um 0 3 11 imi | 016 5
50 4 | 2 8
í 1
1 ad vantages afforded P respectable and active
goui e lee the agen in * a po
p fall pursue n
CHARLES JAMES THICKE, Secretary.
17. New Bridge Street, recen E.C.
HAT WILL THIS COST TO PRINT?
thought often occurring iterary ds, pu
characters, and perso rsons of benevolent intentions. An —
diate ans w iry m
ps,
: el meting of pea Hm :
held a few days since, at gx ch it was
ritish naval foree ha
been withdrawn Íro Juan, with the ex
Inen Diis So Juan
Wome Mews. é
Quem, *P
T ince Consort, and the
eg . ro the 8 fenily are at Osborne.
Windsor È evening che Prince of Wales arrived at
visit to her - Majesty. |
Y
Fat
excep- Brigade is
ment of Types, Steam Printing Machin: ydraul: he
Presses, and every modern improvement in the Printing Art.
A Specimen — of Types, and information for Authors, sent
y
ARRETT. 13, Mark Lane, London, E. C.
William left the N y. thei return to Prussia. The
Qu meen, Prince Consort, Pri ce of Wales, es, and Princess
Westminster Hall o
eor opted for the drill.—
Admiralty was
the various
The enrolled mem
amount to upwards of
been added within the last week.
into five co! — —.—
ani two - itional drill
ing
on Friday evening in Lig rendre icd the
d drill. Viscount
AM
and administered the requisite oath. -
RN
*
D
>
the Prince and Princess took are Me rd has for E —
: Majesty. The Queen and Prince with Princess | after which day they will join the main
3 Xtlos of i t Week e to Windsor after the departure of their at Beaufort House, W Gr About 90 of
5 oa Highnesses, and the Prince of Wales proceeded | the students of the Working Men’s College in Great
2 fro Paddington to Oxford. In the afternoon the Ormond Street have form ed themselves into a
| E ias the Seer of the EMPEROR eem of Kent visited the Queen. The Judge-Advo- and Ra are made to the mibi y-
| or THE FmrwcH, has addr a letter to four eral had an audience of saa al rx nd bp r. Thomas — the author of * Tom s
un- » a
E merchants of Liverpool who had “written to HIS ed the Da Qu of some courts-m "the Pri Schoolday w ten 1
Alice, Princess Helena, Pri isa, and Prince ing this small force of working-men, which will
ini i In this le "e ina Ea states that stes attended Divine service in the private chapel; probably become the nucleus of a large body
: circu the Rev. C. F. Taryer On Monday morning the same pes of the
the Queen and Prince Consort d in the grounds of | The committee — organise the establishment
the castle. Her Majesty a isited the Duchess | of a rifle corps fi pir sly of St. m held a
of Kent at Frogmore, an the ce rt came to | meeting on Tuesday at the vestry hall, St. Paneras Road,
d d visited the Cattle Show. On Tuesday morn rt
ing the Quia and Prince Consort accompanied by the with, and Mr. J. Shoolbred, m the mi of the firm,
Prin Alice, Helena, Louisa, and Beatrice, Prince ended it with a donation of 50.— An influential
ha Arthur, and Prince Leopold, left Windsor for Osborne. meeting of the parishioners onets and in of St.
ednesday the Prince eining ] Fields € 7
M. visited her Majést . On Thursday the Queen, Prince | Monday, the Rev. Emilius
to Consort, and Royal fumily in the grounds. it was resolved to
to have THe PI seremos W. ee
daily P stating that t oe a
opis oe assertion made last week by 2 Roebuck at oig ed
x that his 3 supplied the French | Sk.
vi inistry wi A D of Ou English coast, pointing out
Spain, have| where we codi be best attacked. The following i$ a ment at
ill | translation of the letter :— be Loi Vd V 3 s, to
“Sir,—Your number of y contains an ex n a b te We
“delivered Mr. Roebuck, in which I isition forwarded War
speson deere too eit orte not to foel obliged to reply to Dépertateot to sanction the formation of the corps.—
it. The assertion of Mr; Roebuck t . Gangland. Lave | Tt iui to form a e» in the metro-
n. d attack on this country ; and lastly, Truman, Buxton, & Co.
to be | drawn up no project for an attack on i Dy — first impulse to the movement by agree-
91 5 add t I always consider the ex of & formed in their
Oh Ministry, — to wish that the ing to pay m :
myself a ‘son of France,’ I would De Meet cross the Straits. | establ the number to be at first limited to 100.
t ald | "principles" which now Erase of justice, the insertion of this | — officers and men UE at the great railway
ment Wo Eo from your und T beg you to accept my com- 436 "mel la hive — ee
hat no letter in your ne next number, br JN. Stations in
al at Pliments. ie Railway Rifle corps. esf oe Ne at the
1 hae caches: g, Cabinet
Council was held on eee
»
THE- GARDENERS’ E
uE AND AGRICULTURAL c
offered themselves; and the Fic rsons employe ed T m already se their adhesion are Great Britain, | Farini
Stratford station of ias Eastern Counties have Austria, coating Riet Spain, Sardinia, se Portugal.
menced a similar mo ment, Aine invited the inhabitants | The wf do of Rome, Naples, and Sweden have no
of the district. to Sim i — Monday night a public yet t been r ceived. Lor ord Cowley i to represent her
meeting of the inhabitants of Southwark was held M 4 first Plenipotentiary. It is
the Ier Institution, Borough Road, with the view stated that Austria and France have greed that no
of a g to the effective re m of the 7th Surrey | delegate or a SSE SAY of the States of Central
corps. 15 was stated that the preliminary arrange- Italy, the Governments of which are not recognised by
t vith this body are now com pleted, | the European Courts, € ri el to the Congress,
and that the services of one every) have already been either in an official capac r with any titre officieux. |1
accepted by her Maj jesty ; 3 and it The trial proie the Pollen of the apocryphal
companies will shortly be formed, thus raising € the South- | letter in the Ami de læ Religion terminated on pans.
wark m seme * 7th Surrey, to a considerable Wednesday. responsible editor, the Abbé ee at the approac hing rede. Net ta le :
strength.—. owde meeting was held on n Monday at Sisson, has been sentenced to three months’ impri- | Ho olin ss had appo ointed Cardinal Anton eii Pint that his
the , Horns, Kennington, s the Rector of Lambeth i in the sonme ut t and a fine of 1 ead p € p bw gf irst Pleni.
ne o pinion | has aut ori sed te da Naples
1 oth men 4 rm a corps for the | Nationale has received a first v warning for an article| Gaeta and Cor un d + eh E
oh ts of — d ea h, e Newington, in P M the following phrase: — “The temporal ill come into dir munication with P
connection with the 1st Fox Volunteers.—A meetin power o e Po e is a bl eeding wound in the si ide of | Piedmontese Gazette publishes a decree no —
= the 13th Middlese = Cor FN as he M. on Saturday € | Desambrois as Minister Plenipotentiary of "
rouch End, when Mr. t t, world." The Juge e ey decided that there the Emperor Napoleon. The session of-
— Mr. J. M. Fletcher ensign.— The Lord Lieutenant is no ground for dua B oes d n the affair air of M. neil of State was opened on Satu rday by the me
has accepted the services 2 the 7 Corps, which Girardin's pamphlet, entitled * tr dent, Cardinal g Pietro. The Financial ial Com sulla was
effective mem and
has vem ed |
'The copies 9
. | The Emperor has j
* ples aes been returned.
üst
French consul at Nico, an
th
a
o M. Ala 1200 c. at i
nd Cardinal Seyeli,
to form
two
with the one e in existence. —At iste a
iment is about to be formed, in addi tion to a
the Scotch residents
lerk Telegrap e have resolved to
form separate corps — additio: * those already in
8 in that port.—Meetin um for the formation of |
corps and for the extension of those ere formed
lavo also been held during the we Ash-
burton, Ayr, Aberdeen, Brighouse, Bury T Mead)
Buxton, Beverley, Bradfo erwick 4
Bri Bakewell, Bedford, Bridgn
p worth 3
qeu for the services estu by tat bd ore — Holiness soli kx ü, i
nen lieutenant of infantry to Prince Lou 1 TUR E BE TOM * erigig i
| whose e cause he zealously supported, The 3 Ta about vm rm paier une TERR ae
rea Aie fee nium ndsome dower to one of the daughters Pa chis. Fund bad tender ed his s resignation, which was
SPAT —Official despatches from E is is ibo diy Sultan, b sp:
Madrid show t Pir the reas forces have been ronghiy PUMA b "id uh 5 a eared impos ' Fui
ihe late engage mente: Qn both sides | Suez Canal y Bai EAE
and nearl
opu
y 1000 w s de comba
y 30th ult. a considerable Mooriah foros — the
e Spanish encampment before
dg
Ports, Coldstream, Congleton, Cuckfield, Colchester
Dartford, Denbigh, Droitwich, Dalkeith, Dronfield, | by Marshal O'Donnell, the C St. Petersburg, the Ist 3
Durha m, Bede elesouth, Grantham, eae nbury, men e Spani: army were e put hors de ie ,| to-day in 42 days from the A o
Grims bs, Gloucester, H — ey-on-Tham Huntly | and the losses of the enemy were 500 killed and 1500 2 Emperor of Pe ded ud. the!
emen. A Harwich, Horsforth, Helsto on, Here- | wounded ne Iberia says that in the engagements | d"? as he had n uthorised the cess
Halifax, H: 8 ien Ipswich, Jersey, Kenil- between the Spaniards and the Moors which have and ina des just — d the settlement! M
per Kilmarnock, Leighto: ers 1 taken place the latter not only fought well, the n Embassy at Pekin is ‘sealed up”
Leiston, Lunesdale, 1 Me Mas but ded by officers who evidently under- Palace
Mottram, Monmouth, Northflect, North | stand n strategy barkation of troops INDIA.—We have accounts from Calcutta to
Norwich, N. ti, Otley, Perth, Poole, continu a Algesiras, p Cadiz. | 14th, and from Bombay to the 15th of Novemb
ewell, outh, It w mo tha O'Donnell will y | followin; "we e the details :—
grat IT) m ADR Andrews, es grep cma Sax- — to Madrid, and that the army will — - i ya x omer 2
mundham, Sout am "id po / e | encamped in gu or ie pinter, The Duke de
Wells, Ulverston, Wells, 1 — Ki de (ayrshire, | M. Mont 5 occo not having e bue ‘and į ignor po e
Windsor, h, and Yor been fete his Royal Sighs — offered to go out | Talookdars at which the G £
VACCINATION.—, lei
contains an i cut in pm 3 ee to
be e the
To
dis to Tuesday's Gazette | as as
pa
"iae but was repulsed v the division | Grasset, SA
said that the intended journey of
the King of jte to England has been entirely |i
tai
n adhesion of the other Continental Powers to m
extremely favourable, '
30
us
unteer in the Artillery, but the offer has the allowing en. pon 22 sin
ined.
was expec ted,
The re M the je of from 3 Do
e salaries of the employés in the
and t the tue
per cent. of th
superior oie establishments
licences had been ordered.
RUSSIA. The . is ^ — a ye
andbill all over India
on okdars of O "ig —I am glad to to find myself
country and among you, i and. to have this Me ener 0
to you in the nam e Queen .
whom contracts are made n given up. The Prussian Moniteur 1 Aeon lub Mm
itted as tractor dr deputy n s for | appointment of Lieut There! on W
vaccination unless he shall possess the same qualifica- | of War. Eis Bonin, the late Minister, » dus been it Bu t
tions as for a district dical officer. | appo! Commander of "the Rhine Profits a
Instructions are given to vaccinators under contract. entz. d retirement is attributed to a difference x the fiore, Yon have "p you
2 only to vaccinate s gn ts who are in good | opinion on the new organisation of the army.
health unless there be immediate danger of sm: Adar Hzssr.— The differences between Prussia and Hesse imp that tl the a
Certain precautions also to be adopted in ‘regard to | Electoral are in a fair way of Reng 2 settled by the ja
mph to bed certain signs are noticed to friendly intervention of the Federal D:
th T
de when been picotat
formed. After a notification of se Bait required |
for publie vaccinators
: vaccination is to to y of fie de
a list of
dist, it
form
ven where | the Cou
thes of Minister Pr Hols deir an
inec
DENMARK
med as follow ws AT
"m
Marine; Councillor of State M. Westen-
ten Minister of est the Chamberlain, M. Jessen,
= " inister of the Int
Foreign. BADEN. Th oncordat with Baden has been
FRance.—The following is a translation of a letter pee mc
— «ds on A an urtemberg.
M. Mocquard, in the name of the Em M Vienna Gazette of the 3d à polishes
3 the treaties concluded between France
inquiring his intentions in re- between Austria and Sardinia, o winds of Toi
i vus s is
„Palace of the Tuileries, Nov. 30.
“To Messrs. Shaw, Mellor, Irving, and Gaskell, merchants
fa tl attent
felt t at the agitation which prevails
means are e dope es
For that object
at Liverpool
6 5 addressed Pi rei direct to 9 the calm down „the “excitement.
as regards En
! gn Or g dence di sione sould explain t this | §
step. ( he one side, you are possesse br ibe imaginary
trouble which ap to [n seized your with 2
rapidity of e on on Ë
and on the other, your
desire a reply.
very 0 obnoxions to the inhabitants. The
PP of St. Stephen's Cathedral at 1 i is in a ics
e| gerou xamin
s state. A commission is about
he
UE and to NA whether the cans shall * 1 Hn that I ar MT
whet repaire
n
or "twi t 18 xi of You will. also
o ad in
en to brin,
luded with Austria TE Which they Pii he
ic atter
amous mike known, pot yourse!
sen sates of you!
er indulgences to increase
e land, and set them an
aw Lr rulers, Le t »
courage you
ide. Learn y 1
—€— as
e and
on t fc
ty, it is in $e pe tales of desi;
He will tell you the tru Tuch in all things
: ntative of the Government in O
represe:
upon it, he will be tis Cum
whic
An . Baron Rieasoli has returned to Flo ^ .
Turin, where he has had a long conference with | availed
the „ "Minist er for Foreign Affairs. The a x the wey through t ds "outing p
delegation “oe the Regency of Central y to M. ment on the Jem eee a a d
B been d to the de —.— = Bal of wh ee iu
tion M. Buoncompagni will pro- una Zu
ceed immediately ‘to ans with the ris of a, — 4 8 xi A d A
Governor e of the provinces of their valuables and one mo
ence- | Central Italy. The 3 the Governor-
General will extend to the command of the nl kg against
ts of the provinces Parma, Modena, and al E mdp rp ar pin a
prae cnt pios itis we -— 5
December 10, 1859.)
d, but considerable suspicion, of course, hangs
the € a it is — much his interest to get believed.
vit ulla. LThe + harged Europeans who volunteered foi
t back as Mon Tm characters. The
e 15th No
* the 29th
ao aro
A part
ber, by which
100,000 dollars - ut The ‘J ames Hartley steamer
on the. rocks 80 miles from Hong Kong;
saian were saved. The ship Inker-
u, of London, had also been lost.
— ed "
Hong Kong f Jap was to leave for
Washington by ‘the Pow! hattan on the 22d .
— T Ther
isa ir ctm ity of labo
Java.—The qu “expeditionary force for Boni left
Eve
on the
id the natives z pio ava would ri
armed. M
— natives, owing M their — g forced o —
—— fot Bon A pirae ey to mu
Datoo Putingi , Gapoor had been
d for 1 with — 9
uropean | bayon:
uch — e reo t
2 ti
an
Europeans. The to be banished to Singapore,
Tranquillity was restored o on the 17th Oct.
"USTRALIA.— arp shi p 1a iu: was open
on the 13th of Oct tobe er, and Mr. Murphy was elected
Spedker without opposition.
debate was to commence on the of October, and a
iste The great
The quarter’s
. and the capital of the
Hk of Now South a been increased 50
The Ba the arrival of a
donkey i in that district. . ineident seems to have
1 ion,
EW CALEDONIA.— Three Eng lishmen have been sho
m Caledonia for having — the die wth
against nch Government. These men were
thea agents of a Mr. Padden, the owner of large tracts of
land in the island, who secured his safety by escaping
In gre the Trient was eh ed i his
hich may be expeeted next week. '
omar tan Scott's arrival
y retired from his pioa: with undis-
2
disgus anger.
the exception of the Sate
m from San Juan. It E died at Washington that
een the it
of the ulw
through the agency o!
meee 8 24 23
THOILE
eS
——
E
me so got
LET
: ie accounts 1 from the Carson Valley (Walker River) Mines
? E attention. The mines promise to be
; Men River. These mi . — are Nod
ol AN AM and are suj om
7 Tne distance
"a the
2000 wide,
sins vot — of
m first tt d satiny: ing of an engine
carri toria bridge at
1
E on ws 24th ult. ON pen ra 5 m
urs ef New Orleans by means of the | prop.
carried to Europe vid the Grand Trunk Railway and
= Line, have been brought over in
of 3 eei pide po
cm nounced for Sonta rre
f
'The Want of Confidence
h naval force,
1 pe: Ue Hs ent oi
Public ee
ecent meeting of Somer-
u at Taunton, ign the — | a
National =
T * s
Lorp Ta AUNTON,
seine agricultur:
arks on the
vwd emt — peaco— they enter-
conquest st
ghbour b pat Tn ey RE gre disguise p 2 admini any |
ountry
ni
-"
Engl: duty on their r pa
pared for all MED He, the ore, E. one, v berti re-
joiced and heartily sym athised with the
is countrymen from d's En
bidding Le to b
of then fe
applied.
untry were nally —
h the eee of their ; situation. He must
say that a -— avs respo ye —— lie Mes —
dt 0 ment, if, when the people
ey
i
E
&
Siis
B
F
y of and rei ed
igen ^ he must $a; iy 2 1 ——
nt were fu lly die Y r duties on
subject, and 8 to ae the poh A and navy of this itum
m in the most efficient — 9 nation had *
dure was a duty to be perform A by the d large
p institutions, habits, ti
well as — the Governmen
wishes were altogether opposed to the existence of a large
standing. 3 adit — ee of tis c the Lm of 2m is 1
"er — 45 —to
— its * — 22 va Roa ecessary.
What v — the ae was p y military force we might have
m uld be of the best possible 9 and be man in
e best IE ma — ie — the rt pee of this country
p
ot to look
—.—
pont — and wi ea — cem d
their co —1 » y a volup "rm ‘Vol —— m ha ad
Soa i a field in which En lish activity ad veg po
larly conspicuous. Englishmen
ad been a ar em
to the Government to bee — efforts, t to
selves when they felt occasions required — to net. He
ite sisted, mui * the movement latel; snd
be jem qd
act for
transi
im erg edu VACUA Rui fe SOME
secure against any
4
d — e of vod cupa safety that she would be secure
hostile at
ACLAND at the Taunton meeting made the
t| Mm. T. D.
following appeal to the farmers on the subject of the
o | yeo pidas valry :—
js
r
CIE island moored c
Gr e oi Meu ou es Biol B
the other day, — tho! an
: Soe anc n
lington said that steam ye ie Channe
MB din im 3 the Duke's life was w, and he asked tl
farmers of England, as men of of facts. indi eh of Array t» loot
ur neighbours the Gauls, or
E fier ore awere that the admiral who
8 the British o forces in the Crimea had given. it as *
inion that Le 000 men could be landed on the south coast of
nce they V" — to Exeter, —_ -—
thence Would an
say that at td pem ‘thay could amg on | the
t oi FE half or even a jene of that —
stop the French advance Picture, then
2 the coast. Either the Pret h army
re stan
south coas
ey wani
ch in e
of a trcep of m of which
Nori opinion; bat he said 5 vx inthe cr of —.—
that u had better vere rn and more opportt —
—
ot fit for
LEICA volunteered to go m3 for six yos
between this and their
been ia iment
followed up. If the
useful body. A plan had been
the full sanction of the Lord-Lieut hich
‘by which the farmers of the West 3
: 2 of busi-
iom men to al but —
. ef m
pe 8 Tenge, stead s igs
EU stood. :
i day & o: in the
intended that every new
ofthe body. The
—— selection of fd |
with practical so :
pep pep" E 1 that the
e had met was a proposal
155 te iet t horseback. — was said a farmer could not
i
nis
&
d
A
A
ler his musket and wal
ees "s labour, when he wanted to
had seen quite
— — do. Heknew they were as
of business in the towns were
he
Lived
could prem for r their —
tim
4 — oft the
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRIOULTURAL GAZETTE.
ap — ——
join the rife o
E ms P4 do the E If [Sn uds — toli.
salves te the nex months — 0 Seth
^ v from wh
at quarter th — 2 .
me some movement "The tom
in the north t eh
k Ni E ke d at a meeting at Rugby on
th u pok e as follows on public affairs
National Defi A Wide ya
owards de a d of the sessi
— an anomalous — — a.a *
of the pro; of y ain
t the
acks ot Cardi r an Catholic laity ute
certain endowments fortheadministration of theirreligion, whieh
ws of England they themselves administer ;
ie in a menm the weal ain parties,
— what has
knoss I2 iue
not but be
utions rr country.
as loyal as our-
er jer —
y at the fag end of the session,
a 0
2 an Cat bolle i in county
Vas gainst the i! ire —
that 1 "defended the Catholic liity a action
ae $ y succeeded, th
t there is » fear be otan there is a
possibility that an upon the
authority of the i Dake of 1 Wanne In E tbe Duke
P mo — , in which he told Sir John Bu: "oe uer
upon successive governments the d s
Rate of our * he iuda » these TOME
terms—em ming from a man — sia undoubtod
Jod — may Y live to with
A rs wh ich I haw Ae tailed
he protect of England,
etter in the p^ of — 4 in — -—
A: the — 7 upon —— Militia Bill, and to the hor
mme the patriotic s spirit
, But
militia — tho minimum
— necessary, and we bave
had 800 We ave, in point of fact, never had half.
to the mat of the avy it has — observed that
is scarcely superior to the of Fran 21
unable to resist any com — Such — tbe length whi
— . of this M — the economical mania of some,
€ uated by the desigming at
never
Look
E Arr —2 in such a defen:
1 who in some evil h
ws Roky — in remem ice of fi
make an inroad bores,
—.— corps, As to depo though i generally
believed that as the principal arsenal of our navy, mds the —
which €—— the Channel, it is defended, the truth is that
the — a beter ed are utterly worthless, and 306
not devise r schemi the destructh
than the — — of its
imd
50.0
L erage h, took it
—— that arsenal, they would hav jost basis they
— dow inte the course of
ould beat them back ; member that the ex-
Crimea bas shown Aas the sea is the best basis
to 1
Cents., 281 ; Dite for Acct., — to 284
Bank of bann.
{ISSUE Di — ENT.
Notes issued os se e» 430,743,5) Is Government Debt
3
w. 1 Anam, Perth, Coal Merchants — J. M‘Kenzir,
G. B. M'Narm, Glasgow, Fruit Merchant—R. lus ATT, mg Glazier.
TS: n Not ting! ham, Hosier—
pool, Woollen Drape! M. Gork
ren Folke stone, Tailo r—W. H.
Merchant Ks rtobello Terrac
MORET Southsea, South ampton, Builder
w NOXAE, Water r Lane, City, Com-
Grocer—F.
D, Gundle, " Northam mptonshire,
„ Truro, t *
R. W. J. P. WoonwA&
mission. Agen t J.
Dealer in Poultry.
sing MER INDIA
n, Captain Smith,
shi
z THE CANADIAN MAIL p
1 Mail screw steamer Ind
land, was totally wre ecked on t the | rocks p
Guysboro, f
f
Nova Scot e Gui à of 80, he
21st ult., ba 5 THE 5 in ks morning. The weather
the tain being deceive
by 1 suppo osed he was off Sable Island. The
ship, which was going under full steam and canvas,
struck on a sunken ledge a rted amidships in
half an hour afterwards; one t was capsized
nd several persons drow another ke was
a 80! ned ;
stove alongside the hull, while two con-
taining n of the p
ing a portio ngers and e ‘ited
to 1 an ee not been heard of a
24 were saved by the see Alexander
d ndel at Hali fax, and five — including Mr.
orce
Lutea was also lost while runni ng sk to aka e wre
Glasgow, Grocer— | were young wills, s
subject to every gust of temper and passion,
must always be a difficult, arduous, and anxious pue ier such
a life, indeed, teaching hine a rela un. The hor 1
with his E ER were the lightest he had kms he
nei the life of a public 8 vus a
pad pali T ni was not
mi gf in fall
case His
d fs Arnold "intended to due availed ‘himself
the po ot ie t: year of 0
up
who
80 E
always
Marochetti’s statue of.
was exhibited in 1851
b miliar n visitors to the
has o be )l
i-e "YR
D Ca
EC i nr
plist ht hes ad bee o do.
tention ha tore at ie pod of 15 years. S
might have y prevente d hira ma T. A pede, —The
carrying his reso
have decided that the organ, whi A
sped to co
oao within Pid mi
uld he have thrown diffic iden r the entrance to the
ear ago he should not have had the m 8 aet. livii
retirement. . But when he saw RAN zu fei gue 5 —
he safety of the school, an
espec PA RD sos he migh
pase 8 soon he fri
his 8 ed one of them, a person o
in the pu apie service, told him
with 15 y
fortune gi longer.
ple in ness. iked
F to some
T
increase of room—so much wanted: on
a afternoon services, and also byi its maki
ec mi E es organ will
designed by Si
n, and will be remo wed oe ely wa
in its re n
period, a finished, work, | wy present case, vid
and he hi m thi ende di to quit icin at the exact
end of 1 years, which to his * Spes a Me different thing | €
from leaving it at the end of 15 and a-hal he end
of 17 years. He had M irs iow 2 Jesu & lov ision.
ap IO ag events of his bine had been beet rapid,
In September, he cor ced ube
jel ei —
e vicars chor
of | being plundered by people from shore. The wal
LA: and forwarded to Windsor, in the care of the
ConFERENCE.—A conference of * those w
iverpool, m, Mr.
8. Morley, and other gentlemen, The following: sud]
aopted .
“1, That this. 3 ce desires to ay: its ia
acknowledgments to Mr. Bright, M. P., for e abilit ith
which he has urged the er of ——— enn
on the attention of the country; and for the care and la! bour
€
a settlem which ide a large -
tension of f the ry nem boch d in countios peci in boroughs
— vem — "the | popula:
ung without i rena
rs. If, then, in August, 185 men eon: rs in the early morning
conviction Mist he could with safety mme w 1 | we: m; nce.
Harrow at the tior of the ton fy ited not i surprised E
find him i cupant of a humble hom
— e We ils. d
by the
E -
1 rd
the c
OF Sr. Pani
Dale perd announced his — - rpg
as at the close of the present 2
gned sca everal hundred els of the pak
is intended to esta blish a a Vaughan Library at Harrov
ioners and also by the clergy of the parish have been
| for the use of about of the up pper boys of the school. |
| The cost is estimated at 40007., of
already subscribed. One of Dr. Vaughan’s pupils has
| contri ird A ug net sum of 1000/7.
THE ASE.— — im ren the Jewish
father oiik ‘child i is detained b
ent at Rome, has just arrived in this country afte
| passing a fortnight in Paris. n 2 last he had an
tervi ew with the committee o e Evangelical Alli- |d
his determination, and if poss e To co
si
mittee for ied originated the movement for He:
liberation of his child. The precise . "a nbe ta
by Signor ' Mortara’ and ue friends to nce 1
r of the venen ‘liberty of | se ne for the EN 4 ue paris
bed die ided upon. the ih, id je mia pai
E REAT AS ue Ps pes en
of the r beat apin of ve erated | fi
rumours Tare h een in Gallen; espe “the great
2
12002. uns m
uitable redistribution of Satish j
orem red Sore got enini sb oia car na 3 which have produced something like a panic the gift of the Bees 5 G M
electoral Ter for England, Scotland; nd Ireland; the rep ber ong the shareholers of the company. In order to when vacant, will be conferred on the P W.
re tonnin 5y t; and s 8 ne n to the voter; by means 1 condi- | neys, o hitechapel. ii e war
e been s ks so fearfully 1 prevalent SES — lection wer te of the ship, and the financial position of the com- Tun New STREET FROM Sourawanx o Waist
whic — vy ees [oe e. 1 dee ‘tea Spa es of the | pany. ting The M poli of d
counuy. 3. asubscrip opened to meet the expenses called by tl h inst., at whi urchased a] number of houses on
of the Parliamentary Reform 5 cn for the —.— "d yu ar. Med cha ur a directors for for the cade rds — oae eot. Peas Southw war :
4. That, inasmuch as the, defeat of the obnoxious and illusory aute
Reform Bill of the Derby Administrat ccom mplis ishe d by | mittee of peine for thie purpose of 5 di a|issued notices stating that in
tha eal and- co-operation of Parliamentary Refor this thorough investigation into the affairs of the company | portion of . d emot wi
c stt cie crc to hem to continue ther. erts with from its cee of throwing some light on o d of a lar, mber of houses on the
ofa new Reform Bill by the present Government, to" pronounce | cum mstances which have tended to de press the property. | Street, Borough, below the T
with — Hai, à pa tre upon its fitness to satisfy the
55
ust Mr. bee has
have been bul t little more. than: 20 years,
ma de an offer for the pure chase of the
U As soon as these houses are t
„0007 im
requirem
dane MPLE.—In e short: —
ed dow: id a arti drive |
Street to the church. The whol e of
form a working capital to complete the shipi ^ charter | and removed a further sale will take' place,
eher for 12 months, e shareholders 5 per cent. in | intending to proceed with the = Migne
p | line of v as Seu as possibl
he| Mon T TO
g m
presen nt company. The
mpton of
Commerce have 8 on ai inviting the directors ai | the late Mr. Brunel was so dist
house, No. 1, which is the only buildin et escaped
» oy e us di of London Y Th
shops, are
has been held oe pepe the mer d of er
ommercial banquet, :
su ient monum e his
ea
and ¢
Big n per several other den e, per. su
almerston M accepted a tation to
tion! 10 Lord
1M W +
the new approach. 3 M
1 Locke, M. P.;
owler, Mr. "Hewkstiaw)
M
precise de for holding the ee [me not — boss "a pa nii Mr. Josep
C. E.;
to members of the bar. The e alterations | Mrrrixe Cr ND LA E EAST Wool — tg Chairman of the:
immediately after 2 W onday evening an . — = sae Mr. M *Clean, C.E.; Mr. T be other :
3 = ice to the ET laity of the east end of Dee The following resolution n
Sa "MS ve M ne n I" x ed at Rokeby House, Stratford, for tbe pu and a oe v appoin — * to carry it i
ae late bead master o Te, : Aer pude ir res extending the machinery ie in mark the high ta dh
by hi ike eis ertame lly through the diocese. 'The meeting ned of the gen nius and ate con amen! Ak
in de pe ns’ Hall. The chair was « on C A Mr. dece as exentplified in bis great puo inte
occupied by Mr. Charles Saen and Dat 260 ie series which the Bishop o on | s. eln r of ^ the ES. of his i
e! fii Sia denionsiradi , ludi intends hol ing in the us rural deaneries a his — i ia s be Hien for the erection ary
Spencer „ Lor ord Rad k Lo vd San irse ess ine: diocese, and of which the late meeting at Ealing was | his memory." rd
V ami ton, the first. Bishop presided and address he] Sr. GEORGE’S th
M. P., the Hon. E. Ashl the Ho, E. 5 Smith ing at length, recommending to their sup- Sunday passed off 1 ion
Y tá cA Y eginald Capel, | port the Diocesan Home ‘Mi , the Diocesan | and the arrangemen he
Ralph erh und Hon. B cu 12 cene r. | Church Building Society, an Diocesan Board | prevented any renewal of the rioting 1n
thanks for the toast IN keai, T ^ 5 of Education, and expressing an earnest hope that hoped therefore that the fier
aughan said :— el rgy- and ea Aee 52 = rth oim ener- | hith vail
ugh!
or: gan ised plan, for the | men were bro
extension of the inno: t the Church tironghon t | Police t on Fri
the diocese, Mr. W of the Bank Queen Mary, with havi
vious `
utions were’ unanimously adopt ed pledging there was a
the meeting to do all in fps power to co-operate mitted the responses | “to it
re | the es already in operation ; an to brin abont a th
a) uri ide al associations where they adjourning the cases for three 85 mm
do not at prevent exist,’ consisting of clergy and laity in the meantime proper. <<
dE
. attendance of the prisoner
DiciwseR 10, Ed
THE — CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ota. SL
dem parce would. be e of
he e had been. electrifd by wires passed round his cell.
for the benefit of the
For ans of British soldiers.
or p ed
fice of the judge to t
x Rosier and Chester for g in the
case
church.
of Rosi
cogn - curate, has since been . to t
ehe and fined 2s. for assaulting | Mr. - Sones, one of
eapo
me the murder was com tted, and to th n !
re was some clothed, fed, and educa
i a
diffic ulty i ^. ae by him would be Fb: coms geret
a religious principle did not actuate either of the
parties. At a vestry meeting on Thursday it
2 resolved to petition the Houses of Lord
of the parish; and
h ted t
sition the churchw:
convene, a meetin ng of the parishioners to
ipu the wager for Ar removal E the Rev. B. King
trom the ce of rector. The Hugh Allen, th
- | phre
3 pe ronght up, and — rod Ai ivi
formally 3 to Reinga Yee for “trial on the charge | tion which fitted — reine an were
of Wilful Murder. ow. —
DOUBLE — —On Monday evening Mr. Hum
reys ® held a mati in the East Road, City Road, on
Edmund Shirley, a 2283 m aged 24, and R Ros etta
Greenwood, aged 18 — t
the Railway Coffee. ome i in a — Road by ‘risking | clergy hy — men * held a — days since at Cam-
ed for its carpet, €— =a
e expense 500 children.
favour of — a of a N id at
ously adopted.—A meeting of
5 er, has "been appointed by the Lord
by photographers | bridge, at which
in their business, It 88 from ths ipee d Lon | prese
George's, Sonthwark.
Chan
— THE RoYAL L CH HARTER.—Mr. Mansfield,
the sipendiry Maren at Liverpool, and Capt.
Harris, assessor, have- transmitted to the
Boa — inde os mg report on the resulis of their
late inquiry into the loss of thi sel. ey state that
the iron plating of t essel was decidedly above the
and that consequen bould be 1 Ts — Dro
1. i of
with a * er cg Young man e disputes been forbidden | and pem " cles of information Bal rre
his father’s house. Ina 3 he told a | position, rights, and claims of —.— 2. The fur -
friend of the — * pad no shelter or home | nishing replies to all attacks made the Church,
he should destroy himself, a — the * woman who | and especially those of the Society for 1 Liberation x
pecially those
Religion from State Control; and 3. The
of petitions to Parliament in all cases when
r leave him
They w ent on
was with him pele that she w ue" nev
n earth but w die with hir
upo
the same nps ie
Buß
Eel
URY.—A case of bere cam Lepre has been
the s bro Jes by the 88 when 14 oms under investigation A m^ es of this city. A
were pon diis ded, Phe girl lying on her ba ho had tu draught purchased
with a white pockethandkerchief in her right. hand, ns at t the shop of Mr. John B — ip and d
p enly last € and as the surgeons believ
t uate to keep | ro me | the girl’s Waist. At the side of the bed was a | 21 he [^ «d died of epilepsy, the — returned a verdiet
the ship under command; ^ a same | 3 and bottle labelled “ poison," and two letters, | o ral — An i of poli
time notice. the quein y that. the was | one from the man to his father, | the other from 7 girl having » "m of the case, — a similar draught
from this course by the apprehension th that to her x with whom she lived in Praed Street, | a Reeve afterwards ela
the falling igging a sati spars might foul Paddingt 28 Mr. — who offered y h
p: d themselves. The jury. after a short deliberation, returned and even to keep him and his to pay Mi if Dó i
in 1854, off Balaklava. The ey also express an opinion 15 up. The officer refused, and reported t
peal is = — practice to sten p to the | of p em while i 2 5 state of unsound mind." facts The su — — The contents of
in way. le of BLIC HRA — The Registrar -Generals the bobti were then analysed and found to con-
x they 8 “is not add ad $ ti oer — that the — of deaths registered in|tain one of the strongest of opium.
there are mome „ lull. ing these don in the week that ended Saturday, Dec. 3, was After hearing this evidence the mitted
m power not being readily —€— z apt to | 1304, des nearly the diis as that ee for the | Mr. Reeve at the assizes on the charge of
the ship ahead. r this, when lent gust | preceding wee ek, In the erc aro ng weeks of t t but admitted him bail. Since
rs, the ship drops astern, bringing y 33; which, | this occurred, fresh facts have come te light, and
re jerk on tud iege ind ‘id train | if the increase of population will there is reason „to believe that other —
A of. om *
ty. Taking i
d fury of the gale, which *
the poveri at band of the screw. propeller,
was Va onger. under: "command—a
lo Lot N e]
h Ca apta aylo
m d. considering = the apprehension he may
nen gr noes nchor, that the asts would | >
—
oul the sere
safely ini ini ntermitt ed—they do nof think that this i is m ise
default of the master.—The marine A of —
Board of ave awa the om
from the vessel with 9 5 5
3
“On Mon-
s
wlió yh"
bam 1849.58 the . —
ato — —
—a eir-|. Baru.
2 by the Da on n their * linen, to establish a raval
Canterb
- | beco & — present return is 82 2 below
the 2 g the 7 the births ot ns boys |
Te 912 girls, in mij o — were
London. In the
rr vi ate D. been poiso isoned in the ma same way.
ildren, tered | One of the bodies having -— exhum — er that a
epe ndis ie. "E the | post em examination r^ gm
1009. was Que upon it, but t — the did p
of opium was found in 2 * ew medi —
stated that they coul whet! the
opium had been taken in pinar quantity 85 cause
‘he .
des of
eps ler fond |" M n PIT PN
ET Ou fund Crarsux. The Commimionere in Lenseg haye paid
order af 5 287
of large a the Court of Chancery, belong- f visit to Chat]
ing — the hospitals of Bath. It appeared i that about — ö — i Cinteniet a
l dischargi: insane soldier from the lunatic
at iat Fort Pii m
1790 a legacy of 5007. was bequeathed by Genera
Joscph Smith to the Bath hospitals, and a similar en and turning him:adrift in the
m of 5008. to the public during their visit
were | placed 7. in —.—— with the
what
Madras Charity School si ee
children, “a and that the affairs of the
administered under the directi of
e Chan cery. The money w.
but, from some * —
ever been made
ed
Med one of. ‘ating
better footi
ir J. Neeld too!
2025 rond ren A
men ang
t, and rs. F. R. Mur
‘the body of Ma
ane Mr.
the wo
beg. ma
ary Ann
Mat ther, ‘divisional edis and Dr.
were exi essed their —
man was ane first by the tongs and
mi. that her head v 3 Eran from her
t he d applied for r the
E jury, and
of State had
The fore-
befor
pie k vus ak. that the Secretary
ch
Paani’
“Monday: the
— —
rgeo owev
n for him in his cell in
E to him, and ha
Pi filled with stea
of erio xton L
at had a
more than a del during whieh period he w
r mu, delusions of a limited character
d
the
Tae Fi 2 lune eei nd berge! — on — and MAD in ie . ee of Wallasey ry ji
r. Lai
un enm i
onfined in 845 sa
nthe 0
the following reso-
S fairs held at
he epe branch
We at "dun am, wi ne!
ne with the central
T
k the lom Chi D
cashire and Cheshire «1 offi
ks Board, — an ether interests concerned, a: offices peck the ee places, to coi
expedient to ae mely, Colerne,
í — narret i
te,
— requested tos
lr mme auch t Other steps as he shall deem
further Tm tioa 15 penu
CAMB unty meeting numerous! at tended,
in shel 12 0 of, z mri 3 d ge be reg
re R
he xa Friday in ced gu
Lord | Lieutenant of the 5 system
bject of the e M € = on mastara or oi
" vereri tho mg tamo of S
were the Cou untess of H e, eneo, € red
who attended as a deputation from
; the Rev. Professor Selwyn, the Rev. |
T. Thor Rev.
y
len | Keyham he week, with a
um pek 1 8 abe The land i
| Aubyn estates, and the foreshore
Cornwall It yea Weston Mn ‘Grek whist LM
to wder- — at Bull Point. Sbaul
- Government succeei d in making the p urcbase, tt n
from Plymouth Send to the Albert Bridge at Saltash.
xim. —A meeting of churchmen was held in this
iginator
at Sunamn, in the
| ne, Worthan India — an institution ka er
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONIULE AND AGRICULTURAL — A
city on Friday, for the purpose of a adopting a petitio n
more serious aspect than the writers could have antici-
to Parliament in favour of church rates. The Rev. |
H. Sa
pate ed. The Law Society of Liv pe ei 11 5 g on Wed-
sday ussed
nders, rural dean, presided ; disc the matter, ca c fo gen ing
sent were the Right Hon. Sir J, T. € "ed. Sir reso) olati Mn =“ That the pre cke che to inform
Stafford Northcote, Bart, M. P,; Sir E. S. Prideau | her Majesty's Attorney- egen t that, in case it «à “the
Bart.; Mr. Kekewich, M.P.; Admiral Moresby, he - intention s her Page gM s Government to take any pro-
deacon Bartholomew, and the Hon. and Rev. J. For- | ceedings t the ur Liver pool merchants who
tescue. Sir John Coleridge moved the first oat | | rec cently mad the Emperor of the
to the — t that the MN e with great r 3 RA
npts
thei ir *title ' to church- SN was aun
* —On Thursday the city magistrates were
ged for nearly four hours in farther hearing the
[Deoxuzgg 10, 1859
NT —The ship Marabj
us "Brief - ak
Chale Bay, 10 of her cre
On ontlay morning the sc
Pri
sn wa:
ere drowned, — vessels bare g
aud two of
one to pieces
E . aa
athe si iti ite
e Pri lonists for
ration in ne our of the hw
vith i
=
düsen a pire
demons
m
Gover nment, a
"thé nebo
d — . gs ly | | E: preferred [s Mr. Albert J. Collins, of con-
Mr. Hen Cro xford and others to br ibe
Jo ik, S
aldermen
pe the
m. é fie
has to pay, and d er ache Me ee chur rates! 90 rst, to commit Mr. Co Tine ved e,
there is still another obs mper
ndowne
religious opinions
requisition unsigne ed. 5
e late — 1 i O'Conne
Gallw wey, a . Cronin i»
l | gentlemen or position in t
their concurre:
a
holic
a Roman Cat gen ntleman of
he Tri sh bar, and
Sht be bre eferred against him. On These "gestions |
d it was
of ti f that rate. has been ee ^X a 2
rough W . cut it is enough for our purpose—that the
ore rate of the om Monte to MN 300,0001, a year.
eacon Bartholom nag M ra J. Coleridge : Well
ats it bag m 000/., ya y that by 30 years’ purchas
of 9. ,000, ,0007. Ido in. hesitate to say that
put into the EI ckets of the land hrs
givi ang them that which they had n is | ded
hi:
decided are majority of 15 t 6 not to commit the
defendant, but, at the same time - was determined by
12 to 10 to eall upon him m to
of 2507. each, nd him mit m
fature Ago — On this de mei ning. announced,
ant Ballantine said he ould advise his Sey ien = 6
cept
74
with t
Sovere
hum:
ituting | under a ited, and until he tod
vae was
had b
by force tie “force” having been the Arid ally a
ffi
ollins, the 1 were en
atit Ballanti
intention to offer er any evidence to suppor
the charge of bribery at the ed agd (a:
We Edi: 1 ave against Sir W. Foster and the Wilde.
we go 5 afer Sunday b Bene | Askew, solicitor, also withdrew, imid Bughtet;
and from time to tim. e Holy Com- | counter-charges preferred by the Li ibe
trust to Samuel Bignold, Captai
s PORTSMO!
C
We have no
Fs - intere = 2 the
rals against Sir
ott
r "patteh 1e
UTH.—The tria — of the 108 „prisoners who
ove
the
has comm is charge.
fo rd de: mmonstrations also to ok = on Reis:
At
Sleep around and in those
e preeious — con- zn c outbreak
but we are or t!
: n board
pos nep fter. t also ay, wen the
pir ndi after its eae i aa
Princess fendi ot
the
hich we Court
down, we have seised to char rge p d, and the second charge 150 12 but
s let it be said that we have | d be a of the „peculiar circumstances of the
one
Sir Hemy Winston ene
Messrs. M , Maguire, nM Moro
princi e The following scene
>| the soning of Dean Murphy, in which he m
us. Do not
hing to weaken that —.— — which the Church Of | ca
has the and feelings of this nation.
e 3 „ im 5 with hard labour. On Thu ursday evening
f government by priests, ando cone
thus:
The Ven. Archdeacon Bartholomew e the reso- | Ca
ptain Farquhar read on the warter-deck | of „the — tra
lution, which rried. Sir 8. Northeote, M.P, in | Vil stony à beo adibeusst d Qu C my XVL, wd
proposing th the e adoption of a petition: to Parliament, said : | by: the direction of the Lords of the Admiralty, in nich the s" Charleses,
“I go so fa that i» tated o conside- Inst, and imbecility, un
^ d ris 101
stated, “that having taken into conside-
_ nnd invent them, because I do not see
Wa emi i ily provide for the mainte- Co urt. on Tuesda , in which they noticed with approba-
$ of religious worship throughout the country. It 60 of ea je Hoad i in rema Maud onda
is 228 to talk of lous icts, w erae there the sentry’s charge in ore cockpit when released
=e) other means to accomplish the 20 purpose, but if from ir irons s by the dus, heir T IE had fully con-
you are . rt-martial, and
— the — and X = n land, you must come es 1 good character of Ger e Hoad, and had
toa iim ad r. D^ ters seconded the i
ee . 3 mmended her Majesty to grant os a free
y- He i i
— chief ene i
dde
is kno
of Winc hest er a ns directo d
to be dase against
of sermons published by Us
P.
Under
provisions of the 3d a . 86, the
pro- |
unbar
ings.
Heath, vi vicar of Brading, in the Tse of Wight, N |
the
pem the paragraph 'appended to the sentence of. the | dyr 85
Sive her Majesty grace
m de all, and especiall
an on
ere 2 Fed quarters was d
one, it jd been dete ned. E: allow the |
instance by let
th province, and
Heath is known to pa a st by "his translation of six
Egyptian Papyri previously 1 and is the
author of the $ Future Human Kingdom of Chris st,” E
estre
had charge of the Lon
Smith, Payne, & Sai. a
covered to th Ke 0 "Thee poe
e amoun waet
in which this was : a
but it —
ado AL Mr.
ters of request my he Court of Appeal of |
this
ee pe O Bur en deli
lec Mechanics 1 on hi.
are
ed by th
z M The doctrines im
ofthe same class as those he
mined is e pth thee the e
special to be deter-
y that of the
ra discovery became known a
was held, when the deceased's
‘time pue his death was carefull
found that Mr. Re
z made available
„Which will leave the hank 6 1
he loca
nd A Baw on 89 1 four mere
ee of t French, t
mularies 8.
wi Maie 4 Co., of this port, have
— to 5 on fie 5 — or the Government a river steamer for
to the extent — of such immense e proportion s that she will be the
rgest er eer in the world. Her
all 375
—
"d
feet ; breadth, 46 feet, and
r. “She will be i impe lled by
42345
Bishop
d 34 Messrs. Mucio ce, | carried on against
water line is Thal
em e will contain sleeping berths and ev every suit-
able dud gei de arra for about 800 pmi
She is to be flat-
= hat tough a eop, a copy is in —
give it . On 3 fitted up entirely — the Tham
etary arrived, not ur could | s ehe tpt two experimental
writers of Gio letter to the eel 5
; e ada , 18 tho
— — by nearly all the vessel this ki 4 wil be bail fon the & seaport of "n
Pn ipt — a in India. FF
roops in
Golds
Trinity Colles
| shall —
TESTI
She will then | tion
again — sent to India by te. If
her | p
denounce:
institutions the following is an €
eee I denounce as w-
For my o 8 enoui nave been
wherever by whomsoever x 115 va 5 un
the guilt
or
e, as a national crime,
9383
that speedy ups will
difio
easi
mu d bee:
vd m peters Fren
of Wate xp
hi
if, —— such a E a
people of En; 7
fato, th that 0 e in res in of Pander
mm C ocn vium cid UMENT. Pee
THE
— 1, which is is to b d
Dublin, ha
Fol ve $
o car i “the 4
RT
services ar
su ries — is contin to
DeceMBER 10, 1859. |
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
Wic PAE county of Wicklow, |
* stherto — a good name, IM been the
e hirt mdr committed i in the open day. |
reek, at Mu cklow w, near Tinnahe ely, the
akin
Northern — Maiden
other arra
purchase t
3p *
ı Lane; to enter into traffic
4 — with those companies,
e Regent's Canal and convert it into a!
and
8 TUNNEL axel i is intended to apply to
he ere for power to constr - a railw ay from the |
London, Brighton, — South Coas E
s Tun 4 to the
sed to purchase be |
d to aut » South Eastern,
North W n Co
on Companies to subscribe to t
een | taki ing, and to make traffic arrangements.
er
jury at the
ee-quarters of
That M en
of
Co ooe OF EXCHEQUER
bout t
oe. found the e following verdict :—
e by been be re
gos, ihe a
essel,
e ha
of a: 1 ny — gem John 3 — Mi
E „Catherine Behin, mate of the 2 — chip Mary, was indic
One of the ped obseryed that tl murder of Daniel Witham, one of ros seam
ld have no complaint At, w
0 and excited a d deal of attention in
m of Am > m their
proved that yei blow by the
of deceased, bu "A — ſor the de
It —
The v
* a © comfortable PE
à Wa: pbo.
—
an nad — —.— The
"holding about 300 acres prisoner w was n ced to
as shot dead while eating his dinner Mip Sess
onal servit ww life.
ing a Dresmaker, — On
y ended Quilty to the
son was at the time in the house with
and housekeeper,
rt to secure the|X
Min iore
returned a | major.
—
| prev
cial N ns his limbs,
and three nete with tho frequent acts of soniy practise y the Shall
en | mates erican was
returned a verdict of Guilty of Manslaughter, — p^
diei
was appointed one of the puisne
knighth 200d.
havi
{+ t. is
[Adora
| resi sider
Sir W
was conferred in 1809.
im John Alexande er, Q.C.,
ounties, and | Line — "s s Inn n 1825, and err Que T s Gonna la
the under- C. B.
* Tia
L Bra
—
sseerghur.
which was burned in
and | commanded the Jan E — in the action oí
in which he was severely wounded.
wo
ounds pq
retired
| and Po "tla —
| ing from his
Dosh
»en dad i,
mpaign.
t for a few
w in St
iliam. Alexander, of Dublin,
judges of the Court of Comm:
and to | Pleas, on "-- —— he ren d the customar — ae y",
ese
pon whom the bare
He is — od in the title by ere d
was
ih
ie was nominated a
mount recognition — is services.
T—W-
ore the
b que that — 2 out
di
and
servi wit
fall of l, and in addition to "s a
| made a Companion of the Bath for his services i
who
— on fall pay, — tue
f the
m —
ery cd and numbed
Called to the - et
at, died on oy 34
the
1n consequence
mpanion 6
Rifles,
regiment
bourhood x Uu
until Sunday morning, when he
face 5 of the coat y p —
M det Rifles 2 s am
EA in the 88th Qoi
h he A eta ir hrm Peninsula, and w.
lav BAQO,
un d we
M —.— a medal an
Linvrt.-CoLowns D. A1 110 CB. eh
x ^ fedgin
ught ding te era,
12 at the
Fuentes dOn, the affair of
Be" orros Vedran, for which
ps
22 ih that CIE
shania a c Lord
Keane, and
» of ent, Tor which —
tht medal 1
mwe € J —
n the Olsun
who was suspec
mental in discove
ar a .
lla fell x rd -
d. The sub-in
d to de in an ps presario
vietim
„ When he was a
e it was supposed he uud i
T4 of the steamers for Li
Scotland
— OBERMORY SEQUESTRA’
eoe diim of the fi ove of "Sess
nal judgme
P.
n of
as to nome aes of
Act of 1
Judges, by a majority of three to one, dismissed
rae ~~ Arg designation given
* ent, there
fall, was sufficic
carried by appeal to the House of Lo
prodiens
* LONDON
T
ce of i tended Fir
miao to t5 noie t psen 7 75 ven m for authority V.
a company to construct a railway from
rm Canal, Paddington, to
at the Square, and Li Limehouse, and to for: ben in
North London at Camden Town and the
m's v and rode off
furious speed, and was shir heard of till Tnesday | 4
rrested in the town of Cm history can
de-
Joel laus
Alexander
Mr. William adve by go iba misfortan’
the — the petition
was in ael so rp eqno defective, and for a considerab|
uisites of the Ban nk:
the
by the * irs italiens ot ha of h
ing | her
—
ole Court. wi is now seid that um Pleas, died su
etions
Great |
E 2 Warronp, R. N., died at London Road, 1
ie 24th m. e his 70th He entered the nav 1590,
e Bellero
ULM served in ich
croorted the Royal family of I to the Brazile in 1509.
1810 he became a Lieutenant, and — ently served in
i | tho Hyacinth, Skylark, Forester, Goliath, Boyne. e, and again in
“| the Bellerophon on the North and South American stations,
In jui — pes ^ p» destruction of a n flotilla of 12
He was senior of the Bellemo
A murrendered d that ship off Rochefort in July,
pe Wm p ot ithe saine
retired with the unk
working until 2, 3,
making, in order to support |
all her try ehe was |
ly ‘il and on
71 and on
stand-
oats
M commander tn 18! 850 *
for want of money to aed BIRTHS.—On the 34 inst, at Withington Hall, Cheshire, the
ese facts, when stated in ( Court, ViscouxTESs BT, Vino gir < a son—4th inst, at Cranmer mig
Messrs. Shoolbred, the Norfolk, Lady Joxxs, wife of Bir Wutovanny Josta, Bart.,
stitute the ner tion, | 4 m er, wite of
Er
de inst, at Luke's
e day ich
still, natio | fo co — Ere pre work
ase the mate — juired, Thes
cited the doa vest dom, mmiseration.
r behalt, Tio 4
e ai ha 2 e
amount iy mercy t be
extended to the pe — and said that if what bad e pt gta per
found its way into publicity, those who had socruelly used
creature lepriving her so E of the reward ot he
erstand what must be thought of their hes
er, but mey was
y
ler who came into
7 dancing with the
1 Newgate until his
. He will ve detained
be ascertained.
von Eccues, of her xr. bist
Mbituarp.
Augustus
Sapieha, * was born at Strasburg, where,
pes his father
dri had sought
s Road,
the ht Hon.
2 berg at4, Margaret
late the Hon. Richa:
erry—25th ult, at 2
and last
Wood; Bart, M.P. 29th
third son of Sir J. — Bart., z VE
got fe /GARET, relict of H
nt} h à eldest d
froi attack o
zy 1 perd, y discharging duties o E —
from the present Governme: f Tuscan FORD,
8 ce ssession of — d health, bu nae
ACLAND,
— . in — ummer
Tbe marchioness, e eho Sant
w
inistration of Mr.
Cao Woh, one of the 2 Ke Common
ddenly on Monday morning
ae House moo m the last
the t att i though. he
Sunday Boy might with with sth passen t
7 Bu dden us tbe e
f Montague rw
z yum Gate
for a "s N ies of zm
i" on the oi death of ur “Charles ° Wetherall was 8 of Glou
Recorder of Bristol, which position
:
n he held till 1854, when he Paese Colmar,
asgo The cost and freight business from 1127 oer Qu
S considered closed for the winter, and for spring ther at
meeen little disposition to purchase.’ The vals of £ grain-
€ boa 3 ign — 575 Europe at ports of call this we
sales are to a liberal extent, inc cluding Tag
quA Good Cobs are realising from ls. to 18. 6d. per lb.
Ches: are plentiful. Vegetables are for the most part
sufficient for the — abbages, Savoys, Carrots, Parsnips,
d may be — up 5 Broccoli is scarce.
er cwt. Mushrooms ei
still be bad. red etting . Cut T h — 0
chiefly consist of ‘Orchids, Quim 1 Mignon t 42 "ER T
Chrysanthemums, Camellias, Heaths, and Ros MES 92 p E dee
RUIT. arley at 21s 25 lid. per 400 lbs.; Odessa Oa
Pine Apples, per lb., 5 E Ts | Pears, per doz 4n to 6s 17s. 91. to 18s. p — e e. aud i.; and Taganrog Lin-
Tp Bach. d (os ed packet per 100, tus seed at 48s. to.48s. 3d. delivered. The arrivals of
elons, each, 2s . f 485 ; this wank nel AM considerable all other
Pomegranates, each, d » 6a E Filberts, 2 ae Ibs., 50s to 60s veo The E nglish p feos up this iuris b
Apples, per doz., Zobs, mrs ti 1158 6 a qui My zh tour late quot . The attend-
pe LES. duds was imi. ge also the extent of business i in foreign
Asparagus, p. bündle, 7s to 10s | 5 each 9d to 18 6d | Wheat, but Jess effected. full p obta pede
Seakale, per basket, 2s to 3s Artichokes, per doz., 2s to 36 | parle ey is 21075 ale $t Mo does "prices. Bean ed
Beans, per 100, 2s to 2s 6d | Beet, Le doz., ls od em eur Peas àre e 2 alus Td nt trade is firm, and good
Cauliflowers, per doz, 28 to 48 Ce lery, male, corn brings an ad va of 6d. p
Greens, per doz bunches, min 2 bait fae Ew to 406 $a WA FE prs 5 TO Dec.
2s to 2s 6d Portugal, each, hei 4d cn thes en Flos;
Cabbages, do., 1s 6d to 2s 6d allots: per lb., 6d to 8d Wheat. arley. ts. | our.
Potatoes, p. ton, 90s to 100s Garlic, per Ib., 6d to sà English ..| . 1320 qrs. 3140 qrs 430 qrs. lliU sks.
— per 5 z to : 9d Lettuces, Cabb., v p score, 18 | Trish .... DA * 2050 „ CERT
zi sto to 1s 6 á 40
per per Ad 6d Endive, p. trie tm 155 ds A Foreign. 5060 ., | 13510 „ | 11070 „ i: 100 bris.
Turnips, per bunch, 4d m mer ae p.bun.1s 0 4s
Spinach, . sieve, 1s 6d to 2s s, p. pott, 13d tols9d LIVERPOOL, Tuesday, Dec — Grain market inactive.
Tomai p. half sieve, 236d to PUE T 12 bunches, 2s to 4s Wheat and Flour in moderat E ymmo -without chenge in
3s 6 PEPS Savi ory, per bunch, 2d to 4d pri Oats and Barley steady. Ind an Corn without
Pract table change, but rather me by ho. de
Fripay, Dec. s —The market was mnedesately attended,
bo emen md he: good spec 8 demand at 1d.
and Beans steady.
METROPOLITAN —! MARKET. 5 es
eddy d —— i
We have hor Beasts, e ecially of good uem 3 — Barley firm at late priten:
ones; and con: ently prices have e P Tho number of of FF
Sheep is also small, and although trade 2 zd pp wt — prices
eat. | Barley. Oats, | Rye. | Beans. Peas.
are full; 2 8 selling the same as on | Oct. 29. 43s Id 35s 6d|.20slld| 30s 4d| 38s 94 388 2d
Thurs and Holland i Ven are 550 Beasts, Nov. 5. 42 9 35,9522 21% 30 2 39 3 38 5
day. From
2800 Sheep, and 140 omm pm pig 1 — otland, 200 ed at Rd — 12.. 35 11, 21 5 29 7 40 3 |37 9
o
Ireland, 600 ; bbw Norfolk an Suffolk, 100; — 19.,| 43 135 11 21 11 28 4 40 9 [39 6
the northern and mid nem des — 26..|. 44, 1-| 36 1 |; 22.6 29 1 41 239 0
s "m p s d 8 d Dec, 3. % 44.8 365 219 80 741 9.39 8
Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools. 4 10 to 5 0 Agg. Aver. 43-5 35 11 21 9 | 929 8 40 4 38
fords, Kc. 5 0to5 4|Do. Shorn — . | Hee Aver, z ss
Best Short-horns 4 10 — : -0 | Ewes ie quality 4 4 a UATIONS IN THE Last Srx WEE AGES.
2d quality — asts 3 6—4 6 Do. Aeg : dc Oct. 29. Nov. 5. | Nov. 12. Nov. 3 wow ds; e 26. Des LH
Best Downs and A ee 2
Half- br. 8 TR 5 4 Cal. * € 25 4 4—5 0 ed | pi
Do. Shorn Pigs .8 8 5 0 43 1 — ed Nn e 5 ad: a
Beasts, 4740; Sheep & tabs ” vm: Calves; 143; Pigs, 390. 42 10 en EE 95 Pe y 2 "e
HU] Dec 0 2. ase 0 : ;
The supply of good — ts very short, and on the average rg x 3
prices ade pes than on Mo adaya pIn a few instances our top
quo num of Sheep is about the
same 5» T e the Sext ‘duality is nn e d h
there i is but Mis e m but chóice descript re readily
of. : not much alteration in ta Calf trade, 5
foreign supply pei of. 260 bep v 520 Sheep and 178
Calves. The number of Mich Cows i Ho. New d.
Best t Scots, Here- st Long-wools 5 E0 to 5 g|Rowen ..
5 4 rn
fo: 5 2 to Do Sho
Best Short-horns 1 10 — 5 2 Ewes & ami ity 4 TUN — Tai
2d quality aee 0—4 4|Do. «es be
Best Do mi Lam
HA
HAY. of Thi
ari 15, TR epe Dec. 8.
Prime Meadow Hay vox E 75s | Clover . ae) . 853 to 100s
p oed pe do. — 80 — —
. 36
W HH. Dec. 8.
. 788 to 82s| Fine old Clover
$0 72 | Inferior do.
Finenew Clover . —
5 — — „ 80
30 Infer 1 dd. Uu. Se" 00
Fine old Hay A
Pedes" do. .
rime New Hay ..
D. to b
$201
8i
75
MA He 4 Hei 24 a bass 5 ` |Inferiordo. ..
Do. Pigs 3 Strap,
Boasts, 1590; Sheep & Lambs, 3340 ; Caives, 245 5 Pigs, in| :
COAL MARKET. m ry
: Bower's West Hartley, 148. 6d. cae
14s. 6d. ; 1122 1 S's - Side Wes
TE Hartley
T Sw Hartley,
6d.; Da vison’s
6d. ;
HOPS.—Boroven MARKET, Fs. Dec.9.
essrs. Pattenden & — report a brisk demand for all
fne "Hope at improved pric
E WOOLS.—LoNpoN, FRIDAY, Dec.
t Hartley, 1
Tang veld Med Butes, ids. d. ;
i wt West Wylam, 148. 3d.; Wylam,
s End Gibson 17s. 9d.; mm End Gosforth,
s End Nobtliuziberlan d, 1 alls B d
Riddell; e “a.s ; Walls End West Na 158. 6d.; Walls
End engh Hall, 18s. 3d. ; Walls End Whit worth, 15s. ;
Walls E; d South D urham, n; Carway and Duffryn Malting
228. eds Nixon's Duis, s 2s. 6d. ; Powell's Duflryn Steam,
eas 7 22s. 6d.—41 ships at market.
CorowiaL Low Woon Sai
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETiE
sales took place
‘Tuesday and rese and bere about 7 ge e mates
„n en wont off on — «mp 2 or THE LATE PROFESSOR risa
what easier terms. :
n the ages of 6 and . to
i TOES.—SovTHwARK, Monday, Dec. 5. A nily i Der V
week, the arrivals pre ar have Doen
>
During th
much rr than at any time this season, and the trade is W AN'TED, by a. sien] iu the MY of Oxford,
extremely dull. The 3 are this day's quotations : an ARTICLED EMT "A to of Boa rders
2 ts, per ton, 75s. to 120s. ; — aretaken. Terms Applyto cons. . m, Oxon.
do., 70s. to 90s. ; Dunbar do: ote. to 110s.; Perth, F. and TO GARDENA eh Kingham, Oxon,
. Fifeshire do., 60s, to 80s. ; Kent and Essex do., hoe to does a 0.
Rocks rd Reds,’ = to 70s.; French Whites, 65s. to 75s. : EWSBURY CEMETERY. e Burial Board of
En iar ome nship of Dew: D are nader to receive offers
— BH. — from rson desirous of undertaking = eere — e par
MARE LANE.—Mowpay, TRAR x the abe above Cemete Avi ‘at's salary
pply of English Wheat to m: Ur 's market was | annum. e person Spine ahi bor required t to keep ar the
— . — tolerably cleared at an xm for shipment to ehe f th e Board, to all in — s and t
ices of last Mon. reign continues and filling up of —.— —— the € tery Gro oats
y ormer a but 7 is confined to in propor ord 1 8 5 and trench them pv necessary, to prune
w * 2 (with the exception of and cut the and ns bs at proper DR. He will occa-
ls. per qr. cheaper. Beans 8 have to officia as Clerk a: M the unconse-
ihe prios of ol hy ver dr. Flour is Oats ai are a slow cra rt of the DOM. both in the Chapel and at the
of fully 1s. unaltered in 38 and to undertake ss ed duties ap aaa to the
office of Regist e will 3 to reside (rent vind a
the Lodge at4 "
0—48 Red. 40-45 will be paid hy the Board.
3 . . 42—48 Applicant state in handwriting their resi-
or TS NN family Ie. Mat vacant Ui anaes
" I. sebo r wh ey amount of salary
Foreign. 5 1 gros and references as to — All applications must
Banter ged & dist. usi. “eh. —44 ‘ately 24-40 rwarded to ime arr or Y before 4 e in the afternoon of
tilling 23—330Malting. 35—41 TUESDAY. * A of December nex C. R. ScHorxs, jun.
p 3 ài: dia 23 Dewsbury, D lerk to the Board.
poets coe tg ant e ELI 1 AND DRAINERS WANTED, at Wimbledon Park,
0 wW Feed. ... 17—24 andsworth, ur ab berton, Newport Pagnell,
5 35—38 Foreign Bucks; ‘at Busco t P. A. Md Berks ; and a at Theydoi
H P Lo n, Essex. “Good | hands only are required. "nm y
„ Mazagan. .. 888 to 40a. . . Tick |33— -43! Harrow . e orks, or to r. Scorr, 1 18, Parliament
* Dus ince Al M. * pas * d dime Street, Lond. VUA cea ie
AN' be^ e x GARDENER: Tiere are t
sie, Nox and Kant ^ Bote n 8
Maple. . . . . . Grey 33—35 Foreign. 30—38 Garden. e te ney to Var dle | N
Ber A SE "perat Pee Yellow. , Bishopsgate Street Within, B.C.
= Besten . rer ditto 27—97 Country. 27—37 [Amy rim a e cep ae ween ce
u^ . ove ev» barrel pp to
FRIDAY, F. W. e) “Bedford. "
TAN TED, * pu AND GARDENER, with
WE a knowledge of o country business. — Address,
Bes rt O., s Ho ole, M Manchester Births Manchester
n
EM in a small family, a young Man of d
haracter, to ac a GROOM. ana re eee
Horse kept). — ,
| 43, Monkwell dun ES a quare city, wn
Basi: 10, 1859,
ANTED, 20 tie [isl
Ae thor ughly competent
racter and competency will be rae *
20, Parliament Street, 8 AP ly to e
WANT PLACES.—Letters S. — Letters to be Post m]
(QAEDEN ER (HRA
E rance
ance; thoroughl, 4) —Age 28, m
its Lr Four red Spotless in e
Offic rks,
ARDE NER (HEAD). —Age 3
with o
ears old ; a hi ne child
branches. Wifea Dolo D in E re i
Chingford, = ex, Puoi
t (HEAD). ag Sine E REESE
8 Early Grapes, C i e
kinds of Vege i mes pr. - Stove ante thee
ped eatin V. C., G. "pi
profelaion, including im ndsce;
habits. Character excellant No singl
J UTEILL, Cambertell; bo a ndeip
NOBILITY 23 „
uoo —H. Ports (qs 2) te
55 eee
rions — EE
of Stove and
. — Tate Forcing MES the Culte
ants, — — rence
d 34, m
d at bert
lead
tsman, *
ba aso t
named Wee ud
mptonshire.
ARD ENER.— Married; well im
Early and Late pce bos lived. heer
aca Pic family.—J. C e, Huttoft, near Aird
P RO PAGATOR.— LIAM Oman for the we d
e. Xo ett "and Foreman to Messrs,
lme: , Handsworth Nur Shot wil we
nd begs var to offer, Ms to
g of a Practical mati
references "S - 8
Westerham
— OR LAND AND STEWARD.—Age?
Mono Mn eg va Lothian for several
has also been a Factor's Office on a
Can produce s elato references both as to cba
ability.—S. T., Post Office, Liberton, Edinburgh.
—Address, stating
TAN? STEWARD AND AGENT.—AÀn
l Man, who filled his Lt appointment Y
vig of: . and os a dien as te fe m 207
Mk
e management of Landed eo
e 2 OE in general, &c.—8. 8,
vin; ud, K.
Cane to ee Erne Line
Clifton Fan on, Derbys
PER (Hx
understands his
€ x ux
thoroughly un
| character from last e o
Grantham, Lincoln:
. TO “Eo “—
HOPMAN.—A dep
horough business habits. Man, aay yan P
general routine of E eT ee business io W.O-
branches.—A. B. = SEA V VEN.
ALESMAN. on enz 25; bas
ipe se -— bre of the send
VNACUM Mein ys Honder
are Road, W.
DscexsER 17, 1859.
as second esae
EROR OF on FRENCH receive
The Gardeners’ Chronicle
Nebsp
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL G
HOUSE will represent - MazxsrY's Government | Alice,
ary.
GAZETTE.
Princess Helena, and , Princess Louisa attended
at
| Divine service the Rev. G.
| Prothero offic Area On Mc onday morning the Queen,
,
R :
| Prince Consort, Princess wr Princess Helen
r. i Wedne KT n great state PRINCE METTERNICH, | Princess Louisa i over to Portmoeth it the
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1859. the new gea xotg or at the Court of the | Fair € their return to A. ne in the afternoon,
5 Tuileries. The ParNCE, in presenting his creden- | her Maj and the Royal family took a short cruise
BANK O Adis IT, tials said that the monde or AUSTRIA had com- d p the Southampton wate > ronds poen und =
L Mar a Lo W. ‘ : E rn. vu rince an
ESTABLISHED A. p tree by 33 100 — HE RII, manded him ost particularly to assure His | Pr ncess Leiningen, The Queen walked out in the
TIES desirous of INVESTIN Masesty of high value he attached to his|grounds. On Tu ay the Queen, Prince Consort, and
uested to e e the Plan of Ad e or 8 personal friendship; adding that nothing would cin sy a and drove in the grounds. On
3 igh rat terest ma; obtain ith ample M "5 C ral
zi 2 po "made by Special. Agreement may be with- greeable to His MazxsrY than to see the Rond Mor ener 8 commanding the
"hawn without notice. The Interest is payable in January re and consolidation of the relations of = ,
and July. Monnisos, Man:
understanding and intimacy with which th
| ORDER or THE GakTER.—The death of Ear] De
| Grey would under ordi
TISH UNION FIRE anp LIFE INSURAN P Li 3
Sr. —The 35th Annual Gene Meeting. of the The EMPEROR OF THE FRENCH, in E reply | lue "eT at — TAI her A y; T
Insurance Company was hel on Wednesday, f | consequence of an ex r hay ing been confer
856. 4 Hepórt by the Directors ving fall and said that he entertained the firm hope that the M us ONG t g Swat d
detailed statements of the Company sacti * which had been so T: relied occupy the vacant stall in St. das dec Lal do
mitted to the meeting, end — — ppro ner pr betwe th E m Aver eet p) [4 pel,
The Report by the sade of the Company, 3 the - MPEROR 0 f present ire d will not be filled u
accuracy of the Balance Sheets and of the various Statements, atte Tun e —A Cabinet Council was held yester-
T pim erre ved N rt ting, paces rin of the interests of the [or countries, Poeni "ri con al a official residence of Lord
Tho ade of L 2 "Lite Policies er TE 09d res was 2 mers — in I — treet,
The amo Ronde mad £252,740 1 his fein nd hi 2 ening
Yield: d ot a^ £7814 1s, 9d, | & great value to endship.
W Jupor.—The Gazette of las
that the judge ship of 8 — "Pest
Mr.
That the amount rr —— A despatch from — has eurem EU d vacant p the death of ustice X oe er, has been
an 1
— OX emer expenses of management, &c., a large sum | stating that a severe engagement took place on F ri- 7 arike * 2 ictor-General, Sir 2 yp “the pro-
"m tne Fire Dey S — db wn stated that the premiums day last before the Sp anish camp of Elot T tr. aus — motion of Sir II Keating has been con ia
n
amounted to 40,572L, being an increase of upwards of 3600L, | Mo William Atherton, Q.C., M. P. for Dan. 1 — 5 ed
thet after 8 qu y tha preying jur, and impetuosity, but were repulsed on MM occasions | gentleman is the son of the late Rev. William Ath
&c,, there was a considerable surplus. on n tiy Sire toco Ms with * oss of 300 killed and 1000 ded, whi le | Wesleyan Minister, and some time Memes —.—
the Mar X Jana, "1800, at ; at the rate of 8 per cent, free ot the Spaniards are said to have Tost dl 18 seg M » ! * EE maa Ah m 2
Incom and 30 flieers and 280 men wounded. The : : , i
rd. Scotland, He was om in Glasgow and married
President. —The Right Hon, the E M m afterwards attacked General Prim on the in 1848 Agnes Mar, second daughter ot M Mr. Hall, Chief
ET — to Tetuan bans Hir repulsed vith great loss, Magistrate of Bow 5 — pes
33 3 4000 l, being in * r^ the lot, an extensive
|, Charles Balfour, R. Robe rtson, EA Tho third corps dar g
* Robert Collu Jis Eai, M. D. Hugh F. Sandeman, Esq. nd 6000 cavalry, ty sino» landed at Oente, p. reform, the removal of all religious disabilities, and the
ie Cere ig e June cono. oe he Spaniards were preparing to assume the offen- Tae eb — nel —The Queen has Tir
aiii Inn Oliverson, Lavie, Tea Peachey” . P. sive and offer battle e Moo The cholera | Rutherford Alcock, Esq, 12 "ionem
Forms for proposals sod Prospectuses, mtn all to which had broken out in 2 Spanish "E gi i lo. r p y
r ur begun to subside, but 2 ease is said to an a —— in ap
offi d of th ts t hi e o gm Eg , Ke t
ces and o 7 dog erar to b Loudo Bod. aging feci aT Au ey MXNTS,— The dispute between
meal Cornhill, London,
LIFE
ASSURAN Sicily stato that an attempt has
Moet te of the ep ere bee
ete e. Prince
as first eee fr
is understood that 2 vom Osborne.
er M
rt
y Mov
. Childers ‘and Mr. Overend as to the last Parlia-
future
ee eee
Princess about to be assembled at the War
MUTUA IPE "ASSURANCE ws ida rage assassinate Signor MANESCALCHI, by Sir J. T. Coleridge. The award, which is as follows,
SOCIETY entertains peas of an involv- | the 9n of Lagen in the streets of was made known at a meeting i Mr. Childers's sup-
ime een Palermo made his i PS = porters at Pontefract on Friday e roe dani
ors. . is
fev Wille Palla dy though m numerous SiS of sus d 8 9 aid air Johny Pakington to 2 „ between
Hah Beal ea Joesph Stain sg ead have been made, all attempt ^4 — the Mr. Overend and Mr. Childers, hereby makes his award, by
PV. Gorkha rio Atrei Walke mg am / hic! 1 oe A Sir. Overend, asa man of honour, ought,
pM 8 invited to examine for Hiemselves EA | culprit have been ineffec * rects that he shall, f forthwith make vacant
E ed for aasurers by the plan on which policies are he French Am at Constantinople th oat and tò — . ot become — ay ray
* Offi firman for , or attempt prevent, election 1
re 1002., Payable at Death (with Profits). pooped . from the Porte a firms — eara
ß . The aten the stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds
ini - t r.
40 sa 2/5 a à 1 Y 15 5 Feen g, gebe Ler Sardinia vy — — elevation of Sir H. Keating to the
50 4 a 243 | 128 |taneously supported this demand, in accordan ^ teneri uod ^ RA.
Peculiar ad respectable and 255 with instructions received from Peri 3 — to ole ee
EUM Whe v woud 1 Ts agony * places where n = Governments; and and stormy dis- tive in kisi diy and Sir F.
. d ion the Turkish Ministers resolved nest H. Goldemid, who has again offered himself on
esee, ats Jawes Taxon, Secretary. he Pope, hich h : id the demand to come | principles, is the only candidate in the field.
em e
HIE ne Ed Pd THE NATIONAL DEFENCE COMMISSION.—It is stated
— — 2 EET understanding with England on the matter. .at the Commissioners on F. Love sit tach,
Au LEGAL” i — erg Dei latest oe de the Porte w. ws gsr works of defence for the Dock
CT TORIA. AND LEGAL AND COM e news : t "5
LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, 18, King W ing whether it would be convenient to bring ote kingdom, and that 22
ka mpany miis every description of 5 question before . grea un dr "a
west sit. Lite Absuran F Uni tates we learn
- f th ii till death, or ro :
Ec "x jam. vn joris taker out for the Pr ENT’S ce : ing mei m giri the
th Life Assurance are made on| upon the subject of foreign policy, wi
eee toca ark sa tan) or peeved acer — first place to the San Juan question, which
NE o ies being. at this moment in an “i
HE LIVERPOOL anp LONDON FIRE ax | oer fe Lord Jonn Ross Il is said
LIFE 1 OMPANY.—Esrasuisuep 1836. | positio r ‘ally b
ofi 0. 1, Dale Street, Liverpool; and compli the question materially ya
z and 31, Peer bes nee stating that England h disputed right to the
ABILITY OF 2 « uld ins ni itio
INVESTED FUNDS .. ... . £1,156,035 island, and o i
OF THE COMP. PRESIDENT, it is added, withdraw unde
185 T p — Bow EA mur this ** implied threat," and will therefore set forth |
183 113612 49,128 .. 620,808 the rights of. € United States to the island in the
ad fag Faka p^ . 450, Med t distinot manner, and advise Mic oia -
e me exc
zu Policies expiring on CHRISTMAS DAY should be renewed | en them . Captai in * BRonm, tie
1 ki err the recent Harper's ba.
3 WINTON Bourr, Secretary to the Company. hid " dia má reperi
e ——— Ä V —
5 News of the Meek. dome X ne
d Tux Governments of Rome ^ud iR have Tur Covrt.— The Quetn, Prin ce Consort, me
‘signified their their adhesions 1 o the f Paris s, family continue at Osborne. On Prey Mr. bret
| Dr Bars, of tos Chart
of the diocess. à
ee ee
the proper
of formation, a committee has been
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — Drau 17, 1859,
—————— üt d
if š p with the Clapham company of the 1st Surrey.—Up-, pected to return in time to bi
consider the question of rifle volunteer uniforms, wards ot 500 pea teni of Woolwich —— al have] matze reception on New Yea Yeats d at the dipl
f the corps established | trial bas just taken place at ‘Tou
i 4 0 under the auspices of Colonel Tulloh and other office ers |I Lemoine and her daugher Angelina were oad at the
hich | not yet selected their | of th held bar on one of the most appalling charges
«a: sig corps W 15 have lio d pattern of the at Knightsbridge on Tuesday, Colonel Hitcher K in the | which has ever been set forth B rh g obe nfanticide
clothing so selected will be deposited with the Volun- | chair, at which it was resolved to form com panie s for or English. The mother, who has not yet —
r Branch id-| B | ilv of
+
i d the sev TO
"o r to be si 5 The e bru Duke of So merset, bee of Wellington, Earl Spencer, | a a boy and a girl, to PEE whom she had
of Captain Hicks was ck? ordered to be|lord of the „Earl de Grey, the Hon. 9 private fortune of 10,000 francs, or about nk
forwarded to her Majesty for approval as Lieu- Gore, eri is on. H. Murray, C. B., Colon The girl, who was name ;
tenant-Colonel, and it was resolved that at the next Lysons, and the Rev. A. W. aygarth, wenmbent 0 0 16 ec of age, received her education 1 55 . |
Court the nomination of a full colonel shall be made. the — — the movement.— publie Wee | Einar t at MH me. MÀ eau uty is described 47
icati r de from th 0 "
ce of the Court i t esol d to f 1 ;
use of the Artillery ground for drill, and the application | which is situated the extensive Government Bie ‘ice |ola she publicly declared nied e as vL ripe
was forwarded to the Court of the Artillery Company, | range, near the Royal Arsenal. A large number of th I state, and her course of reading was most
with the unanimous request of commissioners | most v to join the coe esit Dhar ante their in- | extraordinary for one in her condition of li
0 e .—From nd us
ES " da 29 of age, and descri! a
of the Brigade; and a civil service Yd. including mrt to the mayor to consider the pro riety of able e compou und of extraordinary ugliness and
the officers of the Registrar-General's tablis e a 8 corps in that town, an d, ungainly, ignorant.
House, is about to be formed i in vement to be the result of TA | was that the gir irl beca e 7 ith a view
n
ave n el ing the week at wer an not being i ]
rjean Murphy, and other gentlemen have pote Aytoun, Axbridge, Alston, Aberfeldy, St. in the indictment. He, i appeased, believed that his
become honorary members —The London Sco eeh pow Andrews Anstruther, Dd — PERES Brierley young mistress really intended to marry him
trength of between 400 ill, Bruton, Bu ry mund’s, Bitterne, | simple enough to ask her han in marriage of the.
, M.P., the active promoter c 17 195 Booking, murio, ges itm "1 Burlington, mother. Madame Lemoine instantly ordered him out of
Chirnside, Cockermouth, Cupar, Chelten- the house, on following i n
8
8,
8
3
B
©
o
g
E
È
S
EM
5
£2
E
H
iz]
E
2
S
as and
d in, | ham College, Camelford, Dundee, Dunfermline, Dover, him from her service. The Ru a wra
of Parliament Street, as hon. secretary.— A public | Eye, Eyemouth, "Bain burgh, Frome, Fareham, Folke- complained, in the presence of the young lady, that
meeting of the inhabitants of Pimlico was held stone, Faversham , Framlingham, Fakenham, Grantham, | he was not allowed to marry Madlle Angelina, while she-
on Thursday evening, Earl Grosvenor, M.P., in Hatberkigh, Howde en, Hull, St. Helen’s, Halesw worth, remarked that her mamma “would get rid of it”—
the chair, at which it was resolved to promote Nine — Idle, Ipswich, Knares Tenne Ken- meaning of course the child. Rumours of these occur-
1 H n ti ore. poo. "
ad been ad ; le of Wight), Oxf ri Pen- g nant, and.
W. Jaffray, the Hon. G. Deuman, M.P., and Mr. H. J. | wortham, Peterborough, Preston, Rotherham, Rugeley, | means of “an expansive role? deceived many;
Smith, a working man named Sim mes rose and said that Ross, Ry de, ett ea Southam mpton, Sheerness, | but the boasting of the fpes satisfied others more
there were plenty of young men of his own class ready heffield, Stafford, South Shields, Stam- | incredulous that the rumours were not mere scandal.
to join this movement who had as great an interest in ford, Stoke- dent, Torquay, ipton, Topsham,| At length on the 30th of July Angelina gave
the country and in theirlittle homes as the chairman | Truro, Tunstall, Tynemouth, Whitby, Wickham Market, | birth to a living infant, and this, it was alleged,
himself had in his r Aes they were unable to join e rthing, Walm estbromwich, Wilton, Warmin-| Madame Lemoine had burned on a fire of wood,
any corps which was conducted in an soe er, Wirksworth, Wolverhampton, Woodbury Welling- | which had been prepared for the purpose. The
manner. He Aare ian these rifle 8 € Wy combe, Wi igton, Wiveliscombe, and Woodbridge, | Court and jury at Tours, after bearing à number
NE sinew of the country, and not of men 3 of witnesses, and among ages 1 4 im
like some in the Crimea, who, as soon as they saw herself who declared that d moved
smoke, w at to go home “on urg pent private Fare it was born, aquae the danger on the pei
affairs "i e meeting of the members of t vim cerry sf — she was not in a s to be aware
Corps was held on qni at which resolution: 22 as go T on, but found — poe = 1 y
were passed to complete arrangements for its Ahes sentence of the Cc
organisation and “ior the c 3 ent of dril EA of Sane and Wale t a sco have Mad Sunday eu
Wes tm inster r Hall o Thu ursday eve ening der ds arrived; and that ar oy —— invited to attend ina. han the uen —— lie to o 20 years hi
geants of the Scots Fusilier Guards, it have now sent in their adhesions. It appears that labour. Madame Lemoine has lod ed an appeal against :
25 was im à “tit 56 effective iier n and | Without absolutedly erae to be r represented at the | her sime before wo rt of et
is ven members bad already joined the. eorpe.— Congress the Pope had at first an objection to appearing Boar ga Mes —The M adrid journals A
pa meeting of 8 attached T the several depart- | before what his Minister called a tribunal, or to discuss Sa — acy publish s despatch b wen El oir staing E
ments of thes Revenue at Somerset House the — of r until he is reinstated in all that m Frida hy würzig tthe EU
held o m Saturday, w when. 2 E dto his rights. 2 Power is to be re resented by two panish redoubts, b ;
with the ce | Pleni meron PA B eee ber "ve omes Y^ 4 garrisons, and retired to the
. to rhe . ie by its own PR = Majesty’s Gover: first Plenipotentiary, and comma a by these redoubts. The enemy then came
equipped, drilled, offic ered, and fully organised by its Lord Woodhouse e will ehe 3'ount Paiva Pereira gain, but were attacked and repulsed by 10,000 —
| have been held | in the parishes | Potentiary. Count Lavradio eod —— va P del iti a nd Corps, serving as
= os St. Ma Margaret’s and St. John’s, Westminster, at which | the Portuguese — and Pari vanguard. The M oors lost 300 killed and 1000 woundel- —
it was — to raise companies in. those B adtgehs and E! . Mon, "m Spanish | The sg ge oss of the Spenn was 30
form part of the Westminster corps. The following Ambassador, will represent Spain as second Plenipoten- men » woun d od, an d 40 killed. General Prim. has
i id . :— St. Cle- | tiary ; UP e Lo. — * "Sehenit Ad sar nhan o Te mini
ment’s Danes, St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, St. Mary-le- | TOPresent 4 russin; — im ¢ lose, The Spaniards
Strand, St. Pauls, Covent Garden, St. Ann’s, Scho, and Count Kisseleff second, Plenipotentiary of Russia ; — grea third pm has ;
Margaret’s, and St. John's. The pari of St. and it a — oy a recent meeting at
Leicester amd the following remarks on * 1 te
movemen
e
army in station without allo i Xn
an
HUNGARY. —The community of the Augsburg p saving of only 1800r. a » month, as cnet Co siderable annoy
fession of Protes estants a at Pesth has resolved to addres: oe The Sinan, * Gwalior, Lucknow, 1 Lahote,
tothe Emperor petition to the same effect as that of P ore, Jullundur, — and Barrackpore been There "n a great movement mone by
Protestant: cesma: ing him - ed pw ondes. Bir epted in this o — is very — bant e alarm eau
x * aras mmand of the China expedition. * details, how- | the feeling that our defences are not in a perfect state, that
the obstacles thrown in the way of district and other | ever, Shave vot trans pired, and it is said they will not be | this country — Y! 1 invaded by a foreign power, i that
meetin: of the Protestants, and to stop Hey Lm ecu- iris till t aor parol Dt 2 — S Calcutta! in December. nt 123 would t J. S Tronos Now, I wich hire ¢ to say that I
" nown that of I to go, but none of ve not shared in the apprehensions that have been so
tions of certain Pr otestants which have bee tuted. go generally iutértatnel br my countrymen. I am now speaking,
Is mind, my owa. i individual opinion, which is —.— EE
more than — 75 — "a opinion o of Wm man im this rc But
the regiments are yet 2 The Assam Tea Company has
IONIAN ISLANDS. — The Lo rd High pre issioner | just esca; pee Ah caused by a strike ke of all their Mboute ma,
opened the Ionian P: 10th i -— mes ET in number, an Cp for an increase of pay.
t anaging director, Mr.
his speech announced numerous measures f admin de Mornay, and the superintendent of the „ Mr, M'In-
trative reform. with death, and marched on the residence of the latter to
[raty.—Mazzini has published at Lugano a a pamphlet ¢ execute their threat. Fortunately for the company, the
of 60 jagaa addressed — the Lrg of Italy, in which | nisant of the affair, and aware tbat the labourers really meant
he explains what he consider: 2.— direction the murder. He ma: rohed. dow 0 Bepo pman Debrooghur, dis-
move ho | & t i — 26 .
have enlisted as volunteers to rally — Garibaldi and | 'mprisonment for "short periods, ode, and offered the remainder
their disch d, joli
t the holy war. He reproaches them with con - | hands , de declared E ire — ut * $e
m
Tn
2
— -K templated su
oft this pe Tne mn that M the time, chat wi as the opportunit
that he would naturally have — "Now, 1 on wi
to be misunderstood. by me no means do I decry the military
k | ardour of the cou y-1 no means d
tow deerunt ement; on mt 1 1 give it Ne and
with the blood of our best youth who jen e fallen 10 Cina. —Acco — Hong Kong state that angport ia this form "€ —
ears to replace that Vicar of the Genius of Evil, — political ais — iet. His Excelleney zt Bruce "e joe dumm. wae he cun MEA
whose name M a negation of * remained at inaha pr Admiral Hope was at Hon
You have kissed," he continues, “the hem of his — Kong. ie from the re state that the Chinese
gue saturated with the blood | of brave men n and were — energetic with
* f mothers, lik def. that Sankolinsin, “the Tartar Chief, was
heri. of Bron d € of — — ition * His | the head of affairs. Contr ibut tions were Ae for ir
genius ess of e a lie, his| Government from the t var 1
HE
ER
E
us
28
©
32
z
cue
*
hours
army - this — t£ wh say,
God's e let at ibis country in an effücic St Tv of
emo, 0 us — re the militia, niin ie rifle
and do all we = to make ourselves safe—I may say s
- not in the e breath, which is not necossary, abuse the
e 0 or rU
c: de oe epi: of ciae hc gi whic men — «d Hot era to this call on their patri
love n hes in. His soul is balancing like a pen-| Unt — The Bohemian has intet ‘with
dulum e han gai Satan, between chers at and | the mails | from Portland of the 3d inst. Ca ptain €
eee His orks are those of the fox and | Brown was execute e-
hyena.” In consequence of a pastor oral letter is sued by | viously to going to the scaffold he had an int een an
the Cardinal A fN tors, and accused some
"uler whom the a reoth peop
Church which they choose to support, Tam rejoiced to hear
that you aceord with me in these sentiments, because I am
v the sen
T
S
HE
3
iu
ET
E
à
d
E
;
:
r h
What provocation is not our own press giving? And if there ia
a . in — ] fear to some extent it is true—
wish to attack the temporal powe of the he Ns an aatan with his He died br — agai
this country; I ask whether it baa not been mainly fomented,
whether meniz to the vituperativelanguage
A ng them as wretches an — . | Num iy meetings 2 at New York
9 5 — from Palermo to lon 27th ult. states | on — ya lran of t The 2d. of the
that the Commander Manescalchi, Director-General of | New Mu Herald, 9 from Ta ro an
lice, ha i President"
dr
. A er Ow war lo China
followed onek other In such quick succession that the
tefte of mel af realised the termination
id. ation the ensuing Al
. — torts ile ort nonpa the trade of { Congress d will exhibit a vast mg do Qu that
p depression of the Lng per ears, there is room to doubt
Several persons have been arrested and examined, but t
es
a
j
pi
i
Turkey.—Letters rg — moet to the 7th prices affects th T 34 speculative years, wheat tha |
inst. announce that on the = oe M. de | Government ceeuld not ajo t the temptation which a a large 2
Thouvenel had A 7 note to the diuina containing | revenue gives it to entertain, —4 kinds of schemes, Ly h e"
re
an official demand for a firman favourable to the Pon
arrange parties on geograp Er from tha i
on hical grounds, an rom n-
creased Mono in tbe public mind to hold lightly the obli-
ions of leyalty to the constitution. Anvt! point o!
policy which it will touch u upon is is the jon to
b ^ tories. While the
- e. iiit ipatio bei ould | fought six
Bland on on the janiai- Sir Henry Bulwer had been | wait — the emergency co : 3 If Congress will follow his
ed by the Sultan , and gos umerous conferences | advice the wholesubject wil pleri etu for in five years
in — continued: to ER A give the first par p — fr
Ter San 2 ix
Ferrr.— xandria states that for | position. tandi
‘Some days past «cd Viceroy eg Egypt LA been much | was establish: denda: England “that neither 3
2 to his Harney
t Cairo with festivities of wall 2 vem exclusively c o rr Juan until th ; -
T ringers eleme — in his instructions, or from not under- We ach of tl nA
r excursion to Europe. Toussoun Pacha them, clearly, took possession of island. This expected | ignorant [x ice T
18 now about seven years of age. He has — ser step e K. 8 a uc 9 1 ove eral Cas and W. successor Hens wd no better. at
: h nurse, and t h ee frequent —— that England held un ut to the is i ae ee Reese MUS EM 22
its recogni country. This ill by
England, a knowledge of our language, vi bieh would itc 4 re side vein On and admirable. “Bend me pate
ieu fen tam ha mother domene, Melle oe TCT
ow been p under the charge of an | and the President m iE MO rights to tbe island in ru : 5 e A t trom tha
tator. earest and most distinct 3 er the have fallen off Ange the days of the
Coast o e to | that tained. In Ue F. nt 8. i that br Napoleon. But, for sngument's sake, let us admit that
the A Mm — e me mioaa 81 dac in view | they are eq! to tbe heroes of Marengo and Austerlitz; we
21st — verd state that the Cam . — is Mex e de 4 — 5 „ e Ser ttn .
state, in ence of an anticipa Se pns D be | we are better 3 rit
one a P eat a aa LE
e By oe re nn Pos | eee a ear eL PME EUER cer boca ve
E . e 85 0 „ | tha $ ene FES Gir e cannone mouth
ES — Typen a hs a esi Ma y —.— 1 trade a travel, a P wi e — . : is i JS opu
even consequen ence. arge e ion of Congress again „ | PE offective defences. It has a great moral effect on the
—— mee and emigrants had arrived at Fernando Po and ene the reoomm mendations of last year’s special messages iiem, besadat At het cial bristling with bayouets,
n. Another attempt had been made to fire | on this subject.
and the bardiest people in the be
tanding shoulder to shoulde
uld by means of — in fu — 1 it was still levied. Whenever the ak cae € vd 17 did not do ell in g to yourselves a —
our railway: l 100,000 opt 1 7 A militia, | alarm wa: reri ae —— of the inseri] dis or E ate of the ntry upon a Viper Sr tte de
artillery, horse, foot, and dragoo: f our land in | its vedi nary c tho expenditure of the 7 un ould b
94 hours. I believe that three thovienhd i m Khis uarrel— for | from 50,000, 0001. t A 55,000,000/., 30,000,000. o: Wii S or 9
thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just would e was for the interest of the national debt. Nearly the Ci ity Entellige:
double the number of foreigner: I Pelier hat our fleet i of this expenditure must be vide ^ pd out of thos gence.
+ ur sailors would never suffer a French soldier’s foot to touch | taxes to which he had allude d, Ju whic sidering the Mon MARKET, Ex
he 80 Englan I believe that if permitted th at increase in the population, wealth, d reapare of the | sols dea at 95 d ae ITISH i
French army to land—such is the military spirit now pe - | country, would produce much m very year than they did Bank Stock, 2 i ex lv. for the 10th
g England—it would o war, it would be a crusade. at the present m n 3 * a they pro asai more jer ock, 228; nd and New Thr
e c would one man, a U^ E though we were at the same nominal amount of taxation, than 8, 954 i; Indian Fou ee
would live to see his native land agai I have no fear of they produced 10, 15, or 20 years since. The whole question Puede 97; Di tto 1859, 971; I per Cent.
Fran still do well to be on our guard. It does "not would be considered isg ARU n ther ig ald la] yay ; New 2 , z ndia Bonds,
befit eat le to ken 1 * That € large remissions of the present eyo taxation. Other que: ew an Lo oan, for ect., 104i
is most certain of peace which is best prepared for ions woul se in which ev ery agrieulturist, every — — Exchequer ness 295. to Ble. prem.—Forzicy.
Well, we are prepared. I have it — pos highest military and though only perhaps of 20 acres of land, w: sy ithe e bea d, | Fiv e per Cents., 603 ; Brazili Four : Austri.
Scientific authority in the land that ast defen are|and whatever poli ities they might pie soever Cents., 1858, pe ex div.; D F. and a Half
hourly becoming more formidable Our: ne is the in Ministry they might be att: ss and for sc li candidate t 993 t Lot | % Du our per Cent. Cert
the world—our 1l atchless. I do not believe Louis | they might vote, he appea ealed to all who valued the pro: eid cates, 994 to 100; Mexican Three per Cents, for
Napoleon has any direct intentio s o ere moti proie to Aeg . — ES way to p ocur : 223; Portuguese Three per Cents., 1853, 45 to
against England, but the more I study his political career, the | a remission of that of taxation which now opp ussian Fo
J e do k E t, like adventurer, The is th rt of | the agricu cre 1 commun p id notthink that they conid er Cata 58 0d t per Cents, Mess. Ditton
fortune, driven hither and thither by the cireumstances of the ag once prevail upon the Legislature, when Parliament p S., i; Ditto Scrip, es + Turkish gy
moment. Already he has lost half his power in his country by | about to ari fF 3,000,000/. or 4,000, 0007. of taxes, to select | per Cents., 1858, for r Acct., 66} to
the defection of the priesthood ; he MN aaa ae ly on the | the malt tee s the one and onl Pen be be retained ; bu
rmy. Waris necessary to them ulent, excitable, and | he believed t that, Agere! pees ely powerless as they were, if all MEME RR ee
vainglorious, they may compel [oe to take e eq who belonged t e agricultural interest of the country and Bank of Jngland
his better judgment. They say they h i bad votes and ud nae ofa shad eR deu nce with member: *
revenge. We have no defeats to reven ge ey of either House, 77601 0 only unite in dra 8 to all Ses kene _ ISSUE DEPARTME NT.
Waterloo we can onte mplate our encounters with the ‘French that related to the tax, they y weil succeed i in making it one of | tes le „ Other Secures’ E ee
with great complacen tne t the gift of prophecy to | the first imposts to be— ether taken off—at leas Gold Tin tr alin 1548
reason on past ATEEN anà I ventum to prodo t hat if the pr "i FUE reduced. indi ción of relief might also b Silv Manes N
sent generation a empts by invasion of Englar y As revenge |afforded, for he hoped that before long, by cheapening, expe- 291305 b.
Waterloo, they F to their d e task of diting, and facilitating the t fer of land, an increase would ES LL IM
wenging a defeat more complete, more disast: e effected in the real solid permanent value of property, not | ANKING DEPARTME
decisive." merely as regards landed proprietors who had to buy and sell | Fee. Capital. qn E ut ^ beedi
Sin FitzRoy KELLY, M.P., Att orney-Gener: ral in the | in large quantities, mort „ and ] ir money on mort- | Public Deposits (includ- — me ead Weight
Lord Der resided at a recen 2 gage, but also as regards the owners of a few acres, and even | ing Exchequer, Savings pey» ite.
rby, p occupiers. Again, it e. — rn: em might be| Banks, Commissioners Notes Low
dinner at Ipswich and -— d RENE remarks one in favour of ted respect to t 5 itin mdi Gold and Silver Coin .
the pne EG of agr granting of leases, This esi ^. vé elicate and Qther Deposits., . 13,636,760
ape he might 5 S ARN that if ther difficult subject. But if mig ure to ma m ast eel cud us 185,630
persons throughout the British empire ko 8 "wu suggestion he would reco d such covenants ns woul 241,057 476. —
entitled io expect and demand from their fellow subjects all | enable the tenant to cultivate the land to make it as pro- 15th day of Dee., 1859. M. MARSHALL, Chie GA
that could be done to aid and assist nit the efforts they | fitable as it could properly and lawfully be made for h :
were vance their own well- without forcing upon the land “es “rept grees of whi ru
ing to
that — was the tenant farmers and
It was —— ein to deny that while the other departments o
hum and h n exertion—while in the
: P t
e protect; f the rn laws;
3 bat — hr like
equally proportioned taxation, which if it fell pe = a
i the own f land,
5 4. ir at e referred to that
TF which 5 over over again in the
. House of Commons, which, but for the dread ota collision
A and would soon be carried in the Lower
House, viz. thei of a probate dui respect to 8
equal to bate in respect to personal pro ay spikes
it was not y in the imposition of taxes, or in the relief ot
the
portions of the community from taxes, that one might witness
erted to in recent Ie opns Every effort
been m xvi not wring ta to take off the malt tax ur
di vec
was quite impossible not to seethat — roseo
interest was
erc de AE:
Pee vut ntry nl
x he would not say alarmed—
à what might p —.— be the in intenti f
whether we might not be called to 3
g and prosperity,
ngland.
the first time for seven centuries—it was for this reaso
E nly that the income tax = been increased, and would, be
BANKRU
1
8 eub
A OR
deavour, even at some Cheapside, M
W. IREDAL
SCOTCH SEQUESTR.
. „Aberdeen,
BA
Manufacturer
E
RS
p
uz?
2
© B,
EE
E
d
day. Th india or ae!
— that before v very S EE it Nate havi
value of money, and conse icol: enhancing
ould
. —
M
E
e
L 2
=
h n RU
Sie Me Timber Merchant — T.
Mason, Pent cade Road,
Wine s han
SCOTC
f Mu
SS 9 2 D eser
ham, now
Glasgo’ gow, |
e the immense Ts HOMSON,
ed
mely, the want of a con
me we toe ee uld not be w.
PTS —J.B
ey, Iron M
Victualler— C. dade, 8 Shipo
ML ANNULLEÉD--J. Gir
PTS —J. Lar
Lean and H. 5
SEQUEST RATIONS- C
ORDER] Eje Bootmaker— Rev.
te system
Gazette of the GidHeck,
"m,
acturer — R. e
x
TTIMORE, H
d
Furniture Dea
TREAT 5 S at an e end that he Tae New STAFF
T red with the | projected temi to:
sm of the fall in the
qx Therefore, ^t tir Gen —.—. eee for served a ees
tenta SE they fortuna
„Me S R FrRzGERALD, 1 MP, ata din nner at Poi
eni Fs 1 Wednesday ee follows on the alliance Cam
we ‘rgd and Fra:
t is I think a — — rule at all public eee,
this pe what are — political — i Should be avoided,
that is to s which ca oe 8 uite: ES
s ing wW
paying rent quite ina equate,
additional vals his lands acqui:
ual v. 5 of
ripe ould be
ollege, and within
Meg establishm ent.
Tier. y ven of
ion in m
| higher course of training to qual
| gentle alep half a mile to the —
Corr
r offic
the spacious gro
The new edifice, the
contin But I do -
s coun d
believe that the present rule e France fo
as shown an earnest to cultivate ii St. Ph
& ciet time h
—— alliance — this coun — y
intim:
inster ;
rector of St. Martin’ the Fale A. 1 Col io;
Mr. Buller a
in
moment what ition is as ruler Mr. ~~ for to
of France in alliance with country. g as ceand at great length
d are combined what coalition is there possible on the | the public, together
T ciere ne
one Power er? 01
our commerce must ine to tpm „when
more firm, more e woe ig
others which you can fancy in politica life. Nothing in point
of fact ter or more durable De nM fettering
gap ofnations by — s of com and associa- T
tion. If this, then, be t e people of|grounds for insti
France and the ru to | Commission was then
em
80 common MOM
I think it not only -
d of every m
h
untary means, the defences of
at rdi Pie may say, that no man here can
forget t ond that which m: now feel is = — is that —
who wes. the st warrior of he House of Lords
politicians. and —— blis! int
riot I
ur attention at an time i is called t say to
y to that which is known to be a great national want | — ‘minority
MES
priors 2 aie we
f Doctors’ Comm
Jam e Bonilla
Boot
LE, Ranskill, Notts, pro^ jc ee
ATIONS—J. Fonnxs, Inverness, Com Mercat
Baker—J. M'Cox E Glas;
arket Gardener—J. Sw. W.
Sandridge, He
ge, 3
Leit m
30 Conte, late of Bini:
h—A: M‘Kenzir, Glasgow, Machinist-
rA. . , Glasgow, Millwright-R. J.
asgow, Wool Merchan:
Mletropolis and its Vicintty.
N first stone
pn rove the facts already
h some furt
Dr. Twiss announced that the E
to the unanimous EM that
titutin
there are.
to the s majority, b
of them, would be
qn!
10
il"
Dzcrusxn 17, 1859.)
would be: fruitless.” The circular therefore invites the
ration of the deer in satisfying his lordship that
t f t
THE —— — màs AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ie that
effect at one
| period proposed in eonsequence "d pe adjourn-
hem ot hjec ect to any
present time, by signing the following
We, ^ * the Unit
england and Ireland, desir A n ress our
any attempt at - — time Jo alter the UY of Com
Prayer would be nded with great danger to — im
unity of the Chr rch.”
fed Church
THE 1 SrRIKE.— Lord St. Leonard's has to
addressed a letter to the Times proposing a plan wi ith
of
conviction mie
td | inco me of the year das amounted to
e
e |m they were era submitted. redeo ton
banguet “i far directors has been 8 till after
the Christmas holiday
E ze repo
ay,
—
f ti
directos oer gg to ne Cry stal Palace |
ae that the
84
the viev
— to à a satisfactory conclusion. He suggests that
vd
o lon
oft e paymen
À debenta
e dec compen shou
a follo owing effect shall be
re bonds; and the
ria — the pes u
a rning at Exeter Hall, ‘and
; preaching to- m
continue to do so unt
JE
: v parish
DIE waited upon Lord Palmer-
ston for calli ing his lordship" s attention
bmi to urge his — to exercise his authority
a stop to the sa Mr. Soden — the public
been towards
alks and planting
— ‘the able w were highly
Rad
ae Men e nevi 4
) it. will r — no signature nor
erfoil or maben For will, o f course.
end t
iin — of the 2 ed. pes 22 to
20.0599, leavi ing a reserve of 11.218“.
h
Så
master and — and i is not e
the prese
ENEE asters and workmen ` - — with
a jealou: to to thet — of th working
of Parliament y? ag IV., cap. 129)
form: s to
h repealed all the
aws relative the' combinati
it
the following ofences punishable by —
um y: 8, mo _ t hard
bein,
The Act | preceding
st then r makes | opinion that
ate xceed- P 3
e whole of 8 deben-
wever,
tonis Ty ee — to find ‘that ‘the rac bat these
duda and flowers had been removed th
wa s bet
E
ure stock bas — allotted
Thus the
pa id,
> company as their —
the year was 1,384,183,
20,000 o ^. the average of the four |
P
A" PER TY AND Ixcowz- TAX Vorne ON.—A con-
: Tuesday ev ening |
fere
t
onsh
eprived of a useful and elegant ro-
chad been d
| eration and 2" — to his E to order the
had been,
restora what
wanton
| metro
pair nfi ape
n royed. Ra rofessor cell said
p blic took a deep, — "he Er my
don Coffee House, to conside
“either an
— or the total abolition
of the charge — trades — E aunt Tas
Collier, M.P., took the chair expressed h
the income-tax, at did not “isting |
etween aen Ed 1 rmanent and t
Sir: ho oped, ber
—.— — ur to force 4
d É other
depart fi emi oyment, or or * — iore
work before it is Anis ied; Or ent
vent any eem red euer ul — . — n, o —
— hired or employed, from — —
ting work or —
3. ro for tdp purpose of forcing or bands any o
club or associati Y ges
malty, oi
—
any common
any f Com
mre a distinction
tion, or to contribute geao any festi —— and
pe
unt of his not nd
injust. He
e tax, int meeer wrer of the House
mons . move esolution to make bs
, but if nom ‘thie came forwa
wonld move the 8 himself. Mr. Elt stand
nd Mr. Potter seconded a resolution, declaring that
eater esent mode s d d charging one uniform * on all |
income (except under Schedi ile mani-
to I vour
to obtain such a reduction in the charges on
wa
ha her Majesty that he desired
rades | —
va
dee
interest in thie matter, becan
that Ae. "- o
the f been
ificed to the selfishness of a ant bet w
and the A. Bg pra 2 will should. a peal
857 the House of C s granted 1
the further sum of 3500. fo for pet
— EN — . 7 ver ar
b — 2M
approva ry of the
"s ien. as when Bir B Hal mentioned to
to trees, but could
not get a supply, the = 3 ]
him for c pu r . of lan
Palace asa p
— but had, it a appes
v" inhabitants of Park W — imagined t tat
they would obstruct their w Sir B. Hall w
refu *
Sonn
with a
and — - the amount
— one-half that levied on propert; Mr.
oved an — to the effect that the
ived f des
of the office » had been
Manne!
like red, in consequence of the —
of the present Chief Commissioner, the administration
indu ced to com comply with this un-
+N
mes e m tra and
Y cept under
Mer considerable |
. * whie ed that th
d bir rts ella or E the. iaoe had | in his speech made
14
e|an origo radio and co!
vacant place with d A the ‘spring was = vident
ry to taste. y rged his
popular. "Minister, not su fer the
E 1 said
lor dshi hip, as
pe
ages 0.
agreement, or any of —
rei or r the — or time
iden r
partíes entering into
Salizequiteerdenand. for me a r their
for which he or they will w
ne. This od we
asor 14
Et ob le manner, and Without
direct or indirect, to
Work, in cipe
ven for
me contained in
— si ay
forth ~
TMYt pay. The law
d wW itself, and nothing more, but —
m, cda the Hid of Trade. The aim A —.— of the
that, accord pil rkmen
mal
!
FELA
SHE
1
pi
die
term y thin im of
A fenton cc d to his merit, but tbe
asters should be ‘Let labour be un
T EAsTERN.—A meeting of shareholders
ened) of the Great Shi Company was
th Y, Mr. Guedalla in the chair, in anticipa-
Thedatten, meting called by the directors on Thursday.
lanae, it was ff to the 11th of
sr
g e-
le à y discussion, i in the course of which consi-
dissatisfaction Was expressed with the past
| expression e ublic o inion on these and similar topics, |
p
both the resolution and amendment were withdraw wn,
eed to,
he had j ap eed. a report from the Office of Works,
in which it was denied that — had been doi poe had
and the € Bom ne tion was agre
nt v
rate of wages or prices upon which the panos is dissentie
“That this meeting i Cd present mode
cee Ee se ieia M Sut. and, Jesus Helga
un 0 manifes
itself, in an *r Ml d Henn pcse the tax, to use
the most — er — to secure its pr mtm —
the footing of a «ends — Just distinction between perman
and precarious inco:
"yt the
e chairm said, he was a practical man, and |
ihe nme the resolution
. rely of shrubs
| Dickson said since Sir B. Hall had left office
had P" a efully iy A
in Park Lane but that the borders of the wa k referred
to were in 1 tnt iat ad been
done was to take away some shrubs which did not
— S put
ow.
would not — the winter, nd there re * difficulty,
e certainly however thought that stri the ground
7 and — was not " rable. Mr.
the shrubs
er
r agreed obstruct deemed or taken to
of molestation oro duction: — the om xi — and receive —
of ET aon m — oe Honse a Commons. It
vis t * animously that meetings should
with the association, an nd a
zw Mrat Ma Dmm —At Au Court of Common |
resented from
s Mirko ts Improve-
iy | uil, m that the
— ie D ay communication 9 and lar
erected for the enr of —.— 5001
[^ Ls to connect
arketand the ig to
tan Raila p pepe] pm large majori
2 2 es ud pi back
to de
3 oo
w to the om of improved and
court called the
d |
ves of remo "e ng und :
| itals ks ublic stree
[nee is s asin fo 3 n eve ty this fens disease
pagate exten ere
and it be it be Ora gnat em and obe parish officials tojë
eni tho delay what the practice is in thei
NE y Musie Hall being no
opened on Sun eve deta pe the engen
musie, ben chiefly sacred, Mr. Spurgeon
declined to preach there again.
lved u
be held forthwith i in E parts of the country, for the | d
3 r
[den
e Corne erg
[Pry for the purpose of n "their views betore
e
or the — „ wen, E — — —
t th npn interfere ;
and o
ee, ap acer n mons; but
8 Judge of the Middlesex the
bey v y
w errian they were right in —— them.
of not desirable for the Govern
has | for a
He b. commence | gestion,
Hi
f the di venti di metropol
orantis mated op . L4 Milner Gibson, Presi-
of the M Hd —— ly upon re
22
relative to the recent agitat:
ey were very rel
Paper Aa d in the
to | that if e vatis ED Bügetba, tha
would be to appoint a select committee of
send them before a committee of the House
pan
iy chance
28 ih if they would ike
e would then
us
i, but when their pecuni
ment to interfi "pA except
ood e; and if they e f bis sug-
: he waala do all be could to bring about a
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETE. enn 17, un
I
ry
settlement of the question. Mr. Richards, foyer vest of | report «d sons
the Imperial € Gas nl d expressed the re con- ibn à an pe on an extensive ri e days
Sir G. C. Lewis wa, “chen he| Retford. The place is one of the most eral i in t i the however were reje e prse bán th
understood he to communicate with the delegates Pa and situate at the sone of t wo lines of | reluctance in the mee e od m Y a great
of the > metropolitan, vestries, and v when he 1f he Irish € j of the river, de M S e
them he woul know. e German Ocean, the e: p the north to Mie I. MER more 9 Uli 8 desire
IL pou dern E- EAsr.— On Sunda ay there were south of the kingdom. — ons were agreed to and nately ‘the following
Four services as usual at this orth, at one of which the| Hyrax.—Major-General Hay, In spector-General of | before the F : d to be placed
n p
under penalty of dig. | dum
E
T
a
$79
a
J
Rev. Bryan King, the rector, officiated. That con- Musketry, and head of the Stab ahmen at Hythe, has hough the number of fatal accidents from —
w
~
jit
wm"
Dr
Los
—
"
curr
o Pr " hak alt ai
ducted by Mr. Hugh Allen passed ietly, but the | addressed his usual anias ie report to his R oyal Highness ing at Oxford are fewer proportionally than boat.
st h i re | the Duke of Cambridge : posts. die highly e xpedient th that steps be taken ou .
P ane - o me
engaged, were interrupted by bissing and coughing, the| ‘The irte he says, “of o 8 Ake ned during the year a that no o person sh abou " . possible, 2. it is
interrupti irely from bo d gi is 195 (which number includes mE seven flee: ith ease E the es, whiffs, or skiffs
who i» ewe looked t tte o and 17 officers of her "Majesty's Indian f fohe b eing an increase | swim 0 aif freshmen who cannot
y looked upon e matter T a good Joke, of 48 over the previous yea e 195 officers, n were Should. phi e bathing i in ‘com ae A Whiffs or skif
1 me few g made a of “ saying " | exercised in every respect pes 2 pc canned officers and | practise s ing from an pany and ma 1 er Proper direction,
espon á 10 ud tone. bea o destroy the | privates, 98 practised under the old system, and 97 (including | the means bei 85 Tear Eo hos boat. 3. That whereas
, y 2 ing to swim in Oxford are in
effect of the darte? cháditing, but Ped efforts were | th (or TH Lem ta Md k f 21 i
. „
by no means Ste ul. t the close of the sermon} (or 213 per cent.) second-class shots, leaving only one
i n i
Eu.
the! management o
passed into i d weed
"ou on Monday report a van recovery df. 8010 ‘ ^ ; de
the latter 168 (0 (or 1 525 adie cent.) passed into the first class and |] f ti
from the wreck of the Royal Charter—namely, 540lb. 142 (or 444 per cent.) into the second class, leaving 11 (or 8 fnis To sit Sian
i i 86} so in the third class. In th
d arti
master ^ VIRES and that he —— — in the
means of saving drowning persons, and o persons
ri d. —
Por’ —The screw line-of-battle ship 2
101, was K ee on Tuesday in this dockyard in
. jo n 15 presence of a large concourse of spectators, The
í [3 ich the nam re-
The falling off in 1 per r centage of cet pote in judgin;
vered now esp “po 90 about 1 i" APR of the last two partie: not to be attributed to m
NEW 5 5 T CHELSEA.—The mony | | increased difficulty in passing Wen one phe 70 another, but to
of laying the . gate E a new viter "hall i in the fact that an instrument has been used A determine the
> E m i i 0 i rmerly in use for this
bar de of St. Lu ke’s , Chelsea, took place on n Monday 5 | , which circumstance prevented the possibility of any P
e Kin ng’s s Road, in “the presence of d vestrymen | dens on the part of the men by which their judgment
e pàr coul i ivi t orrect distance;
H e mo:
dea EN Han Yo. and ia 7 the A 8 5 Pier er a efficient.” Gen. Hay here
bers ; M e, M.P Tu Wo ative of the vestry a the rformance of the pupils in those practices which are e Am >
the Metropolitan Boar 5 Ps S; kasi upwards of | taken to establish the figure of merit. From this it appears | case of stabbing occurred a - cans at this
1000 spectators. Visco o had prese ented | that — = a slight improvement in 2 of the practice port. Stei
e old sy: 93 g the performances : "
the parish with the freehold site ‘of the Mer officiated on the new system with those on the old, the former are supe- drink 0 at 1
-on 1 occasion. e hall will be rior in the fle and skirmishing practices, though otherwise hee they quarrelled and turned ouf to ‘ight in the
i ion , by the ile i
rfi d standing
-5600 ple. feri
= s seas sowing CHINESE PRIM En; = and French growth at market prices.
He pet 25, 6d. ‘per pac acket. Separate DSON’S GOLDEN MELON B
sold out.—Tnos. Wie “The Primu ulary, Ipswich. ected Samples for Seed of comps most valuable varie ety,
Brads
C
and
and
dis- m
er
near Leek, Staffordsh hire.
ce from unknown corresponden!
|
pos TÜRN ERG is tow
pus Ux
strong plants, bee e n Ss.
& BAYLEY, — Gardens, Chadderton, Manchester,
LLOW ROSE. eA e
EW YELLOW ROSE, “MADAME WILLIAM.” superior both for produce and ma — * may be had of
2 is beautiful new Rose was exhibited d by A. PAUL & | RAYNBIRD & ^Y is of Basin, 89, Seed Market,
Son, at the Royal Botanic Society's Gardens, in the Rege * Mark Lane, E.
Park, esday, the 6th inst and ed ertificate
e
> ednesda; . i DW F SU S om en
erit. 7 de 6d. the pair, packag carriage to London EY das ie A S CER n: xd BEAN. — Price 2s.
. PAUL t, Herts.
Nurseries, Slo
EW 2 Der “ELLEN, — Fine p self, stron Seeds for 13 stamps, or nine
plants at 5s. ; also NEW SU NFLOWER “CALIFORNIA,” ID See ae of this prod:
the finest yet raised ; — ng plants, 5
WARD SHENTON, Hendon Park Nurse
ANSIES.— The best and most distinct
fine show varieties, 6s. per dozen. ET ME
haw Gardens e hes rton, Manches
ID ELGIAN DAISIES In the finest varIP dr ber
ELGIAN 8 —In the finest variety, 4s. per
dozen.—DopwELL & BAvreY, Bradshaw Gardens, Chad-
derton, ——
O E an pa arme cud
d extra fine show varieties, — II., N
w
an
je r included. RI aei & Bav
mchester.
Gardens, Chadderton, M:
[COTHES.—Iwenty-five pairs strong, well-rooted
plants, and extra fine show varieties, named, 1l., packing
hamper included. — DODWELL & * BAYLEY,
Gardens, Chadderton, Manchester.
DIN . Twenty re pei ig e toe m
eee five pairs fine named kinds, in ke
Strong 2 Die 9 avr e eee p ham A in- a height
+ deed
anches!
Es.—lhe best and most.
few thousand D
e N. W ZEALAND RUNNING BEAN
‘Sad
per quart.—Jas ; Seedsmen, 238, High
Holborn, London ,W.C
Packets of ocean, pulis
& Brown, Seed G:
MAN PLANTS.—
A
ked and delivered to the Stati -
sont out — to t ions, 3s. 6d. per
fiue new artati z particulars, se P Catalogue 1000. Fare Pert, É
USTARD ‘MAMROW, —The improved
pii en 1 Jan. 29 and Feb. 1
Brown, Seed Gro
RAYSON” S GIANT e cae E
kinds 3 G PE car e ie A d. per 100 ; 2
„ * to to TR *
WA.
Brads
Bradshaw
stinet kinds,
ia DON Me j
306
— BOTANIC SOCIETY O OF F LONDON.—
d ee EXHIBITION, April 6, the fo llowing
— ifere m
New PraNTS. t IPrise to Messrs. J. &
Pri Road, c Müsschla Wollastoni ;
Henderson & Son, let my
e; 5d, »
, A. Hen Ped 24 Co., Pine
—l1st Prize to Mr. Cutbush, |
raser ; 3d, to Messrs. Cut-
nderson & Co.
of Isle-
ULANEOUS PLANTS.
of ienet — Messrs. J. & T È
bush & Son, Highgate ; 4th, P e He
rene to Messrs. Dobson & Son n,
* to Mr. C. Turner.
TWELVE Sparc £s. let Prize to Messrs. E. G. Hender-
son & —
MO —Silver Medal to Messrs. G. Henderson
Son M ora ‘collection o = ran money a Domina de la Reine;
er alas ;
&
&
Small Silver Medal to . Turner for 12 e ; Bronze
Medal to 2 'enderson Son r th Š
MID
eT ee Mr. Turner for WIN ONS HAVE BEEN RECEIVED SINCE
Brillian — r Satherland, ma ET for THE FOLLO G SUBSCRIPTI C LIST WAS MADE py.
Soodling Camelia Eleanor ; to 3 ‘Intosh, of & Son, of | Allen, William, Gr. angton, Esq... . £1 1 Holmes, J., Hackney E
smith, for a collection of Tulips; to Messrs. Paul & Son, of | ¢ n, ? Hut x f 4
Cheshunt, for Madame William Tea Rose; PM ragg, of | Babington, C. c., tog, Ca Cambri ge. "1010 Ke tehingon, J 1 = 3 Murray Sm 1
d H sl h, for-24 Pan- Baker, William, dr., Cholmondely Castle P, E > Birkenhead .. "x WI
Slough, for 36 Pansies ; to Mr. James, of Isleworth, I , haw, Hen G 1 1
sies ; essrs. A. Henderson & Co. for Australian Cress; to | B ; William, Nurseryman, Sloug — Gaon NU . Howell, Esq posi
Messrs. F. & A. Smith for Seedling Cineraria 2 e ES Black, J., Gr. to Sir Wm. Jolliffe La R Sorge, Gr. ohn Noble, Es sil
d. M. Carson, T. Moore, A. PAR: Bro wa, William, vix 2 Earl of Chesterfield ME kr, Nursery, Twickenham A7. 1l
= ; 1 Bruce, John, Gr. to: J.. Chapman, Donald, J., aq., Welistend, ,
Didi ION AND 8 SSEX C FLORICUUI TURAL Bundy, Thomas, Gr., North Sto: m z — Alexander, riton, Kent ait
AND — Day. SOCIE: TIONS | Cames, John, Gr. to General Cole : 1 e Tu : „Ar Dulwic - 1
‘© fixed to be held on the TM days lys ue Cames, Thomas, Gr. to Colonel Gree bot ` ag l, i to C. Hole, sq. 85 1
Show, WEDNESDAY an DAY, June 22 and 23; Cramond, Alexander, Gr. to J. C. Wyndham, Esq. E B e> d, Jón nursery, Aber " $
Autumn Show, ES hei THURSDAY, Sept. 14 Cobden, John, Esq., Tortworth Court T j | Richan n, Gr. to Lord al es «11
and 15 ; on the same grand scale as informer years. Schedules | Golman, J. J "Esq k ith . z Y 1 pu" ames, Gr., Stoke Hall, Exeter " T
e now ready, and may * ee of the Secretary, 96, | Cook, William, Gr. to F. Izant, Esq. 2 é 1 2 e, John, Gr. to H. Schmidt io» +4
St. James’s Street ; or of E. RY, Queen's Graperies, Gen. eral William, Sheffiel ü : ety Sy Shakespear, Wm., Hothouse Manufacturer, m ! 1
Superintendent — Brad biti MIL d ailes N ry, Barnet. k ; 1| Smith, Mrs., Blendon Hall, Bexley .. Birmingham H
ve e e — nis onds, Joseph, Gr. e onn iet 1 1 Spire, Thomas, Ur. 40 Thomas — Esq oes 1
no 1 AUR maxi of Committee, pavards —.— Wellington. Nurs : Tín —— UM Gr. t to Mrs. Turn ze
— rskine, The Right ; 1 Marquis of Bristol -
Var ight t . * 11
JTAMFORD HORTICULTURAL SOCIE 2d Donation) E10 10 Siewar oe. ie Gardens, Chatsworth ide
eite enry J., Exotic Nursery, Chelsea
The IB quae for the prese wl bo held m on | Green, John, Esq., ‘Kensington — 2 ogan, James, Esq Swavely, Dartf ntt
the same grand scale as in former a SEE Griffin, J., Nursery, Bath , i A E P. Videon, G. F. „Elalenden Plage, Tid mio odi att
FETE will take paco on WEDNESDA eir $ pict Henderson, A., Trentham Gardens . 2 x 1 sich Tames rr sio i 1 AM. 1
Silver Cups will he eee ——— — a n s z, elt
house Plan tn, and other p ctions to the (Signed) x. R. Curier, Secretary, 14, Tavistock Row, Covent le
ber 7, at whic’
‘The AUTUMN SHOW is fixed for neis
for Dahlias, and other beral prizes are Peg
a Silver em
Ac each Bx bition importan: DAE all England
witho subscription or entrance fee. Schedule, "with
Tales, de - be forwarded post free on 7 — to
tamford, A pril 9 H. J „Hon. Sec.
ENGLAND nat alg
WEST OF
FO
ARTS, MANUFACTURES, AND COMM.
bition of FLOWERS, FLOWBRING, S ORNAMENTAL
and " EM l take
exion with the pss Exhibition
tm 98 of their North Dev
en the following Prizes an be
PLANTS, ey WS
el, 2, and 3, i
or the bes collection of not less than
or of Womens — Foliage
ViL—1. d the best r
um
for exhibition must be staged the evening of
Tuesday, May 31; and: are mot to be *
^ * een removed eater char de
Signed) .Gronoxe Brown,
. Sec. Local Committee,
of Petition may be had
7. 50 BEDDING dicet for 71. including dane
or-ome half for T 8l 15e.
IET „ Secdlin
ILE Ld gs
= repr 6 sorta
; ia, 2 sc 12 Nierembergia
50 —— — 50 sorts 12 (Enotheria rinatia
12 Cup! , 9 sorts 50 Petunia single, 25 sorts
Dahlias, 50 sorts - 0 do. a -25 sorts
50 Fuchsias, 30 sorts
IT pr a
Le s um, 6.sorts
50d Variog ted, 12 sorts =a sad Mint
20 —— 12 sorts bena, 100:sorts
Apply to J. Scorr, Merriott Nurseries, Cre wk ern e, Somerset.
Post-Office Order on Crewkerne, —
unknown Correspondents. j " mend pli vem
two stamps,
upon application to.
TIE GARDENERS’ ROYAL ‘BENEVOLENT INSTITUTI Oy
INSTITUTED 1838.
Patroness—Her Most Gracious Majesty the QUEEN.
Patron—His Royal Highness
the PRINCE CONSORT, K.G.
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON
STE DUC ee
SCHEDULE OF PRIZES.
EXHIBITIONS May 12 & 13, at St. James's Hall, Regent Street
Prizes offered. |,
3d.
I. Ten Orchids (Amateurs £4 Ev S best P
i. — 3 IV. Single Specimen of the n
II. Ten Orchids . (Nurseryme 3 introd ^ maed -withiie the last ten
III. Six Chinese Azaleas . (Amateurs) 2 3 in flower em
2 Tou: Chinese pens (i pve da = a Bie ELIT
with at least 30 inches of ä not — 28 . a
ie PA LAN (Amateurs) 4| 8| 2 XYI. „
at least 30 inches of clear stem |
1 3
VII. Six Rhododendrons, net 9 ; : |
in pots k -. (Amateurs) 3 2 1°
VIII. Eight Rhododendrons, inct sorts
in pets * en) 3 28 1
IX. Eight Roses, distinct sorts, in pots , |
ons exceeding 13 inches (Amateurs) i 4| 3 1
not exceeding 13 Nurserym
XI. Six Roses, pos abes te n * MER
XL. right ne taged Panis Vade] © | |”
8 (9 I
plants admitted 4 3 2
XIII. New or extremely rare species - |
ental "ien vos To 14
ifücates |
"exotic par em. 2
J. 2
nde te e O yoia
heat ne Softa d
XIX. Single Enen Pa thes most omamen-
introduced within yat
es
Catalogues on .application, for
1
& 30, at St. James's Hall.
the best f
sorts, one 7 at LE
E W B AZALEA
RAISED BY MR. ELPHINFIONH | ERY AND SON beg respect invite
i conspicuous | e growers of the above named inspecti f ‘thelr
P pauan = | oes W. of Young Specimens Kor all the newest and b — st
WIE pE eee —Light lilac, very large many of Which have been exhibited at the Metropo
2 00» — of extru substance, with ee — eye. tan Exhibitions. They are clean and —— y, well = ——
Lig “rose, 1 are white eye,. ry desirable | bloom, and moderate in prie Catalógues forwarded post
w n a — subs | upon application.—Dorking Nursery, April 9.
UQUET DE LA INE- —Peach, er [ERES FOR THE FLOWER GARDEN.—The
Ls — —— Ane rde eye, large — may be had at the prices — e pots the
£A flower and a he striking Mee | plant 3 are all fine and thoroughly established = T e pot S:—
. d.
Scarlet Geraniums, Tom Thumb; Frogmore and others,
E for pril cut down plan 8 9 were struck last N.
ere or pl t — r bove Ditto, struck last pa eni 6
p. BROW easure in introducing ve | Yerbenas, all the best varieties 6
Sx New W BENAS, we —— a decided . — 00 | Antirr. inu 6
any hitherto ue roduced in form, colour, and extra substance, Ageratum 6
wii fime strong habits so desirable for bedding e. Galant T din bby : 28. 6d. to 3 0
The Stock am d ng limited, early orders arerespectfully solicited Cuphea platycentra, ER we 0
so that the best Plants may be Selected and r d. Dahlias, best sorts to 9 0
The ccs son : * * kage ed, 20s., arnations and Piocotoes ditto e e 1s tol 6
each, sent free i 0
eco n — Sprowston; Seed Establishment, 41, Bian ae j po * 0
London ich. The UE e plied. on the usual terms. Gaillardia 6
NEW y DOWS PETUNTAS: Heliotropes :
HARGRAVE bet respectfully to an 8 and ramosoides 6
$e he will shortly be prepared with STOCK of the 1 ed qain 0
NEW DOUBLE PETUNTAS vertised by him in the Gar È 6
quum! Olironiele of September 25, 1858 Nierembergia gracilis 6
They ute a —L collection in themselves, being of | Petunias, fine sorts 6
exquisite form, firm su rich and decided in colour, Senecio (ouble dark Groundsel) 6
— and of y. uae fait rera good guard gr Salvia fulgen 6
with the centres we a n fact are superior to the Fi -— D: à “fin ont down
Saen v other va ait siota hitherto sent out) Their nomen- umm re gated Geraniims, i ower o é X e T ww
clature is iae Brilliant 3 6
Wooo Ivan, Huntingdon. 5
~ CHEAP AND USEFÜL PLANT Ts SENT FREE. TO
VAN GEERT, Nv
eggs tri Raus
med
ALBA: MAGNIFLORA.— -m fi Ghent ben tung
KING of CRIM S.— Bright crimson, brighter than its e begs to inform amateurs and the Trade that a 8 PPLÉ-
parent “Crimson King." Thé varieties previou sly introduced MENT T to his GENERAL CATALOGUE is 12 1, 1b. f. Sübermad, in
have all mselves to be only purple: may be hi om geras oet; y be Uberrad
Plants of any of the al 5s; each, or the set of six 258. 5 e, Great Street, Lon " 4
It is requested that the Trade fo t — at Ghent Azaleas, with flower- , 50 denne for. 4
&heir earliest. convenience, as all orders will ecuted in the Ghent Hardy B 25 rias ies fór Lis L4
qtation in which they are received. Wee tuber 25 - Il rum - 1
C W. HA tb RET RE HILL, Magrolinan ede Ew T viia"
(BLUME). — " stron) ge ach .. 5s. to 10
A: Loy rev: u y of novelties of sterling inkgo bilo bo, Per = DUEE
itis with pleasu A "s P ati ribera: invite- —— to 3 —— — strong per doz. PRÉC 9
— 7 a a new genus closely] Robinia inermis p sire A 5s: to 10
to Hoya; was received — 1857 PWonia —— 12 nes "e . 80
Mr: Hvow Low, Ju, y (oe repe discovered on |, Clematis azurea di Sigh JT zen te 9
the north-western sido of the Is Island of Borneo. The plant, Viburnum macrocephalum, Et. phán A 5
—— elimbe: a noble baving |: ilian Alstroemeria, per AD 12
auen handsome 9; eni: it great Erythrina Cete gil r rd 9 €
recommendation in being a most bloomer, the clusters rina ta per dozen pmo
of flowers <3 numbers. Tue flowers Chamærops hi eyes 18
of waxy consistence, lour, orange; Gitrus sinensis ee Oranges) per heated . 8t
— until they become E cular, and — n the Agave es s de to 42
wer-stalk ; the lower Part etals is entirely covered micas dan egat: ve d.to 5
ede vel e e give c them a Bor ‘gracilis, ror ong m — y
usually beautiful appearance: f — t; " E Camellias, 100 varieties for
Whave ded ta owe cluster on & newly im Plant, Indian Azsleas, 25 varieties for
which: ted to the inspection of Sir W. J. Hoo! wom of » eight new varieties s (Vervuenio) emat 30
Kew, by* whom it is figured: described in the Nov: r 5 varieties for plan 12 0
num of the Botanical It is also fpered in n payment of. 5s. extra t package, I to
tthe, ens 63%.-each/, Usual discount
N.B. On I undertake
deliver the Plants free ont of — Custom House in London.
reférence is respectfully requested from unknown c
spondents
E S S Deme — E
TION OF EARLY TULIPS.
EXHIBITION
SON 9.
We WOOD is SON are now
heir carpets for all — He best NEW Nat ou of thee
S are well grown, vi and healt!
ET advertised
DESCRIPTIVE LISTS of the above
app n. Early orders will com:
Voodlands N Maresfield, near Uckfield, Susse:
BEDDING,
orre- | compensate for carriage
RED, OR THE THOUSA
TILLIA D SO
many tho ousands of well — yp
se number
Noisette Rose,
arly orders are most ——
W of the stock — *
Ixtra ees E Brera ated with
ditat o
Woodl: li umet Maresfie!
E BEST _SEASO
solicite ted, as
each order
ld; near Uck
rr
s having o
sands, will "b
[pem de terms.
tale rid Perpetual mt.
a Isle — de rbon dit
ea
China, Climbing and Noisette ditt s. to
CATALO OGUES sent post — applicato.
eenting
resent,
y, and
will be sen
— the — pir
N have now to offer
healthy plants of ROSES,
be — to plant out about the end
of Le — t Hybrid
— of
unsold
—— out the ng — in May.
compensate for
FOR — 1 "GUT RO sss.
sew ants of
Show in July last, and was
— of the Show,
ese: e healthy plants; unt to
3
-OHN CRAN
Pl varie resented- wii
he will be prepared su "
this superb new Hose. — hai by him in
——— at the Grand National Rose
— of all *
who saw
the
pus rchasers
. for 2. pe^ 24 for'5t. ; — set of — varios for eL 68.
the ties each order to
TEA-SCENTED.
Enfant de Lyons Madame Joseph Halphay
Madame Damaisin Reine des Pays Bas
BOURBON.
| Docteur Berthet | natu de Marat: |: Octavie Fontaine
3 . HYBRID
WELLINGTON NURSERY, ST. JOHN'S WOOD, LONDON. e de Lye dut Vadare
e de St. Louis
i * de Mandeville
Ambroise Verschaffelt Madame Jenny, Varin
MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON ‘ana de Desbac 55
'ESPECTFULLY anno that did di of these extremel and'efféctive early spring-flower- | Beauté de dem | Orderic Vital
po nay now bes theis — i Misbment.- The ph tonem consists of nearly 3000 Bulbs in Um. Chalbrillan e
med v di the late-flowering Tulips remarkably: dwarf growth from Empereur de Maro
ng from
cole ches n in ing, i including vase-like flower
intermedia!
te shades of rose, cerise, carmine, searlet, crimson, rich bronze,
+h
in their
-cups of the i chaste and brilliant self-colours, v d Eug Me May
and
NOISETTE.— mont.
J. i: Nurseri ries, E Aare, sa Hereford:
P
from s
r, "nd in other varieties showing rich marginal flukes, feathers, or belts of
pure white, purple, or golden-yellow groun
A PERFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR GRASS WITHOUT MOWING!
RGULA PILIFERA
Forms an ad — Moss- sanie E * — creed pd phe e easiest-cul
harming substitu erges, &c.,
year. It is
pressure by rolling or walkin uj DA: ; i studded ove July with m of sn.
TE a ver in July myriads
dure and equally level as a Turkey.
"REQUIRES NO MOWING! !
„of th
white starry blossoms ms; is softer in
A’ unn en 1
T "ur years’ duration,
E. d. HENDERSON — — SEED CATALOGUE FOR 1859,
ets of 6d. 28. Gd, 5%, and 1
creat cn FIRST-CLASS BEDDING STOCK,
AND OTHER ORNAMENTAL PLANT
GLOXINIAS, 12s;, 188. 305.
ANTIRRHINUMS, 6s. , 93.
CALOEOLARIAS, Bedding; 65.; 08,125.
for exhi
PICOTEES, 12 pairs, 185.
PINKS, 12 pairs, 99., 12s;
CLOVES, distinct, 13s.
Plants,
*ach)as‘fellows:— ~
VERBENAS, 6s. to 9s.
PETUNIAS, single and double, Ge-,
9% 19s.
FUCHSIAS. 9s. 12s.,
D „ spotted fe wers bition, PHLOXES, 6s., 98., 128.
— Sojida : 15 15 ass a, 18e. PANSLBS, 0s. 98,
CARNATIONS, per 12 pairs, 188 MIMULUS, 6s., 9s., 12s.
NEW CONTINENTAL. VERBENAS. AND PETUNIAS OF 1859,
18s. Per Dozen.
ERANT " hus
Ei PLANTS FOR THE PRESENT
been visam 1 ran 1 15 PRENON SPOTTED 15 5
AN OY do, 12% 188. per dozen.
Wellington Nursery, St. John's Wood, London.
MING :—
doz. | VARIEGATED. „ge., 12s., 188.
pdoz SGA RET r 20 Ad, ik, 9t 196i
ture, and uniform rich verdure throughout the Alphonse Karr
is perfici pines by cold or drought ; bears — au. d Be
Baro
re offerélin selections of 12 kinds (óne'
CHOICE
IRCHAM anp W. ARD. 15 Vs octal] o inform
er 71 5 yt
the ee of the Rese that Pd linge stock —
the following fine varieties, which offer
under ( ‘han Air selection is is eg
15s, per en. Egaré
rée
le Anglaise Damet
nne de Wassenaer (Moss). Madame Charlet (B.)
u Imperial Co;
Delarue åt
Patrizzi s
A Em a Miss Gray
idi» OE Standard of Sébastopol“
Lord Raglan P Victor Trouillard
eei o : emolselle Claremont
aide Pavie , Mà oiselle.Nàncy Dubor
8 : Nantais Mademoiselle Zoe Mayrel
Candide Mademoisalis-Alice Leroy
Claudia A: Mademoiselle Anai
Comtesse de Labarthe Monsieur dard
e de Malakoff .
General Blanchard Reine de Denmark
Tord Palmerston ; Bonvenird'Elize.
Madame: — — u Triomphe de Rennes
Madame Heraus Thomas Rivers
Madame de St. Genet Triomphe de Montrouge
— | EE
Mademoiselle Josephine. t
Duke of Cambridge e de Montigny
Evêque de Nimes Madame Van Houtte
Gloire de Lyon Marie Po
M d' Autriche —.— iod Goddard
e A
— Reine Blanche (Moss)
4 rags pido st of the'above ma Rad on application
3 to mand je s
* M a
— — — ———A ae
THE BEST DWARF emm mathea SEED
Lie
K of , whi
—.— wk of Sen w lour, r1 dwarfness o They
were i ed by many good judges while in bloom last ea ln
who had r seen the
Breet William — pt rom 1 24 distinct varieties, ie major
of which always vene castle, E pepe
d ra dr the finest
C ove died, an n fiel othe finest collection ihe
lowers come to an immense size, —
* t handsomer than the Glo: — a e er Dt
y
th.
accompany all orders either in cash or
RID qa upper d
ind is the most vigorous of its class. The foliag — ve Marien
olive green, of a size, and a thick lea
, good form, being wal opr cupped, 15
large size, a very large t ss, standing ou t bol
fo It is the tho hardiost variety of its clas wire ng si ——
an expose situation the severest winters, without the slightest
ol Be gh o protection whatever, while other varieties have
px 3 very great advan in flowering late, ad
tum much wanted in the high coloured Rhododendrons, as th.
other kinds are always injured by the late frosts and cold winds.
ited at the Manchester Botanical Exhibition,
certificato of merit, also a label of
ip
2
y fro m 2 to 4 feet high
— each, in propor-
considerable . — when a quantity is
Nurserymen are ts for the sale of it :—
m plants may now be
& Sons, Tooting, near London;
& Sox, St. John's Wood, London ;
Son, M leld, Sussex ;
aresfi
remittance or reference is uired from unknown corres-
dents. Post-office Orders b. payable " * 1
Nurseries, Singleton Brook, Broughton, Man
ALOGUE.
8
END DINE AND 0. 8
ars free,
Pine-apple eP
SEEDL FUC We
EORGE WHEELER, NURSERYM
NG minster, Wilts, respectfully announces that strong 1
het nia tomy caret igo; will be ready to be sent out on
— The ost beautiful doub!
tube and se xs
dark 1 colla
mek’ a beautiful x pore male colour
err property 0
the tower —.— er, and H
good .
G.
[^ 25 Fuchsias offered by
of RHODODEN-
G. J. WHEELER hason hand a large 0
rate prices.
T
DRONS from 9 inches to 5 Um AT ve
NEW
LOW 4 xD CÓ. Fespotfully 1 invite attention
to the annexed pr ofti novelties, orders for which they
will bes very happy to re
„ NEW "GLOXINIAS.
ected the undernamed varieties
viously i ix cultivation, HL
mend the selection to the Tontas friends as —
RA distinct — worthy of a plaro i in the most selec
of this much adm 5 — d easily cultivated fli
April. "Price „ 9s.
ER cr PLOWERING VARIETIES.
troviolacea, very dark * purple, base of the tube beauti-
Ally spotted on a pure w. ground. white
um vue 3 bat Rae shaded rose border, lips spotted with
Lin: e tube, tow ards the e lips alternate
bande aiid tose: [purple.
Perfection, ‘Gar white p dark blue e lips ee —.—
AR nie Alice, clear white tu ibe, bright ro: se be lt, edges very
vilis of Prussia Im mpro
brighter Feci d iud in the old variety.
ROOPING-FLOWERED VARIETIE
Attra —— jin of tube white, finely spotted, Mos rosy crim.
son, outer JAM Moss yt hite.
Beauty, whi , inside carmine lake, broad white belt,
flowers — lange
[NC Et crimson with violet throat, carmine blotch on
NEW ROSES or 1859.
Hys
* in
e SMITH, in offering the following Six
rb SEEDLING D warrants — to give
oe of good growth, fine habit, and free
ITH).—This beautiful flower obtained a fi
he National Floricultural Society ; at Mem
imet 17 Jod qe, = following description, in their report
Certiñonte to Fuchs General Meeting, October 7,
GOLDEN PLOVER.—A flower in form and colour
i of
particularly recommended € the elegant
Lee green heavily y, with A
SIR COLIN CAMPBELL (Wree: —An extra
variety, fine habit and free, de particularly eee do 0 64
ee
sent out - about the
G. S. can confidently inii the following Three NEW
VERBE ENAS Y distin ct, and w orthy to Be ido
co!
— Bright lavender,
an This is one of E
as been offered fi
ursery, Hornsey Road, Islington, near London.
VERB best wi
E offered for bedding purposes. With a flower
bei
_ epee Apon —
ECS hela m Pei aagniüque
lla vi lix Ro!
purple, also mer. 75.6d, Gloire
Kossuth
added to all geod au cimi
with pn
PERPETUAL. E — PERPETUAL.
Altesse impériale phas
Ardoisé de Lyon Beauté de Reeyghem
Comte de — — Bo N.
Bouquet de Marie Docteur het
Empore r de Mai Madame Marchal
San me EE Octavie Fontaine
Reine Cité EA- S0 3
Ambroise Verschaffelt Madam n
Orderic Vital Madame Darru
Dies Reine des Pays Bas
ts 58. each.
à NEW VERBENAS.
1 Mee Stock — of these nine varieties is in the
» ey can with the test confi
mend them to their frien nds as distinct and fest ow —
Targo trans e form
eppard, t rosy purple, white eye, large
pa cis large
tra truss, fine form and free flowerer.
y Hanmer, ruby, white i
frm the be sian hye arene cig e
rs, tak ur purpl hite eye, extra large truss, fine
Mrs. Leslie, bright rose, very large white eye, large truss, and
y red, white centre, good distin
ee ee ^ form, very ct and
BENS SNOWFLAKE.—The hite Verbena éver
fi — to Mrs. 2 —
it produces à much
a cheap rate.
petits perdon, 5 100 In A
Ca ee .Boucharlat of Lyons :— vum
Mons. De B
À Rougier-Chauvière f
collection mens the finest
this season on the C
rores e Continen: ES
Ne Plus Ultra
Wi
Rosalinda
Plants n on qe ready, 16 . 6d, ag
adame Jourdin, the Rek distinct and beautiful of
S Hookers A.
ma
bent
X vd hind ind
London, s —April 9,
THE GARDENERS’ ue AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ed, throat and belt very much 213
| hal
Sea
ssession of "m CARNATION [WE On
dob ite covering a spa EE yis PRIM
n wean HERB ACEOUS
rr
ed plants.
tities at at x prices, — of
[Arrn 9, 1859
OLMES Pr e the above
„per dozen, the new — —
per dozen in April. ris e
a a muy d 5s. 9e doz. es z LI
S oe Antirrhinums 4. 942p do,
cup 2s. 6d. js Cupheas 9, 6 to t
t „ 28. 6d, "
Gera dbetins Se, eule da, »
s, Senecio, L
upon e free ‘for one stam
Frampton Park Nursery, 2
PoE ND CY =
GER
ozen. Also FUC ANIUM
vina NAS, 1 1 955 bee 8 CATCEOLARIS,
EORGE SMITH, Oris plication
field, Macclesfiel cedeman, &c., Common Bide Hae
s EW PETUN
J OHN SEALEY can now sup 12
New Striped PETUNIAS, to um
pei ES ie m$ “ei l and
the o Seid Beautify)
d Clifton Horde Soa jim
saying that they are the fines 8 bay
uve " The seven for ll. est varieties jp
m |
ARDEN Ee. AGRIC
n SM. —St. Gi CULTU
free 6d. Prices of Seed on application ane les Pot
varieties of EU remitted free by post on to Pe
YAMS, 48. per d " rooe p o
SSPARAGUS 11 16s. per 1
Joun W. CLARKE, Whitt]
EW FU CHSIAS ci
n m EN
AN acid established Plan y" “Con
best an —— a
Governor-General, ¢ ditt — tricolor, Agnes Sorel,
Frederick, Wonderful, Mud Star, —
Fine plants
vit FRENCH ee ED GERANIUM
th flower buds and coming into flower, M. ‘Iss,
"SEEDL LING SPOTTED AND bi vmi CALCEOLARIS,
REENHOUSE PLANTS, 12s., 1555 — 5. per doz.—
Fine bushy grown plants, consisting "of the best
uch — v eleas, Le ema i epi.
a
3 oronias, Leschen: &c.; also
dm: ing Creepers.
OVE PLANTS, 12s., 18s., 21s. per "The best kinds,
Begonias of sorts (Rex), err dmm Aphelandras,
DE inillas, Vincas, An Ste-
hie s, R chospermums Dipladeniam ms, H
and variegated plan
AZALEAS, eating of the and leading kinds, with
flower. bode 125., 188., 21s., end 83€ 1 per doz.—A large quantity
of young specimens of watts sizes.
ERICAS, fine grown stuff of the leading sorts, 12s, 18,
er doz., in 48 and 32-size pots. A quantity d
-grown axo
TO THE TRADE.
0,000 of young stuff just tied off, in 60-size pota, 50s. per
100) IRE lants and very
ES, TYD FAS, x» GLOXINIAS, —All the new
dd leading kinds (strong bulbs and AE. of et Van
Houtte, Verscha: Y Ped iw a 6s., 2s. per doz,
i Maio
CARNATIONS Aun PICO
AND CO/S POL E ck the ‘above
ee tin favourites is probably most extensive in
the Trade, and having for a series of y K o
tion to their cultivation, n the
varieties, they are enabled to offer them at the following pm
or fine, stron, ell rooted plants.
True old CLOVE CARNATION, C
rlet . ditto ditto,
e Advertisement,
PINKS. —The finest re — show
Fine mixed border PINKS, heed ei E
xor foedum —Our exte!
the first-nai Vil jaPMBUME is this season hei
healthy, and eam established in pots, price oí
to 12
| HOLLYHOCKS all double fowers, and from i
best ostia ities abe. . A
NEW PHLOXES. E ANT
above beautiful showy "tribe o
ing t the — and newly pare ee varieties from i
y be obtained at 10s. „ puri e P
PANSiBS.. Wines first-class show varieties,
— — fiandaorüóst of (BE new Jang?
6s, per dozen. for®
new Po Belgian var ago
i, io M
doz;
Sam —
LOBELIAS.
groups, viz.
superba, fulgen:
do. Milleri ; 3 per doz. ;
OXALIS FLORIBUNDA b ROSEA.
ur,
dangers
DELPHINIUM M
ANUM. m bie purple, 4s. per gr.
AÜBRIETIA MOOR REANA A.—A handsome, Barr rum a
producing at
winter and casi 2.
2
of the brightest tiae pet
Ape dozen.
pa
plai growth.
mass of un ree oe
LINUM ee
TRITOMA MEDIA.
y dos p zd
llow flowers, 9s. per cerra
£ Dr —A fine
GA AZANIA D IGENS.—Large o. 1
ozen. (E
STATICE MARITIMA ROSEA ee
Strong plants of ees Sone beaut of
n" bape ee - the ;
wers, 4s. per do:
DIELYTRA SPECTABILIS pur
BERBERIS DARWINI, flowering p ee
ROSE, 5 Fellow, 4s , per do:
NTS.—A choice co!
ozen 00.
of
Free to Tondon, 2 N
and AM
sony
ovELL & Co., Royal Nursery, Great Y
à T v A RU ee 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 309
S MANCEL FROM LARGE BULBS. GENUINE AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. — FROM LARGE BULBS. — | GENUINE AORICULTURAL SEEDS. A |f \HOICE SIOVE anb GREENHOUSE PLANTE STOVE AND pone e dee P
UTTON’S YELLOW | € = > saved 1 DICKSON mi BROWN aed E * A. C AT LOW PR cb
exclusively from fully-d rs a 9 Dickson & Co.). P opaa ratio! Man- 3 30 CHOICE TOY E PL ANTS, e, strong,
hich — a proved fo: Premi birra Seed | chester, beg to intimate Korg th > rre b eor vigorous condition, are offered for E viz.:—
Ib., or cheaper by th e —— 8 free to Tu parts, | all orders with first-class AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, — — e agens Y longifolia, vA. cine ae A helan-
84 — — = mittan quested with orders from m ch have Em saved by themselves or under their dra gata, A. Leopoldi, A. trina, Bar
s, Seed Growers, Reading.
INC’S m DE SITON mw deer STOCK.
SY SONS h choice stock of
Also a few b
imped Gloucestershire White Swede, Russian Hardy Gre
‘op Swede, Grant’s Pine Ap » Evon — of New
% de ve fs vhich may n application, p:
Lai al Berks Seed Establishment, Reading.
superintenden
Special prices ps large quantities on application. A PRICED
CATALOGUE is published, and may be had post free.
Manchester.—A pril 9.
AGRICULTURAL SEEDS.
* SKIRVING, Queen Square, Liverpool, begs
recommend to the Farmers of the United Kingdom
his — stock of the most 1 roved sorts of English, Welsh,
Dutch, and Swedish CLOVE pM n of the best varie-
= of WURZEL, CARROT, eus TURNIP SEEDS, all either
wn by him: self, or selected from the: pad reputed growers.
short prestiga cal list, with reasonable prices affixed, may be
had on application.
land, i t affected by frost, and | In addition to his neral collection of Turnip Seeds,
sapie od in the grount i t re til cod of Ma: "New | has, this — to offer. hre istinet varieties of the SW EDE,
uine Seed of this excellent Swede, price 1s. per lb. | all of encres e can strongly recommend as — E
farrage free for orders of — d upwai d gen 4 eerte in such critical Turnip-growing s M
VEY, , Basingstok 89, Seed | last two.
riet Mark ane, 1 London, E a ME The Ist is à new PURPLE SWEDE, Ve short top, broad
— leaf, rong dry weather well, ripens early, very good for
ROWNE'S wate wh DE, ream opped,
d by far the best ista while e
size, solidity, — —— matter e^ is unsu ea: —
seed is from the stock of T. Beale Browne, Esq., of f Salp
Aa whose assiduous care and —— Auring
eny winter
BRONZE SWEDE, medium-sized
i E P eie Jon. well.
r top, is the largest,
d * ERN d
he ve a PU
per, an: nd Tonge
these
Aue aly f
—..— — Y —5 sort known.
can be had only from the Advertiser.
ma
Correa ‘brilliant, Tents “indica rubra,
a
— peg D na nobilis, Eschites Pelle: 1A
ranciscea Sare Gardenia Fortuni, Gesneria
a, G. a, G. Sutto ni — alba, Gloriosa Plant Hexa-
tris cinnamomifolia, H. carnosa,
The following 50 CHO OIC ZE GREENHOUSE PLANTS, very
stron, d fine plants, are offered together for 65s., and 25 ma;
be selec for 45s., or any 12 for 25s., viz.
ssima, verticillata, A. armat: oronia macro}
Bossizea Hendersoni, Brachysema acuminata, Cereus
aldi, Chor cordat —.— nden:
s, C. varium] rotundifolium,
Chandler, Coronilla gl
D. Van Host, D: P
Fimizena, Dillwynia cinnabarina, D. — nni, Dracophyllum
gri n 9 gen ete = uniflora, — ter-
mediu ium, — — rum latifolium, wn
Gault — —— Reedi, ndi *
Isolepis meis "Kenned ya iem &lba, K. LT. . K.
andevilla suaveolens, Metrosideros
Chironi K^ tin nosa,
sata, T. Niep; — Pern
"pu l Hendersoni, Scutellaria
roa mon — Stylidium graminifolium, Stauntonia
pp
ed of
a series of years wi owe the perfection of this invaluable d ^s per E — Swainsoni Osborni, Tecoma jasminoides, Telopea
la, per Ib. for Permanent Pasture W. S. begs speciosa, and Tetratheca verticillata.
ARSHALL'S IMPROVED SKIRVING'S SWEDE. A offer his 1 of "the most useful PERENNIAL GRA 185 "Selections from the foregoing, when left to B. & B., will be
very superior — being large. . —— globular, and of SEEDS. The sorts selected from personal Lee o of - harged as as fo low
firmn The seed cannot be too suy growth and habits of the different Grasses pow in his Sto vt plenta; "20 405
recommended, as evi - — Jb it wis saved from 7070 rre = — this system he has applied, wi within 12 hha piren 24s. to i
SDa. oare fully. r Ib. and other varieties a few yea any thousand acres, whi have given Greenhouse plants, 25 5 varieties
Savon URZEL, all kinds, 94. 15. Sti All kinds every TID pre d 1. — quantity e c "d rieties
TUS 5 eee eee ae 01 BRITTAIN’S. NET a and SHAW’S e of at the
- E pletion o Prices and Catalogues of which | able manufacturers! price GISHURST COMPOUND for
d ste Tis N l Nef Hiodgti: FOR THE destruction of Red Spider, pat ealy Bug, Scale, &c.
7 fuck GP. 1 " SWEDE, ETC. EW ova ALS AP. LLOW MANGEL, | Goods (20s. kia upwards hay to all — in London, or
introduced by us two years ago, has n thoroughly 2 N — n London and Norwich, on the Colchester
ETER LAWSON AND SON, THE Re A AN ros mended ith pe ct confidence ds
~ Queen's SEEDSMEN, &c., 27, Great Ge: of a remarkably vigorous growth, — "nei shaped ro 8 AND BROWN, Seep and Nursery ESTABLISHMENT,
Street Westminster, re respectfully request at- intermediate os th en the Lon; req: — Sudbury, Suffolk.
tention to their vi muine Stock of the E i FCC
LX has produced from 5 to 10 tons mor n any other | Y EIGATE SILVER SAND, best p for Florists,
above excellent Swede ; also of t]
PURPLE-TOP SWEDE, both of which have
been selected with the grea
have also a very fine Stock of the KOHL
RABI, or TURNIP-ROOTED CABBAGE,
dos
Trop — on the Farm is a good or
own Cm
Jat Suinhdeld Cle Club — cw TR — so perai jaN on the character of the Seed as in that of
Rabi was largely grown last w be relied oi e Turni from its great liability to degenerate, it
2 ate forth ya the irrten and Mangel, w. wi — ‘these roots do requires the most seru — care and vigilance to produce
not su "3 blanks where there is a Stocks that are every Y worthy of confidence. To atta
CENA ding a “and all kinds IRE up or d the s = rra ee che
are
ser Foots, “tes oy go scar tn ir it to = aridus kinds: and we believe that what are now offered will
ve the most. perfect satisfaction. All the ci
& Son have also selected
t-rate Stock of
wiser WURZEL SEED, which they
natural
ean confidently
& firs
th, raise:
recomm or Bulbs, and in the h.
saved with iem. ut care, — SEEDS d vay — the S , the strongest clay soil is always selected for a con-
tely or in mixture, for la; wn Permane: A siderable portion of the Swede and Yellows. This m i
xj &c. : T sin T Seed materially increases the expense, but
P.L. & Son have to deliver Seeds free throughout ui dom satisfactory system than the one usually sont,
—.— and . Establishment, for all | viz, sowing c rando stocks o cile in tfe, 5 after other
value. d gue from to tne re plants, , loe ch uy d ; ae
i 8 are not even su hosed t zh geh — innin oreover,
Nm and all other Seeds, Plants, mds e dar j t the eal fle cung
ATUS minster, frequently ciere to perg prolits eapen prices, so
RAL aa Mere - that a strong ci YEG 2 pedi ts Sorti. We
ETER, LAWSON AND SON, THE Do x do. Pacey's 261bs. to 321bs. per bushel
QUE SEEDSMEN, — renuine ITALIAN m e. vis
Reed of che aluable kinds of NATURAL Hom e-grown
nep or mm NATURAL 2 eal —All the best varieties
— ac y^ *- down Lawns, Bowl- The Stocks o ye-grass äre the select
E ing Greens, "gum Grounds, Cemeteries, growths the Ato X and being all dii — hea
en the economy of using such in 5 2 foul chaffy se
PRICED LISTS mayb however cheap, is a — apparent Our imported Italian is
.. tion.—Perer Lawsox E Sos 25 Great rad from the usual source, ani always un faction ;
em — while the home- grown is the direct ported
proa P 5 wu eee seeds the
ins having n dressin; e
OMAS AYRES, ca 29 every k and GRO perio of sc of pU sper unusually clean and fine. Tu eel selecting the
Sede, — 2 n Boch y on in kind of — 3 ^ ail rape 3 ork he them EA erg fully
T" ripen
xg ALSIKE CLOVER, and other varieties.
MEL Dealer in didi
l^ Flower Seeds, Fruit Trees,
Shrubs, and Flowering Plan
o “le
x]
te:
» markab!
8 5
U. T
se T
SWEDE T
YELLOW
i n TE
In cription
* —
tl
~ a. the: ots
s. partial toc! e
such, we 05 for
— kéo
s our own grow
ulbs di
tock,
'astures, b)
rai:
a muc!
and takin,
guaran
PER
Do.
N ‘evel
ee
OWER,
pen
T. 1 E TRAD
Coni SHARPE has still to offer, of his own
saved from the finest selected stocke—
LONG RED MANGEL RED 1 eae GLOBE
YELLOW DO. TURNIP ron
YELLOW GLOBE DO. GREEN GLO
ALTRINGHAM CARROT Lime ag TANKARD vus
Prices given on application.—Wisbeach, bridgeshi
AND R. STIRZAKER have T3 otfer — N
: E PLANTS: = Drum-
of so "e or pickling, 5s. ;
ly London, 255. per 1 17 hav * a
of the following extra fine rooted well-grown
"An Common, 1 to 13 foot,
Berberis aquifolia, 2ft. 108. p. 100
per 100 aglis E
lanrostinus, 4 flowering, 15 in.
Yew, English, 1 kt eue x
per
Lancas
m Writtle, sex, ks his
friends tha w ready ae
of MANGEL WURZEL TONG
and RED ORANGE, all
; LOTHIAN — te
ME ROBT.
Agrieultural
"RED, LONG
fom carefully selected full-sized roots ;
Eo CEIRVING'S SWEDE TURNIP SEED, and uu
D — CABBAGE — The Mangel Wurzel 1
D — Turnip 10d., a begets. pee lb; pac
- A reference ex —— d ——
HOLLY HE
Foa SANG anp SON:
E 15 Fir k -
m i inch rd —— er 100. ios high, at 15s. per 100,
in 185
B
looking than the twice transplanted, but have of course
hundreds of very fine twice 3
at 20s. per 100, Carriage paid to
LARGE BROAD-LEAVED SCOTCH TARES.
With every other description of See
— * PRICED LISTS of which may be had post tee on
application.
W. DrumMonp & Sons, Seedsmen, Stirling, N. B.; also at
85 Deua Street, Dublin.
is m 338 placed in point of railwa:
— and constant traffic to a
G
accommodation, t
the principal eran in ‘ine
(via Glasgow), almost daily 7j the chief at land,
thereby insuri 3 — Be of which.
except grain an hri n
EADOW AND Im TURE, Gi GRASS SEED.—
The great difficulty experien b BE Gentlemen
3 about to lay down Lan the selection of
and ——
the
e pro)
quantit; + or pa
brated of such a guide
M Fan In
prd pecia a few. weeks sao ie
— estate 1 believe to be o
the crops of Wheat an: perdona have 5
Grasses last year it would be e fabulous by man;
Amine iti bici poseer e. ve 2 to ADDIS Seis to
e
= japon thet gi
7 1 8
to som
send the same to gentle
Ma n ter of statute acres to be so
EDS for PANE
Seed Warehouse, 68, t. George x —
to or ye Mio Lr rre change of SEED Talavera,
Red Nursery, and Ap 132WHEAT the best sorts for pon
sowin;
Che a: Thanet, Golden Drop, Long-eared Nottingham,
American, Hudson’ s emm Melon, Banham’: 3 other
varieties of BARLEY.
Canadian
Potato, H. Poland, and Tartarian OATS.
GUN eee weighing 68 Ibs. per bushel.
Samples and Prices e rg
„and 89 e Mark Lane,
he
His
| Gardens,
and Scotland, ra — steamers
and D: — — t the kingdom.
JER
16s. per ton; less quantities, 1s. 6d. shel; deli vered
to any London Wharf or Railway.
Mould fay Pad or — quantities.
each; 6d. — five ho ot
8 255 in Maje Swi
London, S. E.
GENUINE
Gia WES IN By
PH BAKER, 1
having dealt upw: ius of 20 z
* n best article for destroying the Fly. 1s. 4d. riy 4
r 10 Ibs, 1s Post-office Orders payable Stra nd Offi
“Old Kent
ROLL TOBACCO 8
GTH TO ToBACCO.
GENUINE TOBACC UT FOR FUMICATING.
APPLEBY (Foreman to rs. Ivery &
urrey), takes this opportunity of quem wi
e above
e Surrey),
and the public that he is now offering
— „ weh d — price. It is now V obi in tind war roi ‘abs.
ach, a ah r lb. A liberal sped betae d —
For ee fale t that will guarantee its quality, see
Chronicle, March 5, p. 189.
ine t Iron Pots for fumigating, 3s. 64. each.
All orders to be accom 8 with a Post- office Meri
HENRY APP Dorking, Surrey.
payal SR
Wis SOT ESERVE YOUR HAY s
RICK NOTES New and Second hand,
At vg pé eid oe BH ond |
d West End,
2, Duke Street, Lond:
32
S
PRETTY TENTS for Lawns.
RICK CLOTHS, Second-hand, very cheap.
NETTING for Fruit Trees, Co.
West End Establishm ent, 32, Charing Cross, S. W.
I DOMO.” —Patronised by her Majesty,
Queen, the Duke of N e e for Syon
Grace I A ke 5 D oem dis for ME j
Lindley for the Horticultural Society,
cal Sod,
nce of Ealing Park, and — Co! er, Esq., of
Professor
Joseph Paxton for the Crystal Palace, Royal Zool
late Mrs. Lawre:
Dartford.
PROTECTIO M COLD WINDS anp MORNING FROSTS.
“FRIGI DOMO, 7 a = — of erm sod UI keeping Hair
—— .
A THO whole an
Trini tz tae rn. "Street, City, a and of all Nt —
“Tt is much cheaper
Ts
than m:
Eus IINE
pleasure to acknowledge the recei orit of —. ollowing buama
20, Strand, London.
G. GLENNY, Esq., the celebrated
310
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
EE . r Ey ROTWTTEREG 6° Oren cee
GRASS SEEDS ror PERMANENT PASTURES & MEADOWS
` [Arrn 9, 1859,
THOMAS GIBBS & CO., Corner of Half-Moon St.,
THE SEEDSMEN TO AME
“ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND,»
1l "that their MIXTURES of GRASS SEEDS for Laying down: Land to s Permanent NN
ae
pee to inform the Members of the Society and A
nowready. E
AR.
MANGEL W RYE-GRASS.
R MEA
Ed ; MIXTURES for Improving Old Meadows and Pas
ITCH
ET Directions for Sowing and Management will be sent with the Seeds.
MIXTURES for PERMANENT MEADOW
roth
and PASTUR — yA suit diffèrent soils).
FIELD LAWNS, CEMETERIE
ADOWS, GAME COVERS, "att 5 fe purpos
$ (8 to Tha. y acre
TEN GARDEN SEEDS i in a Collecting
allow Globe, Orang: be ue EA Italian (selected, very fine) | Carrots all sorts
Long Bod " p x > Dickinson’s | iieis T » d 2,
Imported Foreign Seed | »
ton — Common or Annual | . »
Silesian Sugar Beet Pacey’s Perennial | Common Turnips „ |
ALL KINDS OF AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. .
Price Lists sent free on application.
unknown Correspondents.
HA LF-M
Reference or Cash — — from MOO St
Piccapnnix, Lonpon, W.
HE GREAT VINE AT HAMPTON COURT.
HE SUBSCRIBE f the Royal
Kitchen Gardens, Hampton Court, are 3 to offer
muino eite. ‘mens and te — HAMPTON COURT
a rade si irn an 9i h pots, 42s. and
jantsin 9-inch pots, an
If TO large — s.
be made in 81006 xm & Son, Nurseries, Kin
HAMBURGH aes
HOMAS S METHVEN has on hand a large stock of
BLACK — 2 TER: —
Ls A Hor at 3s OU. each or 968. pe The usual
a es N xx As r —April 9
n, S. W.
AND AL SMITH wel. "ow in bloom Acacia,
„ raring — . d rl cosa coccinea —
ve —— in one 4 ‘is, Poohsias, Caleeo-
lias, Heliotrope, “ayaa Ca a . hybrida,
GAMER Ferry Rose:
above are healthy, 5 and "vell. an plants,
prepared for sending away. Prices 1
Dulwich; —
SUPERB DOUBLE BALSAMS.
Y AND A. SN are now se out seed of mur
8, which are — size, form,
y epit 5 aeir of flower, — of plant.
= 0 of nine separate colours è PU *
— "jn Pa "s "laria gis
; 2 am tealed and
d Kingdom. wich, Surrey, S i T
CHOICE GERANIUMS
ILLIAM HUSSEY to offer the undernamed
n 2 2%, package er viz. Luttér,
Zn, Dücy, King of Scarlets, dens RR "
Cynthia Enchantress, Queen of May, Floretta, Mary, mq
na,
ttraction, Kery Uv — poten A rd wie
Standard, Agnes, Eu, se estia, sei
Hort icalturdl Gardens, Norwi pr
ERANIUMS. — Fine, velata groat variety,
plants of — free — — ariety,
size and
and 9s per do:
grt somo-of, the — — 3 ww
Colonel Poissy, General Eugene
a, Jaeques Duval, Generalis-
8 Mochanna, Mr.
Y PLANTS, 25. E dozen.—
"that. abe unfall collection
upon T be
CALLICARPA PURPURE
od the ae ee the. above. (at (at
jos But A AND. "LOWE
60s. per doz,
numbers a considerable e en will B
NEW SEEDS FOR 1859 SRS. PARKER AND
CUTBUSH snp SON be respectfully to MEL Leu ene m
te that oy + PRICED — ALOGUE OF 4 and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOG
R SE
N AND OTHER FLOWER SEEDS
s GERA NIUMS,, Show, Fan AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, e
ga best FÜOHSIAS grown,
pg. Be ED the. List
he novelties of the . —
inel in w
Show ind Fancy ki
The above Lists forwarded | in exchange for one postage stamp. ** 3
Game E SMITH, Tollington Nursery, Hornsey Road, Islington,
DODENDRONS. N
OHN WA TERER'S CATALOGUE. OF UNRI-
"A HARDY SCARLET AND OTHER: CHOICE
RHODENDRONS, as Exhibited by him at the Royal Botanic
Gardens, Regent's s Park, is published, and will be fore
warded — —
e
NIE AND LATRD be show
which they warrant a fine s
100 Pansies, in 25 sorts . 5
100 Hollyhocks, 1n 25 do. — ale B
0 Phloxes in varieties,
Selection of. the above left fig D. &
to the Trade —17, Frederick Street, Edin
is recommended as a work of reference, as it
D —— 755... —
e American Nursery, Bags urrey, near the Sunning-
date Station; South: Western. Railway. à
NURSERYMEN,. SEEDSM t & FLORISTS TO
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN.
NEW FUCHSIA —
Ext 5 _
. Taal
fcm D uam
has y
its character in every respec
time in 1857, uc prov ed pin in 1858, and has mainta;
m N d — at -— 1 p per plant. ex pus free, if dd
sending onton
inclosing two stamps;
acoares
YOULL & o8 ROYAL NURSERY, GREAT YARMOUTE
CHOICE FLOWERS.
BUTLER & McCULLOCH'S
pond CATALOGUE OF SEEDS, £
— AS ANGE
out, where it will produce some sa brigh
LE glass beads.: 4 : origin mal plan, with — — -— .
whole winter. April 9. rare species and vi t foun
NEW CHRYSANTH logue, now ready and may be had free and post paid on a . : gaved
2 : , and VEGETABLE 5 the crop of 1858, E^
SBEDLINGS oh oe he most eminent, growers. & 0,
described, thar mow may also state that the Sardinian correspondent of Messrs. JAMES er vei
which.is the largos in Em 3 — I Picotees, ee given such universal sa this
. rey itt 1850 Er minu V rmi aud appointed ue his repr 11578
Willian Street, near Ham „ g aie al Laeger 1 Kn
YSANTHERUMS CHRY NT ME Pitter B. f charging the lowest 2 ^g Catalogue s
j ^ tà the Gardeters Owoni of B. & N00 8 i
` H. 2 RM Newing- 8 ee (Oorent d X - —.— 5th, h * f Be Rika ig in [emi "and. Vegetable Seeds. L7 :
the Clirpsanthemum in the British Empire, — Naa marly ee oof ees — — Hot up, te TU that, the ee :
afténtion of the lovers of the above beaut fal antumn flower to he saves to B &/MoCorrLoen. e —— quede choi ib were eS m in the abundance of its :
ne . earum n , thestock of which amounts to upwards or the excellence of its arrangements,” us add, that it yields 5 qi os
0 A $ x f 2
J.H. B ean supply stron plants, one dozem for 6x ; or five ME me^ E E tiful Annual Flower Seeds 75. Gi. | An.Assortment of Vegetable nnn ie 1 ro g T dn
—— ss ráni 80 N Se Mead ty, for IL: or ^ Ditto 21 ditto s r H Peas, and other Seeds in pra * ps i
vario * wo ^i
for I.. 102.11 1 LR dior PMP ON ö in Eloy o amma ERE aa PUR, of “beaut ‘Biennial snd-Peten, . mir +- ii 12 quarts 2 : Y ;
variety, fo 50 varieti Ditto 31 r ditto
t wo of each variety for Il. Strong amid d * boautifal new Ditto 24 sn E 112 - —— aie ditto 2
de dd e the —.— Gedo Nulli, 5s, each, ready, with m" ^ = 5 6 Ditto Peu 5 aca pita
al allows to tlie Trade; * emus will N lower Si and vegetabl. 31. 1s. Carriage
— on the Chrysanthem
)rders payable to J. H. BIRD, Stoke N Newin: gton,
y attended to. Catalogu es on application.
ton U
— . = Scotland, or
BUTLER & „ McCULLOCH, Covent Yes | Market.
FANS
TIC
Apart 9, 1859. THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ud
MANG * ^ E i UR 2 E L 8 E E D, Fit CHAT ATER om now sar supply fine x
SUTTON & SONS. SEED GROWERS,
YELLOW ni 8d. per 1b. | LONG RED
9d
RED GLOBE . eI : LONG YELLOW ..
Cheaper by the Cwt.
READING:
8d. per 1b.
9d. s
EW SORTS OF MANGEL WURZEL.
The Stocks of Seeds of : r Wing new sorts being limited and in great demand,
gio gh be sent in good tim
r Ib.—s. d.
er Ip.—
SUITONS NEW LARGE YELLOW | ‘| "MORTON. S XELLOW GLOBE. T
GLOBE.—Thbis seed is saved from large roots selected, — s d Mon "ds — MEM m . 1 0
and will produce the heaviest, erop of all the Mangels 09 co
[Prosuming. that this superior Yellow Globe Man- SUTTON'S FLVETHAM LONG RED — —
gel will R be preferred for the main crop, A heavy cropp ery fu r.
we invariably send this sort, unless the 1 0 All kinds of stock thrive remarkably well on it. This
— — (see above) or the pen expensive is muchi d by the Londo -keepers. . 09
ribed below, are mentioned. | [Presuming t| superior sort of Long Red
will be preferred, we invariably — — unless
SUTTON'S poren ORANGE GLOBF, R
Ve genorally award tho Pins? Prize to this t.. 0 9 'SUTTONS LONG WHITE—Swe of |
FISHER HOBBS'S bote BAR. , STRATTON proved RED GLORE.
Deep yellow, fine shape .10
The Sorts porum us. * are mame m be sown in d ic quantities jii for trial.
N. B. The 8 . 1} Any and € T. p If. g Alat "ad e tg 4 g ki ds. and should not be
sown till the last week in April or the first week in May.
SUTTON & SONS, Royal Berkshire Seed Establishment, Reading.
n E 2 | - 2 T
JAMES CARTER & CO., SEEDSMEN,
238, nhe i HOLBORN, W. C.,
EG to call attention to the 24th Annual Issue a their ENCY! CLO — gp OGUE a
ecies and varieties of Flower Seals
GARDENERS VADE M
isi den, aih a comprehensive Calendar of ribs sagas for
to recommend the following selection
&h month throughout the
No. 2 mo of 12 extra fine varieties of d ag abus 2 M K ls. 6d.
12 superb T : o. E
5 beautiful 5 deut poco 2 A | a
16 selected h Dwarf German Stocks 0
s. ea e Imperial » ps9: w
d Camellia-flowered Balsam Vice : e
Mg ` Rose-flowered . 0
m bene eee, 2 Picoteos, 6 vars., 3s. 6a.
" 1 1 „
1 wie e gs MB
— SA — . FFV
i 5 — 12 su £ wu». ee i
: 12 Zinnia elegans MUS TE Spi E
5 farine Plants in — 12 varieties, 28. d.; 25 es 5s.; 50 do., 10s.
f Per pads. . d.] No. Per packet. No. P.
M p err ag 6| 918. Humeselegs: 5 Y: 1457. A e eee
40 a. — n x 5
$ ) pomeea hederacea suj . 0 6 1474, i is si -
4| 948. oma hederacea superba eines now guod 0
6 “Macina 1,0} 1490. Salvia patens ae |
6| 949 » atroviolacea 1 0 | 1490. „ Splenden 0
6| 962 * ad de len 101505. Saponaria moo rosea, new 1
6 998. Kennedya longiracemosa . 0 6| 1519. Sc hizopetalon wp . 9
10 1032. Leptosiphon ary: oe 0 6 | 1562. Solanum V |
. 0:6 | 1046. m colchicum se 10]|1565. UM iim : eo
ur] | 1048. > speciosum aj . 1 01570. Spiræa Eea FA PA EA |
0 61067. Linum kermesinum .. . 06] 1589. Statice Bo — 3 0
0 6 1091. narbonense — .. 6 1594. „ Fore Lid
$ — n oe us speciosa. , 101607. Strelitzia Ea
g - 9, ‘formosa .. * 1.0 |1614, Swainsonia K i
: i 1122. L. Hartwegii erelestinus, P 1615. - m olia E $
^ new .. dt . Tacsonia ignea .. he Mer |
«< 1 04 1188, nanus albus novus, new 0 6 3. Trichodesma zeylaniew
- 0 % 117. Marianthus earuleopunctatus 0 6| 1644. Trichosanthes colubrina ` D
-= 0 4| 1181. a Barclayana ker- 640. Tritoma Uvaria .. —.. ..0
0 6 mesina .. ay ae 0 6 | 1653. Tropeolum Lobb’ Géant
-. 0 61204. Mimulus pl. sp. et var. .06 des | es.. ]
+ 06/1217. Myosotisazoriea . « 06/1854. Do. do. quet um 1
-. 0 61222. iosum. , -- 10/1658. Do. do. huli HS d
20 0i A 1223. i bum.. 1 01661. Do. do. Triomphe de’ Gand.. 1
0 1242. Nierem Lewis , 101662. Do. do. Victoria Regina .. 1
- 10] 1246. oa a perdo a 0116 7. Do. speciosum . ST
- 0 6 | 1262. Œn — aig Veitchi 911688. Verbena hybrida, mixed ^l
1 01265. dx Drummondi 0 | 1699 Victoria Regia as 5
101293. Oxalis corniculata fol. var. © | 1708. Viscaria cli rosea alba. . -0
+ 06/1296. „ tropæoloides .. 0 ITH. „„ oculata Dunnettii 0
. 1 0 1315. Passiflo: barina . + 1 0 |1720. Zauschneria californica. Be
++ 1 0} 1820. Paulo piani estes 61737. A E ,new .. m d
` 8 1331. P. emon Hartwegi d ^ 1740: „ La T MEL
10. 6 | 1771.: Carnation, double, finest mi 2
5 0 1332. „ ‘coccineum .. oe + 06/1772. » Por 1
$ 0 | 1333. cla E 0 61775. Chrysan’ Bur-
102882. „ NMurrapan " elg : ridpi
s.: 1.0.) 1858. Petunia vindicineta 7 0.61776. „ beautiful ay
. * — sym vem 8 nova 0 61828. extra fine ..
E F . 1 04 1830. Hollyhock, mixed
++ 0 611877. Bhysalies ko . + 0.6 | 1850. nk sh elegans
. i 0,| 1389. Pleroma s d .10]1804. Marigold, French, new orange
+ 1011396. Poinciana ai rare . 1 01890. Nasturtion, Ps spotted
10 Portulacca ellusoni earyo- 1891. m Thumb
1 0 phylieides — .. + 0 6} 1907. Pieotee, finest st double ue
Em M 4432. Primula 8 de Maids ti 1:0] 1909, Polyani anthus fine.
. we TEMA fine - 4 1910. "hee * e yellow
1011452. ‘Quisqualis gla 1969, Virginian Stock, N rose .
" to. wate tha in nena from the above the numbers in margin will be sufficient.
led post free upon application.
LI & C0., Seedsmen, 238, High Holborn, W.C.
ts from his
for Mie ok uel n
See — CATALOGUE, to be had on eae
urseri A Walden.
ES Y HOCKs.
Celebrate - Newest
FirkRaT- CLASS
Fixe SEED;
ILLIAM CHA’ PERS
Varieties that will rake wel
ditto dit
Ground Roots according 25 colour, E at
Seed in 2 separate — the Collection
6
From varieties such as Pourpre” de Tyre, Memnon, White
| Globe, Hon. Mrs. H. Ashley, Canary, &c. eed, s colenrs,
the — ction "y 64.
Ditto in.6 separate eolou urs, the Collec 0
Seed fro m 20 of the best varieties, . per pkt. H 0
2 :
duni mixed, also a single variety 1 1
ET bove 255 be procured from the Nurseries, Saffron
Iden, Ess
L HOCK
> SON. be at „ the n
HOLLYHOCKS, nis h have been sele
ings. PA e e Me of ordinary
plants are strong,
si
BRISEIS Pav) arte , ale pd of good s. d.
form, spike close - eo
—€— HAVELOCK by scarlet,
r of **Scarlet King,” int à close Spike anda Aree wore
t ;
2229. 5
ET
RED
S B A
. t SS SSS
S (Pa ne fter —White,
splendid spike .
5 a —Pure white, petals thick, ‘edges smooth,
VÉPRUVIUS (PAUL).—Pink, large flower, of perfect form
and ppee substance
ZENO (PAUL).— Rich plum colour, with silve very edges,
flower large, spike good ; new aud distine
The Collection of 12 varieties ‘is — for "ab As;
named sorts, 9s to 18s.
4 ings im
5 r 100; mixed Seedlings, 10s. to
LLY HOCK SEED, 1s. to 5s. per pac t free by post.
omak * CATALOGUE free by pest.
-
ooooooooso óo
2s.
Ds.
H
Also
30 —
H ux COUN TESS OF HADDINGTON. M
puce, dark violet eye. perfect form, distin
PÉNTUTEMON TYNNINGHAML — Aan — bold
flowers, close pyramidal spike, first-rate
PENTSTEMON Mrs. LEES. — Crimson purple, pure white
KS at, large foc —.— and striking.
HO
MAS MN N has much pleasure offerin,
5 e em Ard home EST
e Ear! n, inghame, a
seon them 1 5 decided acquisitions
— nts 5s, ene N i :
rong plant and Leith Wal dicont to the burgh.—April 9.
— — s Cinertigs P "
uc DA as, Gt i
ies, Chrysanthemums, Hollyhocks, Phloxes, larias,
Heliotropes, Stove, Greenhouse, g, and Hardy Plants,
at very reduced may be had on i f
It contains ons of their splendid new Seedling
| Hollyhocks, Fuchsias, Calceolarias, Verbenas, and Heliotropes,
to be sent out in A — May, and are unsurpassed.
Gill r Richmond, Yorkshire.
SEED
n esque.
wincing proofs of superior ^
with any house in the kin, dumm
CED CATALOGUES upon. oW
PRI
7 and 38, Oxford
and 58, Abave Bar, 8
The Gardeners’ oe
SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1859.
Keke coe
MEWHERE about the year 1843 3 we
3 ie Pee em
et the ho ortiultural row, indy flow:
leaders, perse
beyond m mth),
Hang. mot en 1 ad baie
in whic , durin
i
ening
A
ig the ‘night, there is apu a con-
312 THE GARDENERS’ — AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE [Arrn 9, 1859
it lent, but the, the further evidence we re
temperature; and unless men are] surpas sable. The fruit was excel require. Garden
. to fancy th at they know better than foliage which . pedetermines whether either | 1 A or particular tna sera ni !
Nature herself what is beneficial to plants, their ruit or flowers are to be in gin ion, icai : 18 wea xod a shurst solut may be,
common sense ought to tell them that in forcing i ve 3 bor = were alike, | they can only do in a manner rari
0
mpera ! |
or i should be so uncommon an Lape 2^ prie n our n were F dem ais
Some observations made in the garden of the| They were as gre ondimen :
Horticultural Society a few years ie place this Augus, mip 80 full lof ge rich ap. that they laid m 5 that the pinch of a on |
in a striking light. Certain pany were placed | about some hours in without | fingere = ual to two pinches of * |
for several |
2
.
a See
weeks in a stove, with a 92 night Bagging. EIK us hope that this demonstration of | fingers pen
` temperature—suppos wed to Rit hd ee fol- the effect of a cool nig ht temperature will m : E 2
lowing were the rates of growth in i "s " impression upon the minds of young g udn T E in em some of our readers to know
Night. E | whieh its vast Leni importance dem ands. Le t some Kidney s just forwarded by T^
Fig VD Ep qs aba Scio Trane VOR | them remember, too, that it is equally itolin to | HAAGE of Erfurt, under the name of the“ Un
Willow .. e 24/1908... .. 21.55 all kinds o of plant Ez zg Runner idney ean,” appear to —
come „ = — with the New Zealand Kidney Bean that he
nca T Now that mildew, green fly, and all sorts of so much noise; thus confirming our original .
BT other pests are seine t visit us, the time seems to this * novelty” was only some dint
s to say, the ey grew ige st by ni ight as Ja arrived for once more drawing attention to sort not Mri es in England. Let us add thy
: a 1 fon the — Tite is obviously the substance called REUS Compound. The sample from the same eminent seedsmen of da
e when these ee; other pa preparation thus named is a soap of unknown «c Errum Menu es or Provence Lentil” is my
wero gr omni M s ih exposed to the omposition, capable of being readily dissolved in like a bad sample of Dr. Ravcu’s supposed
night te — of England, the result was water, in which state it is applied with a syringe | between Pea and Lentil.
My c did erent, as will be seen by the following or sponge to the plants infested. Although, the
| winter is far from being the best season in whic
f iorta ucl 563 : THE NIGHT mw n s OF FORGING
Willow N us $17 982 from many te Benni * before us that it
FFF appears from many testi a j
Hop es ss 0e 4208 7 109.55 has already aequired a very high value in the EA eny „ pe lease of
Vine 25 1 . h m forwarding for your inspection a e of
. un 7. estimation of practical gardeners. That it really and also some leaves and eae tá 9 the srt d
Jerusalem ege or $e CR. oon 05. 73235 kills red spider, aphides, mA bug, thrips and ottiene which the plants attain under what may
— We iden mms scale, it is Eden e to doubt in the od ak. the | would regard as very adverse circumstances, Naty
reports of practical men, among Ad om may um ears ago, in my little pamphlet on “Cucumber is
experimer jos mention Mr. 5.2 Jupp, of Althorp darin " man high night ten-
Wa adc By ES being carried all ft ue who we all know is the last to endorse anybody's peratures zit was therefore with some s surprise that Isr
: — the result remained the same, the total statements, unless he is satisfied of their exact as rule that to gro v Curt
growth by night being 119.07, by day 337. 85 truth. That being now to ppearance an dn
Rs e dern md e established truth, the other question is whether it of 65" t to 0 75 "b night. 5 md I rate —
stances only ly made 1 inch of growth by night while has no disadvantages—that is to say, whet wn]
made 3 by day; but that, on the contrary, does not substitute injury of i ts own for the tlie. fne: ind more frequently w 55° than above i
under bad artificial treatment, they grew equally The of others. during the night, while on more than one the
day and night. T “ore inevitable consequence of this The very fact of its being so speedily md 2 night heat was below 50°. I wil ye ot subject mip
inversion of na is immature or unripe animal life is calculated to raise a suspi icion t by stating the size of the lear
wood, with imperfect st ill-constructed. 2 and a a it my kill plants as well; and this appears to i | and the girth of "the branches; but I wil say! hire
- feeble con nstitution, incapable o the fact | vigour i beds and open
of g falls i tommy n 5 a x ially, | In our original notice (Nov. 6, 1858) we stated that in the dog days. did not consider the leaves s
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wood nor fo:
“tape of den un 7 rcr nera refore B Mie irn ta epe Tas * i udi i à use was never shat
m e of deve — 5 their natural beaut rops in a g ass of water are beneficial to the | t for the wam f
ng those extremes of temperature tr, or of a | colton: Sy this subject we print by per- ES Ann fag as
l to them, or of bearing the fruit for which m wwe es 5 h ENTWoRTH BULLER the follow- perhaps son rud be disposed to think the
they are cultiva NAS iag e 12 057 from that at N in ao. seis +h he gives Pre advan tage from the construction of n of the b
e ment of a paper in the|! 725 fmt noe : or from ern Tm I will deseri
t Ie Hd ts ural [eie as pre ht 3 Theory| ." "s I have been trying i new n called | the dnas — it receive n
and practice of Horticulture, E was Gishurst Conpom d, late ae referred to our | roofed structures built for general purposes + Pines gc 3
founded upon a long series of o made columns, perhaps the results of my pere My for growing anything from beddi i
by Mr. DoNALD, the present age 3 oni ecl ier panoan Although I by no | Orchids. Hes house “pe feet was i and shot
at Hampton Court. If indeed we Re ue a little isparage what I 8 ave no doubt will south, with 9 feet of gass im, in cement
what end paias 7 feet on the north side. A brick in phe
. find that, like animals, th 5 8 to be very. careful i p apii ibis e upto plants with | 3 feet wide passes along the back tmd i
2 periods dapa. Winter to have ^ —— _— foliage : E pu ried it wes excellent affect, is Ege it — two 2-inch pipes 11 ey remaining P?
; wi Ara Er: rdenias an o eure meal. pii , and ere is a pathway "i
omne tare edes edes ith rselves, a period n , Dracænas wid llias for 1 do as is devoted to vin Bottom mne for hee Pines »
E 5 ; abit wi! 2 240) ak think that it is es or better than me old füdy tained by fermenting materials 0 mid a
tem upon these natural | habits. When we attempt of soft soap with a little t e and mos; heric heat is peer fii tne
it we see Vines Lee es wood and colour ie coat more efficien cn i we es s mm np wall This m
A * >, e, . E sc
less fruit, stone : ng to stone, Cucumbers | thing that I have ever tried. Ifo ses 2 "E in 8 forate the —— miss m a air, and by ag
a gummy and barren; and so of Water an efficient cure for green fly on reed Roses; similary Nm board which slides in » B
with all other ts according to their kind. In rites for this can on “hit and miss ag eng b
fact, when eners say that plants under such Purpose. I ea recommend its use for Ferns, T l arni e move ement from a qu uarter ese opening t l
s are “ drawn,” thes dE the | applied it to buon species to destroy t} aT think opening: These 10 thé pipes wide *
truth. The firm organisation o a plant is only | 5 ie bari tion of Dicksonia antarctica — . all be observed are Sici opposito b to the Post usd E
3 day, and the ie (X night is merely | i s ir passes into the bo 3 aisi
stretehi whe
out- : ou e
drawn MEN inl „but yo sl e of this species is not pou killed. Iam told by the top lights, but these
pec not had an | winte in
purpose " the
e trete 25 a Exeter, A il 1.” | Of the glass, I may say, oe
+ paper ` es, Which uestion to eee then is, what is ag ig fe | use a quarter of a century, and to
bers 5 manage. ep of the Gishurst Compound? bas this | from 3 inches by 6 inches to
: ^ : : : point mons i
ae A ee DU the Cae vation " spondence before n us — . — as tho corre- (ke show that there 3 ho
T : 0 ey are scanty e h ment. i
the Cucumber in pots, &c., published” in 1841, | valuable senseri fr REN Prati ath bs € Pat | Well, in the early part
m that d; MrirpEw Tm i bil
mong the a a :
and in that little TWO 13, is the filli iic Tod ) much. Rive 1 gallo on of Dm 3 OZ. is clay), then a turf wall was b
: We have that
ente will sbi no inj ong KE. the NS. A . he size of a small hen's ee d the back part Was
of 55° duri night: injury at a temperature eee t In a quart of water, a ai = ao a i brush 5 loam interni ied with 1925
will be more vigorous di d contin WE with 4 which had been prev
ig v. 8 an np io nue longi ar-|à li toa e is too s os ig vis dd. a 9 — tel As soon
; Prants Ib. to fficient heat some 75 5 Poor
was maion a us recommend the present | Lad. er . to a gallon sufficient heat s ordi
f A ET Ed “Danity Nevill, 4 us eived nothing more than
paper by Mr. Ayres to the serious considerati toa Pig Juil. receiv :
i nsideration of | 9 e gallon.— Bellis, Horton Hall Gardens, | reel —
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6 oz. to the gallon for the most and Melons, viz, never to
TOW s > ey ma sore: T-W00D cha: mata
possibly learn e ix perusal il know v ot tois Dorothy Nevill. M gs p de Lady ale always s ical v sporis e Soil
own failures, or at all events now whati
ode s ep ms is the. ond foliage.—Bellis, Horton Hall Gardens; | y
4 —
the rule. The dine n of his 955 As with F.
8. erns.—
Mr. AYRES Mindes was un- The ensuing summer will ice supply all| aout of the leader
Arm 9, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 313
and if Lam going to cover a rafter 20 0 feet long T always that means. From this — and the tardiness often ill-formed and short-lived. Upon these data M.
adhere to it. I may have to wait a few days lo ‘Jon nger for | of the D it never has been, s it likely ever to Regel, the author, condemns grafted e p P
first. et than those who encoura, e Quo ase be popular as a means of propa sation: In all the large altoge ether, If his objections were founded on facts the
paitfulness 1 ur eee red Rhododendron culture is an che d verdict would be just and reasonable rms but they
in the plant ^as w will sustain it ina Kulte state for full feature, grafting is the principal, if not the only means are not. With an imperfect 1 of the yt of
ww without ceasing, and I have kept the same | employed for i — ng and perpetuating the nume- the Sikkim ntroduce d, some
pm a bearing state for three years. I have|rous hardy hybrid varieties. po Selen, m^ ihe f th
{i November; | a few species, some of those from Sikkim example,
on the 23d January the first fruit was cut, and since that are bey peer by cuttings of the ro nie wood, ena able puce to obi iate the evil.
— T hav 1 ad a regular succession of b p sandy soil under a bell or handglass, and Ult bids it will no doubt be geri 3
not long, for I do not grow the long kinds, but of my inest ne a t gentle bottom-heat. But, as in layering, * e a byona Rhododendrons of 30 ears’ stand-
own —.— Black Spine, which is quite long fate the slowness of the process in producing established
for table use, and of greater daily importance than an pamos compared with grafting, and having no compen | bet ween scion and stock can "hardly be —— may
ion
4 X
hp ?
te
E
al 2-foot pue oae s, does not recommend it for general dr plead successfully ag
will thus be seen there has been nothing parti- nem | Per rfect unions, short lives, and stunted growth. And
cular in the Een of ve. Lager they have had A me How y t was | of those from Sikkim
a comfortable bottom heat fi water around the r$ and echoed ie a few oth es, p — present equally satisfactory catia although, of course,
pipes in the tank into which the roots soon introduced grafted, ee were, as a rule, . lived, as yet of m uch briefer duration; but there is no reason
mselves, and I have bai that a ng of dung-water unhealthy, and i in every way undesirable. It wou uld lea what falli Another
put occasionally into the tank did not do any injury of M. Regel objections is that no stock at all can
Asto light they have been M on the northern | cuss the subject in all its bearings, * even if it were | found for e of the small dwarf species Fb ently in
slope of the house, and of heat I have already spoken. worth While to do 80. But we PM: blen assert ee an 0 however hardly tenable, rer if it
hese plant no good | wer
ea! e
more than usually vigorous and fruitful would be erben who has bestowed his care on — worthy | eiple so widely and usefully applicable as È
regarded as heretical by most cultivators ; dt the|of it, will be found t To show | known to aa: With reference to the stocks most suit-
result show: s there is a shorte er and cheape r way to ~~ kind of horticultural knowledge sometimes coupled | able for the Various Sikkim Rhodode ndrons, we shall
i ith an objection sn grafted ‘tanta; t
than ot pope TW g hear x — instances where ein tor collections The best season for grafting the Rhododendron is
for a l Pe ht temperature as connected est k i under the | early spring— February, 2 the command of heat can
with the eh t e but are the benefits 3 tat al ime 12 should be seedlings. It be had. It will however, be perfectly successful in
emfined to that n as soon as the
shoots of the current sea-
son are matured. There
whole range of the vege- . antages
table kingdom, for autumn grafting, but, on
with plants that are natives the contrary, many dis-
of countries where advantages, the chief of
nights in the growing sea- which is the necessity for
son lose and warm, I protecting the plants
believe our slavii at- thi h the winter; whil
tempts at imitation those grafted in spring
natural conditions are nox- be sufficiently established
ious, and not warranted be d to the
inductive philosophy, for g 3 2.6.
until we can command th supposing all necessary
brilliant conti treatment has been timel
sunlight of the tropics, it and skil rfi .
is perfect no: - indi les are
while she union between
tock a
tem ‘ d scion is in pre-
1 U 1 a. thie is an.
tries Grape d gress; and gr is
: cum to the greatest per. 2 ecessary in enabling Ha
fection, we y say / lants bear e
Gra it to have a A ES aE If the tran-
nigh! in ee of 70° f sition be too rapidly or
to 80° in "d y effected, the
at what — experience ? la yo leaves
I nut. ans . 1 qux ^ 2 and otherwise dis-
diner who prided p
uence the health and
chly fi f at eai the plants —
unches o considerably damaged.
NE me ho -neve mvenience of treatment
coloured stocks are
dressed a brother SM: 1. FIG. 2. rio. 3. FIG. 4. 1 mg In exten-
“Mr. ben oom, J cannot tell how it is,! at Lean eed ht t lt ti ti ade; but
+h 1
Poterie. grafted Se are not sometimes |all m orent purposes the ny is the more advisable.
found: but this usually arises epos: accidental pian d however is not m until the stocks are
nd n nothi rhat ed.
stan a
4 d to do with the peeps E the system. There three principal modes of grafting,
the house in which my Cucumbers are gm wing | The chief cause of such unhealthiness arises from | either of which i is to je anaes as circumstances may
ere are a few Pine plants, small s suc ckers giv me in stunted or diseased stocks. If vam be unf. tel
1 =
In
— s
PCS EU tunately seem to require; if the scion is merely a small point, as
the autumn m Ed 857 iat | employed, and even ! i k lf 3 a young seedling plant, choose Fig. 1
— m e summer of last year they were en- | with the scion, we believe Am past the art of man | (wedge grafting). 8 a shoot or two of a rare kind
ly wit! ithont, bottom heat, TEA ‘the chamber for to producand healthy and ‘cle alent ty with the com- is to be made in ny plants as possible, . 2.
i h as qui ma until the end of September. | bination. much care is necessary, and is by the best | (side grafting) will ene the best method .
2: I hare. sin several of usd plants had showed dd cultivators g aris to the raising of and preparing the when plenty of good sh be had, adopt that illus-
ave since cul ral small but excellently | stock, to the subsequent stages of the plants|trated in Fig 3 (saddle 3 In Fig. 1 it will be-
3 that a
i CUm eg spec: mas, E an n Enville, à in January weighing progress — s
Be a uo eee 533 The advantages of grafting are important: its dis- s above the stock. It is of importance to
Vines in th f e: 2 5 gay ews Frontignan renee E: a nominal It affords a ready and n his i in practice k produces a large amount
and be desired, 3 have sot thee n A "ees [RS undan s for increasing any given 5 it | of cellular 7 matter in e ess of its union with =.
; Were fit to pick the first week in Marc aes d if the latter exactly fitted | the incised |
and
This I think is proof sufficient that a much lower more overing, in me Jd eaten wal if not of | the stoc this
ES temperature than is usual may be indulged in, fl
and it is also a proof that
x matter
i mportane e, it tends in inerease ens profusion, = in a comparatively imperfect union with the addition
eedling state characterise | of an unsightly scar. For the same purpose & por-
. deners need not be | the best hybrid d i- | ti
harrassed ont of their 2 Ph rest gardeners | the best hybrids. . An thane advantage are as mani- | tion of the stock, 5, Fi
X e CARNIS ate era- | fest and ful in ivati r S 50105 á
> tare ` 1g Pp | fest and as = the cultivation of species as they | covered by the scion. This is perhaps not
: Which is q onde ary and in all cases answers | are necessar na increase of varieties. 2 But for x picti d i re i
ee Purpose ex cept that of i inreasing me coal | precocity in ad by grafting, kar oct d few of the e y M.
veh Ihave thus detailed the 8 | Sikkim x , Rhododendrons _ ver 8 e flowered under but it Seuls the less practically
my fruit were produc I e monk 6 «Femara their | with other minute - “nortan mate
conjunction with theory ean
p
r thought, Rn Paes it to
ech Er Resa ri g cu Mator Many of th e VON 80 4 were tice in con
x mself whether he will “go and while in a very youn state transferred e |
3o likewise. W.P. Ayres, Orchardleigh Park, March | their roo ts) “4 ater to stoc jf em ee tN g^ T iie
hybri
speedy, in a few they are yet waited for.
— RHODODEND REON —No.
W. Since she, above was written we hav een the
maT the ordinary kinds ee ue February number of the Journal de 11 dee
varieties ud 2 em ost zen increased, and {pepe d 8 d of F aterial is Cotton
some form or othe, be raised, by se Pee grafti ing is in whi ch is per from a Germ an periodical reiterating — — the 5
ting these iq eo a peti " heat :
is ae pda but in N cuttings ou s to supersed ente as the ott
per 1 as P
Pa 3 e oan enis. XR. of timited a m being E EET oed nisl Tar die desirable. The g =
" ni mi jiave mparatively | plan nb considers, present various more
35: it can be increased to hui outa ent by | not, he sys always uite wel, and ey ^
314 THE GARDENERS . AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
s vim
in less time on the greener and more succulent portions. ) great gardener w e Grapes are always a shanking, ]
And
whose Chie uae ‘eine in his Ch erf Rouse.
NF er r while grafte so j — a es Ims wil =e Whose Ca mellia 120455 ver or — he [wi
hose — if ens graf. is | tuml "S UR . I wono erw oen i SE
io d under Mr. Figg fire will be ady € By di ime
sald give 1 work. He the d caret stirring it with thoi 0, Dour ig
by name Reuben Hard- | boils up again. When it does so ha Spoon until i
third
rarely unite dide t
ks wz ched to a rx Bh)
when grafting i t
artificial Lus altogettier, the hg abe
deferred for a month or six ter was a S0; à - d i i
hand, for his aunt was rs. G.’s and | a Vet it si me —— i
af an nae T ould be at te ed à d. oe Pi a peus an industrious young man, I asked m facts if I -a pint, after which it must be — reduced to
0 i take him on for a few weeks; 4 1 y Lady to free it from the scum. It is then red
M À—— and if he is not "afraid of not at a the worse for a tablespoonful 2
ON FORMING AVENUES. | work you may h n, for Pm afraid that poor| being added. ie may be eaten with toast, cri
(Concluded page 289.) Robert—that was a Lie man ie: — his By browned. It is essential to 3 that these
AxD now a word on the selection of the trees; and with an n ever be fit for gar arde en ork a should be attended S Ift Pee prise be pati
another on the atm n — Before your plants are more" My us al o the peor =) bli adu en t 80 it i if the à
bought 1 a sho + the nursery where they | her. So one day ked R ut vinti vit managed 1 oa
grow. If their last years sot are of sufficient length, | Mr. Pigg did zc aie eia k ; Clitheroe
u
- To be continued). might
fi
an Ie
admit them; if not, re out; and he n me that he kc in » the Fiera: im The dre § u il The
The consciences of ode ser — en to the south may be with a dibble, sh ved them in and stampe ed the earth | Wednesday : std Thnreday "s C
hard round 'em. š was singularly damaging, it may bei
straight "mae for aught I know to the contrary bt 5 t night? Á pens says Reuben, | record what ‘early plants suffered ‘an A. md
ised | “ hss id they were jets enough, and didn't want; and | fall of b
en the foreman mentioned one day that the roots | the 30th ended in a pa = ial thaw v OF rain, and wa
> all is em up in the holes he told him that it | lowed by at. least vii frost. The following
d LAO | DMAE ane poarta i as DD 928
nris noo ilit m
^ dodi fio brought them in waggon- -loads |
e e to my labourer, who received them, yw cinths jedes o like Mr. Figg.
n ^ yd for my master ine on a 1 ima, in full bloom,
: e poor Fir tre rees from year to year des ene t Might if it Bn beti well Worked; Hast MT: injured ; its flowers must be the
are not worth th nursery. On a cut as deep as your spade, drawing the ec well hardiest known. Early hy brid Rhodod enon he
return home, — What bing had been 8 bod | forward, so as to leave a nice appo Meses to the d
me, I ordered the greater lled | cut, slanting a little towards you. ady b R ee ei, badb und
fr wood. i re mixed with a little E nid. Then wed, tough. Bot e R. ciliatum, in f
à exorbitant
— of ii 6 high, were obtained from à rumm a ow, whic vas m
The f Wel 1 says T, “when you have to turn out Dielytra spectabilis was crushed to the gromd ai
b Forsyth
8 2
As 130. ad ^an ‘due in the nurs ursery- | silver
a him his choice, go down on your right knee, and with your left bloo “Dont od in full growth
t to e d against me for 137, or to band lay the Hyacinth against the back, pressing it| were erushed to oe groun A and some — —
ja — He Mie Wee eS Dad to forego | gently into the mould so as to give it a little hold; a by the weight of snow; but I cannot disover
th i an al : Ps
don' ith your rig gle b „
= the roots straight and comfortable, and put over them | were absolutely so encased in ice that it was pulled
€ wi : i
ys to a nurs
your own MR and see it put into yo D double handful of the sand and mould; then put off with some difficulty from each individual bul
‘eart. Then pay your bill: leave half a crown ^m that the border till every-| This applies to all Fortune’s rarer varieties, a$
beer money to the men, and order your man to depart. hing i s placed firm, so itas psi Hyacinth can't slip. as to the old Moutans, and I t| ink it ii
Lastly, the atmosphere must be considered. If Go this manner till your roots are all planted. to note it, because from their appea
vitriol works are in the neighbourhood never think of | Then dy ely. gently, wie Aes whole line the mould | morning after the frost I thought their recovery in.
planting an avenue. Let me add, that I consider e border, mindin keep the top of the possible. One called Ida by ppp
establi and gas works NM inches below us rface. Don't tread them | early white one, is the most tender, but even this
eousis to vitriol works. They are all of them | dow of means; give them a good | uninj buds of ali forward,
The climate of e emg th milk-warm water till the soil is a ani er. been
d (just except at the sea side) has always been ; then draw a little loose br over the puddle | I suspect they would have suffered more. Apricots s
le to the growth of trees. But now a m and the job 125 done. Afterwards yon must * big as Walnuts were totally estroyed, and the m
i e has taken place in certain districts. | mething to por frost, “hoops covered wi th c pil one tly much injured, ning perfectly —
an e towering ers of smoke and do very well, id T bro pe Yulan (conspicua) in , flowers
—in what are termed the Seton eed. mat made ty soe forwards well over ihe 20015 or destroi H . Soulan brennt flowers just expanding, T
p. e boast and the bane of f tl f that Only mind to give all the air somewhat i injured, but not destroyed; Laurstimus n
el ben tibet fertile 2 that ever the eum | and sun you 3 ; J. N., Sevenoaks, April. —
me upon. Steam, the grim promote: ont do harm.“ When R got Pla he did 3 ill prol ive from various } of the |
spe a d sudden death, palaces and gode Seam 5 toa him, and his Hyacint} very good |
7 — riba Lord — of Englan m
is 8, Flora and Pomona
dn tly pale. Th ition. better 5 "i Hom e Corres spondenc
t of poor Po Mother n" n Phaéton, ash | Rainfall.—As Pus ave been favoured = the records | er
1 set the world on fire Mos n driving. of Dalton's gauge up to Dec., 1858, I venture to send | hon 5
called aloud to Jupiter for help, and said sh an abstract. The result is curious :— een shut up for 1
e as ocated— z | Total mean rainfall xs years .; 26.01 Pereolation, 8.06 | made my first stroll over the ga
: rao terius tolerare vaporem, » n essi 26.82. „ 11.20 tain what ‘mischief has been ri
n pee en e * w 5 years, 1840 exposed to the north, and whew
: tng aon Ù hea ao there vegetation pls oi hr her » » "ea d jim the pred EM "S
= ” 6.88]. . te ‘
: du be , es ne of black; follow. „ i. s yenen, 1350) dim mI just where this draught is
„eh. habitum temporis bujus habe.” 1854 .. » 86 | weathe: 2 m
(qa Vales somo favourable change takes place, the lands gy ni o” ui MR REM CIL sa
ha — 1 soon ae unto The bei t nn in the period and the minimum mich hangs. os Font rera Fue low
nr province Seythia, described same 4:—Rainfall, 18.27; i 8
“poet — ; Phe iiini 1662: Manta e Mean pe a
tellus,” colation (1836), 17.75; last E rainfall, 20.50; A Mus he Chrrysanthem om
21. pereo- of November ast, which settled the collect
lation, 3:21. As fr what Mhi
d you of rail m p
any one who Knows anything “ra m cuttings in a niglit: ong ~~ caen ie ast, Le
n $
Such +
illo rho: eva la t E * in such a e nose made t ^"
Vuleany Ceres and F TIS recollect that Flom and | and permanent, There can be no doubt that — tive poet LIT 17 i
„ t been know e the stock
do travel hand in hand: d here HÀ ud stock of — — v
Waterton, Walton alton Hall, N ery V ald replaee it all. J. C. ©. | rather moist but d are Mae
E 8
2&8
ith —__ ir 5 eq ander 30
, i li
MR. GLASSES GARDENING 9 n eee Lig, which hei unh
j 27. More about faded — —— th in one Dictionary at least (Bailey's) bs
how to rund e Kaen E venen rm told her | word what oai otherwi i bing in one
have e been on aisit to the Mano sid she, “T| you Bailey's definition of the wor
you. know there is
erspoon, where | en
ae d TE garden, and a eve i ok ae oras E
3 And on id Me. Fig, the iden, | Samal i ett into d Bos is ^t seen A
very sucessful s È 1 the Hpyacinths; simply "ihe putting oatmeal or flour i Hee ee
but he said he had tried your 1 d and it would not im 5 * — it is
to t
! ‘oof 0!
in the icd on't. Your Ladyship knows Viane eating oatmeal will fin t
TU qua "i vadens a OPER jue, ere breakfast that can be prepared, and which
ace
m ET : y DEN: in my Lord's big one; oce ect igiene ja E — 2 Pe ae of peut order under s warnt d
Figg ers pie éad of By Bit that he can't | grateful flavour. — make mil a r err | te pr gehen
lasse, ls dy T Lady, and she v walked into ofA ap am nd witer it it is h " 8
wa twas a not to follow lithing in the following manner:
3 3 : i spootiful of ; :
thinks I, that Mr. Figz is the, it a spoonfal - 4 "
— . E - —
e Bas, Libocedrus « chilensis: top shoots ; distinct hardy y shrub, with shining | gm we cannot praise its style we may give it creditor
rocarpa, g Messrs. — ay eying good useful practical advice to bonam mot
ity ued back; P. californica ditto ; P. | son & "Co. furnished Griffinia Liboniana, a rare plant y in the manner of working but also in the choice
urt. Prinos lucidus, in leam ; the | with prettily-spotted leaves and flowers tipped with of ve tools.
Li the 1 gone, but not s eriou sly | blueish-lilac ; Messrs. Ivery & Son, of Dorking, ex- = Ssrs. — have announced a new Encgolo-
es Shrivelled, especially hibited a small blue-flowered Hardenbergia ; $ o niver. “4 e '
pr toting ^t which look scorched; E. G. He nderson also had Rhododendron Blumei, a appear in N. at lid. or monthly, price 7d.
eneral Jacqueminot unhurt; but * Jules nt with small c i on err flowers; and Penta- It will, doubtle: ess, be wor E y the reputation of the
ve th a:
8
ji
me
*i
&
F
£
B
in i same ce . We
3 the 15th of March, and ne shoots |niaceous ‘flowers ‘Of Miscellaneous Plants Cut- practice of referring * fni future article for ‘the
i H. P.'s generally very y Tittle the — of Barnet, had a collection in Which a fime mass|meaning of a familiar word is more honoured in the
hearty as ever. Taxus adpressa, in | 85 Begonia Rex was conspicuous; Messrs. Fraser, Cut- breach than the observance. Why should Abele be
touched. x also exp — by |
e
Cin came fro | easy a
‘ured. Weigela rosea exposed s n and "Turner, and de Miner also sent Roses in once — the Abele is. So of ee which,
w of the — — vosmet, “but very [m ju Of Amaryllises € — enderson had a mo m r, is not à Hebiscus, but * ns
Le the fruit s, Nectarines and Aprieo collection which — t — nd (No. 64) 54) of a rich rs. Bradbury & Evans have & noed their in-
with a white tna 1 star, and of superior * or extending wa e 'applicntion “o ot the Nature-
Bir; ; "Y — Beurré Diel Pear exposed to A form ; it was — without name. Messrs. E. G. Hen- | printing process to Sea and Mi ne of also
Pied with bloom, and apparently as safe-as | derson contributed a mixed collection of plants, both in | producmg a Fern "oo ER in — — s of the —
; "Brown Beurré, standard, looks queer ; — and out of flower, containing many novelties, some ot of the proposed wi have been put into circulation
an's on a north wall 2 begun to push. But we which -— reported on at the meeting on March 23. | —* first volume of the Seaw.
ms wait a bit to know what amount of i inim — Of the more striking, not already noticed, were and on July 30; —
o fruits. Ch s ever, but hrami De la Reine, a fine large delicate rose-co oured |w mich will occupy only a single volume, are we believe
I doubt if we shall have any Plums near London. "€ of wem nt form and slightly cupped; Rhodo-| nearly re ady. These will form a beautiful set of Mas-
“ley Hibberd, Stoke Newing! n jasminiflorum ; ce silaifolia and hetero ti fi t
Veitch’s Early White Bro ecoli.—I feel sure that | mo mph, 22 e A elegant Fern- leaved plants,
when this 8 variety sh cue p become m more Arauca a glauca, &. Mr. Turner had awell- —— —— Lists REC omas Barnes (Dhne-
ly kn its merits cann tio of 12 Auriculas, among which was S Stowmarket f Delon sap re , and various
ourite. Its an ason is — a “early spring. ‘King called 1 Imperator, a green-edged — of dist. —— ut plants. Tte "i ‘collection of really
For the last two years I have grown this, t Messrs. E. G. Henderso eived ‘an useful uini Six of Dahlias appear to be new
others of pales Msg excellence, and in my opinion award for t three standard Azalea indica ; N Mr Turner S. Sims's C ony) "Catalogue of Stove, -Green-
it is unequalled by any of them, certainly not surpasse ed. for Seedling Cineraria Brilliant, a free-Hloom i e, and rom n very small 1
It produces fine db compact heads, quality, r its ri ich dark pple- | Mr. Sims eat — of — advanced to the dignity
flavour. If sown the last week in March it is fit to | crimson flower heads ; also for the following — Se ing of a volume, 62 pages being occupied by: descriptive
the first week in Janu and will iyiyi in-use | Cineraria Duchess of Sutherland, ‘a large bold variety, account of what he now has to offer. It is prefaced
. I. E. t i ow Bass
ary, & y :
icklow. in the very useful ultivation.—
ases.—I shall, with many others, feel upper; for $ eedling Cineraria Highland Mary, pure Brown's (Sudbury) Spring Catalogue No. 5. This as
1to Mr Hibberd for information respecting these: ^c A florets, purple disk; for Seedling Camellia |a list of Achimenes, Gloxinias, half-hardy and hardy
where best to be procured ; 2d, cost and expense in | Elea a fine bold een, smoot petalled, ‘bright pipet plants, hardy — Roses in pots, Ke.
wing; 3d, how they are managed. Any advice on rose-coloured € and 12 Hy acinths, mt ot ore common things we remark such rat
points will much oblige 4 Constant Subscriber, | show’ ariety ba well grow Mr. | as Arum crinitum, Calliprora tutes, Gloriosa Planti, and
. Melntoch furnished a Miel of Tulips in
Gall a ons Quercus-petioli.— —— —.— as Considerable variety of form and colour. To Messrs. phai Cy clamen — macrophyllum, whatever that
yet been co; ar. yt on — 1 s Paul a prize was given for s i of Madame | may be.
it is desirable "to record its — inthe Cambridge William, a Tea-scen pas — yellow D ET AU ᷑—
ical Garden ine: aul mm of 1858. pes —.— — — — —— — shown in Garden t
N young Oak gil ues eight e * cellent con — ing of the Horticultural THE Grove, ROEHAMP L
d been looking r | Society, i inst. —— where it was greatly STEPHENS, ES. — The jos e range of forcing-
an former mer years it ot likely t dat there can have admired. Mr. Bragg had a stand of Pansies, as had also houses, for sape this eum is sede ts A eing now in
qme of it in the. "ec before 1858. As this is | Mr. James of Isleworth, and peer A.H fi of thei miner tog
country o vi Oaks it will probably do very litte dish of their new Australian ‘Cress From Messrs. nit 2 2m erus rem — 0 ma’ be unin-
— here. C. C. N Smith Saft Dulw: ich came. Seedling ‘Cineraria Lord esting.
Andromeda poriolie — brio a slip of a plant Clyde, a dwarf variety, with bold — ud er Cucumbers, which are ga on trellises, axe
»- 3 first dis wech didus cupped dores of a deep purple crimson. ‘Cineraria |. grown Tomatoes and Figs. Both are covered with
xp It is it ei t aste s E f Perfection from Messrs. Smith, “previously fruit, which will be ripe in May. Bane, pots they
hardy | rub. very d character allowed to root into the bed on which they are
ly in vey eran int culture nid tt named Hilax, shown by Mr. Holland of Houns- placed; when therefore they appear to be grow-
AS for its K low. In to the foregoing, Messrs. Milne ing over -luxuriantly, their progress is readily
specimen, | Arnott and Co., of Vauxhall, had A aan Duchess of checked by lifting up the pots and P
ellington, a à e; Mr. Turner protrude j The
»
m if possible. kind with a baa
cursion to the e I dis- Camellia Lady Mary ` ein pi
my dg and et with several | with a 3 to be blotched, a cupped variety but This induces them to form Knit instead iof 1
bers ebe her and there, except one patch of | with ragged ls as shown; and -— W. Ivery of thus a crop is ob
n flower, and beautifully they Peck, Seedling Azalea Queen Victoria, a free-| A second supply of fruit g^ also * from the same
blocked. That it is a ro of this locality is certain, | € wering kind, white m with pu angle. Some other | plants in one season by th e moe n In the
d it 8 qm olia, ? 8 T. is it | seedling Cinera: rias, € renes &c. of|Peach } ops, the he cath of =
new eing indigenou: ritai i hael inferior uality were exhibite t sti T ti: Pi f
Westcott, Wells. |'Yhe plant in question is Andromeda MO. ———— : I ü ed nin poo 45 -
“polifolia.
n of Tre ee — Allow me to call atten-
tion to che "followi ing:—“ The system of stripping the
bark off the trunks of trees, for sx purpose of destroy-
rg
th aS
m
Notices of Books. Es of which, especially t those of Barbarossa, prom:
-
—
8
Br teirte Lisa Flower. 5, Parts 2 to 8 (S by) This | | been P aetised here with success — the case of pot Vines
fi WO: — i
hy
ing as now been gene ow advanced s that f s. This was
— s en umber in in the Champs Elysées dread opin of its value than when the first dec done last year, and this season mem are bearing fi from
Bib fact, 1 d y of a | appeared m^ p. 543, 1858). It is an account of our h Vine.
ilt em M “communicated to the Imperial wild flowers illustrated by miniature 3 dcin trees, w hich had got into in health through h having
Horticul seal Saclay i by 55 Robert. It appears that or Lupe at the option of the purchaser. ‘The |! I
oiy without epriv whole of their bark, not | figures are reduced A all possible skill from the old | of the Vines in a bed of ! The recensere
N pon injury, but even with plates of English Botany, and to such an extent that| with a view to improve the i vi to prune in their
À each plate parece d 20 different species, "These ds, then — shake a’ all soil from their roots,
i m of . Elms, for example, which species being arranged 1 to natural affinities, | which were washed fee y clean, a
15 Mire iiid | in di mam "more an one or | the vua cu m" young botanist capital means of remove orari ing that appeared a 2
ioi eee, t ^ ares aot ua ^ been fo ‘ound | comparing one thing with another. It is announced — trees were — retubbed ì — h soil, ;
^ E thes 2 5 stripped af their bark. that the Eie pod complete will contain 80 plate the conditions just and — — . are
N aes m ed — uk, M as ecc Birch and | and thus will represent 1600 different species. What bero co vigorously, and will evidently soon make
s pont "d it ds sufficient f 2 o * ain a similar would not the writer of this have given when a boy for | hez ads, , The Vines which o them have
Ei td b 3 y ias o make longi- | such a charming volume of natural history ! nis y they 928 MN armor
Ert AF Agent are a Wind of | hoec dis 3G volumes B what ing of ‘30 bunches to cach Vine. in che
8 S ui b dabo th this subject in the present instance is is collected into one volume | the Grapes wi ripe in May. n
out Jum, el s siha ades A petty only. e have seen no abridgment so 2 Strawberries are cultivated largely here,
6 Uy wel as this, e Calwer's wonderful . of | rummond, the gardener, treats them ev
a a
p if correct, promises most valuable results. fs br om ught t j| i5 er Dm ag —
- M., Court Lodge, Lamberhurst. fi ious C bed of dung
F ( fe. ini wman, Scho. Squar A E HR The el house, and when it
Societies. X ie s Wie treatise is not Der to point out to the warmth the pl
: oil colours and water colours 9 set
aae ee employed in art, but also to show how
ES domine, REGENT’S April 6,—The poner pictures are
: v EI. three spring ca hibitions took 1 ion that p togreph are
— edis me aye E a ux 4 pes inaccurate; wrinkles become farro
Ezam ndsome Madeira Musschia Wol- action of “the one Cyclopæan e
not however yet in . Hen- es; A i
shanties ri
» and table, a neat sbrub, with xcept skilful touching
2 ie nent Auenba himalaica, a — XE.
316 ,
— and fine s ens in flow Some protection, will |stocky. Seed sho uld also be sown
crops of fruit up to ku the 30th d when od o — for them. roe nd to o keeping up a supply of all bees ite
quently. Stir tj
x salad
the — of the following night did great * p d sig mee Se
7 h PINERIE Plants P weling their uit shou e | ground among all growing crops with t Of the
mg eb Sug QUEM du Post Covered with = — Ep attended. to wit th water at the root ; for, if|venting the growth of weeds and a 2 of N.
frui 1 allow Wg pes
p
i littl which it TTAGERS’ GARD
rs having got killed; Plums are in little be T is, fa easy Prepare a 100 for a few Febru ry eee
tion. On walls Aprie they will succeed the autumn m devel as Cabbage.
sary to 1 one to properly wate 15 tiert of ke bold penn t
bese having € heir 8 plunged; therefore En doula Potat Sw. ede Tu urnips or 3 oD — also be sown
ac not be intrusted to inexperienced hands, » A Sana taman ie Mad. e learn that Phi] l
i i ance amọ e
ping off. De hermometer on the morning of Ls EA mater every, pan — e e ed soi er for cu Mid wt do:tó Ail up Hindi ng early sorts in nem
is the least that has been registered. It should be |that are well rooted, whether Kultes or Mns ing stoc
remarked, umee that the garden here is open and|and keep the atmosphere thoroughly moist, giving) STATE op THE WEATHER AT CHISWICK.
much rer qoot Let cold north-west winds. Ear rly Peas air very sparingly on cold, drying, gleamy days. For the Week ending April 7, 1859, Mer qe
been Bla ck Jamaicas and Mon tse rrats expected to su upply "TE Ceim,
which is — D size gh Had Ne uts, 15
have k $ Das, April. Bg se ranis Sonne aie
— ge p half — one ly PU | and — into their fruit ing pots, and care should be exercised 5
frui probabl saved. to avoid checking their grow y any means, as| — maa nly wo
Boddi Plants, =s as Verbenas, Calceolarias, &., | this might lead to their fruiting prematurely. See to D e M
as spring z approaches are planted out here in cold pits, 1 having A balls in a rather moist state at the time of Jan 3 Q Rc
nd keep the bottom-heat regular and the Tues. 5| 2 | 30104
in flower. They then transferred to the flower debe moist and ogre 1 ms il mn plants | Piat, i XX
garden, in which effect is thus produced at once, appear t o have taken e fres e same IR — ——
and others are T 7 paio them ill be necessary in regard to watering and "ami I-Reer, fe 128388 | 65. i
treated the plan rpa acquire additional strength, bottom-heat, &c., in the case of those growing in the 5 d de denidy overcast.
but the pots ery of bed, for plants that are any size are apt to show ‘Vine; coer fine through —.—.—
Very icht.
fme clea a ane e; SEES s and hot
n
to other ntm and that at a season when pots are fruit at this season if at all c gol A Po Lads
usually in n great dem = INERIES.—Dire ectly the fruit i E and fine; S the wel fine; quis e Ei.
Mignonette, i in the form of pyramids, some 4 feet in | sufficiently eee for o p “this done, the mperature of the week, 6 deg. above the average,
“RECORD OF TEE W THER AT C CHISWICK,
t, is grown her e for "the summer decoration of ane bs m s stopped, and the shoots 5 806 70 o n PS During the last 33 years, f be dae dus Week, ending April g i,
as it progresses the side shoots are con irc ey 8 April. iis +5 $8 p Greatest eer
pinched. in—the under ones the least, the upper tedious, 2 Ks obs. the Yi. Give inside bord Se Se Be | which it | Fran | ala
ones the most, so as to give to the plants the pyramidal | liberal supply of m ater, using tha m the iuueni simu | eal aa E -
Shape. This kind of attention is all that is required to | stable-yard tank where i it din be xe ady iting Mon.” WHz| 533 | % 8 H i 1
have D imens of this kind, which are tly t quantity of warm water to render | fies: 13. 55.8 | 37.4 | 466 | 92 | 0.56 5
J Wed. 13../ 8 344 | 452|- 14 0.45 2
-admired ; bloom pote and. last longer in it about milk warm. In all cases, give every possible | Thurs. 14..| 573 | 37.1 | 475] 12 03l 6
beauty * dm Mignonette usually does in its or rdinary attention to the state of the roots, securing a little | dar 15 i 288 420 12 985 $
state. of doing so The highest t ture di the abi iod occurred
= >k the ground is cold and very unfavourable for the isi ehérm. 73 deg; and the lowest on the loth, dy T em Mig
Miscellaneo oots of Vines. bid fermenting materials hay n|
Vegetables i in the Murlels NE ius. — This sed on me bord the early house, the heat t onld | Notices to e. „
market, which occupies two large squares, "à well fitted | hol be allowed to pute until the a is fairly ripe, | AUSTRALIAN SALAD Cress : Eyripo. This is a very nice article,
up, and is covered in with the exception ope vides for. it is easier to secure a heavy crop of well swelled — l quite diront from com common Cres, We
-thoroughfare through the centre of e — eu Doc mec cod
the eastern 8 e arranged, in 88 localities, crop, and a ‘healthy root 9 5 5 is perhaps more im- pier oF of Pine y at ish o on, American Plants
fancy birds in cages, with try, including fow 18, portent Thile ine od is colouring than at any other| Britis u Winter Garden; Sw Hothouse and
sie, and turkeys; uae t kinds of vegetables, | Peri t the fe ermenting materials be Cultivator d store Botanical DH p eh
as well as tropical: bundant y requisite to F À
r4 with Cabbages Beans, fine Stone keep the temperate o e border at about T In ons SP the Horticultural Sets pul a is
Turnips, Onions, Garlic, Tomatoes, and Capsicums or Cases big ionge threat indio is im eee Gardening Joachin.
Chilis, Yams, Manioc, Bananas, ‘Tamarind, Custer | S42cession-houses, rendering syringing necessary, rain Lindley a er ve Botany wili teneh glorie
ced and Pine Apples. Then there were — nuts, water should be as gina: for springing with, asif water CHINESE 5 — : "RP. Y RE seedlings are large, of gel.
Pistache nuts, Areca — Betel leaf, and m any other ing lime err. apt to be polont and substance, and apparently well moh kina
vegetable produetio ew to me, all spread out upon disfigured by an l of it. Cane UsE—| oft 4
the ground, with the ‘ki nds of fruit t mer in season wae the fruit begins to colour syringing overhead MÀ ÓÀ stat viens t the ‘only bie ROME
Besides these, there were seeds a nd grains in alm 25 755 ust be disco ontinued, € ane egree of moisture ggling specimens x Sortie "The plate ate
and the aaan Dad. gcn de oe As to the Gishurst Compound, we T
endless variety, Lentils, Rice, Barly, 3 Millet, Maize, thi
— Bains s, turmeric, saffron, and numerous kinds of ay of water given to. the pomo gradually. Giv ou to a leading article in another column. ;
Indian grain.— E//is's Madagascar. undance of air on all favour able opportunities, | 2UG#S14 Ucxt: C C. Trent it exactly like a common Mf.
tie P g Essa was ripening fruit it i de pportunities.| than which it is rather more hardy. The best fruit is pr é
oplar.— Before Mr. Gladienx’s MÀ tis s pening fruit it would well to remove | duced by unprotected bushes in the open air. ci
ere G y Pianta Wil E
*
tru f of an — PANT (Populu us *#*8) Ig y [Be 9 fo a inde situation. Mors noche F e 8
be splitting info firewood ; ih ain a humid atmosphere. The old bed Aon Bt ger anie a eos
"unusual t. that measured it f dy ; ind 2 aro t » be preserved for mixing in compost aid for Neue Boi meus s Shak ing Verg ome When K EE
4 feet 10 inches ih i diameter 6 feet from the base, 8 AND A er acm eraniums and other plants in Shading is useless to trees or other eade in
4 S inches in diameter 10 feet from the base; at e NIME preeaby. M date. ee | ~ cocattonsiiy mod, not to proven Ha —. DIA
— 4 16.5 feet in cireumference, and stings een coer is in mild wea mice sunheat. There. — m o doubt hat pir PE =
showed 150 well defined — Official Report on Lake FLOWER. GARD bae panu PR S eie
Superior and dnd Red River. a y Rn enne. t of all herbaceous uns 1 a letter from Mr. Hands w
: "es ILN DRYING. We hav et E
S MENS done no — FA M Ar of hi piece lains of our “severe ro rite cism.” of r of his zesg 2
ri dd Operations, | kinds get into too large masses, and thereby pt all | wes equa CUN 5 e explanation Z
ensuing Week.) ee 5 in Lad prae Mas a Sow annuals wherever | ln, A W. mbil
uired. arly struck Verbenas, Cal i e
ab ep "hd de 1 may be planted out 2 or 3 inches a; art in be a 91 en, Bend the Adve somnents - wir
t Pere: ] m no plant suffers from | proper protection they will mak ; ns or Pass “Wve jo. nave. be px E
diei to Planted out it things will require e Ka, | middle of Ma 7 be See eliak C [Ae s Pint de tine naming h en Ens er eet trt
must also r specimens in tu vue Li qom S, m any,|or borders where th v removed 5 du ventre 1 3 taken an un EH
lave a liberal 8 5 e they will bloom a t once, a prt: soon] never have or could have undertaken a an unlimited a
ad — Tul Mio prd a - " ims p nu tnr ri ng t. this kind. Young gardeners, to whom US LM
manure, bnt take care that it is perfectly clear and not Me P sale b phia: sinc, thoy shoud extent tair olr
over E ind i ee e pho i 7 tiation t time — A a fall e ape of Pota- rag — they should „ the tone,
È it. t 2 cannol
TUR 3 trees produce gross w isbud or remove bard cts oe with ieu ill b ected, us IE examining amd hing for ean do i | vt Ti
together, and let the orar wet dale f eM Will be little later than those] desirable if we could. All we can do is to help P gg |
this will ind : A place; punto d in "Feb This, 3 TE dej
thi in ve Tanne by Solerating the piper cheer. Awe 5 el owever, requires a little UE hes c (i Itis „ t us at one ie:
ue ; "NU i u i Si 8 . ; ;
of stove plants in to Watering, shifting, stopping, e., layer thick on damp litter, and carefully hate; nel? |B p Narcissus major; 2 N- moschatus; $ N A
` in ye uon as v^ can 3 by no means be planted dig he T 5 o» E UN Y ay remove them of m oh laea
de : r — ine EAE DR Fee u disirut 3
Bagos, — End amais, Foti Clerc Vincas, i a) es n with sp vas or 3 in T g. than you describe, as soon as ien Rs pom -
ps 3 dd ver in es ara cove a i until t the second
2 3 rder “ti puse up a succession of clean you ; M ane vn the . succeed th nimes 55 ram.
: s i ee t at growing Orchids have abundance of| made f ae 5 8 sprin coli s
on eric moisture with a liberal circulation of | Micha shied . Aes : sen liter —
poi AS the up shutting up close betimes, | later, ch that’, lent Pi G 8388 s i
wy c rag O. observe mies in the Sprou eeks, d axe Rat m Saroys de ^
ME Ay order that a rm osphere for the in UN: dela Conti 88 ession. E Lu
9 y Pe EM : s Dendrobinms will now | Carrots; indeed 2 a be pete h tea
liberal ies of water et plants on | to smb
e be frequently Syringed. M. ove plants will | of T p d Yes Ces Ur MM nt
ern ü mixed greenhouse, where a med m | forward, also omatoes and Vos Pru led ca
cold greenhouse and the stove is observed 800n as youn us i ate 3 eo a
E Li Y the pa cuttings of Heaths as soon as the wood | new plantations Be mile Pu es vie — bs joa
or Fumigate wed ney an ipen: of Peas, an rt a 1 tak idc
8 p ake MR above ground,
1
A t d
; this is best done in a pic ees. nd
wo | Protect seed: i i
1 Some of 1 E things slugs. Pri d but Colo 5 EE
1 4 |
portance m emoved at this well to the early plants with water ; and if th they ar
Aran 9, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
mag
A »
R. TURN ER, 15 i pas T UT
PATENT Priz e Mit for Cru ushing Gorn, See, Malt, &c. ; Port-
THE
Scan able Gri 4 x d poi
T 2 horse-power and upwards ; Threshing Machines, Chaff
N E Cutter, Oilcake Breakers, rse Gears, Saw Tables, &c., all of
NITR a superior description md Ped ted for — Colonial and
Fo
reign use. Illustrated Price — nt free on application.
NY (LIMITED), SPEED AN ECONOM o Forme ers, Gentlemen,
and Ma set Gener, im, NI Na” = CHINE nit REGIS-
TERED HAND SEED PLANTING MACHINE, which from
CONSISTING OF TENANT F ug OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND. its capabilities, combined with strength, lightness, and PE
city, places it beyond a potet Its operative powers in
TRUSTEES. planting the seeds of Mangel, Carrot, Turnip, Parsnip, and all
SwrrH, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts. MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M.P., Western Colville, Linton, small ee, x nw, of equal depth and different distances,
Seana DIMSDALE, Esq., Essendon Place, Herts. Cambridge from 6, 7, 4, 18, 21, 24, to 28 — mie dee and
BALL, Esq., M.P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico JoHN BRADY, Esq., M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq. rolling. rend Ld er it an invaluable It will
EDWARD DIRECTORS. actasa nie 1 Price 5 X 70 U SW T
London Agent, MUELSON, 76, Cannon es
Chairman.—Jonas WEBB, Es Babraham, Cambridgeshir
puty-Chairman. omi COLLINS, dos Myddleton Square, Pentonville. Sold als hy by the inventor, J. Hoare, Old Fishbourne, Chi
EpwanDp Bett, Esq., Tottenham, Middlese 'RonERT LEEDS, Es sq.. West Lexham, t folk. enes = px
Be, Esq., Tetap ^ Essex RonERT MoRGAN, Esq., 72, Camden Villas, Camden Town. R. SMITH will SMASH UP a piece of his Clay
RicHaRD HuNT, Esq., Stanstead Abbot, Herts. GEORGE SAVILL, Esq., ingthorpe, near Stamford. Land, Wheat Stubble, the beginning ^ "d month.
Tuomas KNIGHT, Esq., Edmonton, Middlesex, WILLIAM COLLINS, Esq., 105, St. John Street Road. Gentlemen who may be desirous may then see his Apparatus
Bankers. —Messrs. BARNETT, HOARE & Co., Lombard Stre at 22 —A Card, mating t — . may. » 1 — by applying to
Solicito. ors.—Messrs. KINGSFORD & DORMAN, E 3 roses Strand. him at Woolsto . How
e sh Tult EE oor Mica SOE gE CORN PLANTERS
ut (5 Depositors) HOES, &c. Th tum in com-
iiis, 109, Fenchurch Street, London.—Manufactory, Plaistow Marshes Essex. bining Cultivator, Hors Subsoiler, Broad-
Ridge Plou
Share, m other eig ‘all bee ^ , Complete TL Ts.
Prospectus sent.—C, PowELL, Hurstgreen
THE ae beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultural Public that the following Manures V ASES, PEDESTALS, SUNDIALS, FOUNTAINS
are now
BALUSTRADES, EDGINGS AND CURBS FOR FLOWER
ODAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL. BORDERS, SEATS, de, in AN viale Silaou Stone,
at reduced es, for the ment of the en, the
ODAM MM BLOO D MAN U R E FOR ROOTS. Mansion Grounds or rra — or — Park.
For Priced Illustra apply to FREDERICK Ransome, at
O DAM 858 8 U P E R P H O S P H AT E O F L I M | Stove Works, Ipew Cannon oe Westminster, S. W., or Patent
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents. 51 TD TN Au rti air st zie
m ANUFAOTU m
variety of articles for S et S all of =
V y beseen in use at Worto t: plicat 5: o the
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &c.— Manufacturers Bee. Vk A. ON G U A N O. U z L!
| and others engaged T making ARTIFICIAL MANURES E The present price of this valuable Manure is— Gardener, i hio NS — 4 TS of ANT
nstruction pi their economical 12l, per Ton for 30 Tons and upwards, ALS GRUERAL Dan pxsiMcEN DARE
MO. — by bos plying to J. C . NEsBiT, F. G. S., 13l. 5s. per Ton for 1 T m up to 30 Ton HE GENERAL LAND DRAINA AND IM-
| é, Principal of the Agri and Chem al College, | And, to guard against the purchase of adultera ted 9 95 PROVEMENT COMPANY : Offices, 52, — ** ent Street.
|
„London. yses of Of Soils, Guanos, hos- e of sn oe —— purporting pone Tunis equal Henry Ker SEYMER, Esq., M. P., Chairman.
phates of Lime, Coprolites, 8 ee of Gold, Sil ver, and consumers are recommend apply either t1 d 1. This Com mpany is eof Land, by Act of Parliament to
other Minerals are executed — and despatch. sates A our agents, Messrs. Gibbs, Bright, Co., of Liver- | facilitate the 2. 0
Gentlemen desirous of — — instruction in Chemical land Bristol, ot Fe dies uen ofestablished MOREM ia whose Erection of pore „ Farm Buildi and Labourers'
Analyses and Assaying, will find ample facility and accomm mods onesty and fair dealin, ng they may plac feiplielt confidence. Cottages, and o Improv vements on all ,desrintions o of Pro-
tion at the College. ANTONY GIBBS & Sons. perty, Siete eld i or Co ihe or tá erg bay rtgage, in trust,
y.
ONDON 8 COMPANY, removed to 116, * OF THE NEW ee NO; IMPORTED 9 85 ls Iu 20 e is any in 8 sary.
Fenchurci jd 8 C. (Established 1840) have the R LEASE FROM THE CHOW thing the experi-| 3. The Works may be designed and 5 by the Land-
MANURES ready for deliv vite with KOORIA MOORIA GUANO were made late in the | owner or his Agents, or the Company will undertake the entire
CORN MANURE for SPRINGTOP "DRESSING Season, and under adverse a tine es, the e a improvement by their experienced staff, and advance the
URATE all of wc confirm beyond doubt Professor Voelcker's repor ney required for the works. Equal facilities will be afforded
MANGEL MANURE guaranteed | No. 4 —— 5 W uc Royal Agricultural 90 5 s Journal) ng e 81 ry
age HATE OF LIME quality. | — ina hein cal manures, applied to Turn he expe-| 4. The whole cost of the works and expenses may, in all
BLOOD rd rimental field, A back f" pod the Md. and had. no bene- — be c hny ged m the Lands improved, to be repaid by half-
In nseq! the reduction in the price of raw material | ficial effect eit; ther alon onjunction with phosphates. yearly instalments.
the — to lower the price of The Koort Moo o ANO is essentially a phosphatic | 5 The term of 2 — 7 . wata irri besos
fae Lime, and to 83888 improve the —.— taini ing sufficient ammonia for roots, end, with a f 1 we E. dis HISP the instalment ts wil tie, rank
bern : 8 talxture of d one-fourth or ammoniacal guano, cannot be excelled | for Farm Buil ee oa tate de improved
; oes Gibbs uud Bone) SR o anid Wales ali red rt cs, RM Pande 8 to pay. vers
ani ivered as rted, free from risk of adultera- K
Sons), SULPRATE ot ton." Deeply i ported, t
1 k of rofit i: Works executed by the Com-
UM Liomesttr of onodirigihg e i * —7 rot is taken on an only, approved by x Inclosure
e re og Cem k Los mmissi ers, ——
4 116 Fenchurch Street E. C. EDWARD Purser, given such inereased facilitios for shipment, that arrangements Jë being anes A AM A Oc
= ha — Purchasers
CR Mey 4 eg for 4 can Y,
. | supp ith suitable quantities from cargoes now on sale, RI TURE anp CH [EMISTR
ORNWELL to inform his Orr -— dime 66 per cent. bispina ang: nt prices, COLLEGE or AGRICULTURE as ud 37 and
d the Agricultural public that he can now 4. 10s. ENS on applying to Joseem HINDsON, 38, Lower Kennin, wks Kennin, TPOS FO a
re “SUPEREHOSEE ATE of LIME” s superior tosnything Broker (one of of the — — the he Crown), 20, N — John Princi C. NESBIT, x
yet produced. Each Bag guaranteed to contain 20 to 25 The m of 5 ed in the Coll.
m . E: syste pursu: 0 Ae 33
: E cent. o E AN Phos — — ate o ed meri peri 5I. es — x T EL a eee Dec. 16, 1858. branch requisiteto prepare youth for th e pursuits of Agriculture,
E z Lad M "T eg rte Deme a i DearSirs,—I beg to inform you that I applied the Kooria Engineering, Mining, — pon: and the Arts; for the
i eal sappia. g ene ne STA foe. and a — 8 1 fax ae 2d Turnips, on land of a loa — Naval and Milita: . and for . Universiti
; ^ ; Y nalyses and Assa ys eve ery description are promptly and
Offices, 7, Great St. ost o 8 z drained." m each side: of xg im bert P Gui N executed" vat the College. The 5 and other
REDUCTION IN PRIC LAW antitiog apii AO P5 Inanurea with best Peruvian Guano... The particulars may be had on application to the Principal.
; R. LAWES bee "fe t 15 1 2 quantities applied of te sort wi ‘sang equal — it for weight — —
egs $i ——.— at he has 7 per or. ie crop—a v TY goo vod os e throughout—is now being OYAL IGRICULTURXD SOCIETY OF
| Season reduced the e price of the Manures manufactured by | eate. p. Bs
P
h shee Ver ery little perceptible differens can sAND.—WARWI MEETING
— "ad FR i er to es ; * | discovered, but nis den s Hor — — difference is in favour of the
h . from T urnips sown with Kooria Mooria Guano. and DRAINING PIPES, mus E be made on or befo
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME .. : igned) JOHN BARKER.” Entries for LIVE STOCK must b
fares, MANUS: do. » s e J. & J. Graham, Guano Moran's Penrith.” * All Entries received in each case after those respective
Prot: E A Pamphlet, ** Hints on Guano,” contai a large number dates will, without any 3 be disqualified, and returned
A and Dr. Voelcker have v atcaple d from a bulko te x specie dome — 7 — — agricaltnrst, ote analysis A gie to the senders.
ae ag a and their eee — ven | cargoes here, may be had of the Broker, at the above addre: Yun SHEETS may be had on — at the Offices 0
in Circular t obtai cod "arro o — his — he Society, 12, Hanover Square, Lo
tait P s, London Dri a o. TL Jar Sa gy ced A YRSHIRE HEIFERS IN FIRST CALF. — i 5
K Soo m Twenty very carefull lected pure bred 3- d
2 ook Sd Mess 1 y very y selected pure r Ol
» phate of Ammonia, and HEIFERS of this celebrated Milking Breed are for Salo i Che ette.
1 American Cotton- seed Cake — p singly. Ten way. be seen 20 miles from inia. X he Agricultural Gas
good 2-year old BULL also for RR Fon ly to John Herriot, A
: D EE J. Lockhart Morton's, 8, Finch nden, E.C. cg SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1859.
MED. T PROCTOR S TUR NIP E ANURE.— —
ET P. draw particular attention to this i LEY’S FOOD FOR SI TLE.—Every person MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK.
j $ c necessary ng an interest in domestic or farm animals should ve €
T Mc devi lopment of the Turnip Crop, so combined, that, S a supply of this celebrated and Porc Bory ear Wankstpar, Moni "1 Dublin Agr Sedet m
D their bin e ience, el i ble i
NG CK 3
Entries for IMPLEMENTS, CHEESE, WOOL, FARM-GATES,
re May 1.
Dublin Agri. Society.
4
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— Ho ^ imer. —— een it Mash: to 3
y most of the eminent Agriculturists of | with surprising rapidity w on it, and their flesh i i
- ^ wt pal op wee. alg eer throughout oe flavour t viuo. ‘ow S rs vill fi oe ab advantage: 1n fiae 3 et Be " pe system c
8 es, and, they venture to say, is unrivalled | the increased vue and improved quality of the milk duri &
que agat ET ae, S the 5 which it produces its use. A an ani * Lm y: K. A — d hich w. extract.
B
let on
bree e from the
en , Carriage "y toa a
the best quality. nola Post-office Orders ero to JOSEPH THORLEY, 5 aere
R, West of England Depót for Arti- 77, AEP Sa ai PRA London.—N.B. Th ve 7 cautioned
— [oa — * Proctor & RYLAND, Bir- nst being imposed upon by worthless imitat. f
; URN cre en O PIG EY OULTRY FEEDERS AND MILLERS. ber, October,
Bee ARD, LACK, AND Zu S CONCENTRATED VHICKEN RICE, 7s. 9d. per ont in bags 1% cwt. apply:
PHOSPHATE OF LIME; AG per dent to contain | X each. SCREENED RICE, 108 wt., in bags 13 cwt. | that, a
un soluble, eq 0 per of Tribasic each. RICE MEAL, 6s. 6d. to 8s. T. Per, gat, RICE f | threshi
Part i a | allowance p p r Ton. "Ame erica! — INC barrel
9 the URNIP MANURE, l and bags, per ton on y: ocust ns, per ton.— re oec
i 3 ee only T JvPP, 6, Cross Lane, St. Mary-at-Hill, East this
E ie vedete Mannres Dr, Voelcker says: —“ These results must ATS.—RATS Taken WITHOUT Porson OR
Eurus i Lu and AL the ue — of the very | BY WHOLESALE.—Shi
which characterises | houses.
superphosphate.” Ware Fari
set
10 elearly
E applied
AN S tire pri $ is e i I
to the f the late and present every R i "ation of the soil, every pid armer
ee ERO aral Soc ty, ith Test nials, | night. Printed. AES CoU GE poet for de 3 Hi
mar m esi d nnl dE s s lof alive sent free Sows, Bla talon, ‘for Two Shil Tat -3 E of his own s
1
prospect of
"m erp our own observations would lead to the con-
wn experience convinces him that one — on of
ifje
cultivation
the cultivator in these two s does, on clay
da, produce as good an effect as two plongbings. | C
He as his clay ve ap e lds— |
roots, Barley, Beans, t, Clover, Wheat, |
Beans, — nd Whe at, 2 which ‘he Deut.
nates, as in the followi wing diagram, by the
p a WW e D
| Roots. Barley. | Beans. Wheat.
si — per ous
|
E F
Clover. Wheat. Beans. Wheat.
expenses, and pay interest and prin
loss to the
remar! the ys be cultivated ab all. has judiciously sige se for perman tps
indeed “they pi be sal r eni ye tais at im menee
wear out during the lease, besides what he is ens
| has succeeded the e Turnip okop pan ie ud to for his superint nee risk, M
t that they cap 0 as who cannot, with good management, reali
kom weeds ; but should ‘be remembered ‘that pay too high rents for their farms, P. ning he
Barle not peers and few farmers have no ecome such a fashionable pursuit that a goog Tow
retty good weed admixture to separate from the people of independent means, who preter at Sadar
P bid 1 threshing. hani b a nust be country, rent a farm in a "Wwe lity congenial to thet
A embered that before the Barley is ripe, and | tastes, more for ‘the sake of healthful recreation than
| N its cutting, enou 3 are usually sown pecuniary g rather than purchase a small a
to ensure their continuance, upposing, € Hence to sou
the seeds to have escaped this, som source of ¢ g: n s it
nation we are able to assert, ir ete bis nm P ME
£z 30 samp eds, consisting of le gru: * 1 r ers m E
THE n of the year is fast Seer and | *
indeed iae: rh when the important — distin-
tinguished by the farmer as “ seeds’ well
forward with its spri
n be predi
pring growth, a aad its simmer |3 ar E
usually occurs, but whic + is not sufficiently
ttended to, viz., that Clover Grass are very
mee up
more or less
As io EE the present year's
n th have the injuries which early |
ted been more thoroughly repaired tha an|
8
.
A
more than in any previous s —
recollect has been caper pi ten mu
H ey a ter 5 and if we see w
seed crop, we are as anxious to tin them | oug
—“ ddr out Tues Te up ne miens
«LA 1s. per acre."
ipe that little — Docks or Thistles are
ooked after; in indeed, many "Pon ds are
considered as a good part of the crop. Who
troubles a
Plantago media—Broad-lea:
x lanceo:
”
Ranunculus repens
Geranium molle—Soft C
erardia arvensis— Field der.
tellaria ~media—Chick
et
os
AR
A
worth dultirating at all iti ia —
ap
as from
beh therefrom h
Fut à any other erop;
om it may concern that, df need be, from 2s. 6d.
that have led to to ie pert for thisis not thrown “ied — if s
than
—— i QM Menit
l nt 5 s year
shall Son a find th — the good 8 of corn cal or even more, will result from an effici nt "ve
intended for hay, from 1 ewt.
an
from this it 1 be safely
ud
c experienee we ean assure heed |
| requisite je
erest for
| whieh will w.
ITF. L.“
rented 200
P
that porti
pon. expen "m. a wor
| esirablo ob ed "E woul cine
ea coun untry. ae instance, it
eight ` letters rs of the al alpha habet t; ‘and the follo owing eight hundred or ni AIME * * Ar "s mers on ght 5 3
chara eristie instructions at once become in- are often sown with e bushe EE each acre of id 7 to enable them to fum pn.
telligible:—“ The harvest in, bring out the steam | seed! A sum so — large that ti p not | fitably. Too many have not m E Sl oe
h up c, 6, H; if you wish for further ai ig the crop shoul ally so h à cre to purchase stock ve rad ge and for working
expedition, cross-cultivate H 5 steam, t ve p> The follo owing Ea Table s es 8 brio 0 Pin expenses, F — nte Lr Bars evans m.
winter, for the horses you mus a contained in el o > *
2r e rest; they e ugh k, eross-cultivate | of the erops — hich is pened e — € ere; Kane "mus. armen kep
o and a, drill £, c, and d, better and cheaper average in round numbers of the six samples o — — „ zie. ere with their
ane steam can. This done Jet the hors bout or | each set :— ces of the je ds | keep their car sie a
A ar , manure it, split - 3 “fe px TABLE OF Warp Beens IN A BCSHEL. — — | first-class, saddle-hors 1 "
mil. be n themt this wi eee eee eed antes = A Amount per bushel Average, asecond-hand gig faie Cas or à shi ;
winter, — ue, for drilling in, s spring f 8 which is groomed by the cattle man, ne pay
roots, When they have done x, if the manure is Parennial Bye grass. 15040 "ML former giv ies
ready they may draw it on to r, and plough F and Duis * | 184,390 242840 education; some of the latter just give their familia
B for Beans i the ordinary way. g thus itto 204,800 " an elementary edueation at th a school, A
sketched out the work, both for horses and Ditto | Ao ae acre farm 3 which sia zente by * enant of sud
steam, I may s that the former will not Dio oe > positive loss te t .
with this arran e full employ during | Italian Rye-grass 20,480 and his wife do not in eneral c «€
H i team Ditto 61,440 q y amon: st thos: e
7 ing uer z ed 92,160... 411,760 rodue on Qn ria coun
F etn ^s ept e inis ; eee ad grocers, md, per
in idleness at the cost of your steam tackle, for D Ditto 261,120 , ; : >
i i „ f people th de whom such
will have sown with Clover, and A will not Ditto 2 0 0
require much of their assistance until the spring, | Red Clover 6,56 ‘ ind w y enterprising ; farmers E
and chen if the land is at all adhesive and h Ditto 140,880 abate iy € ee sail Ao Ae
: 1 t vill Ditto 245,760 128,293 employment, but they also suppor!
n fed off by sheep, the st implement w Ditto 307/200 , and higher walks of life.
produce a much better tilth for the Barley than if Ditto 1,085,440 Since a farm "which will emp
ploughed in the ordinary way. you hape an M —— hat Mr. Grey of Dilston haie
manure the horses may 1 — it to D, it will Gow 40,960 e to the industrious lal
P 4 good, and the Wheat crop after it. | Ditto : 102,400 | society,” small farms
way your may be kept as ge Ditto 409,600 401,086 || qualifications of suc
and with at least one-third fewer horses Ditto 768,000 | many tenants of 100-a d of
necessary steam is not adopted; itto . : 8,24 | farms who ae possess more than 4l.
- , if you are keeping and working 15 purchasing stock an eme
horses, or two E Seea working that number p yia 1, 24.000 tj — wauld be m » mu i j
en them, five may be sold, and wit th m ae 1,209,840 2,768,106 | occupying the posi E
reali d the saving in the on st of k ^ ivan sui suitable to their experienc abili " E
e an 8 Ditto 4,505,000 the apparentl elevated ams — position 1
an engine and a apparatus may be purchased ; E e TREE Er ae DUE a
cost of coal, and wear and tear of eres being | This is indeed a fearful array of figu 1 (eir | farm.
a small item compared with horse keep." — em we may expect the res dr Pide y more corn than a co farm al
positior :
y
t
ieren = dee profit for bis
rking expenses
ear of ho
—.—
—
ieultura:
It being the root crop that
last season, a e circumstance th. hoe ork in pie
a Clover | value of arable farms, any :
Barley were ripened almost together, had caused | field; and the Poe we may thereby do is not alto- | the canter of labour ELT
much gr to shed in hurry of gether ed to casion, but if set about at must now dias ng ot
getting it together, and the subsequent mild the proper time, namely in early inet d of Tabourers-and 5 tel win the sowing 9o
weather has augmented a gro which a spring, all chance of vented, and | divisions of labour connecte 4. 200 ae i ja
harder winter than the one we have experienced future itta thus become Bu uierous nips than a farmer of 1 Mr. Grey's: gei
would ya prevented. This question is and expens employs. Your extracts from ME un m
, wi ow small farmers get the labour
interesting as showing how one er be ding anion pont
ioi LARGE A ALI The comparative condition 0°
ps id b mee, a een - — b ) eene m9 ferent parts of the United Kina te nd tho?
care should be exercised in esting the previous |, HAVING een employed on farms varyi 10 : t pu ing a
ee so hat eie hed eds shouldbe ot as pde o 20 ͤ ᷑̃ eredi im | ie mali ore pret reel
possible. Tt is doge perhaps very e oint ifyi 12 iscussion between some experience otchmen, parently cannot giva, octire de
edy for A this = dere in necessity ee h * *. — Fed, a pred Norful” re- | description of the labourers in ;
m much may b pue Jn nents i an old impression of the emite s ions hi bn
vot ted oce d 88 Ff à te
rge or small farm all the me, c
let us offer a few] age as epic his farm as will defray his wi EM to | at Zr root oot ofa T iprietor, furmet,
i Ann 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 319
Ei
1 P vers in a well organised system of rural economy, momy, at; tained that the analytical proce processes of the chemist were | ex exhausted g gneiss and 3 mica slate soils of Virginia an and
last rding to his sphere ought to be so. The inadequate to determine th
D put erect hn buildings on each farm | composition of a soil whieh may 3 wd € * dre eary barrenness ” ” prin capa want of potash,
eth man and beas ow many landed proprietors | ence betwe en a fertile and a barr The: e pro- | or rather its nitrate. Altho — pio SiL be tain a
they. y bave performed such an incumbent duty ? " of nitrogen, which, when e gives
am siy h ft valuable and worthless manures. heen stry E enormous acreage wa compared with what
Hering resid unsuitable it must be for per^ farmer and | is emet: as competent to measure the value of a would be practicable to add in manures, yet we have the
‘a r for so many labourers having to reside at too| manure, by measuring the quantity of certain s su - | most 5 0 evidence that this is often in a state
t a distance from th farm steadings. . Scotch | stances that it con ntains, as it is competent to measure inaccessible to many Plants. The large quantity of
d sand by me asu ug tl che mists astray as as to the
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hoard and lodgings. Some farmers udy to make their | province of this science to settle what is the value of | hundredweights 1 per acre of a substance of which
comfortable; but too many do not. What er ese amt aee but to measure their quantity, and in | tons alre; ady 8 in the soil could not. be the direct
ese is it than the want of a diffusion of general know ith agricultw vos praetice to poin on the | cause of the incre: > of that f
ledge, the want of suitable cottages on each farm, and |source of. the Merc tes ached to them. by the | atter. have attr ibuted t to tl
too low wages in hrec districts, that prevents high | 9 — ts redes id act ion in
farming A the domestic and social condition of rural from certain ee considerations, founded upon | making other 8 Ker in the soil assimilable
i being equally alike objeets of admira- | ash deme of an uestionable ^ xactitude, as also upon | by plants. But all minds,
2 assum ogies with regard to 7 — relation | extricated from the barre bias of „preconceived
y AR sufficient number of — M fora com-|of the vital 3 to fart elements, chemistry opinions, are now able clear ee. t
petent staff of labourers on mostly e y farm in | (or rather the chemist) has in times past been led into | cereal c og which follov the use of the salts of
lof th f Scotis acid, is ** to the fact “ee E
sime districts i in the north of England. I have already | sometimes assi — a — character, sk gal to | bring to d ant material from which to fi
you Dow ge sy present
. social, aud 1 pecuniary point of view. I ob- | ing painful instances on the other, of how ad difficult | 9d. To the tently of each available for commercial
serv purposes.—The supply of phosphoric acid in bones and
of the Farm.“ I may state that there are, in that | candid acknowledgment of error. LL phosphates is inexhaustible. lmost every
district, generally three stewards on a 1000-a acre farm Had ad fasi ing bst j ye brings to our knowledge some new source of this
which is rented by a gentleman farm m there would be no ubstance. Potash, though not so 1 as an
who superintends everything on the f ‘a an adding to that soil), RT the other substances article of commerce, is nev 1 57 less so widely diffused
Mino su pod 3 the m labourers "and a ated chemistry eee oA us a in the of th t be entertained, Our
who dr a pai of horses cts plant we wahyi o grow upon Had we iik Nee E nitrogen alone do "mited. The
as time-ke f land upon which such edi was found, then all | nitro oe clog are fast being exhaus i, ais
lind to the peeled depth. i ery far distant vidi the W i-a
The majority of the plou ghmen in that district each — „ ogical val ue. This value odd resources * this element will be the jme M ie
| havi oe, the ploughman’s wifé or some other d (1) ), upon the agar i required to get each in a m vufactories, and the r resi sidual 1 ig:
m of ak household gets up in ar to prepare chads assimilable VA: lants to the soil; (2 2) upon i 2 that about
the breakfast and mi ilk the cow before 6 clock. The f each in F positions accessible t para | one vi millionth part ‘of the ee is am —
gr and feed | (3), upon the amount required by the plant to be and this is slowly abso rb ed by some soils, but with
E he thei r stalls. He milated ; (4), upon the excess which must exist in "the ws rapidity fo while
turns to his t, and hi that required by the plant, in order that, the on the other hand ies „are the Jaws | of diffusion that
] work, n Mb ats "the aute with to horses, at | latter may get what it wants with sufficient rap
$o'dock. p portions of a loger estate are not 9 upon the ease with which that shi h is once 3d. To the labour required. to “ge et them from » their
adapted for sate farm arms, owing to portions of it ha | fn ved from the soil can be restored to it again in several sources of supply, and convey them to the roots
detac he a arm-yard 3 manure, oon Ko.; ee upon the readi- | of the plant in MR. ions able of being assimilated
ind it, it, or by its por he form of ith rm latter, —The labour of collecting bones and im-
oblong square. The is a gr at waste of time in walk lost in drai water, or may rting mineral phosphates, and grinding them, and
to and from th points of f: il is Oy aa finally upon | of bringing 5 he the materials, , Ke, for the manu-
. Wtes in exte uence» in o opera condary agent „ together with
peur of an extensive landed diner — — e ge physiol e condition cng the soil, of render- | that of t t f ll
a requisi ing other substanc: vailable, &e. Had we such an parts of the co hand constitute the most serious
r Tater cottages with “separate apartments in EN extensive tract of leak 5 did we know che in 72 5 element in the conditions that make phosphoric acid
Sage. Allow me to a corr espondent, « A | all these seven conditions, ied E rmer or ae po Ae important to the farmer. Potash is no less im-
SAN E satemena oper vis ‘residing i in Morayshire, for the same the nimum o far 1 were portant as regar rds the labour. required to bring it
eee g th it ertility ithi
applicable tothe labourerson that when once in ‘that state he wicht have upon the ue supply. And when we contemplate the gisting E
is moi tds the farm a debtor and credit sheet, ed posits of guano, and. take into consider
which would at any ue enable him i see the amount 7 2 to collect, ship, transport, 1 and
of available capital present in his soil. To complete the distri country, we see that with re; to
ve etm with from this s
T Sun Gf 28) — he our suppli itrogen ource, ur is a
e only have yet to em up peel ik zr ont ar
of apartments to | food of plants; if experience
decency and self. supplied in suffici ntity for th
ture
an i er —
ich — rope reall isite number
jot ; pu od brett habits of
Tespect ?
ntity tor the
na!
sphere, &c.,) then t| — could have no agrie — portance if this fourth condition did not possess a
value; if such were not the case they would assu nam but analysis shows the presence of a very large
value dependent upon. the soat conditions specified | percentage of phosphoric acid, potash, and nitrogen in
above, A cultivated crops. Chemical analysis is competent to
Importance or tHe | gested in this paragraph w ill r ested evident how very give an exact knowledge of what the plant has received
ARI pns — MANURES AND complieated must be the — of fixin ng hs value of and retained at the time of analysis, but it has not yet
THE ipio — 8
vidus Nw * E
€
Ese j manurial constituents, from a co onsider. of t with what the plant
p | tl excretes. It has not yet solved
E enone & clear —— gites y we have chosen, with the valueof the resources o ss that t bein the soil in
ate to grasp the subtle 88 they we are entirely familar, The subject requires, not m mi) that the rootlets may get a full supply at the
— —— said to have engraved upon tlie all that aie and ip iuda practice p f the um activity of the growth of the
y, in the groves of Acade ere the bestow, but i it also i the consideration of im- | plant, nor has [* niet the capabilities of the latter
jon | portant 3 of political economy. | to geb its constituents from natural sources.
fan,” o But we have no soils with the resources of which we | we are incompetent. from a simple chemical view of the
consider, with | are so familiar as we: are et to be with the one | subject to decide what is the Mod gh the quantity of
F dering. Our ignorance the several manurial consti quired by eiit
ing, may we this subject was dwelt upon in aiy last letter. Unable vated crops at the hand of the
^ Some
mistry. by logical iri to develope the agricultural import- who: were labouring seritur an unfortunate
science had been | ance of the several manurial constit: ired by bias from conceived d opinions, have been un
plants, from a consideration of the data afforded b dmit that th
chemistry, we are obliged to appeal to agricultural | do not correctly express. the value c iE the
ions that th stood by to enforce the practice to see what value has been attached by the the soil, for those substance es by the i But —
the inscription implied, much that — laws of the equilibrium of trade to these constituents. d, and who
end "Write: en upon the question we are con In America, England, and on the continent practical are aware of the facts now presented by agricultural
* elatio agriculture has es tablished the fact that certain Hu practice, are obliged to admit, however anomalous in
n betwe een e studies and that of artificial manures haye a great agricultural i ignorance of causes it may seem, that the quan-
— y has enabled us to decide that this tities given by chemical analysis do not correct
see Navigation, Land Surv the demands of the plant for those substances
3 been . — is not more itii to — which m contai in—phosphorie seid; poii De e soil. 19 d may refuse
stody of chemistry to seientifie and nous. —— the — — bratag halfa crop.of Wheat, the Mere eie of an.
peri opm rations of all the mine 2 e as
ity, for t than.
in total ignorance of exenedingy iy delicate, i it still requir he skill of the | still more anomalous, — Wheat may be grown
no other science is this prac- | practised: operator to get indubitable. evidence of the | after the Beans. These fücts have received no satis-
e explanations afforded of | presence of “ traces” ot this soils, | faetory explanation.
presents, from no other source | and very ae 5 contain arne s quantity o of pem. | bth. Tothe Le ef returning the 8
of d investiga-| phate to ex th This
are m |a new e supply.. The quantity. of potash find their
E not even ex-|soils, im a state assimilable by plants, is 3 very | | way into the m manure 1 5 P ad Pr rn but for
à p. ree i vain and root rotati — ad fu Bon da ^e of li cim
; 5 ous; crop con. in ani nes and ve s , the case
the resonos of the soil it was main - importance that is attached to phosphoric acid. The is . This co! sation 1 de the — na
520
ofthe question of town i oen theme about which |
THE GARDENERS’
— Av n had “paid” when used at a st per |
of Jime in America m hr f Oats, 1 would n si mn
said in England; it is to
* mete here. Sa ffice it to say
is allowed
extensive for our ns
importa U^ se
o give e other ele ment an importance, pabi since
they i egree, the um t total
of * importance is cele o what it is for these.
Thus sulphuric acid often „fails in soils ;
o pur-
But until the ch
cial
_but sinc e it | va
assi
An nd uch o! f the edv eg and between
ti of Philadelphia and Baltimore been ren-
Genel ies of with lime alone on just such conditions.
emist is con nfident that the farmer has
it possib yet
CHRONICLE AND JORICDUPURAL GAZETTE.
[APRIL 9, 1859
apt
who evar geri to d
fo ac i
0
a new sui
not b
in other words until he
id too a for his
knows that the farmer has am
phosphoric wes and potash, and
annot form any —
d
arn- s aru
may rest assured that if he has bought
artificial manure, he has paid very odia for an the
ble 3 ems it contains. He may rest
that
phates, and even when tod board as in gyps um, it
costs so little, it loses the agricultural rue it
. The e same s might bes d of lime so
a
lime as a pee "arent we shall
The very f silica i m
would render this a | substance of
838 “ort
dbi presently.
si our cereal _ Crops
[What i is * rainfall
ist cidental Fir
dor He ae y 5s. Ne. dE
Epi farmers to fils the abore
n the banks of Ullswater,
course h I pursu
71
es.—In your Journal of A
0 call attention to a 2 ecl.
lv raised by 3 ve of Con
near Tamworth, perc the rado
erly ¢
tain, enou gho of this substance alre:
ady.
therefore concentrate our attention 82
may
phosphor acid, er and | nitrogenous | substances,
ured chea 2 * is not a non for destruction of crops d 5 ten N
absurdit than a “very cheap, anure, ? if by very | verdict for the plaintiff” Permit me to ask 1
y ntity aments upon a matter which, by the mere sibi.
With regard to Time ina uch 1 mi wicht t be sai , but tion of private property and private parties fi pie -
Of itself e can Misa; only one 0 10 orks is Linum corporations, seems to me be strict
to 12 sul y pla A eu hore sub- analogoui e northern coal-fields, and I dare sy
rv not prese ent in kek Poil, dins Es " it h late years the
it fe rtile e. But soils
aed wl mot emer n but they the working y: the collieries ; E aa scorn sue
cope ere n insoluble wie ate inaccessible t with its dingy load across |
the plant ; lime helps to bre ak up the se jumiinatiose, |o orn fields, and threatenin ng ruin in to Our crops. E
the valual or the use of of accident by fire, is the farmer’s remedy against his |
lord or the coal. owner? |
me a que
wherever it bya
is gover
tached values to each su i saj map
ned settl
proper 1 in regulating its hys; has at-| case,
of t
the value of any artifi ficial m e pend
simply o € quantity of these tase i it
md d ar on be too forcibly y|
^ the ind the America
Hu of
nure does n | the
then
lime.
ten
dens eee of the
tter to buy these
t to use
valuable —— in artificial ma han the such purposes introduced into the district? And wil
Again, use of lime cannot go on n for an in- the nature of the remedy be the same as in theme —
pem period of. time, and give good results upon all cited by yourself? But if so, how to prove your case?
—.— nce, as it only what the | Coal-owners are not usually so magnanimous in acknow-
d with a of ledging heir offences as great railway companies;
ls
ees alteady contains without supplying i it
as
onnec cted
any points c c
4
to be land
to
Suy on
h constituents of gate des latter must ulti-
_ On befor
ving passengers, 70 *
nin. ma
more * 5 depend — — the dubii of a few simple |
^om: d which it contains, than does the value
gold washings of California pon the amount
d iila] it contains. And ve creo would
the e is Mice of — — scientific investiga-
tion, and it is to be hoped that America will not lon
learn to look upon the cheap man hich quack hind Europe in erecting institution ns for agricul-
manure manufac! ture urers too often vind into the market, tural investigations, , and D grid at the disposal o
ith that itl "oem they would be *a very f ma vm) them, in order to
cheap — sand," there would ‘be few of do her’ part towards solving these and other obscure
people being cheated and en as rad neg b of points in questions so pre- — important to her
having expended money in artificial manures. It is not as are all those connected with scientific and practical
is to add a hundredweight of valuable manure
to
z en. of 3888 rubbis > Mus then. to sell the same |
w and cheaj le farmer who
— M EE
me Correspondence.
0
team Culture. The enclosed is extracted from a
letter just E It shows the energetic spirit of my
Tiere, m Grea Britain, where the Royal Agricul- |
tural Society, the Bath ru Biens of En
the Highland Society of
mis Societies have aln L5 ‘ofessors
reputation to we to thec mere ede of the Fs ati
tural i * K of t boye remarks very
ed Baa
country belong jun. 1 in conjun neti on wit
his fat i
h * e of the eight. year old s 1
Priest ra own 191 their masters’ interests, Betws
the two stools wha t becomes of the property of sr,
One of the A,
Germination of Se eds.—In your P.
arch you refer to results of experiments pte ie a
mination of Turnip seeds of va
ne en
. In April, 1858, I minc my spi 25
in “tke green nhouse three difterent kinds 105
seeds ix 105 own growth) 23 15 855, and 1
seeds fr
at eight ye ars o old, 5 per o cent. is the av
um
| days longer in the ground and were weak
any one from En ngland to assist him. Wiliam Smith
| Woolston, CE vr drs vet
10 cult
perte ing
88 it imposs
iow from
| of visitors — ee its P Caere John — Bally
pone: on, Co. Cor
—I a with “Sigma” in the value of
s Ont hays especially when cut into chaff. I have been
alo!
tical man beate vend node uced large capitalists of wi
known reputation and 57198 sponsibility, to
purpose
e fue th
Tares
de + a
ith them for “rm I make my sowing about |
to | this time of a Yes earlier if the weather will
permit; vM : ond be in good heart. When the
beg o show their bloom I begin to
mow | only
isse f or seed, and are now
see anything rh N
e fence, a Len ditch, a
S | and a blighter of crops?
beautiful th man
ei apr a higher class of in
ne? If I wil e
3 1
5
raw
am now kac ng, of 8 0
ä hey expended
all the money for m which — have laid out for
manures, they wo have been bet
tter |
orld has
and in none po it yielded better results.
Were we to tell the farmer of old England that the use
A short time since I examined an
aia not contain enough of valuable material 9
transportation, in waggons, of the rubbish with which it was
„ —
zs z j^ m is criminal, n
it involves, but because 85 W s m
e farmer in a valuable article h
CERT,
eferri:
nsylvan May I had
ime had à a flera — 4} 42 feet lng P "e the 24
4f
will be
FÉ
e
Eit
me a
eet tall ;
r
e | le
infects their poorer n
of | better notions and feelings than
t | or what is
? that your correspondent deprecates
iti is AM ere uin that ptt erow timber is re tof
landlords, in many instances to the detrimen
own pockets; if they let
blame, or rather who would w:
any others do good indir
I
pt. ment
very case presume an improve
labourers o gn bal pre oparty. 9
poor are ogether
ads aie landlord or tenant
neighbours an
À
d
they 1 ei
sold for such, is consumed in
an ill farm
uon at
4
my opini: as been acq
of bx tbat a man deos X T
. or me a wi
FRE
i
| men who can ppl earn
ari "ie
Jaq
ran
£ feed g. 4 resume soy
c is + drained, “deeply pom t in ze M
dress with about t4 ewt.
machine. I ask TT. S."
P a the ene res
ta short
and answer it X what is t
wt. Undoubtedly fo R production
of food for ai beast
1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE € AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 821
leasing manufactory assured E West of England S r the} The followin is a reference t rogress
ae n bs . that none of {s can d sy Manu factures, and Com- inelosure :— s CEN "a
bat still y ee: ving that this is the proper answer, n 25 25 x TIME atthe It is to deeper cultivation and the improvemen so A " nta:
wit t. h 8 "D lands that we have now to look for the extension o
produce. The earliest records of substantial 3 date
NS ‘h Devon 1 meeting at Barn Sis tied from the earliest period of the reign of George the Third
E m The passing o of more tban 3000 bills of incre li a
of 60 years is a pu. — rapidly the cultivation of new
nd proceeded in that . A committee of the House of
acres. We havein d Analysis of the Occupations
f
of the People" a complete record of the progress of inclosure
fine, reall tatel k i i ve ope from the commencement of the present century to the year
he sta a or m Thi 3 1840, viz.—
= : rel u ad raise = wind,” and I hope m ESI. infact f sal al From 1800 to 1810 E. a .. 1,657,980 acres
M aga A and again on any tus depen Meere irablep i| From 1810 to 1820 141080 „
yS
may ach that is irreplacea enble s but I still hold that few | Nicholson, Agricultural Engineer of Newark; Total il
a : oftheprini Tova denlorsand manufacturers has enobtained. 1
hedgerow trees ar ing in of the. fossedl, ia gains Thus, during the first 20 inc osures amounted to
: may remain bini t doin, ial MS. M upwards o of three millions. of ‘acres. But whi hile these 20 years
15: these y g B present to our view the phenomeno! of i — peel it
harm, even 0 arable fa 2 Let every man think een be stated that this took place ‘ander the stimulant of the
of cutting timber i ee hi t "bo S u T. T as f highest range = pey Pus ever es pere ae ot
has made Y l t m cut oo amine. At the close of the war in e ave price o!
up his urs s s de nr. heat bad been during the preceding 15 years 848. 9 qr.,
and during the succeeding five years it was 78s. 4d. From
oim
hood hood with the “ yearly profits derived from the des of
tion of the fac e of our beautiful country.” Serung 1 be e
= which I cannot agree is a proper | show ivili ion o must, in order to - ran 6d £
melo — . are his — as to e «d of i i dar 1820 to 189) only reached 340,380 acres, Aud gredvally
the e by pointing to nearly every am melioration of . iduy i * WT : y
d h b
the 40 we have an addition of three
s
with. agriculture, causes not
acing or kely t n t
re Me N he need not be in any ws en d lib y ?
alarm as to the degradation of our à Ac ed ottery, glass, m. work, wood work, in their ment, gives the following figures :—
. eee, MEM ME N et prg for gpi sures since the ME LÀ rus — 809
Exchange EH . 1697
Partitions, &c. n ic sé „ 261
Total
Of this number 316 have tak: en » placent in the —- year.
Acreage of N
Ditto
—
in the way he speaks of. Let him take a trip this
summer and Judge for himself. I ae sure he will not
de di disappointed in what he sees. Sener.
Sotietles.
281,949
i ditto in progress .. = 8,687
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL | or ENGLAND rner and ot! | eminent artists, h as few have an oppor- Total 20
3 the Duke of tunity of eee LH be opened tothe public in a manner round numbers h alf a million of ac ese returns
or
rod adi a period of five years, which were in inelu judea in in the last
. e
" Frxaxces.—Mr. eme nd Barker, Chairman of the | hibition will open o TY Rg Ee Aer) and last for the week. | decennial period from 18:0 to 1840, but. I have no power of
` t d t hav ^
3 e laid before the Council the IE te a eod Deis cibo the 16th April. d, and | sepurating t Them. It is estimated tliat there are still 15, are
i acres of waste » nds etis of pcg Sera ment, 6,000, o!
Moni Report on the — of the Society, from of MEN m ay be had o Hr eppitcation to Mr. George Down, | nich would make arable land, and the remained improved
ihi vs it appeare 4 "that t current hal $n thè — — y — XM igh oe nd Mana Thomas Dyke Ac- .
* un., irman of t ts an tures Committee,
"hands of the ban 1 a: 22067. Sprydoncote, Exeter, 8 Mr. Smith concluded with a review of our progres
1 az Mr. T ia ce ars eee of the Journal in drainage, farm buildings, rotation of pea green
made the following repo cropping, Jabour, and the application
1. The Co ,
Implement report should be sold at 2s. 6d. each vies im of steam-power.
2. That W i on Potatoes by Dr. Lang, ordered to be Lon April —The Tess of Agri ulture.—
P ger Dai duced so as to be published at a Mr. R. "Smith, of oath aia Seal a er on this
3. — Beth Sp E SML on on J Horse- -shoeing is subject, from which we extract the following passages
e EACH 2
5000
Reviebos.
» copies (cost) .. — .- x 10 ^0 of agricu ulture from tbe earliest times. more | Results of an Experiment on the Half-time : nay i r, f
pesi (oo 08 39 16 10 | detailed treatment of the SEHE commenced pn the Education in Rural Dist
Onhand1700 — Profit .. +. 6 6 10 dake of Ve Agricultural Society of Englan 5 EAR d 8 C. Paget, Esq. MP.
— e Y». Se
WAR — Lord Chairman of the General lough? s pamphlet publishes a paper read at the Liverpool
Warwick Committee, — the Couneil Ki crit f meeting of the N of W vae The fol-
factory progress made in the preparations for the foreign trade for ds | lowing is the most of it; we have we carry
Society’s — enis pmo ng, to be held at War- with portable manures from uet E author's aati vr caving ^ cried
wick in the week commencing Monday the 11th of July. | foreign birds? Who had tho ou ht her
* Fisher Hobbs brought forward the | Substance to a soluble & food. f InNovember, 1854, I determi aber mà play cg boys
motion, o ich he had given notice at the last to de k hith » y four,
3 monthly meeting, to rescind the D e 5t each boy spe his day at ai an
of May last year, in reference i on gs under school . ae other, so that I should always
which a dinner should take place in A ed at t the paper? 8 have four on the € four at school. d
county meetings of the Society, in order that ? might agricultu 5 5155 mor d Mes- inconvenience in this rrangement ; when the boys’
be enabled to submit to the Council a plan by which | senger, and, other jour rnals now dev the | clothes were wet and dirty, from their morning's work,
they were * for school. I therefore cha
the dinner in his opinion might be — jK — causo of agriculture? nged my
ce of 5 Lat the boys now work on alternate days.
5 ulti full r. Smith -— reviewed the history of the London
discussion then ensued on this subject, in ich the whole | Farmers’ Club
bearings of the question, founded on past experience, | The happy formation of this — ont E — — June, Sue at
3 5 3 . once announced a new era in the annals of our agriculture,
t Mc ish iv te Fisher * inasmuch as Mr. Baker, of Writtle, was invited at the outset | °
tion to his motion, the | to introduce the subject of ad Artificial Manures,” for the free
objec w
Council uo —— whe it was found that the Council by a | discussion of the members. Since that period this 8288 8 T pirit; and I have no difficulty in
urge ma as many willin cept employment, eos
t.
g
8
E!
e
a
gp
=
3
ds
&
8
ede
8
X
=
ered to their l of topic has been discussed 10 different times, and there hav
eir resolution of last year, been up to this date no less than 110 subjects discesa Ly he
ting t ture. esti
Serle that there should be no diner at the | of “Tenant Right ” has been Before the bonas 0 times;
Warwick Meeting, aud which stands as follow: the agricultu 1 rice —.— Myr pas seven times; and
per loss of his son's
pies too great a sacrifice,
willing to for oneal ‘the ount to secure to
> -~ “That, in future if any dinner ner be held at the cow e draining and root crops f The important sub- wg o yan T does not
EN. under the patronage of the Society, the entire manage- jects of geology, diseases of cattlo, . statistics, agri-
ment sl De vested in p e Local Committee: but cultural marem ry, waste lands, food of cattle, farm leases,
A me shall have the option and power "of reservin and ect pbs a v the e breaking-up of Grass land, carts and
hs — uch a number of tickets as it shall think fit; waggons, deep cultivation, the influence of science, the rota-
4 is Society shall 1 the chairman, and sup- e — id ar inp A A RO, a 3 ra peg Bret
i the list of t ts, e farmer's so ve also shari e atten-
hs Piy the is ° d» but shall have no other liability tion of the Glad. This is a result which may be written pod
3 (e. the broad pages of our "ddatory, b n the book of agricultural
— s from Can Pil i] :
JS T eem Croydon, "Guildford d Tielgnte on on The following is a short history of the extension of
our resources as to manures :—
Liebig gave the greatest scientific stimulus agriculture by
f vitriol or other acids 2 rendor the 8
in a district co
rising K ent and Surre TI n Ing 0
! Jon Committee w was appointed, consistin: A r Ray-
; mond Barker, Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, the Son W.
witha re MP, Mr. . Fish er Ho bbs, a and Mr. Milward,
and report on their suitableness or otherwise for the
a me ode ety, ME the next monthly council.
is prese a copy of his new serinl
work pst in France, on the en lts and progress ot li ne,
Ariel tural armed o th in Adr?
of €
3]
AND West or ENGLAND.— Mr. Acland has enon by reducing hem to a a fine powd
te the following letter to the raat n of the sad it i gat Dee A. EE
of
topi been simultaneous with that of y gu M
"The facts that H. R. H. the Prince Consort has become a 8 utilisation.
RAND CABLE F FENCING
—— LUNAM REI ED INE ;
declares that any ; master who h perienced the Y ARNER'S ENERAL PORTABLE PUMP. P R O m GL :
benefits of the system wil fe very i to forego - il viene 1 ables Laan V. 2ins diameter G. Sb each 12
them. In the first week of Octo ber. 1858, 1 examined & Son’s Patent Buckets and Suckers 3 „ »* 0 4j „ 1 Ins. diameter 19 EN
three of the boys now work: mg on my farm, who have | and cannot clog in action. The 4, 5 0 5) „ 14 „ á 29
ble time, an rie: eh barrel is of galvanised * LI f is $ $ Fous l^ 482 » $4
abont to leave school; two bane nd one just 1 8 at — “the logs will — ae á 0 J01 P 10 % „ x 3 v
s of age. I found that they Et de intelligently | anes nd thes whole $. xi 1 4 * 5 5 i Si.
d well, ey wrote from dictation, fro ik on the shou — da Me: F » » 1 2: uj 18,, 7 b ^ »
cap they had not previously seen, in a clea vri a and | requir ” » 30 » $2
f v takes. In arithmetic I dictated sums, | _ Price of 43 in. Pump, with legs, gl. 38. 11 „ í : 9.»
ew mist z : | If with "planished eopper barrel and E UMBER digo v
vii satisfied me as to their knowledge of numera- | galvanised iron ha: aa, ^d 14s. extra. 94 inches Tong r4 : — — inches lon S
found them quite familiar with the first four | The barrel is 274 in. long, and the le egs 22 2 rh g ü
s of arithmetic, and reduction, and compound mul- | are 5 ft. high. " 8 2 n : : E w » SM
tiplication. The be vidence give of the value r ren Dd HA xu id PA 7 5 to ang lem
entertained by the labouring classes for this system, is | straps for serewing on to any —— 12 inches. .. g Od. each di inches . 8. y
the statement that they voluntarily adopt itin their water butt or cart, nud fitted with ss 14 75 7 o m
own arrangements. In addition to 16, whoare working | inch brass union for attaching flexi 76 75 » 03:2
vm ^ suction. Price 50 Painted ana ua AM 16. — bu
as pairs m agricultural labour, there are several pairs 13 inch Gutta Madii Suction Pipe, bee [^ Sheet Glas.
employed in the winding and seaming, belonging to fts. 110. per foo Ps "TRAE PR, od A
` * gi hi ist| Rubber an ru s Suction and Delivery Hose, from 3 inch - per dozen, .
the stocking manufactory, and several girls, who assis Aere prd tt te den i f WO ko eaten wach j 1 ron
the vx in her domestic duties alternately ; and I Pi — — or, m in Ape g ome. Bk: dk e e HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGE PLATE GLASS, "
. om pari e ee e e or Piante in towa o ee Wg Tend, Tieni DA iig on, age
sfactori 5 , 5 i :
. val ic faeturors, Sons Wah & SONS, 8, Orescont Jona St., London. atty, pepa onan Vp be.
and intelligent as tlie master of our Free Scho ol, I do V ARNER’S PATENT VIBRATING IAN. 180. 8 te St. without. London,
^ idm sa there would be any difficulty in the wide DARD PUMPS. 20
wh 1 hes, | „ PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, fitted with J. W. & Son’ GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, ETC
paS — — syste Rags ere, in close parishes, Patent Buckets - Saokan, rs, which cannot clog in action, for erer AND CO. supply 16-oz SHEET
—— estates compel the labourers to live in , Cottages, and Wells, not seg anufacture at prices GLASS
adjoining vilages in a that they may keep down Diam x per square foot for the usual sizes required, many th u
no doubt there may » Jui ffieulty in of Barrel Height. s. d. which are kept ready packed for immediato deliyi
r poor = nay 8 "he es 3 cras short] f. Tin. ( Fitted forlead, T 10 p Liste of Prices a l Estimates forwarded on pplication, te
“124 „long 8 gutta percha, | 1 14 A PLATE, THICK CRO LASS
"E but this is only one of the m — 3 „ ditto 3, d seat: pp cast iron 2 12 0 TILES nd, SLATES, WATER-P RN PROPAGATING
w of rating, which are 34 „f ditto 3,, 6,, | flanged pipe, 2 ASSES, ILK PANS, PATENT
—.— nei — eee nitary 4, » ditto 2, 6 % | as required“ 3 3 0 ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS. ami GLASS SB
serious 24 „ short, with 15 feet of Lead Pi 3 o., 35, Soho Square, Lond;
hat the l pe
condition “ot the people " at they must ere — ready for fixing .... 2 14 0 *' Chronicle first Saturday in each month,
ttract,the attention of the legislature. eene 24 in. lo ditto ditto ditto 2 18 0 PR HORTICULTURAL GLASS—JUNE TARIFF —
system of labour and rest appears to Meus indica sed b Tren URSINI ND Tu MILLINGTON’S reduced Taf of
— — A for the werde of the conan te oa every — — a 0 9 by 16 oz. tothe foot, Ia, %
Eee ptofeestona] 1 an has found that the best — Xr e mappiy of ———— IP by ti, A oF 8, bes ol CE by ray per 100 fa
rest for his over-task oes — y exertion. | ground tance, or in Hot, Forcing, and Plant 12 by 9, Loyer 104, 145 by 10} 13 by
? ^ 1
Much more (han satisfied. with t. ihe i of m om ex- Houses they n may be fixed, when desired, 10) E a 124 by 9), 13 by 10, bby 105 15 00
r e € tly 3 Mit any of the E be o tained. of any Ironcnongor OF » 22 = 252 * d 104 mM n Mbyu
friends of e * who m eir power own or country, at the MNT à > > ns
will repeat it. The quine pie ie one which ix of a | prices, or of the Patenteesand $ Manufactur — pe 12) per € ai 160z. 21 02
in | HN WARNER & SONS, 8, Crescent, Jowi Street, London. y n.. 248.
T. wide application. Already has mufaeturer in p ry description of Machinery for Raising Weter ‘by means 20 by di or a . D8,
— 1 pi eta results he heels, Deep Well Pumps, &c. ; alip Fire and Gard 20 by 1
40 boys in his employ; an our m mes, 2 on appli Orchard House sizes as sup.
classes might give their sons, up to the age of 20, an tc DUCE 3 proe ad Rough ets te Glass from Totus
alternation of a day of college and gymnastic exercises, H J. MORTON * Co. Galvanized Iron Works, | Coloured Glass in great variety, at 9d. and 13
r mens and dime wil e Bling Tao 5
€ 3 : NISED RON ROOFI utty, E arnishes, Bru.
| God's 5 m that ineimehlp —— Farm Pali and other Roofs; the cheapest, ^ D ur- F EA psgate Street Wi ithout, same side as por
boon, a sound |, embodied ealthy frame. able, and neatest Roofin in use ; alsoSpouting at 104d. 5 ze Se — way-
—— WIRE ST ( PAM DIAMONDS ^y CUTTING HORTI-
LM et — neas
MEN went out here more
winds prevailed from the north !
bled — ires like a rope or r cable), the strongest
ing pilo ence in use, will resist the largest eattle,
8 been the chief and will not ond Lor get out of form by trespassing upon or
ly |o Price, e Gal iron main
Vidua
imes the — of solid
Pwards of 1200 miles of this
Fencing supp)
GALVANISED GAME AND POULTRY NETTIN
Galv:
>, with Fe we tard of two frost ings lnst f j
-sowing on the last of February, | MEQUE
of uet TEL nec yx whole S is |" ts SER
— nri —:
ui
im
received All che First Prizes last offered by
ieultural Society. of England, viz. :— Harrows.
Mansicns, Railway irat Prize for the Best G. General Purpose
So Works Fated e First Prive for the Best E
Th be .entrusted to
— ii ICE = ecol cw First riget ince o xod ont the Pate
RTON & Wo. 2, Basing! nildings, Leeds. discontin (3 3
RS. 1^ M TE Re ete Im 2
HURDLES from 2s. per.
88.2 i
the ust atate that epin Medien exei
RURI 1232775 | HO — E RARES ey have for ears gained s
Sed 225 see Prize ey hae j
2272 55 222 PLOUGH nt
22525 P PLOUGH, with two wheels, forlight, pups T
Sis Bae PP PLOUGH, ii for general p 05
27 etes 5 SKIM COULTER 5
8 STEEL BREASTS, Y nd s, Bd.
$9920 HA R HO W S.
222 N 4 Set of Three4-Beam HARROWS, with Whippleties,
r DOE * $s recommended as general Seed Harrows, 31
UL. 2222 Sete 22 452 SERES 2225 0 „ 2
Oro vn Sroxwess: f A Set of Three 4- “Beam HARROWS, with Wipe 4
the crop upon thi : ARN. tree, adapted for 3 Horses, 10 ft. wide, marked
Xni: Bi BISHOP, axp BARNARD, Market ORSE RAKES ee y
HARLEY y. Wooncoor : Bos un in which the | machinery for the manui ts re Of theabe argen tn in their | Price RARR, e eee, S NN
save a verdict or the a — th question, — Jury enabled to make à grea —— bave been teeth. on 755 f . í :
wi not grow, the fendant a bein Gal Mo adn ve! Te B, with 28 iron teeth, er g g 0
y ence being that its failure was 2inch: Price pr ings size, marked 3 0
ped to the dryness o; of the season, not to the badness of the Pena ice of ar 8} feet EAD xd asi j i
y Price size, mark with 24
Ms. WreTwERALL'S Herp: Y R S. It takes place at High 2inch extra large arge size, marked with “wu
Grange Farm; near ideas ond, Yorkshire, on the 19th: of this | 18- — s extreme width, 84 fee ci to tient LA 0
| Price
‘Price of a Set of 15 42 —
en used as Weed Exti
: Alex, We are informed that a ood recipe for prevent- Finch ivery inghai
ing 5 — and hares from barking trai is to 1 » much iin — — Ma
He . y skima ed as required, and mix it up with soot Lincoln, 8 l, 25. VEM or
abou thick as paint. With this is paint over the tree with | át propertionate hám. „ Retford, x n Beh edi
a vhitevasi Pagan» It lasts well one season, A correspon- than the lower, i rgh, = 0
oe 45 ays garden is open—full = iin les — — and | Streng Galvani OWARDS’ E CATALOGUE, .
destroyed. um this fully nd other d : ard neh Mem
gei, út this fully rens live and other Im: — — cluding
le Xo Meis il e and XE EE b ull, or ew which they received Finland, rent fee the
raine ire attlea and De pem ican — H Agricultural dro ded Don W
Hlastrated Catalogues and Patterns S forwarded by J. & F. Howarp, Britannia
i Aru 9, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE. 323
— ee Tm y "AND 55
garden nme Syringes, &c., upon the most approved principle. J UN, WARNER avn SOX
Jew
Street, — elena VA n RON 2 'GARDEN
ENGINE, Warner's Registered Spreader, is str. ngly
commended, Gor or durability and low p
viz., „ to hold 10 g ates
a de in wood er 14 gallon:
gallons, and 35 — : Muy be — —
ay Lronmonger or Plumber in tou or country,
or of the paten-
tee — Manu-
inds f
raising Wat
various con-
2 and
es from 98.
upwards. M Metallic String from 5d. to 1s. 3d. ber lb..
— CARDE
NES
TYLOR AND SONS, Warwic
wick Lane, Newgate
€) e. Street, London, E. C., beg to call attention Z their very
superior manufacture of GARDEN ENGINES and SYRINGES.
GARDEN ENGINES, MACHINES, AND GREENHOUSE Piia
WITH ALL THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, MANUFACT
RICHARD READ, Instrument Maker (by Special teen i Her Majesty,
35, REGENT CIRCUS, PICCADILLY, LON
| a 2. 3 Ve eh À ap 4 TN 0 7
| (avri0x.—R. Reap begs respectfully to assure the tü ya im
| r make, but are mere imitations; and oti trial man of ! £ All Syringes made
by Reap are marked with the Royal Arms, and Address, à i Ef
A Descriptions, with drawings, sent post free.
| _ ^95, Regent Circus, don. i iptions, : ns E
g. 5
t well painted Oak tub, fitted with J. —
- DEN ENGINE in
GREENING & COMPANY'S S , PATENT WIRE FENCES. — Brass Pump, Universal « — Registered Spreader,
whieh answers the purpose o! — th
rosé, fan, and jet
CONTENTS OF TUBs—
s the PRINCE C NSO ORT. 10 gallon 15 all 28 gallons
Patronised by His 24 100 $5100 £6 18 0
` : Fig. 509. do. TINNED IRON TU
No. 10c VARIETY.—PBOOF AGAINST HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP, HARES, RABBITS, &c. : Gore oF TUR:
r MEC Sgallons 12 gallons l6gallons 24 gains 30 gallons
i] 1 | £2.15 £35 £4 5 18
Í Í | j j i hE
E b B 4 i
8 T" Fig. 618. No. 1. REGISTERED SYRINGE, with India- rubber
— — RE
Hi THis A !
suction tube, one rose amd jet „EI -po
nM — itto ditto 1 T
lescope Branch Pipe for ditto .. . FN
Fig. 619: GARDEN — wione ^E ee e eaeh
yit d # 621. ditto 10264 »
e E —
„ 6235 GARDEN SYRINGE, without rose & jet; Se.
Fig. 623. READ'S SYRINGE, —X P jet; 188. Gd.
^ 624, READ'S SYRINGE, with one rose and jet ..10 6
* „ 625. Improved ditto oe
X x „ 6926. — ditto
NOE aris a
and W. 8 (for shallow or
Wells N ndry of every description,
act Pumpe a
ae rok Bee C amor d Cl Ho
SPECIFICATION. No. .10 c Variety, 3 feet 9 ed qe. á 3 — of stout a wire, meshes | Garden and Fite Engin X o zec iron Baths.
Gard d — Ax Lamps of every déseription, C
5i me r Lineal Y — ̃ given for — 5 co
& Co. Fer ward "Dk free) on aguibsiton their ILI di Tub el — b containing particulars 200) j TG and THREE-LIGHT MELON
ol ie above and other Iron and Wire Fences for Parks, Farms, Gardens, Game Preserves, Poultry Courts, &c. d LIGHTS, af the best rape ge . —
r ready for m$ —À use.—Jasi W. LM Ino e Builder and
Hot-water E aratus Shee „ Old Kent Road, Lo: di
_GREENING & COMPANY, Victoria Iron and Wire Works, 81, Oxford St., Manchester. E
auser Pers PAT ENT 0 HRON OM ETRICAL
ADDRESS: THE MANAGERS, ST. PANCRAS IRONWORKS. VVV
* TMM CANAN LANDA GUNEE ETE REEL EI
Tue Sr. Pancras Iron WORKS ARE OPPOSITE THE OLD Sr. PANCRAS CHURCH, 77 eg ee i
OLD Sr. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON. |
zd
R BAR HURDLE f
IRON COLLAR BAR H S. e 5
Obtained the Silver Medal of the Royal 9 Society. i|. Forcing rcu
, af H servatory, de js, r supplies 4
uable
ae
ŠT. PANCRAS
IRON
l
ji
E
WORKS, — 2
== —
SR Bue
E —
=
HU
bu
RUN mm pu
M: Sii LN
n
Mood ud
LIE
I 1
mprovement by this PATENT consists in the COLA RS on the Bars Which, being placed on alternate sides of the centre 1 ? l H
ar en — it E its position, confine the bars to short — prevent their - stramed, ang give more than : i quii
IDITY to the HURDLE. Ei. -
d GAUNTLETT, — on-Tees.
-PROFESSOR VARNELLS MANGERS AND STABLE TITTIINGS.
THE GARDE?
ERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
. ,
e.
JOHN
—
jfi
"d
= ni P i
LIRE
1 COMPANY.
NG'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LONDON
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HOT-WATER APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, ENGINEERS;
PLANS, ESTIMATES,
AND IRON FOUNDERS.
& ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON APPLICATION.
onc HOUSES, AND PITS
eoe gy iia B
-— BY STEAM MACHINERY, AND
ted King
ANDS'S PATENT is — uS system i circulate
Heat, and for WARMING, FUMIGATING, and VEN-
TLATING Hotho ou Greenhouses, Winter Orchards, &c.;
gep — — in a humid 8 » A pent >
— — any ind o hape of Forcing-houses and Con
tories — existin, g e^ “trifling Pom —For 1 apply 65
the Otesi ie rt otte = Fitzroy Square, London
Mr.
— — — WATER
T HORTICULTURIST will dud herein an
"md vay
expensi
ment of new
—
tmosphere may
B ees
be pro-
Seat at will either 318
rtia
tages.
m Warming and Ventilating Company (Limited),
sus eet, Westminster, S. W.
CANNON BOILERS.
sf.
—
MONRO'S Sones BOILER
es. roe
SIDE Sy LONDON
f late been said about BOILERS for
COTTAM eA vede a Engineers, 1 Go.,
DON
SLEY STREET, LON
A SHOW ROOM | DEVOTED ENTIRELY TO ARTICLES z HORTICULTURE
EW s — eed 3 it E UPON APPL
2
Conservatories gyro ass F. leen Engines Flower — erin
reenhouses Foun ang 5 pier Garden Parr
uc enae & a Ornamental Wire Work Handles „ Rollers eee,
Garden Vase Flower Stands Garden Chairs Flower Labels Garden
Hurdles, Strained Wire Fencing, Game Netting, &e.
Every description of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought Iron, and Wire Work.
ITION PRIZE MEDAL GATES AND EN n
- B. COTTAM Ax» COr. beg to make it known that th tablishment from
t that they have ue a — entrance from 2, Winsley Head Strest, o Ho aide of the old om Ox d
Vives, opposite the Panthe
Hea "by Hot Water, but these Boilers have d
. 8 be the best mi diode
pted for heating eve ry description of b n d MN LE OKINS anp HURD, Seymour House, Jubilee U T Te TENTS, AND RICK CLOTHS P?
of various sizes. o PH Place, King’s Road, Chelsea, plot or HOTHOUSES, SALE, og HIRE.—H H. Pracorr, 115, Fore S
24-inch Cast Iron is - £5 10s. Od. each NSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, Pits, and escription of — i Clay, . 4
24-inch Wrought ditto o.. .. 610 0 erections in Glass work, either dn Wood or also Heating prow RP POTS, of superior Red 2 ape
36-inch Cast ditto | ESO ” the ie by hot water ee the most approved. pitas and at the by the Arley Pottery 5 (Limit —.— pots t
36-inch Wrought ditto i renee 7 81 » low t prices consisten: with guod v . Estimates forwarded, | ance to Terra Cotta at the or the E jy to Ee
References to ker and N. d x sold, say 2s. per cast, delivered. in London.— Pie
Boilers are now at e Cann cas Dollars era 5 — eR ie & PEARS, 8, rge Yard, Lombard Street City, 75 4
ps and are to bo had oally of ene 6. Banke, iin Pl bes and hapat PAINT fr PARK FENC- OOPS PATENT ANTI-C O dei 700 Ś
Pipes and 3 p eni ena Water 3 MINE RAL BLACK E one LABEL, suitable for ° x
i ow ther AINT. Sold ready f ,
house in London. Estimates f vue 178. eady for — ee Circular free by post.
complete inany partoft 3 ie past by the West India Dock Ge ze n Jous Suaw, Princess Street, Manchestet, jen
on applicat on to J. Jones, 6, Bankside, ND E Rene Ke. Recommended to the nobility and 88 es m € 15 ie ROSCOP ES d yi2
H ULTURAL 570 56 85 AND HEATI e dera bend d to the Trade, e * OSEPH AMADIO'S Improved Compoun
WATER ig eee Manufactory, Kennington Lane, Lambeth. COPE, 21 22. ; Students’, 3 uren en f
17 New Park Street, Southwark PAXTON PERS SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738. „Both these are lc» 4 o T T esir p
nufacturer of ev ry description of Bu uildings f — dies are excellent ‘of — ,
tural purposes, aid Inventor of the Improved Co — Rente a ^ Uha » mus dimi MICROSCOPE
for hea ^ he wd ae ertake à ah omy e D CATAL ater
magnitu and refer: others
FORCING "HOUSES vy "HER MAJESTY'S GARD
MORE, and at SIR — pil PEEL’S,
constructed un e superi denc
nder
DII JONES; and also to his BOILERS tthe 6
AE PALACE s Li S fixed at the
CRYS.
the ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, REGENTS
s. 9d. each.
eceipt of one P
H- i
of your Patent WAS :
ING, WR RINGING, a — em.
1 uld ut one. i :
Vide M
THOMAS —— — Patentee,
Manchester.
Descriptive Pamphlet, with Prices
free by post.
AND’ COOKE’S warranted P
NG KNIVES, SCISSORS, pU :
urserymen and Seed Merchants in
D
UNING and BUDDI
Sold " all n Nurse
e three Kingd
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
325
YI: CARDENS.
D LAWN riim
e
in England, 6d.
nials 228 76 free on application to Me g tone
rep ord s 5 t, Ci . 45 AE
rthe Works, bury, 03
ATOWIN NG Tapers 8. DINGS,
AN — and GREEN'S, with all the see improve-
— & LowE, Machinists jiy e ee gg
ull particulars e
a
ERRABEE'S W MOWING MACHINES bed
AWNS, PLEASURE GROUNDS, CRICKET h
to obtain — 10 RA
FOR LA
FIELDS, CEMETERIES, &c.—Those who wish
— M MACHINES ap fa situation, a
rate prices, a ull ted to read JAMES
FERRABEE & co's ILLUSTRATED D "DESCRIPTIVE CIR-
(U LAB, which will be sent free by post on application.
following i an 3 from the letter of a gentleman
859.
April 6
sho have
The recommendations of different’ friends
[4
e forsevera
r explanatory y particulars,
m n A n the
2
Phenix Iron Works, Stroud,
3
PATENT PRIZE YTHES ND 1
AMES PAYNE, Kirkendbright, "invites the ‘atti
d Patent-
the Kin
c on applicatio:
HE SIR JOSEPH PAXTON PATENT FILTER-
ING WATERING POT.—Instead of this Watering Pot
ue Atm Tm "e
bring the nozzl slipped on, as in the old way,
à isafixed sponte oF tede Me pod on, as in fall off; and
the spout is mgt liable to leak, break, or
The section shows the interior, in which is a cone for
SEI CES ” requested,
before finally deciding, to vis Wr M S. Burr E
ROOMS. contain og an — is of "FEN DERS,
STOVES, igs ari CHIMNEY PIECES, PRE pu i and
GENERAL NMONGERY as cannot roched
beauty Ji esign,. or
it renee with ormolu
33“. 10s. ronze
standards, 74. 51. 128; 800 Fenders, 2l. s
with rich pr ornaments, 21. 15s. to 18l;
mmey Pieces, —— ll. 88. to 80L ; Fire- -Irons, from 9$. 3d.
REDUCED PRICE
^v F 1000 yards; 47i E.
Walt Be 1 Bo genis 10.; T |
dréss in EDERICK EDatN6tO ON,
79290 N
of Fruit Fe
che 200 yard 8
yards, ; Scrim: Canvas, for wall fruit;
Mais. baci Tarator & OO: Rick Cloth, loin
Cloth rem 17, Smith
ually Protecting t yo of Ni
osts use pee ^s No. 3T
stes.
THS AND LAMPS.—
LI X LARGE SHOW ROOMS
ited exclusively to the SEPARATE DISPLAY of —
Baths, and Metalli — teads. The stoek of each is at o
„largest, newest, and mos varied eversubmitted to the pubie,
marked at prices 5 with those that ce
make his establishment the most eee int
teads, from. 6d. to £20
UBB’S LOCKS, FIREP
LATCHES, CASH AND EPROOF ga
Lord Street, p free —57, St. Paule Ch 1 1
Lord Stree — ool; t
Wolverham T "EE 16, Market Stree
8
E
—
e od each, 0
case, 78. es to Bev them with s
3, Ne w Bond Street, x on. Sold e e Teramo, Presné lans
S vi, TS AND
N
38. ed., EN and 2s. 6d. Not
75, Lower Thames Street, H. G., E
EGAR.—Patronised by her
8 PATENT PI
MALT V
Vinegar, insure perti and endet asi
Report of Dr. Letheby, City Officer
the Lancet Com mmission, and ir eoa
mos. Im 1s, 14d. ; 28.
: é ds — fe
& BARN oe Die pensar, pes
set to 4L 4% The BURTON 'and all other PATENT London. Hoake dd que respecta
e the
es and | Aq]
v d to | whom t „
ring writing, stating Ns sex and ah and — i
ach. age stam
free to at Railway for 3s. 6d.—Sold — rhe DET
5575 * odi wholesale, 62, King Wi
denne FREEDO
M FROM COUG eam
Dr. Locock’s PULMONIC WAFERS ui Te
and a. rapid cure of asthma, ma A
disorders of the breath and lungs; —.—
tas oily 1s. 13d., 2s. 9d., and 110
ELT
eet relief,
coughs, and all
a most S
'Sold by all Medicin
LLOWAYS p TS —The liver, that
eee barar a v Ls i
Ber 'duode
watch earefully the first Dd deis
lly, and on the top of the x ve e
u N ssin lying on the loft aidb; a dry co 2 e
gf breathing, are among the dia; 1ostios-or si
s more or less affected. For all disorders. ips tatis
Hotow. WAY's Pills are a. specific; by checking tho over euis
of bile, . its due seereti tome to the
stomach, they effect a speedy and perm:
TST dign BACK, Gr
matism, Gout, Indigestion, Flatüleney, Dat
ity, &c.—Dr. De Roos COMPOUND aus PILLS bare
been long —— ped as a ie pot effi remedy for the
above complaints, rges ion of uri
and diseases of the kidneys; rl
E which, if neglec
a li ingering dea! For de lepression
society, study or business, Nw ; diness, drowsiness,
without refr —.— gre and insanity
self, h E diseases,
they are wirid: "By d eir sar action
bile and aeidity of the stomach, the forse
tion of stone, MES € as ied: functions of all tes
o Price 1s. 1}d., , 45. 6d., 115 pert
rough all Moticite ventots, or 2 fioe
ets in postage Lu
Street; Oxford Street.
Bees
to try Tr.
SCROPHULAS
whieh baffled her di ee
medicines, She only took e d
p of the Ointment, D effected a cure to | ‘of her
er friends, who wish it to iblic for
br suit Toring flew, creatures. Dy HOBEGISS POO)
P and PI
AD
successful in the cure 0 of
in the a Ki ngdom and t W 05 Colonies. s an ils
3 HYSELF.—MaARUE. . bot
ive Ther th grr and i
5 — disco
writing, — an unique sir of 3
meli — — send a
es, Protecti , and a dirécted envelope, re
rs Sold in pieces 20 Ex by |) Shower Baths, ea » 69, Castle Street, Oxford Street, London, and thet ^
88 inches wide. No. 1, best quality, 5r. per piece; second Maps lote) tim inc E Dow 2: Tos in a few days a minute detail of the talents 2e!
17171. ck Gn Orr puro Coran di Tl argue. Sa rim vint i D
Address Jonn Suaw & Co, Manufacturers and Dealers, UTLERY, WARRANTED; — Tho 555 F BOTH
- Princess Street, Manchester: assortment: of TABLE CUTLERY itt the wor, atl war- |" 0, THE. NERV AS idu sso
LLEN'S PATENT PORTMANTÉAUS anp | Tented, is on SALE at WiLLIAMS. BONTON!) at prices that are | D. tired Clergyman, having lr ig,
TRAVELLING BAGS, with SQUARE OPENING: remunerative only becatse of the o largoness of the sales s. Sineh ays, after many years o ving s stam
Ladies Dress Trunks, Dre — Maem. with Silver Fittings ; 5 oe ars e nae 10r. 08°; i to high shoulders, 195.64 doz.; 3 ony "pp or ti — — dH —
esserts to match, : —
articles for Home or Continental Traveling: iste ge | Càrvors, Ba. por pair; largor sizas, rom S08 to's
New Catalogue for i859. By post for two Surg eae: AT extra fine Ivory, 33s; it with silver ferrules, 50:
ty dat of Officers Barrack Furniture and Mili- sa d por pair mm, 6s. 0d. t dozi; Desserts, Ba: Odi; Carve
" M an nd. i .
separate ; black wood-handled
b eq TH 55 8 BALM or and F Forks, A per jui dors ; Table Steele from 1s. ents Whe ite Stre
COLUMBIA, Which Has for been „stock in existence of Plated Dessert Knives and Forks, in
= ced Et peculiar: cleansing, and and otherwise, and of the new plated Fish Carvers
t yiug the hair, ergrowth, ai las prevent- M S. BURTON'S G.
ing it PN ia or turning & A. OtpRIDoS, 2 Wel: M noe ty eae tne reves BRAL I 7
trim eras seven doors from gratis, an. e b; St. It co!
Choate = Ba are e 3: i, Oe 6%, and 11s.; and by all tions of his illiited d. Stock of Blect — and Sheffield Plate
is invaluable. water Dishes, Bora Feuders, —— ia = /
= in
1 HITE AND SOUND TEETH e | Ranges fel S fe Ted Urna and Nei ler Len Hape | ent of Types; Seam £r
1 attraction and to po and lougevit Tuble Cutlery, Baths’ and: Toilet Ware, and
ater m »ticntionof food. 3 or — — of peddling, Bod — a Ker, London.
enti unde ingrediente, is of — Prices aud Plans e Show Rooms ab 30, Oxford
able valuein improving and beautifying the teeth, eins heni: Street; 1, Med ze Newman Street; and EAL
eran e in E th 12 na tt Place, Bonden. E tablished 18 820. E —— men, — INFLL ^ M jen N
= ic h, removes — neipient OU WANT LUXU URIANT gent 15 AL
and polishes and pre — the enamel, to wi it HISKE HAIR, ELECTR IC
b » a pearllike whiteness. As the most efficient and | guaranteed to produce ie ra OUFELLES ar n is Sonor; pä ME Nuit WORK, intent
fragant aromatic purifier of the breath,.tee a gums ever | imtwo-er three weeks with th weet certain 17 eee usa ^who are su EY re
nown, RowLANDS' Odonto has for a lon im i. Lord ak — vent its falling et check gre Hle OU: LOC PHYSICA DEBI pre ractical O
oceupied a distinguished place at the toilets reigns | stages eprpdiuee the: has Ma n ali its * Pond whieh they lead ; Bern.,
and the nobility through Europe: while 1 15 Lene e for | — lie on Sold by: aj m 772 ai: Whatever 2 t Curative power of ELE ing tone :
VV which i sally he €— post free, on receipt of 24 penny postage ster ee Treatment o us by ed, from. due te e |
Price 2s 9d. per box. CAUTI TION. The ro s rem — PELLE, 69, Castle Street, a a Sira berg i by constitutions relaxed. debilitated, ff from thé Standing
Odonto ” are on the Label, and A Rowtawb & Sows, 20, Hatton | | Street, London. A toilet guid st free for. fi — zauses ie, rari Canes compl dy yours
Garde ‘engraved on the Governmentetampaflsed on each box. | I rei „It completely restored m hai Di Mis ts Davia y a Regi egistered Medial Fret ee
Sold by the Proprietors, and by Chemists and Perfu whiskers are now growing freely, Qe ^p cien “eben "^
ARP EOM eo APPS
isst i
„
S Us
A1 One Vol. 4to, 100 Plates, 6l. 11s., e 1s. 6d., free by post, 1s. Td. Fo published (entered atStationers Hall), 9d Edition, -
ILICES EXOTICJE; or, Coloured Figures and [Tan ABEL X “FO R THE HERBARIUM, AN ENTIRE NEW SYSTEM ON
Descriptions of Exotie 5 nA of mh as are | SISTING OF THE NAMES OF THE TS CULTURE OF THE POTATO.—Extraordi-
seated in the Royal Garden W. J. | CLASSES, ALLIANCES, ORDERS, AND SUB-ORDERS. ary produce again in 1858. See Advertisement in
culti Gardeners’ lr ied of. January 15; 600 bushelsto the acre free
Hoe lio most magnificently illustrated book of Foreign Ferns - PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S “VEGETABLE KINGDOM." from disease of that most delicate, most liable to disease —
A d. t s m est Potato the Lapstone Kidney, which, at 4s. per bus
that .. di pages, price 1 dum Hey 8 boy c s à Loon gives 1004. per acre clear profit on land in one year. The Book
T K or HE ee TSH “PLORA a P forwarded post free for 18 stamps.— Address R. B., Post Office,
HANDBOO Mise aa Plants and Fern R to, | J. MATTHEWS, 5, . M progr Street, Covent Garden, Hathersage, Derbyshire.
— be ihe British Isles. For the use of Beginners | Miseni: NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION OF
sod Amate surs. By G * NTHAM, F. L. 8. ly n consequence of the - postal arrangements, parties in the DR. LINDLEY'S THEORY OF HORTICULTURE.
Any one conversant with — who takes up Mr. | I country who desire it can have two Snia sent by post for| Just qM in $vo, with 98 Woodeuts, price 218. cloth,
Bentham's book » [immediately feel that he is dealing with | m mp Tenes for two stamps or eleven for four, in addition HE z RY Axp PRACTICE o
an origin nal work ^ of the number r, an Attempt to explain the chief Operations of
BOO K s F OR NE GAR 5 lov Jine ers each, or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution among Gaidening ie n Physiological Grounds: being the Second
Professional and Amateur Gardeners ude oe he Pl rs Co! Pel . Die. delivered anywhere in London, ona n Edition of md “Theory of op ome much enlarged. By
Garden should possess a thorough know ledge: Dus d jm 5| office . 2 sent to the Publisher, JAMES MATTHEWS, at Jonx LINDLEY, Ph. D., F. R. S. nding Member of the
and Flowers they eee DIG T TOMA RY the Office of the Gardeners’ Chronicle. Institute, vies temas $e the ee Society, Professor
p 3 par in University College, London, &c.
HE CORDAE ae Pimia . CALENDAR OF GARDEN VJ.
desirable fo for the Ga: ac and e xplai e terms and opera- OPERATIONS. By Sir JosEPH Pax TON, M.P. —— which time - has had an — — creation, and has
ms employed in their OA; "Edited by G. W. Jonx- Reprinted from the GARDENERS CHRONICLE. Upwards of | bee nslated into the German, Dutch, and even Russian
— om, Esq., Editor of The Cottage Gardener,” &c., price Ss. 6d. | 126,000 have already been sold. lan —— Being — particularly — 2 —
Also the following orks:— c — X * ENT S: eee the — at ——Á kak 7 — A eee
V d Ae 1 i enerally interestin; use: yam ui
“GLE ENNYS HANDBOOK TO. THE FLOWER | African Lilies Fr cati Fr —— operations. 2 He has thus greatly extended the matter,
0 ud AND GREENHOUSE.—A new edition, thoroughly | Agapanthus Gilias Plum ald kiki to facto
" 3 1 few days. Cloth, n Gooseberries Pol: mE y supporting the amem n octrines with an appeal
oed gà e b ecg ponto 4 — Grafting Potatoes familiar to cultivators, or which ought to be; and the result —
iit edges i t till inte hing and po ps compendium of the principles
OTHE VEG ETABLE KINGDOM AND ITS PRO- — — 0 — ng [tings - and practice, a Ea fir id art, of horticülture. "E Builder,
DU enen with nearly 300 engravings, and —— Aries Herbs [nials Propagation by cut-| his is a Second Edition of the MGE 0 or —
ing an enumeration of 7000 genera and 4000 synonym Bonis Herbasons. Poron- Pyracant a with the addition of a large quantity of
represen about 100,000 species of plants. By Robert Beet Heliotrope Radi: NAE. uced to show how entirely scientific princ rires ped
Hoco, A ing of several works upon Plants and Fruits, Biennials Hollyhocks eee e tion correspond. The volume e as much
price 10s. 6d., handso cloth. Black Fly Honey mr Raspberries matter as the first edition . . . . Although very large additions
CCC PF
ding M a ‘ e i it, é ‘opel 8
— —.— — pde Sane Site eni Hyacinthe Roei S the greatest changes are those which relate to vitality, climate,.
London: W. KENT * 00, Paternoster Row, and 86, Fleet Box Edgings Hyssop Rue domestication, ventilation, propagation, pruning, resting, and
Street (late D. BOGUE); a 55 s Fab 80 0 K. and a Broccoli Indian Cress Rustic Vases men - d such p. e d bere p:
i »
POLLE : 5 Kidney Beans . ich a form as to make it evident that the great object of the
REEDERS or POLL TILE are informed | PE vender Bavo s author has been, not to produce a work suited to men —
that the org M a nee vue gv v a Cabbage —.— axifrage but one which in onim info — 5 — — may undi :
i re) ress. It will contain the Her and a olume cone avery copious index
flowing reedors — ie — — 2 ptosiphons Searlot —— of matter there is no —À Ei ANE where any given
His Grace the Duke of Buccleuch e Annual prm See a subject is treated of. Prey a
The Right Hon: the Earl a momen odor. c wei TTRODU CTION ` JO" "ROTA ANY. EN
e E um Carnations London Ie eak: E 17 à Edition,
The Right Hon. the Earl of Cawdor Carrots Lychnis, double Select Flow: gral? enlarged ; 8, rous Wood En-
m Bight Hon byt yg Southesk Cauliflowers Marigold is Select Vecetables | gravi ngs. Tw wo S ae o, ag ide
dt on ix Cele Marjoram and Fruit It has been the Author's wish to bring every subject that
"Sir Jobe Stu t Picea, Det. of T Pusligo o Cherries Manures Snails and Slugs he has intr wise down, as nearly an reed to the dia in
Sir J J pm Stuart Forbes E of K ils, Arbre ath China Asters D - Ae 8 which it is — 1 at Lies present d; toed i added
y China Roses esembryanthe- Spinac so very considerab quantit: p especially
Brown, 8 m 3 0 ithemums, mums Spruce Fir in n what 4 to NM ND Anatomy and Physiology, that
Cunningham, Samec, Dunrod MN, Kirkendbright | Chinese Mimonette Spur Pruning de present Edition may be considered, im those respects, a
es in 8 T
Alexander, Renchal, o neha T Clarkias Nan i e London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, & LoNGMANS.
., Woodburnden, Fo Clematis arcissu 'ummer Savory VH Clima Cn . 1 o i
„„ . — eoph rest 1 OLD PHEASANTS d
> oer
c» mm John, Monyruy, a B LD, some very me e
Leslie, James, Thorn, Blai fepe ped (Tigrai dia Pavonia Cocks being now in fall plumage, sel — ed from the stock
M "Combie, william, o of Tiulyfour, À Aberdeen Crocus Parsnip [Transplanting of a n Pheasantry, which is overstocked. Price
M‘Combie, William. 3 d =, Ahendeen Crown Imperials —|Parsley Tree Lifting a oder: — ess to A. B. C., Mr. Eccles, Stationer, Wood-
Scott, David, Calna eaten Cucumbe Peaches Tulips took, Ox
— rats & ia tly eerie ed flowers Pea-haulm M ook TO RY RS.
liam ] a "t *
Thomson, Samuel, Blaiket, Crocketford, Dues Dantes window cem Venus Locus N R. TH OM AS 18 TICROFT, in in W hob the
Trustees of the late Mr. „Soott of ood "Düisios Pelargoniums Cash g above panes, which has been Saplished for —.—
Fortleth: Dog’s-tooth Violets 8 Verbenas —— 30 ye xus — thank his kind Prien
sang ibiti 8 Iris i generally for 88 very liberally afforded him for
gamba be rece, bam sten | ing articles for” Potunias ` seca | Romany enra, and a fh ih 8
uy his STOCK of - which is of the
to Stock. s vas protection | Ph Phlox i [towers ^ ion; also, Wachen P. i may be
x — MERE ee application to wen — G i imm he, RENAN is in a good situa-
Edinburgh = of Seam ge te J Marruzws, 5, U Wellington Street, Cove Gard „ r ee tn
inburgh ; o BERT „ Upper n en, attached. Personal aj en! ! 7
Office of the Farmers’ Gazette, Dul London, W.C. wick Lan
SOLD, an OLD ESTABLISHED BUSI-
E aT NE f ; ane of the wie egg
NOTES. AND QUERIES; ge ea oe
manent — —For further particulars apply to
A MEDIUM OF INTERCOMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, port Office,
ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, PHOTOGRAPHERS, &c. BE "E BRIST ERY GROU &
Kemp Town, Brighton. — Gardens are now to Let
OTES AND QUERIES will, it is believed, be found to bring before the — reader every week a Mein | "ud SE treating, fr t the — sd "obtain N and
amount of curious ee à interesting information. It was established for d apa one . to all lovers of reris | pe — to view the unds on application to Mr. R. W.
A cmmʒn Book, in they might, on the one hand, record for thei: tse and ihe e of others AR ose minute fac @as,-20, Great Maribora esr bei loni, X . and. ef Mr.
those sof a Aub phrase or di: uted berger those illu: iint r Punt —thos: —— biogra- A. CHANDLER, x Mortiedlaral Valuer, 38 28, ry Road, Wands-
phical anecdotes or unrecorded dates which all who read —— 1 upon and, on 75 other, of Mapping a medium | worth Roa:
through which they might address those Queries, by which the best inform uate 24 rrested in the midst of their — ——
. — oe the e oi ae * solutions of Pe fron some of 1 number Thesu hich has a attended this mere 10 0
supply a want long felt by literary men manifest by tbe necessity o — enlarging the Paper from 16 to
24 . For opinions of eren, Atheneum, Examiner, Literary Gazette, Spectator, Dublin Review, &c — eria the Min C. STEVENS is is directed b e Council of
utility, &c., of NOTES AND QUERI Pros 7 ee «— Societ. of London: 2 pi ay
A — E sent on receipt off five 55, King 8 treet, Covent Garden, on.
Sale t Room,
QUERIES is also issued in Bondi) Paris, for for “the convenience of those who may either have a difficulty in TUESDAY. pel 12, the’ unique eb riens CALI- .—
the unstamped Weekly Num rre or mage pret D receiving it monthly. Each Part contains Papers by some of our most fon tay ay be viewed description in Gardeners’ Chronicle, Jan. 22,
i Those already issued contain articles by on the Morning Sale, and Cata- |
i: ‘brooke Professor De — Rev. J. Hunter | B. Mayor, Pu of Shaftesbury 3
.. John Esq. Dr. Diamond muel Hickson, o ame {M.P W. J. Thoms, Esq. SR H AND FERNS. 3
John Bruce, Esq. Hepworth Dixon, Esq. uglas Jerrold, gan 2. Monck. Milnes, „B. Thorpe, Esq. ; J. C STEVES will Sell Auction, at —
s e ma. Sir Fortunatus Dwarris Rev. Dr. Kenn Ormerod, Esq. Rev. J. H. Todd, D. D. ME ree 38, King Street, ——— Garden, on
VN. D. Christie, Esq. Sir Henry Ellis R. J. King a K. Planch ché, Esq. Bir V. C. Trevelyan, Bt. URSDAY, ote” Eu 12 yá Clock preciely, -
J. P. Collier, Eg. C. Forbes, Esq. Rev. L. B. Larking F. Rimbault, Esq. T. H. Turner, Esq. i 3 sry — i aed plicate specimens.
W. D. Cooper, Esq. E. Foss, Esq. Marc Antony Lower, Esq. Rev. Dr. — * Rev. Henry Walter 1 ii dd ge Eh . e du dmirably grown :
Bolton Corney, Esq. Rev. A. Gatty |W. B. MacGabe, Esq. 8. W. Singe Albert Way, Esq. — ‘alo A
^. P Cunningham, Bed. Henry Hallam, Ed. Rev. S. R. Maitland, D. D. E. Smirk ca: B. Witten, Bart. Plants. ‘the lowing,
"Rex. T. Co: J. O. Halliwell, Esq. Sir F. 3 n jeorge Ste ens, Dk W. Farrell, Esq., r Aeri
b Dr, Dalton E. Hawkins, Esq. J. H. — Esq. IE. oe Kc. &c. Kc. »
oe NOTES AND QUERIES is also published in Half-yearly Vol each 0 r i
umes, eac very Copious h rice 10s. 6d. cloth boards. „ nobile
ws Nine have been cocina — — ee. Sets, price 4l. 14s. 6d., far d 3 4 a i vulnerum |
E 6 oria bjects treated upon will show that these Volumes are not merely of temporary interest, but of lasting $» gun |
History. I uie of Bap ed vd Gena Rao of n RD rem on Literature ^ Cymbidium eburneum
Early rature e Arts t
Illustrations Glossarial Notes of — and e Nat tural History
Manners and Customs Notes on Hallam, Macaulay, &c. sxe dun 814 - a
Genealogy — FAL s and Old Poetry Photography, cially in its
cellaneon Rem arkable Events in -— Relation to Arc Ke.
Toole — — Scotch, and Irish Hist dre. Ce.
out- of- the way informati amusement — uld take up a a inps that
may be opened to bo of interest to more — sat odd
a ä of NOTES AND QUERIES is of itself a | mind, than a volume of NOTES AND 1
uite an out-of-the-way treasure. Wholly apart
5 lue as = aid to the literary labourer who
— — mms i—a point so — ised
———
No. 1.—Cocumper AND MELON Pit, 10 ft. wide.
5i
— —— a rae
No. 6,—GREENHOUSE, from 18 to 20 ft. wide. No. 7.—Foncrxa House, from 18 to 20 ft. wide.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS MANUFACTURED BY STEAM POWER MACHINES! n
| BEST MATERIALS AND LOWEST PRICES.
HENRY OUR MS ON.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDER & HOT WATER APPARATUS MANUFACTURER |
STANLEY BRIDGE, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LONDON,
Deeply grateful - the vay, liberal and kind patronage bestowed upon him, begs m respectfully to inform the Nobility, ster rm 5
that it being his on to o pains to merit a continuance of their rectas nd that he may be enabled to e se adit j
An miim ait at the e possible cost (agreeably with the best Materials and Workmanship), he has erected a m 5
Power Machines, he purposes of his Trade.
y referring to any of the above sections, receive immediate
PLANS, SPECIFICATIONS, and
pecnliarly adapted for
PARTIES DESIRING fron as to prices, &c., will, zd
ESTIMATES for plain and inexpensive practical Structures, and for the most elaborate — Erections, $
Wood or Iron, forwarded on application. a
ORMSON’S PATENT JOINTLESS TUBULAR BOILERS
May be seen in suecessful operation at Mr, Vrrron- s, Royal Exotic Nursery, King's Road, Chelsea, and om view and for sale at
THE „„
sof No. 20, Q
Printed by WIILTAM Brapzory, of 13, Upper Woburn Place, and F. "s
e Freeinet of efriars, City published by them at the p^. No. 5, Upper Wellinga ke ; Parish of
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
No. 16.—1859.]
SATURDAY, APRIL 16.
Mus useum, British
Netting, zebra
AN sale or
z
A
2
888888 85
rr
8 8 888 .
£
=
8888855
SSA 8s
*588838
N eather in D France
Wen! Farmers’ Club
lock
earacasensis
e-grass
cake manufacture
5
ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF.LONDON.
— is — giv — — the business of the Society
rried o. t No. 8, St. Martin's Place,
1 are. W. e.
E E SOCLE — —— LON DON.—
ien
3 at Chiswick
the Kerne kde retary, St.
— O, "before APRIL 23, after which’ the
I 57 y the Fellows will be sold to the Trade.
OTANIC 9 SCR
|
|
EAE
E: 2 the Royal ea E e
orci ra d ETT had of CHARLES TURNER,
is a 5 DAHLIA SHOW FO
EL 1859.—This Mon. JE will take Hall, Renens on the x rut ve
Prices i showtly be
LOU A L
d MENT, AND MA "ANY p
"er — — seque for the ma d —
Registered Offi ymouth.
E To 2777 TILLERS AND AGRICULTURISTS.
RESH HEU WHITE SILESIAN SUGAR
E
880 A BAT. ATAS. —Fine route 9to 12 nets
538. Aag dozen; Uer rg siz
Rind Ny Seed Growers,
eg to i mate that
t now is the best time for planting the above. "Good Sets
—— or 43. po oes Te he Nurseries, mens
AS) for
é sets (from flet, —
end weighing over . €
e "per dozen.—Apply, —
OR: [ TS. AND
ONS 1 5 DIOSCOREAS, » vhi uer
ing out
3 are sent with the roots. Early
E etsi frt tm Read
„SO M, US SACCHAK RAT! TUS.
ON Digo SONS, e e of this Seed, can
wholesale and 2 warranted the true kind,
Seed, at reduced price, EN to quan-
acre sufficient. Instructions on culti-
Sows Berks Seed Establishment, Reading.
gamps. o
on receipt of 10.
Dm Ü JU, ies BE EMO PLANTS, — — s
Catalogue sent for one
Erb Lond
varieties, 40s.
tto B. & L A liberal allowance
ets
“lets of | page
f Price Fivepence.
* : E » 6d.
. W je STOCK. |-
UTT AND SONS have a choice stock of
SKIRVING’S SWEDE SEED, evi of 1858, mus they
can strongly recommend. Price 9d. per Ib., or cheaper by the
bushel. = al Berks Seed Establishment, Reading.
IVE FIRSTRATE BROC LIS
ish GU CBOSION.
WALCHEREN, f October
roduce...
HAMMOND'S WHITE, CAPE, Sept to N Nov...
1 dk eee Feb. and Marc
tete oe 2
HE SIKE CLOVER. — This valuable but scarce ThE G ”
ANT. late white, for! Mes an nd Jun
lov = over eed "aed — — —— . of A 4 O, pac . of es 22 free by po - 3s. 6d. B 227 1 *
nate husbandry.» It c. * ne supplied alone if required. Price Bass & Brown, See a om an Ei Suffolk.
fluctuating, to be had on application.
} ee Gp ee AEN S OR WILD respectfully 1 reminds his friends that
8 OSH" Mixed e9 is th wing CHINESE Lc
HARL s ALEXANDER, pde Edinburgh jours, r packet. Separate co
Cus New Seod of the above at 20s. per lb., and 1s. 64. Sold out. — Tus Wilp, The Primulary, Ipswich.
Is UF THE Y ape pe — St few thousand
FEW ZEALAND 1 7 — Price 25. to be sold, 18. s, per T Apply to Mr.
mimm epos Palace 4 "Garden We bridge. E E cae
Sao London, . no iO - RTER & , Seedsmen, 238, High per Post-office Order Sts odi y bo Mita nde
ZEALAND RUNNING BEAN.— NEW SEAS WALLFLOw
Packets of 12 "Ses for 14 stamps. LOCK HART, 15 TORIS a nd SEEDSM MAN, "P arson’ 5
88 K Brows, Seed G s, Co., Sudbury, Suffolk. B X Fulham, near el a is sending out Seed of his
rade.
men, S4 fokirig Suffolk.
5 —khe improved variety, ty, 18
ta! e Se eds for seven stamps, free
= | by post. Suo drawing of thís mou ae — iens dsome inc
in Gardeners’ Chronicle, Jan. 29 and Feb. 1
CLIHD ck eod Growers. Dig „ Suffol
IFLOWER PLANTS for Pricing iw: . per
— ABPARAGUS, 2 years, 158. per 1000; be
2s. 0d. per m m BEDDING PLANTS, 2s. p
RD, Atherstone Nursery.
sorte mat NHOUSE AND STOVE PL ANTS
—See rc a nd List: 7 N pd. of March 26,
e 260, with descriptio sizes, Also a LIST. contain-
ing serena —— — free: 55 post. oa d & Bro own, Seed and
rsery DE EN TAS y, Suffolk.
ALOGUE
OBERT "Sie 8 NEW DESCRI IPTIVE AND
PRICED CATALOGUE, No. 6 (62 pages) of his COLLEC-
ION of BRITISH. XOTI FERNS, can be had 3
Pra Vo 1 er .
—5 gay; cm
t
OHN KEYNES'S SELECT CATALOGUE OF |!
DAHLIAS, CARNATION: 2 &c., con-
52 in each class, is
taining Lists pf all the valuable Show
now ready'and will be sent LIS on.
Castle Street N 12 m 11 1 —
HENDON PARK -NUR
ps psa SHENTONS Descriptive CATALOG GUE
w DAHL "HOLLYHOCKS, PELARGONIUMS,
BEDDING. enl BORDER 9 and the — New
Flowers ot the Ed warded on applie 2
FEDE 8 g= RDENERS' CHRONICLE.”
CHEAP CEREN FIO UR AND BED DIRA PLANTS.
SLIPPER'S CATALOGUE is ied ready, and
— 4 be had for a D
Villa Nursery, Camden Tow ones, N.W
FINEST SHOW RAT 718 OTEES, ~ PINKS, c.
Vg merci SCHOPIELD h as a tine h — sto —
e above for sale at 6s., „and 20s. per doz
Also CP ANSIES, 1 VERBENAS, FUCHSIAS. [3
—— ready, e on application. Kno
thor; car Loos, "Yo re ie
Gree
ingle BLACK WALLFLOWER,
rw afi 90 men ench for e. stamps,
new new Double Black Wallflower 30 stam sake
IE BEST LT
S
in sealed packets, con-
— deme 5 his
xc
TOUE -— — sD CO. having 75 13 Stock of the above
grow n the Sea Coast,
ffer it at the | following — tama
ASPARAGUS, pem T,t tone
SEA KALE
55 K. 81 Nu irsery, Great Yar mouth ax Noris oc
STIRZAKER. have again to offer several
years 25. Gd. ssa An
— e Ar —
»
of.e E CABBAGE PLANTS:—Drum-
head Falle Be Tu „ 9s. ; Red, for — 5s. ;
Cauliflow 160 Mon, 35 Shey is per 10 1000. —Lancas er Nurseries.
Fiw - LOW R ROSE, E, * MADAME WILDE *
— his be verdad w Rose was exhibited by A. LARET
Bos. S the Rayal Botanic Sóciety's Gardens, in the ei
A n Wednesday, me 6th insb., and awarded a Ceri ede
Meik. egt et 6d. t rat ard package and carriage to London
inetuded. —A. e = ae Her!
A. ze SSON. ie " Aie stock of the
me, in 8 e order for removal,
any "suited for’ — — eh ay wg! or pa * Adver-
in Gardeners’ Chroni November ber
——
Ni A Herts.
LN URSERIES, Forres, E
per packe
por pae gati
T BE SOLD, a LARGE i E YEW TREE
va) TTS, SLABS, and ROOTS; also a fine YEW TREE
of great age. The best SEA SHELL and GARDEN GRAVEL
for onset Vitis and Garden Paths, to be 4 ect he —
at Gravel Wharf, 67, S A Street, “Row
OLANE: Proprieto c
E
Mae AYRES, s, Mn p GROWER,
dori "Supply every kind of Wurzel,
QEEDS! GEN UINE
SEEDS at M —— TM
ch is G. W. V
E 8.
LIN HUSSEY up 40 our the iis at
4s. per doz., or 30s. per 100. Also several thousand Seed-
ling HOLLYHOGKS, - from a ce gor som lection, at
28. per doz., or SH —Horticultur: 8, Norwich,
T ND FAN! E
re en, Also FUCHSIA
VERBENAS, PANSIES, &c.
GEORGE Surra, Florist, Seedsman, &c., Common
field, Maccles a
"ERE NIUMS
8, CALCEOLARIAS,
Catalogues on application to
Side, Hurds-
terms for cash.
N. B. Dealer in * and Flower Seeds, Fruit Trees,
Shrubs, and E Plants.
8 ae LIFERA.—A iive — substitute for
Uie Li WNS apg seg alm wo years
establ ed Plant, showing its character, t free om
receipt Tr ie or 30 stam
Addres ener, Fores t Hil, fees
pm GRASS — ARGENTE EUM).—
beauty of this extraordii season been
VERBE
HARLES "I TURNER | 5 gr — out —— s
fine new Wr m s. arn — 5 Catalo ogue.
The A rier
ANSIES. ine b a and es stud inde. 2
YLEY,
ad.
ELGIAN DAISLES.—In the finest variety, 4s. —
D dozon, —— ELU & BAYLEY, Bradshaw Gardens, Chad
erton
LES ATIONS.—Twenty-five pairs strong, well
and extra fine show varieties, named 1l., packing
— — Dae d. — NR LL & BAYLEY, Bradshaw
n, Manc
pan — —— -five pairs strong, well-rooted
m "x extra T show — MN, 1l., packing
and hampe included. — Dopwett & Bradshaw
Garden hadderto n, Menchester
Ni KS. ibis, ini
strong healthy
cluded.—DopwELL
e ra —The
.
tine named kinds, in
r
dozen, —DopwEL | 8d. p
3r. por dozen :
It om * espe b py : dos, hundred,
AR
reciated.
ot rS by CHAR!
CU UO ERRORI
mm piti ns of "wired
GRASS — which
CLIMAT. bear com
and sam
iAINFOIN SEED. —Sead
—
TUE e
THE GREAT VINE AT HAMPTON
Te T SUBSCRIBERS being the holders of f the Röya al
Court, are enabled to offer
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL a
OSE
LIN A
Leeds,
Fy HEN er MAJ OR, Knosthorpe, near Leeds 1 5
ounce that his . on Mst week: of
PH MAY axb
Mx
SKIRVING’S SWEDE >
sin te fam famous an truly e N b CALOEGLARIAS w all be oE30, . for 15s, post GREEN-TOP Sema Perla
in onth, d 1 T
BLACK s rese eh Mim nl ts, 42s. and 60s. per S E are the produce of hi 2 rut a Pt RED GLOBE TURNIP EC. '
d sed in larg poorte * considerable Lamar will will bloom this year. Postage LONG RED MANGEL 1 9
wells 3 n E MR PE. , Nu ce Pec when the amount i — A 2 rene YELLOW GLOBE Do. $3
: ne ees A General LIST of SEEDS f 09
for the Farm, Fk
HOMAS 3 METHVEN has p and a large stock of xU CORN FROM THE 5 4, or EVA. Gardens forwarde Sen i a lower, TUI
strong well ripened BLACK T: — ESSRS. RATN BIRD anp HA LI ington Street, Strand, Waterloo Bridge
he begs to offer at 3s. 6d. each s. per in. “the sual to Agriculturists- requiring change of 101 REI GENUINE AGRICULTURAL SEEDS
disco he Trad d N and April WHEAT the best s. orts for Spring 8 E
che * ni LA ith Walk i Edinburgh.—A pril 16. Re NE guay M ESSRS. DICKSON anp BROWN (late P. ang
AE ERETON Oh dane, Thanet, Golden Drop, Long-eared — nra e bes ro daten e thee [es Corporation Stree d
I X» SON beg respectfull invite | American, Hudson's Golden Melon, Banham's Sprat, and other all orders with first-class AGRICUI ÜLTURAL I
wers of the above ed to an inspection of their un- | varieties of BA nd Tartarian OATS. which have been oi by themselv my ie T.
rivalled Stock of Young Specimens of all the newest d best| Canadian Eten on opetoun, Poland, s T superintendence.
varieties, many of which have been exhibited at the Metropo-| Fine CLUSTER BEANS, weighi bs. per bushe pecial prices for large quantities on application, A
tan Exhibitions. They are clean and healthy, well yd aan Samples and Prices on application. CATALOGUE is published, and may be n Tad post ig ia
bloom, and moderate in price. Catalogues fo pue Adáress—Basingstoke, and 89, Seed Market, Mark Lane,
u application.—Dorkin oF „April 1 Taon, „H.
aN, e HOLLY HE : HARLES SHARPE has 5 ‘ill to ofi ulis
EORGE WHEELER eee Eee ihe DWARD. SANG anp SO ONS, "Kirkalds XB. ing, saved from the finest selected storks
minster, ts. respectfully annonces 5 ss 525 eb di beg offer a quantity of fine ice transplanted LONG RED fin n INCOLNSH
ofhis SEEDLING FUCHSIAS will be rea 21 er eee x ad 9 tó LOW DO E SEER QN
and after the 20th inst. st beautiful do üble | 15 inches at 10s. per 100. These are just recovering from the irg á x ATE GREEN GLOBE Do.
SIR COLIN CAMPBELL — pals | second transplanting in 1851, and are therefore in good con-| ALTRINGHAI T | YELLOW TANKARD DL
r ition for removal. E. S. and S. have also a lot of once trans- plication.—Wis NE d |
i r
on the 2d
places it 4
s f cour:
ver looking than the twice ian =~ d, but have o 3 di r than any oth kind, d grows ers ü
pl 55 18 7 20 in — M NK à per Y am xl id t6 DL wing upon poor land, is not affected zs
ante, Ben o eeps good in a the ground or in store till the end
SU OUM ARGENTEUM, OR PAMPAS
(carri: 90
TTELL has the gratification oF pr ring Due t, Mar k Lan
obtain two — — superb varieties of Los highly ornamental |
eile uiis TEN and Siem elear waxy-white, | Grass, raised from proved specimens ; he CR endin; 1 * RO ls W HI TE E E DES |
corolla rich da mce; rie a ay t the Maid of Kent, out, numbered 1 1nd The number o Y* pee imi A 5 Nus 1
the flower eig fuge —— — habit, a free bloomer, and a No.1hasa majestic habit, sending up its flower stems 8 the hardiest eh poy the best keeper, while ir
The usual t to the Trade. 1 quantity s the — 5 —— — to — wd: dd * m . yn rowan MM — passed, Tie,
G. see e dt — to out with the above ax able height among the er s ore recurving, see x us » Esa
ix new Fuchsias offered . Smith, of Tollin leaves ully bend to the ground in great abun lou: Guide, tow ose assiduous — nd od
Num ot spei hU xD | dance, gi Mg the whole rd most noble appearan: a sores of ye e owe the perfection
has on hand. a large quantity of RHOD No: 2 in habit is altogether different; the leaves all recurve er i
DRONS from 9 inches to 2 toot, at very pes n rra t about the same €— 80 i the flower 3 Mem Teig e ee D W 8 "a 2
J fi e from feet from the , large.
za : or UNT eget oe Mos. xem ow The b eads a flower are p* rger and more feathery, e bey: x aea ut - — too — A
Ru VA in cultivation: a by i pie paid i — m oue Mr Kempe in ver : teas week to 5s. each. —— od car efully. er Ib. and varieties 9d, to l
ill ] J
Ta obit of this variety is rate P the lato Bs ges Other, Strong plants of — mdi 1s. Gd. to 2s. 6d. each. ig RZ EL, all kinds, 9d. per lb. and all
andis the most vigorous of its c e foliage is a beau tiful f se orthe Farm, Prices and Catalogues of
olive green, of a large siz al e, anda thick leakhecy, iamen Gladiolus brenchliensis,
The flower is a rich cri n, good form, being well cupped, of| flower this 3 Is. v 10s. wii per poe or dee be
A Mp and a ve — truss, stai out boldly from the | post, 12s, per dozen.
- foliage. It is the hardiest variet variety = oni 7 stood in| New Gladiolus, for open ground culture, in 12 magnificent
3 -m i situation the ek! etic. e the slightest
- imjury, with no protection whatever, while other varieties have
varieties, fine S flowering bu Ibs, po
Paci conchiflora, 2s. per dozen.
At the Great Roo
(as in former geo the pees
been — a, ew variegated, Bijou, — as per — e - Sy Aa —
great ad in flowerin; adesidera- ee ot oots were aw.
eee "ich coloured Rh Pe don as the s — Shottesham cs . Si TA
Pri e e and cold winds. fe new St. Clair 8. Gd. 128. he! Rev. THOMAS STEV
Tt has been exhibited at the Manchester Botanical Exhibition, ; SEEDS OF BARE Plants er pot 4| Tux P. Sramcey, Est.
and obtained a first-class certificate of merit, also a label of amid 00 the GEORGE B. MORLAND.
. commendation by the judges. — pres icem -— hardy, hi S : Ta G
The Executors of the late William Lodge have great Amar p 3 very REA 1 0| Also EIGHT 25 GUINE
fidence jn introducing this due to p. Ae abia, and “feel mary is ( reden 5 hi fini 1 0 CONSORT for the best
assured it will — sí gene eral fav Alstrœmeria acutifolia, T pesca ouse climber eetings in East Berks
Strong bushy plants 3 a: m 2 to 4 feet high | Calceo laria, from large wered — A — richest S on, anà oN SWEDE
at One anda. Tir, Two, à pg Three Ero each, in propor- colo Pokal dp 9 SUMON PION rib
tion Lo the size. A considerable reduction when a quantity is second quality ed Prizes in B oe
taken. Amex from extra fine new varieties 6 Tm * So 2
As the demand is gr 1 from extra fine older varieties 6 ow i TT ion ier vae E
well-budded plants. zi Campanula grandiflor: a, hardy, the finest ofall Campanulas 8 Weer zel, o or or chen by th Oe anid. pts tt oe
The following Nurserymen are A ents A e le of t= Geranium, from finest new French and — vars. i ger 0 arze Pieshire Seed Establishment,
and from whom plants may now be Gaillardia —— — - H 2 SWEDE WHICH NEVE
Messrs. WILLIAM name & Sons, Tooting, near London; s Cesi 13 9 Ts $ PION SWEDE has ag :
— B. G. HENDERN & Sox, St. John’s Wood, London ; Lilium gigan veo, nsa 0 su N'S CHAM by i
Mr. Jo ot, Linu Adora or rubrum TuS LU a 6 the TWO 25 GUINEA CUPS ated re "
Sox, Maresfield, Sussex ; -= * P v b aede 8 985 PRINCE ä — Royal en
CKSON y Surrey as ks-Agri : A
— 5 — » 2 th scarlet marks 0 ese two Societies. tain, a eT
cpr now tal Caton stip aoe * 6 . pas ently aD —
unknown e e e aes imet pd hich tae
Payable to Juss Lopar, correspondon $ ot the [3 icr E: mum or cheaper 57.
Brook, Broughton, Manchester. Nursery and Seed Establishment, Westerham, Kent, ups ur
AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS LOCOSTEMMA LASIANTHUM UME). — Seed Growers, Reading, Berks rs
LOW PRICES. ‘Amidst the prevalent scarcity of . Armi a of seed of the above. Barly orders
ats ore peri lie MOS metam pre belongs to an aana a oe to preme QR DE
: e a i— | the above- P a new us closel:
CC phe allied to Hoya; and the 2 e in bey See
squarrosa enia | from Mr, von Low, Jun., by whom it i
a manicata, B. EOS y ee. Cyrtanthera
e ogoni nobilis, Eschites Pelleri, wes S amazonica, | w bai —— E
and Vinca alba. An: 20 of the above ma;
for 45s., or any 12 for 35s. zi
2 i 2 AERA
fine plants, Sateen d 25
be for 45s., or any 12 for 25s., Van by —
erticillata,
A. v
laxitilius, Mit Mitra nea, Nerium Tangle,
re, Pimolea. ee 8 Pernettya mucro-
nata major, Pulte Hendersoni, Seutellaria scarleting,
S, Styl idium graminifolium, Stauntonia
sborni, Tecoma jasminoides, Telopea
atheca verticillata.
e foregoing, when left to B. & B., will be
Stove — 20 varieties
12 varieties
Greenhouse plants, 25 varie eties
12 rco
me
TING a Y at the
BRITTAIN'S. "NET
f Red S r, Thrip, Mealy Bug, Scale
20s. an: dcn koi. ore free to all Stations in London n,
‘betwee n London and Norwich, on the Colchester
ipio
Seep and NURSERY ESTABLISHMENT,
Suffolk,
et 1 have expanded
KI
I rn prices ; baad the GISHURSQ- COMPOUND for as eri
„Ko.
n side of the ias iA of Bo —
—— vin,
pestes bándeptug foli ago; C it poU a Very pem M.
recommendation in being a m rofuse bloomer, —— mà ce
unbers. The
with a snow
» Ce 2 sorts
come 45 E — dum w So Chrysanskomums, 50 sorts
N
C W. HARGR AVE begs respec y to a
e that he zt DOM. be ETE with à STOCK. ot the
xiu DOUBL him in the 'Gar-
e i of September 35
They constitute a unique colléetio i in nd decided T Nes of
substan colour,
i are suj petal,
me e
out. Their nomen-
son, very double, dwarf habit,
ABT pict clearly mottled with white.
BURE 2 GEM. .
Bright crim: with whi
ALBA MAGN ae — fora ay. —
R
3 OLD 185 SILVER FI
of
»
mson, brighter than ita |
previously introduced —
ly purple.
torte Hn al i
igno:
me ane that — nie e their commands at
their earliest umi: 25 all orde ill be executed in
rotation in which they are received, t the the
C. W. HARGRAVE, THE Nursery, WINCHMORE Hut, N.
THE GARDENERS' RS AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Arem 16, 1859.]
IAM
w FO
BUSH AND SON
that their "PRICED CATALOGUE OF VEGE- |
LM — to| V
season. The pla e well gr
west
FOR .
000 pen SON a
heir — c da sor all the Ls NEW ROSES o of —7 —
i
1859.
and healthy,
cutin
c
*
and
es of
sold
inti *
ND FLOWER SE &c., is now ready post free y 8
= Lention. Wat. C. AND —— devote particular attention to are supplied at the rd — ces.
225 Lepartme of their business, a x most of the choicer | DESCRIPTIVE LIS STS o the abov will be sent free on
kindsot culinary seeds and roots are saved under their own | application. Early orders will comma: — the strongest plants.
m. — they ean contidentiy guarantee the quality ofall 1| Woodlands Nery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sus
— — s. Lond stablished A.D. 1095
offered — — ea Sant SES FOR BEDDING,
Fa DENDRONS y UNRI s Dozes, ms weng cores regie
E TA OD anD SON have eo
Jos: VALLED Y SCARLET AND OTHER CHOICE Th —— of well grown healthy iPad of ROSES,
e b P "Eshibite d — him at the Royal Botanic | in 0 — which will be ready to — -— ren the end
t's hed, and will be for- of Abr c dee Hybrid
i s Park, London, is publis Em cm consisting "of an immense number of e best ybri
LI. ended as ork of reference, as it 1 us 71 — Tea, 1 Nol isctto Roses, Catalogues
> 2
— — — plisun of all che —— varieties. Y Ned - de — xe camer 5 solicited, i
dale Station a dig arra Surrey; near — rtion of the stock will be cow pus out the i the frst s bote in May.
| xtra plants p ted mpensate for
"ESSHS. PARKER AN RA Ms beg to distant carriage.
inform their friends and patrons that their PRICED Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex.
— ol I\Hasdy Ferne. M of Exotie Onde Gteen. | THE BEST SEASON FOR BEDDING our ROSES.
house, and Hardy Plants, Variegated and Ornamental foliaged WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD,
Plants, Coni — er s, Rhododen — In published und M. —— AND SON Tm "salma “that
Gloxinias, actuses, now pu an the of April and May eligi
VT be forwarded post — application. e — for planting — Rosos í - pots, for e «f. —
Seven Sisters’ and Hornsey Roads, Holloway, Lond groups in the Parterr Rose
Seven Sisters’ and Hornsey Roads, Holloway, London, N. —
GERMAN AND OTHER FLOWER SEEDS, VEGETABLE,
"ex os ca ba ETC.
ESSRS. PARK WILLIAMS beg to
inform their friends and . that their new PRICED
and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE in which is enumerated
Sra of proved merit, also — the best of the —
l no M — and will be forwarded t free
application. i: e stock has been vA ted — the
best —— = [sew sources, and every kind is warranted
following reasonable
Hybrid Perpetual Rose:
Isle — Bourbon ditto
Tea-scented
OM, Climbing and Noisette ditt
Plants added to eac
true to name, and of the finest possible quality.— Paradise
Nursery, — Sisters and Hornsey Roads, Holloway,
London, N.
1 h he will be
Snare ME ore pem gram floweri —
plants of showy, free blooming kinds in great variety,
be had at 4s., 6s., and — -— "dorem, a —— to size and
qu The followin,
firs
yn tod — amongst the numerous
— i
n een bira, rnais
of the Alma, Stepha
Miellez, “Car — Colonel 1 — pis deed — e a
Im
W. V W. & Sons — — hand an "immense Sto
thousands, in pots, -— J^ happy to supply
~
ne
incess
Anna de Dies
Beauté de Royghem
Olym
tock of many
them on the
9s. to 128. rcgi dozen.
» - to 18s.
ser 18s.
128.
‘or distan
out on
»
»
C — tnn — post on applic —
r to compensate
NEW HYBRID 3 eum FOR 1859.
P. FRANCIS offers the — NEN, ROSES
— ar
w French varieties:
pie
p
in May, at 5s, each. 373 have been carefully
num
no
wu AM CHATER « can now ooh — $1
plants from his Collection, having a large si
for immediate planting.
See DESCRI dai — e e to be had on application.
s, Saffron Walden.
FIRST - En t A. — —
LLYHOCKS.
2 AM CHA! TERS
arieties that wil
b
Ground Roots grad to colour, also at
— the Collection
Celebrated and Newest
well in September a 4 NC
rs
6
om varieties such as Pourpre de Tyre, Memnon, White
Globe, Hon. Mrs. H. Ashley, Canary, &c., in 12 “a= colours,
the Collection . . 6d.
Ditto in 6 separate colours, the Collection 0
Se * from 20 of the best varieties, mixed, por. pkt. E 0
t
goo - mixed, alao a Singla vita?
The above can be procured from the Nireoriai, Saffron
Walden, Essex.
CHOICE HOL CKS
\ A TILLIAM HUSSEY be w. offer the undernamed
collection for 15s., p 8 viz. 1
— s of Sutherland, Hon. Mrs. Ashl
— — Pillar of "Beaut:
Memnon, * Er Whites.
— Sarles Norwich,
LYHOCK
52 N beg t o recommend th the follow-
* —- NEW et which have
fro eral thousands dlings. The stock of peg emf
kinds r. this year greatly pun vy The p are strong,
well established, and 8 healthy :—
BRISEIS Cdp e — Purple, silvery flower good n r
—
form, spike close
colour of ‘Scarlet "a but a close — and a round
GENERAL HAVELOCK (Pavt),—Bright, ruby
smooth flower of perfect sha 10 6
N MEMORIAM (Pavt).—Crimson ‘maroon, large, good
substance, first-rate flower, good spike 10 6
OSSIAN (PAUL). . — shaded with salmon, remark-
and symmetry ;
2 1 Deva s go Genera — — fi rice — genie Do 1a Motho Cecile de Chabrillan able . for substance, closeness, ap
Al Ste e Spike goo
Beck, Crimson . — Robert Bruce, &c. s 12 ie AXAQO P ANTAD LADY (Pavr).—Pink and blush in blotches,
tian Y oop & IxcRAM, Huntingdon. = tesse Impériale ben de St. Louis a yi — — rj good atio ic; " J 5
EL ATED GERAN MS. — Yd ord E PL UL).—Plum colour, of fine s. ape, an
JANE (L ner land fi riega- E my splendid varieties | Madame Brun very smooth, guard and spike good " .10 6
: ). an equal an lega id y P P h lish
‘tion, with a profusion of fine scarlet flowers; the truss is e the Go — Vital POURPRE NOIR (PavL)—Rich purplish maroon, arge
large, and the flower of good shape and subs > a free Seedlings. at 8 i 3 7 6
p E: eem exhibited this — at the first Gomis 45 ee — de 1a cits spike spion a ey za ery 8 d -
AUL).— White, lemon base, large lower,
— C e L—F d K. Menenius — Mi splendid spike . ..10 6
Able. Tt A (Cox gës m e e of shaded Armide Madame Jonny VESTA (PAUL).—Pure white, Ley thick, Pme ooth,
eri and pink, the centre of each with I ard goo
scarlet trusses of bloom. 7s. 6d. VITRUVIUS (Pavt).—Pink, ríe
Ro E Slough. ROSES and — eger
— AM. = P WARD — res — o inform ZENO (Pavt).—Rich plum colour with ‘silvery edges,
2 e admirers of the Rose tl d e te ea [f e stock of | flower large, spike AN - and distinct 5 0
W — o ators — above i in — — x — the —— fine varieties, phoned — M Ue Lo ofer dd be Collection of 12 varieti offered for ål. good
„ per under (when a fair selection is made) :— ed sorts, 9s. to 18s. per — ; very superior iuto! 24s. to
Tee ad A) " De: come 155. per dozen 425 per dozen ; —— linge 10. in sep — 5 „ 905.
ums, m 28. Gd. to 4s. p.doz À 50s. per 100; mixe. 10s. to 215.
4s. zu Te dntirrhisnzos: ts. to 6 "ERO Loup mmm en HOLLYHOCK SEED, 1s. to 5s. per Bi free by post.
3 | upheas CECT Madame Charlet (B.) Also a PRICED DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE free by post.
j as ds. 99 ——— Imperial Madame Comtesse E . Hate.
Clemence Delarue Madame Schmidt LICARPA 5
ee Madame Vidot OHN STANDISH, the exhibitor of the pos 0s
Docteur pler St. J: 's Hall), supply a few at 7s.
Ernest Gray, each. Mowing from Dr. leading
LOX 0 5 SS. OF HADDINGTON. Lu — — „ article in Gardeners? Ch for Nov. 20 will give an idea
e, ri M Trouillard santé i purpurea
PENTSTEMON TINN NOE Fi * urn — bold 20s. per dozen. rp me d Pesütiful in ite winter ore 9 irs
flowers, close pyramidal spike, —— Fi le nt purple berries, a the size of swan shot," It is easily culti-
PENTSTEMON Mas. LEES. — Crim m purple, pure white| Adelaide Pavie Nancy Dubor vated, and well in a cold greenhouse or conservat
"throat, large spike, distinct and striking. Bernard Nantais Mademoiselle Zoe Mayrel lanted out, where it will produce thousands of bright
THOMAS METHVEN has m h pleasure in offering the Comte de Morny iselle Alice Lei Berries resembling glass beads, and i on nearly the
lle Grst-clesé flowers, raised by Mv Thomas Lees, gardener | Candide ens ue + ete | Whole winter. Sons Ap ril 16.
tothe Earl of Haddington, Tynninghame, and allowed by i Claudia Augustin FF E
who have seen them to be decided acquisitions as show flow Com de Labarthe Monsieur Jard ANTHEMUMS.
Strong plants 5s. —— Usual discount to the Trade. Duc de Malakoff Ma Ponctuée (Moss) * rt EX IDE ton i^ announce that
Stan well and Leith Walk Nurseri T Edinburgh.—A pril 16. Felix Peretti pommes —€— ty is now published, in which id
EW PET TAS General Blanchard e de Denmark SEEDLINGS an d other new CHRYSANTHEMUMS of 1859
Lord Palmerston Souvenir d PEU are fully described, as we the unrivalled general collection,
OHN SEALEY can now suppl t the Seven Beautiful] Madame Debesse Souveni ranger which is the largest in — pe.—Strong mim. of “Golden
New Striped PETUNIAS, to which was awarded the first | Madame Vigneron Triomphe de Rennes Queen of England," “ Prince enim " and every other variety,
prize at the Aue — 3 Horticultural Society. J. S. has | Madame Heraud Thomas Rivers will be ready in the course of the month. —Versai
no hesitation ^ — g that yi thee: are the finest varieties in * de St. € vo E rese pi pa Montrouge William Street, near Hammersmith Turnpike,
ee ma ame Elize de Chenier riomphe des B Arts wer
G CATALOGUE or DAHLIAS, HOLLYHOCKS,| Mademoiselle Josephine Vallide (Moss) . 7 x. FE eee
EX de, and of GARDEN Ax» AGRICULTURAL SEEDS ase ELS. NURSERYMAN, BOOKS MGE
be had ón application. aen E per dozen, e ton, P md a rag eun EE
Duke of Cambridge Morse d de Montigny the "rsen is] ire, begs to call thi
THE € DWARF GERMAN Fa SEE inn Madane Wan EM an Houtte attention wi wa . of Ew above 1 lautumn Titel to. f
x YET —— 10 UBLI oire yon Marie mer his matchless coll: stock of which amounts to upwards j
Savrb FRO) ce —- atasi ED FOR 2 d' Autriche me esae Goddard 50,000 — Na nud, e iei
m e Thierry . H. B. can supply strong plants, one dozen for 6s. ; or five
gowanp T TILEY b Beg to inform — lovers of the M9 25 Reine Blanche (Moss) dozen in 30 varieties, containing two of each variety, for M. r
above beautiful flower, that he has j A Descriptive List of the above may be had on application. fort 10e variety,
ust pure the
2 from the finest
ey
: as to Rosary,
Were udges while in bloom last ws
— th Aster b: to such per- LANTS FOR THE meo
— aeS, with T a dwarf habit. ls. Gd. — — — — the — rye e — X
plants are e an oroughly established in
Extra fine mixed H SEED, saved from the newest
e SEED, saved from spotted and striped sorts, ME down
E SEED, saved from 94 di istinct v arieties, th pas nay al best
e Verbenas, the varieties
: — which flower double, Carper packet. Bins ei,
a IMPROVED SANE SEED, exire fine, 6. Per pekt. rr 25 5
“the finest COS L — —— west of England from | Cal es
Nierem
—.—
coer
gracilis
cio (double dati dark Groundsel) E
oun dmi
lants.. er de octo
Carriage paid to London and Pe 88
, Suffolk. —April 16
GARDEN.—The
Per eee d.
carlet — Tom Thumb, Frogmore and —
— that were ruck — spring
autumn
SSS SSD
ge 2
E ^:
RAISED BY MR. ELPHINST
A.—Crimson, large, and fine
colour an:
4. 5 €
*
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
[Arrn 16, 1859,
332
OHN KERNAN, Srepsmay, 4, Gr
: reat R St
EW FUCHSIAS (English and Meee merge CHOLG E SEEDS. e eJ covent G arden, dene danou ces Rus al Sm
Specim : quantity the beg
Ae — Tee * Y Run T Prima Donna, 0 CH, We xi Postar ig cay is, Laing’s, w Nürieties of
Saati nem me] BUTLER & McCULL eren Rec i, ee Bart ue
Frederick, Wonderful, . 5 et n to their general S RING CATA- Jabbages' for early lambs, Yellow Globe, ‘one ae and Other
FRENCH SPOTTED GERANIUMS.—Fine plants set | while drawing attentio: * high encomiums Siehe Mangel F n^ t e Red and Ri
a gore buds and coming into flower, 12s.,18s., & 21s. p. doz. | LOGUE of SEEDS, which cO [coy cultivator, Glope Manse ea Eid. ea White, and Alsike Clon
SEEDLING SPOTTED AND STRIPED CALCEOLARIAS, both from the scienti present opportunity to select from | Grasses ; Sorghum "saccharatum, the ie parate mà res
b vent ENAS, AS. a 1 tote ent out last year and | its pages the following list:— —— a eerie : eei an nd especially useful f.
NEW VERB Prep Be 63., and 9s. 37) ACACIA LONGIFOLIA (magnifica). mpro Y of milk in miez
the best of the 1 aah be lden plants, divi 0 one of the most splendid Acacias in e with à Treatise m E — — mm and culture of which Mm
aidstone an x A several inches in | ready, price ls. Two lbs., at 2s. per Ib., are sufüci
Pe EENHOUSE PLANTS, 127, 18s, 21s. per doz.— fongt ; v ey Rardp, EA E these LEX snd | acre, and not eight, as i constantly e DEM
p » e inds len , y A ewer | quantity, from . to on, or upwards, All th T
l; , consisting of the best kinds l plants our collection embra o
is Mee Polygalas, D GÀ Aphelexis, Tre- th: — -— scum nn of t » nd decorative charact of Aci DES ti ese 0 i. Trade supplied on the —
Tandras, Boronias, Leschenaultia, Gompholobium, &c.; also (183) ) BROWALLIA CCERULEA GRA DIFLORA. M vocent inka MERE and Flower gei,
all the leading Creepers. Large sky-blue; quite new ; free flowering eet rare). ac "pou . — N as usual. Plant
S, 12s., 18s., 21s. doz.—The best kinds, T EDAT. y ad on application,
STOVE Em 12s., , m3 vn Ixoras, Aphelandras, Y 99 — — n r a lo ara PLANTS IN FLOWER
pow rome G0: — Medinillas, Vi Vineas, Allamandas, Ste-| Crimson W AND A. SMITH have now in bloom cia, Ci
phanotis, R hypelorpermums ums, Dipladeniums, Hoyas, Gardenias, | quite new. (217 a.) CAMELLIA JAPONICA n ü E e rarias sq ine Rice ventricosa coccinea Be
e; ants. and finest striped and other varieties of v. superbiens, v. intermedia, Fuchsi 4
ARA AS, . of the new and leading khi with| From mained gems $ A larias; Heliotrope, Hydrangea, E. Cavendishi *
1 . 128, 18s pn E Mis. vef rg e a a a t "S leaves large Phe. eed. p Gerais Fatry Pei
oung specimen! , e winter; a > > e wn
o Wies ne er Cee ras Ad T— 2 t i magnitoont pi pla mp. icem un ae: "ELI “genus prepared for sending = — ela Mu Plants,
30s. cht gro ; 3 versae collection, co: dues 0 inds
: I mens ADE. — beer ar x beauty of their sa and foliage. SUPERB DOUBLE BALS
E. Just potted o off, in 60-size pots, 50s. per 71) CANTUA a OL ated T AND A. SMITH are now e aay seed of ther
we Tante d very A han qm 2 ith bun of ud eream-coloure: d Ur Mey real so Ta E size, form,
3 —All the new | flowers (rare bri ancy of colour, doubleness of flower, an it of
BRL TIED asp an cra ye srs. Van - (299) iria Ads FONTANESIANUS. In ane ctions of nine — colou; 2
and leading kinds (strong 864 er doz. Blue shaded with red, new and handsome. it ^ m highly uid
Houtte, bape —.— * cs, ati aeg ornamental genus we possess nine icona varie hh alf qu antity i T
04 CELOSIA (spec! The above are genuine only in our ‘sealed parkets and
A most eleg: << plant, producing a multitudo of long spikes be aa of most res sctable e Nurseryme and See Bap.
UGH LOW axp CO. respectfully invite ecc, of feathery blossoms, silvery whi ite shaded with Drigat Tose | United Kingdom.—Dulwich, Surrey, se
f ic e ing i ectly when drie n ^ AS ABBA CENDIOA, cute E RN
N eie bres Me poe meee "i A dim jte colo winte € one of u reato woxeliion 9 INDICA. — The following 25 ch
will be very happy E Jus — 8 out of goos or in pots from July varieties, all fine and handsome blooming planta, may
Hvcu Low & Co SEV 6 GLOXINEAS. y dernamed varieties to October... Well w attention. Adr ied specimen may be rs — together s dos. ; or any oft bama ms
ed by themselves from seed en. or 2 2 „ onii, anca, 5
from a Bigo pomber Suef Panis rw 227 Basme howered them (319) CESTRUM AURANTIACUM. * spicua purpurea, Dee Demons, Fred Glory NE
reaxefally and judiciously by hi ith the Wette pre- One of the finest conservatory plants in cultivation, being Hill, Iveryana, leucomaj , mag magnifica alba,
for two seasons, and compared M MNA: m- ed twice a year with i hnhidaome orange tubular blossoms. | Minerva, Mrs. Fry, Phonicia, prestantissima, Rawsomi
t in cultiva’ tion, H. L. & Co. can with confidence recoi po M ROPS HUMILIS. Reddingii, Rosalia, Smithii coccinea, PRU OP
mend the selection to the notice o ot eng t x bern orc very ornamenta 0 Ta» Palm which: wil Wadi Urte, | triumphs ang Vesta Per 19 varieties of one
really distinct kinds, 5 p f selection, 2
beten of this de da * and eas gs ugs en — wit ith ey little p erence testi esie CA' Aale 50 ES, with descriptions of the
Plants in April. . eac wi
above, free.
Carriage pas te all 4 in London, or on the RC
COMA: AURE
einstein VARIETIES. (344) C HRYBOCOMA Seis | Commenter: tan 1, udp Sale
troviolacea, very purple, base Ib, bearing a profusion of etin all-like
a anyipta ma cone res eaim e rite te Foaia s * 1 dsomest greenhouse plants in cultiva- RE EIGATE S SINE 10 E AND, or quality i Main
i i border, lips s tion. 6s. pet to ess quantities,
— 4 ad white e SEE taba, to ds T lips alterae (393) n roit Dept MAJOR SPLENDENS. a E ay x harf o Railway, Pat, 175 » mni Test
purple. Brilliant crimson, mo: — in arge or small q à „
. bc and rose throat, dark blue belt, lips deep violet (451) DATURA F ai FLORE PLENO. ach; or on hire, 6d. each; five hold a ton. oe
Princess Alice, clear white tube, bright rose belt, edges very A magnificent Brugmansia- ike ET producing a profusion ee to her Majesty, Swan Place, ent
eee of deep golden-yellow flowers e, double, and sweet- London, S.E.
Princess of Prussia Improv ved, throat and belt very much scented. One of the greatest Bored ties of the » — n. ~ HORTICULTURAL VALUATIONS
brighter crimson than in the old variety. 577) GERANIUM NAPOLEON I ALFRED CHANDLER (of tie hte iro o
DROOPING-FLOWERED VARIETIES. Of this and other “splendid varieties, including Scarlets, w ME. Panter & Foe: Vettel e to inform litis
base of tube white, finely spotted, lips rosy crim- | have a fine hich c fail to prove highly 8 athe hang Ibert 5 ndë rtako ti the. valuation
ria is Nag — v of Plants, Nursery Stock, Horti
* I. inside carmine bel 970) PENTAPETES PH(ENICEA. Censor at Horte-
ev m ue — Une pm long and serrated, a very handsome Es ES opon to engagements 535 had EE Ba
thelip. Tig 2 001) PHYGELIUS CAPENSIS. tensive experience.—28, Priory Road, Wandsworth
NEW ROSES or 1859. Large red —.— flowers, inside golden yellow, a handsome aepo NIE
'YBRID RPETUAL, kot seeds rare). .
H 041. wie Pearrsvat plant Ces (1005) SALVIA SPLENDENS Nova. ns favourites s probably the mosk extensive
Altesse impériale Beauté de Rœyghem Species, scarlet (new). the Trade, and having for a series of years paid oye bs
Ardoisé de Lyon 1187) SIPHOCAMPYLUS BETULEFOLIUS. tion to their cultivation, introducing the best of the newest —
gom contort BOURBON. A handsome plant, with scarlet tubular flowers ; suitable for | varieties s they mabled to offer them at the following
pd Madamo Marchal atl 1149) SOLANUM CAPSIC ASTRUM. or fine, strong, well rooted icties by pane ie
3 * how varii :
bes m Lo. Octavie Fontaine Miniature Grange tree, covered Lcd sith a proteo Eg — (nest fet eris pof
ine t fruit; à handsome plant for greenhouse or sitting ~ varieties by name,
Ambroise Verschaete Madam e rooms (1170) STATICE BONDUELLI. T 24s per dozan mer 7% 8 mm 305. per ozen pairs.
eric Vital Madame Darru fl 1 d fusely, in large | Ditto, on yel ý o dit
EX F e AA MI MUN oor ae nom ee
(1276) VERONICA ANDERSON True old CLOVE CARNATION, 12s. per do: th
N VERB EN Purple and —— all but hardy; a E shrub. Scarl ditto ditto, s. AE ww
The entire stock of these nine . nn de Li eee n of (1282) VERONICA MELDRNSIS. NEW CARNATION “EXTRAVAGAN: ti per pate T
H. L. & Co., and they can with the greatest confidence Beautiful rose white ; a splendid plant. see Advertisement, March 26, Price is d 9 pri
U — lowers. (1385), BIGNONTA RADICANS “MULTIFLORA. PINKS.— The finest first class show Pinks, by j^
Flora, ‘tra fae fe eh ee Finer and brighter th large panicles | Fine mixed border PINKS, 6s. per dozen n
E i bright rosy purple, white eye, large | Producing a splendid effect. HOLLYHOCKS.—Our extensive stock of th
p^ quss 1 Gare) GLYCINE SINENSIS, or WISTARIA. - the first-named varieties, is this season very Md,
M e of the most valuable clim! mbing trees for out-doors (seeds | healthy, — well established in pots, P
* fine form and free flowerer.
white eye, immense truss, extra rare to 12s. dozen.
buy 2380) IPOM(EA HYBRIDA MARGIN LLYHOC
as HO KS, warra
rs. ! ee bene im White eye, extra large truss, fine} Large an cpi flowers of various seii on ih thes me best leading kin
eadi: ds, 20s. pe
lant, varying from the Seq Bas elvety purple to sky ine, NEW PHLOXES.—An
di-
ty.
Vio Mad. St | Vedi ABE vil ronda homi t f
With a flower 5 Hol. whic! render them the ‘ornaments for the CHI SANTIEMUMS.—
^ ford, it produces a much larger n umber “etal to Mis.
y
cl — ds pidiy, and covers a largo Space
plaisir | Madame Souvenir de M. pu “short “time. t succeeds in a c e ind
Ma vêque Seringe tee a h wall with a little protection in win
> 597071 plant, of dwarf growth, produeing
New Verbenas received from M. R. ugier-Ch aviere, of PeT TROP LUM N ULUM i i
aris. These and the si 2 t E 0 GRANDIFLORUM. large flowers of the brightest
ts scarlet blossoms, far surpassin TARAXACI
Madame Hardy Monsieur Hardy class yet known, ‘It flowers most DELPHINIUM
cold greenhouse, =
NDA
3 per cm 5) TAGSONIA TANAN, 1 tod oY isch vole CA
ved Boucharlat of Lyons :— ae ee Passionflower is ualled the bril- ACROCABEE. =
Madame Denis Blain| Mons. Denis Blain taney ad wr of ita — os 1 CIR
RM
d
warranted all ime flowers, and fom
p 22
Pompone kinds, s
ground. This variety has been grown in com. | (31) MAURANDYA CRIMSON: TINTED PURPLE GRAN- — M Ease big
; ES * beautiful (new LOBELIAS.—Finest racist, adapted 8 gU
ER be extensively planted the first season 438 MAURANDYA 3 MAROON GR Nbtrton FC
H. L. & Co., have decided on it at a , (1438) — lr x: Bi ur di
—
-—— Der dozen,
varieties, by?
mass of
E ing — include the finest beautifully streaked with carmine (rare LINUM FLAVUM, 6s. per dozen.
varieties offered this season on the Cont T TROPXOLUM GRACILE. — : TRITOMA MEDIA.— A handsome
Cendrillon | 1 Ne "Plus Ultra Wege n 55 handy. y penio Pak.
pom | Clara La — — Primulefiora oe BOLUM M INIATUM d eg PÉNTSTEMONS. beh | — 2 ia
atim: eandre
r^ — 22 (1488) TROPEOLUM TRIOMPHE DE DE GAND FIMBRIATUM. GAZANIA RIG ge ae 1 pargo- uf
Verbena Madame Joundi he Locate ifl of | , CARNATIONS: oat PICOTEES saved from the most choice sta of ese ino bau a sad rs
all the stri eti d 12. aok | Collection of English varieties grown on the continent, and Strong planta 8.
LOBELIA T db m ne. which may be expectéd to produce flowers of the highest 4
Bay, figured and ibed by Sir Wm. J Poorer: A Fekkai merit, sent out in er éts as received from Bow YTRA Nr pure nds
dense gro , each plant covering a spa Sardinian correspondent, whose flowering plants,
rposes. For fw
further description see ** Cot Ar T
Eo end in pikea 6d. — or 218. Da did
8 of ol
i i den seeds for man have | DIEL
ense growing variety, eac space of ground | >; i y years have n po
12 to 18 inches in diameter, with its ample bright irreeti foliage th mento ag le. pena — &nd from MROSE, dou!
Gn the way of Verbena Maonetti) and large light blue flowers
with fine white Tt wil
which varieties of
t pric PLANTE -À choi:
1 — much in A for bedding For prices and further particulars with regard to the above HERBACEOUS zen
and
and other rom we refer our patrons talogue
itself, which is sent free and post paid on app tie aaa =
Free
‘bade all the above- — ed plants. castle
der date in large quant tities at low prices. j BUTLER &. McCULLOGH, mls of the Nursery:
8 N. E.—April 16. COVENT GARDEN, LONDON.—Arnir, L 16.
a LL.
" £ & , T T
16, 1859. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
ArniL 10,
F
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &c.— Man — kie eiii pnp 9 DN — ROPAGATING GLASSES—
and others engaged in mal sking ARTIFICIAL 2 um v1 *
obtain every necessary i uction for their Án " set R. 10, Gough Square, amr PS — 2 ins. me 0 4 each ni ins. — 1 9 each
efficient preparation, by applying J. C. Neserr, F.G.8., having meas och of 20 years in the above, ca zw 0. 4$ „ RA LL
nd d of the Agricultural and Chemical Co lege, mend it as the bes — Tordestrosing the Ti. ls. "ng verib.; 4» » 0 55 » u ii 2 4
S ington, London. Analyses of Soils, Guanos, Superp over 10 TE Is. e Orders payable Strand Office 55 » 9 64 „ 15 „ A $33 |
Kennir f Lime, Coprolites, &c., an 3 of Goid, Silver, and - 8 — 0 bole ae 3 6 i
There Ain rals are executed with ac and despa ENUINE OS PAPER.— Parties fumi- Y s i h35 -o in » : » |
— desirous of receiving instruction in emm 2 gating can be supplied with the beit 1 10 e cen 8 „ » 1 a zi » » a : »
Analyses 1 nn arini T "OPERAE D ERE Mon iscing Tore zi E fee La i 9 eeds. 10 s i 1 "i 19 A $ 6 0 85 |
E om sod aii EN BAXTER, } 2 ze . 1 20 : N45 |
APER FOR FUMICATINC. 24 E vd "
DON MANURE COMPANY, removed to 116, GENUINE TOBACCO P CUCUMBER GLASSES. |
Ei Street, E. C. (Established 1840), have the APPLEBY (Foreman to Messrs. Ivery & Son, 24 inches long. 2s0d. | 16incheslong .. ls. 4d.
7 lowing M ax ready for delivery :— è Nurserymen, Dorking, Surrey), takes this opportunity 22 » e 110 |14 - VS 14
" N MANURE for SPRINGTOP DRESSING of informing his Patrons and the Public that he is now offering 20 » - 1 8 12 " ET 10
2 E all of E above at a very considerably reduced price. It is now sold | 18 ” — kp Made toany length. |
y RATES 1 NUR guaranteed | in packets of 4 lbs. each, at - 3d. per Ib. A liberal Discount HAND GLASSES. |
SUPERPHOSPH 11 OF LIME quality. allowed to the Trade. The ollow wing T Testimonials amongst | 12 inches. .. Cs. Od. each 18 inches .. .. 9s. Od. each i
Boon x ANURE : y others will guarante: eo i atit d " i 7 om. » n 5 10 5. |
ion i f raw material ** Maresfield, Sussex, Feb.1 B. 2 0
RON enoo of t 85 aro enabled. i a m ‘the eso *Sm,—It gives us mach leasure to inform you y^ i^ * Painted ~~ glazed with 16 oz. Sheet 8 |
8 hosphate of Lime, and to m uten e the | Tobacco Paper with which you supplied us | as auswered f open a t top, 8. extra. :
their * and Urate. admirably. We have not the slightest — — stating WASP vise 3s. 6d. per dozen. |
that llb. of the Paper we had from you will render more AGENTS FOR
ET London, I Co, also supply PERUVIAN GUANO | service than 8lbs. of the paper we have beon in the habit of HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS. |
(direct fro ae cre. A Gibbs and Sone), SULPHATE, of 3 elsewhere. “You E ^ iw send us a further ü Soie Duel, fan PE D» sited dips A
A MONIA, D ATE n supply of 281bs. at your conv enuine hite i urpentine
a other Manure of value. d ^ or dealers supplied. under: Woo DAS ON. uns — Maresfield, Sussex." Pu pu Colours, 1 robe &c. d
116, Fenchurch Street, E.C. RD Purser, Secretary à dnt Berkshire Bent. 1 Reading, 285 5 AMES PHILLIPS AND ^
ishopsgate St. without. Ton on, E.C.
UCTION IN PRICE OF LAWES „Sm, Our propagator has tried AP — — Paper tl - , | 189. Bishopsgate St. Without, London, EC.
begs to announce phe por “a tiis roughly, and considers it nm good. It is also very convenie —
M. on rodno the pets of the Manures manufactured by | to o ten . to rec eet te dei pa X — u mi X «Ter ETLEY AvD CO. supply 16-oz SHEET GLASS
nould therefore glad of 1 cwt prese nt sale in of British M. fn tur t — arying from 2d. to $d. "
bim, vi URNIP MANURE. from £T to£6 6 packets, and will let you know when n required. per square — for ra v AT EIE ds aid Ms s a — of
E ERPHOSPHATE OF LiwE. x 7 to 6 6 "SUTTON & SONS ^ Shih are ke ept y paced Tor inedite del Livery.
MN em "E » 5 5 “‘Nurserymen and 8 "Reading, B d Lists of Prices and E nn tas uid. dini nog
4 *'Norwood Grove, March 28, PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN. G BS, GL
MANURE..
8 e Dr. Voelek mee lod pipelined i sad „Sin, — After trying you Tobacco Paper to E the forent TILES, and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROPA
Sg T. een Pp d analyse ven | houses from the tooder a Vines to the hardy Azaleas, I am | GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT, PLATE vos 180
6000 to! at his factories, po creed reportand analyses are gi — "o it ans admirably, and É thank E to ORNA AMENTAL WINDOW GLASS. and GLASS SHADES,
in fall "i "Circular to be obtained on application - i ws tn d 5 y as — reuse e quantity 5 befo! xY & Co., 85, Soho Squa:
' i t
à pua — reacts S: vice e Db “CHARLES Bar eg ” — eie Chronicle first 88105 in each month i
N.B. e Peruvian Gua B diria fei Messrs. GIB “t Gardener to A. Anderson "wood, Surri — ., ted ainka Pass = |
Nitrate of. ‘Soda, Sulphate of y viene, ca other Chemical i. APPLEBY'S SHEET 1 IRON Pers e POT HORTICULTURAL UNE TA RIF ES |
Manures. American Cotton-seed Cake supplied 3s. 6d. each), which will be a erent saving of Flower Ur. 45 . AS MILLNGTON ` reduced Tariff of f
they 55 > apt to breal The undermentioned Testimonial wi 2 r
5 T by 5, x 16 oz. to the foot, 11s. 6d. |
AND 1. PROCTORS TURNIP P MA ANURE.— The Gardens, O n House, near Exeter. Dec. 11, 1858. 4 4 A T4 by 55, 8) M e 5 % „per 100 feet. |
é Me: „H. & T. P. draw particular attention to this «si ir, —I am pottery satisfied with the little Fumigating Ini 100 boxes,—4ths Y s do. 48 14s. 4d.
valuable which contains all the elements necessary Pot, and can stro ang and muc i in p o flow Oby 8, 12 by 9, 124 by 104, ch 8 T 13 by 11 ,
for the full deviiopnieut of the Turnip Crop, so combined, that, Pots, as i itis a great Savi ng and much easier managed. 10) by si, 13h by 9}, 13 by 10, 15 by 10, 134 by m
from their chemical knowledge and spa eet d ere * Gr. to Major-Gen. S studd, e Liber, Devon " n HEU WE 15 by 18 13} = y 10 | Dd * 14 by |
tisfied i t advautageous to the cons It has been > by yl
wiry extensively sodbi móst of the Ferre it Agrículturists of | N.B. All orders to be 8 with a Post- office Order, 20 by 12 |
the day, and has attained a high reputation throughout Eng- payable to Henry — , Surrey. 20 by 1 |
d en ee er NV S BLIGHT COMPOSITION Gs. ver gallon,
i 5 sufficiently stro: fit for use) has stood the
— ak eo sno Sly th ‘the — of Baer, Glover, and When ie test of eight yea 0 rs pubio t trinl, and its great success has led to Orchard House sizes as supplied to Mr. Rivers.
s? 122 numerous . Dr. Tindley, in his leading article d 3
POTATO, GR BARLEY, CLOVER, AND WHEAT ere * He ——— 182 cases in its favour, sufficient y
à MANURES: also also. BONE. DUST, d d a GUANO, and the tical. .Seeds packed for * —— i Coloured Glass in n great variety, at 9d. and 1s. per foot.
E NL of LIME, w ted of the best quality. in parts of the A rid PAGE & Toocoop, Royal South Hants | Paints, Genuine White Lead, Tinseed Oil, Boiled Oil, Turpen-
App n, West ie dtd Depót for Arti Seed Establishment, Southampton n. ti ES pne — Dip 9 qa oe =
ficia ica Manis 6 Cathay, Bri y, Bristol; 3 Procror & RYLAND, Bir- IS HU RST COMP o OUND,. PATENTED.— orks ramet ithou i East
Tur x P (magnified). MEALy Bue Gus LA ZIERS DIAMONDS € bU. HORTI-
URNARD, LACK, Ap CO/8 CONCENTRATED j N (magnified). Y CULTURAL and other GLASS, to be had of the Whole-
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME; guaranteed to sale Manufacturer, JOHN EDWARDS, Sha rp's Alley, West
Smithfield, London, as Prices from 10s. 278. 6d.
0 .
X: Or PRESERVE YOUR HAY?
RICK CLOTHS, New and Second hand,
At BENJAMIN 8
rece Acid soli uble, eq uivalent to 40 per cent. of Tribasie
CONCENTRATED TURNIP 3 equal in value to
the preceding.
Of these Mattei DF. We ee de m 2. Duke Street, London Bridge, 8.B., est End,
32, Charing Cross. Wo
be very gratif to you, and are the tor ps? a ag of 3
high agricultural and commercial h characterises |.
u
your concentrated superphosphate.” | * ted Catal free.
Detailed ahalyses, with opinions of the late and present P
Chemists to the “Royal Agricultural Society, with Testimonials, 3 EDG T Ad 8 x Duke Street,
Prices, &c., may be had us mess to — LACK, NSTER TENTS for — —
& Co., Sutton Road, Plymo
a scitu d ai va GU AN O.
d, vi
NETTING for Fruit Trees, &c.
West End Establishment, 32, Charing Cross, S. W.
191. for 30 T. d rd GREEN FLY on Roses and Greenhouse Plants safely got T :
per Ton for 30 Tons and upwards, vid of by syringing with PATENT GISHURST pope E * 1 TOM th OMM
13l. 5s. per v for 1 Ton up to 30 Tons. 5. tthe gelen
to gu against the — of adulterated mixtures ten UO RO an VER ALVANISED IR IRON | WATER € ISTERNS
Peruvian, consumers are recomm to apply rome Se our- | "That it really kills red m ] reri Were — „ ae ador coe rl rm
selves, to our agents, Messrs. ante, Bright. & Co., of Liver- and m it is impossible — — in the face of un 30s. each; and 140 ins 366. =. un ben th ap, p, keeping
l and Bris tol, dae i of es tablis med character, > ee ose pre acti cal men, among w whom may menti. on Mr. D. — aioe the water peer Srey and clea
onesty and fair dealing may place implicit confidence. Althorp Gardens"—then foll F
ANTONY GIBBS & SONS. too pre atm solution. GALVANISED IRON PUMPS
The Gishurst Compound is sold in boxes at 1s. 6d. and 6s. | for Liquid Manure or ——— estic Use, 3 inches diameter, 30s. and
each, E 5 2 for use, and p prin nted opinions of Mr. | 328. 64, each; Tail Pipe for same at from 10d. per foot.
r, Lady Dorothy Nevill's gardener, Sir William GALVANISED | 5 SWING WATER BARROWS
s for rm use, containing abou y
ed of 64. eac
| QUCCESS OF THE NEW 250i IMPORTE
5
E
m
2
a
E
4
E
H
E
a
755
3 8
34
w
A
gs
“eae
tni
855
2
8 8
fi
5
RE
E:
S
g
HP
z
N late
Season, mni under adverse circumstances, the successful Asher mption is not. oL digo the compound keeps its strength best
gbtained con: firm. * — ond doubt Profestor Voolckcérs re hae ae | the small. The undermentioned Seed N ength best in
o, be L, vol. ed —— — A ecu rt rerit — ) &c., having taken in supplies are prepared to sell single boxes :
rimental field, kept back at first the crop, and had no bene- 1 b dt. abe in *
ficial pov — ee ates. "y qoe oss TER age ios cad
The essentially a phosphatic | Brown, D., Norwich Henderson. he & Co, Pi
Manure, co containing sut sufficient — a for roots, and, with a | Cattell; J., Westerham apple Place S dd.
; mixture of o —— —.—.— mages cannot be excelled | Cripps, T. Tunbridge Wells | Hooper & Co., Covent Garden.
y aud will be deli g oi r tis a CET dee Pew & Co., Bonden Bridge Jefferies, W. B., em
e pd iei" vered às f imported, free ity of en ris d tus Dickson, Fran ci is & Arthur and | Kennedy & Co., Dumfries
; import of t| — able manure, her Majesty's Government = me & Ban Tu Mic a Sar, Norwich
| . fiven —.— increased facilities for shipment, that arrangem Dickson, Hogg, E Mann, J., Brentwood
ra considerable supply. Purchasore cun t be Matheson, R. C., Gloucester
EUR y.
er] hampton
AR 20, 20, North Joi Nurserymen and Seedsmen supplied by PnicE's Parent Howe, B m ie
» CANDLE z Company (Limi mited). Beles, Vanxhall. London Joseph Paxton for thet
Greystoke, Cumberland, Dec. 16, 1858. : OULT LTRY—DOGS— PLANTS can be kept free late Mrs. Lawrence of
orm you that I applied the Kooria Dartford.
on land of aloamy from Insects of ev dion by using the PERSIAN
il, and. recently | INSECT DESTROYING POWDER, unrivalled in killing Fleas, LIU A
lot sown with Kooria Mooria , Beetles, and every species o (wl am ess to animal Wool, a
th best Peruvian Sold kets 1s. and 28.
6d. A shine pe ees oe
0 ree by post for 14 wc xU NE Yt KEATING, Chemist, 79, all
ood one throughout—is now being Pauls Charch A London, E.C.
hat differance i Bip scere d R TS —R RATS — — WITHOUT Polsow 68 Dun
a Gua
ro t JOHN BARKER.”
“hes uano Merchants, Penrith.”
ay ni: Guano,” containing a number
S from well-known agrieulturists, and. of the
, may be had of the Broker, at the above address,
night Printed, dis eror umeros
lot alive sent free return
WiLLIAM | Goopwi,
ne uA
334 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Aver 16, 1859, |
r — ä — M — — |
GRASS SEEDS ror PERMANENT PASTURES & MEADOWS.
THOMAS GIBBS & CO., Corner of Half- Moon St.,
SEEDSMEN TO THE “ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND,»
EG to inform the Members of the Society and Agriculturist ily r that their MIXTURES of GRA ASS SEEDS for Laying down 2 to G1 a Ce i:
now ready. Each kind of à $ ed com Directions T pure and Management on be sent with the Seeds.
suit different soils).
MIXTURES for PERMANENT MEADOW and PAST TT *
8, FIELD ee CEMETERIE
MIXTURES Dx IRRIGATION ME DOWS, GAME COVERS, da all Pag purposes.
RENOVATING MIXTURES for “improving Old Meadows and Pastures (8 to 12 Ibs. per acre),
MANGEL WURZEL. | RYE-GRASS. | i PON KITCHEN 5 SEEDS in Collectiong,
— er T i , £2, and £3 ea
Red Globe a mported arte we Hy tan x^ P^
Sesion Bogar Beet Pacoy's Pe — Common Turnips „
ALL KINDS OF AGRICULTURAL SEEDS.
Price Lists sent free on application. Reference or Cash required from HALF. MO OON S St.
unknown Correspondents. Piccapiuiy, Lonpon, W.
NEAR WINDSOR,
AND IN THE ISLE OF WIGHT
SUTTON’S GRASS SEEDS
AT THE ROYAL FARMS
SUTTON'S GRASS SEEDS
FOR PERMANENT PASTURE, PARKS, AND LAWNS,
ARE NOW SOWN AT THE ROYAL FARMS, AT OSBORNE PALACE, THE ALDERSHOTT xd THE CRYSTAL ae ae BEES. THE
title eran SOCIETY’S GARDENS, THE PEOPLE’S PARK, HALIFAX, AND ON M THE LARGEST ESTATES THE KINGDOM.
These Grass Seeds being mixed expressly to suit the soil for which E are (ovem are never known to fail.
SUTTON & Sons tod 0 fan many years paid especial attention to - * i Land to Permanent Pastures, they are well acquainted with the various soils of
t p
The following Sorts may be had separate or mixed, at lowest Market Prices :—
c
— cente pratensis Wwe duri: Festuca tenuifolia lium italicum oa pratensis Phleum pratense a
} thum odoratum elatio: „ hordeformis 35 eem tenue „ trivialis j
Agrostis stolonifera » Preis , Glyceria fluitans —— „ nemoralis Petroselinum Meg
flavescens » heterophylla » aquatica mpervirens | ,, angustifolia eiae d
millefolium » pratensis Holcus lanatus Lotus deen major „ fertilis pratense perenne
— 2 » Pere „„ avenaceus Medicago Lupulina » Sempervirens hye
ALSIKE and other CLO and f tained Mixt Cost of the best Mixtures for We Be 305. to
34s. per acre, according to the sorts aina for the —
Fine LAWN dRASS SEEDS for making New or RAS Old Garden Lawns,
Price 18. per Ib., 28. 6d. per gallon, or 208. p
Improvement of Grass Lan "s by Sowing Good Seeds of the tine Suitable Kinds.
SUTTON'S RENOVATING GRASS SEEDS (6s. to 9s. per Acre)
Consist of the finest GRASSES P PERENNIAL CLOVERS, — gm — o iea in * Are "ra at a small expense. Quantity of Seed. required
to 12 Ibs. per acre. Price red uced to 9. r Ib., wt. Sow n Mira and April.
Ez" Having greatly reduced the price of our RENOVA RE, we eg 10 fria our Field ms will encourage the more extensive use of tb
same. Our Grass Seeds have for many years been — bs o 55 ihe bs [x =~ ay we may add that —— aid v the cheapest Meadows nx Aur Pastures os nay i
increased in value 50 per cent. by sowing these oak, Gras own Permanen per ac Seeds Carriage ré
to all nem exceptsmallparcels. Catalogues post fr
SUTTON & SONS, Royal Berkshire Seed Establishment, Reading.
——5i ——
SON D 8 CHOICE FLOWERS.
Seed of all the valuable kinds of the NATURAL
e BUTLER & McCULLOCH'S
PRICED LISTS may be had free on a plica-
tion.—PETER Lawson &
ieee Sox, 27, Great George
JACK O NEWBURY ” SWEDE, ETC.
„ LAWSON AND SON,
SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS,
—
1 on a new and vor cae I plan, — copio rere apt 2 ene v
1 a eres 7 mo and rare sp and rartotien ti in any other
ogue, now ready and may be had free — id aid on applicat
„FLOWER, SHRUB, TREE, and e aud port paid SEEDS, th the crop of 1858, saved vi
excellent Sw de Pi may also state that the Sardinian correspondent AMES e
h s fine ey e transferred th ag — re enters — tative in this ;
om a- very Capa nm KOHL, e Agency from that firm and appointed us his representativ
RABI, or P s IP-ROOTED 8 To meet t emand for first class iade; particularly RISTS' FL
Stands at Smithfield Club Show. Ti Kel Professor LINDI: s anii ACE secte wi —— > emend Catalogue.
Rabi l: last season, “BUTLER & e Ga & McC.'s i This list
as aan forthe Turnip and Mangel vi where tt ‘Gen E do € — closel: — 8vo ers 5 (Covent € t Gardon) m) Spring Catalogs of che —— — — i sai aie for-
MM iii quii Darin end gi per ace | he ^ y supplied one of the grew great den mei — odin tated "x that Tm Europe, has "nos aw
. *
aré equal to the Swede, and all kinds of stock prefer dence srs, ks rügen eg. Let us add, that it yields to no Trade List in the wende
P. 3 * Sox have also selected a first-rate Stock of ii o te e Nr. ap Mu reme I um An Assortment of Vegetable Seeds, 20 d
NGEL WURZEL L SEED, Nass rg can confidently i “5 e ene 356
ave n al d
Chen — ed they are ready to Er R — ht ^ soloction im of {0p pus ri beautiful Biennial må Poren- e p E 2 narts of Peas ditto : :
mixture, ying down Permanent m ito 31 itto “ditto” zT : Dit ao ' 12 a peng RE ^ is 0
Fom ta To ondon Estao free throni | pen dur mes ji aa ; Gitto itto ditto ditto ditto Paid to an
: ndon Establishment, for all — d vut — vegetable or Sass and inel Seeds 3 to Il. 1s. Carriage Poi
"LISTS OF det of the above and all other Seeds, Plants, . .
&c., may be had on ap;
3 3 BUTLER & MeCULLOCH, Cov Covent Garden Market.
|
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULT
EL 16, 1859.]
Ji JAMES CARTER & CO, SEEDSMEN,
238, mimm HOLBORN, WC,
ssue of their ENCYCLO
Bi
GARDENERS’ VADE MECUM, containing upwards of 2000 species and vire of Flower Seeds,
every requisite for the Farm and Kit ine n, and a comprehensive eem ndar of Operations fo
each month throughout the year. 9. C. * “Co to recommend the following selection :
No. Arva of 12 extra fine varieties of Quilled German Asters 1s. 6d.
5 é 12 suj — rb pus Perfection di ire 2 6
5,718 » $» Perfection „ F 2 6
„ 18 75 16 — T Dat German Stocks M. 4^5
„ 92 X 10 sert p mperial ; 3
» 35 5 12 n m — Balsam a haa
4 8 finest a Rose- : 2 0
equalled gent of Carnations and — 6 vars., Zs. 6d,
e a b of — ra fine varieties of e Rocket. Larkspur . 2 6
S 2 beautiful jj x Drummondi à EEr a
3 88 5 B newest » —— i ‘ ^ Res 2D
„ 60 perb Wallflowers " $ 119A 1 i
2
, 62 12 splendid Zinnia elegans . ‘
‘Alpine Plants in collections, 12 varieties, 2s. 6d.; 25 do., ‘bs. ; "50 do., 10s.
Catalogues forwarded. post free upon application.
JAMES CARTER & CO. Seedsmen, 238, High Holborn, W.C.
NURSERYMEN, SEEDSMEN, & FLORISTS TO
HER MAJEST Y THE QUEEN.
NEW FUCH
"LORD CLYDE"
I»
SIA,
(YOUELL®).
and satisfaction that we have the opportunity of offering for the present season
that has yet been introduced.
with much pleasure
hich — — and — the qe beautiful Srg
of great substa:
are of rich (€ "vue e latter $ st perfectly reflexed, exhibiting a
am Arr fo ded essem — rosy pink, distinctly flaked, wi bud stripes of bright violet purple e p
the "— — 2 the pro fuseness of - B ms prope erti es are al an be desired. It flowered for the first |
time its character in every respect. Strong ads will |
Au 27, at 10s. 6d. per rant (Per post free, if nee red.)
ge api dini ings, by Mr À WS, be fe J 2 tof 6 p tag T
ablished i 8;
OPZDIC CATALOGUE and undermentioned. —
ee
2
d P à
For Four YEARS SUCCES SIVELY His Rovat | HIGHNESS THE
L GAZETTE. 335
SPLENDID BED ING PLANT,
ins karte ca AUREA,
EN IT
UCOMBE, PINCE, AND Co. having a 7
stock of this most beautiful hardy — — on oer it well
fit for immediate pl at the
Sin . Bulbs 8
E
of ^H. D:
Established 1720.
xeter N wrsery, Erster.
E U
AGE AND > TOOGOOD e can now supply GARDEN
b TA a BEEDS, cal e free; SEED POTE
&c. The s Prizes Leer e by their Stocks are
vincing iooi "of s n erior quality, and their prices — —
a the kingdom. Wa HOLESALE and RETAIL
PRICED ATALOGU S upon i application.
Agents for OpAMs's Blood Manure, Superphosphate, &c.
| Si Pack Expo. tion to all Parts of the wor:
37 and 38, Oxford ke ed Lag the Railway Terminus);
[utm e Bar, Southa!
SPRING “CATALOGUE
. ARTHUR HENDERSON AND COS
ATALOGUE or SOFT- d erri irradi (inelvding
all the —.— useful . — en for ear), c
em — 2 r icati
e-apple Place, Edgware Road, Lond
TWO HUNDRED GUINEAS IN tieu 1
Fy
RDED TO
UTTON’S CHAMPION SWEDES at the East
Berks and m aa — 3 "pup in A
1856, 1857, and 1 eady, 1 r Ib.,
| cheaper by the 8 mena EE
Royal Berkshire Seed Establishment, Reading.
YOUELL & Co. S8 ROYAL NURSERY, GREAT YARMOUTH.
The Gardeners’ Chronicle.
8
EXHIBITION OF EARLY TULIPS.
WELLINGTON NURSERY, ST. JOHN'S WOOD, LONDON.
MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON
ESPECTFULLY announce that a very splendid display of the above may now be seen at their Nursery |
Establishment. The collection consists of nearly 30,000 Bulbs in 400 named varieties
ATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1859.
MEETINGS FOR THE FOLLOWING WEEK.
Tuvrsoay, April 21—Linnean ——— S PR.
TRE TM of the NATURAL HISTORY COLLEC-
ONS THE British Museum is now fairly
before ——— i an vg will probably be brought
epi final consideration as soon as sible when
ouse of Commons s ave reassembled
after the TE: dissolution. The case indeed
s become despera ; human i inge nuity — ex-
A PERFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR GRASS WITHOUT MOWING! space there is none ; — ither natural history or
ee and art collections must be consigned
SPERGULA PILIFERA, to the open street unless some new build diii
Forms an admirable Moss-like Plant, with a dense low growth, of the easiest culture, and uniform rich verdure throughout the des one or the other is provided. That the trea- -
year. It is a charming substitute for rem lawns, Verges, &c. 21 = perfectly uninjured by cold or —— bears any degree of| sures of art and antiquity which ean bear the
cop equally asa —— 5 over in July myriads of snow-white starry blossoms ; is softer in its struc- maerens iem — stir is, wes pero 2
out o e question. is n ry which
REQUIRES NO ROWING | will have to find a ne w lod i
A further description of it is given, with d b years’ duration, in A f Comm
ated — iter ^n abs j
E. G. HENDERSON & SON’S SEED CATALOGUE Fon 1859. lade „contains informati j 4
Offered. in Seed Packets of 6d., 28. 6d., 5s., and 10s. ject, of the highest interest.
r things that during t
e on natural hist
ORNAM EE Agi ore sinh reo STOCK, — of ves cjr have
in taking evidence an
ORNAMENTAL P measures they recom
Strong Plan Plants, i DOT 5 re offered in Janes, £10 kind Mee Mets | } ži
ee - 8 tr
VERBENAS, 6s. to 9. GLOXINIAS, 12s., 188., 308. PICOTEES, 12 pairs, 18s. eee
PETUNIAS, single and double, 6s., | ANTIRRHINUMS, 6s., 9s. PINKS, ENIM 96., 128, apis
zc m CALCEO LARIAS, Bedding, 6s.,9s.,12s.| CLOVES, distinct, 12s.
DAHL CHSIAS, 05. 12s., 18s. is flowers for exhibition, PHLOXES, 6s., 98., 128.
ACHT 0” 9s., 12s., 18s, PANSIES, (^6 95.
ACHIMENES, 9s., 12s., 185. CARNATIONS, oh ree 185. MULUS, 6s., 98., 195.
NEW M he VERBENAS AND PETUNIAS OF 1859,
18s. Per Dozen.
GERANIUM S.
STRONG PLANTS FOR THE PRESENT SEASON'S TOO
M deo Ya ATED ão., nem :
RIETIES, 12s., "a NE S AUB i :
et case ;| tions which affect the disease of ]
be provisional | amongst Orchids, are applicable bent Oe 80 prevalent
As regar e latter pl
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Arnis 16, 1859. E:
with the extensive library of the British Museum. Sir p been given to the arrange ement of the garnet case
wi H R, Dr. J. Hooxer, and Dr. Lin kr but su su ch an arrangement can only
8 in €
eral e
Museum to 1 ically r S
Kew, with the view of ETE hini pop And this Ls dee organ is : t
‘more complete, b long at the ked by Prof. OwEN who has only to remark appear in specimens gathered in their native e
head of the Botanical Garden fe "Cents and Professor ror the reference by Prof. MASKELYNE to the| of growth. The combined effect of moistu Place
1 the late eminent Garnet Series’ exemplifies the inconvenience depressed temperature is we believe in pine.
ore ae rec ovs d f a small laboratory of instances the real cause of mischi de
— ; by of the continued wa nt o , e of mischief, th
rémoval would be of great disservicé to science by x goniom external ey ents may ocasiona ally —
ivi ni s:
central oen Herbarium and Dieses. In this work, specifie nongst n "requirements of vi nile effects. M. J. B.
inci 1 : e y at the time of his appoin
" Next day the are informed * THE PRESENT SPRING and LATE WINT
fi
deine pa
dew ishes th e eh erbarium bequeathed Wi Sir JOSEPH | ment. ext day t trustees
Mr.
“The herbaria at Kew, and the Lat a are, | DES Ne antorin, 1 and Cos sent
by m the greatest part of them, private pro and by Mr. NEWTON, as well as those from Carthage, be s fe (it
only ssible to the public under certain a y Mr. Davis, gio arrived, 1 for April 1. e h ve (in Paris) before ou
hich with the 160 0 blocks of gend 5 ded b y the|eyes an Almond tree which had expanded j
the Peg collections could be deposited, and no staff [with t gentlem 5 pre vation. of these flowers by the 28th of February, an Apricot im
sufficient for its care, and the pucem x T epee? remains of ipie da art is bis 2d of great im- | in bloom ye the 3d of March, and a Pear tree
acoosions. Iti * sisted Wt k t the Briti A Museum porta: ance, as no other country y possesses any of them, By the 29 Mat
and Kew is very large. In additio the ell as artists, i : i itg of the Luxembourg ooked like
considerations it is clear that such a eranefer a above | speak of them with admira ation and envy. The fairy lang. ‘Every branch of every tree was white
$ nor antiquities from Carthage are in some parts of the e-coloured a e used by M.
to your sub-committee, can the question be seriously | Basement : e cases are one on the o x 5
oim ed un vor the Government fas decided upon | Endeavours are Mee g made to find room un- | the 26th March
erecting the necessary buildings at ch and providing | packing ke temporarily displaying the e is as th
E — establishment in that loc And sh ed afterwards the —— MA that is shown by some curious instances of mild winters
r these reasons the 3 were unani- more antiquities e expected from Cnidus. BARRAL i
e of opinion that it is W desirable to re- As nearly the whdlo p ps space wider the colon- | | fo
P
* accordingly. At all events it is clear 13 asement for wan it of ro sewhere. white with bloom. So again Prrenor relates that
or A in e a ig
any other of the natural history collections | e so that fresh arrivals may be expected 42. — on Christmas Day and Twelfth Night
-can remain in Great Russell Street, whatever may | fro d artha oung maidens were decorated Vi
be their destination; and we hardly suppose it Fin ally, as it to complete the difficulties of the Bluebells " (Bluets—surely not Centaurea Cyanus,
-to be intended that the British Museum should position, Prof. Owen lays before the board his or Bluebottles), „and Primroses, and in
zn its site. We also remark that on the|views of what is required for the publie display 1421 the winter was so mild that Cherries were
0
n na ons. in in . T
poned considering the 2 report of the sub-co ittee | the views of this high authority, above 11 acres an account by MARALDI of the winter of 1718,
letter of ground are required fo side - History een ; which seems to have been still more ex 4
i . «ddr and a quar ** Most trees, in February and March, were
5 cba est nei it a rm pn toe answer had | of galleries each 50 feet vid end iont — feet with flowers which were eut off by the frosts of tbe
Sedet been received at the end of last Februa It | high, [onse Aii libraries, a theatre, store end of March and beginning of April, At Mar-
; E eben 8 at the Treasury is delibe- | DES rooms, offices, and sides for | an fruit I mm 2 i € eee mal
$ : e officer i^ etober, and produced fruit whic I
It is 2 a ma! ater o of org notoriety that even last uch is the present state of the — History jus ri x pene On the 18th Dee. Cherries and
2 1 E the Tru = tees Y" i been for 1 85 . n nable | eia! and the British Museum Apples v me gathered perfectly ri In thing
space for a lar; same
objects of sil Rind, which: vere therefore pur fnppened vi i itd Plums, Oh e "Fig, and Peces
Nay 14 cellars à d vn B th E weeks since we rcceived from a correspon- Oran ye e d
et hab. Bod WEE sol "genter dista | Kent two PINE APPLES WHICH EXHIBITED | to d petii d to ond their fruit
On the Sth 0c t. they were informe d by Mr. 177, | A VERY CURIOUS FORM OF DISEASE. We conte nted In Prova the Olva trees wers as forward in
on its way from Budrum, trig antiquities ad perita 2 ps pud trio urgency techie: We Add ca Ed Ei $ 1 5 Tk
s us
Carthage, amon — PM Me Hn: alone|information on the s ject. This ^ V haves DU — os RRAL, because we have alr ady seen 4
of which co i PUR eei tote tho digh’ unfortunately we have little Har x S dun information
al. e, ot cause, the case is too important to respecting D vegetation » pU ne
n the 19th| ‘The disease comm ordinary seasons of the years
owe : ences when the fruit is just to com-
f our last volum peus a a e M x vati — voip bs have gone t the 1250 e Elend. i . eet ta
5 ian and the fruit becomes k fiale and dies. ° rer of those ote TOR ebie een
a Ene. tion gradu extends u s and do eure s
j cuneed ; a ey | ti —€—
Ex hace 5 — . that the provisi Sonal till the greater part seems ii mass of MAD qu Wew Plants.
provided ior begi im tion he provi "ra pei a late yan of the disease fungi make their | 217. 8 amn 1 a
Evo CER an e e ene RI | lam, e
: e ionantha of the Belgian
“the Trustees another Ec., kar d VN | The first ‘point in all such e ases is to as ce ria the “This i isi indeed a very lovely stove ve plan 0 g
j Majo 5 earnestly die aan á * us inger ones footly h are dead, | * whose 5 1
vernme psi ; larg
— n importance of the pant before the dis ve petal — a of pp minute tooth of the bee v 2
valuable addition to our national collecti are of such a healthy green as to lead to © | petiolatéd, deep rose-coloured, foli aceous lo deer pm
iqui i . pus Wed of elusion that there is nothing materially ions What, fakes pi pace S respect piro DE
i about them. i " : 8 | well-known enda of o . ST
from i a ne to Bete hens e authorities of En would Se Rs) to oad foes de ire A E interesting in onn point of v pie , as - ofa ne
| i Arm 5t order n « lants, though | genus of which the typical s ze
to find room for other im t ba of the rs free from scale, are by no means infested with | Weddell, of "Bolivia, has ben d detected € 49 1
o b barks of
5 n Ee prm ; injurions, and as h 8. To th
are lamentably deficient; and they or as, a ar as we have heard, the mode Bolivians in intermittent fevers. To ths
ine a: in 3 of disposing of Way of s e or ur xl be g . It is quite | | Weddell has assigne he — 1. pis
discreditable t à: injurious to the works and plant are di at where the tissues of the oii nag 1 says Dr. E ® Guinguinäs, 1 9
o the country." 2 n the evil has not spread from | © a Monographie des o, um a hoin ( .
, Barly in January Prof. MASxELYNE reports that diseased r € seal rnin e Trane antre fimile.
* „je ;
a ey minerals dew a 2 to their final classitica- | some oe sane Hay A COME my wii fea onl is a to donner à ma Rubiacée un ble ampi J Hs
exact and definite ar- | di res hed s be | ce me semble qu'un justice en laissant ©
3 of a large number “= nerals will be thè vet 8 surf. pr ogy? detect in r elui qe Pe allen nologite —.
3 until the means are furnished to the | chilled after s yri fig, fr TR the froit gets
partmen i Ber ied nd | radiation, or f raughts of air, from | qu’a ew — sur es “collection $ de Quinqu
examining the minerals by those chemical, erys- | whi are Kalli b T cause | Pavon, léguée par a
9 and optical methods, which, in the examinatio: < the
—— perse indispensable, Tor lee 2 - put e-do not therefore We understand that Mr. Howard hab mee o 3
: discri ud Until there a proper room 1 ich Dh e. constitution almels dy ene * yi 3 bed eminent botanical ie craving a N
for che vens i" for „ applications. We h — A ane yo sig rnal» some of the authentio specim of m
— es, the arrangi of the | dense in Pine A 4 where the ore sini 5 Off preserved in city. à the Caracess |
provisional, $ ik re have the fruit were affected, and the same pie tase, This Howardia Caracasensis is from tn? $
its name implies.
Aram 16, 1859.]
CLUMBER.
‘tas erst demesne, containing as it does the beautiful
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL in M
gay and well filled with nice specimens of plants in |
Er wer.
| T lawn and pleasure grounds ar
“ Dukeries," 12 miles
roperty
ied a estate.
ark comprises an of 35 500 a of e ad
little more “than s century ago.
Forest
"The par
— t land. which
face iso of a
with dae timber, i
an extent of 1400 a
— - t tribe
ost luxuri 1
s of fr rom f 80 to Hr growth con
th f f
and specimens of Ho lies
h
of |
ir lar form, extending onwards a pe yn
| tance 17 the m
arkable
rgin of the water; the surface is some- | have
y produced, a
s b me unique
with no oble
y
Trees, Purple Beech, | several ie) es ae nic
ema!
EU Spruce, — exhibition bain Mer Melon gro Mad: is contain:
enclosed s n the wes a side, ai
ely cons
of fu T 100 lights, w hich are v used mnt
ars of Le cular o
glaucous and silve ery bject of great attrac-
—it is 60 feet in mda a contains 160 cubic |
feet of iabe ; its beautiful branches weep to one xd
area of man
a decidedly
| us
n circumf
such f
proportioned, dry and firm on
course is i indi cated by espalier trees in a most healthful
The whole
The w:
e of a * rate establishment. alks
the surface, es them
187
y yards i
e grounds are further interspersed with many 7
„ Thuj: as, _ Cup pressus, &c., tog ether
an
| Thes
gardens at
the perio zh ' my visit were in the best possible con-
imi sheer as — ri —— or magement, and
but also
| with well d
hI
la uM.
| evergre
ens intermixed with ane flowerir
| shru bs, ng
possessi all 1 charms a % comforts
tain on an arena abou ic feet
to
60 years planted average in measure 50 cubic
of
d and firm walks are osi
led 1 through these magnificent rapis ot v seid iei hole
tendent, whose excellent management for a long
y superin-
series
much
Ap
ing much Ferry on Mr. oft de worth
of years — constantly been the subject ot
object in this lovely scene, on 4 e eye at once
dite with delight. Near at hand s
di prop 0
and t
little 1 anything ut coarse Grass
: of
feet ; and possi P ben few estates, more especially y uec pg yA
2 midland countie th | w ndeur t The Home Po is situated within the limits of the
this particular description of useful timber. The the dr scene utiful belt ull Grassy | ark, a nd isan ohjee t of much 17 1 5 to the present
etel a prima ts dei Retford ; , with their excellent traversing walk re alto- Duke; it contai Mh, of 1000 acres, a very
at Appleyhead, under fty freestone arch, with iron gether 9 in regar ping and management. | side rable portion yra which i of a free * loam and
gates and pali ading, fad handso r dges in ib The he most and more especially from | well adapted for the Peda dn of Barley. Root € aw
classic style on either si From this a 14-feet sublime and cheering character and this des escriptio n of la ogy eh ae sought after
road sweeps over hill and dale for a distance of 3 | e lar arge and l ifi li of its free 1
miles before it reaches the n nsion, 2 of which are r -€—À merging as it were into t foliage of the|in ng wie ies. Abou acres o pev meadow have
between iving Lime trees its well clothed verdant islands jutting 2 € broken d ‘os thoroughly drained; it was
30 years p war ts nob Sere whi bosom. In the middle distance the aid down on the most improved p rinciples, and
to wear By much grandeur: that portion a te | Splendid ‘frigate vides majestically at . cbór—a noble | is now p. rod
this
18 dá assem
T, ex waite paintings W the
pS pe mber are its state
agnifice ont, library;
e furnished, orco
articles of verti and m
at etg and the latter ioa, in superb mahogany |
foreia and eme yop It occupies a pui
situa’ m ion in the park, o n the
which flows in ie proximity, eee out in its
Course to the east in large se of more than
n, a considerable stream |
RETURN
PIPE
proudly along, and acres 2 "s description n of are now
be cu to groups, in order that y^ Pen Y views | on the surface of the waters, or congregate on undagi the proc renovation, amd
over the i ae scenery of tlie Saat park | shores; and these moving objects in the foreground | which will doubtless. be attended wi d the -—
ht Nor would this peration confer a I ul itherto the farm ourers
interfere erg wich vis pen noble avenue charact cter of thi E by y any possibility pma se veral mi work; it has, how-
frable drive.“ | ful lawn interspersed with | ever, 1 55 one of the Duke of Newcastle's first
from different points, whose lodge and gates are | its ls d of stately € edars, Acacia, Purple Be ied. [siderat ions u improve their Hort tay by the eree-
ey n 3 ee rev inthes aggregate hy pete &c. ox relieved by the more airy forms of Silver | tion of suitable dwellings for their accommodation ina
14miles in length, and generally i the width already | and wid Fir town, over all, whilst the under I
indica pmi. rives the io ind well growths of Je pen and other kindred subjects | in the most t munificent manner, by building three
on s are also of great extent ; "they are wide and ia bs ss, as it were, the wa or adorn tg f ifal o». |f -i ke d ornamental caine be containing 13 deen
whole bein; further y "m
the bant ark but also of the — count try. tet al of art, p - lent effect tyle
I first. Knew al the carriage drives were in | hill to the so south — y avast range of stately men. ene. pev dade are situated o on a y fined
most unsafe to Gavel ou over.| timber, and is continued o nwards across the latf
They rect however, of inte yea as rs been placed | under valley, through ich ‘the river flows, the whole of the farm ans i and 5 extended terrace is kid ow 4
the im nt m egt of his f 11 t and i n the latter — s of $ tember
forester, — have e * — — —.— a credit- | noble timber, whilst single specimens of Cedars dit * of flowe x It * under Mr.
able condition, alike fn rd to formation € gu quid oie trees of particular interest occupy the | salient | Spey s management, sud is well iion be ardent
2 even this latter operation continued o poin D.
extended surface is of itself a gigantic u ind taking g tiful freestone bridge with a . ——
which MM ac ta s not only ds alt open. 5 ee g an object of consider NEW MODE oF VENTILATION.
roads wear a more improved and ionable r- | mo ati of this woody scen Praec wins 5 sun ey tim mo
Enos, "put Mf Saat o d d pens 9 ao 2 relief tom ecent. n UN y Wist tan; Se sos mm of heat n e ventilating," have induced me te
evidence of instak and care. gre ines ‘jews of the y mansion and its enchant- 1
e mansion is a noble pile of white freestone in the | ing val ley are obtained.
classic of Venetian-Italian archi! consider. loping well p
ably enriched on three sides, and having =
colonnade termi ce in a conservatory at the easte
end, conferring much dignity and Aegis’ on the
whole . It was built by Henry, the first Duke of
ere, a fountain of ate marble, vat 1 supported
by nu and other works
| the. mansion.
and vegetable „ Ma
substanti ally built brick ce of which 800 yards i =|
F fenit
are well covered with healthy "trees, and I pieno d
e very remarkable specimens T M le Clere
other Pears then u aia ther rt he main
ga
ble
of eve
from tj the. windo x also
e surf:
pina: "wo ng MAT be |
servatory is Scri
80
and range
of forcing houses, yin poc portion
e co m
| these houses are very wide and somewhat lofty. There
houses of consi
occup: the greater
| of the northern wall, is 450 feet i in length, and is divided
ral of| would be
me made to any
pu ; length, and to
fow-pipe with the cold air pipe attached,
338 THE BB enc CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZE ITE. [Arn 16, 1859.
is all that is required. Either of thes: e plans, wi MUN eee E
Welle tn
duod b the Dottom-hest | And now for we ore wen house. At "Tad
— in th the back wall to allow the detected air r to | 1 wed action inde y 7 ne a lot of pans of X igni oes 3 chron 1 p o M ; i bn 2
th back of a Pine e. the house stood at 49°, :
fear of its being too cold or or west ten mede | Cucumber Lee in the oreet en A m. heat, about 98*. On 1 205 morning nh tdg out do
for keeping late Grapes, especially in a damp climate, | others were growing in pots which were plunged in — 2 9 S 3° of frost, and my fruit w
and as a dry atmosphere is indispensable for the plants were trained and tre gea pus 25 ass T vq 1 ed at my a undan as
the bunches plump and good no water should then be | eve ry other respect a ve - vieni um od Reed coh 8, Ms Rari: m mias Magi.
a eat scarce E . n mus
kept in the air pipe. W. “Hut ss a Malgwyn. fom e ia idi of De cimier unti the middle of da nt crop and swelling ER ieee T
— th be imagined when in spite f
RADE MEMORANDA. ebr - pite of two
Who is ies wii who sends large orders from | bore an en of fruit. Now, here were plants s die x | rz in a house 95 fee es
2, Somerset Square, New Allen Street, Roc hdale Road, | that had the same night temperatus cad ie rd er i zing. Hortulan y „ descended to 3? below
i s whi am; 7
Manchester, a place which the ing, receive e same amount of light e
M | only difference was, the one lot had bottom-heat, an ari osperma.— Hay. of
2 com -— n LX iac cottages where, at No. 2, Mr. the. other none. See how different the result. If a readers in cultiv. E s Arundinaris, the 0 MT
ardener has, we willsuppose for instance, an Orange Br ake of North jon Which, by the des be
m in ill health, 705 does ie DEE to bring it by botanists, 5 size, beauty, and hardiness ms to
Home Corresponden - rou oa He has all the soil removed from the roots, | rival the Pampas Grass its elf? Some time pe
On T, ; t their Bar Tt a appears | has it carefully potted or put ina : bps on of these
he Seren) prunes the head, dnd ^t then deiode it | right forms and spoke in favour of tbe d introducti
iy their "x TET ich dopri wis E Leste’ acy Ti where it can Ls ave “a comfortable bottom-heat.” If the | novelties ag this class, but as yet Po: suggestion does
injury. i amd with cons; Mee advantage, eir opera- night temperature be ed low and the e atmosphere not appea dest bee on act ed u po 5 America
tion ten i o increase thei of vegetation.” mois t, as soon as the or tub begins to get I beli ive is Ml Gras ; why can.
I cannot stomach this. The dle 1 is too potent. In|full of roots the tree wil push away vigorously. not we add so [end o our at ea
times gone by, Dame Nature knew the bette But, I ask, WO ould such be the immediate re, Me thei strikingly beautiful plants
necessity of trees being furnished with bark; for Ovi lt if there! bottom-heat ? nsider: PI pipa TI usi n. Y
that correct field naturalist, expressly tells us ‘tnt the growth of 5 iia deny &e., ost which F 75 x el 4 that deerit possess,
re ultr See te om-heat" is one o! mo M., Hawkehurc. c
— * = * — — ird 25 jos ch death th = s to be attende Pire that i Dioscorea (see p. 218). —Having reat in your Paper
| untimely death du 7 e rather &
of Phieton, were supplied with a comfortable | secure = all other conditions be cing a ended to, the a little time since some sparaging reports of
jacket of "er fiat Whaat their voices were heard | results are 5 satisfactory. Wi hs it, no matter the “Dioscorea japonica,” you m ay oa be
for the last time. “Cortex,” says Ovid, “in verba | how assiduously every other n "s me -— ws to, the posed to insert the following. account, of the experi
novissima venit." And, in our days, in the year 1811, | results will be unsatisfactory. I planted in
three deer escaped from th frm at N ostell Priory. | autho do in practical matters, an ida as Add hole drift of February of last. year a single row of about 50 feet in
aving int l ms, they com g producing
Erie — 1 . of healthy Cucumbers in winte s been owing chiefl y A — about 110 lbs. weight of tubers, eus of thee ax
Elms. Every Elm di own to the ground; Vati to his Keeping a a e low night tem very fine, the largest one measured nearly 3 feet in
and new shoots sprung forth at the bottom where the | ture, I have been uced to offer the for mug in i | length (inclusive of the tapering upper end), and 10
bark had ihr disti y the maranders, | order that Shots esos insuch matters m ot | inches in circumference round the thickest part, and
“Trees, no doubt, will live for a considerable time | commit a great mistake, M. S. weighed above 3 Ibs. The per of about half the
‘after they have lost a large ion s their bark, , Rainfa ul in Cumberland. —The following was taken crop is upwards of a foot, the other half of
Thus, in the year 1814, 2 neighbour at Chevet ! Silloth f St. Paul's Church, Holm smaller dimensions „and more irregular shape,
in his pleasure-grounds one of the largestand healthiest | Cultram. it nal be phy et to some of your|crop was planted in ordinary open en gr
Variegated Hollies I der ‘tate One ing, hich has fallen | without manure, which had been trenched 18 inches
ering v: of H i X I this year with the rainfall| deep. Many of the finest roots had forced their
ime deprived this fine tree e M bark de ay 2 fet of e diei aep fered in the four preceding | for several inches lower down into a stiff peo
in circum: "og f | yea ha ug
. bá . Ra
1855. | 1956. | 1857. | 1858. | 1859.
&
" =
ot
115
*
5
©
F
2
i r reason fo y
3 me Maay ce would have been condendi Hes Bor
Ins. Ins. Ins. 8. which
0.340 | 1.720 | 2.100 | 2.241 4.968 qu was an aecou 755 of an experi M wie
s 0-270), 2.770: | 1-207} 0.219 | 2.979 skilfully Se There is no doubt that a good
1.701 | 0.020 | 2.185 | 1.547 | 5.074
0.010 | 0.470 | 0.202 | 0.334 | 2.055 crop d always be had, wligr pro roper means are
ployed.
[Nei stomach the Pech i story to | ——— =] i L — 1 Asar |. are nagd Peaches. — I enclose a D taken
which our much valued 9 alludes. On the | Silloth is situated o on tree in an orchar
m
2m "d house, I do not know
contrary, we have been assured that all the trees that vim berland, n t 15 rts no x: that the above will whether such erue are uncommon, but Pa neve
r
"have been barked have died. hold good for of the county, from the unex- | met with 82 fore. "The tree hich it
Night Temperature of Forcing Houses.—I h a 5 ther which e prevailed | was taken ] [yn now score of similar j
. Ayres's paper on thi bje t with much interest, since the 1st of 5 1859. R., Carlisle.— From | ones, and I should We i a pet ym ui
If I understand him rightly, he attribut ou, in the P M of | | sin tell me whether I had better leave them on
in growing Cucumbers during winter, chiefly if not London. appear apprehensive of evi I fro ant ol form part of the crop, or whether it would pen i
entirely to keeping a comparatively 1 rain, whilst here, in Cumberland. „ W. S bor proper e take "vM off, and trust "Eu
ture. am as full nsible as most people of the | having too muc . "You report the fall o n to bei n | single ones, W. M. [We should prefer Mà twit
injurious effects of mai — a high night tempera- January, 0.71; in February, 1.31; in March, 0.71; the ‘single | ones, —.— should allow a few of the
ture, and have during the whole of m my practice is dell | be pt a little 1 ws than 3; 2l inches. At tl ay of'experiment.
on ven E ratively lo * m ure at night. pne nswo: „ Es. near Whitehaven, the Cucumbers.—I Lad som e beautifully bremen
Impressed as fi am of the advantages of the ines e—in January, 5.41; in February, 447; ber plants with eight or md leaves, pl as ep
i in Mare * 49; tage ap m inches At Silloth, | hand, in raised monnds in a pit heated by manure, #
a seaport on our coast, EN e fall (see ve) during | brick-walls —— holes to admit fresh heat when 1
ved 16 days in March was 5.074. In this putt 16 inches | quired ed by outside linings. Perceiving peri n lows in
| have fallen mic a the pr e months. Bow 35, Post instantly “fumigated with tobacco paper and fa e ee
es- | Office, White e usual way ; next morning by 8 o'clock, I
The T on "e ema of the 1st inst.—The plants shrivellód, droopin g, and dying. The tobe» 11
effects of this severe t in this e was ving used it various times *
best .E. on, are most disastrous The thermomelet
g
ment, of Lond . The di d hot-water its.
been | hea’ w showers on Wednesday, th ult., were ener Pig
; flowed a at night by a slight wind frost, the ther-
around | mometer registering 28°, or 4° of frost, Thursday, th ;
o- | 31st, was dry and cold, and the frost at night terribly | Societies.
severe, the thermometer on Friday — a standing | Hogg it E
at A howing 12° of frost, Apricots were a most| BnrrIsH PoMoroGICAL: . March 3.—Mr.
nt cro lls, and a
bui T n | the m" Chase, desired
wees unprotected, or protected ò nly with nets, every It w. at Mr. Newton, DE DUE
fruit estroyed; on trees protected with tiffany, even food Meeting E
double, some we are left," perhaps one in a 1 me ti get
E these, althou gh green and apparently sound, have tl
d dead, eaches and Nectarines under
the. same circumstances seem all Weste th
os had set an — I never remember them
t EE ine y or e their fruit, be t
re wien ues EM pd the plant be a their shoots being > well ripened by "y
g, ra
how tee a der vio temperature coul enses — 7 few ki ds Tx ce pee E f Tes *
s" Th
year they the parts o fructifie
the chamber for dung was quite empty unti 1 Early Prolific seems to — withste h sealed the —— "pp
Septemb At thai time several of the plants red than any other. On T yt this kind panied by the i
showed fruit, and I have since cut several sma I Were covered with their beautiful pearly blossoms, but Fetter ror, from. Mr. Rive
cce e E had all closed; on di "A sin sin eral
Pine plants had “a comfortable bottom-heat * from | man blossoms br 2 1 a us don * -——: he —.— So at
the time they were planted up to now the results "
would be more
cer:
as 1
the trees tod à wre bend with stam ti
, satisfac tory, Had th here bee on no germ — perfect. s here had jue —— in Se marson ak San Drdgowort, 7 on hard
ssoms, car — inn havı
to being m — would have been t Still there er be found — — delen — on — Sito enn
Aru 16, 1859.]
of the Stort, atributary ofthesea. Pruning: ng:
ight summer pinching in June em July, —
shoots towards the end of August
—
ure replanting, some leaf mould or
ani the 'caleareous sand common to this
tree; two shovelsful of the
former an ll mixed. In March
vem same e y of soot, as to Apis is given in the
me manner. The Pears are all on the Quince stock,
— the —.— on the English Paradise
The day after the — p Secretary received the follow-
- letter — Mr. Rivers, which he copies in this place, asi
the — which was desired at the gn ting :—
& forgot to add to my notes on Apples sent, that they
very old, dry, arched ur under
wy s g- -shed, the average v winter temperature of
whic’
about 50°. Air is antly admitted at one
aa flows gently per
crevices in a ver yo old, ill-fitting door at the end
ite to the wire grating. haz observed
A have kept
t
n Apples quite soun
e fruit 4 is gathered, and, withou
THE GARDENERS’
dition, but of the same
e
Kirk’s Scarlet Admirable. a ec also — twi
valuable kitchen varieties, not hitherto described in
tle Major, a medium sized oblately nece : ple,
erage diameter about 3 inches; eye open, clean; s ong,
rather slender, deeply inserted; colour pale greenish "owed
rather densely covere ed with whitish spots, tipped wi rown-
russety specks ; flesh firm, juicy, and ie d acid. Poor Man's
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
339
as on all hands admitted to be superior to any br
forward before at this early 3 y -—
Hyacinths, as l; the cipal feature,
and a — number was shown tia D on any
occasion, These, Whether for competition or exhibi-
called forth
tion
Profit, a 1 handsome, oblatel ruit; colour pale
warde d to
rizi
9 — mar UE eig "near Bedford,
gardener to
Car . — collection con-
tained 8 of Pears and 23 of Apples.
No particular
may med, that it was — 1
guish 2 — kinds had ‘been kak on the stra
— itt are
asy
that choice fruits
Fruit. Met "o
absorb the flavour "t ^
vegetable matters which “they a — o laid upon, = nen
for a very short time.) Mr. M‘Laren’s
* any c -smelling
n cked in,
Easter
Beurré, Nahin: juicy. à sweet, the best dish. of "the ki: = rical m
der t the nd s notice during the —
melting, and good flavo ied.
evidently over- die,
as Ribston pe
ich had come u
e
Golden Russet; Cou!
d Wyken Pippin were good, juicy, SUA well kept;
the rest of the varieties were kitchen Apples, in good c
kinds as thos mentioned in the
Semen aper Mr. Holder, of R. tribut
arge interesting
late.
and well co
aape, excepting Bon i Chrétien d'Auch, pora was sweet,
melting, but astringent. Bergamot d’ ES speren, just ripen-
ing, and promising to be ap —— The other kinds dint,
— of a S — ly have been improved if they
A few, — as y
Harvey, were Aree. i
dessert kinds
r's * Boston. Reinette, Court-pendu Plat
fey, good), Cla; Pearmain, Braddick’s Mapana (rather
and Dutch onne. e re kinds in collec-
tion and which were chiefly kitchen App! iem n good
state for use, and were as follows:—Caldwell’s Keeper,
Northern Gree: White Stone — Norfolk Bearer.
Seedling, Goose! oy Bedfordshire Found ing, .
. De Bar! , Cuisse Madame, Reinette
New Baldwins, T revizand,] Hatuette Diel, London Pippin,
N by very de dry pu Brakes (Pteris aq —
eq!
Petter cem T wd ever keep them before on the shies
of the fruit- -room The ples were laid i in heaps on
3
and
ured, but gene-
trays or stands
f
Wi
»*
y
the 8 * thi idious. t to these
were A . pots filled wlth spikes or clusters of the
allied fa uml e 3 Na
nspic ter
le e
presenting, edidit pur
and rose, sometimes beautifull
om
foliage from view. The
1 flower sent for exhibition, presenting, in its
ds of Daisy-sha P 3 of richest purple and
lilac, an agreeable contrast to the brighter hues of the
Rhododendr anh were inters
Rhododendrons, “bot Dee cho icest hous
ns, frui
of keen vegetables, the produce of gen-
amples
r from market gardeners in the
temens . ns,
neighbourhood.
Among the articles for exhibition hayas — following :
—From I n n barba
a variety witho
Ho — collectio, with
icu
betwee! . cinnamomeum,
whi E Mr. Handasyde were also sent two nice
small specimens of Rhododendrons, viz., pyl um
and Keysi, the first time whi have been ex-
hibited in inburgh g n-
good in flavour, os dr; ngst yr pples . Tw
ish the Royal Russet, under the synonymes of Bu
Russet and Silver th The —.— dishes were of us E which deco orate the in front
same leading varieties as are rated in some of the other | t
collections, And not suffici ently remarkable 4 e spedaly Mess Dickson and Co. exhibited various rare and
detailed. Mr. Newton ( . Graham, Esq. f
brought a collection d 15 Vires of Apples, which exhibit toi interesting plants, A fine cease an ts mero aent
the results of some experi he made in different | g gree dnd sent
very but barely ripe e Plus gue em 3
oe very rich. They had 2 M. —
lath shelves in a fruit-brcom. Mr. Swinerd (gar
Swinford, Esq.), Minster te Isle of Thanet, Kent, sent —
interesting collection of about 20 kin — pu * g fou poche
of which Passe Colmar and Be
which
ascribe great im RM CENA y leaving th e door
om f * ance
and Tuy up ; Ne
—— ag pi ne "hal melting or ure
er he ry like the m
tinteres'
pareil, firm, juicy, and delicious: Flanders
e), ovate, eed our rage e lemon, scattered over
o!
1 r, Sweet, and under the
ot Ran —
high flavoured; Easter Beare é, under sper 4 petu Winter gom
sane, past. The Apples were plump and tender-fleshed, but
not juicy or high flavoured ; the best wer urt-pendu Plat,
he name d Sam Young, under the
usset Nonpareil. Mr, Swinerd sent the vri a
ars concerning the mode in which they had bee
that the Apples and Pears have been
kept in in 75 * — of the old vga y a of. which
are 2 feet thick, and — feet fro e
north and east walls — iN the — €
— eh mi Ms
as
Geraniums, Heaths, fads, iy of the Valley,
—
3 the ind baing rer e
Lawso
her t, well
erp? was much pe
umber we belie
with green 9
&c., and a “ Bride’s” Bouquet
A fine row of Hyacts nths, eight in
which vr ee the front of the platform, ‘were: f
em ds eig
ug
we riegate ed pla — among which was
d po Pavetta Bor ca, and several new
Bego Mr. T ra: athe: exhibited a fine collection
flower, E and other
first premiu awarded to a collection by Mr. John | the naturally damp x
Cox — to William. Wells, Esq.), o Kent, EPEE 11 | flavour, and were rich and juicy ; but those in the dried sand gon atd:
kinds of Pears and 20 of Apples. Th ere also very fine in | had lost all their flavour and — of their j pee — of . in r, Epacris, a h
— N “n neto over "ripe. KY v eee New ioned, ti y r, amh L init —— à M sudo ja ooded plan: M Aleti er occupied also a con-
stances soil, been orme: si experiment wi rii sani ut envelo; each irul s +
reports. The ATR generally from walls, and and the | ina piece of thin tissue paper, and that they had kept their | Siderable space with greenhouse plants of various 2
rd sof fi from 15 to 30 old; very little | flavour much better. proposes, however, cason to Ferns, and other interesting productions. M.
c sil thinning the branches; great | tako e it of the XP preserve S hai 1 rare and interes EE
r, | e Toh — ree from | them in each e three ways above-men he | ments of new. and vari iaged plants, and under
th folla — wee the EN may estimate exactly the results of each. nie t llery an. extensive les in fine
— 2 m juicy, and rich in flavour; Pearson's Pe Plate, „preservation. M 1
* The D amber wh laid out singly on the floor of an ady juicy ; 3 page * paes some fin ode with
upper chamber when gathered, a kept Fariet — specimen of i m erum , and Camellia Spofforth-
open, so as to aff S wi a esr i Ventilation, for two iat EE — — bou E Rer etie Ios jana. From Mr. og tl sent for exhibition
pente: they were s he best selected, a "e don. RÀ La "of No. d; — — some elegant Jardinibres,. Aqui x
us pham, sent a nice co comprisin ^
* E» wrapped e: ely yin pap paper, E AE in layers Ped oi a Colm mar and d Easter Beurre. Pel Sey ast ix juicy, et nots.” W. M. Ellis, Esq., fnere A and finely
p lai s ut not not high flav e Witte, very melting, ry, and — 3 of Hyicinths 3 in pots. E
The layers were * h other — Knight's Mone oh, pro: mashing d | been room without aj m -
Phi
aid, show may lished in pd *
Notices of Vooks.
— —
ane d favo
its E ET
street, but upon
failed
we have to disco
Lists Recervep.—Ge
ld | [west are built against. with other buildings. _ The
e fros “The -—
id dat "holds 16 — of wat
sible for the frost t
room is entered 5 a „trap h
tight. sh meth and Al
TRADE
field) Deseripti
phlet of 1
bedding-out
Vilmorin 15 Co.'s s (Par) Supplément, e. (
fo thei: List of Tree Seeds). This às an imp
y h
"
issued b.
never use anything but — ——
s
le ai room, and hutt, m the door of the sik hl, 1
e
e, lige, juicy, sweet, —
onoga d ob, firm, and good-
en es e (under bed its
) Royal Russet,
dee
Pippin, King of Pippins
ane Yatieticn De vem
ö Winter
MEETS
Eum. has
main, and
Lord. Stafford, Cossey — Norfolk)
ppl
rs and TO!
z as examples d ae — 21 E. -— long du pho the fruit
The fruit was * though the skins of som
trees, where they — d Yn i eu gn e they fell off ai
and 4
were — à brui
HORTICULTURAL OF EprNBURGH,—This ring: -
hibition of ag fruit, e beer took p!
the 22d Though for at iq years yr
n
da
wet by *
sa e ic, yt
1 die s Babs 3 erai Beon To fon :
oe the attend- | list
attentio
t nly many x
m Chili M Cal lifornia, but it the
te the e nens come f oe
ich some account was g
e on of ?
3 "to most of their |
— e drea from the nursery they
2 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Arn 16, 1555.
— — D
— S nn Advantave shatld to cee
= P 7 rly, and so p ally. dvantage should be taken of a fine mores.
ee ek es En E EE NEA 9 * — tak 2 — 1 when ash the trees well with the engine, The ans
recover from the effects of travelling, after the T à 8 — dat. not, i do strong | - Wie osis pricots should also n 0 0
ec glo ee a si N mode © rich, porous fires, are ray it — cessary to admit currents and the remaining ones carefully examine in se. 4
toinpost. "They. hoata then bé kept pl eaa] pua to aero t : thermometer down. a green eate erpilla ar, which not ‘only i injures ther *
and g vadui ally ed to light and : air un " they are of cold air at e " e pty 3 iie fi n
y exposed to Achimenes, Gloxinias, 1e young fruit, t thereby causing it to
shout inches high, giving 8 ^g required. | Give proper atte x^ flowering plants. The last | gum, grow reuse] or fall off before it t is stoned. A.
Whe: they have i arrive ad at this stage of their growth, other suminer : and aig 5 8 persone 4s
they s 4 t s > fo Spi i Beans, and Turnins z
a remov ing the pite altogether; by. this treat- should now in um i at, Some o sa th s for giác in three peek ete eti soning AE puse
+ “th 1 t nay a ang «d E
ment they become £ 1 1 a larly well adonir a rad dé with strict regularity, a and strict reels.
N " mw depend eerie e b d. sh slow sn for thei eir general | and proper ai should be paid to D
Previous to this time the ground in irai they are Punt pans or 2 require an Hans nt from the ravages of birds aud ae If the crops of
intended to be grown should be deeply t à nche ed and cultivation, -— Mh p are in flower, let the | Onions, Lethe Pa arsnips, Beets, Salsify, _ Scorzonery,
ots ge ato pha ta agen : ny : efficien t as possible, in order that th 1 Skirret e lost, and
3 jy ^ ga v € 5 deti sini v adh : vem. fre eh * ratered without stagnating the soil. Let | the latest oo for f E Kidn crop of Carrots is
tities of vermin 4 5 202 the | Fuchsias for summer and autumn display have ate ben iio inn “i xt of tall Kid "s Beans (m now
D n, repotting them as may be required in ric made in early
Dai M early P id gona: p i RUN ko sionnliy wate ring them with liquid
n of each plant, allowing from 4 06 feet apart | compost, and occasions g bnome Ww i A
Dv Mia anes open les 12 inches deep, and the | manure. Much ewer of | the e ir beauty dep fi , but when this kappers tho pes sl a
in wi Ith; till these with prepared compost, | the shape of the pla ear the
i bip "that can be had, ave ing the use of|r ral tenden 8 form pyramidal bashes, nd E the —— corr ie
uch manure at this stage of their growth. m attention guide ien Ben he Slanted thee 1
t- t f ; Saly one shoot should be allowe plan e naa = 55 -
In — aei € ea Ge of the MN care, plan appr opria 0 AES lis s nly on be trained perfectly sh beet a little late spring Broccoli i may a
— vicis t. advan about 2 inches under the level of — the side branches regula ated MA ws 5 ropa orla aps these may be 9 Eres
the bed. This done, secure each plant with a g
stake, and supply them liberally with water until the RCING DEPARTM : om d pe o nearest — a : he happen
have taken to the soil. It is a good practi e tc uta! vIVERIES. Ww There it is desirable: i y ibid breaking ien Ux. Maid . — Pis "ed vi:
3-inch pot, with a small quantity of Moss inside, re- | i the ate house as long possible, and the glass tne E Cuscitib for Gherkins 9.
——— arly ene, er sm d - " ids rene tla pi ü T 1 i-is — His — ome rm sheltered corner. Heb to
earwigs, which are most destructive to the young plants. | air, they should be down as far from the glass as 4
traps hould be examined every morning, and | can & doté, shading the roof, and giving all the air 88 chem afterwards will be given in a future
the insects 2 e in them killed; by continuing possible. We are not quite 3 howere er, that there | num
this practice fi time they will soon be destroyed, jg any decided advantage in retarding Vines by artificial | e tuk wzerzEE eee, SENDER
and the health and beauty of the . T amply | means after this season. We would almost d For the Week ending April 19, 858, as observed at the otc Ges
bo e trouble taken. The l which allow the buds to start at the bidding of the we; PRCT OST WERE . —— | 7
^ 35 BAROMETER.
cierta 4 wa wa de E we the branches after this time, merely giving all the air ponibie; ysa] April. 8 8 f r 0
in ail di healthy | take chance as to the frui keeping until next March, 24| Mar | Min. | Max. —
Fr pon P pet of Ti light and air. e top. | preferring the certainty of a crop of prime fruit t ory Tere Ree
EE ol manure, W. can be had, will being able to furnish a very late supply. eaklyor Ben 9 6 | 3995 2950 8
them at this s tat te their growth. overcropped Vi to refully examined Sunday 10) » | 29.328 | 29.222 | 59
They will now be coming into bloom (about the end of | for red spider, whieh ot may be expected to make its Ju. {| 3| ano | avast | 2
29.404 | 29.308 | 47
July), when all useless ihe Urs rm ede es L appearance on these, partieularly if the weather CINE E S o C 65
the bl ing to the habit of each |; fe y rur
variety. nt e case of weak growing and abundant | eradicate it the moment it is Preh Probably — — diy "T im
ber mers this should be done to a very considerable | the best method is to well yos every affected leaf| “= 10 Bain; cloudy; tine; over
AN aol TEE 1595 eee "ev with a sponge, for it is useless trying to aee it "s 3 KD n nga under. — — sd m: eat night,
‘tion. EH d een Yate „such cases by syringing, whi au only se to keep i S — —
à ' We y vieni tlie re general cultivation | in check, Sul 5 the fruit begins to colour, an and — un 2 .
tiim t. i EE WEATHER AT CHISWICK,
Mes Ta : rapidity. Keep the ioi dias moist, sprinkling the ECORD OF T . enen 189
; Miscellaneous. Ls freely on bright days, and take care __During the las 8 years for the ensuing Week ending Api 19. ee Fa
ent and Fe Ani * et these took that inside borders are well supplied Ma th ve iila: EHE a8 yet 8 8 Jl:
Ufer important i iest house wi 2 8. pranti
2 een The Orchids more Mot je Heeling. fut ec iie HERR until they 2455|46] A6 Rained. | f — pf a pa pia
Oups Sod tehy OF magnon einen Bear dol diuisa Inter crops bs guided l. ta | tl at] Heo) ae
Boater dn e tere werd hone herir ofthe trees as to the quantity they may be |a R 2| E | ABI
‘sddod. Some idea of the kind of telcos Mes v fetched pem to sal i Syringe regularly er [oet air Ne . S90 | 18 om | 348
/ T oa uui uy on a 1 55 able opportuniti Friday . 336 | 383 | 484| 17 HE
T. Scher — Where the leaves are thickly clustorod | Sz Ai i Bal SAL B e
rhe d shadi the fruit a few may be removed 8 ; and tlie lowest on
tort 27 t 7L, > and a third 18 M ON as, fo togeti pé an xm sine e migita itn m os Tees Bie 1855, at — 77 deg.; and tlie
> » T" — , ts.
10s.; £ PAK the necessary Notices to Corresponden á
miedo n M UE d 6l. 10s.; A. quinquevulnera, | " ashing afterwards. Pie Hovsm.—Maintain stea ady Aaaa Aat C. Pits is a deadly poison 5 pns
Bk: vA: nil idi À ad 5]. 58. treatment, as any reet is apt to make the trees cast | the plants which yield Sabadilla, from
ot crispum, a similar sum, wem nes x their fruit. preserving uniform growth. prepare j house Cul
other Aerides fetched from 1. 6s. . per lot. i Books: YS. Swee sts Hothouse and Green!
f the Arkad chos of — CUCUMBERS AND Msi 1085. Thin and stop Vines and ber
e hugofto ; y Os., leaves and set the fruit. Let the night temperature be
105. " a good according to Mr. irections (see p.
in nc Scape 74, .| 312). Musnroom Hovsr.—Trap woodlice by means of | nsin A
» “> H t. L
same, 50. 5s.; Phalenopsis flower pots laid on their sides, placing in ps F der = e as
i < bottoms p D a cut Potato " ed fly onis) wi
two plants in a pot of the large- they y aro ful Wg up sil
of the same sort, 6/. 10s. ; a. little dry Moss. Watering occasionally round the
veru attleya mare. sides of the A with NE. ee will also effectually | need eee:
| thin their n — Water regularly SIA You cannot grow meg?
à — spese rae na pee abun da i which have ripened | bottom-heat ; d Cucu: 5 A no me
um præmorsum, 8. 10s.; S. guttatum, i May you rF
t may te planted on a rich border to make 3 now the sun
sai 56. S m, er heat: i mal pn sabi at night,
S. retusum, 4l, 10s. + raid setts they may . also produce some late fruit d the i
ium Lindeni, 4 ae airs autumn prove favourable. Re-pot Capsicums
logyne Lowi, bee
Camerotis FLO OWER GARDEN AND SHRUB
l
4l.; A. cau-| Lose 15 Amet in potting off bedding ——— pricking
P. tigrina, | them ou
to frames or boxes. As p demo Ly
dium eee "established they: — be h
ia hirsuta, ually inuring th the open e “The aris.
of 100, | ki ay soon uh a bed o l ashes or
For Ferns the sale was | Pl in old tan, ashes, or some other light ma
lots, among which Much of the labour of ing will thus be saved,
Cheilanthes, deat! is avoided, and plants will alto-
hylla, and Cyathea arborea. er be in a better state w planting out
fetched from 11. to 3/. 5s. per lot. = ve. Pa y annuals Should
i 800
tches of showy hard
now | wn in vacant places which usual Ny e exist in
22d, was put u sale on t bands 6 with wi anes Avantar $ o
occasion by order of the Comi ok the Horticultural in the shrubbery. Double Poppies, of various colours; | thus Meer ich time and
as knocked down. to Messrs. E. G.|Lupins, Sunflowers, Afen and French Marigold 8 at colours they will not
— for | 37.1 16s. The whole proceeds of the Erysimum, Clarki Collinsias, Silen
sale, including the sum received for the last-named | Nem mens are excellent for that purpose. A sufficient
plant, amounted to upwards of 5007. qua ntity of cuttings and seedlings of bn Me
— t in May*
— —ꝛ—ꝛ— das such plants as Cobea — Loph
Calendar of Operations. ms, Calampelis, Toms Tropa ra hee 3
(For the ep Week.) many ny bero places on the waa era trellises may be
ines, covered and re e ntal which would otherwise
be unsightly blemishes.
DEPARTME NT. some night-feed
1 p —Heat and 3 Bas ir HARDY FRUI senec idu i
be more liberally supplied i tropical pla As the Commen e budding Peaches ore Neva s
1 these should be Mdb grins remove a portio m of th
avoid a high
night temperature. That | a week or
the
Zo Lars: G S. The best ink is mmm
days go ee them and regulate tiir pem wine P MEME
APR 16, — —
———— 2 ELE e
THE PATENT
PANY (Lutep),
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 igen OF LAND.
TRUSTEES.
ApeL Surra, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts. Masor- 8 Hatt, M. P., Western Colville, Linton,
ps MSDAL| Essendon Place, Herts. paton ge ‘
— Bar, — 5 ne © 8, Belgrave e Road, Pimlico Jons BRADY, Esq., M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq
o
Chairman.—Jonas WEBB, Esq., . Cambridgeshire.
Deputy-Chairman. med Cordis, Esq., — ddleton s Pentonville.
BELL, Es rotten ei pe BERT LEEDS, West Lexham, Norfolk.
Joon A. bz, Es. 2 — ; — Veen y , 12, Camden Villas, Camden Town.
Ricnarp Hunt, Esq., anton! ee "Abbo: GEORGE Sav: L, Esq., ingthorpe, near Stamford.
WILLIAM Contin, -— , 105, St. John Street Road.
BARNETT r, HoARE & eo; ispum
= ste "blind.
„ 28, babes €
Secre
rts.
t, He
Tuouas — — m í Edmonton, M Middlesex.
M
N I
Auditor. —G. W. Brown,
. JAMES ODAMS,
| — C. T. MacapaM.
Offices, 109, Fenchurch Street, London. — Hanufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex.
are now ready :—
DAMS'S BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL.
ODAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS.
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME.
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents.
THE GARDENERS’ _ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
NITROPHOSPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE
COM
Tur Directors beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultural Public that the following Manures
d $ :
841
E oF AGRICULTURE AND CHEMISTRY,
particulars pplicatio
BUI Us
5. 08 MAY BE OBTAIN NED baton THE GEN-
AL LAND DRAINAGE AND IMPROVEMENT COM-
ANY Ys AC T, for the full pee 155 ge by the owners of
Settled Estates, Gr s, Tru: * Cor — e, &.,
for the erection o Hou Buildin
Labourers' Cottages, designed. by their PM "n 3
— by — Inclosure Com — M onns are 8
by a rent T;
accurately —
mar
and
e
arge on the estate for any term the landowner
m x, not exceed li ng 31 ii
nvestigat: n of title being r uired, and the eharge not
e Company fi
undertake A entire: Tes
sired by dern
Compan rut
only, approved | the. . Commission
thereon, being cha
5 y description, a. d
nsi ity of the Works prose [7
rofit however is taken b
aM PROVEMENT
Westmins!
KD PANY
2, Old Pal
, certain
and other pori ene are —— to quen the
the ell iem 2 e 3
. ced by th
PR Company advance m. oney, un unlimited in amount, for works
Land e ee tbe Loans and incidental expenses
being — — 8 a rentcharge for a specified term — 1 deln
No of Title is required, and the Com ng
of be commercial character do not — wit tho plans
n of the works, which are coni led only by the
mprise Drainage, Irrigation,
pure 000, in $e 000 Shares of £1 each, 5s. to be paid on D
within onths from Allotment, and the remainder
í Directors — require it, in Two Payments of 5s. um.
RUSTEES^-
HENRY Fenton J TA E Ret
T dare Esq., 15 meg Street, S. W.
DIRECTOR
ent—Sir JOHN DORAT, Tis: President R. S. L.
tershire.
Sa Worces' T. E. Marsland, Esq., ; Pall Mall, S. W.
15, ind mh 8 allace Pedder, EA. Wadhurst, Sussex.
inei „Vork tod Portman ga Eanes W.
P cunei à e Colquhoun, Esq., €— 2 X A MN Temple.
n . Heywood, Kennards, and Co., 4, Lom mbard Street, E.
Board of Trade.
J. rir.
Sars —Mr. Vaughan Prance, 37, New Bridge Street, EC.
Engineer.—Mr. G. L. Fuller, C.E., 69, 1 = | Audit
Secretary—Mr. J:
M. Haldon, F R. G. 8.
PP
Offices. — 193, Gresham House, Old Broad Street, London, E.C.
ABSTRACT d PROSPECTUS.
It has been for ems ter of n
NATIONAL FLAX COMPANY aum) 5
e Thornton, 1 aor C.E., F. G. S., & c., 25, Queen's Road,
orised ci
n Clearing, 8
ee ries | Farm Houses —— Wat
r Fa
aem anka, cinere
Roads, Jetties, Steam E
n fee 2 effect improvements on their Estates with
he — and aim A in-
salt out. mount of
roprietors 11 ee ly for the
of e M iri i
— utfall, Roads — the District, W.
For further information and for forms ot ee pis to
the Hon. W. aa R, Managing Director, 2, Old Pala
Westminster 8.
j'SSEX UM ICULTURAL ASSOCIATION.—
c THoMAs.BuRCH WESTERN, Esq., President.
AN ra wl Ya 15 this Association will be held
00 ve ter, UNE e following special Prizes are
red by the ren ociation. 15
Ist. For the best Entire Horses for agicultural purposes, open
to all . N the . ane a member, or paying an
entra of One
* The Hores obt: tiie above must either have
€ regularly in the county g season, or
e owner must sign an undertakin; ‘that such Mis shall do
dir em ire sae and the will be withheld until
tne completion of the
2d. à Sc best thorough-bred Entire Horse — — all
* N a member, or paying an
fee of 5 oa
A
e *)
4th. For the I Ram of any age of a pure breed, open to all
England, the proprietor being a member, or paying an entrance
fee of er guinea.—10L.
A Sheep must be barely and fairly ‘shorn, and any
ihe orn previously to the 1st of May to be disqualified
ren "rhon.
25
=.
years akers, and also of the importance of tl eds 301 The Poultry Show is — to all England. Entrance fee 3s.
th d lrish lin — also ae diras bm oilcake. " for éach pon "dmi des
e goods, hire: Sarri ea suffered from a deficient sup- | Asan example of the intended operations of the Company, By order of the Committee. _—Ronert Exsov, Secretary,
N of Plax a ana ins This „ ee ao d the MEINE is quoted from the full Prospectus of th Slough House, Halsted, April 10.
ec ation axin ma y P ATH AND WEST OF N
Gprteased ins increased with the »quirements E — s will be understood establishments where the B EXHIBITION. VEST, ies c e ENGLAND addition t0 TRY
Slow ch nr man ares. Our nati commercial statistics dn of Flax-fibre from the raw plant for the spinner | ordinary Money Prizes there — be e 2 handsome
the Un — m of om» mot tons ret — nually consumed in M manufacturer Sat be rou rried sed Men ugh ‘arated stages. SILVER CUPS, open to to all En,
o 50, ns are n ep das| Prize Sheets and Certifica be fth
In ad. n to this enormous importation of Flax for the base of o qe nnn tent machines ix Teak. phew 9
— man nufa — — we 8 tec hundreds ofthou- ak if . at Wok for (5 (sa 7d 300 ight paton my year wili Py NT. ee Hamm nei Sire stanton
1 Sas of quarters of Linseed every year for home consumption. uce annually 1200 tons of DET 7500 quarters of OYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF
E. — manufact: s : United Kingdom have de- ENGLA
! at they are to take any quantity which can be — AR d oe — FR Miis H 2 A
Nes home, and at such pi as be more remunera- 5l. per ton for the "there 1 Person us of havi eto ng either
"The € agriculturist than the usual Prodase raen lands. p eer that it wil take as picks as 10 ton: First or Secon kes MENTS dor t I ie in
1 PES of the National Flax Com are prepared | unseeded to: produce of Flax-fibre, at a cost of A the Society's rwick, in zw nex!
irre t agriculturists of this country flank no: no more pro- | ton, and 8 ed Pon: ^ for all expenses, the total o the' barioa 5 y^^ Forms “ot Ted a n at 12.
Ps cultivated than that of Flax, whenever their will be 6: . lea vig a Seeman be 1 of 15, 900. [d Hanover Square, Lond.
early 30 (t of the buildin; ngs, Tenders must bà delivered in, as above, on or before the 30th —
ries), which
ected fro
is wholly
for two retto
th: ni b anes fom
of Lay! divide:
at may be e m other
ing and M 9 M i a
one whichis
Copies of the te Pere and all further information, may be obtained at the oh.
l A QT Gresham House, City.
; halfstuff for paper
e peri cent. 5,0001. the
plant, and — together ms suficient 5 capital
espect 1d
xpe totis: F
p, and | and as the 1 of — Company are exiis ded, the
bad proportion.
_| the Society, 12, Hanover
April.
Ro
By Order of ET Council,
JAMES HUDSO:
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY EH OR
NGLAND.—WARWICK MEETI
Entries for IMPLEMENTS, B apes d 4
and . TOP
Entries for LIV.
PRIZE Send «y bs edid
Square,
dividends will pAs
tain weather, and at the same time insuring him a cer-| The pecu ee of So orkshire, and the
mi Eo profitable return for all the Flax — 8 surrou ios Fla y hes decides the —
any's S the Company's depóts and rettories, The Com- on Pound their 1 frst rst rettory in that neighbourhood.
"ee P. ations will embrace the whole of — requisite oar ud . — — of = Company being rod cultiva-
mr forth aring the Flax and similar fibrous — —— ‘of which in the United
. ro iu "i King —— there € "t gt — — the | to
" mpany is the | Company may y ams its attention to the acquire-
Cator patent, — eee "x r. George Abemarle | ment, in due course, of an available pro]
ity po Sentleman who has made the cultivation of Flax and r
E for the spinner his especial study for many
eur and ream fally demo; the qs economy of
Tun fibre, wh very great improvement in the quality of the
Preparation” ich is the result of his improved 0
""Brplanato The will be found fully detailed in
to be had ira rn Flax Cultivation and Pre
S
has inre gii uch attention to
this subject A been already stated in the Agri-
ie cs E
P e ede to injure them
* to pich P . fact in
per seded, hiec and on t
"T ders . = arsenic. ury who bad ui
— * - decide the case —.— Messrs. ELLIO
K gave Perg for the latter, carryin,
damages inc and e
in the death of the sheep. The first was, that
the dip was too strong, and that the poison had 5000
been 8 by the dis, 22 thereby caused
the death of the sheep. The second theory was,
tha i
washed by rain on to the Grass, the Mp ite t ^
Grass, and were thereby Apna In the absene
of direct e Syris either of the two todas
might have * ght probable or at least pos-
sible. Whenev r the chemist w s to ld of e
C
Tea
were y^ once started to account
the
ground th at danger is to pes appre rim from the
1 of arsenical solutions over farms, a
is vi
Holstein, he says that in wo se two Duchies
nds
nated about the country with impunity.
e conclusions which he vM from the expe-
ai
y [accidents ol 1 15 s aie ‘considering the enor- |
ist | mou unt of arsenic »ph or dipping purpose
th y | wholesale poisoning can be
s
a arsenical tion to a certain extent, extent Tat ben that carelessness on the part of the
his men at Burton, during an
cannot see how any iii 3 80 patent.
one for a moment ent enter.
very great regr
with et th
oy yes last week of the Rey E Annone
1 - 4. S. Hare
College, at Ci ; ln]
ollege, a hc cross The yes t high sta.
sing of the college is greatly due td his ¢
on
ral College, which had at that time f,
— ute—the students being ben rh
eim — but recalling the smissed
| riments made in concert with D
ollows :
or suffering from scab, with extensive eruption, or ‘foot
feel, in arsenical solutions, varying in strength, is un-
attended by 2 "elfects and proves salutary to
alamity
was informed that eof the 15 viae which Ph
had mem to dip the » Mir aisi mening? entire,
he said that 5 e dip
e
tions; but he stated to t — ^ s Was |
1s Own
risk, dip them i in the Vah hte by isole
the rem kage, and whether the animals
ai ed under the ordeal, “that he
* 2d. That the congregation of sheep, after dipping,
where 5o is not allowed them, is unattended
— of
“lst. That the immersion of iie whether sound Yin
increased to any as th e te can am-
fortably accommodate, while the out-students are
o be
dang
* Sa. That all the sheep having remain:
ed damp from .
24 to 36 hours Ms being 3 0 cutaneous absorption | |
hav 7
during the EEn R period that the sheep continued | c
wet; but no unfavourable symptoms ensued, indeed t A
the reverse.
- 4th. The absence of the slightest change in health,
ifficult: is
nthe town of "ci iren titles
We NE o
lived, o
om Went) sa SS stand or fall by the result. |
armer refused to settle the point by experi- | even medicinal doses by the mouth, leads me to infer,
ment. He was told by scientific men that that 1 :
the
| skin, it i is quite insufficient to develop the physiological | y.
on ES 5 of arsenie to the lower animals
penetrate the system of a sheep by absor orption by t.
rey
ew. eadily
e absorbed Ban. aten abraded 9 r five the
with-
** 5th. tion of arsenic is n
healt! f skin, E ANE ie the arsenic actin
of his success in the complete organisation of the
establishment, that the whole machinery of tle
d harmonious action,
suddenly
college continues in full an
though its revered head has been thus
moved.
The tori ue » of ee clay land |
Wheat — refer ecent adver- -
He was mere opinion S as tisement
out the basement of e. ent, should not rule | astringent on the sores endering the latter. as keen ani last
eiie wd on his side, and he was desirous of ined eable, probably, as “the “sninjared skin. This if
He could have ied Mu pee pn gs e lente w — 8
that his do Rad Dos: , “6th. It impossible "8 poison sheep by| been alread
; ingle ca salty mat "s solutions, apes the liquid eight were then ‘‘ gru
the last 1 — about 2 000 sheep had A i io m y misc 2
di , and had i the better for it; j| “7th. “Arsenal eee. it quen — tl — deep, and thoroughly disi
n|or mai
“sth, A. ders partake of Grass and other food | POY
wise MS of being. absorbed by the ge of acr
which has been smeared or soaked with an Pme
MM 8 the presence of soft s
ent. He states this offer was not accepted.”
, Mr. Pasko’ who i is clearly of opinion that Mr.
L e having eaten of Grass on
His € tn nal er were nevertheless made,
men whose evidence on the trial must have
snd
ts are reported in this paper by n me
ich th ical fluid rom SPAM from their
s, thus sums up
tt Here 9 Due to we impregnation — =
gen by p —introduction of arse
S. been disregarded by the jury “tie o whom the
arsenic in
the fleece of each sheep bathed, while in the cas
of two other sh ipping mixtures in the 3
the quantity is upwards of 330 grains per sheep.
In order then to test the effect of the materials | p
ee, these baths are compounded, a number
were as i i ee
liquids, various strengths with
s 0 ne wi thout Se
being dui Wa “ad in which sheep y infected vi te the
scab, and d therefore fore with unsound dipped | is
and 1 nd harm followed.
conclusion to which Dr. Macapa i is 3 2 out it
—— ye
ee expe
easonably fit, dii prope — bn th 4
c pine of exe UP ‘used according "t he
directions affixed to each package.”
Mr. Jonx "ees 8 eontribution to this es
states that with Pages = sheep dipping, th
e
ntary e un n existence of that ¢ cin ie T
asosa of the stomach and puces of the
sheep—and lastly, that se ae N cannot
ski Mr.
; in fi ^ that
tot, of Berwick, is to be Siete to the
amount of 14004. "ind Min. 3 his mixture
was, on the ground of mere othesis, wet
orted by a single NIFI, declared to b
3 fit to sed according to the p
—' Itis my firm belief that arsenie is |
raed ia meeting of the 9
"apn ers’ Olub, by J. T. B
In some of the — in in Gloucestershir a
commodation for stock is nearly the same ips ;
years ago, and the description of it uns te te
intelligent writer in 1787 stan
n x am bo A a
sam
| (page 18, V 1 1 ic ar cl is
e buildings an ards of the Cotswold
e hi
Th
since then, but they are by no means
which far mers
* precautions 2 have especially been 1
on, are universally ne to farmers, are
st, Keeping the sheep’s head out wt the 1
2d, Pressing the w d pa so
e sheep to carry away as small a tity as
pe of ~ oem solution, "3d, Allowing
ey ree: ep to drain large area deprived
mad shop. be scattered, as they should be, over
an extensive surface im mediately after being dipped,
‘the Grass which is no doubt charged
Vadis det. if Gai be any c Bee
si my:
manner which the sh were siet
Burton th at m aid * 3 ^u
W Fu
not only innoc ent, but cou
= = he
ploy that t ch they know to be poi
HM the preeautions known oe oe i
in dealing with poisons by any person of
an erso: Marshall's ** Rural
common sense. . . . "The evidence in favour of the | ^4 Caird's “ British Agriculture,"
ore A. to the in interest ele -
el
ared u
m
rther investigation must prove that] came was | selves as soon as th
d
3 for their ir sheep. Of all the poisons it —— Mr. Cos joncestersbite t
aps the safest, when niei: in the shape; d
a bath. Farmers cannot and will no with- x Jannaryt — eg cond:
„but when they aj for idated fara
their own neglect, or for accident after bathing, [es
un D, | two lots of m
brio gp
in 19 way be d vede pati
— sl the loss of 850 sheep by x: Wers Vanlisted Wr tae AME —
ACK gust, and that farmers must e ^
ws 534
rae d their dissatisfac 5 —
butting each d the
Ya. TE
Apart. 16, 1859.]
THE eee CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
8 i ably every one of us could endorse this as a true jie
(C cep of things is not, are — to the |
extravagant eves It may be as well to —
ere 1 the . tion of
— FARAN 2 perhaps, with greater force to ‘that
m yar with | Sheds attached. , Straw and p
accompanied by m
found mixed with t
geni campestri), w
ensis nie 0 ECT perenne,
J
condition would be of littl
tees and of V
p. Th
iet of Gloucester, but i: a: e or less
set dere to be found perm ughout th
" and as pointed out ee — " Dilston,
ins paper on Farm Balding rated € €
Agricultural Society in 1843, the consequence
ce for I t.
greater demand for farms that pe well — with ticles re-a
every conv nien unm t
t lan
f them is E A b
degrees, however, a slow | ee ensues, the
rrange themselves,
ar-
- | thence.
ing
ted from the Black sra e standard of quality
t prico is PY — the "y 25 rtatio: pc
In ud y BL k bold
creaking hea Now,
bee produets are formed, which are rs so that | and pu ire, w. ya posé gets of other 3
vol. buildings have called * the meat and | were the eripe carried far enough the e of the qe 2: the Grete L I ingen thi: eem article is now to
manure factory of the far (Cain p. 67), a and the con- valuable f the manure might be w ashed Ley bs. extent centred, w tamper with it,
the importation would — Tie if any room for
tare ar forcing attention to this, whi tl 15 lepart d, se be 8 be — Tea to reg field y objection But during the i m een war,
p jh,
ani
t tim n has beer
did lte
carried P such an “extent, that’ a Qegutation of seed-
miller.
without — buildings A & windmill without
covered with wie: it is well p oxen
i ard
stores —— be for = — I by am
It t becom then mpor tant qu uestion what
,not too h
iet — — as it is spread ov t
* houses in „Lon on. e interview,
Y fth A ee
m. in their construction, for I fear v ibat
| many cases the outlay expended on the home
-
Let us s then consider the
nll. And first,
the nen Porter- coloured stream
and down the
sing the ad
to be bro rapt one the depu tation, 2 being
shown a — 9 of pure ‘Linseed, «id also one contain-
d uris uested
to state their —
Lu here, would c i
forced to ber M competition for seed amongst the
had m
eit the “economy of food, and "the! — of | y
factory g
A 1 ti "TIE 1 1 ERN sk
over the quality of the
Thati "nn
my do very M dii in the open fields; and I can ins —.—
qne ease in which, although the farmer has some
nodation in the sha
it night be—the animal
uch as that now passing away, — do
hich could
from th ship nuine artiele.
It m it be sked, what are we to
ith o raw in cases when we have so much, a and
2 "fre is nd principally shee cep; it is only by
that t
found for an ne city removed all i
m the seller a ge To p» hgh
price attained peur e last two or three
exposing it in yards t
at all? I question much whether we have by any means
arrived at the maximum use of straw as fodder for
tt
scum ns causing sour act a "
ich the cattle — the rese per su
is I am obliged to k
Norfolk mar got Med . quant ities
Yorkshireman would make his
5 ould
nd
; em
at if a Yorkshire anda | an
he
bad harvest
y to suit
ubt in some instances
ate large accumulation
of extraneous FO so that, when the cake is crushed
nd r 1 ng
„ has
been induced to add to the
e, it cannot always be said to be
nseed-c:
Our bre cu across the Atlantic have mp s
ing d-cake, Wha
e taste, iti is thi D tender, fais and finds a ready
the highes
Norfolk
would ake more PU
| 8 a middle that of
| verting the rest into dung."
voriolk man
Others would
eating one- half an ty con-
sit —.— he cartage of hay ua and makes
where it is gen — much wanted.
inr: — that the sheds I have — up are wae
simple. The area of each of them is about - pm
— ie accommodation for 16 you wii
two years old, at a cost of 13“. Foe e in-
all the materials (excepting the straw) and
This subject opens the question of the |
(ted.
n a letter writen a few tity
market price of the
2 Lr ion of g dee iom being left entirely for sub-
ent reper rni The cake A ge the eye and
ways in good demand; and w. hat more is requir
o | Farmers have cay themselv tea is to blame in
de the
d Mangel alone, ali during the
March, Apri a and — "à on n straw,
ith t
d for this purpos ind
| as s ts i is preferred: it is roce En the ‘ition i
bran in its ae aoe Pod 550 ive has t
107. o r 1l
nths,
Mangel, . Cabbage, and oe N
d Bean-meal, eing . to them
d iiem — — Te is
a clay soil and t. suitable for for a ng s the
Still there « decided objection |
€—
the drops heath open
ry Ml tti Resin
contains very
tin EE is —
P
ns the soluble it ised and
p
as he does in the |
my agreement with the following |
to pay dd for the 3 of bran, which c
or 5l. refe and in the United States probably, sont
not sient dwelt upon; hard-
which i ground, althoug
t “all manures |
under cover, either in stalls, boxes, or
— CAKE ebe ee ee
Fr
ces in by fermentation, and after being
the frst rain carries them | to ther roots of the Gr rass.
—
s grounds to any great — after t the
— been — in e, all the on—h
— Observe the customer
our farm produc: ster — the droppings are
— — a flies, at others rooks and
away at them show that they have
rms
** One of — eapest and m t effectiv
—.— an old man with a donkey-cart to go found
2 — Eur perat of the cattle, and making
into com ings, ditch- d &c.
ue recommends the turning of the compost heap
next A tye ag consideration of the effects
oe aang when ‘the: cattle are
pen yards without sheds.
wW]|184 ..
1842 ..
by Ms
tuts | produce 13 87,500 to tons o
United Kingdom show a large —- 2 increase, as
appears by the following Table, viz.
asy tested.
bran, it may be
T. ers Quarters
Year. Tear. e
1850 -- 608,984
1851 ..
1852
1853 ..
1854 .. 22
s 1855 .. ee .. 756,950
439,512 1856 dé -. 1,180,179
1400 1857 . 1,100,
4
367,700
1843 .. |
1844
1845
1846 ..
1847 ..
1849
In 1857 the y was
sources: viz m Caleutta 90,000 quarters, Bombay
120,000, St.. — angel
Nes
000,
ports 60,000 It
the
i
Li nseed i is drawn m Russia, a nd ap lenti fi ul o
derived from the following tes
Alexandria vari 000 quarters.
will, therefore, be observe that the largest portion — adios d
fro
alw ways in fault;
h
he
ing his sa the ande method above named,
be bids Pe it by its intrinsie wort! li, before
his pur The still greater i
Jc
d
felt by the Agar na of Linseed- cakes — in a Reber €:
or lower ran
ices consequent thereon. He also
suffers from
range of p
the inferiori ity E — caused by the
of see:
pay for an ee article ore a higher
1,100,000 quart:
eed- ea
this country may, 3 * dimi at n
aciem annually. zem East Indian nq
à "n Mim in
ERE fortable spot well littered ‘the animals
ect their bed, but there is r really no one
— mend such a mode of ere stock;
ne them to be subjected to all the
iva e dium ate. Animals so
ww ag E to the
tolerably e seldom varying to any
appreciable extent at the respective ports of s M
They yield the greatest quantity o:
part
articles; and the third qualities
ra aio wi wholly of the last named of the following
arti icles, without any Linseed at all :—
Castor-oil Nut-cakes,
Rice husks,
on-seed cakes,
ut-cal e-cakes,
Sometimes | the viele. of the above are mixed and
of o
pressure the cake is no — t more nourishing and |
valuable than 8 other. But the bulk of th
hand; and: some or all, : according to circumstances, are
O
to U
io am as unwilling as I am unable to attach to the
to devise a cai effectual ni
er eee
Par
ticipation in such practices. Be ils nothing è
to for ,
4
oi
“fave Dagon wel but have been table to re
v g activi
pulverised to a suitable tilth a
is free of groun
plo the
344
rom exposure,
2 of the pM value of a ton of Linseed-cakes
made to suit a cheap customer aa uer affect him, but
i t wha
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
and therefore the following Table of bere hat the rond of pove.
AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
555 pee travel through- spares no trouble. Take a walk in the c
mode of distributing | the afternoon, and you will meet con towards
he town
ountry
13 p 250 the | veyance making their w VEM alter om.
an
n pits
d
wom spre: ead it f in an
Baue b in my vers cst aig Gir
filling he; perds and t n for |
nd o
one man for 5 vidi 7 i i
g ne woman for dara ow Posing a pice of soil to y;
to each other,
so
Leges — ques are likewise lower in eit i and
dint uh ton 1 of cake Ci g
5 reg of soft green Rape-cake *. 6l. per we 111 p Án
5 f bran, large flaky quality, A: 4l. 10s. per ton 1
5 ewt of Nut-cake at 6L. Ter ton 10 o
wt. of fine Linseed equivalent to alike quantity } 2 10 0
i genuine cake, and worth 10l. per ton
6 12 6
ine Linseed-cakes
"iub from Bombay, Bia Bake Sa, or Baltic seed ae Me
ce in value 76
The temptation, rm erefore, to dias turo a compound
similar to the above finds greater inducement when
cal hi rowing disposit ion disi
purchase su n into con
sideration. it the price of Linseed packs x 4 P; obab y
will do, to a level wi ith for induce-
m 59 0
e times
by ‘the use of the followin
reg ruler distances into the c
three -— for every three wo
for dividing the manure for every S Wi e Sik. manure .. ,, i
one an he
it is oppressive work for a delicate female Cow-house manure 7 returns,
women, but a fed employ Each competent Horse manure =. o (igon 8 aui 9
female labourer divides the manure hal i eee : 8 z
Some farm ho ean yoke three ploughs when apply- Human excremen T
ing about 10 cartloads of manure per acre llow three, But a Miti limit 2 (x in 1 Flanders ‘oul suffice ^
fillers at the manure heap, one man to empty the carts, | show erous and striking proofs of the power et
nd seven or eight women for dividing and spr reading fertilising tens and induce many, . |
the manure «n fees i s. When apply! ing a the result of which we iat bt mat oa |
quantity o e man c empty to keep ir be their looking upon i it as do the Flem
n n rather
the wanton was
treatment
of m
three N employed, an nd
equi o forw: me oft
— vin “empty. pt Alternate cart, e pe in our country. To p practi rie one of the gratas
the manure, two
hose
very superior as to —.— “adulteration les profitable.
The samples of th that
it muy be reasonably hoped | that the abs he ud cas
ward, especially from Kussia, will be both abundant
and good. The value of Linseed-cake as food for
and
boy is required for driv mg ie horses in the cart. ES
odi who 1 seven or eight horses and h which it is dissolved, and th e energy P
n 8. g in com paratively shor time its fall ie.
he shortness of t|
p
two men d ing the manure, 0 y
betw the us and the drills a x boy driving
cattle has been so often set forth i in this Journal, that |
ve wo
em
, one di viding mr Neither
m
„ drills —in all, five
m
men ne
every 5 that to obtain a picea ph ample wies ot.
M
who wishes to improve and sustain ais Y
One disadvantage undoubtedly ee, ^ ds
creasing imports from the East Indies
ed will find its way
us . the
guan
of the application of a veria aT a he e nea ad
e stance. is the diffic ulty of | its _ transport
ws. By weighing y g Brug
of and measuring the length of the drills, PX the town in covered carts to the
or artificial manure to an acre of
Mx ult task to those who. can suis 4840 yai to
The p
658585 of their disg
mare onesies by. the wi idth of wie
su uffuses around ;
f
ey tka] th At +h
H
cattle, wid ultimately improve éxitos and
quality of his lan d to the profit and re both of
and his landlord.
Vi Mb o on this subject, I will add
rene tee throughout to show, in a |
is à stands be
- That 8
and if
urious article rode and encourages its eie |
sp
the blame does no with. him e ent tirely. Ou. the
or no
inan acre of land thus obtained ^ -A whole ps
„liquid man nure tank
length the field, exclusive of the headlands. 4
words used Acus
9 — point very noticeable in the
reign 9 e Shiekh where th
in wh i
cultivation mon everywhere surrounds him wi
| convey | the id a that the people were blessed with a soil
fui 1 di n
hat from the scrupulously n
fields,
should c e? The growing importance of the
send to ths pues of pius aud its yearly | e |
tent, forbid it: there o plea either of present
they me aided of h
th Boxe of me- reducing the st sterility of the un
Li uid manure in Flanders
by 1 ms di
chanism, and woul
when informed that both his surmises wets altogether
ol ingra
23
.
ES
[i
c
"E
is]
un
a
or e ee that bai a ustify i it. It
to the crusher who does not adulterate, as to the con-
With a soil generally poor—so hen! 1
parties concerned. There is aw
e spread belief t
no crusher i is an “honest miller”
“Ths I need —— |
isting of not! sand, with no know- l
t | ledge ofa diit i is called agris fuori or chemical science, | after sowing to the growing crops,
with implements few in number and rnde in construc- | Hx ays with
h e
been ‘termed—in — Ee and t
ing
is shared alike by the honest and dishones r.
Mite — undoubtedly many who have suffe: ee 8 |
s in eontending 1
than manufacture a and others Ed
stro
temptation ; and before I conclude I wi
it.has been but by the exercise of an in
which never tires, and aided only by the lessons derived | dag
pen a long ee ce, € the farmers of Flanders tha
sueceeded in making tracts wild with bleak aisah and arouse
sterility yield rich! ee ate bts a wide variety of plants been too hasty in deci
and n uce. And if stimulated by these statements term “engrais liquides,"
of this point. Anh
F
comprises human urine
cre
7
poi
iller, livi PME uen do. ipt
had for - time ror him all his
but he e saw and poeta
x
— the careful practice of Ls
nd t. ipee 3
him neat with Flesh S died he — fid
that in the exercise pes ni roc
chiefly 1 the whole secre save
soil, an
m
and re orki
ing and oy sod prudent dis- |
of
dj
Nis I dcus sade th eet |
they can afford a mutual MEA . — iA E.
m
ure; Mim utually | Lt V the. mee
dependent Me * ther, the
nt.
be said
| be the t importan: may
2
The whole pith indeed of ed 5
William Wi
of Sigglesthorne Hall, Holderne m ede ne
orkshire, in
ournal of the English Agrieuli —— ociety.
dua bi uiti do
freely translated, “no forage, no cattle; no cattle, no
manure ; manure, no even; para 3 in | si
England im t rough but expressive proverb, * k The material—term
ae meal.” t Hema ore 3 we investigate the main in the
all
A that
i dered to
rs | of belief ee. „but that with th he “ engrai
faith it influe: d all their rit the M ue ney ting me NE.
the country, you see it in cx lavish e expen ture of the | w
e | field, and in the careful sa ving of t the farm: M The|e
three s.] The
27-inch drills as “ J. M."
uires the ploughman
which is, 1 he ti "upied i
into
| ie i in Flanders,
reges 1
“ Muck,” with "T
all the ‘material wed as
under the
on. 2 n the term
iE in | Hops, Tobacco, REE
-— y also applied to
TEN neler al applied at There the
“tamer” it immediate, and loss is
vying a | through the soil. It is n
pid
33 miles im
z Ploughmen who
king | o
nd requi depth, and |
nd-fast boulders within um reach of the
seed
ey Dar
g
cupy too e 5 its nig on the "leaves sg 1 p
E es Age naming | be burn wet doe t
0 ti
"i agii"
terials, of the use e siis me of | full vegetation, n equ
er dream. A
r far weld nev
abra of 222 substances ould oc
our allotted N we oait ourse!
ne only, human 1
contin icd f
y walk e than when they are
ble ;
peer ary r of the "i of the 18 that it goes t goes to t TE
engineer, [im olats our streams with its presence, is th lants. The quantity ap
to th 1e Flemish farmer an gre of the pao solici fom 200 hee
„ Ke. Pe e Supplementary
Arr 16, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND LS OU ELE GAZETTE.
345
reported i n the Shrewsbury y Chronicle, we make the
fo lov ned extincta: uh A ecturer said that
eglected throughout
ts and carriage horses ; nor has
attention he deserv ves. He
(Mr. ona) — dist more especially-point out
— to apply the principles of breeding i horses than
o other animals.
eguhted aecording to the fertility already possessed
s land. The industrial reci as Colza » Hops,
take eate:
it
degree of puri ity and
Sometimes it is used
ter or
ai
an = difü
pep quantity for a top set He
Arrived at its destination, the plug gt the hinder
of 5 essel is withdrawn, and T e liquid emptied into
a barrel, which ene "boit e
and which is 5 with a " handle at each side.
alki
King
carry the barrel to the place e
where TM manure is to red spread. ee this barr newt zd dit properly
d receiver, 2 —.— too; they all die i
te E returning with the ben for another supply if you breed horses of s
cart— it js taken ou t by m ones? reste: an ill-shaj ed [e
g Is it cheaper to
unar
p their bite
me iw
one? chea
y pe haps say,
e with you mas cattle and Mop you are seldom
progeny is alw. rae what you 2 pected i
vifi you havi o idea what
sappoin the
ur or shape of the
q — "Á RT.
t great law of nature eding i
m
gentle shower oui An than that ofa bini: yis at
one point and little or none at another. This Nod
we have previously noted, throw of the liquid : a ith noth ds th 1 f
.the aud is not "admissible “during the hot K w F variat io
af the plants with it. The method of application here that 4 ‘ian
scribed takes three men to carry it out, one to spread mre c eet = ill- aai — — calf, anc
wo to car nure from th small at he expecte you inquire
wupations another method is employed necessitating odi Ge 3 .. ik "hl ans It is t
oly one ets which | makes many say that hors e. eding is a lotte
e tube ever. if you breed vm —. rhe little to fear.
s thorough-bred a y seldom ——
us
m di
wh april
shape, and adapted for the
to bree and the moi
is also | the —.— iesiri is breedin; —
and the This should make you ve
hat not onl
ha
of the po pita of t th
attender s the excretal atid of the stables
ww-houses of Flemish far
carefull
the stal ow tin, ei Whie
y agriculturist being | predom isinating —— on the proge
tents of the solid dung the female ceil ?
ans s and the
other r group; or do both ive a all ?
Mr. Eva * any very be witi ifa and inte 3 vin then.
in support rof each theory which seemed conc sive in them-
ue quantity of the solid — but he maintained it was not fair to look at one set of
also vi the Tobacco | facts — and -— our eyes — others. It — be: an
BEA T m its ordinar: rti h. Pen
als vA that w. e get the —
a, the Turnips, Flax,
e latter it is-used with g; and although the
af — straw. e^ nonce sometimes ar n goniti in one ens
visa OW and the female uence another, ye direction is 'y no
5 = eans constan ften teversed, and admits of no absolu:
— to a known formula.“
It is a common but silly question,“
yl A
other ——
c of the —.— with tbe bomi a escapin
tel litter there asses a arti
Maure, For the Flax cro OP; re
Ís op, ENS are e m
Ondi it -applied to s
to the M
—
view,”
S
rse- | — may say
e | racers ; “therefore you ask how can you avoid. phe
It is :
wit th ca
easily establish ha bree
o
As to
disa ted;
while in brooding | — purpos
kin
St to o big, To ensu
e firs e in bre is, that like E e 34 p^ 83 (Er and livin;
d produce like ; but it must be er ee in our — 5 —
ond ti
— maro "anys St Sto: tnnt e ^ the stallion
of a differe
into the pedigree his "Individual "shape ; prily, his health, el his temper.
wering = sd But there ing the so be ada that
; the
RS both parents join hed or “the Š
jectin the
with which hé fully ne Which Says That! both ee are brea a
alway in. the d male
te dur
t
mares, but there are many more fa ailures. Som:
tbat you have no pure or thoro reeds, e
ever too late to mend.” Su
p. "Smith, and gra at re Sa bre
— The pre:
— a bad one; sJ
a e alt bred
fail ; ae ou
nins
. — “exclusively from
ad
em B
animals of el ame shape, a if therefore, adapted for the
may
same purpos
peenlinrities essen *
ha
b
and the back ribs dem the
hand is usual:
i ds of
| Stonehenge observes, ‘‘ gives the whole
a larger ds a nd is ways —— —
whicb may easily be overtópped ; and here
have failed as idod. ma
2 wt been da
fra ecessa dec
| duis Such as aps
gud make = 15 Na adapted —5 the E.
tended s bette reed from
à. whether aix or female,
re the mare being stinted
as much a:
corn, but 32
ed animals often
mals ofa hei
mall.”
a state of ore x Mna wit!
ooling diet, unles she Fatten
me when s 0
also, like her, 1st wi u his blood ; ondly,
this diffieu enm
lty in selectin,
itabls, but prs ero
ion's suitabilit,
ences more or less
In expla-
st, Professor
e potent, influe
female by oe males.
n that ent physiologi:
ntal ons left by the first male pon
female ; “but den are mA Which — i dei it 1806
likely that the blood of the mbibed from that of
oute 80
m its male parent;
e may communicate these, with those
propos 15 herself, E the subsequent oftspring of a different
nale parentage."
n incisa ad allow m say that agricultural
d are to be blamed very much for the little
attention they pay to ho as compared with. other
3 especially poultry, “They ong to pe liberal
pri d the bes ood m and 8 of all
pay as much —— ntio
more—as to ca
should have to travel within the district of the
uring next. session,
Kies
i stall
animals is the best for the. ner Ye
areka others advocate the long-ho
pes particular kind is germ — —
mstances — the Aena, of all others. Such
Some dens
all cir-
persons
the surplus
taith
olid m:
n large acer iti is s tramsport ed to
That p^r of
r adapted for that
out lyi ing particular toca
Before ex ti wland ; vee 4 r grassin better housed.
i» hol e are E ecu «pa it also . upon the demand of vM neighbouring mark ets.
i 185 - - y . |Insome parts cheese-makin ng pay est; in other parts milk
epositei ‘matter with t iquid ; in| in ee meat, &c. In s istricts it pays better to
N ts. it is pumped up into the Mend manure | breed dra vc horses, — others 2 = ey rg in
ich tra i w m i es, in 8 ponies, &c. "Wha 1 to im
s its own
Press sooty upon your mind i is this :
Over | peculiar conformation, and that c
m ns sie l upon close inves tigation to be
“engrais flamand.” | particular. purpose ; h
the usual
g itis by s of an —
for babe, the reets.
d very m
ande
same
tana
horses into two p y classes
and go fast; ee to dre Weights afiar them.
that they are destined for Mei Le —— —
differe: erely draw
set to work in a very m
— utn — tho fact that here's pe a peculiar shape apd
1
kets. Thi rdiy, having decided upon t!
—— study the’ best Shape and
attain in a most
y
breed horses, scaly the qm
duties. Fo — don't —
vv ale, ose shape is well
it is intended for: let thun ba of the most perfect sha
can get of their ipee ra being 1 with
of reru d — u wil not be satisfied unless their an.
thor
ere read.
of from Miss — 1 on pn the Festuca
me Present state of growth of which sh seers alo
Council then adj
[journed over Passion and Easter
Dod: Monthly Council on the 4th of May. pony, "or carriago-horse,
——— —
ot eee
na wrong
a
g | The Chai irman : Have
ug
of their tenants at a nominal 24 F. them-
selves also wet ris their own en by
dr oft
being * penny wise and pound foolish; # au Ys more
at the fee of the horie: when they pa] him, than at
his shape.
Mr. H. Smith said : I can truly sympathise eon Mr.
i h for the
US in
z
E.
*
another bloo
you such a distinct br
Mr. Samuel Meire: There is not a doubt of it. If I
fock up ensure my life for 100 years, I could keep my
ock u i
bt at the Shropshire
epi is a cross-bred sheep, and w hat breed is not? I
should lik who boast of the purity of the
Southdown as if that was the sheep that came od of
the ark. i
MES
On the History, Cultivation, 2
Italian Rye-grass. lt W.
Albert National Agri nsi
the
: "wt „ &c., of the min to be l
g at the Albert Institu-
tion and 1 Model Farm. The result was so satisfactory
that in the autumn of 1858 1 was further induced to
offer a prize for the best Essay on the *Hi er Cuti-
ion, positi The
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL I. P (Aran 16, 1859,
e n;
or singly. n
ale.—Appl; E ot, rs wer and upwar
2 8 for fale Res d Cutter, Oileake Breake
tifying as thos om
Mangel Wurzel, —which was, it a 8 re-published
in America, and of considerable serv the introduc-
tion of ore - to American agric
essay refers to the Soli history of |?
the 8 ee to A his istory , of its introd uction to
a | roots
t — y | Carriage paid to any Railway Statiou in England. To be pro-
— of any —— 2 e. des Machine Agent in
actui
detailed mdi intei manner. ~The fo loving is —
account of its growth bees MB uid manure
lad being able with co
OE
A su RSHIRE HEIFERS IN FIRST CALF. — „ \L MACHINERY.
FIRST E T
y very carefully selected pure bred 3-year "ad E Vn i . ties R, Ipswich, —
d arefor mri in on e Prize Mills for Crushing C
HEIFERS of 7 his celebrated Milking pev are DL 1 D Pret 3 n Corn, Seed, Malt, Le.; Pat.
ju
Dm from
ers, Horse Gears, =, By Tables, c. Qut
hart Morton's, 8, Finch Lane, London, B.C. ER
XATER, | 2, Superior description and adapted f for Ho »all of
IMPROVED PATEN serene: AN D MANGEL GRATER, | Foreign use. Illu str P Eisis sont pome, o Goloni a
0 WARNER anp SONS, No. 8, Crescent, S MY for Farmers, =
n Street, London, „in introducing and Market Bertie in 3 Exe ue
their IMPROVED PATENT TU xD MAN ATER | TERED HAND SEED PLANTING M MACHINE, wii ei
to the notice of Agriculturists, beg t state tha its capabilities, combined with strength, !i htness, and ia
nally tested its capabilities during t last three seasons, | city, places it beyond a parallel. ri Simi.
—— as such feel that they ^ À e test confidence, planting the seeds of Mangel, Carrot, Turni nip, Parsni Y
commend a machine that will upon trial, satisfy the | fo small seeds i in patches of equal depth and different Àj —
requirements o of Feeders of Stock generally ; one man or strong „ 1, 12, 8, 21, 24, to 28 inches apart, raking in
m 6, 7
mparative ease to grate 20 bushels of | rolling complete, render it an i! invention, ^e
in 10 minutes.—Pric me the Machine complete, 4l. 10s.
tm Agent, M r. B. SAMUELSON, | 76 Ca
Gold also by the inventor, J. Hoake, [e
or Country, or of the Manuf chester, Bader
Albert M. Model Farm, Glasne
e application of liquid manure to the Italian
Ryegrass, has, at all times, given highly satisfactor,
ts on this farm. “In order
FOWLER’S PATENT STEAM PLOUGH,
GREAT REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF
uses,
p ies, and the pupils’ dormitories, water-
closets, lavatories, &c., und iron pipes, with
y have — 1 y means Bee the great Improvements recently made, JOHN FOWLER, Jun., is prepared to execute Oris
of steam-power about 50 of the far a is at the 2 prices :—
application 3 has bee n chiefly directe to t H d
production of Italian Rye- — — although the — — pari genetic irem Self-m Uu Am "e Ropes, We, Y
$ sa = 125 dp those N r lates 501 Cultivator, fitted with Three, Five, or Seven Tines 25 0 o
reported as having been realised in other places, ye 700 yards a Wire Rope, 36 inch 8 which is a sufficient. lengit, on "er
they have been highly satisfactory, and ha Coh sine 6 id queda — ES '
good return for the outlay on the necessary w f working, for a 3 : 9
„The g is t e several cuttings i
ing the past season, and the weight o T Steel Rope, £7 10s. extra. £207 10 0 1
acre. Each cartload of the Grass, as i . The dint T to be derived in the Man: of this Tackle over others are, no belt is used, ently»
ent for soiling, was accurately weighed, so that the
y
o-farrow balance gen re — worked by it
s
ieasuring a small ot groan — the
is supposed to be vines average 0 the whole, |
weighing the ero raised upon it, 10d from € this
for ascertainin — produce | th.
quon; na only half the rope is required for the same 1 oe of pe w, anda w be done
shii fting e windl ass can be attached x us agricultural engine, and the Mar adel v emi Xi
hou d intended t
From the d
pum — engine va effect a 8 unt of w an the same engine ie tne ees
r of entering hw fiel
calcu
reable return, w: as effectually obviated. Thus
ting.the
nd thus only, can à reliable: return of 1 the acreable pro-
duce of G
and b
h the Rop s being odi: in wn sal per
The following TESTIMONIALS have dere handed to JohN e by some of the parties using hi
i pu Fes of a| | Amount of Steam Plough and Cultivator :
Time of cutting. uiting, per MED IO rae en Lodge Farm, Chipping Norton, ied g 1859. , advantages over that ploughed by horses, inasmuch as
; Cutting.” s Test s Sr — a am pleased to fg you a most favourable | a greater uch for the grain wa ow in, 2
Tous cwk. Gallons report of your Steam — — sent to Mr. Langston. “tt has | root crops much —— ja al Fany es ee across the E
Is Cutting, April ut 14th a 6 15 | 9561 been used daily tor the last three weeks without the slightest ploughed 27 steam my hi sinks full
pua 9 13 9030 5 and has more than answered our expec- oy" upon that ploughed be animal povon wh
E Mas 1 — a 455 Sig 11.221 We have ploughed with it the most varied and uneven | of the good condition in which the land is lot Toe
4th Zz 51 paii ee ee 14.276 gem upon the estate, and have fonnd the work perfect. pi Bee — plough. You are at i
3 . 2 4 The grubbing with plough heads and shares effects an ex- I have stated in this 1 to e
Sth „ a 6 15 6308 ~
cellent This is removing the turn “Tam,
ag i the e ploughs answer either for turning the soil John Fowler, Jun.” Pie
E pert 50,396 r for breaking it i gt We have for some years an ex- 14. va
$ cellent scarifler, whic! d is easily attached to each end o: ing rii
Revue Agricole de P Angleterre. Par M. F. Robiou de | plough beams, and this — a simple and edd “ Dear Sir, —As ed —
la Trehonnais, Paris. Librairie de Firmin Didot eoltinates, with t! 5 endation, that it will work | You to Mr. Gurney bean. last
frères. Rue Jacob, 56. ver ridge and fu fumow and i Te roughest eee ploughed with eget: . the Ir a
N ogging. e al 5 e fee bis of my o ex; beris
This firs& number of a 1 c intended to make and during the time mentioned I [e^ given 8 atten- | Ploughing ; and o E Sh gen "ale, pis being his b
English agriculture known to nch farmers is con- | tion i the working of the plough, but it Aus been E OF PE xU
ducted by a gentleman 1 ti — in his ac- | Yit men eic qos — alm 3 — on oe 75 Hom
meld 00 e pari
quaintance with the farming of the two countries. It Mondag last, ani A v sure iet e aditional Mesi should
contains articles on the agricultural influence of free | be wanted to my statem. could procure it from
trade in this country, on the history of the Smi — = list of signa well known | A th e agricultural public.
Club, on Lois- Wi
on erst breeding, Th 1s also a biography and | capital
Mr. Jil Y Webb. The Review
— 1 — a considerable exe in Englin ad * 16.0
—̃ Ä —
Calendar of Operations.
—
E.—
i pring, 2 been uni y busy.
The — ma Oat sowi — most Anis LI =
exception g where a few
tate,
Iam ebur Le 1 bec de mx tse ent Pen so well ear Sir,—In reply to your
‘avait. ae a large amount of horse labour, as the land is a stiff | ing Srey — value of the
g xtent
equence list weil oa pais M ae indi- | hav: i à
er has yours faithfully, “J, CHRISTY, Jun.
2 ad an yours truly, | **MarTHEW SAVIDGE.
r. John Fowler, Jun., 28, Cornhill.” ents, e r ende
yton Hall, near Chelmsford, March 2, 1859. field to field, of the value
“My dear Es en Steam Cultivator has finished the | the other alterations which e
acre field i to my entire satisfaction. The land was ghed tackle is now such as m vell
. Ine Scari- large occupier to —
and eed Miis eq c ed since.
—
„John Fowler, Jun.”
with in November last, I b
> full
“John Fowler, Jun., 28, Cornhill,”
and of every
ley, Reigate, April 4, 1859. enda of the corne!
what once were wortby of th LA ** Kinners|
8 have e e devices the *"run-| In reply to your favour of the 29th. ult., requesting — to the whole ground that has y ploughed,
to green,” such as an posila dm, puli up, 5 ng in state my y opinion of your Steam Plough, I to say that — —.— ugh, has been so 42 TT i
a
y
ae Oe ear, when your plough turned up about 35
ery ronson to be pleased with its performance on m; ares 1 hare n
likely to — ect with nac Mee e ey m 5 th of 8 ben
detriment to the root? Growing crops look wall in m fact their | manner so " I ho to arrange v 1 u Ar js appara!
present can tend but little to improve the yr P Eo s agens, Vr. Brooks x 1 ere again imme- cultivator of — E ilU
Wheat, at present c Those diataly ai after cde e rhen he shall |n the greater part of and in autumn I expect "E
areon the “look-out” for a ; the land is —— arm to plough if he likes to un dertake 11 T am, dear sir, ing stubble and foul
either let at varying from 7/. to Sl. per acre to a man 8 T. Sg 8 ough.
who finds a — the seed, the farmer being : msible for * Uh "Fowler, Jun.” i a piece hi S To
horse labour only, or is aui is likely to come
Vetches and Trifolium appear luxuriant; the Burton-on-Tren for
and og * earl have been on the Ist of May in| _ “I am decidedly ot p that Tues done by Ros 3 en p En at 1 believ
sevi The water meadows t this E rere e le for horses to do in — ic it req!
[ue , dairies, ci uently the yield of it,; as the treading of the horses isa decided drawback to them, | ™ay adopt and employ c
— and of a very quality; it f mi st ther: Ape ey the sort when done by steam, and it | therefore no hesitatio
Į eie edem M — = ae 2 ne 8 respect quite equal to that done by horses, and far es
s for ox le year, an was the universal opinion of my frien: ^ P.. —The iia rod
hee ei rr Sheep! ena vor prices, i ge are mt loughing across a mixer soil, or or iind probed aD ME 1 7 possession . before Í p
„and low not to be Mri db xis d db ba. eid m me ee of im. gravel, sand, clay, and | any of the work was done.
low pres —— | parta and it keeps a regular depth of about | ward ; this certainly could no
to Correspondent!
well eaten off in the autumn, the earlier
€—
Grass: A Sub. If it E
it is shut up for — m the spring the earlier and probably have ved
the sere r will be the
LIBRARY — RAL. Works: G A. There is no circula-
would be a lucrative speculati
seen; poesis They are very difficult to
En of without injuring f res wool. .Linseed oil may be
: into the parts m ested. IW OS.
11 "Inches, and ves the and a mh lighter than when
** W. BRADBU
Mo > Fol
your reda Plough upon my farm. In the autumn of d
a l
ting io Rage of tural works to our knowledge. And uM pe M mc j^ gx SUPE god pec S av -
— — — such a thing to the bookselling trade, could n
on, ing well, ani
was very much diluted with water. |
. — Plough.
John vii Jun."
W igi ** Dear Sir, I Teel
enkridge, April 8, 1859. Pi
h reply to your Tur of the 29th March, I tho tne siue Steam,
n certifying to the efficient working of | good depth ting
58 | hands of a
"i cha for e will e
ot have Bo dne so wall by bora: = ha Wheat is oi | w Eg hehe
and I consider that a ploughed id steam has m Lp
Illustrated beer with new Prices will xs bd dy shortly. For further.
HN FOWLER, jun, 25 Cornhill, Talat i
Apart 16, 1859. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 347
| PATENT PRIZE SCYTHES, Prios lis ano Ile Gd. | MATA
TOWARDS’ PRIZE IMPLEMENTS, TENT PRIZE se ARNER'S SWING WATER- BARROW
— nei HOWARD, Hiritannia Iron AMES PAYNE, , Kinkeudbright, invites the ati (To Hor Forty GALLONS), MOUNTED Wurm
ES AND his newly improved Patent 20 INCHES HIGH. Will save much de Gardener'a: time and
po g to direct attention to tion of od deners M p
ke H 4 vis P i ON PLOUGHS 4 justa table Scythes, riae A be set to any angle in labour. M. "n of any Ironmonger for 31. 83.
"b n^ minute's E are light and easily ma inaged, arrinte ij
strong, and unequalled for finish by any in ‘the Kingdom.—
Circulars on applicatio
GMA'S BEA N, MAN ird vean CORN
PLANTERS.—A Prospectus s
THE*MULTUM IN PARVO?
NI wa ALL FITTINGS.
$
rec seized All — First Pie last offered by the |
Tem Society of England, viz. :— :
he best Plou h for general purposes.
First Prize for the gi for fion eg
Pri
t Plough for heavy land.
e o. for the best Double
Ri lough was also — to J. & F. HOWARD
Ridging Plou cor rii troubling io Pub c RASS SYRIN GES, 0 18s.
awarded to their Imp 8568 S, bu riety of eff ‘hen r Hy
would just state that for P A i H 8 i purposes, and t ly Gardens, Hothouses, Cottages, Farms,
PRSE BAKES, 1 22 5 deer era rs gain Mansions, or Boards of Hanui v ith every. ected
Pee for whi ey nave ii eyance and distribution of Liquids.
» LOY pe ht work £4 7 6 Fountains suitable for oar ges Lawns, &c.
d am nem iro vio p gen purposes 412 6 Joun Warner & Sons, 8, Crescent, Jewin Street, London.
ULTER 056 CARDEN INES AMM OV Elna
SKIM E BREASTS, 7s. and » arena GARDEN ENGINES AND 9
HA R R O
F TYLOR anp SONS, Warwick Lane, Ne ewgate
E e Street, London, E. C., beg to call attention do their very
0 XPAND| NG BROADSEN | superior manufaeture of GARDEN ENGINES and SYRINGES.
ked No. 1 4 0 RE
=< 4-Beam HARROWS, with tps:
tree, adapted for 3 Horses, 10 ft. wide, marked No. 11 4 4 0
HORSE RAKES.
free of small size RAKE, marked AS — 24 iron
teth, extreme width 74 fe et z
Mns Steel Teeth 8
Pree of large size, marked B, with 28 iron teeth, ex-
inme width 8} fee feet 5
10
D
ol e size, marked B, with steel teeth |
Tre of extra size, marked C, with 24 steel 0.
mu DN ECCLE attached to the above IRON HURDLES, FENCING, 40. MADE BY MACHINERY.
used eed Ex ti irpato: E — 0
POWELL, Hurstgreen, Sussex.
o oo oo
. J. TYLOR & Sons’ BARROW GARDEN ENGINE in
lon we eli painted Oak tub, fitted with J. TYLOR & Sons’ Im:
taining prices and
eerie, Rak — — — 2 Lis Uni iversal Joint, and and — rose, fum, amd jet.”
éeription of their Pate ws, Horse Rakes, MEM se
vad other fupiementil 2 Smith's Steam Cultivators, NTENTS OF lo 3
which they received at Chester the —.— — of —.— ^am 10 gallons 15 gallon 28 gallons
Agiultural Society of Englan — t applicati v £4 10 0 £5 100 £6 18 0
J. & F. Howanp, Britannia Iron orks, Bedford. 1 Fig. 590. do. TINNED IRON TUB.
PAXTON WORKS, EM. ESTABLISHED 1738. CONTENTS or T
Sgallons 12 gallons 16 gallons 24 gallons 30 gallons
£2 15 £35 £4 £5 £5 18
Fig. 618. No. 1. REGISTERED SYRINGE, with India- mentee
suc! cum o: Mo rose and jet . EI 5 ea
No. dito 1 1 »
— Pipe for ditto .. 91 „
Fig. Los GARDEN A pn DS —
20.
e ^ 691. iu Si ^s
[Comes PATENT INVENTIONS ron STABLE| " 9? LADIES GARDEN SYRINGE, without ros & Jot, b.
REQUISITES, awarded a Prize at the Paris A PAL
patronised by the s English and French Govern —
Fig. 623. READ'S SYRINGE, with two roses and one 2 185. 6d.
„ 624. oes EN GE, with - rose and jet Rs —
„ 625. Im ditto
T — Dn ditio
ditto H
Manu of Pumps and Well Engines (for — or
— Well) "Ph umbers' Brass Foundry of every description
Hi gh Pressure Cocks and Closets, Copper and Tinned-iron Baths.
Duden and Fire — at M of every description, Copper
Goods, &c. Estimates n for Hot-water and t
CULTUR
Quei PATENT YT CHRONOMETRICAL
Pumps are also made without
— with strong wrought-iron
Screwing on to any oi
— or cart, and fitted with 14
Mion for attaching flexible COTTAM Ax» COMPANY, of Winsley Street, are the original
instrum: ‘hich
COLIN Suction Pipe, inventors — the — ol ENAMELLED MANGER, —— e fit] combines an rta
Be fot —: ͤ v oy pe Ng eg ee * ene
S of 60 M festo o to order. Branch patent — — Dome and collar rein Regt y Het i — lil Ai AAA UNI an | tented.
Screws, Ko. "poe — e manger, and wo l m | 3
om 2 Wh ihe d guide-bar. NOON
—
COTTA — PATENT SEED-BOX, an important addi-
tion to thea — fittings, E in construction, light, and
durable, promotes cleanlin and is economical in its results.
Ii placed 'm
Hn — —
TULIT IH
Te
LAUREL
V RU -
— tA idi UI Te
COTTAM'S IMPROVED — GUTTER, with with perfo-
rated moveable cover, the use ——
— ö —— TRAP, from its im-
proved con on, ter passage, and does not
allow any smell to ascend from nthe
PATENT LOOSE-BOX FITTINGS, an d every article for the |
harness-room and stable, y kopt " Y Diin, galvanised, and |
3
nim
HTH
The New Illustra‘
application. 2 COTTAM and MPANY, 2, Wisler Street,
beris ker
I
e
HiHi
j MHN
j
|
Street, London.
tag Water by moana | yt
en application.
348 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — 16, %
IN THE ROYAL GARDENS. NOTICE 0 F REMOVAL
S SE 8 “PATENT MM LAWN MOWI
NG
l e dey Cram e guaranteed eee im use, easly BOYD’S PATENT LAWN cane eae MACHINEs
as well dry ——.— is pri are efficient in use, easily
handled, and readily kept in working der. Doing the wo 1
of five or -— vag Prices, i neluding - n carriage to any = ] : he TT, Lawn — that
railwa; ay s 3 a= 1. and 1 upwards, s i hare
Cop ie: Hw st T — post fre — Salica at tion to Mr. SAMUEL- n = 1ed to the Y Ap
oa ee en Warthoure, 76, Cada Street West, City ; Messrs. ees Cutters, aud that ne Aris
DrANE's, I London Bridge; or the Works, Banbury. Oc n. AER zi e Kniv Th we
“BY HER MAJESTY Ys ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. already in successful operation at the Lo
Palaces, and on the lawns of hun "n iu
Nobi ility and Gentry, T ey wan Of te
by all tel for c men as perfect; Has and
guaranteed for efficie ia
3 in. ncy, excellence, e Moy
s seing ta of five or six xen in
Ege CRE — : — yes epi: 20, 18: $53. à ting
Pr
ERRABEE'S IMPROVED MOWING MACH {NES gree Lists and Testimonials fre on gp
R LA B o Those s 1 . iie i »
FIELD: 98 CEMETERIES, & sw wh o obtain the i RAY m
-— useful MOWING MACHINES uation, at the „ 41
erate prices, are respec ‘fully i e vited r^ pus JAMES
FEHRABEE a co’s I ILLUSTRATED eer SCRIPTIVE CIR
CULAR, which will be sent free by post or application.
The following is an redes from the le 8885 of a gentleman
ordering a Machine :—
Co,
l
e London Bis
«Tn. April 6, 1859. e seni
“Sirs, —The recommendations of differ an friends who have p TAPERS, which are now be;
tried different Mowin, Machineshave een yuzzigme forsovera ral à x20 1 ix emg manufactura)
weeks as to my 9 5 — Your explanatory particulars, for tl I g a e g idi early orders are solicite
received to-day, remove ed n “wavering from * mind on th
point. pu | determined — rd have a Machine from you. —
"To Messrs. Fer PATENT LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MACHINES
JAMES S Pinnan oe ie i ^Phenix Iron Works, Stroud, h
Gloucestershire.
BY rorat iar ue ones LAWN MOWING MACHINES,
WITH BOYD’S PATENT IMPROVE MENTE
“Doing the work of five or six men. Ilie Times, Sept. 20, 1858.
The following PRICES include the Carriage to any Railway Station in England: ;
With Boyd and Samuelson’s
Patent Cleaning, Sbarpen-
ing, and Adjusting
Apparatus. |
9 inches wide, d |
without registered uu. uscire] 82.10. 0 |
— 12 inches wide A 5 0 £417 6 kt
16 inches me with registered eM bg J d |
IMS, AND 3, W. ment (for one man ` *
pour MACHINE, To for Pl T onin Eus 19 inches wide, ditto (for ono m A 517 6 9 6 5
solely by the Patentees, x 99 inches wide, ditto (for man a boy 6 0.0 7 38
— = 22 inches hiec ditto for ditto, sy Tu d
fitted wi 9 E for re Rey 8
effective Lawn Mowing and a man to w 615 0 8 2 6 S
0
th siege cularly request a | 95 inches wide, dit! o 9 lill 0
strict mination, ae ari. epi trial with any ga 30 inches wide, ditto (for TIME ip ny)
washing yt For si simplicity of e — y light ness, Box of 1001s OH Can. a
v
11 10 0 13 13 0
y of draught, ae dare for ing e very kind of ¥ d other melts sent with each Machine, 5s.
rcular, and verg ote this machine * no rival, an nd emi — of these zn in
hog d the im nowin sful o Le mug onthe Dawe
“Ro om 0
rders, aught,
whilst working — — cutting the Gries E T efficiency, and durability. The demand
€: the machine at the e time not — 2 liable to ob- for then d is ‘yearly inereasing—the number
tion or damage. This 1 remedies a just and | feupplied by Mr. SAMUELSON during the
— complaint years 1856, ass and 1858 being more ——
Secondly, this machine works easily and effectively on un- 2100. Tes nials are continually bein
dulated and sloping und; it can be thrust forward or be |received —— — ics having them in
drawn from behind, = p being the easiest, or the larger ed use, who speak in the highes
machines may be w. — both . ede at the same time; oo terms of their efficien
er machines — under imstances, requi: "These are the only Machines that will
than one person to wor! Xem cut wet as w boc ee dry Grass without
Thirdly, this is the only machine made that will work. round | clogging the
quick curves; it will work easily and effectively round circular beens for 1359 should be sent at once
small diameter ; re —— delivery and to prevent
appoin
5 "acti 591 : }
3
ae
a
RE.
3
&
5
g
È
themselves. This very
obtained by fixing to the front i di 5 "iui
der ie ims QUE UND cae Rei dese ra B. SAMUELSON, 76, Cannon Street West, City, Lo
cal gui afi
e lr "roe continual redi o com pede | to the Manufactory, Britannia Works, Banbury, Oxon; ee
their novelty and simplicity — deme į | or to Messrs. DEANE ayp CO. London Bridge; or any respectable — seaman in EE
PATENT) 1. 4
tead of this "
y
NE we have attached to this machin
motion, for adjusting the eating p pasta orit 8 I OOTS PATENT ANTICORROSIVE EN. HE SIR JOSEPH PAXTON
of Grass. There being a tii o QN Md of the GRAVED LABEL, suitable for every description of ING WATERING POT.—
machine, and so arranged as as o aet conjointly and more equally, | Plant. end ho ag free by
acting at the same time upon the Deo ed the knives. w, Princess Street, Manchester, A gent, E
con
other machines a slow, tedious, and uncertain —— n, into HOTHOUSES, — — FRAMES & LIGHTS | i
one of quickness, ease, and certainty. OR PITS, CUCUMBER X MELON BOXES X LIGHTS. |
„the parts — this machine which have = *—
Me . have been entirely re-arranged upo!
this machine for general and * — ay de une W
' PRICES :—
Economic Patent Lawn Monte Machine, 8 £ s.
Packing Case ve e x inches
Ditt — ditto
Ditt ditto ditto n is
Ditto ditto ditto
s et y ditto ditto
having the
z is affixed
zzle or rose merely sli
thread-screw, 8°
x Tiable to leak, break
à n
ditto ditto 0
E the rollers be made the full viae of th
19, and 22 in., each 6s. ; 26 and 30 in., coe sie
Em *
PRURGESS ax» KE Y, 05, Newgate Street, London, |.) AMES WATTS, Horsovss Nds S, Claremont
brated T00 p, 85 br: ot ond for hene cele: 6 Main Old Kent Ron, Lond, ,
ave always a large reen an ouses
their Custom: they m h | length, from n 16 to 100feet. " Framesa, na Lights for its ‘te bin 3
ANTHONY'S PATENT ye CHURN.— The FIRST pear 8 ft., and 8 ft. 6 in. wide, any length, fro
. 8
PRIZE was again awarded to this Churn in Competition with 00; feet cU Wr geo of 200 Cucumber and. Melon Boxes d
several others at the Chester Meeting of oe Royal A ome 5 — ghts, im toot y: 3 to 10ft. Gin. by 5 ft. 6 in. kept ready,
Society; - — e First Prize given by the Soci. Y | oady for "i ves a best -— age oy f ne! ae complete,
at every Meeting since - material, packed
Messrs. Bonorss & ofthe skoda om. —Refereni mces må; be ha to the
4. 95, Newgate Street, strongly re- Sanit utro. wid tha Trad
, e in t Jun
most perfect Churn now in use. Full par- England. Horticultural Buildings o fetes ap here p an. Ale jets post
om the most approved and ¢oukiouateal priis is EG Er
if Apart 16, 1859.
| 0
TH E
GARDENERS'
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
JOHN WEEKS & COMPANY,
G'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LON
KIN
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HOT-WATER LE PEU udis EON ENGINEERS,
PLANS, ESTIMATES,
AND IRON FOUNDERS.
& ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON APPLICATION.
CREENHOUSES, ORCHARD HOUSES, AND PITS
Or EVERY DESCRIPTION, MADE BY STEAM MACHINERY, A
ea
d
competition. The eere is most poset, and the 3
o oe Les mt day. Pric vi- any size on applica.
s all Pari of the Unite à Kin,
88 P ATENT is the only system to aT
Heat.. v fe WAR: FUMIGATING, and gem
TILATING Hothouses, Gree , Win hards, rH
om
LES
aes Ner WATER
HE HORTICULTURIST will and oe
an
e Stre:
reat Geo et, Westminster, S. W.
M NA
BOILERS.
ate
D
AJ Nn ,
qt
CH has of late been said about —— —
; a Heating by Hot Water but these Boilers have
ves to ne the best at present * ß s
tages ,
London n Warming and Ventilating: ‘Company | (Limited) ] 8s
HORTICULTURAL "WORKS,
DANVERS — PAULTON'S SQUARE, CHELSEA, S.W.
AMES G
TE LLY begs to inform the TM gentry, Dice Spent rdc and others, that he continues
to carry on the business in all its branches blis}
TER “GREENHOUS ES, FORCING HOUSES, bier raga PITS, &c.
y description, erected on the most approved principl
HOT WATER.
J. G. having specially devoted his attention for many years to this part of the 3 is now fang prepared to Heat ever
st
description of publie and Ae te buildings, viz Ems ique Mansions, Warehouses, &c., as well as all structures connected wit
Horticulture, in the mos cient manner. His system is the most simple o mat can be. adopted—which he has reta from.
long experience to be t the best —can be co natructed ‘at Ies 00 b MA ore easily managed than those of a complicated.
a hich have attracted the notice of ux public.
J. G. to call attention x^ his CAS’ S — 3 ARCH BOILER, which from its sim) joii of construction
has not the li bility to ted, which t| f a more E design are always subject. They Med
used for many years, an divin the . satisfaction
All business is ke at this establishment on the pri tive p ht rials
E —— ing every Vea P enn of building, and are dade
| Titius sizes. The Pric Plans and Estimates furnished on the shortest notice.
P Cast Iron is či T . £5 10s. Od. each
Galion o K $19.05
X Mach Cast itto . 8.0.0.7, KINS anp HURD, Seymour House, Jubilee OR WATERING GARDENS, PLUMBERS,
i der T tto 10 Place, King's — _Shelase, BUILDERS or H BOUM ENGINEERS, MILLS, AND MACHINISTS.
E ra are to Gentlemen. aud. mpm. ro thes Cons! NSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, Pirs, and every description of VULCANISED INDIA RUB
1 now at work. ind ry annon a M EE in erections in Glass work, either i in Wood or Iron ; ; also eating Washers for Hot-water id — ing H
are to be NES, 6, Bank ide. Also, - same by hot water on the most approved pionna and 4 2 Steam Joints Do: fitted ving Brass Joints,
iption of Saddle d Glider Boilers. Hot rcs est prices consistent with good work. Estimates forw: Elastic Packing and Valves for Taps and Spreaders
TR at pric pom Ae Fes a any 0 el Steam Engines nep for
Tappara Sns orog STEPHENSON, late STEPHENSON anp SONS, | P Buckets Trucks, &c.
ofthe X, Pump Buc (compound
b. Sitne coapte, and an tata Catalog odas C. 61, Gracechureh Street, London, Manufacturer of Tron | | India-rubber) ih ag Van, and
ILDI Hurdles,” Fencing, — 2 a —— ved Iron and Copper Conical
NGS AND N Y | Boilers and A) arming Buildings of every | Fire En ands, much improved
T WATER. description by Hot W. ire Engine H for driving all kinds of Ma-
EILL, 17, New Park Street, Southwark, | ^ Prices aud i Aie Beds, Cushions, & Bolsters | shiney
of every description of Buildings for Horteul" s farnishod upon application. Water Beds, Pillows, and Poet | Door Soren Gai Baes
and In : armers oves
b . SMALL GAS APPARATUS, FREE FROM NUISANCE. | N. B. A Stock of the above alwa ways on on had, and any modifi-
00 dol among othe: the celebrated range of + *- E NATIONAL COA AL.GAS caron made to order. mmunications to.
* cx at HER MAJESTY'S GARDENS, FROG- ATUS, for rivate Residences, Farm Buildings, | the Manufactory.
pde bn AYTON . — Railwa ay Stations, and other JAMES LYNE HANCOCK,
ror MR. and com
APP.
Cha
pen not hitherto lighted wit Gas. It Vulcanised India-rubber Goswell Road, London, E.C:
pe
"pu BOILERS xed at "i. 1 ess
N REGENTS the produc better quality and purity, and at
We at several eek of the Nobility’s | less s than i is ordinkeny obtained oben Pubs Works. By ques pe 4 T PAINT x PARK K FENC-
J ments, and Manufactories in London and | an. en: nr new and peculiar p: orked by a rigen "t commie Wood and Iron Work, is aT gprs ep a
Iron H. also 0 ription of | boy ^ i eee eme vue inn ore: e including | ANTISEPTIC MINERAL BLACK PAINT. Sold rea
ng I ouses, and Iron Fen ing, plain and orna- | labour, wear and tear, and interest of capital, ia l is less than one- | use, 17s. 6d. per cwt. Used largely no for —*.—
1 —— for Sheep (6 feet long, 3 ‘hee = A" that of . It can be pore reti past by the West India Dock Company, for Fencing, Barges,
and , 48. 3d. eac Mad for cattle, 4s. 9d. eac ing order in a few dme np „ pare Ge. m ided to the more and gentry, stewards, land
— A arded on rec eip monia, f b. on application - | agents, &c. A to the Trade, =
he Proprietors liberal allowan
turers, J. T. B. PoRTER & Co vic unis ,K Lane,
r
HS DSOME BRASS AND IRON Bena =
— HEAL & SoN's Show Rooms Sate DSTEADS-
350 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Arx 16, 1859.
URUNU ——
B SAMUELS
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEER AND MACHINIST,
of Brass Bedsteads s, suitable both fi large amont
Tropical Climates; handsome Iron Bed: stead” SAM fe
gs e
1L; di i nts, 2.
Chimney Pieces, from II. 8s. to 801. ; Firo-Irons, from % yf
the set to 4l. 4s. The B Erie Aa: all other PATER
STOVES, with radiating haat th-p
— vim BATHS,
Win - as SIX L E
T: Sschetvty to o SEPAR RATE Distiay V 5 Med
establishm
cn — TO: oe e 1. to £99 [^3
Shower Baths, fron war |
Lam; ps % teur) from 6 0 T5
aria ms) All other kinds at the same Tate * T
WAREHOUSE, 76, CANNON STREET WEST, LONDON, Pare Cola Oi —
WA at WARR ANTE 1D. — me
ssortment of Ma ere ydg eol a 43 p "m —
— is on SALE at WILLIAM S. BUR t prices that are
— only — of the NU of uh sales. $}ineh
Ivory-handled Table vip i ph shoulda 12s, 6d. per den;
dos ext;
R
NFORMS MERCHANTS, the TRADE, and AGRICULTURISTS, "that he has opened the above Ware
ome as a depót for his own Biden ra those d Messrs. Barrett, Clayton, Howard, Hornsby, ? Nicholson, yha rable Knives, ig ;
rst-class mak D t s. to balance,
ond, Tuxford, Smith, and all other first-class make —— UA v — ee force X: Rl
extra fine Ivory, 33s. ; if with silver ferrules, 40s to 50s; white
| E bone T: Kni E 6s. 0d. per doz. ; Desserts, 5e. 0d.
E cst cori SELF-RAKING REAPING "MACH N bone ‘able + i “i Pis doz. ; Des seris Grey
With side delivery in sheaf, no rakers or gatherers required; and all the most improved Spring Desserts, 6s. ; Car 6d. ; black w wood hatiin a tate
ted and Foks "es: er 4.5 ; Tab e Steels, d 1s. each. The
Impleme eiim Te the season, may be inspected at the above depót. caine bee os Tabie E —
and otherv and of the new plate ted: Fia MD
B. SAMUELSON, 76, Cannon Street West, London; and Britannia Works, Banbury.
ANNED GARDEN NETTING, for preserving
ILLIAM S. BURTON'S GENERAL FURNISH.
IRONMONGERY. — hoi hal
Fruit Trees from — er birds, &., and as a fence Important to every man who keeps tions of his illimi — “stock "E Electio and Seel Puts
es — Silver and Britannia Metal goods, Dish Covers aud Hot-
for fowls, &c. One yard wide 1}d., 2 yards 3d., 8 yards 44d., : i 1 5 — eis — tal quid "
and 4 yards 6d., — any q quantity, may bo t — at C.
re, E Strand, W. C. — A liberal to
quen 108. ; 500 a * RC —
b vsum S) ps Lm Too yards,
5 — t :
security o: f fresh Un — T squ: ard; 200 yards,
125.; 500 yards, Scrim g o for v all fi fruit; Garden
Mats. .—At yet Co's., "ou Cloth, Tent, , and Waterproof Beware of
loth Manufacturers, 17, — d Bars, City, & Old Kent LOWER POTS, of superior Red Clay, manufactured
F 2 the Arley Pottery Company (Limited), equal in appear- | So!
Terra Cotta at "the price of the common pots usually
sold, ay 25. — cast, delivered in London. med to TAYLOR
& Pears, 8, George Yard, Lombard Street, City, E.C. bo:
58 LOCKS, FIREPROOF SAFES, DOOR
Pd ev m Y DEED BOXES. Titustrated
s, Lamps, Gaseliers,
Glocke, Table Cutlery, Baths and Toilet Wi
and Brass Bedsteads, a Bed
ai Show at. 2. Oxted
Street; 1, la, 2, and 3, Newman Street; and4, 5 and 6, Perg“
plished 1
PRIZE MEDAL, PAR E
M ETOALFE, BINGLEY, AND
TIFFANY,
= Dy 39 inches wide,
Co., Princess Street, Manchester.
erties GARDEN z- completely protects
Fruit Blossoms from injury Ages and ewe —
the circulation of air and admission dd light as Pia Ms 1 sent free. Pood 1 — —. Charehyard, London;
do: — m etor wis goo i ciun "us arket Herma Manchester ; id: at
trong MAPPIN'S PRUNING KNIVES IN EVERY VARIETY.
; No. pe do. 39 inches, Ta. a T8. a WARRANTED GOOD BY THE MAKERS.
the breath and lungs. To Singers jc Speakers,
are invaluable for clearing. — stren rengthening er pee
fare a pleasant taste. Price 18. 14d., 28. 9%»
os. 1, 2, Sold uL all druggists.
inches wide. ZEBRA ORNAMENTAL SHADIN .
wide linen shading, 5d. to Sid.
used freely by millions of amg
sexes and all ages, in every part of the von es :
public Pre: mi with authenticate 1
nary cures in a vast variety of diseases 800 ti
Muss BROTHERS, Queen’s Tom Works, pea 5 and Liver ame —
ed and 08, RENI illiam Street, London. le case in whic! Hou way d
with id effect. None when using
and Pills need suffer the hope of eure
vimésto MAPPIN'S 2s. RAZORS
r e c T -MAPPIN S 52 RAZORS eie
'ARQUEES, TENTS, anD RICK CLOTHS wor | Shave well for Ten Years s Mard or soft Boards)
- SALE, on HIRE.—H. Praaorr, 115, Fore Street, B.C. — elis e TABLE-KNIVES maintain
ASES, PEDESTALS, SUNDIALS, FOUNTAINS : periority—handles —— possibly | wi:
FLOWER BOXES, JARDINETS, FERN CASES, become loose tho blad — — ro all of tho v MR lity, being
BORDERS, SEATS, te. 8 —.— — e. Kns. Kns. C
my 8
Manton e the EN Villa Garden. de —: Handle, balanced 202- p. doz. rends Ade 6s p. pair
the private Park. 8. medicines.
For Priced Illustrations to FRED: APPINS: SILVER-PLATÉDDE
the Show Rooms, Cannon A Patent M ORKS, in Mahoga derb
2. ͤ ͤ 0 I 12 Pairs Knives: ar Forks, uon TRIES. in 0 in ask 2. 80
PS GUTTA —— SOLES.—IMPORTANT H EI s deeem ‘do. .. 180.
TO GARDENERS. ~The Gutta Percha Company have the do,
the recei; of the following letter from APPIN? 8 0 SILVER
Fonsi Mii oed BROTH E ATE,
worn Gutta Percha Soles and Heels | pointmen: e
two years, and Mig 96 dh ins gitar ie hie [IM
am in all weathers, and with the ground in all states, I
v no account be without them. Asa matterof economy
Ap-|& Tr, at their Dispensary,
Peers Houses ; and retail by al respect
n the United Kingdom aad the e ies.
contain by far the largest S Flatu
ardeners to use them, for they may | in M which is matism, t on, Ponape
he material at s Cutlery Works, Sh T unida. Marta SUD d
8 sus above —— 8 pm. f —— 3
12 Table Forks, best quality 1 Attern. and diseases of the anda stone
that completely defies — Many a ga escape 12 Table. Spoons, best quality 1 15 % ui : . rally, which, be. e
colds and — 44 the — p —— — È aig ems best quality 1 7 0 ERU oe and à lingering pa a et nfusion, gi
obedie G. GLENNY. 1 5 — Spoons, best quality 1 7 U 2 0 0 2 4 society, study 3 fear,
Every variety o tea aita — shores such as Mill Bands, 12 Tea Spoons, best — 0 € 1 T 1.7 sleep without r from or combined xi
Tubing, Soles, Goloshes, Sheet, sanp e = e Messrs. MAPPIN BROTHERS vite buyersto itself, when e de By their salutary
qux Union Joints, Flasks, Bott! s, Bowls, ibe: their unprecedented displa; NUN for No of 2 2 d of the stomach they
Toilet Trays, Sponge Bags, exquisite — pe m novelt: unrivalled. T bil f sto a on 2 the healthy ue
Trays, &c. e, which is conthiually re receiving addition of] 20 Of stone 2 4s. Gi» He
their wholesale New [ssim s, sent 2
Company, Patentees, 18, Wharf | Baormens, 67 and 05, King Will on, — m Mew —— d a oie, Vender
Manufactory, Queen’s Cutlery Works, Sheffield A Street, Oxford Street.
de: 16, —
UNT BOUQUET. d:
D ii: TUBIN, Hah a FACTORS
P — — — ndon.—* This — perfume Xe the
s close.” FRAN
N
T. CLUB ge SN — the
ja elve CENT, 2s. each, or three bo bottles in a
se, 7s.—See to have them with our Bow ad T ppm & LUBIN,
3 $ New Bond Street, London. Sold everywhe
j New Bond Street, London. eS
EWELL ax» CO. respectfully solicit an inspection
S of e NOVELTIES IN ENGLISH AND FOREIGN
MANUF
ES.
. Silks of every descripti ion.
Chai a —— rao yt in all the New Shapes
Ball Dresses with the p Soi des Fées,
| sen Hobos à Voas ts, or cut in engths.
UT and Carri: resses in Mae and New Fancy
— d skirts "made Wesen ibbons, Laces, Gloves,
Shawls, and Embroideri
Compton —
LENFIELD PAT — — s — gu n the
Royal —— UA and uiae by Her Majesty" , ‘andi
dress to be the fin tarch she ever used. When you ask for
GLENFIELD Parent ‘seine RCH, see chat you get it, as inferior
kinds are often substituted.—Sold by all Chandlers, Grocers, &c.
Wornersroon & Co., Glasgow and London
7 VINECAR.—Patronised by her Majesty's Govern:
R.— Families, by u
Yinegar, insure purity, and effect — a saving v E
pg d 4 bo — e
— cet Commission, and that . Six Qu Single —
free to any Railway 2. 38. 6d.—Sold by the Trade, in bottles,
Jabelled and capsul olesale, 63, King William Street,
London Bridge, E.C.
PIRITS AND BEER. — Brandy, 24s. to 40s. ;
Whisky, 14s. to 18s. ; d m a 6d. to 15s. per ^ mw»
Pale Ale, quarts, 4s. 6d. an ; pints, 3s. 3d. and 33. Arcy's
Dublin Stout and. Poden q 4 58., 45. 30 35. $n pints
, 38., and 2s. 6d. Not less than 6 OWEN E Co.
wer Thames Street, E. & 58, Fore Street, E. C.
Victoria Chocolate, Bon Bons, Solub
great variety. ese delici verages are now sold at
moderate prices, and many of them are highly economical.
FRYS HOM(EOPATHIC COCOA is an article of unex-
- eeptionable . CERE LE COCOA, in Hexagon
packets, and FRY’ * RA COCOA,are strongly recommended.
FR MANUFA TO THE QUEEN.
Y anp SO
, the po Chemist, asserts that nitrogen is
| to the wen A Action of the e and the growth,
— an and invigoration of the body. No stronger recom-
mendati Chocolate can 3 be given than
the following statement :—Caffeine and Theine each contain
oily about 29 per Eo "s Tacobromine ino (pr essence of
tains up wards oj
hey Will tere
5 virtues, and
gs hithe rto unsus
confidential.
Ar E i
c — or ar
AG
ILETIE.—OLDRIDGE'S 7S BALM OF | or tue ANIMAL KINGDOM, and Manual of Compa
CX THE TO
ERA whic — has for more than 30 y
its peculiar
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. E AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
351
— ————
BRISTOL NUR SERY — NDS,
L
LAR RAL, HIS RY, |rpo BE LET
W. AN Wees un on S od, fep. Svo, AM
A ^ Town, Brighton. Thes m
W. 7 — k} 8 1 TSH TLANI 18 AND F s RNS S. | for occupation with RA iate am — — An now to Let
ACGILLIVRAY, Tenth E ion, desirous of treating for the same obtain particulars and
10s. 2 to view the grounds on application to Mr. R. W.
Mae celle ray's Manual of Bot Second Edition, 4s. 6d. 3 — ry Marlborough Street, Lo rem A i ; and of Mr.
Macgillivray s — of Geology. New Edition, 4s. 64. . CHAN R, Hor cultural Valuer, 28, Pri oad, Wands-
cgillivray's Manual of British Birds. Second Edition, 7. worth "Road, ^
M odiada le ning te Description of British r 10 BE SOLD, an old established NURSERY and
: a comple
Forest Trees. ti eu.
Dr. dio Lin Miley "Bowny - "Physiological. Systematic, &c. EED BUSINESS, in the Midland Counties, in a
o — . — t Town, and immedia ately contiguous to eoe
eese pe (Gucvessor to Robert Baldwin), Essex Boo Railway Station, The STOCK at present x w, butgood, and
may be taken to at valuation or by private treat; parted
ne ETT: s Seeberger wos FOR THE | with * on account of the death of the e e
Editions, Svo dh eet vith many Illustrations. n ig iow 6 NS pper UNA i "E
est . , 7, U
gui their Breeds, Management, -— Je STO NHOUSE NTS
Cattle; e e Managment he E Ww on. Price Ss O BE OL LD, by Private — per and very
The Horse ; its Bre eds, s Ma t, m Diseases. By W. select collection of c and GREENHOUSE:
Youa' ncipal R.V.C. d consisting of ihe | best com newest varieties. They
Price 83. all young, vigorous, . — plants 2 the —
condit tio! pu. Stove reenhouse plants might en
2 — ee J. P. Ponte Sua C. W. gom. separate — any party not requiring — Also small and
The Art of Bre By David Boorn. select co ht of Carnations, Picotees, uchsias, &e.
Agricultural ^am d By Dr. H. M. Mead. F.R.S. " Al to = deri men of on very reasonable ser —Inquire of the
Useful and Ornamen | Planting. By G. SINCLAIR, 25,64. | Gardener, at Dorset House, Clifton Downs
NFOLD.
Honan Law (em Sales bp Auction.
LLED HERD EEDS OF CONIFER ETC., FROM INDIA, CALI”
REEDERS or POLLED ATTLE 5 informed FORNIA, VANCOUVERS, IAN AND WESTERN
that the ari P due of the POLLED HERD BOOK AUSTRALIA.
d f
8
now prepare: will contain the Herds of the M's . J. C. STEVENS will sell by Auction, at his
llowing Breede ig = p om 38, King Street, Covent Garden, on WED-
His p e Duke o ecleuch M April 27, at half past 12 o'Clock precisely, an
The Hon. the Ead ‘of Aberdeen LE of Seeds of Conifers from India, including 560 lbs. of
The Right Hon. the Earl of Airlie CEDR US DEODARA, 94 lbs. of CUPRESSUS TORULOSA, 31
The Right Hon. the Earl of Cawdor ^ of PICEA PINDROW, n * of PINUS EXCELSA, a na
The Right Hon. the po — 2 5 Ibs, of JUNIPERUS EXCELSA. Also an 1 i'i
The Right Hon. Lord California and Vancouver's isan and a collectioi
BE
LE
The Right Hon. Lord Talbot c de Malah
— John Stuart Forbes, Bart., of Pitslig
wie, Alexander, — of Kelly, Arbroath
e, We TM
ioe n, Georg: wn, Fochabers
Collie, John, dy ct
ee. pron]; Dunrod Mill, ee
— Alexander, Renchal, Za
„Wo 1 Fordot
Western cep —May be vi on the morning or Sale,
and Catalogues ha
c FENS wil Sai by Auction, at his
w E
in die — can be entered.
~ | be Horea to Galloway Stock.
onae
Hutehison, saa M 2 pehes 1 ph.
ames, rgowrie,
M'Combie, Silam, of Till Tiuyfour uo r. J. C. STEVENS, 88, suing eet, Covent
M‘Combie, Easter Skene, Aberdeen
a ee kettle, Fe 10 aarp FLORISTS, — E f
ennan, W. ., Balig,
Tayler, William James, of Glenbanie, Huntly — aar A een —— AND 0 gx *
URSDAY, ds i
22 p class collection e €—G and jeotees from
. Hobe: T im ica, ai lants
te, William, Spot, Kirriemuir int
— will be received up to April 15, after which
A distinct Section of the work will
of Entry may be obtained on applieation to
ScRorT, the Editor, at PETER Lawson & Sox's,
Edinburgh ; of Ropert THRESHIF, Esq., Dumfries; or at the
Office of the Farmers’ Gazette, Dublin
STUD LASS BOOKS.
ANUAL OF BRITISH BOTANY. By (ee e
INGTON, M.A., &c. m urth Edition, 10s.
Y COURSE or BOTANY, Structural culis
A 1 arns ic, with a brief Outline of the
Geographical 1d Geo 1 ARTHUR purp
HENFREY, FRS, T. S. Ko., PL core of Botan King's
o ntis London, Examiner in Natural Science o the Royal
and to the Society — Arts. Post Svo, illus-
vui of 500 Woodeuts, price 12s. 6d. ud
— —
Au meri n Nv
METAM - AND EXT TENSIVE SALE AT THE BRISTOL
NURSERY, KEMP TOWN, BRIGHTON.
ve PROTHEROE ar IS have
ved instruetions to Sell by Auc n the pre-
ristol Nurse „Kemp Town, Brighton, — * 1. in.
NAY, ihe — of the — — . — of E er ped
To; and other PLANTS, includi about 1000 choice
Camellias, all sizes, in the 2 state of
Chinese Azaleas, Ericas,
ENERAL OUTL INE or THE ORGAN ISATION | ing —— Valuer, 2 2» -Priory-
Ha
WARD, 82, Oakley
Anatomy. B hr RYMER JowES, F.R.S., Pro e. ot
brated for rties in teitoring. por enim
> , g, “and mparative Anatomy in Kin "s College, London, late Fullerian
beautifying th „ promoting its *. as well as prevent - | Professor of ug to fhe at egre of Great RESIDENCE AND LAND IN BERK
E — — onan * Kaos ist Wer Britain, ke. nd Edition, Svo, 8 400 Woodcuts. ESSRS. DAVIS axnp VIGERS n erui to
l 01 seven doors — i Sell by Auction, at Garraway's, on TUESDAY, May 10,
‘wholesale and retail in bottles at 36. 6d., 6s.. — ani t price £11 $
yi at 1 2 for 1, a FREEHOLD AND sca merita PROPERTY ;
Themis and Perfumers. Its use for whiskers and moustache | HAN PNE or CHEMICAL MANIPULATION, F 4
SIX with ver merous Illustrations. y C. GREVILLE WILLIAMS, ena Berk
m Al RR, A) My SE ss d in the 3 of the University of Ac Bon on. he
T in „ 158. N Q
Rom. M MAC AC ASS AR OI Great Western Railway, 8 miles
* T from Windsor, 3 pes 8 and 27 tro
Ro aar aeta Ae emk E lud GANTAD omnis. SALTS Qi Lf Sal ia ENS
1 con denos be Ae r, clean: F. C. S. P Lo y
it from scurf and makes it beautifull oft, S
pliable, and glossy. "fa the growth of the beard, whiskers, and | ELEMENTAR
Y COURSE or GEOLOGY, MINE-
it is unfailing in its stim: ve operation. For
children it RALOGY, Ax» PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY. By Professor
beantiful head of hair, while its introduction into the N. whan — e: ^ nit aw of Kings College consti — pn precast vowed E
2211 Sebo eine ene e Bel and ra
Fries 3s 6d. and Ys mily age net eg 2 — EY 5 te Pe Fellowof Ju aem — — — - dge. econd
CUN A. and DER 1), Edition, post Svo, with man Illustra
E > doable that size, 218. — CAUTION. On the
rapper of each bottle the wo «Rowand M ACASSAR “There 5s just enough about — general ini of matter, just | Messrs.
2 " u b
On, &c., in white letters, and their signature, A. ROWLAND y od pn logy t make — — — of bam
: in red ink.— - — c ear and very
emists a M E old at 20, Hatton Garden, London rand fae Sa y n 25 pt in all resp: nA
AT m * eh 1857. D, EPSOM, SURREY,
CIN SRS have ri received, m
: on very advantageo
doing M with 8 and an poate
Machines, Hydraulic and M
v o
e 2d. free ee sty a Sa be Treatise, E pages.
HE "NATURAL REGENERATION OF qe pl
pane ORGANS, practically Illustrating the tual | exce!
Cure, ut Medicine, of Indigestion (Dyspepsia), Habitual
— — e e idity, Palpitation of the Hea by railw:
DAY, May 10, a
DENCE, with Pl
Presses, Torpidity of the Liver, us Headaches, Nervousness, Bilou” a mile from
A Specimen Boc Yan iderh iis rovement in the Printing A xerit) UR :
inen Book of = General Debility, orm sthm a, Const umption, Des
iw and information for Authors, sent dency, Spleen, &c., without pilis, bar es, 95 medicines of of i
à e nE rr, 13, Mark Lane, London any k ind. Es — —— pleasant, and infallible means, adapted | w:
i o the gene: et
REETRICAL in INFLUEN SE IN HEALTH AND DISEASE. Lenden Max Nerwews, Booksellers, 39, Cornhill.
ECO ed. price 1s., free by post for thirteen Sí TORR ho
s ND LIFE: on ELECTRICAL NERVOUS ^A CONSERVATORY TO = SOLD CHEAP. ema —
FORCE; a MEDICAL WORK titania dur 11 3 modern guns CES weed qu bed
Lr who are suffering from the various forum s of KER- t Oakfield Lodge Low
ene ne DEBILITY and the Reon ulterior mái
, fhe great which they lead ; with servations on 858 ALE Z STOUT HOUSE, WITH NURSERY GROUND.
à Treatment Jd einer by ECTRO e e in the ther or 9 with a
mee. Hias relaxed or e E MEER LS e iie qun a ie rent. iura S Dun; Mt war's and the Estat °;
a with fases compiled from the Note-Book of about 1500. wi this a ray to Mr. PLANT, " iandof n Meeks Pet genre Vie , Lan
er of twenty years’ standing. — Road, 2 9 Prederick’s Place, Old Jewry, 5
y
Man, 39, Cornbill, and all Booksellers,
Elephant tand Castle.
352 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Aram 16, 1859,
GREEN'S PATENT GRASS CUTTING, COLLECTING, & ROLLING MACHINES FOR
GREEN’S PATENT HAND MACHINE,
LIST OF PRICES. Box and Tools for sharpening and k te
Machine in order, 58. extra} with Gurih 1
` reventi id
ior one person. To cut 20 inches 71. 10s. ; 22 in. 3 \ ds ng accidents and Keeping the wig
ior pe — es 1 , Su wi ER opt ecg’
Sl. ; 24 in. 3l. 10s.—for two persons. If with ae We Y os \ . wie 3
Suitable for a Don-
key, to cut 24 inches,
10.; 26 i, 1M.
Fora Pony, 30 in.,
Leather traces,
able to attach to
Q
é
Hi r
a
—Thi e 5 t [ms mii yit SeN
Msn. iS SUTTONS 1 DIOSCOREAS, y E they ariotiop ˖ donen (M Ab Ago dos Be 1 i Lists ot E
L out, at 5s. I on to Jo .
sets each.
Instructions for the roots. Early
orders for stro:
Royal Berksbire R
IOS: EA Bi mE m G- YAM. s
* * AND SON beg to intimate that EDDIN
d ms. is the e med — — othe above. Good e MIT A beg | to fer the usual varieties
s. per 74 per — Sas 5 urseries, Tondon, bedding
SORGHUM, OR HOLC RA 1 — 8 5s
E ar eene oe dap : Lists of | tity IE gig ity Song p
Prices y. vati
WE Tuns Secs. of COBEA SCANDENS, MAURANDYAS, bi white,
de Joux K mut zu and REG LOPHOSPERMUM, "TI A RPUS, and
E CAT LUE hi TROPZOLUMS, in large zo quantities, P Price: application
OBERT SDP s NEW DES SCRIPTIVE AND | plant plied b;
y Norra & Son:
| E CATALOGUE, No 6 (62 ages) of his COLLEC- —.— VEU —Seed Warehouse, 60; Barbica HE aa being t eum. S
H n
8 stamps. 1 prorious p pur ES — F "ue OLCU the fi 3 . ie {AMPTON COURT
NEW = A v4 £5 1 a r ac. HAMBURGH G a doz.
ces o on ication. mples pots, dd. ax 60s.
OHN KE SELECT . OF — of Holcus remitted free free b by post on ES t don
. 'aihing Lists of all the valuable Show each class, is
XN how ready and wi ton nd o, E m
Castle ursery, bury.—April 23.
: AR URSERIES, HENDON, N. W.
oia RD SHENTON'S Descriptive CATALOGUE
of new DAHLIAS, HOLLYHOCKS, PELARGONIUMS,
BEDDING — 9 PLANTS, amb - | leading N.
[ Rowers of ‘orwarded o ——
AND CO.’ z ae CATA-
DII PE A — ror to be
F & Co., 4, Lime
PI —F irs
il extra fine show varieti T
ifty
Foe EA hamper Bue weinded —D ee &
CAMELLIAE A AZAL LEAS.
NURSERYMEN, Glasgo
CAMELLIA plants, 6 to Aas feat peg 24
lot
y double 9 Eure
; 8 god t of specimen
ERDS GENUINE —— he RIdHT
the Riahr PRICE, to the RiGHT PLACE,
— New Seed Warehouse, 48 a, Moorgate
'All sorts of Garden, G:
yo i — „retail, and for exportation.
CHINESE YAMS, 4s. pod nd
ASPARAGUS plants, 165. per 0
Jonx W. CLARKE, Whi
5 ttlesea,
ORK REGE
S. W.
above. Pos
E
Cambridgeshi
hacer gedirem
ngston,
ENTS.—For Sale, about 4° tons of J. m
Middlings, of firs A; aor ity.—Apply to G. W., 4, Wells rivalled Stock of act ——
Road, New Road. Hamm ith varie Y E which have been exhibited a the
FARM bios and moderate i ries. QM
bloom, and m era e in price.
qum PH Sa go Ne _ beg q heo: er thie f eat upon application. —Dorking Nursery, April 23.
SKIRVING'S SWEDE aoa i Per lb.—1s. w S
GREEN-TOP ex «s -
RED E TURNIP
E Bese BLE A
LONG RED v o. 2 on appl cation. WX. C. AND
YELLOW G E Do. f their business,
A General LIST of SEEDS for the Farm, Flower, and Kitchen kinds. deba seals 1
Gardens forwarded on application. tion, and
1, Wellin: metin Steet, Strand, Waterloo Bridge.
NEW BLACK WA 1
LOCKHART, Frorist and S AN,
e Gree am, near London, is rer out
Sma SED DL'NC CALCEOLARIAS.
R. eire vr éd acci Knosthorpe, near Leeds,
his Unbioomed ANDRRA
rcel of 20, or three ferocia i 15s, . — Peas we can
rg parcel of of his unrivalled M ese and
will bloom This y year. Pos in payment, or Post- in
office d when the amount is 15s.
Choice CALCEOLARIA SEED, 28. Gd. rmm.
Cc
this month, —
They
354 s A* 3
puri UP ee GAZETTE. (are A
e BOTANIC SOCIETY OP an — NEW ROSES FOR 1859. NI 29, 1859,
SPRING EXHIBITION, APR ILLIAM WOOD Ax SON H. AMS is now re
N REPORT OF THE ogia: W AND “BON fo noW Gron pr elde, PENTSTEN pared to exeenta
drs ss Prize: Messrs. E.G. Hon dorson their orders for all the best NEW Roseg of the ose d cred iy Label. of [2 EMON GLOXIN
Son, 5 ington Road, St. John’s Wood, dh pb on. The plants are well grown, vigoro healthy, and A t last. mendation at the Natio; nd LORA, Re.
fornica, a reput hardy shrub of the Siereulisens. p iiy. are supplied at the lowest advertised m ae 8 "ad^ ea E ke ange “void flower, ot te
with large — yellow flow wore a dis naa DESCRIPTIVE LISTS of the above will be sent free “Ao s from unknown 800d fom,
plant. SEQOND fes enderson — application. Early orders will pring se the strongest — pinied by a remitan correspondents
Co. oo gest p. 785 or ref: must
s teat Gyanophyllum x magnificum, a rare plant Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex. e Finchley Orders to be mais —
eaves; and for a fins double- D. IB bes "Nul A
beswsllow Datura, of the habit o ROSES FOR BEDDINC , Nursery and Sedds
CATES! Turner, of Slo bun Mok sheen teet, ^ By THE DozEN, THE HUNDRED, OR THE THOUSAND. 2 a um tma
bright rose d ured variety of first-rate properties. 1 ILLIAM WOOD anp SON have now to offer E . an OXE
2 A wh red for Azalea Leviathan, a fine semidouble many thousands of well grown healthy plants of ROSES, DL ju BA AYLEY hay
rà : g substance, and likely to prove a useful decora- n 60 pots, which will be rea lant out about the end | are now MAL and the
3 S eret s ut cine erson . for Lomatia a Ar ara of = immense number of the best easier PHL pow prepared b supply the u T that à
b i 1 à nate lea HM ur Jj a, and LC 18, ey offe m
— vos al: peel curiously- aiot for | cae * esl free on eec ioi TIE Rum COUNTIES Ne DR _— co Hct 2 ms "ue in.
d 1 ylla,.a pretty green! shrub, with pale-r wh SS or DERBY.—C
ed and for Arthrotaxus Doniana. Messrs. x Heni — 2 of f the s stook SE wil bo planted out the Bt p^ — May. fm igit msc ien DET. s vu With camis,
o. for the and beautiful Todea hymenophylloides. Extra plants pem ted with e ord rst week in May forming a compact spike; habi zd A Sat
being — i M — of — Bridge Road, showed the fol- nt carriage T . gd EE
‘ plants but less nove than the fo: eee i OUNTESS or EL
lanuginosa, nd its variety pallide, and e leeres, e eee BuU DUI e strikingly chaste and beau, hate a iat ie
together with a large rose-coloured coarse Azalea, called Benno, THE BEST SEASON ue t I — -— and finely formed. Especial, habit dwarf, truss compa
Leopold. 1. M Ule s p. Henders Bi oret propert 2 m Roi WoopLANDs NURSERY, Mar exquisite: variety. 5s. y excellent for pot cultum, 8
rson Vell. CLAYTONI.—Whi
, Stil dovere species of Sedum, with Sparmannie range yellow — yes oe SON 1 su mit tht memes menge per blush eye; in be ih
Umbeliifer, named Monesin: Ie plant, apparently an | for planting — ce fro ! ire Ei Him xe fps smooth and v eae: ae large, ompa, Of grat sub
12 MISCELLANEOUS PLANTS. ems pus Mobi qu the Parterre and CELA ORAR ine lit. shaped ; habit ‘Compact, and
ta - J. 8 ed En ge Road. Srconp Prize: Mr. Cut- dur PT "i pots i bo da an immense Stock of many N d à ne ine centre; fine
rnet, who sho s » happy to l VERDAD a
cluding a good apecimen of [Ju Fe lige y planis, i . — donna ä Se style of, of rat subst ino and very.
solouted Craton ely H brid Perpetual Roses SE Ts CY RO = dozen. TRAH gorous than Countes of
ALEAS.—Ftmsr Prize: Mr. Cutbus sle de Bourbon ditto .. 12 : set of four, 15s. .O
MS plants of new varieties. SECO — ead Mes oe Teese - " 5 Pos orden. Terms to the — ve wih dca ed for every thes
Ec pe though larger, were less. effective. „China, Climbing and Noisette ditto viia c 3 E - t older varieties, 8s. ani d 12r. pa €
12 AURICULAS.—First Prize : Mr. Turner, of Slough; CATALOGUES sent post free on eos radshaw (Gardens, Gade m P
among the varicties exhibited “Dickson's Matilda was pre- e aded toad rder ensate for di EW PL - :
eminent from its fine form and chaste markings. ‘i se er Spent te UGH LOW A NTS.—1859.
= -— ARGONIUMS. — Fer PRIZE: Mr, Turner; well- HOICE ROSES IN tod AND CO. respectfully invite attention
loomed plants of moderato sire IRCHAM anp WARD beg respec to ibn Alt bo very ee iE
speres 8 1 .—The following aw made:—| ino f — admirers of the Rose that they hav: : — € — d em —
D r. Turner, eire iei O e following fi LO:
"P D exhibiting much variety ap of A ineach | under (when a fair Ek jose Same enables the em to offer as | Huom Low A Co. have 2 e undemgmed quii
i Sol brilliant Sons those shown, Comet was conspieuous for 105 155. d from a large number of plants raised by themsel :
4 . — t searlet flowers clouded with maroon, Virgine for cA ee Fe > à carefully and l judiciously h hýbriūišed anti dtd Ives from seed
its bright carmine colour, and Raphael for its dense shaded Balle An nie - 3 ee ma 5 withthe e
i MALL SinveR MEDAL: Mr. Turner, for six - well penny p de Wassenaer (Mos: ame Dam viously in cultivat L. & Co. can with : »
grown Cinerarias of choice kinds. Bronze MEDAL : Messrs mperial s) ee Charlet toy ) man pop selection $ to the notice of "their
C Son, Isleworth, for six well-bloomed Cinerarias. ien 2 Madame Com cally distinct, kinds, "T e: a . ithe mat ati 1 —
EN. Mr. Holland, gardener to W. Peake Cardinal Patrizzi Madame Schmidt. lection of this much adm
for N 8 utbush, of Highgate, Docteur Ruschpler Madame pee e aout 3s. 6d. Pus
poer elargonium Beauty, a variety of spreading | Ernest Bergma ] iss Gra; -FLOWERING VARIETIES,
in good truss white-edged leaves, and large — flowers, Gustave Coraux Beandard c f Se E iolacon, v ry dark violot purple, base
5 kr. Turner, for Seedling -Cineraria » | Lord of Sebastopol fully — A on a pure white ground of the tube beauti-
penes e, a ich: looking "abb iol. with the florets Tose-crimson, Victor Trouillard Bridesmaid, white tube, aliod rose wag i
ha : af unde surseanding the dark rosy disk, und | Abe Feytel 20s. per dozen. Lineata superba, rosy carmine tube, towards lips with
Bib a z ull flat circle; also for Seedling Cineraria Slough — — n larerammt Dans Clie eee CT
a variety of good habit, the disk dark and the florets — ademoiselle Nancy Dubor | perfection, clear white throat, datk blue!
a of a purple-shaded erimson above. Mr. Conte de Morny Mademoiselle Zoe Princess Alice, clear white tube, bright rose
. ee dwar — dk ty 1 in pond eA x Mademoiselle Alice Leroy — re E edges very
crimson, scarcely whit H e, a small rose- di i i = ) "iy
: gardener to nd the disk; and some others. 5 Monsieur Jard 8 taan in Cho did easly iiw
SI 7 ener to E Beck, Esq., had three Seediin Duc de Ma Ponctuée DROOPING-FLOWERED VARIETIES. ~
i Lisette, and Admiral, G inferior quality; and | Felix Peretti dé Attraction, base of tube white, fin ; a
e T 9 * e me de, from 33 — : Reine de Denmark Be son, outer edge pur g —
5 3 ames, imerston Souvenir d'Blize auty, white tube E ‘carmine dico. id. white
mne from eO —— Some inferior kinds n Madame Debesse Souvenir L Beranger —.— very largo " 3 . ire: da
„ not for competition were exhibited b ä N the E ight crimson with violet throat, carmine blotch o |
5 A — & Oo.; it contained among . Madame de St. Gen D E NE M |
“called a fine variety of Cattleya Skinneri, | Madame Elize d Lise ope vs iei, UR Hynnm Mors c ;
T Heaths, Madame ire de Cheni - Triomphe des Beaux YBRID PERPETUAL,
„Co. Another, from Messrs. E. G. He — opimo Vallide (Moss Altesse impéri
formis, £c Nr Stain Baga ew oor "DuecOMage | Mos d Ardoisé do Lyon
of Exochorda alas 8; h, of Bagshot, showed several cut branches Evéque de Nimes E Monsieur de Montigny Comte.de: Beaufort
. dre iræa laden with racemes of its Gloire de L. Madame Van Houtte er
Bet. pier this very ornamental shrub, intro- Louise d' Au m h Marie Portemer 2 de Maroc
hardy that it was deste? by Mr. Fortune, is so thoroughly | Lelia gea Mademoiselle Goddard Salom
frost without inj to have recently withstood 12° of| Maximilian II. Mario Thierry Sate -: "a Louis
S Fidea amples oí — P: E 1D some | A Descriptive Liat.of the abo ine Blanche (Moss) — e la
4 i hr oseo; gboye- may be e
F collection N vegetables, , Serben of o dan Batatas. inb paid to London and aeta A n Orderic Vital !
of (transported. peer mine 8 the South — — — — April 2 i — bach:
steamer to London), were iris He Po Keine the Caull. PE UGER dol qe) ATE BRO Oe oui 8 NEW VERBENAS
flower heads were remarkably "Peas and Strawberries | WALCHEREN, for A e d produce - 0 „ u. E. O0» anat I of these nino varies
—.— 0 Wate CAPE Y * ea eee TA oma to tht ionda ns tne and i
ur c c REI 3 rir e
EJ T, late white, for May and Fine . 2 0 „ | Lady, Cotton She oye, duo
2 etatis td free by post for 8s. 6d. i ins ge stamps truss, —— * var purple;
„ ue ou STOVE SS Growers, Sudbury, Suffolk. "| Mars, bright red, po^ truss, fine
8100 AND — . -Hanmer, ruby, white exe, i
ot| Ty) at Low Puro. Seo names Sg ld JISE (PLANTS NLIS the bestofite class, ——
— page 300, and April 16, page 330 $90. ^ — 1 lt fine white eye,
fine, —— STOVE PLANTS, very strong and Mrs. Leslie 1
FIFTY CHOIGH GREENHOUSE PLAN me endid form
——— REENHOUSE PLANTS, ve nubes, rupe
. Lm
For the best collection of not less d 8 — BRITTAIN 8 458. ion left to us gg M oris SN ine bost A
; yei YU Ue det. tix) 37 agis GARDEN NETTING or ub yard, with 6d., 6d, | oras it produces A ush langer a wi te ae
— EROAN collection of not Jess than SHAWS PANY or best No. same space of ground. ‘This variety
IV. I. For tho bak wi n dF (Nurserymen) W Ed ; also stouter quale 1, 5s. per piece of 20 Py with the e e
: able for Orne A. cs — 45 Boxes 1s. 64. each with I. that M exten —À
R 5486 da. Goods 2 and Net HL. & Oo, have decided m
vi 20 Ferns of any kind of not less than sod Norwich tations in London, or on Single plants, ee eben e per 100,
1. 3 ornamental basket —— F BASS x es ped line. abondnneo on
irme For tho bot group of pes ua ars) 2 1 TES x Establishment, Si ; Suffolk. Mme
preference — ie! W. H W DOUBLE fin ink Felix RA nd Aadame Hoss. |Reine BM ak
VIIL—i. Fo — ne (N C. that RAVE begs respectfall Kossu! — Monplaisit | Madame Tare Seringe
Te d Best speciien of ‘aap P vM NEW DOUBLA 1 Peron be propered with sai GK wf the 2 12 fl ech, e
N 3 BLE PETUNIAS ad advertised by hi STOCK of the Plants 1s. 6d. Mantes d e rui ot
Ornament: Plant, or ien, à special FFF y him in'the Gar.|, New Aae gd Ute preceding cMiection include #
exhibition A uni ue collection in is. / the preceding
i - Mua to the above, prizes semen of 1 exquisite form, detente; rich án themssives, ves, being of varieties-offered this senson on the Continent, n
eee or Fruit and Vegetables. A portion of will bo very fragrant, and of first-rate habit, ha decided in colour, | Baccarat „| -Gitana T Marie Bt
5 E ia faot aro good ganrd petals, — a 1 ^| pri
2 clature is as follows out. "heir "die * — Fatima E f — 4
wish to arrange and exhibit thei urserymen who| ROS Figaro Beam
A : 1 eir collecti > —
e impie of competition, for be e wi e :
splay of Garden Devorations and | CRIMSON GEM — Height aser, well formed. T all the striped varieties ;
Hants intended for tho E een ze ortioulture. t MA GAL OR ght crimson, with white contre LOBELIA TRIGONI St CM
ilwa m Exeter Pto —— line — Cri CRIMSONS.—Bright Ap hi —.— — res prse = m vt
o B nietas “+t — l rimson King." i brighter than growing v: oring kent green io
e f the 9 before May Applicaton n for space to e rimson have all proved thegnediveg tobe ET ously i iis (in c inches in me a ite bin ine f0 ;
ie erret e i o TUS the above be each, or tho set of nix — e
^5 be" ‘ventoved earlier tha the | their peers that the Trade forward. their of six 25s, urposes. F. "eye.
GEORGE BROWN, Gators it DM —— i n price 2
Hon. See. Local Committee, | C. W. HARGRA ecuted in the | nean
AVE, THE N meat WINCHMORE Hu N. E large
Clapton Nursery, London,
4 Arrt 23, 1859.] THE GARDENERS _ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 355
a
E
NEW PLANTS FOR 1859.
MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON X SON
PLANTS IN MA
NEW GENERAL CATALOGUE and SPRING LIST of ORNAMENTAL BEDDING and
UMMER PLAN
EET oR DR
omy WATERERS CAT TALOGUE OF UNRI-
J Sarun HARDY —_ AND OTHER CHOICE
RHODENDRONS, as Exhil €— by him at the Royal Botanic
Regent’s Park, London, is published, and will be for:
warded plication.
e 1 List i is recommended as ork of reference, as. it
curate descriptions of all the —— vurieties.
erican Nursery, Bagshot, Surrey, near he Sunning-
pin South Western Hamn »
ESSRS. PARKER WILLIAMS beg to
FLOWERING P
inform their friends uit petias that their PRICED | Will be ready for distribution wherein will b all ied following and
Nu DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of Exotic Orchids, Stove, y : rt pg * ng. other New Plants
n ardy —— Miscell — 8 — Eee r
and Plants, Variegated an mental foliage
hous Comite — — — ALLAMA! DA VIOL = VARIEGATED- LEAVED GERANIUMS.
Gloxinias, Fuchsias, Cactuses, &., is now published, and THE E gem BLUE FLOWERED -— ANDA. wa EMMA DOM SILVER CHAIN.
will be Did post free on applicatio on. Fr AAT Nursery, The plan offere — the chet or jenen p GOLDEN TOM THURS — gil
Seven Sisters’ and Hornsey Roads, Holloway, London, N. nally in re — of — Low, who em from a | GOLDEN CERISE UN IQUE. UD.
tropical collector, and are now our sole p ——
The late Mr. Gardner; — of. the Boral Botanic Gardens, 20 ONALE, OR „ e
GERMAN ANO OTHER FLOWER WS. VEGETABLE,
TC. Ceylon, in his papers on the Vegetation of E Brazil, contributed | AMY ROBSART.
EED
sigue Y EMMA 5 daba:
a PARKER AND WILLIAMS beg to | to the Quarterly Journal of the London Horticultural Society | LADY CHARLES COOTE. ITE N NOSEGA
inform their friends and patrons that their — PRICED (vol. ii.), thus alludes to it:—* On my return to Crato, I M —
and DESCRIPTIVE s syi ALOGUE in which i rated | made a few excursions in that neighbourhood, and add NE BEDDING GERAN
every novelty of proved merit, also all the best of the older | considerably to my herbarium. One of the finest plants met THE oe, MEE
kinds, is now or ished, and will be forwarded post free on | with at this time was a beautiful new species of Allamanda hy
application. Their whole stock has been selected from the * —.— Gardn.) a shrub from 4 to 6 feet high, D.)
-— — and Foreign sources, and every kind is warranted | numerous
— -— of the finest possible quality.—Paradise
— Sev Sisters and Hornsey Roads, Holloway,
London, N.
— UNRIVALLED PRIMULAS.—
Norices To pans malas he
speciosa. This is by far the most beauti
large flowers not unlike in colour those of Gloxinia
T b: — species belonging
to the genus, all of which, with this ex bear
flow: "5
As mpetition plant in collections, A. iolacea, in its
5 Ais tint, offers a new and essentia — feature m d
there being none other to associate with the golden-yellow o
Edinburgh pos — ark, stamps enclosed, but — d — E delicate rosy-blush of Echites and
B. Smith, W. Hooper, and many others, 3d Edit n of Treatise, enia.
Testimonials, &c. „ill be published and sent to all. subscribers.
Will your Primula seed hold out thisseason? Do ubtful; order
v mediate
"n
a
E
&
Garden Report, — th
e Hpo vantages derived from the
enge entific foreigners 2 well as English naturalists
moe r in the same favourable condition, ifmot
0 ET as a working library, and itis |
Tie Musen. Tuis esi establishment must be inspected t
More — — 2 of its San ed Wrede
rchants and travellers, will be
E: 2 pedi
HE RovAL Pas G
has Atakon de URE GROUNDS,—No particular alteration
place t
the A m. Tho lake progr enlarging Sate pees 3
HS
HIR
x 5
mand G ieu I may E pe we have had We,
ISHING PLA ELMS
not ye met the N PAR is récent — has
but an g the dr of the parks in question,
5 stock of different ages is provided for
THE GARDENERS'
» of thes se buildings | future years.
o^ bé extent
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTUR
AL
GAZETTE.
405
Our books show that we have during the past
year supplied to—
1. Hyde Pari
6—14 feet 000
to be cultivated x
immediately in fot of the house.
plot i
arden
dn the centre of the
English Elins 6-12 cet . 500 | vegetable plot is a basin d —
1500 | may be added with very
2. Battersea Park., Planes, 5—8 feet 0 | The wall which s . de g: pale? is to be covered
Elms, 12—15 fett .. 900 with Ivy and other creepers ; but Pos de may advan-
: 500 |tageously be devoted to fruit trees. An American
3. Victoria Park .. Planes, 5—10 feet 300 | domine rp hedge separates the portion devoted to
Elms, 6—10 feet 116 s tables om the fomeinder o he garden. The tw
ME those from the main walk, are
Tm 24 erarches to be Priel with Roses. On the wide
Thais de W. J. HOOKER. — of turf 12, ordering the walk at the end of
To the Right it the First Commissioner of the „garden, are in ic ated sit tations for specimens of
Works, &c., &c. | x es. 'The two side walks are
rminated by vases 18 and
their places might
men plants or ` pillar Roses,
At 15 i be
—
e
È
=
2
c
5 em
=o
»
2
[c]
3
co
[c]
„
4
E
.
E
n
re
Holly yhocks ; backed b y th
— a fin e effect, and form
pleasing Adee in the
garden. On the lawn are
two beds 18 and 19 for
m ji pea or other
dwarf
aa
8
=
=
t$
EN
2
2
oO
2
"n
2
em
P
Hom
Corres ponden ne
d
— ort, the future plans
f the Council were well
they d
d
near m meta banna nted
in the history of such sane:
PLANS FOR VILLA ne SUBURBAN
GARDEN
Pr 3.—Occupiers of sma ate
are often desirous of devoting a —— x the limited
ually allotted to
LATE 3 uburban residences
allo o the cultiva-
jene ment. This
8
the port presented in the plan is
„something len. "The garden front of the — 1, is on
Ra lk, 5,
e vases to be filled | with |
are
vt of the ree nod its whole 3
wire arches at 6 and 7, to be covered wi
i ista,
several walks. : :
petted h the kitchea iie on either side, pyram
Apple i and Pear trees, in the front of w which ;
| at least that I did not Le cod
be known through the Nerd b and breadth of th
regre retted w: as the!
and th
of the insects ann in a
were "not giv es =
, for Shey oap t
e land.
406 THE GARDENERS’ SS AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Mar 7, 1859
"T Tad Hime, 1 trust will , deficieney been - ignable to any cire
un dly , Sie t moved by time, o r over which the Cone a likely toten tober.
trol, they might have still en deavoured o oti exercise on.
difficulties of their position,.aud to carr
who are
ko on ula‘ an
t deem these observa 0 ut of place at the presen
Col chester, — — ig about, as philosophical a Suggestion: as
t 0
«che ie Thomson, F.
Now it the infiuence of electricity acting “upon e ertain ida
€ teresting favourable to the ma yo
form: of matter roduce ve etable life, would not the t Potter Coffins.—It may not be unin y re fe maintenance ote
: S of your readers to know t dre — — I that, — direct loss was — Garden
coffins is now being carried into effect liis s 2 direc dre
f yo
t
n f l orders 3 animals may be attribnted | enrthen are a
sa arta cans 1 A Gard : ner. Yes ; if pl Thorniley’s ‘Tile and Pot Works, Heaton- Mersey,
produced by electricity so qme an animal, But the if | near Manchester, I had lately occasion to go there t
is everything. order some flov ver-pots, when I saw some d [in
1 the kiln—so complete in every point
ken my Ih
3 dung frame with linir ngs 22 p front a
N isease.—Havin oa with interest t tl
articles by Mr. 23 Mr. F Fr that it was hardty possible to find fault with them.
Cucumber, I was induced to ld f| TI
your able corre 25 — inform me sie cd th coffins of our best makers. The e lid falls within well-
cure of a disease which has tak f 1 and, I was told, is fastened down with
w
c Roman cement before being consigned to the grave.
Mr. Thorniley toll me he has orders for a thousand,
e gentle bottom heat; the plants were grow —
ent luxuriantly, the leaves nny of them ME and hopes to be able to make at his own works from place of r
12 Ta bec way, and the roots all over the frame | 500 to 1000 : week — arrangements are eom
like packthreads, =e o E attention paid to them as | plete t ed. = Parkinson, a Manchester gentleman an
to s T, wa 8 and such About three or these coffins, tried many other plastie mental par
ot i some pes s wee cks in the stems ; pos za materials ; o, found gs answerable in every way been taken to
ing it — A too much moisture eIl t tho ose made of t e best 7 clay. A
rather dry sin ain, a t h, s discovered a |
coming, ani 3 inches in len M ` are gur nming rand — substance or solution, ES Eee fa AE ' |
dropping off, and some of the fi e leaves are oning renders T hardest materials and substances capable = |
brown. There are three or Mu ed sorts of Cacum- | of being beautifully and enduringly “ flocked.” ell, pere 0 .
me, such as Cuthill’s Black Spine, Lord | these is when finished are exceedingly P pretty, just — er parts o 2 ge N M is |
Kenyon's Favourite, Lynch's Star of the West, &e. - piece ric lvet Crim- | handsofthe Fellows. Andt the Comma i
have likewise another (rame of equal dimensions, at flock is te e used for Ric.
nplaint, and likewise a quan- | private — ies who buy
5 of miigh look to be going in | heard of them it struck me that £ they wou ald be too
the — 5 tate. Young @ heavy for pre use; but those I saw a =
Spergula pili * — -Having i idi frequent opportu- | or eight years of age were not too hea T
present looking hea althy, but I am afraid showing sailors, white for paupers, and _ k = ery
pioms of the same 11 buy their o
nities of see seemg M dm. A lawn of Spergula these coffins it forcibly struck me that i
pilifera during the 15 yn years, I may perhaps be|an effort or two to produce good ance ipes
tted to offer some e arks upon the plant. for € hot-houses with — ebe, [for w
i hly as 2s bas been of asa Dwee for syphons, and T’s. Coffins can be made 6 feet long.
Grass, its. s have not p my opinion t all Surely pipes 6 inches wide and 6 feet and — in | 80
i t e jointiug could be e by
to see the lawn, some of whom h gone with Portland or Roman ems —€— answers ve spe for tes alon ie of the inka Bec Of Mens
conviction Te t the published cud. of it v east metal pipes. I am at liberty to state sid, the charges — — — .
more fanciful than accurate; and of a e Cir cheaply the coffins can be reste but if M can be | foun that the
questions that have been asked respecting i I know ma ade at the rate of the coffins our hot-houses could be
= but x e which ha: s not been satisfacto orily 1 alf the cost of iron pipes. Th e present i been disposed
I le?” tem of heating is good, but the materials nsed are = 5s. for — and 504 106
— making all 3061“. 4 60.
Pee ve (eos die übers at No. 8, MaRrIN's Prach,
TRAFALGAR SQUARE, — ive been taken ata a total rent ot S
g and on the present occasion
Experimenta are in progress for the determination of expensive. A. Pettigrew.
Last Christmas Aa of Spergula, eere Cases.—I have been much pleased with
bout 6 by 2 inches, were slept . Hibberd's satisfactory account of obest
piece of d in Mr. Mon n: these cases. That
of 12 to 15 Mies Mun): d cae explains the facility of Propagating the
he ile part of cach pateh bing means described, but if the Lee teh SET
ap into | im en and planted in the of their comfortable quarters
H aed Lit riod ue Hs “yous
Will be Will be sarees (dace end of the I appre- | fear meus = die immediatel oe v s stomp to eee their- 1
y. Iventure to ask
hend that the quickest way of ene m would | what plan he suggests to those not enjoyi become inevitable; but they
be, to prick out seedlings at 2 Tosh ae the oe 1 HUP
IT prepared surface of loam, a trou! que some job E — plants or
doubtless, yet one that would well 1 the labour; two or three weeks in their hotbed has expired ?
for it might be done oy. mere boys, under oceasional | I „ha ave es winter raised several seeds in a dens
— The eX stion of t with dung, but they shot pt very weakly
lawn ought not, it seems to me, to be allowed to pre- and 1 Spur died away: such I should — would he
j the merits of. the iin as — vy do not discard | the fate of the nurslings of the Waltonian cases to
many perenn mìals a sa e they o bloom the first | those who could not Secure an equal day a
of Tio a d 2
N. the Society, if an inion i
25 pi been n notified
ing months, Mr. Hibberd Y will perhaps be so obligi
— — iet. 1
era does not make al
suc wn as no Grass ean
Like most good buings, it will be liable te have [th |
I have
an inferior article substituted for it; and as
good near n dien. didis ou seem Cc O
XE CIS
— — a: cna
erit 0 dis anri 400 n
Societies. drum dots,
ie „ Honm Mee L: May 2. Y MzzrING
1e election of Council a sees for the ensuing | are
prepared at to tak adva
an Tor, t the Rev. ernon Harcourt, V. P., in he Chair. Ein rt
from the Council scr
causes that
fod aul pi The Sce Tute. atinually informed of the
= wile Sagan preserves its pro- | to the heavy ot London and Chi
3 those of J ‘Exhibitions
tinual sustained by the
ground, viri S zgul — | tocol et then
a 9 at no considera o inpren inth
four i —.— hes long, mcs the roots of a : Pateh of Spergula Se this | ides a EM tb pon was epe — ni — — — — e is foun Mum
the
iom into the stiff clay subsoil of s "Mr. Mongrodienrs | engt si stronsiy s commented as a ma “great the mimber CLE i p
rdin
— the ew of the plant for hon purposes
first, greatest extremes of atmosph
changes will en ffect the soil deep e j
it (while Sagina from its limited roothold will not
heat or draught) an ly, beca: his
istic secures (as has a beautiful lawn, —
Perfectly free from cracks in the hottest weather, upon | brought t r. ve how A " :
a soil it for nothing better than making bricks, E T to savo the | Bocity's Anan are
a procumbens is such a wi n weed in garden ween, o Exhi'itions of see oving cost more tha e —
de that it is very likely to be maten for, and pts, exelusi has so long oceupied among the
even planted with Spergula pilifera; and as a lawn | convenience: d the sone been
8 will probably be escis steal of | ike Seer the E 1 e year 1 18569 axe Ss having
months, and thus earn .
seh
tae Se ann 500/ beyond
part of wuich loss is chanzenble to >i Gerd. fea sha.
thin] that — the
Max 7, 1859.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 407
nt, the Treasurer, Mr. God: Mr. Blandy, and and, after painting all the young monkeys with this, arboriculturist, the principal advanta
Eb. Were T Dilke), in order m pr the Society | treacherous mixture, set them free. Their anxious | sists in inducing a full state of bearing eight —
to meet two thousand pounds’ wort of old promissory | pare! s had been watching for their offspring, and er than by y
tes, bad guaranteed their payment by instalments, | iem them away out of eg am The liberated cap- 10 obtain this result, M. , Du Breuil commenced b
thas relieving the Society from a serious temporary | tives were then surroun ed by the whole troop, wl wx
- liberal an act on the part of| commenced licking the "mess — - r fur. Before eene part of the w alls where the produce of the
hich showed how ch they are very long, the expected — sts made thi
VE
cie E nk was t ace the trees in the open
as deserving the warmest acknowledgments. | ance. The rcsult of As pom was, that the im undi d distributed ro E qe garden quarters.
Fellows expressed a wish t that the Journa l, or | were so terr tified a . — anguish w which their It is here that the — of M Du Breu il presents
equivalent, should be revived, and it w the toont: that they fled | the greates innovation,
stood that steps would be taken for the — rz a | the place, = Tt a 5 in that locality one of the enclosures double 'espaliers, with perpen-
F sheet, which all Fellows might receive — ] long afterwards.” lieul iddl
bs future arrangements in contem- Tere a nee of four MM beds, running orth and south. These
jon respecting the a at Chiswick were dis-|, TRAD ange Receryen.— Fi isher, Holmes, § Cos a
but as no definite conclusion had I Hands Catal oque of Stove, Green by footpaths 3 feet 3 inches wide. The trellises were
at by the Council, the —— of this subject was prend ud 7. — Plants, a very good collection of useful ormed of u 5 laths, abc se 1 foo apart, with a
postponed to some — re general meeting. aud rich in aon ‘Dut the names are terribly 2 post 5% —.— d må 9 feet 9 inches
The Chairman ! announced that H.R.H the miss a. : pie eh at ever "n The pce was —
Prince Consort m en unanimously E place rong ee wires cur their extre
oe Pla bran = a Mide raa * ida Garden Memoranda. | tio i in the » each —
Professor Lindley, e Rt. Hon. the €: of | rwe extract the follow: the top of the posts. Each line i two — of
Ducie, Professor Henfrey, and Mr. C. Edmonds, j country-qurden fro — 8 trees — against i — n vertical.
members of Council; n. Jonathan Clark e, Esq., pet uoa FRUIT GAR: OF THE CHATEAU DE VER- When the espalier which have been poned —
Mr. James Fraser, Audito N. —Our readers know what a great i impulse an — bear fruit all t i gerer trees will be e
i id the ground which ‘ney occupy cropped w
ment of dessert make up - he space taken u
righ
fruits—has received of late years tables to p by the ne
Notices ot > of Books. through M. Du Bret m active TE — professor, arrangement, We “ill now follow M. Du Breil in in tho
e giv at the Con- examination of . “diferent kinds | of tree e of
1 dem um
Invasion invited by the Defenceless State of Engla es Arts et Mé g
By T. H. Key, M.A., à nd A. Williamson, eas over alta parts f ios ^. numerous hearers who | of his new mode of short prun
Bell & Daldy. 2d edition. could not ater have the opportunity of listening P s er trees in j lines, against a
This important pamphlet, costing only threepence, to him. The 3s which attends the lessons of this | South as of varieties of win
should be in the hands of every one who has even the | eminent arboriculturist, and the — increasing the trees p re "planted at 16 inches apart along a wall
smallest influence over members of the Hou p 410 feet long. Two-thirds of this length have been
3 though written by two — — edat a new attempt. | planted we Lr They cover two-thirds the he
of whom however is the — relatio: M. Da of the wall already borne rui
most a Na vies — officers, x — ed its 7 in the theatre, however “clear t hey may be, require e to T perpentielar espaliers : the t
of a th h acquaintance wit accompanied = — — of results on the About foo pet
de moot of P ich it treats. authors point out | ground. In fac wever gre the attention of the ra 688 " single d alio . These trees, which occu:
— I force, but without a a word of py Je eme the ability rot the pro — d his in e new plant: re-men-
kill to illustr: ate by sketching, there is in "natur al tioned, have sed planted two years; they consist of
ise and how w great mmer and a n varieties. Old trees, trained
is introduced i into the selon of the —— by the inspection of: the ol objects themselves, especially | e izontally ini no e wall,are the only ones o
e aren sA ee = abundance ; but where | if ings, taken in Tre ne Pastori e the 2 plantation ‘which 1l be preserved.
are the S opas an the form. er? We have of existence, and in the differen’ - phases of their e planted 16 Pooh apart against m east:
admiral escis growth? Excellent ga e who now nothing of the | be inch 180 et do ong, n and t ines.
mand. * — is not an officer 1 in the service who will | subject, a lesson in the pag ane eee ator | The eet have been planted three years, and im ve
not endorse e every statement that these pages contain, | who already | understand it. t. One. may have — great | almost reached the top of tus wall. ‘The short pone
— bei tt ich has ing — succeeded per rfectly. The stems were =
ous isk of being wra wrapped in the confla- been done by his neighbours, and believe himself far | hid by the number ee
gration al p^ x to rage -= the continent. For|advanced; but let him go beyond two or three depart- 75 feet vo be same aspect the trees were trair 2245 in the
— pe b m Voce gend our -— Eee like z= | ments, he will see new and ingenious methods, and will same m but planted 2 feet a apart, ar s the nets
mmediate acquire. Every ] ele a: trente er length. | ‘The trees, e year!
and ver ers e, ha jg je * et à
Against 144 feet of south. wall the trees
were * 16 Vds à apart. TI
and had nearly e the — n of the wall; they were
e ered with flow: uds. dabout a
s was
“his - s; with | botanist in his study, working microscope in hand, | ¢° = be
rmn T 3 TTT or apart, al
he has much
laissez faire ame we — — — o | botany will recall with pleasure and reg he rural
excursions directed by the last of Jussieus ; the
nce became a hundred times more attractive when it
the
—Against a —— — 98. L^ = with a
s 0 ! south aspect, the trees were were planted 16 —
and to make up for the want of a model fruit and trained in oblique lines; and a ener 69
M double espalier the trees were about a foot apart —
med uprig
22d last, 3
— Mandrill.—* Som they a situated near Alençon, and econ ing to the family of Apricots.— Planted 16 es apart as a single espalier,
their disposition a — pom. aus Rattier. His n vita i arm response, and trained in eee cre; 'The espalier, 138 feet
h meclf with bae ticket at long, is sheltered on the west side by straw mats from
— Anne sport of rage if amy attentions be a dins to l P P rovide
— within aug sight. Ths curious propensity was | single fare, a 5 Mich. the Western Railway | top to — and by a stra shee ed projecting ins.
— made the means of re-capturing a large baboon— | Company of France had generously con on this| This shelter is necessary from f middle of February
a chacma Jardi 3 U — o the weather at Paris o on the | pue - = Not May; they are sie removed, and: by
des PI Plantes, in Pa T 1 had end bailed many | i 1 1 the enthus d th
attempts to entice of amateurs was considerably n inished. of — reins quality than from a wall.
tried, repelled the —— sev di wonnding several | Those who i ed id accompany M. Du- Breu on this bens vr wall 108 feet — is — with Vines
of the keepers. At last, a ,ready-w witted keeper hit | visit will doubtles regret it, for their anticipati ions | about 14 inches apart. They trained w — ae
upon a plan which proved eminently successful. There | were happily not mi ect and the kane in which the | Per — and opposite laterals. „Ano not ther pct
was a little window at the back of the cage, and when | party took a lively interest, was — en n favourable | feet long. i is planted w ith Y E
the keeper saw the baboon in front of the open door, he | weather. We were presen be able t
in a young lady to the window, and pretended to give an account of it to our reader: walls have an east aspect, and are —— wit ih —— —
c mag dios arcet was too much for The Chateau de Vervaine, cok 2} miles from humidity ^E the climate ined unfavourable for the
jealous feeling of the baboon, which flew into the Alengon, on the road to Brittany, besides possessing ripenin Grapes.
cage for the — — of exterminating the offending | the finest orchard in France, hus a park of at least 120 ‘Appice — are trained inito Fer d ihe
Another keeper. was stationed i in ambush near | acres. We will not stop however to give a detailed Mm the rum des MICA
: > Cag tered | description of this park, kept up in style, and | is feet. e trees are plant Arp sort"
: the den, he shut and fastened the door.” affording, with its pieces of — at 5 pa about a foot from the edge of the walks
„ Monkeys and Sugar-canes. — “One d y^ itted , a great variety of views. We will merely 1 bese are trained "vertically against a
— succeeded in — the monkeys away | remark o es possi and beauty of the evergreen dwarf wal € the west, length 98 feet. Alo
3 plantation for more than two yeas, phy that|trees, suc| 5 ias and many of Conifers; agaiust an (à alier 4 feet high and 138 feet in no
pd any violence, or offending the prejudiees | together with T — distich un and American Oaks, | They are planted 8 sare apart.
sia ig
and —— A | growing g crops eaten by elephants, The fruit garden which was the object of our visit | in the form of goblets on wire fram:
eys, and oth f four inclosures, adjoining each and Raspberries.—Cultivated in line
able to ed d the ground from the robbers. The|s sene by walls; the a — a whole is nearly «€ we dem pe — the west.
heavier animals he e escenas means of a deep t trench | 3} acres eee ears ago a number of wall walls
eane pate a AR err part o which were in bad condition, deser Per ice
just within the ditch. But the monkeys | t | nd;
n ground; trained in
nothing for ge or wall, and carried off whole ig E in im the borders round Bar of he vegetable
management, w which | is still too
shelter of the trees. dier a long time | much à adopted, the trees injured the crops, w which they
and the planter
: see the ripening Canes devoured in his vei
dure ry the wall trees, to which the ä planted.
Presenee, and the chewed fragments — — — o the ele of the, ciate they
beca:
— ene — soon me cove red wit h Moss, w which besides —
ed even por his longevity S xtent.
He chased a flock of the — M. Du Breuil was then employed to remed mera se
help of betters. ian nt on ti
. the produce of fruit.
88
anii straw coping
the
a number of the young, . — he however
treacle by thin canvas attached
108
rads iani Ms et 10 mches j of convenience this is easily enough pg uns but
8 the Kotoni of the wall. den s, owing to | where the accommodation is limited, it is b n
the manner in which che wires that steady the p cant Pine. An
laced, may easily - Ser ris d thin canvas 8 in cases where a regular supply of as E "
| grow t the p * so as to omma nd
over the bas and also’ to — able ye move the binis toa
i cooler pit or o may be ne cessar y. a ck
| ^ ter
|
e © already stated that by the new method
dopted "b M. Breuil there is a con — We
decrease in the — een for 875 D ect
ees. o
old, are dre ud ti :
ill have ice diy T: Dr P| fre ee growth, and a paci - them shou
mier | ecd their Rating pots as soon as possible.
iti and the stock be e should receive avery
D
the 1 be in fall bearing. The Use every
dicula: liers, m last year, be ans. to afford growiug stock a moist Moda ty d
pos 2 in five years; while he old mod iode |
i the. average 16 years
nir the
pleto benation of wall trees, and 14 years ofr ere Pei are to be ke ehe in first-rate 1 Give air when
pyrami s. favourable, but avoid cold draughts and use shading to |
P his s early bearing has no prejudicial effect on the assist i in ricas V down the ees without bei eing
will b
THE GAR DENERS! CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
| May T, 1839.
ATHER.AT CHISWICK, NEA
5, 1859, as observed at the Horticy:
TEMPERATURE
Of the
STATE OF THE WE
For the Week ending May 5 * LONDON
8 a tural Gani,
BAROMETER.
E
April 8 &.
and May. Z 4
Friday 29| 26 "Ec
Satur. -
Su inday
29.787 | 29.688
29.843 | 2977
29.798 | 29745
3» 901 |
2 9733
P DI
egz
EE
i
F
SAN 3
>
z
E & BE
lp *
& |?
a
A
rern Rain. LA
April il a ae clo uds,
30—Hazy ; rain
d—Qvereast; 2 th
ou yandi cold, with mou a ti
3— Overcast; clear and cold erage
3 HE fine but cold ; frosty,
e cold, , and TE NI clear, 1 der.
vs fine; o
pr creat, vercast at night.
May
5 Overcast.
gu at night,
elow the Average,
HISWIC
Week, ending PUR 18,
RECORD OF TEE wets HER ATC
s During the last 33 years, for the ensuing
o
quantity of fruit produced. On cale ulation it f SEPARAR Preval
th tl it -| Vo —In here Muscats are grown inthe| May. 83 5 gE vata Greatest a
bearing wood trained in oblique lines will be 1 same "house. with. Hamburghs and other. free setting AERIS de Be | which it or Rain z ii AC
much as if trained „horizontally ; and the perpen S F
2 7 » 6 BS
1 bloom, and until the berries are > fairly set, to Mon. 9. 616 202 50.9 13 v pa i 5| ;|-| 8
pal i Ju As B T IT Tues. 10. 620 | 398 | 509] 13 ow 36 60
2.0807 greater y 85 2 : ix Wed. 1L. 62.7 | 40.3 | 51.5 12 0.36 HP UE
Its of thet ted 1 t healthy Vines, unless they can be | Thurs. 12 .| 635 | 412 | 523| 15 970 fal ‘lays
4l „ E rider 18. 63.6 | 39.7 | 51.6 16 1.10 als 4
M. Du 2 aud carried out with rare skill by Satur 14. 63.3 | 40.9 | 521 E 47 aa
active intel — gardener at the Chateau de the M frit, It will be better, however, to risk having The highest temperature during the above peri occurred on ir
Vervaing M. — 1833 —therm. 81 deg.; and the lowest on the 8th, 1855—therm, 2 deg 7
transfor: aen ntaining a night temperature of 755, — .
mplete, lt is | varie
thet finest fruit pie establishe ed in 1 eral times. Its | whic hi ts the * of some good growers; 68? or 70°
inary extent, the mage gn 4 to am d the | will be found . at ient. Get the borders prepared |
ground and the trees, the , goo angement f the for plantin, ng out you g Vines, and if these are started
above all the application of the mproved prae tice of or it will be Lügen to prevent their ae be scheck |
modern arboriculture render it a complete model after * out. Mrztons.—Encourage those newly
garde one cannot behold without the greatest | planted out with ne moist warm atm mospher ere, so as to get |
admir | them into full gr ckly as possible ; but sis
followi wing cut, representing what the French | that are eee: Sable 3 be ER: cooler, int |
double oblique line training, will assist the reader | ting a very fav voura ‘able opportuni iy n es
wood. Fra Gv x
air P water as before, but do not Re pem over
head whose first use cold water.
er,
STRAWBERRIES.—Give abundance of air and water to
the latest c es
iem gud SHRUBB
Notw tandin g z that her has bob ome- |
what m n i$ it has lately been, it will be
wise to deter e i eiie Stock, savein ve
favoured loc: until w
8 EFT i " to Corresponden
'OOKS : J. We are not ac ae
Bock o Sa the Orchard.” "ME ees
Orchard and Kitchen
ishes mes ol
should begin by studying the rudimen
hich he will find explained in Prof. Lindley's School Botany.
e will thus bec acquainted with common plants ani
their names. When he has made himself of that
subject we e him r. If be wants a
Catalogue of the nami u
hig! «i standing it is bec they are beneat
They only o ya — among g ladies maids aud polly E
o are too ignorant to distinguish sense from
: Novice. You seem to be going on as well
as possible ; ify yore can — eos tem
it is enough. Would it not be bette cover- at
night with mats, in case of. need, — lake
i ? Jg
| | change. niin. me take —— Opportunity of exposing
pai - Mero ais s0 Mag them well har- 1 e nid, A purpura GAA
; and see that everything: is perfectly free| f zil; Ch Li hi fi a
Ser what is meant in tove diele Dy | from insects, and also have the whole of the stock oani; Chysis 1 mand ‘Cypri ipediand ila “ht
J ESNS a i so that when planting-out is com- . India. We do eee
———————— ment everything may in readiness. Push dee id
Calendar of O orward late propagated stock, an endeavour — vour e the w
| o perations. keep the whole growing slowly in their pots. It is a sect escaped,
(For the — Week.) common and very bad practice 5 allow bedding stock | M^NUnEs : Messrs. D ely & D We must decline me
to stand in i " periments upon what are called new manures. "
stand in small pots exposed to bright sunshine and MILDEWED VINERY : J B. If all your leaves are liket
T bab i ying winds but scantily supplied with water you have sent yo have — fruit fit to send to
Consrr Y, &c.—When th use contains a until they get almost dried up, and this with the view | we much her your enemy i» mildew, All that
mixe l collection of plants, which it gener: illy does, of preparing them for planting out. The plants should „ Kate watt X po
ides are usually very troublesome at this season and | exposed to the weather as freely as circumstances tection will enable the Vines to
it is always irable avi ing here. for Wi mit; but this should done by degrees, and symptoms yox describe are such as might
ides the expense and annoyance, it is n pleasant | never to the extent of browning the foliage and drying | roots that cannot act, if indeed you pe —
job to fill a large h e hings | UP, „the — -— they should never be allowed to very op been, the drops 7 x on apo o TE . p
„5 famigating may be remove gur for the want of wate en for unless the plants are Naur pared - end cad een
to a close room or put under a frame covered p out eru require endis tantly decli — hea of dried or ba ,that we
with calico or canvas ren air-tight either by care afterwan if the beds are to e covered i venturo to request, our correspondents Peg 04 at
ol a coat of boiled oil or put where the edy can * and despite every attention are s long | this kind Young 5 — ners, S win d t — T re T
much more conveniently and zh a meeting “into “free , growth. Take adva vantage of r d tha re applying to
k cheaply e sant than especially apply, should bear in mind that, emit
in a lofty 8 and therisk of of injuring th e blossoms of | showery d ys t a orough or 3 they om üld — N te tro df
uire fui ing. ining information. We cannot save l d it be
But if the enemy is be ab aner wil be n : cese HARDY FRUIT AND KITCHEN GARDEN.. C00 A
s ed he fre u ntly examined, and Proceed gradually with tl dding of Peach and that most selling -n now in future mt
the — h with those that are found tobein 8 "pia aa ä only = portion of the buds To va t ref 1 cR ion af e
in à 2 " est will sprea 1 80 un ohn M er K se ul examina
i ni 4 è sin: h rrived at th lusion that t >
= “ego E t to of its being eradicated, z EN three e times at intervals of about a week: D. Falconeri is you have e The flowers are smi
smoking the house. Should twiners Or speci ie — checkin, ng the trees ‘to same than usual, but they will probably be larger a8 v"
meus planted out in the b infested, these should adding is don once. | beo f DE wil
bes syrin the following mixture; viz., J Ib. of Lock “carefully over the „Apricot trees and destroy the Eng i 22 x
1 : o water, 6 gallons rain caterpillar wherever it is found. This - sometimes „London m Where they "- not tell you 2
ater, properly lving the soft in a portion of | "€ destructive pa ae on and cue fruit when | is the j EV 4. E i
the water. But as is some uncertaint; t th scd but t for Be in no yet to [ee k3 “Pleopeltis . 5, ;
strength of this mixti : y about bhe move the to re. hami; or more properly, a 6, A yp ologi di
plants, it should unt be mat oia ER ^ ifferent | jn found m ing tar, gom mid the crop | Can you send we & San i of S olonia
"Hoe: Ae withou ing sure en they might Clonmel. Epimedi lpinum.— . seldom: seet-
that it will not injure the foliage or young AEE d removed for n trees where en is till. eaim of oe old-teahioned. her us t now domom;
also that it ficiently o destroy the insects. Take ad advantage TEM sho er to plant P. 1, Thomasia solanacea, not Lasiopetalum tis: 3.198.
sais — i mee ny other hard-wooded | 2" ttuce, Cauliflower, & e to etting "€ : some Pim hene no reellen ®t ;
plànts, which w the Cymbi
will soon be fadin * ju rper m had be wl to
rà ä to supply their places with others in full
^ ZEALA RUN:
a RCING DEPA se Winner to the plants for succes-| have sous y proof t il is so. weit
INERIES, EE cases where a ré 15 rs | at all times well supplied 1 upon the subject, and thestatem: » "
is T may re og that i prt fr iss Sang cig MONS who knows for a ty that it isa mativo of ge
to e 88 stock of cesary COTTAGERY GARDEN because somebod ht it thence, Custard Marr
ock of plunts, frequently marking} The destruction i denco in his recommendation, As to te
those c considered the most likely for fruiting, so a m to be | at the of weeds is of th tied * nee} Gonrd u * wi € s first to eat 2225 di
er dry at the root for a nth o | demands timely ai the . — u young crops also this ountry, SX do ; ears ago when ud
80, ‘eich will, i in most e have the desi "ti effect Fer imely attention. Manure and ids all vacant ENT Ci Coat it D did not make 157
of checking growth and throwing the plants into fruit us Ke. Beate e a xe e Brocooli, Winter | known? "xs ds i ibe fm Tar
e onl aces u and j : Mi you have sent intent kind, u
i suppl in| Tuts: Mitcham. The kin Saen. I
of frait ‘at any proci Nine ie CoD alt adr ue ca CN s, also Leeks in iréncbes, simi-| Rubrorum, or King of tl ^ Rods, a this seaso D. sre n
management of the. stock, taking care to get Sp i — kor 1 9 —— IE Save vi withstood pe riecty n
growth well matured in sufficient. tim ne to alte : - "p carly now form, when th D 5
e the ipe ints a short period of com lw o rel ered be ai 3 then nf mei ther Ws ai colour, whic Tooting E
esi 0 * *
ich he only certain means of indu ucing | the weather cont qi aug of Poss Ir Es Nereus Sree ed
ues dry many thin
plenty be watered, Attend to other qoe eis
ired season. With will | require to
piik
any dm Ir refs poss x
made. We must also beg the
the insertion of whose co Ning s
Max 7, 1859.] THE GARDE NERS RS CHR HRONTOLE, AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
————————— DET W
5 E AGRICULTURAL} MA
— | E F. TURNER, E
duos = k PATEN T E uP sume for — n end 2 Ties
m = able E ot ope bs es fixed and , Portable le fro
—— ower an ; m iml
ROPHOSPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE 2 eae &
haa Lige description rn —
dapted for Som; Coloni
jt
—
and
trated Pri sts sent free on —
CO M PAN Y (Lim ITED) í VIGMA'S BEAN, MANGEL. & CORN PLANTERS
1 3 ? (5 Depositors) HOES, &c. The “ Multu Parvo," com-
e * bining Culti Pe Horse Hoe, Ridge vis dnd tenir rs
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND. share, and other forms; all expandin mplete,
Propet ero a Hurstg — ——
TRUSTEES. PEED AND ECONO ior Fan Gentlem
BEL SwrTH, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts. MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M.P., Western Colville, Linton, and ‘Market Bos eshte in the use of HOARE'S REGIS.
— Bar r Esq., — Place, Herts. Cambridge TERED HAND SEED PERGAM Ee which fi
EDWARD BALL, Esq., M.P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico JohN BRADY, Esq., M.P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq. its — combined with s ngth, nen — and simpli-
DIRECTORS. city, places it beyond a rr, rall * e powers in
* — man. J oN AS yes. Beg, Babraham, Cambridgeshire. planting the al Mangel, Carrot, uds o^ ag and all
Deputy-Chairman.—Joun COLLI s, Esq., Myddleton ique; Pentonville. small seeds i in patches of equal depth and different distances,
Epwarp BELL, Esq., Tottenham, Middlesex RoBERT LEEDS, West Lexham, Norfolk from 6, 7, 12, 14, 18, 21, 24, to 28 inches 3 apart, d 1 and
— CLAYDEN, Esq., Littlebury, Essex ROBERT MORGAN, * 72, Camden Villas, C Camden Town. rolling complets, render it an invaluable e invention. It will
ARD HUNT, Esq., Stanstead Abbot, Herts. GEORGE SAVILL, ESQ., ingin orpe, near 8 a drill wi T uired. Price
— ni H7, Esq., Edmonton, Middlesex. WILLIAM COLLINS, Esq., t. John St — — pose piens Mr. B. —— Wo, Common — ——
. BanxETT, Hoare & Co., Lombard — 2 8 = inventor, J. Hoare, Old m"
Solicitors.—Messrs. KINGSFORD & Dorman, 23, Essex Street, Strand. LI . ͤ ͤ T DS
EO ATEUR GARDENERS, NURSERYMEN, AGRI-
uditor.—G. W. Brown, Esq., 28, Parliament Street. ó T» M md AE TS, AND OTHERS. `
ger.—Mr. JAMES ODAMS, Secretary.—Mr. C. T. MACADAM. Guam PERCHA TUBING FOR WATERING
H GARDENS, from 234. per foot; Vulcanised India Rubber
Offices 109, Fenchurch Street, Lodi ancy Plaistow Marshes, Essex. in Wate ve
bing for V g G:
THE eee beg to 8 their Friends and the Agricultural Public that the following Manures | Haren c
W. R. Woops, 94, Goswell Road, near the “ Angel,” Islington,
5 London, KC. Priced Lists can 'be had on application.
3 Please notice the Address—94, Goswell Road.
ODAMS S BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL. X^LEMING'S SALTING MACH MACHINE FOR DE:
O0 ) STROYING WEEDS ON GRAVEL WALKS, &c.—This
8 s BLOO D MAN U R E FOR R TS. most useful een a i 3 —— «ode
ever it has been introdu t 7 means 0!
ae AM es SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME, keeping Drives and Walks completely clear of Weeds.
Full particulars may be had at the Company’s Offices, or of the local Agents. Extract from article “ Trentham Hia m e Chronicle of
** And I would observe in passing from these grounds that
RTIFICIAL. MANURES, &c.— Manufacturers | odd ate ron ROOT CR EOFs, of firat rate quality | the whole of “the Grass « — = . ry most pee
and others engaged in making ARTIFICAL MANURES | h Analysis guaranteed, manufac y WILLIAMS | order by the aid . — 2 » small Han 8 2
obtain every necessary instructi r their economical | & Co., T Mark — London (Established. 9 5 — 6. "e ed . dif ditas - access; the latter is kept in order by
Prince vb the —.— — plying t and d College e, includin su oe n — a SALTING MACHINE, the invention of Mr. Fleming, and judging
dition of the Gravel in every direction,
Analyses of Soils, Gua: rphos- fro m the beautiful con
I should say — it was e vm most n i
ch Ce — E E —.— REDERICK" CORNWELL —.— — ii (The Mowing Machines here referred to are SHANKS'S):
on
receiving and gricultural Tis that he can now From the Fie
miU E — ample facility and — supply: " SER E HOSE Ar Bor LI superior to anything “The Salting rari will ie or Apri 2 destroy the Weeds on
tion at the Collen n: proa —.— labia P guara nteod to contain from EE Ginvel Walks and Dei 1 ae
Cire ‘Solubl Limes Price 5l.
ONDON MANURE COMPANY, removed to 1 D delivered free y Railway or Wharf in London. Dealers ap lication to ALEXANDER 2 2 80 f. 5e ene Per Works,
Fenchurch Street, E. C. (Established 1840), have n and the trade supplied Y LINSERD. CAKES, COTTON: CAKES, | Arbroath, Patentees of ag hay Mowing. — Collecting
following MAN U RES ready for deliv aud all descriptions of ARTIFICIAL MANURES at lowest and De livering Machine for Lawns, Hot-water Apparatus
CORN MANURE for SPRING TOP- RESSING m . rices Offices, 7, Great St. Helen’s, London, E. C. ufacturers, Ke. Wis Rope à
MANGEL MANURE guaranteed P E R U V I AN GUANO "m GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE D IN-
SUPERPHOSPHA! ATE OF LIME quality. je present price of this valuable Manure is— ROVEMENT COMP n Offices, 52, Parliament Street.
BLOOD 121, ^d oe on Sor BA 30 B and upwards, RY SEYME sq., MP, Chairman,
— — the reduction in the price of raw material 3! ‘on for 1 Ton up to 30 A d s" f Parliament to
the London Manure Co. are enabled to A lower the price of| And, to aah poet. eit the purchase of —— mixtures m eg ena i — incorporate Mec P Making di the
their Superphosphate of Eis and to materially improve the | and of inferior . purporting A ae results — to | Erection of Far m Houses Farm Buildings, and Laboure:
Corn Manure and Urate. Peruvian, consumers are recommend ply either to our- Cot and other Im rovementa on all descriptions of Pro-
Manure Co. also ly PERUVIAN GUANO | Selves, to our — Messrs. Gibbs, Bright. —— of Liver- pe riy, h slot hela i in ee, or under entail, m — tn. trust,
( -from Messrs. A. Gibbs and S Sons) SULPHATE of land Bristol, or to dealers ot established character, in whose Gocléeiastical ó . " 8
R Ugo CRUSHED gora, and onesty and fair dealing they om e i 1 — — ence. d 11 is pal of e necessary,
other Manure of value. sale dealers : z m The Works be designed and executed by the Land-
116, Fenchurch Street, EC. EDWARD Purser, CES xig FOU ents or the mpany will undertake the entire
REDUCTION IN PalGe OF LAWES'S MANURES. H. J. MÓRTON AND CO, € MÀ X Iron Works, |j improcement their experienced, staff, and advance the
M — begs to announce — — has — . required for tho Equal facilities will be afforded
season c«d the price of the Mam tured by GALVANISED IRON — in citer
for Farm Buildings and other Roofs; the chea most dur- The — cost of the works and expenses may, in all
him, viz. :—
TURD RNIP from £7 to£6 6 — — est Rooting nue ; also Spoutin, at 103d. per yard. harged on the Lands improved, to be repaid by half-
SUPERPHOSPHATE or LIME «. 7 to 6 6 TRAND CABLE FENCING say i ed, paid by
5 5
MINERAL „ s to
BARLEY MANURE
Prof.Way and Dr. Voelcker have ‘sampled from a bulk of 5000 to
6000 tons at his factories, and their report and analyses ure given
in full in Circular odd obtained on — at x office,
ER Place, London Bridge, E. C., or of his local Agents.
Genuine Peruvian Gua uano direst, dis m “Messrs. GIBB$,
Strat of Soda, ican ta of Ammonia, and other Chemical
8 1 1 cake cum
ji 6. No profit is taken any Works executed by the Com-
(formed of Twisted Wires like a rope or cable), the strongest, pany, the ng 9 only, — by the Inclosure
cheapest, and neatest fence i in use, will — the largest cattle, Commissioners, being charged in all e
and will not bend or get out of form by trespass: ing upon er W.
Lian Cu FE
12. over. Price, with five lines of the Galvanised Strand, iron main ZANOLLEGE or AGRICULTUT i
axo T. PROCTOR S. TURNIP MA ANURE.— | posts, and pronged Standards, 1s. 21d. per yard. OLLEGE or AGRICUL à SET srir,
* Messrs. H. & T. P. draw particular attention to this | , This fence is far cheaper than posts and rails, or any kind o | pli Mise ge Set * — A oi Pre
valuable Mai ch contains all the elements necessary m * and possesses four times the strength of solid 38, Lower Kennington ington,
for the velopment of the Turr j Crop, so combined, that, Will not rust nor corrode. Upwards of 1200 miles of this Princip: D own p 2 5 EC. * am
Fencing supplied. every
— GAME AND POULTRY NETTINC. I: oquisitoto prepare ot forthe pursuits of quod rs
Galvanised. gineering, Mining, Manufactures, an e
* 2 — 8 and for the Universities.”
Analyses and Assays of ev ption are promptly an
accurately” — at of every descr The,terms and other
particulars may be had on application to the Prin: cipal.
The system of studies pursued in College co;
er yal
MANURES . m: qui d
33 of LIME, si, PERUVIA the best deity GALVANISED IRON CHAIN CA MP STOOLS & CH AIRS, The 5 ou
. Proctor, West of England Depót for Arti- | POULTRY FOUNTAINS & vnde PRONGED DAHLIA
„Cathay, Bristol; or Proctor & R ir- RODS AND Boga STAKES, & TURDAY, MAY ', 1859.
mingham, n P es Uer. "— Strong CATPLE HURDLES “fom 2s. per yard. x
EE ee hasbet D c o o — CEON?
MEAE, LACK, anp CO/3 CONCENTRATED TENT IMPROVED GAS MEETINGS FoR THE ENSUING WEEK. |
PAT WORKS
PHOSPHATE OF OF LIME; guaranteed to contain | of all sizes for the use of Private Houses, Mansicns, Railway
Phosphoric Acid solub! e, equivalent to 40 per cent. of Tribasic 28 Mills, Collieries, Mines, es o. Works from
PEOR Lh Lime. 500 lights estimated for.“ The works can be entrusted
van TED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to T ourer.—Apph din
ENR Ruildi: Leed:
these aap Voelcker says :—‘‘ These results I DO — — =
As and mer — best 1 of the Y very
— ue w characte!
ho Royal As "Agricultural dea — mE sonia Joseph P Paxton for for a PI zo Royal Z Zooe
on lien of Kaling
load, P 12 3 — eee COLD WI
TANT TO FLORISTS AND GARDEN PROTECTION From NDS AND MORNING
LEY AND DA WESS hat CONCENTRATED de ee ee oe Rd
ILISING MAN and Wool, a perfec in 8 of H
— Ve m np ates or wherever it is applied: Axel te
does ems all horticultural and florict
es particu 8 to this Fruits ia: Flowers eic . — iscou the
: 2 entana all the ele- | wind, fr from attacks s of insects, m : at extent, a
a rei and Hard- be had in any required ; proclamatio: is exceedingly
Seta ard run; . 38. 1 of il " i i
pectable Seedsmen, in llb. packets, | Shadi EI n. NU P s —MÓ
e 183 packs X3 at the 1 Manu | y ELISHA P Tools i Ancuta, whole and M E facture compared with
0 loose n xes O
na and tennis free by post on appli- Ki d Sootsmen th 8 a. ‘cheaper | ss of mere ou d “Likelihood. The
Wain, May
—
N almost 2
eated g
of the.
gS
E
15
Fatronised by h
he Queen, the e of er beiak
House, His Grace the of Devonshire
Gardens, Professor Linley ten for the Hort icultural |
i
i
1
E
„
pU
i
zr
H
1 155
LI
410
THE teen Be
E AND AGRICULTU
.
RAL GAZETTE, [Mar 7, 1859.
— —
statistics "x
wledge of its X
t have hin-
publication of e agric cultural
country, accurate kno
aval produóe would no
the country, stands out made as it
were more conspicuous By its very absence—unrepre-
sented, unable in such a glorious list to point 2 any
refuge for t the untortun = British farmer, any
n fin da
E even with more reg gularity du uring the exha
hat after mene 2 5 experience, a —
ni siodic cally mea would show with t ihe Wells
accuracy the quantity of w ater i in a stratu
1
o or his widow
ds gricul-
"Wh
rp
a a resting: pha z
—
18
1+
hrs ugh it te of
drawn as perfectly from the im
= as from all o
of the sind rise *
e country o
a ns as its food sets n if it can anyhow
ascert —
f|be don
she whee nation is i brimful n"
n the rear of good works? Why shou
as s agriculturists, te a bre for the rece =
"i oorer and less fortunate hy
be
cha: ch:
hot we,
tion of tho E
and our
Pen, d ‘ec ate
e
en aien foe
x we refl
My o own opinion is,
ps eA that the same he that rules
charge of subterraneous water on a large scale w
cena the discharge of water from soils b.
dra In 5
a —
a
from. —* In at unbroken g
ground pes
ason
very dier
bit — poverty whic
nas in every othe
can say tha E - es
cer-
e?
are less frequent, or his chances o pem
g ot c r 8 ted with
rain, ater will Ki vadua ally. a level
throughout ; ; should there be any depression in in he
will im pools, the level of w x
ide the
pervious to or reten-
r les
when getting in the Mangel tain. 12 then, Should hei n hiesuffering and h ist tr nt am tive of ARR rem the inclination will 9 à
Wuzzd. A is sone ied " eee n of the lat ount of friction or resi istanc ce. whi ch i
le farmer in nties, |!
throughont the length and ena of the . fei f inclination tind P a
we wee cal attention " "the erase ben vant solace — every suffering class but his own or opera rations must ^d conducted; and the |
largely extended growth of this root as compared | Let iik Bliss | + d the depth of d ;
id the S. EET common n Tar amip, The diffi- Let u us rem ove e this r TO: bach us grea at p ween an je depth o rains deter .
With « of theo table a list, whi up e influence and | practice o teo...
culties which are increasing in the way o is rae d the dignity d eee demand, [I am assured | soil above the “subterranean level, |, which ‘shows ited
E n whether they be e and the bare mentio uch a project for the ameliorati e ground at every furrow; the difference between
J the pis nt „itsel M ac S. and ES relief of bus de hile at complain not, | the partially drained ridge and the undrained furrow
attributable e deficiencies in — 5 the will spee edily realise such a appy an uch-needed | is too well known to need any comment
viruleuce of inseet attacks, seem as like *r Towards the fulfilment of such an in the remainder of the paper, was to sho
the f: * s the merits of object I have received promises of hearty and zealous | efficacy of deep over shallow drains, at a time when the
the to draw | support from — — — ing — —— md point had not been decided in favour of
him, A crop of: 30 tons, which i is more easily ob- implement ma n the kin my argument was founded on the theory of the
tained than another K — 20— which i is as useful cordially mie "with the suggestion, a Y Y mow water line. ere is another condition of
for either — eep, e requently found in this neighbourhood
months — ha “AS 800) | as sufficient be noticed. There v tensive bed
goo
other voile in four or five, oug
mand a more rapidly increasing cultivation than
replies. are received, a publie
ee appel See and then
I have good reas recognition
of clay to the north of the Chalk or
which form a large portion of the counties of Ber
and Buckingham e
and — np: of the
is from localities known
btaining. =
0 is ubt the difficulty in its way is
the mewhat more liberal manuring, if | c. e with pe
x to end it to tke good will ofa imt- parts, as here in Oxford and its wegen
the sul nent « crop of corn is not to suffer t roses tts frie We E fi ue add | clays are covered with a drift or gravel, reine í
its tha But it Mes urists and Tem 8. e therefore only a X
to land. er that any who are sposed to join the movement water, and conseque tly requires 15 be drained, Ibis
all the farm manure fhat ma fitin don Ade "en — to him at Tiptree Hall, found that the surface of these clays undulates it
8 eimh aud dépend PTS NE P certain directions; hence if drains. the le
ate | 7 way of these undulations the . is stanked ba
rather than ran as Ta has vators in — up T UE EU ee by the ridge on either side, so j deep dra
the oe 8 unties always do of m À MÀ Mairie will draw only a short Sit w je dra a be
erop altogether, however liberal onchuded from p. 393.) e water e
the deis o fon Ho the du - Ix the yar 1840 I desi gnated this inclined line the| these subterranean furrow hat a a
VIE or in the v wey — 5 s give me a better term and I will use it. The e — is Foha " Yi the opposte 5 —
00 ^ » 8 j
£ à n th i 7 t abour and t he This x r alates the 8 of all subterraneous ge ologist, . that DL . Au
ES | throug winter. The h ting | water, is. OF Whigh i never Iove. fe
addition o — — Nen pr roofs sont bé brought forward to show zm im of | V
bill of October and November r—but i
ut, Kimmeridge and Oxford , clays, and —.—
Mr. "Mzcnr's benevolent object needs no word
0 MM 8 asd ro referee to it, s E
i he Ke stem, 2
rs and breeders of stock of Campi — —
Per cw nue =g — summer, There
waters in the eart tarded
1.41
eythorpe sy
rie d for universal 88 d
If the rth w
in in their exit, springs would fail what their waters: are
eg. and o ur rivers would be hke
|
far as my ‘own n experience and observation
right in
rom frost than
—
an
5i
waters
rudes babes ——
ke ce
m The actual inclination of the water level is best
„ascertained by Rs be Kan ee da of wells; the! level at
s quite
that the raining to ‘eonditions of the soil should
by experimental dra trial holes, but there?
| reason to believe that i in I wails except! when e
by beds qus or gravel, there js any ren
tion,
which
— — . M diete water is
JE ch
cutting drains in pi ction, except that e
bodie inp water 55 “
the escape of subterraneous pen. Spin e 4
nti
ties are
6 and
—
of straw 225 all
— a
irian impermeable prim —
S ick the water is found. There is —
in mms wel
those
1, namely, un
think, fail
cannot, „
. — d lg ie
brooks or bourns.at high levels, cial
chal dite , Though many strange theori ries Ti 85
——
e -hearted m: an who hs — > it,
do — — = its nantes -
[d The following is
yai like * England, teemi
thropy, and exhibiting su viene, ee gratta
in the profusion s her ch where pati s art:
commerce in all it extended we ena th the eln
the naval an milit itary professions
E to its pn Chee erected and ai ede by
nty of those who ose hearts
8,
urch,
point with |
bef found on ascertaining x relative levels at
bow urst out where the surface of the soil
age at Mex tbe — sme
bourns may » etid b: —
pec ES & inii xad rite — —
m
He
ve spoken of the condition under
us mde cu
their free
er | struck teh the he rapidity » wi
—
nage is
doubt rm — but
soils, sa ays the wg! ot eu
that
yo e; it
er m
Ig evaporation ; eei nbn bota v
diam: into the earth; the reason I
rte dy Re capillary attraction t0
iod ae
emm
Be Aua ag
charity, ¢ ture $ where, by ther
containing w.
itself to them: if the sce
ii
presence of free water in tie
proving the action
T | the natural s
prings,
ken eod eee
— * the wall —. an cared for, and —
y | level at vari
water i in the ear earth.
ious —
springs w I
s the natural adj adjustment of
— variation in
Pedir em gene-
crime was misfortune, is ebab
comfort, Whi le c this
wide-
in-
z as she does the most im-
rally as of exhaustion a
“replenishment. by rainfall takes
| gradually rise iu a great
from the vent or ontfall
very remarkable TH ;
of them
in M when | se
the level will
portion as the distance |
; this is marked by a
the same e process will
which havi
and which I — suites d
— information, namely, that
ractio —— again
which have been carried
scending water; “this may
t
ex
take
spring water, and may be seen in the.
aer by a white deposit on t9" ^
Max 7, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS'
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
—
411
Frvancrs.—Mr. Raymond Barker, chairman of the , as they do, loped treasure of ammoniacal an
cene eet xe error Finance Committee, . the report on the phatie fe ane y Those gifts tave mot yet been availed 2
cue TR hare more e" rid of this pest, my idea P those Subte terranean treasures at our dis —— e gone rho:
of ploughing 5 current cash balance in the hands of the bankers was | of the weet cultivation of our stiff clays would give an
being that I would —.— zi — E. ret" $ ee 5837. 1s. Sd. ave eret Ye * ot. sont 4 to 5 5 inches—all below this may be
us required I wou clear it all out, but in 2 known an: be hi territory, itis is Sod
1 n ‘o and t that ie sun Faer bate Haa | did Country MEETING 1 —— — The re of the I at after fer Hae the filtration o E ono of water and
: ve the hole of the till (after havmg been read ‘and — mae de gradually. rod certainly aerate and improve the
mo ‘ res ived fi 7 Crovd on, Guildford, is i the process is too slow for these quick moving ti
hing) With di e seufller ” rubber” or M Re dub mea . that the Co ountry Mee — MÀ y to di des. ead — saturated masses by
atmosphte: »osure. ens mass
beer: — — * te steven umm itcr did at in 1860 should be held at Canterbury, = * that infinites — niit Se p at ted by pulverisatiom s0
8 he Mayor of that city entered into the usual that.the millions of almost impereeptible Abres m
a e depth an scufile immediately, then ditto | ment TE li fhe S o 5 ry of the Bois br: ihe x themselves without anay to the hitherto in. Bee ai i
crossways, followed - a xA or eat harrow, then a pair of | Monthly Council on the 1st = Jane, — deputations | Pat fertilising ingredi eal tights, ghe 8 to eMe, and d
harrows, — E sty a e ill 5 light t harrows. if the consisted of the following me — of ai that at passes 6 "y posed clay a
weather and ot Presiden it its toübilgie, and in —— toes. it with ammoniacal and
be pape. = the Twitch that has been distributed East S 1 aes — Serge m Kim, Es: cie | fertilising gases, As you follow the steam cultivator on a dry
will be see: ai and can be — -= a Worten, Esq. ; John Sutherland, eat The Rev. E. F. dap i iantancous e — qq anke y» nostis, o
x it is advisab Brynon; Wm. Godsmith, Esq ; Thomas Farley, Esq.; Wm, | Vince you that the earth is a great apothecary's s! "d of
gat * can, i it one o; Can iledine, Esa, ; Mr. John W Wod -R1 Riel harda, Hon 8 chemieal compounds. The rough and lightly laid fallow
two children follow each — and if 9 2 —.— Canterbury Deputation.—Lovd Sondes; Sir Walter James, |? E Ara — and imparts uA -
should be persisted i or three —— — Twitch | Part.; Sir Norton Knatchbull, Bart. ; William Deedes, Esq., dn y playful » ry — coe ok the ——
= be no m uble than any other co : n weed ; TA x Bk m Bart — n. E but e atmosphere. ‘Ths rusty looking WOR of our Ded
negl " ver s fol " i . ^ d Canterbury; Major Munn poor ela; ls makes y claim upon the passing
— pe = Faten — the wo will — in- PE M. Fine Esq. ; ; Robert Lake, Esq. ; Thomas Cooper, Esq. ; — — — gets —— * Se
credi y and seriously deteriorate the so id mas Philpott. 8 "e ef ais
add hine. Jethro prince of. 9 de
e Scri duh Bone nia; C- Goldemit di diuo; want of artificial drainage defeated all his calculations. The
to the aliit a of nage it. Teltch! is an pes: Fr us J. lom W. Eborall, — Rev yx Lois Weedon, is the great — p of =
enemy, n i — nat on our s
must — h it E —— — e Guildford Deput: tion.—Farl of Lovelace (Lord Lieutenant of oo clays culti : Itivatio wae hed re be "n a NES
ES : h L 3 acting on f Eeonviotiom after I rained my land, I broke
must — it how fields or it will disgrace us. a fitus M i ey a sins Cue, Det Constan, it ehe get six other horses following in the
Twitch, Heiri "Au, and Thistles efore — Said of Deanston’s great subsoil plough. Our
farming, but with bad farming they flourish and super- Y. ren Hos 'oskyns, labourers called it a little earthquake, and my crops have never
sii ris Cho dido th t fe m dimer of "the | Chemical p mittee, Miser the | forgotten it; but forall that I saw how costly was horse-power
corn; they e cos S cultivation, while the when cultivation was atte Mr p amp a à it was
produce is diminished. J. W., Deb recommending that the E ge Te- | that we should yard deep of cultivation,
Couch tin s rivi of analysis be 3 instead of 10 or 1
]—viz. 3 1
„W. H. S.“ I be = td say P he will proie nis | 5o he Intention of the Counci al Doubts about Steam.—1 confess T
bibit directly the corn is ent to put four horses abreast rep m bota analyses E an bar r the bond fide | v very much astonished mie M Cb e friend, Mr.
on to one of Coleman's scarifiers, an A
mith,
progres, should dese
L consider
na! of far
investigation by the Society's Consulting Chemist were
recommended :—
— e changes that t
oxi a
ake place in liquid manure in passing
ugh different soils.
for Wheat
fot; 3 mure p 8 rn
and Barley. ttained.
"shines. C
k it off. itl, yo ant time your land |
if it
acter Soe teins
= is impossible to deny with truthfulness tha
5 experimen nts on the nature and Fowler’: d Mr. Smith's plans are ctically proven
stables; th s to be allow dos n on it, no matter i — of cultivated — ps. 3 saled win — of — — nd — both in
how full en laid a winter in the ame | F — 2 effect, b award and of the Royal Agricul-
bottom of the yard there will be plenty of time for ali] o Ar. Ra „ hair. | these plane, 1 um sure i Sin pay Y —
kinds of seeds to swell, and after it has up ea wdc f ime * i i
" h 3 : of sa Tie re itt enge t fixed steam-engine I shou once e prac
man of the - ommi ee, presen: e repor as artt
into a hill in the field requiring it, such a | a eply disturbed,
ion 1 or seeds of any kind can | | to the repairs required in the drainage of the house. but I suppose I must hire a portable n a pity-af-the
possibly grow. I advise, if you have nothing | Wa ARWICK MEETING. —Lor aig vice- chairman of! a at a v olo MM S mentio ——
> the G W. | fa in Ju r.
to t your dung on the land; the E General loug! — — c attach ; cultivated wo stetches of
will run on nicely now the land is fir Yo f the Committe fa —— — — field on which Wheat was to be sown
can then h the dung in at your ares leisure, That Mr. Bishop, of the Regent Hotel Leamington, ci. in October. Alt — ren feld had been formerly subsoiled,
time bef. . d supply the first- class refreshments for the — in the and forked by manual labour, Fowler's subsoil brought up =
y ore Christmas. In the spri ngs when the show yard ; and that Mr. Cole, of the Horse and Hounds | ex to view some tindisturbed nasty ochrey rusty sul
land is dry and will bear the horses well, give it — | Inn, Warwick, short supply the sound — ee x gricultural friends woul —
— — e — and th ments, subject to arrangements with the honora cue uld d say notning would on it, but mark the
tch will not as fast in the mad Direc! f the Show. esult. October or November the Wheat was duly drilled
mI. e spring ntumn, so | 2. That th eed of entry cheese, wool, ai oer the whole field; as soon as it came up, and in every stage
Sur, — ren ae om es if you will
the Gazett
oa 9 serait ts that | 1859) in Wheat again, and in this early stage of growth, two
erre — — and good, pad been made for — My men — — ME.
say S lbs. Wurzel hee to the acre. = es rjr ami TE commencement of the show yard by | Bat ho can seriously doubt the benefits of ; on
You are sure of a yc as the — will be full of moie. f . ne clays after — —— *
TwPLEMENTS.— On the motion of Mr. ubi dexina, a
ture. No a how d r, but don’t ARD or € and dry, the intermediate spaces were dark and damp.
in wet; if you do the Pee, e — t you have it d — by Mr. John Hudson (of Castleacre), | It was deep cultivation that did this, producing facile aération,
— the plant has its rough leaves ing. Rainy | Mr. Edwa was elected one of of | jme capillarity, and rapid ion. It proves that a
soon makes them fit for the hoe. Now let us| Implement à in — place of Lieut.-Colonel Towneley, | yard when H m crt ond ny fond 1 — -—— — car Wi ; —
have a a look at the ex xpense, follow wing is an esti- ed to the Council his regret that he | Pars sida "ne a whose — — — 13 den 6 inches — *
th | and e t no present
aclean one. There will be no xs say on des Tur- — i. idea as depth of eultivation and e shall
nips or Wurzel, but nevertheless, as soon as the crop is|, STEWARD CF Live Srock.—On the motion of Mr. — imately amive at with ith steam power. -W hy did that Parsnip
visible, the horse-hoe to work, — dont let | it stand Brandreth c seconded b Mr. Geo eorge Turner, | of 14 feet. Tt had — 4 a brick-earth pit, filled up with soil
still the crop is too big to get cut, and then Mr. Fisher from the adjoining land, when it w cessary to open a new
will be sure to have one. Comm Mx mirma or 1861.— On the motion of Mr. due isn —ͤ—ͤ— —— — — — — —
i —.— . 258, Gd. | Brandreth Gibbs, a —— from the Se ecretary | m tende us, The shilling flail is superseded ed by one that
H vy harrowings .. i x of the Crystal Palace, i — relative to the Society's | costs 3001, — —- and profit. Who is to say that
1 3 proposed MÀ MÀ ing in the year — was wo shall mot have = — . wil
Clearing and carting stubble into yards - x 8 0 refe aad o the “ Met an Sites — dm t — 1 — — 3 LB result?" Toit.
a three — 9.0 List. — popa with. the Scion the | were astouted ien Vo wies mans irte -plou gh. dra: as
1 heavy ele rane ^ tio — 5 Es MER m m A un DOCE
llightditto .. . 0 6 M — b. adoption at the ensuing E m indeed did CH — i my admi-
parey . TI Tg. x ri "n 3X1. Yd or | Fonoi a — m ps
N Carting manure tl as heretofore, the 1ith inst — * Lx realisation of what agriculture once considered a romantic and
ow attention ^ sy Me any chance you cu a — of | d chimerical id: If my anticipati are to be realised, let
the in the land after this; — mme mark : Cia id ow drain — van -— their “
as this is yonr game ; send your bane er: nS Oj EM
vibe fet to tal take it up, and fog cook it! Charles LOND May 2.—The Advantages of Steam in Position, as an agriculturist, brings to
— le. Hope, Essex. (Mr. Bates’s figu A pe e flowing is the greater portion of the | anxious and intelligent inventor, whose sl
is w.
Fe
per read by Mr. Alderman Mechi :—
pà and absorbel by 2 one — and who
2 While the agricultural e is congratulating Efe ——
for this neigh-
anguishes for — ‘wherewithal è
ical bearing t houghte-
3 EE Monsieur de la "Tréhonnais is holding | us up to his
Upon. The man we have is y sober, and | your humble servant is lamenting our
gnorant, and from. the conversation I have | backwardness and imperfection. his ae of
e and large farmers, I feel confident | sentiment may be readily accounted for. They compare |
— men would ‘he toe the Apaan with, the — With them the extensive po my Ant
district, — i por of progress. With them the — —ö—
C D de — 2 — J. pail 3 ve rule. With me they do but con- —
ou should apply to — demn it, and point to its - ndment. We paf — do A
— ee, at the London, eet oid and the New = much 1 of our e f.
eterinary colleges respectively.] 3 7 districts suy tis aa
feed. | but that —
Societies | cold, stiff, tenacious clay, 15 or which ae
i soa | drained, is to my certain kr: in a most M MÀ
* . ͤ iplescaieof tenant, and the country at large. the pobli — ms
Dae : sday, Moy 4.—His Grace | Now, it opinion e dn su w s the
ol Marlborough, improved, dd most „
ki. THE GARDEN “es dp AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTP,
ower : par red with st steam In the great t Cornish pumping operations of cultivating aud c
economic in com- | to the depth of from 6 toT diee. es, cultiv voting, or Or Smaak
ar - p 3 Ibs. of cee hour will | acre, d siderably che epee chakra hó e of 14,
— at four hours“ — o believe that c € : : rse-power, 1}
i NOT RE reg 1 hae e I have
on ordi
of our agricultural newspapers. The steam-press is developing | powe
steam cultivation—drawing t the bern of "s the lag-
behinds of agriculture, vd making them progress in spite o
their prejudices. I have no fear but that each ien for | produce one 7
rding 18 pan ges ba^: would exhaust a
i i al ci
=
vol : ing even
erits. i i uid do as much heavy 5 forma. On our i
8 will but look M it. I recently saw Mr. 1 Bien wor ps T5 horse whic i ggera "X E J ail eat 240 tons can be carried ons
k i mon portable vian 8 which are e stoker, pant: and T minutes’ tj
i ha; xed ' condensing on the qus mon akan rs atv: Compare this with ime of
rder, Tibet a den 1 E mount to 7l. per mile! whieh Pc
to ne horse-power for 24 Ibs. of coal, or 21d. The trials
an abour, i£ of these engines by the Royal Agricultural Society, as reported Saving of Food by Steam Culture.—A dimi i
md Leue Tope, 48. Kopo was LS byt he ju 0 x pti bout 5 Ibs. one-thir more of our Mirage ge = ution of
finger, hs of an inch e-power per hour. = ad M miller assured me | the foo — man a vast extent of o Set free for
oa * I Ro o! ; — heard heavy 1 0 farmers ^ — they that he once, for a wa f corn wi If S ps ik,
5 ave horses without feet ; Mte the | 14s. 64. worth of coal, Shiah would k goth — 2d. per quarter, or | of its availabl a 1 i roduce of
h steam, w. re 0 abou tid. p r bushel, coe e w that with the common Cornish | acres mre 3 that something like 2,5000 r
e init e; farı orse e population. Spackman
alke: us
b w i
he operations farm on a gra nd pst by s a in fact, that almost everywhere a s
nd 4 ,
t
entirely novel w Having witnessed the operation the wind or water-mill, and in addition e have t steam indi 1 L
I was struck with i — Vat and unerring accuracy ; mine. — of irr m v te E con ing ro : rin t d ae SS Ky chaft: ‘cutting, D
nes orke i a ay, i x
of work done, as well as by the 8 of the may befüiriy — that Sae hots power worked 24 hours own sewage sb, pis „ hav
whole power of the engine without rope, and with a is equal to the labour of six real horses for the same period. enlarged upon the vital niri to thi ye
mere fractional friction. Every one . sen n Mr. 8 — m Atlantio temer That, eam det night = sewage-irrigation from our towns, that 1 wi ill ina a
Halkett's paper read before the Society of Arts must would require 6000 real horses to do the work. To imagine to my brother farmers— A.
have retired with a conviction that the subject was | what space so — pem — require, their food, water, Consider the a Ei F daily folding on the res f
r of the most peau nd consideration, and of a fair |atténdants, bedding, barn and shoeing, seems an im- I ell-fed hum — o ), and add d u n
4 possible absurdity, d 3 practical Mie N a farmer uses a mal de eposits “in oe wns, v all the
——X trial on a large scale. liec odere ne ePi y Ax: L tally ludi — e thee — » m 3 other waste pro-
1 equ udicrous - a y estimate s
have pe do this ana An 3 N 5 7 — embarrassmonť. Pp pitting these treasures to flow awa; sto these, ae
tions. When I see that S ceca ana e tame Ai and what is 4 “willed” by agriculture, and the engineering difficulties will
— ded speed of 20 a an Vous a whole mile for two- Keam engine to do on a Farm ue n I speak of the eiie 1 8 5 — — Fa s the excrement of human
panny# ih ex 1 1 feel that the 15 ld in 05 application of steam power in 3 I assume an im- bein send a mals the so that it is in a condition
the —— of oP ote ibid would: ba $ neten t Mim 1 107 proved and profitable condition of agriculture, very different to flow away, "dum "without pim addition of water, Watford
and teir, and first cost of his pr railway. - I exhibit from that which unfortunately generally exists; but let me Rugby, and other towns, will bear witness to the facility with
á photograph pi the machine in 3 performing várious eight a Metros tie and v om — ned farm of 200 acres or | Which this de. eration UA. be affected, a tit must be done by ^
fariá If oi duly costly railways pay the share- g five of m re(I make more than 10 — e -— why I mention it in this if
helders an pe tro 775 and yet take us as cheapl Hee the Tabonrer maker 32 score) ‘there will be plenty to do A s ingle e g 15s. worth of coals every 5
as the old coach, p Gores Pret of our time, is 74b Erant c ish. Oats, k Rape-cake, cut and steam 2 b 000 40 ‘gallons o of “water, and then forces it throughs
. utopian to imagine that similar — — — produce agal chaf, thresh n and d dress corn, pum water, and, if opportunity | 12m ch pipe toa tank a mile distant, and 150 feet above the
effects in agriculture? Is not tim Appio offers work irrigation pumps, and if you add to this the culti- engine. Now it is a quito clea ear that about the same power and
labour, as much money as S on — — MSS NAR: the 'soil, air 8 bored: -power engine will not have à 232 size ree would re-distribute eme a
2 By-the-bye bye I have just heard that Boydell’s traction engine Se REGAL UI Ji sès 8 — — to your neighbours enriche à gei he i tho Mod t s e same quantity of water when
E - corn i i a i
n ring oals into Manches ewe 1 e a way the money I receive in in 5 ium a ‘culture compared ings of Croy 4
Way buffers and spriugs were not attached to the machine s, so that my engine only costs the wear and tear and in his *O D anufactu oon —Spack-
when it had to draw tas BS cim IDO ee eee SHE doge ai my work, irrigation included. is “ Occupations of the Pepe, pi
buffers and springs, our railway: engines would be breaking | f, nce harvest I have ground more than 300 quarters of com agricaltaral inter i in la 900 and tenant ied
t erc mo much bief by sudden concussion ising Ay ca N 8 put is os nothing. — United Kingdom ,0002., v
as much as 10,0001. 2 075 own the chaff, cake, &, when steam :
=n nie, — eo my aid TIARN Tas inventor "-— ^ cme LT guns ie fair it will koop sweet and i ings oaa manufacturing intere, 2 Wale
i on 1 ` ^ according to the bulk of the mass, and Quies c WIRES
Yorkshire, br but a lar 8 is yet required for its fall o Animals li ei it better. On a farm of 200 acres there ought P Although I think this is exaggerated, there can be no donbt
daveloumen t is intended, I believe, to fit with Boydell’s | steamed b 00 tons of straw, to cut into chaff, and to be | that agriculture is by far th yes st interest in the ki
^ wheels, ar something Pea Say | 8 principle. I. 8 etel aoo cames iby y the waste steam, from the engine. The time will | But is it the most intelligent and unprejudice * 527 Fi i
* -A Boydell's severe indis . n we shall w. r bullock sheds with steam in If I were to test this comparatively, 1 should estimate it by the
unwearied o: : In Auction angini, 1 chong d ee n the e urers warm their mills, and in N of steam-power which it employs relatively to the
che. following from Mr. Hall. who has used Fowler's | fanner through d pay well to drive a circulation of air b; ther great producir t country. Let us ses
hfor some time. It will be seen that he works at very annerthroügh the cattle houses, and not a fly will be seen | how the matter s ble :
pressure;— —— n — — nor any disense. There is no doubt that during summer | mate — im
JJ. .
r | » ; 2 orses TEE |
22 eee reas [pen aac tq ̃]¾ . a
` — wh le dra en of in nt recoi of 100 horse-power,... .
— Aes ey row w plough, by the wire-ro| d or or tripled | MENER wilt demand ta 188 0 son at dou doubled ye Armed 5 Xavy, — ships; 15 : ncm A
rid E ELE nd” "| Ab Ss —
" 7 or water. ur li Now, if Mr. Spackman is right, agriculture sho 5
Feeder eed ve Pfowlers( irked: by. Baydelts:whecls Gain in Time and Opportunity n Sees pn Cole INE OF Borse power, aie M 48,000. In these dus
iced peii abs A e = amo) 9 To work 10 Although, irrespective of the above — 5 p psc cv What ele im agriculture mp
no TERRE : ot wake sos horse-power, the question | oe d — — that Mami could not master. kewi
EM a quarter o ecomes insignificant in compa y day, two 18 horse-power engines, Wini
aus whi i eile the damage dono to the land 13 her ko How nity. " parison with | ET Pe one “emploged entirely in wp "" aud E ~
be enabled to proceed into any field, without (rici ion—butto| Nothing can illustrate this De ord: from floor to floor. "h rege n $^
is a mos , Ehe Bde — i
valuable „ t Smith, ydraulie squeeze.
acquisition. My fixed engine, worki of. Woolston, in one of h ower, caused a bal which,
pressu P or a: = ae ae his stea ultivator, He says, zy have shows that 2 eriat 8 pm a bale be preg Pre y 4;
st Barley-stones, — de bushels pec — ur; prex Eran . 20 dagen clay require the work of an 8 h ower en, ney, ach in agriculture as in any ot ^
. tones. pios 4 bushels per hi ur dach. —1 remain perform e: find from practice it would require 35 horses to | occupation. the average of farms at the or
;—Yours very truly, d ne 1 ine or 8 $e time. " C 5 five horses for 315 depth of cultivation, the number of steam-engines che n f
i E IA oes not include what | wou enormous for cultivation alone; but if our! XS
a RE Performed the sume quantity 5 othr: ca be do he apparatus i in the spring and summer.“ In (as they ought to be) moved to a depth of 2 or Bí Bet”
r esame quantity of work as the Bewt. at rds, as a farm 225 acres would only have eight or | indeed, t be the requirement of steam As
aes s. three: fou nns of his stubbie land would b .| ordinary f cultivation i pg Our
Binds the uu 3 the 45 fin e un 1 tivation is under 5 inches, "f
prudent to reduce the = pwn, in 1845, Lave thought it October. Tt is only tho 2 . quadrupling Out sion qp c
x T of altare who can suf- ivation wou e equal to an immense "UR.
Comparative Value of He DNE Poor ior dior appreciate the — this loss of aération, territory, without additional rent, tithes, i fa
We are much in „ filtration, consequent 5 a — present, in our stiff undrained clays, all below fve inches 8 8
à lo Mey Bes c1 Aces for his | °° consolid ation’ of stiff clays in damp weather m | terra incognit ile is shown by u
able paper 4 1 the cost * horse po v oyak tal know them pti c: the exclusion o seul air, whose T prio. | "going oe en d Ma ues mete A
e Bouety's last Journey, Da tf 3 — SE ma f this, by steam í probable:
. ** are egei aigi any | cul min dry rath Bes he es a great gain. itr Sm Steam erste ating” the proba.
JU c S —5 various
power is at least from 50 t ie that hors comparison of and "steam: power contin an n amount o ('iteaxicpowa ue generally i n our var"
om 50 1 calculation, t thas four h g
cent. dearer than our hours of unremitting draug! 3S ides t; 1 rcial operations,
steam, where x — 155 brou t to rest is è day's work for a med ne A t wit T T istrial manufacturing and e it rid other
t e the com "ne — Mud bore ped ume s ice of four ho ina lino L scs Meier Pie fhe anks to m p oficial pae
hey would ridio ale the i ye he he ger you SEM ai dendi the aie — pole ceremony of turning at the riends fo kindness with which they have
you cou Sikes. clothe for horses With wot dar ing and threatening to get the Statistical facts at my disposal, an for
What a — wa page rown wwall-pleugbed ‘pair horeg etn ghe MM pies they have otherwise afforded to me
cheap, untiring, power, and is uis = Li S entes May t tranquil morning been highly amused UT tee —— n Med c
s ta e een a pair of knowing fat Ware Bad PRA anchester, there are s. 50,000 steam-e estet —
cultiva good- ut indignant ploughman. agriculture owes a deep debt of gratitude to Manchet opery l
Now, you can never get comb “Boxer and Wiolet,” * ed ejaculations of} Th find that .
S - r al iolet, Woitee" and “Hike, ope she will repay by similar means. I fiud Pe e The
horsesinany number, When first — Med Qeon e ringing the morning air, the h me hither,” | miles of nger railway employs forty locomotie ayar.
$ stiff SES , before the E e tried bomb wot SH their effort to pull for the plough Z especial number of miles travelled on our railways peii H
confusion —— en — Babel of | à small ci iu. . — steam vill destro accompanied by Biana e bes t — cing is | nol boen n effected ;
draught the outsiders compressed those in the centre iculture, and exa codes 5. and tte it
those in. y give it : b use of coal: the furnace-dvor is left o
cloud of yore arose from the excited and the c z The Great Jaw of St t Pom . — . strikes EE ainst a deflecting-plate, "rhc throws it
pare this with the tranquil grandeur of a 20, 50, or 500 the Judges’ report of is proved 4 surface — 0 Puis and causes. perfect COM E of ;
2 In comparing horses with — — Show comparative trials at the Chester | smoke. a hint which might foni . ett
rse thout int be Pt i uc
rest, for 4} bours--hat. work 8 eee ission or Hay cut into chaff "^ | agrion earl § on ibe. <= by Tho air Das ? e gives ©
de kept for les because a large well rre ———— Roots cut — aei a Ai ie Ibs. in three . more heat than fet hot coke. S |
steam — pé he al Let us see what my own Do. for 8 se ORO * Conclusion. — pologising for me Rein
and my engine is not of the latest im — 1 — on sp ied AES M » » remarks, T u will think with mex
in use 10 years. The exact measure ot ich nud 8 toen: Thick —— broken . 165 » » proved that steam is not only an sci.
e i — » y . f :
perhour My own engine evaporates gil 60 Ibs. of water dressed ee TOL »* » necessity for agriculture, and that Jt ability
therefore, gives 9 working 10 hours pet hour, and, Whe: eat threshed and dressed red sufficiently availed of. A great repo har,
is i4 to 18 Taai pei workin ng five Kos urs per My. "m I Barley threshed and dressed T00 90 — —— ge 3 minu 85 in this matter to those :
> ve
r urn half a ton n of dust coal, at 95. pa e he —— results as these could not be obtained by x lie das
artage $a bork. E and men are well “ up to the m 55 ese trials the machines annual mos that the M
hene the utmost; and the engines in rid E tA ene — to b s tenantry, and t 5
sii ates Horse-power would cost 1 71 6 ing aalo e for these ci nnai&poes, el ; but even mak- | pat . character in te rel
2 abourer at 23. day manages my engine ds it, wonderfuleconomy. Every farmeroughtto reg is, indeed, a | that exists, a heavy responsibility re
—— it. How = ich more would it cost to sites d on P pi gasps ei at m y ern Society's Jou ndy the Judges’ ( the soil ; his example and encon
T eight ion are rex : : :
these entert it is is only ih. agric etiem What. gush 56 ertetio, Dut) byw 8 to three- iore N 1 MR n 6 inches | and almost demanded in this ee tle
1 I must say I 2 id ha pe 9 88 Hr 1 neto 12 Seton Seep cud. "i for men to exe g m
D N a z tad 4
oa et pu r has taken so | in the latter case was a 2 T iue gin over horse- See e removal of proj dices; yh be
endurance bility of horse. | Howards’, of Bedfords’, Smiths — trator Por the Y nt suo. this may
the 750 explained by late
qur 7,1959]. IHRE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 413
lo converted u poor tenant and a miser- ;
Serf who onverted a poor serae wle and m| PATENT LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MACHINES.
atly increased rentals. We have modern rers
Tui etes auis inmate SAMUELSON'S LAWN MOWING MACHINES,
UM mon ME ur coe NU. woh WITH BOYD'S PATENT IMPROVEMENTS.
their p — ä à. Lens
p be follow wed HAM present, od E Doing the work of five or six men.’ The Times, Sept. 20, 1858.
tate
ie
the sawing and preparing of the tim ber of a
nsid and I re t
t 1 : The following PRICES include the Carriage to any Railway Station in England :—
hirteen years ago with the workshops and ma hiner ry
2 Duke of Bedford, at Woburn, whose y farmeries
ceu the
| With Boyd and Samuelson’ "s|
Patent e Sharpen- |
g, and Adj
|
cottages, and hedge-rows are as andi g e | Adjus in
general agrieultural non-improvement of this kingdom. | ratus, |
In conclusion, agriculture has been, in the matter of g inches wide, for very narrow borders,
steam, backward, miscaleulating, and ungrateful. The without 8 wheels 1 n : 1
K H 1 7 i- inches wide } »
statistical comparisons which I have made are humi 16 inches wide, within registoro 4 arrange’ | j
liating for British agriculture, and when I say agrieul- ent (for one man) 5 10 0 6 60 E
1 mean landlord as well as tenant, for property | 19 inches wide, ditto (for one man) 5 17 6| 617 g 5
its duties as well as its rights. When I see that 8 vide, — m e ES w 600| py E i
landlord, tenant, and labonrer are ueber 2 ran f red Aad draught im — for y — 3 :
manufacture for cheapness and abundan a : alm ws and a man to w SES k 0 | E E 6 8 i
hes wi ! 3
every necessary they Lene both T an 5 1ysical, | 25 ine |
do — that common gratitude should induce} 30 inches wide, ditto (t rinde pag A i n um
them to adopt Berite means to feed abundantly and Box of Tools, Oil Can, and other requisites,
cheaply the enlightened manufacturing — $ Pd ow Hf aao thou ve ple — einen
whom they are indebted for those benefits. M of Royalty, “the 3 = Gentry
cultural friends may think me somewha Sesto in | the Unit 5 and t e Continent
S i Y riends | of Europe, and are oot ne
these my observations, but they are our best friends | 5 poan tor e pf draghi
f efficiency, and d ardbility. The demand
g
E]
$
4
E,
[-]
QU
A
occupation would be gt ai
| terms of their efficiency.
£ s Tbese are the only Machines that will
Calendar of Operations. cut wet as well as dry Grass without
APRIL AND MAY. clogging the —
UTLANDS Apri 22.—Wheat generally looking well. | Orders for 1859 should be —— at M
Spring crops very . w, and requiro rain and war — — 3 4 = — t. delivery and to pre ve
land in fine condition for Y ae Arti - al mart — s con: Lp ee
tinue to be used to a considerable extent, notwithstanding the
r ty Aud gor o mM. B. BAMUNLSON, e 5 o Wost, City, London; ;
only requires basting w o its own dripping ; but had the Solon o the anufa Britan
ires tory, anbury, Oxon
of the 2 — o bas tings ot 3 ment os A d 5 a tion i or to Messrs. D alk AND CO. 2 Bridge; or any abel "eibi or Ses i in the Kingdom.
retu "—— ]
we should have ever read o r heard of Minh ad observation
4.
the one alluded to C. 2 =
Rohe PS SAM UOCE LS 0 N,
Turni nea gone — * p e f ider | H |. N || S T,
| 8 chee zi soon bo short. The FONS “AGRICULTURAL ENGIN EER AN D MAG 3
| |
|
ea
which the sheep depend after the Turnips are fed were forwa;
and are now strong, but when once eaten ake little progress ; |
the meadows — E poorly covered with Grass, and all |
kinds of stock a dull and nearly unsaleable, à month
will also of Soret A weather before — * a M sed
to be ninm ind, which will be rather
who have stocked very heavily. A month ago the pe per
i demand . i-es ne
ather u 0
Jeet there i 2 plant e nough, and so we may look for
crop. The sowing vj Bar ley aud Oats is — they are —
up, and the earlier sown look well. Chavet, though 3
is strong, and — e fewer failures than usual in it; de and a:
—— pe pad deal of old hay left we have goo
ood another year. Our market is — sup-
— well with Wheat at present, yi Dp t a
good m: ay xt ricks yet to thresh out, and the rise in price will
Set the machines to work again, especially as as there i is “ite
n
FEE
p
E
.
oe
E
oO
a
Ja
zi
5
3
R
o
ES
a
A
2,
2
—
T
e
B
[^4
P
H
—
e
+
E
2
oO
f;
Bo
ummer Res to make way for Whea f — A^
e to Correspon 8 WAREHOUSE, 76, CANNON STREET WEST, L ONDON,
Cream CHEESE: Alex.—The following
ces " are two recipes.—Take € E B
qu of cream, “if not desired very rich, A, thereto es
Pint of new milk warm it in hot water till itis about the | TNFORMS MERCHANTS, the TRADE, and. AGRICULTURISTS, "that he has o opened the above Ware-
tablespoonful rw — E 5 A eer houses as a depót for his own — ud id m of Messrs. Barrett, Clayton, Howard, Sort: Nicholson,
break it slightly with à spoon and place it in the frame in — vai Tuxford, Smith, and all other first-class makers, whose implements hei is pasted to offer on makers”
reviously ; press it
l;
; slightly with a weight ; let it — a few hours, then a
= domin s T : alittle powdered salt may be put THE BRITANNIA SELF- RAKING REAPI NG MACH de i
oth. It will i i — RM
en’ Method. at — — a Moe. i da seh With side delivery in sheaf, no rakers o rn rosse, and all the most improv
E ty cannot be had ut . — 5 e x nde bag, d — iniante * the season, ma
much cream y happe o ha it,
becofting naturally 5 ud day m and nd from it B. SAMUELSON, 76, Cannon Street West, London; and Bates Works, B
If ase c and the remaiader will prove an 3 —— -~
fine canvas b ea m ean be had once and poured intoa | PAXTON WORKS, SHEFFIELD, ESTABLISHED 1738. MSS TENTS, AND Be C
conie. 50d " ie AVI. SALE, on HIRE.—H. Picco
8 ose made with ren
2 —— Superphosphate dong ; with
eee manure is quite a prame de te for y tm
of dun Apply 3 cwt. per ac — Eum 10 or 12 tons
E. Nitrate of soda, lor 13 owt is better applied to |
n pi —
Ss A X a half or 2 c
of Wheat. We a per acre ^ a good ressing for an acre
w T ni
Tor Pas ano it to Sw edos.. A
bus!
can buy good soot at 6d. to 8d. a
— B dh eaper LADO eA than 40 bushels of
"b yon. gan COOKE'S warranted PRIZE| —— Rp ate very diiodp.
of soda and 1 d fyou d qan get —.— — — of nitrate PRUSING ey BUDDING KNIVES, SCISSORS, &c—]| — Ed dae. a
ndl cwt. of Peru Soa DURER, ees A
End Establishment, 33, £32, Charing Cross, 8.W.
showery weather if if possible, cast—in ble Nurserymen and and Seed Merchants in|
; GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Ma7]
» THE GA —
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING & HEATING BY HOT WATER
M. a
Y
BY APPOINTMENT.
2. EMA y
I Ha in
JOHN WEEKS & COMPANY,
NG'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LONDO
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HOT-WATER APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, E NG INEERS,
A
ND- IRON FOUNDERS.
PLANS, ESTIMATES, & ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON APPLICATION.
FCC COTTAM & COMP r., Engineers, — &e.,
Heatep BY Hor WATER ON AN IMPROVED PLAN ar 2, WINSLEY STREET, oe
ORTICUD
—
may be pro-
— — either per-
fectly dry, partially
numerous
The Donde Eo and — Compan: mited)
26, Great George Street, West SW. us *
M RO'S ANNOS BOILERS.
CANNON BOILER
E Jones.
O-gSBANKSIDE (REL
A SEOW ROOM - DEVOTED ENTIRELY TO ARTICLES OF W 2
THE 3
Bice Merit Lima EROS AI APPLICATION.
tori Moe Moin Hand-glass Frami arden Engines
Ero eas | OP mee wok | Smt - me
— Vang Flower en wer Labels
Chairs Flo
Iron Hurdles, Strained Wire aning, Game Netting, "a
` Beery description of Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought Iron, and Wire Wi
PRIZE MEDAL GATES AND ENAMEL peine
N. B. COTTAM ax» COv. beg to make it known that there is no longer an entrance to their establishment o entrance f,
e iere int d a second entrance from 2, Winsley Street, Oxford Street, W., by the side of the M
cM de Pantheon.
ADDRESS: THE MANAGERS, ST. PANCRAS IRONWORKS.
eferences to Gent N s
Ballers are nova ot ware. The Cannon Boil en THE Sr. Pancras Inox Wor PANCRAS CHURCH, :
` gery deseription of Saddle and Cyl LD St. PANCRAS ROAD, LONDON. p
Pipes nec i E
house in London. for 5
Siete eet] . LRON COLLAR BAR HURDLE
ONE TWO si THEE thwark, London. BY HER MAJESTY'8 ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.
200 BOXES and LIGHTS, ofthe bert seasoned —.— gersang mataria Obtained the Silver Medal of the R
^Hot- ratan A DUA ite M — 1 pom. Builder ani rel ay
ASES, PEDESTALS, SUNDIA à
ien de d PERS OASES |
ORDE BS, SEATS, es ND CURBS FOR FLO’
at €— prices, for the adornm —
Mansi — or NT TEE - alte Fal
E
| - aum
. The improvement by this PATENT consists i; Bars being on arena nt
BORDER EDGING, upright bar, keep it in = Osito fin 5 ea a ES, — uad
For Priced II Hiustzationg. apply to d Ransome, at | DOUBLE STRENOTH and RI wirr to the HURDI a nt dnt —
the Show Rooms, Cannon Row, Westminster, S. W., or Patent
Stone re Ipswich.
PROZFSSOR VAZVNELL'S MANGERS AND STABLE FITT E
F.
mesh, — —— 33 -3 — Street; 1, 14, 2, and 3, Newman
Em Stroug do. se porya Ts Place, London, Established 1820.
2-inch » intermediate; do. oe
: inch dd $4 inches wide : GR o U ND D
F BE LET, WHITTINGTON NURSERY, Upper
1 » intermediate, do. — .. 7À Holloway, to, be en ediately. For —
» extra strong, do. dd — apply to J. F. Manse, N, Baty È ea —
at — above kinds can be made of Mr. Bomar, Nursery
than elon a O BE im BRISTOL NURSERY SRQUNDS,|
ur 7, 1859.
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
GARDENERS, FLORISTS, AND oT THER
O BE SOLD, 4 FIFTY-FIVE YEAR t E
with the option of Ep ing thé Free' ~ Arni WALLED
IN GARDEN, in a highly ctable neighbourhood within
HOWARDS’ PRIZE IMPLEMENTS, , 1859 Lio U 1 DU T RNOR EN TU
He anp FREDx. HOWARD, Britannia Iron -
Jw orks, Bedford, to direct meget p =
CHAMPION PLOUG
respec
100 feet long, with PROPAGATING-HOUSE, »
GARDENERS' ROOM, STABLE, &c , $c &c
f which may remain on mortgage if ui: 4
D low.—For fur ther — apply Qs letter - Ground
Sales by Auction. NC
BEDDING PLANTS, ORANGE TREES, CAMELLIAS, ETC.
LÁ EES
hich they received All the First Prises last — em the
Boi Agila Society of England, viz. :—
m PATENT LIQUID MANURE DISTRI
3 for the best "Plough for general purposes, BUTOR R. S ill S »
orn WATER-CART, warranted not to choke up or HASLAM will Sell as above at 1 o’Clock each
The First e — = 1 — Fou for light la. otherwise got out of order. p is “thoroughly adapted for Drill day during S month ot May, at the following
iy Prize ever offered b iety for the best Double | Crops, or Pasture Land, or for Watering Streets; has been | viz —May 7 Nag's Head, —— LAT ud
y Prise avor rT rewarded (oJ. & F. Howanp, |@warded SIX FIRST PRI 218. 21, White Hart, Woodford: May 14 and
— ri Ridgiug Ploug Full Particulars and -— timonials may be obtained of the May 12, 19, and 26, at aei oid Lo
2 List of Prizes awarded to their Implements,
gi =i - ows jast state that for PLOUGHS, HARR m
Hi ib RAKE E Sud e for several years gained e
Prize for w they hi ed.
R. J. WILLMER ir: to announces d he has
ions from
— “IMPROVED LIQUID MANURE
r ums PUMP.
GHS y
DPLOUGH,foraPony.- -...... 22 5 0 May 1 ay be viewed two days prior to the Sale, and Cata.
* says — ie M vi ES >s vs epo p logues had on the Premises and of Mr. J. W. Au
i EFS Surveyor, and V. m r. o 1 — Sunbury.
br 7 ew ener —— ae * de vs s dum a likely to co e, an sed o: : Gao
SKIM COULTER mE R Boat 45 pn ns the OE. cae M R. J. WILLMER- begs to Sarge — he has
i received instructions from G
A Set of 9 = — ga d ze - shoulderto any pond or tank to submit his costly Coll n of TUL Public Auction,
Sear mace No a 814 0| Price of 43 in. Pum mp, with legs, 31. 8s. without the least reserve, on the premises, $02, Albany Road,
no» Three 4-Benm HÀR ROW h Whi ple- If with planished e copper barrel and i mberwell, on WEDNESDAY, May 18, at 12 o'clock.—Ca
tree, ted for 3 Horses, 10 ft. wide parked 0.11 4 4 0 galvanised iron handle, &c., 14s. extra. 1 Sad sale pie —— may be had on the premises; and of
: f with Patent Bee 6s. per set extra. The barre 1 is 274 in. long, and the legs Nui uctioneer, Surveyor, and Valuer, Springfield
HOR TE. pi ft. high. ursery, Sunbury. —5
Pumps are also made without
th d s
e, 74 feet wide, marked A ith 24 iron tee! eh strong w — —
— rd Steel Teeth’
ES
has rectived 3 to Sell
Large size, 8} feet wide, db B with 28 iron teeth H 0
on MONDAY, May 23, at
Ditto, with — teeth +e 8 10 n
Extra large size, 84 feet wide, marked G, with 24 steel 7
th .. a EM — T vs vè .. 10 10 Rollers, &c. may be of Mr. 5,
A Set of 15 Prongs, to be attached to the above when 1 M ILLMER, Auctioneer,
reip ond mde Sui € Val = E. he ld CÓ N S. W.
— and Canvas Suction and Delivery Hose, from $ inch
4 inches diameter, in lengths of IT to order.
a
110
Free D rmingham, "Bristol, Colchester, Det
goce. ^w Lincoln 14 ng ted London, Manchester,
EUR. Nottin p 5 hrewsbury, Wisbeach, Wor:
Yi ublin, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and
TOMOLO
pi ï: & STEVENS nce Sell 1 by * aucti ion at his
t Room, 38, K ng Street, Covent — i FRIDAY,
Branch
85
EA
ep
wW CA TALOGUE, conteining prices and
description of their Pat loughs, Harrows, Horse Rakes, ARNER’ PA 11 ENT.
and other Implements 3 — Smith's Steam Culti ARD P
for which they received at Chester the Gold Medal of the Ro; PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, steed with J. W. 4
Agricultural Society of gland, Sent free on application to Patent Buckets and Suckers, which eannot clog in action, —
J., & F. Ho varp, Britannia Iron Wor Bedford. Farms, Cottages, and Wells, not ei
on the day prior and morning o 5 Catalogu
oA RD SF I ~
LAZIERS’ DIAMONDS for CUTTING HORTI- D E 3 - 32 dT 855 Lye ———
— 1 =e — gon Bai aes D rain. DAY, May 16, at aee tis Fo Clock — 2 col-
Smithfield, London zc Prices dr n " te RITISH E ey EGGS, eh the late J.C. He
1 i E pot "e à ads of Car 3 all well authenticated, an e greater
T eem JUS E “sent to any 3 : i
iia a
by ME ere — — m Aat I" wed on Saturday, and
101. ;.21 ft. br PER aay oS Big
60 ft. by17, 90“.
letter to Mr» A.
L SN
T AND 1 BALE AT
BRISTOL NU RSERY, K KEMP TOWN, BR ic TON
ESSRS. PROTHEROE AàND.M RRIS have
received instructions — Sell by Auetion, on the Premises,
Bristol Nursery, Kemp Tow: — Sussex (formerly in
the occupation of the late Mr. Edward tchell), on MONDAY,
n 0
E, and
s requir
ad Pi
tached, ready for fixing .
23 in. — ditto ^ ditto ditto
z The short barrel Pum s very convenien
WINDOW | for fixing in s — on lintel ae and
870, Oxford ees nine ie ly of e aes
SUSPEND)
ash-houses 2 coc i
tanks, « in — 1 nd Exc. :
pre- ; they may be d plants, including about 1000 choice Double ie ranging
season, m le un dee parom superintenc ‘of MR. — Er all sizes and in the finest state of cultivation ; Toe zem
RICHARDS. 370, Ox: re ge A. Prater i of an 3 or lants of Chinese Azaleas, Ericas, Epacris, a quantity of Orange
Garden c — s, Roseries, Temples, Trainers, Garden Seats. | Plum or country at the above Ee 2000 Show and Fancy Pelargoniums ; 5000 let and
Folding Cha: Fencing, Borderi ring, and every description of JOHN Wat 2 am 'anufacturers, ariegated Geraniunmis; Double Purple and White Primulas,
Wire Work imaginable. Bird Cages, & Conservatories and Basie & SONS, 8, — Jewin ——— London. e Dahlias, Cinerarias, Crussulas, Gloxinias, Chrysan-
Aviaries fitted = in the best style and taste. Sun Shades and description of Machinery snag ener b ames themums, ums, Begonias, New Fuchsias, &c.; also a large assort-
Window e linds, — Rams, Deep W. Pumps, 4 e Fire and Gard ent of Bedding Plants, Herbaceous Plants in a bed of .
LOW. FOTS of superior Red Clay, manufactured | Bagines. &e tc. — sent o P | first-rate — all named iine. Jasmines, Honeysuckles,
„ In s Nb ION HEDSTERD: ines, Picotees, Cloves, &c.—May be viewed
by the — — Pottery py fuum onat in appear- AN USUME bKASS AND IRON ADS | three days prior to the sale. Catalogues may be obtained 6d.
ange to Terra Cotta at the price of the common pots usually — — & Sow's Show Rooms contain a large as each, returnable to purehasers om the premises; of Mr. A.
. Gd. per cast, at Kidderminster.—A pp to TAYLOR ment of Brass Bedsteads, Chandler, vices Valuer, 23, Priory Road, Wandsworth
G Yard, Lombard Street, y, E.C. :
s | Road, S.; of the principal Seedsmen in London; and of the
Erara. I or | Auctioneers, Americ: Mi po , Leytonstone, Essex.
every
: hn featored,” in N p LE tree Woods, Polished as me or E Wir Haw at — e
U 0 Y 2 em th Deal and ki nm t fitti ith Bedding and Furnitire —— -
—— ——— EN 1055 Li v appli of PLANT complete, as well as — of Bedroom Furniture MEN, FL S, AND
TUBS and BOXES forwarded on application EAL AND “SON'S ILLUSTRATED ÇATA- TOSS , PROTHEROE 3 AND MORRIS. wil Sel
- OGUE, containing Designs and Prices of 100 Bedsteads,
RITTALN'S. SUMMER SuADINGS. — Strong | as well as of 150 different * ae of Bedroom Furniture, sent 12 o'Clock, — colle
Tiffany, a inches, s ayard; No. 3 do. — beet a! free by post, —HEAL & Bon, Bedstead, Bedding, and Bedroom n eat AZALEA INDICA, ERICAS, EPACRIS,
piece, 18 ye — Nets, Nos. 1, 2, Altf „ an Furniture Manufacturers, 196, Totten am mut Road, W. and other Plants in bloom ; Fuchsias, Verbenas, Dahlias, &c.,
e — M VOR. ZE BRA ORNAMENTAL, SHADINU, EDSTE S BATHS with a large assortment of aim meso Plants for Bedding.
Pd v wide linen shading, — to —.— Jig — 5 AT S, AND oy alien — | On view the — of sale. — talog s had at the Mart, and
Peel Street, Manch has SIX LARGE SHO' of the Auction. iu LAT m
Luc ^ to the ne aeris DISPLAY CA
Baths, - Metallic Bedstead e stock of each is s ies = NBERWELL 0 EL DDING PL
lai west; and most — — the publie Ej PROTHEROE sep NORRIS: are re directed
mar] at prices Brent the mor d rs those that —.— tende y Mr. Isaac Stew: by Auction, oi
make his establis — in this —- Premises, Beehive Nursery, Petar Street, George Street.
, from.. to £20 Os. Cam — on MONDAY, May 16, at 12 o'Clock, about 8000
Shower Baths, from — a 49 s BEDDING and other GRE sa reker —: several Store
un (Moderateur), from 0 T »
ic other kinds at thes same rate
E r gallon,
re Colza Oil on
ATILUIAM S. BURTON'S Cid URN ISH.
ING IRON MON G
ES Rec € 8 n atio: M — ves. — — WEDNESDAY, Ma
n | DING and other GREI
om.
now to Let.
rca 8 Iron H — &c.
— Hull or N Lond
Wire <2 PE. — andi of Improved
llustrated. Catalogues erns forwarded by post.
No. 9.—GREENHoUSE, from 12 to 20 ft. wide.
— — A N
EY J 4
Z
o A [2
o o fA :
o 7A
No. 7. Robots House, from 18 to 20 ft, wide. A
fr Ne E E e from 18 to 20 ft. wide.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS MANUFACTURED BY STEAM POWER MACH
. BEST MATERIALS AND LOWEST PRICES. E
Tem HENRY ORMSO
HORTICULTURAL BUILDER & HOT-WATER APPARATUS ` ” MANUFACTURER.
‘STANLEY BRIDGE, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, LONDON,
„
Deeply grateful for the 1 liberal and kind patronage besto wed him, begs most respectfully to inform the prece: Gentry, ——
that it ae his determination to no pains to merit a con tinuance of their favours, and that he may be enab execute his 4.
increasing ord netually, and at the lowest possible ws 8 with the best Materials and Workmanship), he has N a st complete set
Power Makia peculiarly ada for the purposes of :
PARTIES DESIRING INFORMATION as to prices, ie nr by referring to any of the above sections, receive immediate ention.
PLANS, SPECIFICATIONS, and ESTIMATES for plain and inexpensive practical Structures, and for the most elaborate Architect
Wood or Iron, forwarded on application.
ORMSON’S PATENT JOINTLESS TUBULAR BOILERS
May be seen in successful operation at Mr. Verrdn’s, Royal Exotic Nursery, King’s Road, Chelsea, and on view and for sale at
THE MANUFACTORY.
M
d F: *
9, 5, Upper
LLIAw Brapevry, of 13, Upper Woburn Place,
p City
ICLE.
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News. — The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
SATURDAY, MAY 14. mde Fivepence.
PE STAMPED » Bor e.
IND 7 SKIRVINC'S SWEDE—SUTTON’S SELECTED STOC A p Ho
rts UTTON anD’: SONS have a choice dirt of PAUL » SON. ls Sal! a large Stock ed
433 a SKIRVING'S SWEDE SEED, growth of 1858, which they X. HOL LYHOCKS, strong heal thy plants that will blooi
— . a can strongly recommend. Price 94. — Ib., or chea; "m r by the | this em at the followi ing rates :—
495 b 423 6 bushel.— Royal Berks Seed Establishm: t, Readin, MIXED SEEDLINGS Ty pneus o ed sorts, 25s. per 100.
= 3: PETURION GOURD— This wonderful Ve , d af iai rogante oon
434 b 143€ tains the incredible — of 180 to 135 Ibs. in 36 days. Papia Ronee tia ks stron 2
424 a | 431a | It is nal edible, and mak rtant addition to gd 12 LYHOC Ager e edendo
* . 431 € | kitchen garden. Seed. may be 11 E packets at 7d. and 1 z E 3 — aper peores
t" a „ 425 b | post free, from E. P. Dixon, Seed Establishment, 57, Que ree by post.—Nurseries, Cheshunt, Herts. —— .
2 T Street, Hull. q TEENS DOUBLE HOLLYHOCKS.—The present
a . M r PO 0*3 — =.
425 7 lame EW ZEALAND RUNNER BEAN. — Price 2s. | 7 i5 yot a br planting out this noble flower de
45b ' 496 a e Wut eS i m & Co., Seedsmen, 288, High autumn bloo ore Mx ATER can still supply plants fine and
424 c 427 P 8 gre d ny, at reasonable prices.
- Beis : 495 6 | Holborn, AI Ixs XUNXING RAM Appl WILLIAM CHATER, owe Nurseries, Saffron Walden.
e n —.— 2 E CHRYSANTHEMU AND DAHLIAS.
. 495 b Tenant and Jandlord . dim of 12 eas for 14 stamps. OHN SALTER can 3 endin ont s s m
Qo ted RESO aa Bass & Brows, fes 2 P em: Sudbury, Suffolk. Je Seedlings ims of M n^. A zu
.. ——— S prod
NTON is 15 S ellin. off his surplus — M in Europe; also several og i new *DAHLIAS, aa
(usan EUN t SHOWS for 1859 d 9 5 A riport nigh Foran. Vora KELTAN MUON
WEDNESDAY, May 18 EDNES Sept. season is advancing. Fenton SUNN g. Hendon Fark pA a DAHLIAS FOR Tut "MILLION."
WEDNESDAY, June S THURSD ARLI EA.—DUNNETT'S — LAR KE AND COMPANY'S CATALOGUE
EARLY is in every respect s i above is now ready, and may be had gratis upon a
WEDNESDAY, Nov. 9, . 10. i 1 arlier, havi ner and ri tion.— CIA RK R & Company, Florists and Seedsmen, 86, High
Schedules of Prizesmay now 2 — M o application. 1 i + t. F. — i x Street, Borough, in on, x E.
toile Sere Tickets at 3s. 6d. eac Jom Obtained on app r. T HSIAS, y uper a
- Crystal Pa ; k EORGE SMITH. FLORIST, ec. oto Roa
May 14. — `- Geo. Grove, Secretary. _ Bi Der Sessio 2f tf üt for tti sd iren Walworth, begs to offer — following, — 1 strong
RYSTAL 1 PALACE. —FLOWER SHOW.— sr ones, or 15 aa 8575 lants, true to name, his stock containing the new flowers of
ess (per eni —
Dahlias <., * Double Petuni 6s.
; | Verbenas .. .. .. Fine dry bulbs of Cycla-
LI- n ir pe ga — Un E E men Vet 2 1 5 Coum,
Fuc eee. 5 . 8s. to 12s.
- IND
Doa J. t — SON beg to — their Friends
cket; or wo and P that their I DESCRIPTIVE SATA.
LOGUE of the penne a nam
oda der Season ‘Seed may be had i ih sealed ackets iod newest and best varieties, and m:
2— : i the Khon, on — endum ri ofa — stage stamps, post free, at d P. DixoN 37, Queen | application, at either the Dorking or r Rei
Hull. LARGE CAMELLIAS AND
OHN WATERERS” EXHIBITION of RHODO Jm d ^T
LJ
MS
THYNE, p RSERXMEN, Glas 4 aa 3
DENDRONS will Pa usual throughout the — * MELLIA plants, 6 to 10: fet gh, wel
month of JUNE ns, Regen: fried. moana double 8 . fine of specimen
London. Eh ue NI A 3 eee 8 F
SEO
pea rio any
Season Ti. Guinea other kno : i pm i all
ent of 25. 64. ; by Day Tick rot, 78 s. 6d. ; or if taken before tains a ize, will not run to seed, and every plant |I ed is now oA pole te 1 rips pol
3 pos
HARLES SHARPE, hes Ten r^ offer, of! his own
YELLOW DO. TURNIP SEED AT i LOGUE
: YELLOW GLOBE DO. GREEN GLOBE DO. > OBERT SIES NEW DESCRIPTIVE AND
piset D SON i lec . CARROT YELLOW TANKARD DO. de eas proa
. in full nd w xt SORGHUM. OR HOLCUS SACCHARATUS for 8 stamps. E
weeks, and may be seen : : " NT AR CANE — Sünb. Nursery, Foot's Cray, cM í
: importers o this can O ORCHID GROWERS.—Duplicate
F + UL "miri m Tb it on on liberal 8 accordiug to quantity required. 0 DS iw of
HARLES TÜRNER announ fe that his ex- ishmen Chelmsi
ord, Essex, viz., —
süperba, crispa, superba, marginata, e! slogans.
HOMAS WILD has only a tew yu of his
Tm dae me left, P dus — — packet.
Deui t LL Royal Berkahire Hood 6mm EN ese maa ae
11 LECTION or TULIPS are dd in fine bloom, OLCUS em mp — To SUGAR-
* viewed till the — of the month:
A m invites an inspectión of the above on
4
ne Anniversary Exhibition of the ROTAL
NAMONAL T TULIP SOCIETY will be held at the Nursery
S SACCHARATUS, or North China Bagir-
ne,.—Pamphle rx „A Visit and a “ar t; —— only
e
T ERDDIU PLUME the cheapest
place in England. Catalogue sent for one
š s Nursery, Upper Holloway, London.
and à — — — —
F Pel
free 6d. Prices of Seed on application. amples 04. Four
b
e collec
ese — Cinerarias, &c.
tted —— d post on receipt of 10s.
uc of Colonel Parker, the band of the
ill attend. . per doz
Royal Nurseries, Slough.—M. ASPA cnr plants, 16s. ae
HE PLYMOUTH SEED, 8 Alleen 2
AMPLEMENT, AND MANURE COMPANY LIMITED aoe MAY & Co., SEEDSMEN, beg to of the TD ELGIAN DAISIES.—In the ice variety, 4s. per
Supply every requisite for the Farm and the Garden. followi ng :— dozen. — & BAxLET, Bradshaw Gardens, Chad-
: Registered O Offices, Union Road, Pl outh. Fifty varieties of FLOWER SEEDS, 7s. 6d. Thirty ditto, 5s. | derton, Manches!
ESSRS. B. ROEZL axp COS NEW CATA: | Fifteen ditto, 2s. 6d. ARNATIONS PICOTEES.—Twenty-fi
Twelve ieties useful and orn ntal GOURDS, t free, 3. AND wen y: ve pairs
e t i e t Lol Mtr aig irie HOLOUS SACCHARATUS, with. see forc m 64. strong, well rooted, and extra fino Show n oed
Street D ind Ibs pan N per ip cluded.—
wG worm
r Ib.
— DIOSCOREA or CHINESE YAM, large roots, each.
HARDY ae — —— — NEW ZEALAND opi BEANS, 6d. Ad
than any other A LIST of ei and ver SEE S st. Poet free on
p application.—1, W. ington E AL Waterloo Bridge.
LY 31
AHLIAS. —The fuer 5 sections, stro: 5
D plants, wal ; Ss., and 12s. pm
— & Bay 2 9 Man-
AND G: SWAILES offer T several thousands as
under, at 10s. per 1000
CUPRESSUS SEEN THUJA ORIENTALIS
TOURNEFOR yit
The above are 6 to 9 suis in inch pots, about 150 in
each pot.—Beverley, Yorkshire, May 1
ALM FOR 8 speci, TT high. Har &
not been accus uch heat t.—Address X.
TER GERANIUMS.—
Per 100, 20. — — 500, 101. I
ts by ROBERT REA,
CHOICE ROSES IN
AM anD WARD EM : large $ Sty et
Ewes t ROSES i
e appearan:
Sen - habit ae vum — — habit; without ex:
w ready at 3s. 6d. each, with the ving such an
to the Dok 2 . 6d.
St. John's street N 9 8 K Colchester.
ET OHN
Mio
TT
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
418
NTS IN FLOW
n A have now 3 Bloo a, Cactus
e (fine), Cytisus ; Erica ventri „v. super-
biens, v. breviflora, E. intermedia, E “Cavendishi, T hybrida,
E. aoe nana; Fuchsis Calceolarias, Heliotrope,
Hy a, Geraniums, Fairy Roses, &c
The above. are h eal strong, and well-grown plants,
prepared for sending away. Prices on application.
Dul E Surrey, S.
ME ESSRS. PARKER AND WILLIAMS beg to
form their friends e patrons that their PRIC ED
and DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of Exotic Orchids, Stove,
Greenhouse, = ardy Ferns, M E Green-
— Pla nts, Variegat ted and Ornamental 3
Plants, Conifer: Roses, ee odendrons, Indian zaleas,
Gloxinias, Fuchsias Cactuses, &c., is now published, oen
will be forw: aper 5 5 m^ fr — on application. mii ^
Seven Sisters a s, Hollow: pem N.
GERMAN AND. E: 7 D$, VEGETABLE, |
AGRICULTURAL EDS, ETC.
RS. PARKER AND REED beg to
A inform their friends and patro: w PRICED
and DESCRIPTIVE CATA LOGUE i — vto h g ated
every novelty of proved — also all the best of the lier
kinds, is now published, a: gee be forwarded post free on
ti
has been cina rin n the
ry ted
A8, in strong —
A
viz., Admiral —— Amazon, Annie, — of Bats on:
Captain Ingram, Colonel Windham, Cossack,
Carnation, De e Würde, Dunis of Welling-
n, Duke of Wellington, ress, F. Dodds, Fa
General Foucher, G Sultan, Incomparable, Lady
Folkestone, Lollipop, Lord Bath, Lord Palmerston, Lady
k E Caroline, Míss Burdett Coutts, Mrs, n
. Whee
eminent, Ruby Queen, Rachel Ra
Scarlet, Sir R. Whittington, sir Ha
Sir William Wallace, Sir F. car tig Touchstone, Tri
Roubaix, Yellow Beauty, Trotter.
from y of the above, 3s. per een
Henry May, The Hope Nurseries, ae Yorkshire.
EW ANTIRRHINUM
—— AY has now ready for delivery b is fine
SHEDLING ANTIRRHINUMS, selected from an immense
collection of very superior d^ ; and he can evier rae
tnde) — improvement on exis
li
vu JOHN RUSSELL (Mav
'EARER (Mavy’s).—White — "spi rose
with r centre, very fine — —
of it in his
the —— ‘Horticultural Society Quarterly Jon
he [ene
nny The
ba double VUES ACHIMENES LONGIFLORA.
[Mar 14, 1855.
AD CANT. o
N & SON
NEW GENERAL pibiLuevs and i nrg LIST 11 ORNAMENTAT BEDDING an
SUMMER
MESSRS. 5 * HENDERSO
PLANTS IN MAY, AND T
FLOWERING P
WILL IN A FEW DAYS BE READY FOR DISTRIBUTION, WHEREIN WILL BE DESCRIBED
NEW BEDDING DAHLIAS, GLOIRE D
va mawn AA —The best white variety "i —
noble formed and richly coloured flower
other Dalia for beddings, a iri plant showin berth! ay
As e blooming habit ma at hey, een
638.)
, See Plate x
all English
haye much 13 in introducing
b ibi
Nurse
AN VES S NEW FUCHSIAS (9 varieties,
EW CHRYSANTHEMUMS (8 varieties
in the Illustrated Bouquet.”
BREEZE & BANKS'S bise pie
will include the fin
speal
of the finest shrubs
d spoon in the uM D
hore ay colour those of Gloxi
inte tit ion plant in violae n its
violet. "blue tint, offers a o an ature in wer
there being none other in the same style to associate with the
a. -yellow of A. Schotti, a the delicate rosy-blush
1
of Echites and Dipladenia. 638. bu ours, as the
finest ever sent out by v a sta i
DING GERA RANIU
THE IMPERI aD RIBON, No 10 T
f. z — Mrs NOSEGAY
GERANIUMS. See d ui also the
Catalogue. Pu
Among Variegated Geraniums, MISS EMILY DOMVILE
= a Paice —.— m (see T" Orgel
e two GO. AVED varieties with
flowers. vU E
THE RAINBOY, with the finest red-zoned foliage
M rco CLOUD, a beautiful accompaniment to TAL
THE SILVER CHAIN, with deép margin of
en companion to the GOLDEN CHAIN. Meal
ALCEOLARIAS, scarlot, « dritt crimson, and yellow, of
REN on true bedding, shrubb: branching growth;
f ——— as the majority are y 3
THE WHITE NOSEGAY GERANIUM (for beds)
AGAPETES BUXIFOLIA, a neat-habited plant with good
wienn foliage, and large bright red Meus flowers, re-
se bling the Mitraria and Epacris Ee tely.
mpeting kinds raised by
EW INDIAN AZALEAS, "MIN
“pte, M. C. Van Loo, and M. D e Wi tte.
carlet-flowered variety of TYD ÆA. GIGANTEA, and
IGBY, and — CAROLINE
P
LIERVAL'S NEW PHLOX EVENING STAR.
BURRIDGE'S Land NEW PHLOX DRUMMONDI, VIC
TORIA AND ALBER
CALCEOLARIA AMPLEXICAULE ALBA, Splendid bedder. |
BOUVARDIA N AND “ DELICATA," with:
large flower tubes, and profusion of bloom.
N.B. The quotations of Price to e" Sien maeri ree eh — . Nosegag, at page 355, should have
peared as
Wellington Nursery, St. John’s Wood, London,
very fine form and habit.
LORD DERBY — 8)—Creamy white; with o lip,
beau D with bright purple.
Y's) — Deep rich purple
PURPL 1 1 self, fine
} Gren. Bright rosy erimson gold lip, very fine,
" (May's). — White bright crim: b
5
3 M £
m na Sens rosy purple, white lip, fine
eight 5
. —
Y, The e, Yorkshire.
Y, Ho , near Bedal N
ONES FOR THE FLOWER — 100,000. | 4
CHOICE BEDDING PLANTS, &.
Fe es L È & CO
GERATUM white, 4s. per doze GERANIUMS, variegated of sorts, 6s.
—100 ng, well hardened plan f the CGILESTINUM. pO best ed 4s, per N GAZANIA RIGENS, large orange, im tre, 6s. ^
followin ed — aall — ris, Seale — „LUCIDA VARIEGATA, beautiful for edging, 9s. | HOLLYHOCKS, ton a show varionie bynan
8 —— m E —À cabo ANAGALLIS, large red, do. blue, 4s. per doz best named varieties, at 808. ae
and z include 0 wrde perly | ANTIRRHINUM YOUELLI, a beautiful variety of dwarf, | HELIOTROPES, o
pep 4 TOR busuy Habit: Tho flowers are of w briltisntroritige adret | KONIGA VARIEGATA, v very pretty fr og e Up
r Verbenas, | with whia tati tube, produced i spikes | LANTANAS, 10 ne ory, beautiful for M
„Hesry May, T — near Bedale, Yorkshire. ANTIRRIINUNS, fin ho abe dich
s of all the best named kinds, | LINUM FLAVUM yellow, 6s. per dozen.
NEW CH LOXES: 68. per LOBELIA SPECIOSA, EA T nain 4
JOHN STANDISH aa MNA the following as BELLIS PER TENNIS, new Belgian’ Daata vut ‘thie best 158880 Lec REA for forming mss
„ r do: n 4
— MIR Qut last year, he having seen them | BELLIS AUCUBE ndsome variety, wi T nifice ent groups 9e. perite E
dwarf and cote thought the best. They are | . golden blotched foliage and et flowers, 6s. Su fA b ges erna of sorts, Gs. per dozen, 9. per dene
Ver until the föst destroys chem in the BERBERIS DARW. fine golden eon, 6s. per dozen. LYCHNIS rites fine orange scarlet, 9s, domm. —
Hr firent — CALYSTEGIA PUBESCENS (rose coloured double-flowering | MAURANDYA BARCLAYANA, blue and white, e 4
: vao cedem 1b to | „ Convolvulus), a hardy climber, 6s. per dozen. MATHIOLA TRISTIS, nigh ht-scented Stock, 6s, pet :
— then ALCEOLARÍA AUREA FLORIBUNDA, the — — MESEMBRYANTHEMUMS, of showy kinds 6s. Pe vats gy
de Water Tès Reusiien; stuféd Violet purple centre — n: ee the 3 flowering NASTURTIU D DE GAND, Jer ge,
tite, with purple centre, superb CA ALCEÓLA ko “of for bedding " DOUBLE PE nx» DOUBLE YBLO m^.
» Shot with tper dozen. ià ;
v m UN n. CAMPANULA CORALLINA GARGANICA, dii very pretty, | NIEREMBERGIA FILICAULIS, white, lavender eè X j
Suer, white purple centre, v tty fe per di producing
8 ale Ore —— A ES LL EGALIUM, fine golden yellow, 4s. | OK ALIS FLOBIBURDA AND ROSTA; 1 bardy, 2d
| "Monsieur Forest, livel. bed of ri colour, 6s. ozen: , dozen, St
Saini ais A AE —— — CARNATIONS AND PICOTEES. (ENOTHERA MACHOCARPA, largo yellow, d F
Surpasse Mad: , white purple centre, very dwarf. "M ek eee class show varieties by name, 185. dozen.
Tha above ^t. 6d, each, or the lot 215, besides the above J. 8. Pit x TARAXACIFOLIA, Vesp a 8 uw ULL
s jez supply the finest old sorts dd adres from 6s. Bi. to 1s Dor domin. 199 1550 inest . . da class show varieties by name, 18s, and PETUNIAS—M. W handsomest Y —
„088 fo bee their roots, strong lants Ditto, ll oxen pairs. ;
x on yellow be 8 —
Son ms CI e pint beatin of 400 ea Roses, | Finest mixed B ORDER CARNATIONS EPI & PICOTEES, 9s. ditto » ed of Sorts; 6s. per dozen.
— 3 per True old CLOVE CARNATION, 12s. per dozen pairs. Gem of Suffolk, beautiful silver vari
» nine I epe das. iden i met. ditto dito, "lk. = m largo p le flowers, 9s: per I Ger
— NEW CARNATION [ON OS "—For articulars colours, 4s. and ua Poog pidot,
e mer Love Advertisement, 6d. per PANSTES- Finost Bret class show 1 NW
Tus Chaix, 25 6d. each, or 2s. per dozen PINKS.—The finest first class show Pinks, by name, 9s. per dos. | L ENTSTEMONS, of sorts, including PONES collection e,
- N . o de Te or e mixed border PINKS, 6s. per dozen pairs. f NEW PHLOXE San extensive and s fe and nech un:
pine i ur, 1s, 6d. each, or 12s. per dozen. COBJEA SCANDENS, fine strong plants, 6s. per dozen. pairs. | beautiful showy tribe, comprising nt, 6t. to 9: i à
y ux the ost adapted fori bedding CUPHEAS, of sorts, 4s. per doze duced ud from the t, 6. MU CD
purposes from its dwarf bushy habit and being always | CHRYSANTHEMUMS, the han the new la Ider varieties, 30s. per 100... i
Victor Trouillard, Ie. 2 — flowering and Pompone kinds, fis. r rge PHYGELIUS 8 a handsome S
ictor Trouillard, 1s. Git, ach or 12s. per dozen HEIRANTHUS ATROPURPUREUS, of dwarf habit, produc: | . her lant, producing tube-shaped
NOISETTE b he de Rennes, 2s. € * dozen. = pe of rich purple flowers, 63. per dozen. ~ SALVIAS, of sorts, 48. Ab PS
ROSES of 1858, on their o DAHLIAS, fine show and fancy varieties, by name, 6s. per doz, | STATICE "MARITIMA ROSEA AnD ——
Hisüm iuh, AL ROsES, 2s, 6d. each, e» DAHLIA PURPLE ZELINDA, fine dwarf Sd ôs, per dez. Strong plants of these twe beau fusion
Due de Cambridge "Evéque de Nimes CRYSTAL PALACE, scarlet, 6s ducing throughout the year a pro
Lord Palmerston uise d'Autrich DELPHINIUM FORMOS far the mos most beautiful lowors, 4s. per herbaceous
Marie Portemer Reine de Denmar! bor — he — forms a — permanent bed of the TRI TO MA MEDIA—A ban asome iow Lowers ger
Thomas Hivers Triomphe des Beaux Arts ‘sane — Birong fie owering G und Roots 16s. per 100 ; | . produci pares of versa gud
ven A mer ae at nian DN nest bedding varieties. 6s. per dozen. white, la lainaa m jo, plamy cultivation,
Paper ^ Uthe new fine varieties of last season, 12: per dozen | ofthe wost and har ost varieties in ara
Ambroise Verscha felt x Beaute de K Royghem 9 RIT = — cum dozen, or 5 LPINE pants of tem
e A , Pl ‘ ge
dime de Ll: Celine Forestier per doz P, scarlots and other kinds of best 4| HARDY H HERBACEOUS ANDA 100. ;
nean Frangois Ter showy species, 6s. per dozen, 30. pe* Liverpo |
s Ara; Rall, x
Oriflamme de St. Louis All orders of £2 and — are delivered Carriage Free to London, Manchester, Du, ga
tephanie Beauharnais ans le and Newcastle, as well as to any Railway Station within 150 — of the ^ Contes
je ure de Girau cations, d arts land, dnd Sòt well a jike
: Octavie Fontaine si 2 s Railway, t 7 Aone te ts of England, = tend, o» no: 3
ts are now ready to send out, and J. S. ie
—Bagshot, M.
Ln on their Nr roots ready to i
ROYAL NURSERY, GREAT YARMOUTH, rg
— NAR
}
|
|
. Mn. W. Rad mant hꝛoaite,
re field of 12 acres of your Champion Swede, the
2 From G. Txr Ru, Esq., Mount Gernas, Nov. 1
— Li have gained the prize rio distri EE
e "lar am by f o ct Soest
Max 14, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS CHI
~ SUTTONS CHAMPION SWEDE,
THE SWEDE THAT NEVER MILDEWS.
7, 4 7 77
rown, we shall hear
4 Ju T £f
the Swede crop.
« When this sort of Sw y 9
JJ JJ v
Extracts from Letters received
Henry HERBERT, Flax House, Pou wick, Feb. 15, 1858.
"mm Chainpion ee is the best sort I ever sowed. I
have an extraordinary crop sown 1st and 5th of July.
From Mr. GEORGE PARKER, Balud in
“ The Champion Swede Seed w. I had ee a ling ear
has proved exceedingly good ; iris in fadt considered the best
Swede ever — in An the — I had a field 27 *
which, realised 40 tons per acre, many of them weighing 161
each."
From Mr. C. TAYLOR, Cross Hill, Wigton, March 2, 1858.
- we will see that I have e . — my order for Swedes very
much, eee d for a few — $$ neighbours, saw
my * d wished m A — — xa
the Seeds I bs you were — Soa and answered well.
ER, ESQ.,
“The S — sot duet —.— — —— aep “ham.
ion Swede — me the — in the Agricultural Show of
Kew weastle Emlyn, and has been much admired.”
From Mr. WILLIAM FLET Radmanthwaite, March 12, 1858.
The field of. your Champion Swede. — which I I drew the
prize roots for Sera was the finest I €
From R. T. SQ., High Ashes, Abinger.
„On a naturally v: «y oor sli and nearly 1000 feet aboy
thelevel of the sea, your Swede far excelled any of m “y neigh.
bours, although they possess a much r and climate.
From Mr. ERNEST- —— R, Whittlesford, April 6,
vi — — pte he ‘our —
—.— 4 fine a
deni ot qa Turn ) as the
Champion w. t
I have 5 acres at this time with 4s fine green tops and sound
bottoms, as ever a man might wish to see, while my neighbours
who sowed other ape hayo not a green top to be seen, and
many of their bulbs ro
From W. FFE, Esq., Northbrooke, April, 1858.
“Mr. — lub grown this Sint 80 N of Sutton's
Champion Swede, the best crop ever seen in the South of
England."
From DANIEL PorrER, Esq. Ch Charringworth, 8 1858.
jars esi Swedes from your Seeds last
From Mr. EDWARD Jaques, Monkton Farleigh, April 24, m
“The Champion Swedes I had last year were very I
have several tons of therh now in prime condition.
From ROBERT RUSELL, ESQ., Abdate, July 6, 1858.
— — from my plants of Mangel and Swedes, I think
must have grown.”
Marc cte WooDEND, Rusland, Oct. 12, 1858.
“The Seeds were — nn particularly the Elvetham
and the:Chaun; v —
Wurzel and
RY CANTRELL, | Farm, Stoke, 1857,
Te 0 aret have awarded me H.R.H. the Prince —
25 guinea Cup for NM Bucks, for the best 5 acres of Swedes,
There is no doubt about this Champion Swede of yours being
of first-class quality:
From Mr. HENRY 1 ao Farm, Nov. 4, 1858.
“I obtained the prize, a Silver Salver, at our South
Bucks 8 My fi Seld s was equal to Mr. Ive's, which
gained the Prince’s Cup, (the was also from
ri
up, (t rize) which
your Champion Swede, and it p proves the truth of my ob-
ire hp year, thatfor quality and weight I thought them
From C. RANDELL, ESQ., Chadbury, Nov. 5, 1858.
—.— mium of 10l. given by H.R.H. the Duke d'Aumale
tor for the 6 acres of Mangel, = a similar one given by John
—" for the best 6 acres of Swedes, have both
to me for crops grown from your Seed.”
avis, Esq., Bromfield, Nov. 5,
Your Ch. OH bt Swede is excellent, I AEG . in
ng good crops this season as well as last. The Yellow
lobe alange! equally good, and the anie nate bean.
From Mn. W. FLETCHER, Nov. 5, 1858.
in the county T otts."
1 Branscombe, Nov. 6, 1858.
wc e Seed which I Le 'of you in the
quen Ma. Hener
2
= me ever? tn sales ME PA
hope to becom:
"m CAPTAIN Harrison, Clánna, Nov. 6, 1858.
Harrison mela some Champion wind Skirving's
MN oe ve; former are by farthe best
by Messrs. SUTTON & SONS:—
From Mr. Davip Easson, Camperdown, N. B., Nov. 6, 1858.
“The crop of p this season from the Seed of your
Champion is most satisfactory.”
From MR. CHARLES Turner, Kelmscott, Nov. 5, 1858.
“My S 7 from. pt Champion 7 are very fine, and
also my Hybrid emt * — Turnips a Y Vetches are very
uperior in quality antity."
Fro H BLUNDELL, Esq., Bursledon, Nov. 5, 1858.
“The nausea Swede Seed I purchased of you last season
— the farm of A. Elphinstone, Esq., and General Rober
urned out remarkably well.“
Woodstock, Nov. 10, 1858.
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
From Mn. JOHN JOLLY, Steeple A
it ^T have ers ale 3 with all the Seeds I had from
URNIPS AND MANGEL WURZEL SEEDS, ETC.
HOMAS xen ipn CO., Corner of MER
Street, the Seedsmen to the ** Royal cultural 8 —
of England,“ t to uni ebore of the Bosiety
m" a iaraa Ailera A generall ave still on hard a
the
pl f the diff morally that 28
supply o I ifferent s of ANGEL WURZELS;
selected stocks of HYBRIDS, SWED
TURNIPS, Ge. ES, "und other
MANGEL WURZE
Yellow or Orange Globe, Long Rad — other kinds.
TURNIPS :—
Green-top Yellow ene recommended, and bears
te so”
Purple-top Swed Ski ing’s Swedes
Globe sorts Ti ard's sorts
GRASS —— DS — — ——— Cemeteries, and
rch Yat
Chu Law!
RENOVATING "MIXTURES 1 for ola Swards,
PRICED LISTS sent free on application.
p indeed m r Champion Swede. They are a very fine
[ like them much better than any othér sort I
E. Cast N, Stoke, November 9, 1858.
rs ‘Your oerte Brenes; i grown from Seed supplied by you,
are allowed to be the finest field in the e parish.
From RICHARD NEVILLE, ESQ., Velin Vale, November 10, 1858.
* My — "of 4. — Swede end Orange Globe Mangel is |
the best I have seen in this neighbourhood,"
Nov. 10, 1858,
8
se
year were
— oar we
— and — Yellow Globe
‘om MR. E. BERRY, is e Hill, Bovington, Nov. 19, 1858.
» Eri gained the first prize for the best five acres of Swedes, at
the Aiden § nd Chesham Agricultural iA ga Silver
ue y T. T. Drake, Esq.) grown from Champion
E. Wars e Hill, Ballina, November 858
* Tour Champion È ects H d v nr in — with me — P: 8
indeed, so good crop, I shall so' other next year,“
From — om, 1 Ha d Grove um Nov. 27, 1858.
very exceedingly —
sort A sow more of. I like them
From P. MADDEN, Esq., M. D.,
ud — a first- cá crop of your —— Swede this year;
in d I pen speak too . — in their nre 4 have tried
any sorts, as the Ashcroft, S. cng ee Cop ires nen —
but none of them equal the Champion — f crop
and —
From W. SUMMERBY, ESQ., North Terrace, Nov. 6, 1858.
“The Champion Swedes raised from De obtained ga Pied
are in — ity and quality far above the average of an
sive distri
From GILBERT PEACOCK, ESQ., Greatford Hall, Nov. 5, 1858.
v oe like ? tend Champion’ Swede very much, and hope. to grow
muc! xt year.
- deis
p
of all tbe viable kinds c 12 85 VE
J. n aed .
Es dre —
lica-
ected with the greatest care,
vé — a very fine Stock of the KORL
RABI, or TURNIP-ROOTED CABBAGE,
imens of which were shown at their
tands at PM Club Show. The Kohl
Rabi was largely grown lasi ern now bé relied on
From CHARLES NOEL, Esd., Bell Holl, November 8, 1858. as ja EA n the Turnip — Mangel, where these roots do
“ My crop of Swede Turnips this year from PM Cham not succeed, or for filli p blanks where there is a partial
eed is a very fine one indeed. It is — of the best failare. Its feeding q ties, hardiness, y weight acre
en this year. I al in ing ind are equal to the Swede, and all kinds of stock p it to
time some of your -topped nr ybrid, which suc- | other roots
es well; they are now a splendid field of Turnips, an L. & Son have also selected first-rate Stock of
the quality v ery fine." MANGEL WURZEL SEED, which ‘they can confidently
recommend. Their natural GRASS SEEDS have been also
From Tuomas BoswonTH, Esq., Wat: 3 Ids, Nov. 10, 1858.
„ have had the priz es awarded e this season 57 2
Selston and aoe Agricultural Societies, for = best ci rop
of Swedes, from the Champion Seed supplied by you.
Fro pe es ERT SPILL ranscombe, Ne
wet p* cire of y —.— Swede (al eat ^s 115
season), 2 platted. good size, and very handsome wnt“
a Kian d Wurzel I W from your seed are very superi
those
w from seed 1 bus ht of others, particularity
the Red Globe. I believe them the most handsome roots I
ever saw.”
From GM. OBBI
“1 plan — jei
; the Toit t wae that ream ee
Ashwiek, Ne November 15, 1858.
the best I —— for many
Mangel Seed has produced an
Arrain Wioks,
“Your gii r keramer minkar
— The prize of three guineas
Beeten to — “for the best five acres of Swedes, given by
the Rickmansworth Society." (Sort, Sutton's 3 "y
From Mr. James STEDMAN, Lucton, Kingland, Ni „1858.
„The Champion Swede Seed I uk from you tgs year was
I never saw a better field — Ue es than I
had from it, as also the Green-top Hybrid Turn:
From Mn. ARTHUR BENTALL, Eastwood, dia
I have the best Swedes and Mangel from your [ncm that I
have seen this year in this district, and wish to continue the
Same sorts for next season.
From ore TTHEWS, ESQ., Po Vhia aai Nov. 8, 1858.
My crop o d Tum ps this year from your Champion
Swede is a rery fine ae "indeed it is te of the best I have
seen this yea
quality v:
Pon X; T. HAYWARD, ESQ., Long Wittenham.
^ 55 Suttons c s salao, and Sy Swede has cp x Morrell's Cup of
ve —— ue, itae o o — for
best ô acres of Swedes in "T
„ Lee Fe
ou . t Wee eres
e ce Consort, for the best
ampion from yp of you, i
— wh, mrs maa ember) ever saw.”
J. F. BURRELL, oH Frimley.
e Swede has turn Me Bye tos PR ui
better than any I have
er had before.
Piin a fields of Strro
Sn e
Mi toe FERH the Primer Cromer besides numerous other —
.
een DOM a
throughout the.
well known an
unnecessa
ME M
saved with very great care, and they are ready to sup 26 them
a IL or in mixture, for laying down Permanent Pastures,
8 fox have arranged to deliver Seeds free throughout
England and Wales from their London Establishment, for all
Street, Westminster.
TURNIPS FOR EARLY FEEDING.
N’S LINCOLNS.: RED G
LOBE; the
SEEDS, CARRIAGE FREE.
epo —— um ames oe Mraxs
ROYAL SOUTH HANTS SEED ESTABLISH
UNDER THE e e OF gn — N CoxsoR
A TURAL Soor HE UE
OCKS h
the finest — — — — t Smithfield a and are i
d appreciated t| eir part is
in n
e —
s a first-rate
das large as
ENA.
neare:
VE
RB
1858, colour very dark purple, the
lific omer, and good
— —
Phe above are now ready for sending out, strong, well-rooted
plants. a taking the three varieties will be charged 108.,
A
pac
—— must accompany all orders either in cash or
—
Seedsm and Filo
Nan Bai. an, rist,
Pi
nW — Lawrence of Ealin
a shilling an
lso a — of | and W.
st approach to a dons it 18 a
regen T pie = that has yet been sent out ; it alte all ho poricnltural an
a proi bloo Frui
E [93 T cco
MÀ ILLINGS PER DOZEN 5 29 TH.
VARIEGATED GERANIUMS FOR BEDDING EN SSIES, V. VERBENAS, FUCHSIAS, I GTE TO Toa,
2, AKER 10 G
OHN HALLY, NURSERYMAN and FLORIST, 2 cu Diis Pak PETUNT S, HELIOTROPES, 3, BALVIAS, Eigen eae logh Square eet SL, E.C,
— — ee e — g = og oo ee S OR ee EIE TN LOBELIAS. Package i m. De ian m — article for destroying th Fi 1 can recom-
at the annex lio: thoat Cash.—Taomas H. DoucLas, Ros 5 Nursery, Edinbu , 10 te. “Pos voio 5 v Orders parable x 2 dd perl;
m BURNING BUSH NE — 4. inds, apr e foliage 7 TULIP GROWERS—MAY'S TULIPS. 3 ACCO ER.
arl with broad white oe and abe of bright crimson M RIST, 1, Northampton sir cl 2 m a FUMIGATING can be supplied
The fo er brilliant scarle! in good compact trusses, standing | IVI lington, N., begs respectfully to solicit an 2 E 5 post GENUINE E TOB ACCO PAPER at 4 — —
well up above the fi s. per dozen; a few larger plants | pis old friends in th ds mt ei years of ago and re e - vua e von kı ir
: , and now upwards o „ 1 8. Ji & :
. —Foliage variegated, with white edge, — bw that the whole are for unreser M ae BEN a - 65 PAPER be Lad — scs
and having a black crimson zone, rs à very riage truss | rows otherwise. On view at the Nu cry, Canonbury GENUIN OR FUMIGATiNG.
of dee; pne blossoms, 15s. per dozen; NE plants, at| Square, New North Road, Islington. 3 bes APP Y (Foreman to Messrs, Iver & Son,
25. 6d. p h. The usual discount to the Trade on the above. post free for stamp, add d Mr. May, as ab ‘pubic that he i this opportunity fd informin, g bis
: = = t free for sun ET ee d the ubiic bo
Nm. ge ZS LER, e e, A MPRO um) wil now send ox he following NEW dbi redwood rc, "T ia now wld ty este Ws
B Neige apne de van Ghent (Belgium, each, at ls. 3d. eam lb. -. A bara discount allowed to the
nee im a 23 = ee Bre GONIA 1 LEOPOLDII, one of the finest Begonias yet s. r iri e proe pa 5. ^ will guarantee its quality, se
8 ronicle, 2
Reine des Doubles capion nt out Iron Pots for fumigating, 3s, 6
—— Venscnarretr, LO Boigu, pe bogs mue even ew TYDÆA PRINCESS ERR. E dd] 0 N. AM ondes tol ‘accompa ed phe ra bir office Order,
dt out his seven n: 15 3 king, Surr `
Amie ov ea above; 7.5 ne stiong plants full in bloo: SANGUINEA the fo" ony" pya — HENRY APP. 1 M 15 0 .
The price of the set is 3. Early orders are requested, as 5 tiny TORENI A PULCHERRIMA ; ee s E AGE'S BLIGHT CO? SITION N (is. per
will be sent in strict rotation. OMA Vm nn FLORE PLENO 0 sufficiently strong to make fou fit for use) has stood the
The description of the above may be had free on application m S HA test of eight years publie trial, ts great success has led to
toJEAN VERSCHAFFELT. Plants will be og oar ree for kr 21 IN E q 4 R y B SY c AUG. E o UA a 1A‘ | numerous imitations. r. 1 7 in leading leot
after — ^ acsi Wer orders to hath directed to JEA EN ELOCK. — 25, 1856, . 182 cases in its favour, sufficient to
VERSOHAFFELT, Nursery z m x: lgi AMES BURL Y jm 3 pleasure in offering hs $ " n" v most -— “Pace & "o)ooon acked 155 a un to
i LCEOLARIA as a first-rate bed- | all parts of the world.—. y
t, a rare and ee Sa e ean d or violet crimson, in dense | Seed Establishment, OS
OLD either wholly oF n part, a r ding ue Colo: $ dá
sup: collection of Exhibi Spe cimens of TALL pare Mg presenting E Y m e A the eye; Pons I R ee O UND, PATENTED.—
J YLLI, d thei hybrids. They have | the weather well The en i is
— hibited at s Ap Metzobalilan Show: for yi 3n pple Place , Edgware g proved it lasts season, have TERIP (magnified). Meaty Bua
ing large merous the x r wishes to iet of them | kindly off. ered to become Sele yn for thei - of it. : xd g (magnified),
for cash or in exchan for Fern meng Aad — plants in a largo P eadh or wit "n 1 for erp, On. am x ,
uc or
[S — +e ines e T mu um K. Bur xx, Florists weren Surrey.
| POTS
OLD anp SILVER FISH.—Upwards 100,000 ROSES
on hand, at 4s. iet Pee 2l. per 100, or E per qune ENJAMIN R. CANT s the undermentioned A
ORANGE TREES, full of bloom, and some with fruit a NEW ROSES. The plants Sii now ready, and are re : E
bloom, d. each ; an rger size, ‘with very large. fruit and e fine and healthy; many of them have "tto ong shoots a
bloom, 0s, 7s. 6d., and 10s. 6d. each. AZALEAS and CA- | from 1 to 2 feet in length. Purchasers of 1 dozen and upwards —
MELLIAS, 18s., 21s., and 24s. pe vm ; and every other kind | will be sup plis at a reduced rate. The trade allowed the TEN y,
of Greenhouse and Stove Plants, eee ee Stock of the usual EA De HD
best quality at est pric or cash. — —
154, — 55 dits m Shoreditch Chu uc ES pue vtri FOR 1859 — berg a M
WI. CUTBUSH anD SON beg to state that they — — Docter Berthet Comtesse 0 de > Chabrillan pem
can supply the followin; —— PLANTS. Any Edith de v Imperatrice Eugenie Į:
quantity o N o ctn at ti exed :— HYBRID Peers — L'Oriflamme de St. Louis 1 :
Per dozen.—s.d. | Altesse Impériale Le Mont Vés
Ageratum ay % Lobelia speciosa (from Ardoisée de L Orderic Vital GREEN FLY on Roses and Greenhouse Plants 215
Chrysanthem emum regalium cuttings true) the best nna Alexieff need Olympie rid of by syringing with PATENT GISHURST CO. D,
flore pleno, golden i of the class - 4 0| Anna de Diesbach a 2 oz. to - an obw ater.
low, an po rer Nasturtium Tom Thumb . 4 0 Beauté de Royghem from leading articlein Gardeners’ Chronicle, Api.
ode ergo bods s: = : Petunias, VS orts .. 4s. to d y so the following ee Mice at 2s. 6d. each, or « —— it lir kills ring spider, ; aphides, s matr bng aun,
: plaiycentra ny sorts Lac ae e and scale, it is impossible to doubt in the Kee
3 . 6s. to $ 0 Moon of raga vid — Souvenir d Elise HYBRID PERPETUAIS:— p tical men, sing whom we may mention Mr, D. Judd, o
EM of ail all the best ) a free —— ne Clee t a Autriche Althorp spann then follows a 5 — against the use of à
varieties .. 4s., 63., and 9 0 — trig t orange- » vc: oben ermoni juise d'Autric| ng soluti
"Tom umb Scar. warf plam z . Lord Palmerston ld in boxes at 1s. 6d. and 6.
E 40 od dower ” Monsieur Jard = ah ces Coen a a a rinted opinions of Mr.
Variegated, ofsorts,6s.to 90 60 Hyer PERPETUALS :— Monsieur de Montigny Rue r, Lady Dorothy Nevill’s gardener, Sir William
Heliotropo. . MEC A. Verbena of itia best diri 4 0 | Abbé Fe; 1 ds ett. 7 ry 8 A ý Hooker, r Rivers, and other — E pde
Edmonds" 1 Evéque de 5 le where
A IPTIVE ATALOQUER WP M QU qi qas 9 e Pu sum pss ip bet wane the compound k strength best in
i . Mahon T small The 3 —. e men,
r VARIEGATED GERANIUM "BEAUTY" ._ Ab Ibe. per dozen Ao., having taken, lies are pre to sell singlo Boxe +
C. & Son can strongly recommend the above, which has | HYBRID PERPETU. Adelaide Fontaine, Bacchus, - Belle Be Thos ear Es Henderson, E.G. & Son, St.
bright green foliage, with a b argin of pure white, flowe Anglaise, Cardinal Patrizzi, — — a de Sebastopol, ces Barratt, Bury St. Edm John’s Wood, London 4
light scarlet of good shape e trusses in grea abundance, lan, Madame Vidot, Mathurin Regnier, Pauline Bass & Brown, Sodbury: Hendi A. & Co., E. £
and robust habit. We tested it last year with a dozen zeur, Prince Leon, Prince de la Moskwa, Rebecca, Souvenir Bell & Co., Newcastle-on-Tyne ap Ves
Other kinds, an ue cx it premier -— for 2 — de la — N a A i7. de -—- veson Gower, Sir Bell, Jo hn Norwien oper & Co, Coven
It was exhibited at. th women. R ranklin, Victor " Jackson, , Kingsten. ;
i ety, a and received a Certificate of Meri RBON : Glorietta, Omer Pac P lend Bdge "i Arcade, Jefferies, W. B., Ipswich
2s. 6d. men ee 21s. per dee NorsETTE: Miss Gray, Narcisse fhown, D.; ennedy & Co.,
9 FANCY, & FRENCH-SPOTTED PELARGONIUMS. : Devoniensis, Sauvage, Gloire de Dijon, Madame | (mitos W., 8 Walden „ Wm., D
A large stock ds — MY fine planta of the above in Bravy, Souvenir d'un Ami, Vicomtesse de Cazes, Cattell, J., Westerham Low, wu & Co., Norwich
48-pots of all the —— sorts at b&s., 18s., and 24s. per dozen; fine collection of the most es! older varieties, such | Cripps, T., Tunbridge Wells . ael :
or 5l. and 71. 10s. as Caroline de Sansal, Comte de Nanteuil, Colonel Rouge- di Mann, J., Gloucester
Deane & Go. 1 — don Bridge Ma R. C., st
^s ANTHUS an o —. aus —- —.— 1 oe ens Jules Margottin, Sot de la Dickson, F & Arthur and | May, J. & Co, 1 Wellington
* y Si g almai: per * tae pte Brigh
plants of the re dogant Conservatory Plants 4 pots, ester. Di Ape Manchester Parsons, 4 Son, Hexham
R 24s. per dozen. ickson * an Pattinson
"Highgate N : Reg SILVER SAND, best quality for Florists, | Dickson, Hogg, & Robertson, Perkins, J., l Ke nen
NEY, SCARLET VERBENA “MAGNET: 16s. per ton ; less quantities, 1s. Best: beats end anf delivered Dickson & C uh. e
I This superb is a of 1858. The colour | o amy Lond 7955 F Epps, F., Ashfo mar Reid, B. & Co., Aberdeen
is a _ mos vivid sel, with a large eee e e hie, 6 W — for Pus un (MALA fact oron — e * Smart & Mein, E
. E er London, S.E. Fisher, Holmes & Co., Shef- | Thyne, J. & Bu Gig
; the pips are as round, large, and good a substance as | b — field. e
those of the most beautiful Phloxes, the truss is of i i W.
~ size, many of them last a 9 dt t eireum: dee, er tee RI supplied London, S
URA rL Up. PEO tne tock or ue Bear aA fia BALUSTRADE, bende AND PT FOR FLOWER | caxpun Company (Limited), Belmont, — e,
as yet sent out were compared with it last year, but none —— SEATS, eeu unus id e tone, ATIN ERSIAN INSECT DESTROYING '
or Vieh s hot H Hs s THilanos OF at reduced prices, for the adornment of - Villa Garden, the PLANTS are
many Sagres. It never E In the hotta t colour by Mansion Grounds, or the private or v ark.
& superb variety for pot culture. t —.— ium to end
finest and most conspicuous vari
Eclipse and all other scarlet V. completely m in ri the o back
ground. This was the general opinion of ti the
S and gentlemen's — mirisa ws
; A. Audry, Esq, Bath; W. Teone Esq.,
Bath; H. Collison, Esq., Bath; „ Esd.,
Swans wick, near Bath; Mr, of Henderson &
Co., Welli Road Ni London ; Mr. Nelson, Nursery-
Gainey, of Mem Hugh’ Lae e Qe ma ution TO AMATEUR GARDEN
d A ms ursery, O AMATEU
London; Mr. J. Chaunday, Florist, Lewisham, Kent, S. E,; oe AP
Mr. Kitley, Nurseryman, Lyncomb, near Bath; Mr. UTTA TUBING
Shackell, ldfeld Nursery, Bath Bach, Webb, Assistant E en No. G GARDENA, du Lat aei nie
Y. ; . Dru "
Nurseryman, Bath ; Mr. gardener, Southstoke meer | Y or Priced Dietei apply — — Ransome, at | Tubi Gardens, fro
near Bath; Mr. Froud, gardener to — Wintle, Esq., Swanswic! the llo Rooms, Cannon Row, Westminster, S. W., or Patent
near Bath A = A M Da EM: Mr. Tootle, c
gardener ims ; Mr. ter, gardener to |“
Z'Yules Esq. Bathford, Bath; Mr. Knowles, gardener to
— Wiltshire. » Shockaewiti” near Bath. Single plants of G
thé above superb new Ver! um fessor Li RITTAINS "U
New Verbena “LOLA NTES,” colour light, beautifully for the Crystal
pt» S
piece edi
in het, Ud. 8
— I ZEBRA
LINEN, 4
patent prepared Hair
of | — Pit and old, keeping,
It t is adapted for
—— for preservi
ing | Tays of the sun, from
on- conductor
apes a fixed tem
of ins pr and fro)
be had in any required ee
; four, r yard.
run.
ufacturer, 7,
and of all Nurserymen and
It is much cheaper
is
RCHER, W
Trinity e, Can — Street, Cite,
Sesan it throughout the kingdom.
covering.”
healthy growth. Patterns on
than mats as Manchester, sole
ee
Max 14, 1859.)
AMES PHILLIPS anp CO.’S PRICES of GLASS
Jd for the rem —— 5
HORTICULTURAL GLASS, Stock SIZES, ee
aby 9, 13 by 9, M by 9. inn 64. 12.64.
BY 0, 13 219 14,2, D, ne
E" n th th Waa 1h. 10.
Un 1h 1$»15 16 13 i 1 A
„12 19, amem 168. 6d. 14s.0d.
8 ” i 197 13, 20 n 18, 90,5718 is * "
16 “i 14 17, 14 18 » 14 =
PP
PACKED IN Exo
200 fe . . 2 2
300 fe eet 3 E speos
ORC CHARD "HOUSE SIZES, as EN. by x to Ur. Leg
oz
$0 in. by i DA
20 in. by 13 omm: ^. 1 H - = »
20 in. by 14 " Superi "do. éa
90 in. by 15 in. English "Glas 19
Boxe m ncluded — not RH
SMA Ji UARES. hy r 100 x 5 sad
6by4 9 Tby » ll 6
8,6 HM Ei 17 9i» LI
10 „ 8 o 12
MES Pi PHILLIPS axp
180, peng, St. Wi e — — E. O.
TI CULTURAL CLASS—JUNE TARIFF.
OMAS MILLINGTON’ reduced Tariff of
7 15 &c.
y 7 116 oz. to the foot, 11s. 6d.
dy 25 " hed & 8 4 e) o yn 3 -— feet.
100 boxes,—4ths quali , 14s. 4d.
21 y 8, 12 by 9, 124 — FON no * OL 13 by 11
103 by 82, n by 94, 13 by 10, 15 by 10, 13% by ni
11 by 9, — 13) by 103, 12 by M 14
uy by 93, 1 b. „ 14 by 10, 12% by 114
y. er-100 feet 16 oz. 21 0
an by 184; Pe 100 fe 3 245.
vy perio (4. 197
ed
to Mr.
— 75 . —— . Hats Gia Glass ium o to $ in thickness.
Coloured Glass in great € at 9d. and 1s. per foot.
Paints, Genuine White Lead, Linseed Oil, il, Boiled Oil, Turpen-
tine, Putty, Colours, Varnishes, Brushes, Lam mp Glasses, &c.
x Bishopegate Street Without, same side rn Coun-
way.
GLASS FOR CONSERVATO s s — M
PIT ante
HETET am CO . are sup poly et Glass
of British Manufacture, pack — — 100
pedem feet each, — — following REDUCED PRICES for cash.
made feet.
Inches. Per foot. Per 10 feet.
er 6 by 4 at lid. is £012 6
From 6 by 4 „ „ ee! eo OFS
„ Ty 5 » » Oy A „ 2018.9
» wu » ; 94d. „ 1 0 10
» 10, 2.11
8 234.
Larger sizes, "hot exeeaing (Bes long.
nM rt uare foo eee
Li » SÍ. to 7h
71d.
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, and
PATENT PLATE
DA — sae purposes, at
ATES pg
ue
— Glass-
manufactured
PATENT. PLATE GLASS.—The present extremely mre or :
price pt cm Mp article should cause it to
other window ina M remm
se duty,
LAZIERS' D — for OT
le "ufacturer, 20, Sharp's Alley, West
Smithfield, London, B.C. 108. to 278. 6d.
HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS AND HEATING BY
, is prep: undertake works of any
maid : —— ce among others to the celebrated "m of
G HOUSES at HER MAJESTY'S GARDENS, FROG-
MORE, andat SIR ROBERT PEEL'S, DRAYTON MA NOR,
constructed under the superintendence of his anager, MR
JOHN JONES; and als is BOILERS fixed he CRYS-
and at several hu — of the E
actoríes in Frasca ——
—
; ditto — Se)
postage stamp.
S ens BEAN, MANGEL, & CORN PLA dee s>
tors), HOES, ES, &c. The “ Multum in Parvo,’
tivator, oo Hoe, p Plough, Subsoiler, {rent
Fd and other fo ag Qe te, 71. 78.
=" sent. Forti, dinis E us x.
AYNE K YTWES, cum lls. AND
T tion of Kirkcudbright, invites the —— n-
Adjustable Scyt others to his newly improved Patent
minute's tim can be set to any angle in one
y and nsqualled fer pU 4. managed, warranted
— on application. by any in the Kingdom.
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
I boda e E .
N sas io WARD hag ris edet ipn Brk-HIVES AND
POSITION OF AGE
NEIGHBOURS “IMPROVED COTTAGE BEE-
originally 1
8
BB
8
g
—Liv AMES C E] i
har: W. Ws ILSON, nad King Street. Glasgow: . /
& M'ASLEN, um Trongate. Dublin: J. EDMONDSON & Ew
61, Dame Stre HE
TY. S SWING WATER-BARKOW
(To Horp x GALLONS) MouNTED ON WHEELS
20 INCHES HIGH. — much of the — oma ma time and
ur.
labo May be o obeained o of any Ironmonger for 31.
BRA ie p iic 9s. tol
— a great sd of effec dn r Hydraul
, and to SUPPE paves, "Hothouses, Cottages, —
— or Boards of Health, with every . connected
with = —— r^ distribution of Liq
untains goce for Conservatories, 1 s, &c.
TEM Waisin & , Crescent, Jewin Street "London.
GA vin 8.
New wgate
— * me (^ their ve
J e Street, Liste, E.C., 5 7 TE
peii manufacture of GARD
8 gallons
30 gallons
£2 15
16 ons
3 72 25 18
12 gallons
23 5
p gallons
£5
* 618. No. 1. REGISTERED SYRINGE, with India- pex
suction tube, one rose and jet . . £1 5 ea
No. 2. Ditto ditto
Telescope Branch Pipe for ditto ..
Fg. = Ropers: SYRINGE, with one rose and jet, 12s.6d. each
a a —- any .6d. „
0s.
»
x
9 22 623. READ’S SYRINGE, with two roses and one jet, 18s. 6d,
Li
— — READ'S SYRINGE, with one rose and jet
ed ditto di! —
E
—
B
36
E.
4
Ditto dit dit! is 0
Mant ifi acturers of Pumps and Well = of (for shallow o
deep Wells), Plumbers’ Brass Foundry of e ner description,
High —
Garden and F.
Goods, &c
E. r.
able Grinding
ks and Closets, Copper an nned-ir
e Engines, Lamps of svay description, Copper
s given for Hot-water and Bath Hd pparai
Tp — MACH, NE
R. — F. TURNER, Ipswich, — ufactur
Mills, Steam ngine es fixed and portable from
Maine,
PARKES’ STEEL DIGGING FOR Fore
URGESS ax axn KEY, 95, Newgate e Street, London, AL OR
Wholesale and Retail Agents for these cele- BLIND MANUFACTURY (late Coupland), 870, Oxford
Mueve epus maA Siak on dna = Wit
Ee to o this 4 is Ch at uM mde wan mn
ond First Prise uà i — by the Bod ely
Messrs. BURGESS & € Xm 95, Newgate Street, — —
sent en appo Pariet Churn now in
Street, London, opposite Wells Stree
A owt BA of ELOWER. STANDS.
AR of n
em su
made under the
RICHARDS 370, Oxford Street, and atthe RYSTAL PALACE.
rches, 3 es, Trainers, Garden n:
Window Blinds of —
X a caval "GARDEN 3 — jme. rose & jet, 85 | [MS
HAW’S TIFFANY. — The The best
s Street, Man
TO HORTICULTURTETS.
mop KATENE l CHRONOMETRICAL
ETER.
(io 20 30 40 50 60 70 BO 90
sperma HEFTE
Thisinst
j com! Xi
ir 14 ME
a newly-pate:
| iM
J t
change
took place, dnd now long
such ud continued.
e slip (reduced
in 2 b xhibits the
temperature of t! go Scie
agunt —
show yard at
July 22, 1858, *. — ge
by one instru-
awarded — dc
SILVER MED
This is the only instru-
ment (— tem-
XD
and writes it E dows,
no rro i should
be
— — - 14
PRICE TEN SHILLINGS AND UPWARDS.
GAUNTLETT, Middlesbro’ on-Tees.
PORTABLE INSTRUMENT zor FUMIGATING
SLOWED to te — and — — SHRUBS:
delicta D as deli itvering tae th a l, i — rie — and
=: eliverin; e smoke cool, in à
effecting a great sa saving of To bacco.
Manufactured and — to the Trade by Messrs. BARBER
& Groom, London : and may be had of all Ironmongers, Seeds-
men, and Florists.
MAPPIN'S PRUNING KNIVES IN EVERY VARIETY.
WARRANTED GOOD BY THE MAKERS.
APPIN BROTHERS, Bear Cutlery Works,
vm ld ; and 67 and 68, King William Street, London.
PIN'S “SH ILLING ” ee Shave well
IM
t
RS
RAZORS (suitable for Hard or hes Beards,)
have well for Ten Years,
APPIN'S SUPERIOR TABLE-KNIVES maintain
eir unrivalled eai sce cmd cannot possibly
become bo hart — on of the very first quality, being
their own Sheffield manuf:
“Tle. Kns. Dst. Kns. Carvers.
| Ivory 33 in. emi balanced, 20s. p. doz. ; 16s. p. doz. ; 6s. p.
Do. 4in.
[Ne SILVER PLATÉDDESSERT KNIVES.
a
is
e | poin!
for Crushing Corn, Seed, Malt, &.; Port-
422 THE 'GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZET
r e aea
SPLENDID BE
On !
1
LDE t».
[ UCOMBE, PINGE, as . having a a very!
stock of this most beautiful l De bulb can offer it well
established in pote, fit for immediate planting out, at the
undermentioned exceedingly moderate rices,
Nothing can surpass the b; brilliancy of its rich golden orange-
coloured flowers, which are produced in the | greatest mer asa
upon graceful slender rna and stand unblemished the
est and
DING PLANT,
A
SE ar a
TANE anD S SON, the o Nurseries Great Berkhamp- e Subscriber c Ei.
stead, n large quantities fine | well-grown Plants, ‘consisting ¢ of the: bade ea
arge FRUITING TREES o of el Den 9 which are now m following genera, viz. :—Acaeia, Adenan ndra, Aphten i
. T — vx for travelling, the fruit not being heavy and likely | Beaufortia, Begonia, Boronia, Bouvardia, Brachysema lexis, Aa
rea
Y | Cho zem Cle à men, à
consist of PEACHES, NEOTARINES, APRICOTS, | Dillwynia, Diosma, Epacris (100 Kinds) 1
0 fer: J. ir K 1 Lasche
poe
56, 78 6d. , to 10s. 6d. each. e . ^od ofera. sane
CHERRIES, PLUMS, PEARS, APPLES, 3s. o 58. eac Lilium, Magnolia, Metrosideros. Myrt e Nerz
VINES, in pots, from eyes, with 5 to 10 bunches of Fruit, Passiflora, Pimelea, Polygala, Pu eue, a Tun Ox; obig
5s. each. enn Tacsonia, Tecom: a, Tro solum, Ye ronida” de, ae
mend the Golden Tritonia as one of the most effective plants FIGS, in pots, in a bearing state, 3 . e
for masses rn 8 — em tail ee Qi GOOSEBERRIES and CURR ANTS, S d. each. 100 andeomest e 25
remarks in the ^ Cottage Gardener” * Y, IT IS ESTABLISHED AS A Also a zay large Mme i XYERGREENS of which we 50 2 5 0 0
FIRST-RATE AUTUMNAL OR E Frower GARDEN.” It have a fine Stock, viz., Araucarias, Cedrus Deodara, Dom y les quantity 158, per don y
is also perfectly hardy. Now is is Y i timo for planti ng. Lebanon, 2 apere 1 Pines, and ail Coniferous 5 — CAT DURS may be had on Politi
200 Strong Bulbs.. £3 0s. oa 25 Strong Bulbs.. £1 0s. od. | 6 ft. t. high; Rhododendrons, well set with flower M, aped deti of 2L. and upwards are deli ie
50 do. . RC E: do. do. 012 0 | buds, Me to London, TR Liverpool Peter
Single Bulbs .. 1s. 6d. "each. The Home Nurseries are within five minutes’ walk of the and Newcastle, as me to any Rail ilway Stati aug a
Exeter Nursery, Exeter. Established 1720 Station of the, omy and North-Western Railway, Great miles cia Be mt - GS á
OHN — . ee 4, Great Russell | Perkhampstead, Her oyal Nursery, Great Yarmouth, e
t Garden, W.C., ctfully announces that —
Street, Cov:
he is now fully y rime to SUPPL in any quantity, Las
BEST VARIETIES of AGRICULTURAL TURNIPS, that is :
Per Ib. Per lb.—s. ails
A PERFECT SUBSTITUTE. FOR GRASS,
Kaing's Swede 79 6| Red Clover 0 9 LAWNS WITHOUT MOWING.
.
Skirving.. l. 0 6 f refoil La ME SPERGULA PILIFE RA,
Purple - — koe Loe 10 A
Turnip . 06 Sainfoin and Tares, bush. 10 0 S OFFERED BY 1
Fue —.— r Cabbages do : Pr gern end Sone ub
kj ME io 1% MES SRS. E. G. HE NDERS ON & 501
PM o Asters
Red ditto ... 0 6| A mixture of 24 var. of As a perfectly hardy Alpine plant, forming a close, dense, carpet like surface, maintai
06 3 of the abo vs 06
ing t
p Red Mangal ` with a rich, ever-during, evergreen e 8 all weathers in winter and s unge
j P in
ESSE eris bins 9 — Wess picture e an emerald green velvet-like vegetable carpet, studded over with innumer ille] r- "d
d
and Triennials for flowering early in spring, should bo sown r-like blossom
the present time to the middle of July. For r Early Green
21 ws vers CALCHOLARIA, PRIMULA WELB-ESTABLISHED TUFTS FOR IMMEDIATE PLANTING, 4s. PER Dozen,
SIS, SCHIZANTHUS HOOKE 11.
NIEREM BERGIA, TROPHOLUM LoBBII, SPIRJEA, VER. Seed Packets, ^ 2s. 6d., 5s., 10s., and 208. each.
E — VERON IC.
AR beg to dag 4 hat 2 Ibs, , at 2s. per Ib., is sufficient Special directions for sowing, rearing, and final planting are given in E. G. HENDERSON & Son’s NEW aur
Tan aere, and not 8, as is usually advertised by puffers, V DT eed v oR ORNAMENTAL GREENHOUSE and SUMMER-FLOWERING BEDDING PLANTS, which w Tl enr
for the sake of the profit on the extra and unnec: essary | for distributio a few days.
lead ignorance that a space -— ;
in that necessary for the largest Wellington Nursery, St. John's Wood, London.
mm ipwards. ——
CHOICE FLOWERS. 1
PLANTS, 20s. per = BUTLER & McCULLOC H’S
SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS,
GE d
Dur OS NARAR & FR : p. doz
A RRANGED on a.new and original p see with D e Descriptive and Cultural Notes
and contai 2 new and rare spec arieties koj; ee in any other Cat
logue, now ready and may be had free a roe — Be. — i
FLOWER, SHRUB, TREE, and VEGETABLE SEEDS, the ede of 1855, sa saved vn
4
du
car
We oe also state that the Sardinian dein ve e —
whose Seeds, especia — — and Picotees, hav
— the Agency from that firm and aretet oe ‘his rere re in itis
icularly FL
fe oa 12 Petunias [sim T9 meet the e gan demand for first class flowers, part
le 2 12 Gazania
E dark ditto pe E Blue V, elegantia. | i 4 Hat, M Professor LINDLEY in the Gar of Feb; rete d iem e — E an ; €
ue Verbenas h
12 Dahlia ^ rbenas | 12 . “Butter & McÜCULLocH's (Covent Garden) Spri x Catalogue of of Chie F Flower, Shru c^ ani
lants for 21s., the selec- ears that th
fills $4 Pmt A 8vo pages, and ja D A e got u
one of the great London houses With p do raped m
he saves to Messrs. BUT Le lock. Let us add, seeds raised im chat wa
r the excellence of its arran,
e correspondent
beo. ers ype, has now
cally — —— ß... dee a
bordering for i flower i beds or t or to BUTLER AND McCULLOOH, while d.
rawing attention to their general SPRING CATALOGUE which
ae Em EF high a = both dum dh; Mig botanist and amateur cultivator, avail themselves of the p
ni p ; full = ST;
pianis of the Golden Chain Geranium. (28) ACACIA GRANDIS (TRUF). HADROTHAMNUS, HÜGELLL
r On (625)
e of the most beautiful of - A. pulchella section, pro- | This, purpureus, and Abelli oll hantata
NC 5 DING PLANT S. golden balls. Of th — a nd highly orna- this beautiful genus, hich everbody bane
SMITH beg to cod — ie following varieties, — aie 2 — fewer than 47 conservatory sh d grow
el 665) HIBISCUS ROSEUS SUP. er :
„Ok these bebe l o plants Ea xy a Splendid collection, | This, Syriacu { yriacus, and eed we can highly
JJV —
t; à gies, the Curatorof the Zurich UM cd
dnt Cattell’s Dwarf 8 — —— — -— — — for rock-work is E this ha 8 SORGE ER
known to require ese collections we can
pos ias double, various, Dnm recommend, containing, as they do, species only of —— from M ie — .
Niombergia l (199) CALLICHROA PEDATA. ——
——
'entstemon, vario s The above,
* — —— A new erimson annual with white eye, very beautiful. shrubs, suitable ee
eder fancy i new double (217 4.) CAMELLIA JAPONICA. ornamental out of doors i
„ Unique „ Pyrethrum pleno alba From — Dewest and finest striped and other varieties of (972) PELARGO.
ce ROS e —— 5 h admired genus, Of these both large flowered — 5 pere
” vias, various 96) CEANOTHUS m oe GRANDIFLORUS. other smenaga 8 rick
" ; macrophyllus, and Fontanesianus are all | stock, to pro
Neca ore deem DR Ca I FA de Ban SopaNDN vue
z searlet _ | for conservatory and out. vei d are equally suited -— s De plant for nee
»
Musk, 4s, imm
^ : CA
The above i in strong cec ai at moderate prices,
ANNAS,
Of these MARE sa el;
interesting collection. (4885) BIGNONIA pues n —.—
(304) CE A (species Finer and brighter than radicans
"s à. 6d. per dozen. ef nost — eats eee of long spikes 3 ger
—
THERE bd
o Stamps, to J. Scorr,
b
everything suitable for Flower e
UBLE Pr El 88, Of J. S's unrivalled | to October. Well wenn jot of ‘doo tom July
of new DOUBLE PETUNI read *. Well worth attention. A dried s . —
at 6s., qiie fo = Negrete ee TAPA
(237) CHRYSANTHEMUM tall and
Of these dwarf and E varition we have a d stock,
~ | nearly ali of which ‘may depended upon to fine
roduce double |-
M, in quantity; e seeds having i been saved from P
ingens. varieties. savod trom the finest named] CARNATIONS and Plu
COTEES
YSOCOMA € Collection 2 resi 4 — . grown SE
(344) CHR MAURBA ce fl
e evergreen 5 bearing a ob Sn of golden ball-like wk nes wore poring sealed po
DAHLIAS AND BEDDING P. SEEN Fin
comprise 1 one of the handsomest groenhouse plants in cultiva-
LL SARRIBON'S Stocks of the
(451) DATURA HU LIS FLORE PLEN
A magnificent B. Brugm: jaliko t prod
4 g Sonet Uns yellow 1i flowers Y e dou puer
^ * e pene whiel test novelties of the seaso
and frequ Ch exhibited in his
Darlington N ursery, M.
itself, whieh je nant toon and. pott T
BUTLER & McCULLOCH, Covent Garden Mei —
er 14, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRIOULTURAL GAZE TTE.
CULT URAL “SOCIETY OF LONDON. | 'TYUNBRID(
ORTI 25 MESS HALL, ans 12 and 13.
rPTONBRIDGE WELLS HORTICULTURAL FETE, cially e conspicuous; an extremely pret pretty ty and new
AND GRAND MUSIC AL 1 PROMENADE. variegated Pothos h
&T OF AWARDS. variegated Pelargoniums and other small i specimens
iam e emer — POSTPONED TO JULY 1, from Messrs. E. G. HENDERSON & Co. and
Herts. * e 5
ee wont, onen IDS (Nurserymen). 22 Eri vs HENDERSON formed s: vary: pony collection, In
E leitch & Son, Exeter and Chelsea. another set from Messrs. HENDERSON of Pine-
mass IV.—8 CHINESE AZALEAS (Nurserymen) The Most Noble the Made CAMDEN, K. G. apple Place was to be remar ed the charming
See Fraser, Lea Bridge Rond, Leyton. The Right Hon. La rie "S n little greenhouse plant, called Boronia mellina,
vi—6 CHINESE AZA — cum (Nurserymen). The Right Hon. the Lorp Viscount HARDINGE. and a delightful specimen of Todea pellucida or
i — pee, b — varie din — vod Hon. Lorp pr L'Isle: y snophylloides, one of the very rarest
ad.
(nass VIII.—8 RHODODENDRONS, distinct, in pots
(Nurserymen).
js, Mr. J. pen F. H. S., Bagshot.
3i Messrs e & Son, Great Berkhamps
CLASS E —6 ROSES, distinct sorts, — iie
Ist. Messrs. aia e & Son, Great Berkhampstead.
ss X
A
— 2d | ma new or very little known were the rare crimson-
Prize. Prize Prize. | flowered Philesia buxifolia and Olea ilicifolia, the
E «d£ s d. Z s.d. | latter oneof thefinesthardy evergreens, from Messrs.
I yosoti i
]
Classes
Á.—Stove and Greenhouse Plants, not
L ie Geraniums, ies). jas, or Cáloeo-
Ist. Mr. 1 “Gr. to H. Stone, Esq., Dulwich.
ad. Messrs. diei i Son, ue
e ORNAMENTAL PLANTS.
e. Veitch & Son, Exeter and
r Clianthus pompisi
. Veitch & Son, Exeter and | E, —
S eom for Begonia y amabilis; ditto, — pepe Chautini. G.—Orna:
Third-class — — rtificate.— Mes , Exeter and
Que
‘ope at
weg from 1115 an ei ; x then Men
house shrub, Mussehia N with. w ery
e
—
S888 oo
S oo
m BAZE
mong fruit, which consisted of the * supply
of Grapes, one Apples, Strawberries, Cherries, &¢.,
the gem was a dish of the Sir Charles wu
dish of Fruit to contain not less
than 3 bunches of Pee 80Straw-
Le 6 Peac Ne ong
| in flower.
Wet. Messrs. Veitch & Son, Exeter and Chelsea, for Philesia
buxifo fa
M. Mr. Woolley, Cheshunt, lituiflorum
$d. Messrs. A. — ae — Place, for Da-
tura chlor:
Ciass XV.— Sin "t A aC of most ORNAMENTAL
PLANT, not in flower.
lst. Messrs. Veitch & Son, Exeter and Chelsea, for
1.— — black (8 bunches)
K.—Ditto, white (3 bunc ches)
‘ 1
: mos
H Exhibitors Cl e x
Cottagers’ Prizes will also be given, a Schedule of which is the largest possible size ; for the decoration of a
Poca ssert this eclipses everyt! ing. Mr. MUNRO'S
ial arrangements with the South-Eastern Railway Com-
y for the convenience of visitors will be made, and duo for | |bybri d Cucumbers, e videntlyb
igantea. v Sus à lup of e Royal Co., 9 r he Black Ham ite rapes from Mr.
manc — Mesers. r an and of the ry, of 50 per- i i H
Gale for Farfugium grande ; ditto, Ng us pen tree 75 Il be MB . kel EN must also be distingaished by especial.
eum; Tinta "tr Olea ilicifolia ; Messrs. A. Henderson & Co., leas
Pine-apple Place, for Caladium Chan
formers, wi ce.
Further particulars, or information, may be obtained of the not must be mentioned a
Secretary, Mr. E. F. Loor; 8, e Tunbridge Wells. pcr of fruit from Mr. WEBBER, of Covent
OTTIN GHAM AND RICT FLORAL anv | Garden, among which were specimens of Oranges
ee adit wey ;
ps XVI.—MISCELLANEOUS. HO gl a a D S 2 — AND POULTRY SHOW, Adelaide in "um Austra l They were of
First-class Ce TM —Mr. Ed. Francis, F. a S., Hertford,
fora collectio; on of Roses; Messrs. Veitch & 8 „ for E Son
rson
pacio
q. "
class Certificate. — Mr. J. Standis t, | Prizes in Silver to be competed for are Two Valuable SILVER had em received TRKA Adelaide from Rio; the
for Myosotis AE ditto, for Exochorda aand oris CUPS. Theamount offered in prize money in the -different Oranges were gathe ered on the 15t th. of; last De-
Mr. John Hally, F. H. S., Blackheath, for a collection of Ferns ; | c k i ember, d were 11 v
Mr. Gaines, F. H. S., fo — 6 Amaryllids. their cord before cup the ground on the day of Exhibition. e e ©
A. re Certifies —Mr. Bragg, Star Nursery, Slough, Prizes, Ge, to be had on application to Martm & Among the miscellaneous um pi — on the
Sons, Seedsmen, Function £ 02 e or by Post, enclosing | tables was a m model p ared b r. j
three to : P
2 — May 14. " of ee Malgwyn Carseat showing the principle
RIGHTON AND SUSSEX FLORICULTURAT |? ich his new method of ventilation, described
: ND red fo beheld gt ,BOCIETY: SE XHIBITIONS at 1 ET; isto be applied. In our opinion this ie
or 1859 are xe e held on the following days um
Show, WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, June 22 and 23; x Mari material improvement ue, gie
Autumn Show, WEDNESDAY and AET DATI Sept. 14 | methods except . e obJe
and 15; on the sam: — - s ined of : "Y — N both. instances is to secure a proper warmth being
are now ready, an „ Bs ained o e Secretary, 5
Ste Janes Street; or of E. SPARY, Queen's Graperies, ee gained * ae air before it can enter the plant-
Su per. of Exhibitio ouse, ne of Mr. Hurcnisow's plans, as in
NR ENEON Esq, EDWARD CARPENTER, | Mr. O Ar, this can only be done when the
FRUIT
Crass XVII.—The best Collection of F.
Ist. Messrs, Webber & Co., Covent Garden.
Crass. XVIII.—PINE APP PLES; large sorts, not Providence.
1st, Mr. Gilham, ed for Black Jamaica.
2d. Mr. Davies, Gr. m, Esq., Astle Park, Chelford,
for a B —
3d. Mr. R. Turnbull, Gr. to his Grace the Duke of Marl-
borough, Blenheim, for a Prickly Cayenne.
Crass XIX, —PINE Air 5 single specimens.
xd 59 to Ae TE H. S., Streatham,
— res wee apparatus is first put up. But in
1st. Mr. Thomas RATES nk, Dese unten E. ‘ay RH. f his plans (the left hand one, B C, at
Tune Gardeners Chronicle. p.587) it may bo applied ke erg bee
2d. -— Wiliam Hill Gr. to Ralph Sneyd, Esq vance that the model explained.
eele Hall, Staffordshire. SATURDAY, MAY flues, , y hori-
3d. Mr. Tillyard, F.H.8., Gr. UE ur. rue 14, 1859. :
2 c deer i la 1 ones carried under the front
Crass three bunches, in ets. MEETINGS FOR THE FOLLOWING WEEK. wall of € e p ant-house. ise between t wall ;
1st. Mr. G. Chalmers, Gr, to Lord Southampton, F. H. S., b ,M 1 P: t
Whittlebury, Tomes ud p jenes fay 1 t e at and the hot-wate
2d. Mr. G. Tillyard, E. H. S., Gr. to Viscount Eversley, — a neck
E 8 Eom Tur FELLOWS or THE Hon crer | piereed with holes and riding on the upper
in single dishes. : simpl h 1 $
1st: Mr. Shuter, Gr. to the Earl of Wilton, Heaton Park, | are under great obligation s thos dumm uem butt. water pipe. mple mechanica. contrivance
anchester. vators and earnest sup who among them — sr — ‘ton pierced zine, or shuts it off
of Committee. IE ct
pporte ` :
"e e (CA ni AN r . p interesting exhibition at St. Tori as may be found necessary. — e information
3d. ni more Hel to . Esq., F. H. S., Sud- Hall Jas t Th ursday ; for experience vu tna further of — — m dons desire to examine the
voke, Holme, Lincolnshire. rof contrivanee the e n for the present
— XT pa by gasburning, is to e 2 ihe in the office of the Horüeultural Sedi No. 8, St.
ini etford, M Coena" ending, and Victoria. flowers to destruction, and the plants — Martin 's Place, T frafalgar Squ
— Clark, F. anu e thé Earl of Darnley, Cobham | to serious injury. Nevertheless, in the face of so We avail ourselves of this p add
3. Mr, R. Turnbull Gr. to his Grace the Duke of Marl- 8 es 8 poss: ipg opem of ty m A or two operas the future action
boroug enheim, for i i ieh i 1 i
, ; 4 : ings was together e particulars of the Society, which 1s aily becoming clearer.
Util XXV—BTRAWBERRITS, single dishes, not pe — Exhibition are fully de seribed in another After a long struggle against most formidable
Peto R. Smith, Twickenham, f for Bir Charles Na ier. We must however add some editorial | difficulties the Council have at last su eded
Mr. "ed. dor K. Gr. to G. H. Vernon, Esq., all, Ret- | observations to those — — rter. — wie in placing the Society in a safe position. They
nare growers s. to hav are in possession of an income which, if the
. e S * fiden d in the stren ath ‘of t ie oid t 6 — publie continues to support them, is consider-
Hele „ Collumpton, for Melons; Mr. M ; Esq» them to the trial we have eari p with the ex- | ably in excess of the ordinary inevitable ex
umpi Q M onro, Shinley A ary pen-
Gardens, et, for Monro's Hybrid Prolific Cucumber; Mr. | ception of Wise LANE, of Be rkham pstead, and diture; and this enables them to take mea-
8 fer p r JH . 4% | FKANCIS, of Hertford, the first t of sures far more active than have of late been
his Grace the Duke of Sutherland, E. H. S., Clevedon, for a | of the larg est and most beautiful bushes ever seen, | possible, and to infuse renewed i
oi f he public papers have anno
for a dish of Tom —.— Peas specimens. Messrs; FRAZER, LANE, and -IyrRY|that a an application has bs n made to her
ASYLUM, CHAPEL AT bas RE LUNATIC] Azaleas. Among Mr. Woop! 8 gne was a| for 8 s tes 8 of t
ixb HORTICULTURAL SHOW ie id otto Fun por LORAL beautiful specimen of the very st
a Chapel at the Coun "aspis wil NU — held ai phyllum — Some very striking Pal by de an
Blisworth Gard THURSD. 8 :
patronage of doas. ae 3 and Araceous Plants showed the — of we
iu a How THE EARL SPENCER = ae — of imd ie dms of Kingston.
ne Hien SurRIFF OF THE COUNTY. nieder uni
re Rev. G. S. Ro N ? : ^ from
^ d eee HË MAYOR OF Norrin ee em E wed NS 2 with| ti
‘Prizes offered for St d Greenh i 1 n ;
pith variegated and fine foliage, Conifers, Exotic Fetus and — 1 ‘of Mr TANDISH, of Bagshot,
de scr me, Geraniums, Carnations, and Pansies, Fruit, essrs. LANE, both s whom. furnished col- |
— ad — — e eetions, the latter con a
ue time, and furth -
.eulars will appear in future eH IU eM. Ei "
on H. M —. | — — — 3 plants were War by Messrs:
Subscription ove ol ll be received T i
2 7 Honorary Secretary, — — W. J. en eee mel x E whio —— —— ood
Northampton, to whom all communications may be ca in the nurseries Theo sta maerophy
addressed, and imperialis and Aralia Bietoldi we were
[ERAT AGRICULTURAL ae
THE GARDENERS’ CHRON
dens, w d them surrounded | as to admit of
bitions, all notices and other hich f at most kitchen gardens, w — » found ring w
0 to 16 yer Y" which are accom- | be found as o in ab
—— = - ee cvy such a 55 d alis, fom 2 ofa Similar Dy , Or Lie ndi ci y be . Ge 15 ul % Sis irem
m tab e| Turner an s$s Fi
calars may. be event aliy bos ayau " donithi borders must, asa matter of 2 be reserved a er Ala. May pics f, Pruitist, and Gant
future reference, Should the Society ba sufficiently for = Mat e crop of Peas, or hand-glass Cauliflowers,
supported the circular in question may lead to a T y Potatoes, m so with all the rest; they are 17105
revival of the Journal, the publication of which daea the gardener’s choice of ground, on apes ntis . PEOT
as now been long discontinued. e de | wh foster n grow anything he Bond e k go all would have said that the fr:
f distributing plants by ballot is also to he wishes to do better than ordinary. " d | prosp e ged season were most pi nt
: : al e has Promising
i bly altered and improved, so that not add that this ‘cots is now universally taken place! Í
— : Sijan pag ^n chance” of obtaining | ed mned as inimical to the well- pod of d trees, tions of abundant crops aye blighted, a and tow d
lants which he does not want. and the greater part of April d wn of Meg
"ello ows of the Society will have a e: of |i our fruit. That the crop has suffered
5
—— them for growing what dem ou may Naas, w with a qu Eg t present repr eS
Thése unani mistakeable indications of r rell zi AP of pem the tre has in bloom as * noticed think not. Pu the first vide roa
p will doubtless prove gratifying to "i $ here after. The — gardet walks may be margined | rumour very frequently magnifies matters, i sd
ve the interest of horticulture really at heart niowi Wi with Curr „Lo, or even with Saler or bed opinion has been the case in the present i 8
IS. e iru T
re
d lear. we will take a|not been so great as is re d
CLIMATE IN RESPECT TO FRUIT GROWIN bed render our men aning Aye a gue ah 2 8 hee een. ane heard, ; ula A From i
[With the permission of the Editor of the Florist we Ee south wall, cropped, say w. 1 the sce gpa ke-
the following from its able and extremely well-conducted | take the wall 14 feet high, and the border as 14 feet h ry,
columns. | wide. Let the soil the whole width be duly prepared | many may desire, are on the Be such as tole
Tue extraor kM 9 7 5 — of our English climate for fruit trees, — — g enerally is near the wall for the | us to believe it will not be much baa the
haye never wit ory been so 8 Peaches ME. d then throw an arched trellis. | Owing to our variable climate it is not o that's
realised as in the presint “season. After the frosts | springin ig 2 f cet onn the 1 a at front over the have three or four heavy crops successively, Ss
which occurred at the end of November we have had border, to within 5 or 6 feet of the wall, under which | frosts, as they did this season, some years
inter to ak of; indeed December, r r
a ar a
absence of lat
last lish, winter, in fact, might have answered for oct aspects. The accompanying diagram | ix certain localities, but the two princi
the 5 of Italy, by its immunity from frost, and eee the n id rellis, and "n help - E ow failure are unfavourable springs and 2 "^ :
generally clear bright w pontia Very early in Feb- | the plan of protection recommende it is we cannot alter or sink ad he seasons, we must do all
ruary a number of shrubs were fast breaking in nto leaf, | wished to put on the d ing material, ihe ue * 4 ard against these two causes of filtrs,
and Apricots opening their ond; during all | (, which, however, may rmanent, sh set | Protect: — the only means d
went on unchecked, so wy Yd that b the „bezinning | [2 to hold the front eae. bar, ses eir 33 ara i spring frosts. Timely disbadding
April, notwithstanding the severe frost of March 30 — " attention to thinning and stopping tle shoots
and 31, w ds ani sete E rote presented t to retain one more than is required for next
allthe appearances usually shown by the first week in chc 8 e" will in ordinary seasons ensure "i
iption of
May, a ery rden produce partook bl ripened woo
also of the general earliness of the st "he Ce fruit crop of 1856 was a bad one owing tothe pre-
March we had 10° of frost, which, following after a M ussummer and autumn being unfavourable tothe
evious evening, , did a vast amoun of 2 < ripening of the wo ood. The crop of 1857, notwith-
ason ps very hot and dry 2
the crops of apricots s, which were then That s
thoroughly rene and the — bee. that the crop
hi cod ell
several places
Ae a caged size. Peaches partly set, and
x r less B che “the country ; —
early Pan. sad Plum s also. The weather becam
rly er known. Last season tdi —— vis hot and
warmer, and tbe 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th of Aem vere 3 | thé wood and fruit buds were again well rj
remarkable for 9 — the day tem — AW notwithstanding the heavy crops of 1
having been 82° in this neighbourhood on th, sd A there was every próspect of abundance this coming
between ‘70° and 80° the greater part ormer| | ; son; indeed, no
three days, an i the first ot been for the 3
week of April, by : de 0 weather we have had the erop
or three hot the month of April, have been most abundant. Upto
1858. Th next became sensibly colder, and 3 all was promise; on
on the 14th and following days indications of wint d deal of snow, which
ir appearance, followe storms, cold followed by 10“ of frost t
h winds, and frosty ni n the morning e this destroyed
of the 20th we had 8° of frost, accompanied by a the Apricots, hi
easterly wind; this frost h: 5 15 — that wer rotec
55 rr Cherri Cherries, Pears,
excepting perhaps in some 12 locality, c if exception of a few early
which had — ka e a thing almost impossible not forward enough to suffer mu
to effect w where means of an ordinary garden ex- I never saw Apricots, Peaches,
Lore id nothing of orchards and open garden D tarines set more Ae yt ti
ts "rers Wherever
We have 80 miei advocated orchard-houses uaa Wik y t aA of protection. we
the Florist, as indispensable e perd wal i 1 used, a good cro crop has been save, re
garden, uk 4 Front ditio Bede cim 5 rost on March 30th and 3: p he raat Ne
0 e tre ore, h ts, en
s k |e. Iron iron bar, ora — every 12 feet, to receive a horizontal riche Save eee were porous .
EET ho a tae d Fa 7 5 lieh N f. Wood d p Qe imr fron fastened to the horizontal bar After the ee, mild winter we we
at our recommendation for their being adopted was | ^. Tie from mj, to to sla ber) un (9. —.— A cre Meus 8 5 of 33 ai PEN were We
— borne out by the experience of all those | iron bars, or cordage, run up wees or 10 feet pared for Mee. 3 Ah and highly culpable: 2 9
who have tried them on rational principles. We ics from the front "horizontal bar to the one un nder the all s h b d x cro are’
a te Poppers Seite ealeulation coping (g). If th Si des we have seen abundan pa
to see it is practicable to ensure crops o f fruit, strong te sustain the covering, w *
e | ooden h
E such weather as the present, without the assist- | substituted as a support 1 for the tie (i). Eder eai ord B glass ass sua he
-arranged garden, surrounded with walls, with | ensily pnr: frame and. supports (o,f, J) can bo | course, very su picker in - tii ane by and
removed, an ing: P
is quar 4 furnished with Du bush € or pyramid aten ia 9 Leg 5 in urere KT a foregoing; but fn the absence, ob ee ible pe simpli
: when the bloom requires ii he spring. t
URL cod UE ch malt NEL na
h mise an n turn for all the i - w | the present, if the 25 eee
trouble. and anxiety they cost. Bat how often, wird mà — — — r
witnessing 3 9865
doomed to tO fe such onf as it is necomary that the bloom be kept dry if | protected on the nights of Ma
m we nave ra experienced, Vu EN on iw ithout epos manufactured sufficiently thin py light mat "x ox wn, herd ie perte
Ow con we in i H : | erri e sufferi er,
ern tU — ait 3 e | impervious. t ingore k and letting down, and yet | but on trees against walls they are peg
for the season, and the W motto of Nit desper- | what can be ge towards supplying this deiieney i crop. x ears N Diei m e
E et tere al h E in | on walls, viz., Jargonelle, Passe / ngfield,
ments such as these. It strikes ded we must alter our | Tiffan or We at Shadi mean time Shaw's| Beurré i Easter Beurré, Vicar of WIE
garden arrangements for fruit trees; true, we may would answer ing dipped in oil and dried, | Glou Morc I have never known theni
continue to inters ersect our kitchen garden quarters viii on | great deal of rain. yo 9 Senp anid a| to imiss having m in — ste
ruit trees, in whatever form we may fancy to train; substituting netting gf ‘or — tu a JUN. Len n Mete n and Dv
m autumn, when birds, wasps, Die, Louise Bonne of Jersey, 080, ;
ut
spendi ach money and time for such |t o
uncertain — P We think 1 d allowing p* all the | carr carrying them out E FE modi pad average crop. Apples
and |
— sre which intervene betwe een planting Pi pin nde omi of f f z ab Mut. : — E ‘ai paper ra
the orma- | abunda: ees, and nothi
e no difficulty in n. the. 3 iie vig *
Still. when there tenis, We my, tet the b y at nhe and we are | 27th of — month nes ‘the t 5
are y, le thing e| iu" sia impressed with the e conviction th €: a be more promising than they are, are al Det
and, something else besides. Looking | concentration of al our best varieties of fruit tr i, (olen as suffered considerably, and the crop
rather be rage ong red Currants
— « iuis Cat "being a * wort las e from
rho had tti eani;
is a correct statement of my own case, |
eparatio: it requir
s follo wis as a
neighbourhood. I should hope such sights are not rar
in any part of the eser a Apri ril, bat
fine house in the depth of winter is another oir a very
different thing. According to Mr. Fry, “the principi
| secrets. in Cucumber "ipeum aa area g open ous
and I know that nearly all those w
tions to protect from the severe fro: irre il well drained thraigh:
well. know that tari aeia x out abu ndance of “heat, air, pari moisture." It may |
julled into a false sec by the r Mia iiy 1 mild | surprise him to ey that de eri use peat, and rarely
weather, have had their crops very — injured. eaf mould, and as to “ e" the roots of my
asa p^
plants are standing constantly in * — and forming a
So do doctor:
zu; | ind ss
SIT
"he pr great skui
„and j cm iride
he Soy or Sooju is thus prepared. ual quantities of
W heat or Barley and Soy Bean are boiled 3 A nme
ther. Themtxturels enen, urs.
s
times a day
s. The e mass is T filtered
close and s
se two or — mon
pr eS!
complete web in the tan ors differ, and
ej yet I shave not the slightest doubt that is about
wood w was unripe:
invariably Dies nio; * i 46m vigorous growth
aelmas
and Lady- day, through the dead of winter, [o some
: ths of the
which rarely suffers from the attacks of gree
is therefore a matter of — os ost 1
well ripened wood; attention, I may repeat,
should be immediately paid to thinning of the trait, to
disbudding, — peu a stopping i tioma ots. eee
mly what ar t year. It is good prac
to thin — ty hat fruit is left ig ipen will row
be the finer [A its the and will
in ordinary s s ripen well. Wit ell matu
wood and Side there i is alway a cy prospect of
a crop. When the er pruning is not properly
attend goes crowded with young
e fir
rear. Therefore let me -€ ise them to leave the
eatin trick, which has no come very “rutty,” and
take a shorter and easier eat to success. W. P. Ayres,
Orchardleigh Park, From
Home Correspondence. ;
155 Pty improves, ‘while it becomes clearer, with
age. Fresh water is then — to the mare, which
is again squeezed after ixture has a well
shaken for e — ^s
The Sy i is A 0 ed
Canes.—The
— — — cuit us shelves of my old grandm
In fact it savours more of Wee rede
rye — nkey. We are informed that ‘
Eng lishman ” manage ed to approach so
wi 1d monkeys, à
rea - canoe
near
colour when prepared from Wheat than fie m
M. J.
„Tombstone er by a Fig Tree ing rea
ur columns Mr. Waterton’ iio statement "n^ a huge min
| — Mir: supported in the y à Nut tree, I beg to
inform E me in the — - at Watford there is
| large tombstone supported by a Fig tree in
way.
A from Amateurs.—We, th 1
whose name is legion, and whose p^ ence "
called,
— world of flowers is evidenced * the host of nurser
«er
young wood w ere organised
matter which is ghee A in the bod; "and pisi nem
it on the frui x
and finer ; and the
of p
ere spring frost, we may mers ee, c
in on
e seasons out of ten. M. Saul, Stourton, Yorkshire. —
NIGHT TEMPERATURE OF FORCING | HOUSES;
nd y e wood the y y b Pio t: EK ok
em. What an e
could
—
must hav to tarry in the tree
Why,
3 good, bad, and indifferent, who have sprung -
as Mushrooms at our Wing, humbly petition
den 25 come to our aid under difficulties a — trials no
longer to be endur r case stands : devot-
callings
| tion of our comm
| gra!
Xe they
s task. ese mar and mutilate
pem ‘of the “roth enin. I take this s opportu-
to suggest “R. F., Polesden Lacey, mr, d
is rent Beech
the
nity
M +.
ee by
| two iron bolts driven through it; one of them 1855 out a
mo
him — to — his of t
N too numerous
o the Án in which our most c
e stove vid: — in the
eee of these. men, implies h houses. heated to
* re especially eve
cranny is cl venil up, and steam put on
| boil a Cabbage, : and thus yellow leaves, spot, m
guor,
| dwindling, | flowerless, and at last leafless s
hot de to
dew, lan-
pe
aware that ould eall into action th g
querulous disposition of some of your correspondents. from the top. As the tree must I have received its injury |
Disbelief appears to be the order of the present time,
and any attempt to — si — — — foliage, a repetition may occur to the
by-gone usages is at once mbat ed a of the tree i tself. The bolts woul E this —
ege DER he who has — th tually stitch in time Carles
s limited understanding, Th us den Walton — —
D S.” would attribute all the success to a comfortable | mune — elliptica on » Aucuba — (see
ile Mr. Fry and his friends ignere the | p. — 859). The authority of M. Carriére
Success Pye 2 note rat an aer genae No
a very essential |
hunt atth
e of any remark . de Editor, give — for
stat
the
ded, with the plea A "y "were
ML sent | badly established, or some such bosh ; whisper
supposing th —— "Y ent is not — extra
J
“M.S.” that nm
unlearned
ret
il y are not accustomed
1
per
“at the inn. habits of the tin
markable enough. Perhaps un would ial
CC
1 — ee
opportunity of pointing -o
to be a rid Mr Nov. W, aie petitioners are but
of ordina si flesh and blood, — ean but
y pray
lation betw
which the p
the early f March,
sort of — Phenomenon, s ins had the 1 — to
En d to all * 2 — — a aae ity |
to show was no
tits essary to
de ip" of dung toot for — growth E
Cucumbers in the winter season, I lished
been hitherto suspe
, , Flow er Bed
station
ively "etin. |
dis- |
and Mi earn you to indite, i in
comprehensi ble to — en of
— — or little wit, some — code of
ure of stoves and hothouses for tap and nd .
on vi pay set ion by night as well as by da;
|and on Tet and shading. We know hove veal English
gardener horoughly u understands ae to n a
ed near
| Loranthacee), w.
e relations. The experi
exactitude of which we suppose e there is no — wi
| doubtless cause the value of the order Garryacem to be
further consider Its affinity to Cornacem 2 not
seo have 5 to lay out my beds for
| witness rine i prosa of their skill rr our —— —
e | they espect ;
but th
| men professi ga
fill their watering pots, and these be they who create
havoe with us little fish.
t us with testimonials of ability in all
novel principle, for
I am indebted to the r Monde — patter hook of
ess and less anxious about
bottom-heat; in moderatio — say never to exceed 80°
for any plant, it is very well, but to iy it asa
ien for all the ills that plants are heir : to is
tly to do evil that may come,
as | sketches that the chief novelty in them
— of * — lines and — ular forms hon parallel | an
e of t
Messrs. Maw & Co. You will observe from the annexed
he substitu- |
= parallelograms, though a m the
82 — — e of the finest effect, — is shown in
| crafi
| Dec pray you to give ear to this not un:
Mr. Digby Wyatt’s aoe for Maw & Co’s 838
Geometricus, Salop.
may de fo for some . 58 W
et
e stoves
bottom- heat, accompanied hi ih
y a high night temperature,
I — as the root of all evil in plant cultivation.
that his Pi iren — swell in
eee of A n,
ing out on all sides
y flat, and see
y while from
sketches
me | kep Vier than i is usually the e case, a and t that
—— by pass ing over pi
"ite — moisture of the house pai
Sean temperature at night should —
—
differ ren nt spec ies of Doli ichos cultivated i in
ass —
ure. We deem 8 — m
A the r sprouting
foliage of early su idedly — to
and
w
uscats, ob, tot gee Chasselas M
al epee pee and yet when I was E
be ind did the s stoking, the penalty of wing
J
jne air.
“Tt is very doubt however, whet:
y Bean would sui cold su:
0
Amen
of its preparation for cu purposes. Itis used princi-
sg asa o for butter - as the well-known
Soy. The hese pr A is called Miso, and is
made i in the s followin wing w a
to get below E. would have been instant dismissal, and
as well as could be desired, and |a
man to
bi fri r the
and in "i b t
or “shall I J allo past
keep so long. A quantity w added
equal to that of the Soy Be vans, and intimately “pounded
d for
night ts rest, save fael
yet achieve results as 2 E —
jt
one or two days and nights in a warm
mixture is then
contained the beer. the country, known under
the name of sacki, and and left for one or two months before |
i Mr. Fry speaks of fine houses of Cucumbers in his
— and the ev .
er's e than th
t thin
J
Ati ded in sien
added in lesser
T e of js yields pe best — bnt = will not | raised
steamed ri
the —
with — more prejudici
warm cellar. Tas | On examining it
put into a wooden vessel which has | On
sa * im E th;, ‘two of Chantin’s Cal ladin
attacked by this insect; if so, what will kill them? various Palm all in most luxuriant t heal one or : ums,
.G. CZ Surely not Scolytus, but some Curculio. | the e pru lew ed Chi 5 e Hibiscus, erat was the v dd p leer *
i zhi i | i i a magnifica, i
If fpo atter — be caught " night while feeding.] | carias of variou iie ripis em En initin) dd | with reddish’ bu folate; GAB
iod THE GARDENERS' OHRONIOLE AND RUAA GAZETTE.
Suc h pose pa Wer D S A on cea, a se a i
my practice is, as soon as they are fairly | Chinese AzaJeas, astings, an ith 1 :
d they wer e with the covered with long white wool;
set, to pierce one of the fruit with the poin nt of i a pen- which, tastefully MAT 2 hey were f variegated: Geraniuidn, s
to mark the per Wollastoni, a promising ereenl
Am of the operation, to remove a small alice. admirable effect. On a corresponding yos on the \ „ a p g g. house shrub:
- wounded fru: it Mes and is soon obliterated ll hiefly Palms | bium Leakianum, and the old canary. colo
ile its twin brother swells unhurt. G. S., Bromley | from Messrs. Jac be son, of Kingston; amo g them were | pervivum eui Some very fine Amarylii
aria ets.— e tried many nostrums and failed, [ Livisto onia eh onica and Jenkins si, Phoenix stris | fro
and Bac E dien parviflora, Corypha ital
ye
Pine-apple Place M
to as k b SUD essrs.
Pray let me appeal to your Sugar aeui] x m denna pi e ee wih lone Se e ellow-tlowered Datura e chlorantha,
from a Pinery. A. Gi in distres: and the sin 9 looking Monstera delicios r. mellina, the charming little Fern Todea
Garden 25 enses. — Your corresponde ent *J. D." Young, o ulwich, sent a collection in ehm MIS various Caladiums, Dracwnas,
(see p. 362) [s admitted the necessi ity of some ex- | Farfi ugium grande, very fine specimen with more unfelsi evillea robusta, an
planation to his Dr. and Cr. account given at p. 218 yellow in the leaves than usual; Brom aelia sceptron, other plants remarkable for the beauty of their
aladium picturatum and b bicolor, he collection of magnificent Rose trees in
half from his kitchen garden, no ‘explanatory statement | tense, with white b sape foliage ; the white spotted | Messrs. Lane, notice above, formed one o
features of the exhibition. Each specimen
importance has been eA.
th
is no proof of that, and his rsen. (562. 36. ertensi of a 9 8 paler shade; the handsome Tea Ris
really do not warrant such a conclusion, seeing Harem “the val dis Asplenium et Sag wit Souve enir d'un Ami, white, or rather blush with!
that there is no stry iy manure, seeds, &e., | finely cut leaves, Doodia Bleshpgiies,. p centre » Ju es Margottin, 80
in the Dr. account. Let assure “J. D." that Davallioides and acuta, Cibotium Barometz, Davallia Paul Perras, rose; Triom phe
an experience of 15 PE did given me ample | bullata, Pteris tremula, and Dictyoglossum crinitu um. hese were, as they des eser rech be, greatly
proof what kind of demands are made upon a gentle- Rhododendrons consisted of two pei POEM one from | Francis, of Hertford, contributed an e Khmer
man’s gardener, and I had no intention to institute a | Mr. Standish, of Bagshot; the o r from Messrs, | men ry nice Roses in pots, which occupi
eomparison between a public and private garden; but| Lane, of Berkhampstead. In Idle of the centre table, and formed a good tac.
I may tell “J. D.” that the outlay per acre in market | ae Gem, a remarkably ha he me kind; Robert ground for the fruit, — was 3 in front of
ardens, even where common vegetables are grown, Gair, purplish crimson; Mrs. Mangles, French ae them. hag ooms cam Es
exceeds considerably the total returns of “J. D.s” with spot ed sappen petals; Hildebrand, crimson ; Que ruit was as good and as 5 plentiful a as could have been
H cre. I wou aim him that I|of May, v V Rosabel, seman v idering the seas Webber,
have seen “walls” covered fruit, many crimson. "The next e e from Messrs. Lane con Cov ent Garden Market, came a po E
further north than Fife, her although sisted chiefly of yell l
3 it | sisted chi consisted of Coco oa- nuts,
may be true that “all trees" did not bear “even a among which tue best were perhaps primulinum | from v Deer and the Ground-nuts
» rate crop,” yet failure was the exception and not | elegans, 8 flavum, delicate pink and buff; Litchis from China, Shaddocks - tlie oo Tale,
„the rule, and last year there was more than an average | aa atum, lilac and buff; aureum, Jenkinsoni, add Bloód Oranges from Malta, Man
erop of wall fruit. In the gardens of R. Crawshay, |f osum. and a large rough-skinned kind d called the Navel
Esq., of Ottershaw Park, there is a wall only 158 feet Ota zaleas ON Lane furnished some very nice | Orange from the Be of .
long covered with and Nectarine trees, from standards, some of them “unions,” z. e, two varieties prai; Pommeloes, from the W. Indies,
ome Pears and Apples, both in good peki,
eac
which have been picked for several years on an average | worked toge nie. on the same stem, or rather pom k
00 dozen of most excellent fruit. Your correspondent | Such specimens when the colours are à wells contrasted
_ statęs that “orchard houses are of recent introduction." prod uce,
80 AMT oi been sufficiently long established, how- | Messrs, Fraser sent both in the ee
E g
Ha i
dip 1 and May Duke Cherries, the latter
These were staged wi z^ eee
t.
| dwarfs TOS p 22 gans, Loui 53 a F pod considera interes
white; Diana, crimson; dog purple; a double] Of Pin B khen e were some good exami
white ey nn i sinensis alba, Minerva, brilliant | Davis, or 2H n, Esq. seat a ool eo
e scarlet; violacea superba, Duke of meee. Prince Zh Prick i penu weighing 9 7
miration, while inci n with crimson ; and optima. | Mr. Clarke, Cobham all, Keni
Page, gr. to . Le 7 Sat
en Ad
Of new kinds, Messrs. Ie of Dorking, had er furn ste by
b th 1 and plants. Among the ham fs a of Stoneleigh A
e, Distin eva salmon edged | said AN ag ind for frui
E e ori ject info: i tt
, with de t eralities, his Era im h white; ^» deg orange scarlet; Baron de Vriere, | stated to have been a cross between
would 15 more enm Such s ims ents p that at kre pink, spot tted; Due and Dachesse de Nassau, a Queen. ther Pines consisted of
cula i M
yen
page 21 i2 re at ed to mislead rather than to in- | the former a ouble purple, the latter crimson; | Hickson, gr. to E. Challoner, Esq, Hermiston Gi
struct, The house” is t n as a department and Barclayana superba, white striped with purple. Yorkshire ; some
under “J. Ds" charge, and he keeps it (I wonder in or B red Messrs. Veitch had a charming collection. to R. Crawshay, Esq.; a very ni
what ) for 397. 10s. 5d. Then the,“ fences on the | It e ted of Aerides Fieldingi, virens, and I Mr. G illham, 1 Isleworth ; imi
farm,” and “additional farm work," seem the only num, “the latter a | handsome deep purple-lipped * rnbul UM
t He agri iu. department under his care. In lium 0 5
8 is balance-sheet is still very obscure, and can as villosum, a noble plant with some 15 bloo on it; s, however, ast its best.
di prob 17 — oe is cle dlands, Blackheath. Lowei, C. barbatum, the e exqui- Ot Grapes, Saag remarkably fi
4 a 75 di poe t may perhaps interest some | site VR cede um Dor vonianum, and the araro, and beauti- | Hamburgh came from Mr. rost,
X your readers to know that I have a plant of this at Sl Odontoglossum Peseatorei. A spog collection |. Esq., and fruit. of the same variety
present in e bloom. It is upon its own roots and in came from Mr. Wo oolley, of Cheshunt, p Fasern | was contributed by Mr.
e to
sa] The blossoms are bright yellow and very d Dendrobium nobile, Cattl i
| eya intermedia, a Skinneri,] Keele Hall, Staffordshire.
S John Haste, Crag: 9 Bottom, Rawden, near Lee Phillipsi Ever ersley, also sent g Jack Ham
Mths e ee, ki
anum, Vanda tricolor, Aerides virens, X oem truncata, A of this
| Societies, the Ea d blossomed E pidendrum eatin cad and a | Sw water came from
: . ie Mame d gr. w Lord Sow!
E L3 MESI contrib
Ex t: May 12 and 13.—Some of the |o ad aes S ean viia roduced vi te ith Das ofS S t Cliv
; A exhibited on this Occasion are mentioned in — bea > E. TA singulas OF Pe Sutherland at [M ui
Mur com. The . of the plants was Of 08 Mr. | of gond Beurré Rance E
» and the display as a whole | Standish s ent t the outil eee pire) grandi- ay Duke Cherries. were un
desired. On the ora and the so-called Myoso bilis or y Mr. Shuter, Heaton P
in front và a ere 8 rode iu | Zealand eee OE boch of 8 have been ches 5
ms from the Society’s Garden. | formerl. noticed by us. F. Mes jn also
liL cem ande ce, Le dps by Sines , From Messrs, Veitch came Sodbrooko. Holm, near Lincoln,
` Messrs. Fraser, Supported on one sido by | furnished with jes
2 do dei y 4 furt wi a round black boss ; Pauls rere $ Lin wherries were bend b of appearane
x Mr. Gaines, of Battersea, and on the | e ersed with llowish.
> pC tes hite
ther by an equally fine buff-flowered Rhododendron from gn grando the ‘stil vadis n dee a Tele e Victoria a
8 8 grower. On the platform below stood me olia, Olea ilicifolia, the new hardy Japa Mr. Clarke Keens’ Seedling
from Messrs. Veitch, and noticed shove; Coladina’ Chatter Beute fen Duke of Northumber
example of their new hard: rmin: Jn eim 5
. Mine Aa y aroaren Ty iie pastes eee as wel Y ing vs egonias, one Koens UNA Mr i 3o
: en! e 0 een Victoria. The and
] n 1 e 1 e a Weite n rees from Messrs. | leaves of the latter are of medium size and very distinct. Alice M. art ponp. wi à
ah balan ea of which was grand in | Their ground colour, a greenish brown, is beautifully | came from Mr. Iviso
rs pampa g si poit ae phe E 150 sog and spangled with silver "large bands of ons, consisting z of Golden Par
à line running its whole latter running between the : :
dh ap - bond of ac ae es The two side ite pin: a dinner zid beanti fal End bis eee 5 Collum m eee e
ain remarkable ie fine foliage, and is at the upper surface 8 8 dag uem uiia their F YA
r 3 tran vi Meer endrons. Such materials | whilst the ien Ee which E ‘from y putris The
duis ly disposed, as they were, could not fail to centre, are pale straw coloured. Both are Belgian | have been grown in w poxes
OE fac x d and other planis 196. far OGNI kinde the to this country by Mr. "Linden A | having been for rad first aa
tion, Messrs. Veitch snt a pja eo en which | was also sh ger peng ee MA
led — ee A ye of the Hall. Such liberal and dis- TO mé dde Mme xo d G. Henderso 41 e
inten suppor viia deserves the highest praise. | 8. an interestin s eason, Wer"
. ng were Theophrasta macrophylla and | tained Tydea ora à NUS othr ke din — con- Mise v Bag 15 sort —4 19.
both with leaves remarkable alike for their | Brabant, both LANE ul crimson spotted, Gesnera. * te onec lly prolifie, the frui
boldi, a magnificent nes like plants ; ral fine brag. of Marantas, | almost ever sit.
ivided foliage set on the end s | Campylobotrys ax ebe with 8 winter forcin —
of remarkable strength; | deeply-furrowed leaves, having a brown metallic lustre lustre; | Among —
Max 14, 1859.]
Mr. Spary of
cpm taken S hereafter,
mentioned i in another
colum
The list of prizes awarde
found in iS r air eolum
Brighton, of which some notice.
rd Mr. Hutchison's ventilator,
ei on the occasion will be
INSTRUCTION : May 2, N
e Infant Schoo!
to h.
Ho
le: — on Th. care
9 d Doings of e — Ho
the lecture . for t of the
Society, a — first mee — the Society. had held
for any — purpose, a s tha degree of interest was
excited. The des cw nd among the persons
3 Mrs. 1 Gusen, of ‘Highgate. J. R. Scott,
cultural Society;
THE GARDENERS’
L a glacier itself i is as it were » a stream of ice always
a ing, a and flo win ng fas ter n the middle than at 34
he bott
fas nea
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
427
dence. We recommend the volume to the serious
consideration of medical men, who al pable
of for orming upon ua L an opinion on which the
par
1:
pt e community uu to de s
1
nd
nay ale during the , day han during the night,
faster in summer t The a
— his observations as proving that this motion is |
ti m
is due to pressure and the fo orce of gravity, d 1
the dilatation of ies Pan: in the substance of the
ingen ously sup ppos sed HR open.
+} th
E ns that noi
snow whi hi ‘has been a and then 5 — "but. Snow
converted into ice by pressure in the presence of mois-
ture.
The evidence on which these conclusions are based
resent volume; but the
J
— an inquiry ? ?
n ——
R POTEMKIN, IN Russia.
Nat olen z wag 3
Chr you ublish a letter the esta-
ene of the Prince tents, at Vii, menr
— erhaps it will m A.
to
cmn hi about
Russian garden in, in all pati with Mr.
Mas: epa
I agree
ecident occu th Ju —
tion M establishment is the only one this kind
Russia; doubtless it is one of the ri oes but is it the
bes re and the good state o
wn) It is no very great merit to have a large ——
when ie are rich — to p
urchase all de
ust "temm to his first visit to
nced at the changes that bad
» lost,” g the eh to sho rten the way, attempte ted t to tak
EJ
nts), — e a stranger to
Jardin * ing, as usual, the knapsack from the
Montanvert, with a supply of bread, cheese, and wine.
They arrived without aecident at the to
Forer between the Aigui 1
Glacier du Talefre; and when at the point marked i
the accompanying "sketch with. the words Knapsack |
EA
©
w
op of the
du Moine and - gre
— as you do not find them
—
may rival with chat ‘of the Prince Troubetz uM —
and enade effects,
tion he said the
i was concern
f| usual t
Aiguille r^ Moin ine, a
as
d round the foot of the
rod sharply to the|
n firm gro
and then
ht, so as to make the passage of the glacier as sho: ort
ossible,
miles from the town of Nijni, belonging to the
Scherimeteff, still richer than that of Nikolsky ; qe
about 100 miles in an eastern direction from the above-
mentioned town belonging to Mr. Alexander Potemkin.
The xt " which he tered ed was part
7
a book of authority,
Gilbert, 1693, xod
tices prevailing at the present day. then con-
sidered the several — of horticultural practice, and
ie M mpo: ing
e m ee important works relating to them.
—_ er- did much towards that
— study of en “which protea ** The Pinetum ”
lea
almost always the case ced |
in J — and near the edge it was also fall of c concen aled
fiss
Everybody ountry*
offers very great difficulties for gurdenin g, the winter
lasting seven months — — a sce ^ day, the
25
"m "MER mer thi 714
e summer
very short, dry, and hot, rtg the —
of rods and ice.
obtaining - answer, he lat the — in ved. imde —
retur — _Mon ert 5 the way he had come.
Dévon
that the spring laste
pe only in the climate
h difü 3
of Messrs. Gordon and Glen cs ng, and then discussed the
5
several merits of Cobbett's Forester,“ ‘Sweet's ** Hortus," and
the works of Bliss, Forsyth, St. Hilaire, S San-
oare,
Lindley, and Loudon. He md it Dus disgrace to pa
ol
aid of hi
the and make his
behind him his knapsack, of which, of h
t barr: i f. Astonishing fact ‘that the
g | yet besa A ed Np i s, together with a part of even
ts wi many
injurious ts which give
in and of which English gardeners
establishment of Mr. Alexander
her means to transport plants from this
town into the inmost parts of the ers frig the
"A d formed his Darden, should
o Tight n th he surface ice after
movem s
nt, | J
the
— He gave a brief sketch oft he
numerous n which ce
had once e : ly the T Tulip, 3
einen d ee
arcs P
0 — Re rn
— Haarlem at ridiculously
A
extrav: t price: uld now be of but small value in the
eyes of a critical connoisseur. l q
t catalogue issued by the late John Lawrence to —
Ww
hat
—
on — map, as N in the dein be I aret
Pri eed alg thik the difference of level of the tw
points, and also tl 5
Kapaa ot, Glaser dn lo, a 24 aly, 5 1074 ét
2 of level
Horizontal distance moved over MEE
Declivity
Annual motion
e | This motion harmonises sufficiently well with the
und in page 193, if we allow for the ——
provided with a large number of
— here called gardeners, who, however, do not
E ae pre whom he
nothing w any difficulty in
practi Notwithstanding. these and
many others which time and place do not permit me te
— plants are finely cultivated, amd I:
you a super tion of the green-
uses and stovi — Tue best cultivated plants are
"
Auricula, Polyanthus, Carnation, and other puse flowers | bers fo — the Camellias, the collection of which consists
were then briefly dealt with and their histories illustrated by — due to the rapid ES which commences | of a best of th
— — from Fo Mr. —— works 2 md —ÀÓ erbe iet rem ns M. kr
Owing to thela istenes of —— hour, — Hibberd c concluded the s interesting discovery. forms a curious pendant plants so sa shooting and so
lecture re by o other intended to tO ie history o of De Saussure's ladder, believed 4 have | flowering. Likew the iidoderidto
been found in fi nts e Trelaporte, vro U
=) A. Boo t, Esq., one of the Council of the Horticultural detailed in ay Tierala, | - oe: but "this ne 1 PM finest state, developing just now "their “peat
— vote of tiranka.- Ho oni Mr. Hibberd had not | much he „
referred to his own works, but tice abl tter ascertain dá all its particulars. about 6 and even 7 inches long. All vies of. the:
books of the present day. He considered it a pite to hear m cannot conclude this notice without ri remarking | Sibkim Himala 5 of Boo — es: — ted
who written on horticulture such an interesting im the author — iniit himself an injur - n: fme —— „
discourse on the art itself am: re of its various man, who has been, or is, or is about be robbed o rel cultiv:
branches. The vote of thanks by acclamation, as : 4 " 4 A bod, id 1 th ink pte T: pui paria the best show
pas also a vote to the worthy chairman for his kindness the am — which his — € him. We plants of Ghent and Paris. A ck collection of
presiding on the occasion. | believe that i in this respect he is thins tds!) Conifers’ and New Zealand Plants “has pas
| real merits are duly eee — — wi Mer vertit y y garden of the
Notices of Books.
arkin, the au 5 of various. _ treatises on
the —— outdoors was — mpossibe: penes very:
Song re | epidemi ther di
Occasional Papers on the Theory of Glaciers. on the Causation and tion of Disease Gro.
7 D; Forbes, D. C. L., F. RS. Svo. Pp. 278. Mu D in which he denies that fevers and o!
The Edinburgh. ases are assignable to the — from pire —— a beautiful Latania
the claim object of the qon puis is to establish foul drains, churchyards, pa , or even to the
: claims of the author to the merit of having origi d by the pletion of me numbers
nated and established. the plastic theory of glacier | o of persous occupying a confine 2 e is of 1
; ving. been the fn to givea cate that miasma, as it is termed, is merely carbonic acid,
ure.
eL Purpose most of bu. various papers of the | produce in the extinguishing of 3 sod or even of life.
curious and interesting subjects | itself, it will never, can be productive of fever,
and reprinted without alteration, in | or any o ieu (p (p. 19) e maintains that “the
the ucts of the decomposition of animal —
o take
borbonica of about 15 feet
es. Orchids
plication ot Ferns by seed is ve: well practised.
ot ther sto plants such as Ix ar ini
nifica is
dise: ds
the dol health of young men am
"of [Inti ons of the dissecti ting room,
n the highest di
at most persons ar
2 of ice zT altered
The idea of a
majority of
fis
this opini Vk Suton alli, ns -
amidst the putrid exha- many others,
and of knackers and
gv
by the decogiposition. of aru of dead
|the ——
t, the "millions about to be
ed through 199 em ad fe
expended there
euch
— = foreigners.
one from Go or France bebcide it, he
428 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Max 14, 1859,
re nowhere he saw e culture, and plants in ajm moist shady house, tque they will grow much more | Look after the caterpillars on the 0 trees. Ti»
who
Stove plants will I est way a getting rid of this pest is to
t ON. actae — it a NER EM frequent Eav. hing with a powerful eng; Bive the
Dishment of Mr. roin chers ps it one sie " he grown free dy. i and I require "Keep ths the "water against tie sade a des at aes throwing
in the empire. E. Cla ern, Abrolsehne, -— attention as regards. stopping an raining. vae Qu caterpillars, "e they eaves, whid
V. S.) .
Lenin 20th March, O. S. [^ 2d Apri il, N ndi hey will bear without E ile m De ground by "E of an n iron rake. Ge
atmo osphere, admitting air freely on mi a uiros &c. d terials in real.
» expose. the lant,
iscellaneo plants rather
Prices of Works on Botany pire Gardenia 19. — The of their foliage. Look s harp after peus ands oar e, light i — 7 1 sto prepare them for r planting
by M Sotheby & . of the to cleanliness, rye the N * pots a: en as it | un e protection of hand-glasses. If not already
* de ii Go ris Cani s frequently, | done see to M lenty of sweet Basil, Savory, ke,
Mr Low ot Se 3 My onl the | their gro bred — prevent confusion. | on a warm bo e: f light rich s M f
r no :
of (C iai na ——.— but aly on taste of te which without attention soon — yringe and oma arii din n
i ; SE early on the afternoons of bright days, and be put sparo half r may n ot tably em
public. We therefore selecta few instances. Andre shut up early gat days, lin a 14 y employed
Heath: 6 vols., 8vo, 3“. 5s.—Bedford's (Duke of) as sparing as possible in the use of EN heat. | in ki sa eg
Saliet im W. te si 1 7 lates, 147. . Orcuips.—Afford those in growth a th ghly moist crops. — which has o long bee checked by
n 5 here, givin them a good steaming every yer cold north easterly winds, is now besitta to
Pinetum Woburnense, coloured plates, 107. 15s., two | atmosphere, g mei g g id ess; and ds, like oth 15
works of mere curiosity and no scientific gen afternoon by syringing g and shu tti ing up e rly. Adm rapi y m then ra werde 5 ds xs, grow
?À volu dur apace; 1 ing in
son ap nd sina d ea vols, 3 l currents of — wind. Examine the pana order if possible to prevent them from flowering and
da 16 E idu every other day, and water such as require seeding. Planting, if any, in the kitchen garden should
1 vl R Wiehe 2 1L 10s— T ir Ur ) Bo oi Ber t be done in drills. In that way the plants get more
R dinh de 4to, 664 coloured plates, 7l. 7s.— into ¢ growth, and a cool atmosphere will ‘greatly assist effectually watered, and the first hoeing, by filling in
TERSA 34 Muséum, 20 vols., russia, and ih du | in prolonging the i opa = — vlc the drills * e as Eb ^ hop n: Keep paths
] um, 20 vols, calf, and Nouvelles Annales du RC clean, straighten their edges, and o erwise render
Muséum, 4 vols. calf, in all 44 vols., 4to, 67. 175. PrxzRIES.—Pla sni i reeling ae m should be] them not only neat but comfortable to walk on,
Archives du eon vols., se 80. HY Asiatick divest ted "P all suckers, except as many as may be „
1 ches, 20 vols. (wanting Vol. n "an anted for stock, directly they make their appearance. | | STATE OF THE WEATHER AT CHISWICK, NEAR LONDON.
edition, 19/—Aublet's Histoire des Plantes de la This will throw more oF Gió diei es of the plant into | Tore mex fo a Te
Guiane Françoise, 4 vols, 392 plates, russia, the fruit, and will also secure stronger suckers than i 3 Barometer.
very scarce, 10s. 6d.— Burchell's 2 in the In- many were left. Our more valuable sorts of Pines] May S4 — —
terior of Southern Africa, 2 vols, 4to, 27. 11s.— not, however, very apt to produc BE rs De:
Arabida’s Flora Fluminensis, 11 vols., folio, in 5, 20/.— suckers, but some varieties of Queen still in cultiva- | Friday 6| 4| 3003; | 29.985
Bateman’s Orchidacew of Mexico and Guatemala tion produce so many that the fruit never attains | Satur. 7) 5 | 29.985 | 29.02
folio, 137.—Cavanilles Icones, 6 aks 4to, 92. 9s.— size unless the suckers are thinned earl ard mon” 9) o| 3o21 | 30-100
lustrations of Camellias, 37. 3s.—Cur SSj against any decline of the bott m-heat, a ere | Wed. 11 9 30219 | 30.173
Londinensis, 5 vols, fol., p UP qure this is obtained from fermenting materials, a little | Thurs. 12 10 | 30.175 | 30.12
Description of China, 2 vols., sh tan should dded before th gets | Average | 30.124 | 30.055 ma
Nn ia mper, ? M 8 rigi 0 aer Cale too low; and it will be much safer to add a May Cis old; fne: clear lear at nigh
»
8—Cioudy ; very nue; clear; roy at night,
dry air; very fine
icarum = lest and
1 Nove His "hers follow t — we ene t thoughout
8 i
spani
12. 5s. — Griffith’s Posthumous Nd $ 117. $e.
r twice in th ear. See to keeping the soil 11—Overcast and fine; very clear ar at night.
— Hookers Exotic Flora, 3 e * dacco 3l. Pi nts about ee roots, where the plants are in pots or planted 2 DEDE reek, about the aser.
NE il x THER AT CHISWI
RB 2 vom Species o . alt aed »|in the pen bed, i ina nice eir stat e as to moisture, During RECORD ort TRE WEATHE RAT CHISY TE e
free growth. "VINERIESs.—Go over the SB ale) oa of
cession houses, en tly removing —— T “before| nnd EHE H HEEL Yenin K ald
they shade or a with the principal foliage. pis ley Rained, Eai
e pou: mu st be e grown ander the Vines the lai € Sunday!5.,| 646 | 41.1 | 529 10 Gal in. 3
— thin allow of modera Mon. 16.. 65.9 43.0 545 1 0.34 §
* d'en o. ligit Paid the Plants, ; aif neither late s Web i| e0 | 52 ii| od em 1
Com rs. 19. 65.9 435 547 950 2
Complete nor any useless wood should be allowed to obstruct the | uur 3. 689 | 333 5 M EH
rec 8v 0s. — Sets fod, light. See that none = the plants are infested with red GAA É
Society's ider or thri pe I whi
s Transactions, 20 vols. calf, i
Cx E Botanical Cabinet, de pa paper, | Es aU 851 pot vu the i. t 5 h if Meer snd ith up dem. 8 during the phos aaa ie — ag
no | ear pec ying 4 "Ne ror cate, and is most destru bte "tn ‘the one 2215 eas Wotices to. Core RE,
imalayan i „ 47. 19s.— À
Pavon's Flora Peruviana, 4 vols., folio, 77. 17s. 6d.—Sib- ri a e subject t to this 5 and if these are grown is gr readers can inform |
"s Flora G: i 30
Cori s RED ENT. "E E asks if any
under the Vines they mu es closely 8 and kept of s to change the colour of a wall that has ben
thorp’s Flo rzeca, 10 vols., folio, 607. s One of the very | clean at a expense. See that Vines j in the ‘late house | d (abd wbich Pai black) to a eric M
few original copies in existence.—Sinclair's Hortus Gra- are tied up i u. thee places before the shoots get too far] light colour, —what would bea ood material tous,
mineus Woburnensis, the folio, illustrated with dried ne
to use it?
in bad condition, 27. 11s.!!—Wallicl/s miis Y ws there d» e 55 rid anger of be of 10 05 nz GISHURST COMPOCND : Sub. If you will refer to a a leading ü
late Numb will find all that we know on the
s A Rariores, 3 vols. folio, 127. 17s. 6d.— before the rods are tied up. Look sharply dur Ee. poate sg NAA ir
Sowerby's English Botany, 36 vols, and Supplement, Spider, and use every means to keep clear of this pest. — Constant. The spot is a well known ru
241.—Sweet's Geraniacez, 5 vo os id s or Among the | Fres Attend to stopping and thinning the shoots. roots being f pes go eres ro^ koe — to
Botanical and other Drawings the following prices were Padi afit, af. dapi gei jointed g 2 sometimes the
:—Ferdina’ lineation of the genus & Short-jointed strong growth, by Probably the f first in T
sed : Fei nd Baue uer's De i [4 | exposing the yo ung wood to all the light possible. This | Iv. mpty c de» —— skin “ax 27 e
Passiflora, 40 exquisite dinis p colours, rn with 40 | will, of course, necessitate igi d the trees rather thin, pe ree Pear (?) Seog * iane paei T iro of
issections, 2 , ND 184.— but it is useless hoping for p of good f fruit 2 jaa: injurious to young fruit trees by bori
of Plants, B vols, ; un hee diy the trees that are crowded with vod. Keep the ST. The hiotchee on the medir
= authentic. Chinese Son of the syringe moist, and give the foliage a good. washin agm with
a Cotton, iwi sg Al - FL ARDEN AND pri gem
Recen 55 sh ust be
cct Seni ed ss with water wil tong m KI
Ope shed. It is frequently the case
(P e : — "eem much water is given at the root thereby souring
A ses ensuing Week.) Soil, ering it uncongenial to the young root. do garden whom th
eomm lets and the after growth of the plants. Thesoilshould . — 7 apply, should bear. os ‘mind ind th
PLANT DEP. be es moist, but not to saturation, and the plants as ould exhaus
CONSERVATORY, &C.—As soon as cold frames and pits | Soon e weather gets warmer migbt be watered
are clear of stuff they should be ocenpied with | Ver hed with the Pa on the evenin, of | ht
3 pro Dd
stock of hard- plants, for the summer days which will be of f vast ly more service in repairing
of which they are much more suitable than |t
e
houses. Such places will also be found suitable | to the soil while there i A a deficiency of “active rootlets
for dwarf Lobelias, Balsams, Salvia splendens, S. gesne- to absorb it. Where Roses are infested with the grub There is much di 3
and many other things which are generally it VIE edili DD go over the plants frequently to| what is a species the gent 13 (seo hi
flowering in the ato this pest. Green-fly is also very troublesome} reduces 2 a Font and
wi od with the garden engine S : puse vue Your
a moderate tem ure wil be more manageable is
here and thrive than in lofty houses with in getting rid of thes these br omy e pests, but this
double the attention. As New Holland plants go out must be done after dange frost is
of eir see „ the | Planting of all properly prepared bedding sek may
t back fay under rable pe
rms of one
ns are easily enoug! ned m
a 7 fortnight to neourage a free root action without and a sprinkling of these stuck 155 the beds after | v.
incurring t the risk k of the ab s breaking scantily. Look Planting 1 of great service in protecting —
well to the stock of "nne for summer and autumn | Plants ying "rae of bright sumshine, an
and do not allow them
ji xc PTD ble hir 22
to SUSE ain any check PF Ard Ou ITOS
through want of dioe room or carelessness in watering. HAR 3 GARDEN
weas are first-rate subjects for this re Persevere in s dei [sic of insects it trees |
i in beauty than alm
purpose on
ost any other bard in ted to xh: Eos o ung shoots a fair chance to
and are not near thy so proceed with disbudding and
be. Fuchsias for vu blooming stopping gross ie Eos ha
warm; but should be placed in a | trees are not allowed to suffer through want of water,
Max 14, 1859.] THE THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 429
FARM RES u Ee cs.
Ties ANS dun BE OBTAINED na T
ired b.
TEE PATENT
67. * the eq y
Seti Mu — Incumbents, Trustees, Bodies Cor te, &c.,
NITROPHOSPH ATE OR BLOOD MANURE Eo er con ye or yr ea
2 in ns are
tioned by os Ir ^m th estate for am The Loan
ent · — * on t A d for any term the landowner
COMPANY (Limirep), ee :
* — investigation of. Pith be “being required, and the charge not
ein y incu , no legal expenses are incurred.
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND. The " Obeps my furnish — of. VET description, and
undertake the entire responsibility of the works wherever de-
TRUSTEES. sired by Landowners. No profit however is taken be: Ped
ABEL Surra, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts. MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M. P., Western Colville, Linton, Company on any works they execute, the actual expenditus
CHARLES DrwspALE, Esq., Essendon Place, Herts. Cambridge DA Approved bythe ett 1 8
x VR sion thereon, being charged in all cases. Applications
Epwanp Batt, Esq., M.P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico E Brany, Esq., M. P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave Sq. addressed to WILLIAM CLIFFORD, the Secretary, at the Offices
e C 2 i "
Chairman.—Jonas WEBB, Esq., Babraham, Cambridgeshire. of UE AED INPHOUVUMENT CCOMTANY
"uty-Chairman. 9 OLLINS, Es d., Myddleton . — Pentonville. MHE LAN DS IM Pe: — .
EDWARD BELL, Esq., Tot: — iddles "ROBERT LEED! &, E 3 Lexham, Norfolk. 2, Old Palace Yard, Westm
pu. yen nel Esq., Littiebury, Essex — MORGAN, "^ TS me 2, Camden rye M red Town. To Lando owners, the Clergy, Solicito — „Fette A Toni ts, Sur-
, Stans! em 9 Herts GEORGE SAvIIIL, E Inginorpe, near Sta veyors, &c.—The M ODE is incorporated by Special Act of
— req keel Esq., Edm n, Middlesex. WILLIAM COLLINS, "ESQ, 105, St. John Street — Parliament for England, Wales, and Scotland. — Under the
N essrs. Ba ARNETT, Hoare & Co. Lombard Street. Company's Acts . for Life, Trustees, — —
: 23, E St: 8 d. pete Incumbents of Livings, Bodies e raped
dnas 'ors.—M. ssex Street, Stran and other landowners are empowered to o berge th
Auditor. 6. W. Brown, Esq., 28, Parliament Street. inherita ince with i» cost of improvements, whether the ud
Manager.—Mr. JAMES ODAM. Seeretary.—Mr. C. T. Mac be borrowed from the Company or advanced by the Land-
owner id of has own fnnds. eti
: The C dv nlim t, r]
Offices, 109, Fenchurch mre London.—Manufactory, Plaistow iis Essex. e 1 expenses
eing liquidated by a rent charge or a — term
tural — E hien d of Title is required, and the Co Today
THE 1 beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultur Public that the following Manures se relly y commercial Pradesh V tta io compa) ihe plans
ere now ri and exec cation. st the pe which are controlled o
3 Enclosu:
ODAMS 8 BLOOD MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL. mein provements authorised co mprise Drai —
arping, in Enclosure,
ODAMS’S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS. Planting, Brecting and Im roving Farm Houses and buildings
for Farm purposes, es, Steam Engines,
ODAMS’S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME. Wheels, Tanks, Pipes, dc
Owners in fee may effect mp ipn ments on the — 22
Full particulars may be had at the Company's Offices, or of the local Agents. eut incurring the expense and personal responsibilities in-
— t to Mortgages, and without regard to the amount of
— rane etors may apply jointly for the
RTIFICIAL MANURES, &c.— Manufacturers
isting in
URE rog ROOT CROPS, of first-rate quality, — of Impro clie nnn ally beneficial, — as a
and others engaged in m aking ARTIFICIAL MANURES r. &c.
AN
with Analysis guaranteed. manufactured by WILLIAMS | Co c Outfall, Roads 3 the Dist
may obtain every necessary instruction for their economical | & Co., 47, Mark es us rr “A come hed 2 — — 22 ton, For further information and for forms of "application. — ply to
and efficient — m ng to J. C. Nessit, F. G. S., including bags r Rail The the Hor W. Napier, Managing Director, 2, Old P. laos Yard,
e Principal — the Agricultural and Chemical College, Trade suppli — Westminster, B S. W.
ennington, London. Analyses of Soils, Guanos, Superphos- REDUCTION IN PRICE OF LAWES'S MANURES. OLLEGE or AGRICULTURE AND CHEMISTRY,
T of Gold Silver and ME. LAWES begs to announce that he has this C axp oF PRACTICAL apd GENERAL SCIENCE, 87 an
Gentlemen desirous of receiving neten in Chemical on reduced the price of the Manures m dudit E kw — Paa FOR ae
tion Seule ying, will find &mplo fetlity and mg URÜRNIP MANURE . . from v4 — 6 The system rof — pursued in the College com very
TIT SUPERPHOSPHATE or LiwE. ex 6 6 branch requisite to prepare youth fo: 1 poete
MANURES. MINERAL n : 4 Engineering, Mining, Mandfiotores, an rts; for the
REDERICK CORNW TELL — — inform his BARLEY MANURE.. Naval and Military Services, and for the Jab —
friends and the Agricultural pub! t he can now Prof. Way and Dr. Voelcker have ‘sampled from a bulk o o 50 000 to Analyses and Assays of every description are promptly and
supply a 280 ATE * ne 6000 tons at his factories, and me — and analyses are given eat executed at the College. * m E other par-
yet produced. Each Bag guaranteed to contain from 90 to 25 | in 1 neni, — Deo obtained on application at his a, ticulars may be had on application to
cent. of “‘Solubl Pix — f Mr 5l. 10s 1, elaide o .C. E 7 T ar
ton, delivered freo to an Railwa — Whartin Pda tog Hed ani N.B. Gen ruvi; irect from Messrs BS, IGHLAND ax AG pois TURAL SOOTY.
and the trade supplied. LINSEED-CAKES, COTTON-CAKES, | Nitrate of Sulphate of monia, and other Chemical | - 7454}, and 300 GOLD, SILVER. or BRONZE MEDALS will
— A — ARTIFICIAL MANURES at lowest Mem AS eS American Cotton-aeed Cake supplied. be offered for STOCK, IMPLEMENTS, and DAIRY PRODUCE.
A E aT "P PROC ORS TURNIP MANURE. P Sami st a d
0 2 y — ales of entry, — copies of the Premium List an
PON MANURE COMPANY, rmvrel to no ntion to this Regaistions, will be issued on application to the Secre
Zollowing MANURES rods. for delivery :— mage ae um contains all is elements nece sary | 6, Albyn Place, Edinburgh.
x e pment o rop, So t 7
Nen ne ad pulp va iperienee, th pd Rar AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF
MANURE i . T been ; — WAR MEETING. e
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME quality. — — — The time for receiving —— for Wool, Cheese, and Field
2 — Tn land, and, venture to say, is unrivalled Gates, has been extended to the Ist of June. es
ence of the reduction in the price of raw material | for ager Ay of the Bulbs which 'it produces. 1
the London. Manure Co. are enabled to lower the price of be found te to | London, May 14. — 9ÓÀ
their Superphosphate of Lime, and to materially improve the | pen, ri d —— 2 Barle ov andWh
Corn Mai d Urate. 0 yi rer ps o 5 —
The 558 y Co. also ly PERUVIAN GUANO overs AND 8 1 l -
Manure O. also sup
(direct from Messrs. A. Gibbs an Van! SULPHATE of gene at ict uta a tte.
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA, » CRUSHED BONES, and to H. & T. Procro — t -
every other Manure of A e. i x-- le deale: 2 e cm ed. Acts — Cathay, Bristol ; TURDAY, MAY 1
116, Fenchurch Street, E.C. Sw AED Porser, Secretary. | mingham, and Saltney, near ©
E R U 45 i A * : "d U A NO. Mu D, LACK, AND 005 3 inda rm. gen. cum MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK.
The prese SUPE PHOSPHATE OF LIME; E ue ms — toc Wernpnespar, May eui Society of England .. Noon.
Phosphoric Acid soluble, equivalent to D per of Tribaeie
Ph rei wiping of Lime.
CONCENTRATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to A
— Dd To bn ife 30 0 Tons and upwards,
J. 5s. per Ton for 1 Ton up to 30 Ton
And, to em against the purchase of adulterated mixtures
and of inferior Guanos purporting to produce results equal to
Peruvian, consumers are recommended to apply either to our-
ves, to our agents, Messrs. Gibbs, Bright, & Co., of Liver-
land Bristol, or to dealers of established character, in whose
esty and fair dealing they miren — t confidence.
Sons.
CORRESPONDENCE has bae POP by
a De: Vodokée dyes sults must Mr. SAMUEL Purpps, of Long 2 m, n
bo vi atifying to you, and are the Dent] proof, “of the 5 — Hemel Hempstead, on the eats fe the
high ‘agricultural and 888 value which charac . — Duprey RxDER, in the county E
your concentrated superphospha :
E analyses, aere eee of the late and present Herts, which the relat ions of a landlord to
no Royal tu al Sotieky, with Tos meng ad yearly tanit dcc He striking illustration.
nD, Lack, iff
to the
UCCESS OF THE NEW GUANO; IMPORTED „ Ko., After con
Tue erence and discussion of
— UNDER pl Me or he oe ee z Á"— & Co., Sutton io e ach. ms, Me. — o the tenant of Qs f
CIPEED p ECONOMY for Farmer. Gentlemen. term
à ED anD ECONOMY for Farmer-, Gentlemen,
ze s: under adverse circumstances, the successful results P- A Market Gardeférs, 1n tis di e LP HO ARES KENE at basha, 3 1854, at : inse rent of 4201.
No. a Part m Nomi Agni 1 aD | for the first three years, and 4307, afterwards ; and
chat reap s TAL to pem a — the aoe n the faith of this unders n proceeded at
rimental fie! e a t crop, ai 0 " 28 4
ficial effect esca es or in conjunction With plibephates, plant > great expense to get land in condition which at
Ria Moora Guano is essentially a phosphatic 2 15 to 35 Likes Apu raking — commencement of the tenancy was in a very F
mixture of one-fourth — ee etel Pt ue iei de rolling sail whan = r it -— invaluable invention. It will D hi 5 8 We now quote from the pub-
for — * or grain * tu ^ 5s.
will be as im) ee Je ie» nat of l deposit, | °° m Agent, Mr B SAMUELSON, 76, Cannon Street, West n Novemb e: 1856, some words fell from a
Sold also by — inventor, J. Hoare, Old Fishbourne, Chi- "e, hindi induced m me to thin 2 that m
such increased facilities for Shipment, that J j Y
E >y — arrangements LENING'S E MACHINE FOR DE-
sorenein made for considerable supply. Purchasers can be DS ON GRAVEL WALKS, &c.—This
5 22 GENE en DA QUE Cet os — e l Machine mre
LE T ee ee
N, K. ves s comple! clear o
K. (oe o ker (ne ofthe under” the Crown). i es. ie John Extract from article “Trentham” [n Gardeners Chronicle o
T— Lessees: ORD, January
ke, — „And I would observe in — — "from these pr that
you that I the Kooria — 5 whole of the Grass and Gravel are kept in the most pag
béunbeat oti — eol a y er by m aid wie worked a the small nd int by a Horse 2 —
— » y sul and recen on erever i nstrumen
drained. On each side of the plot sown with Koo; — used in places of difficult access; the latter is kept in order by
2 Turnips manured with best Peruvian Guano. The | a SALTINc MACHINE, 1 haere v1 Mr. Fleming, ee
2 met of each sort were of equal weight for weight | from the beautiful condition of the Gravel in every
Sete. crop—a very Rood one — nie now being | I should — that it was altogether most *
ttle percepts ce can be (The M
as a
| farther Wr
| TRANTER, the ste c `
ish to the farm
Saten off with sheep. Very le difference can wing Machines here referred to are
discovered, but if an: that difference is in fave From the Field of April 2.
Turnips sown with Roo ‘toute Guiho des E mee Machine will ee s spe the Weeds
— “Joun ” gii Menden alks en nd » . r : asked that, D u oak
& J. Graham, Merchants, Penrith.” i outla
Pamphlet, “ Hints on Guano,” con to asnos e SHANKS 888 compensation for the great y
teports f ^ ," containing a number 2 of Improved M [shou no; the only answer I got from my
fr meinte — "irc „Delivering Machine for d Pans ds But no;
430 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 14, 1859,
eU EES PT ill furth lati
under (ond here T q it Tonanti, and when vie per tepi of ant . f be tanet Tt it he EL:
x - — — * the land in ho way I thong ate for my | were "re "along with 50 or per . NEL areuker security - tad 2 — Mas prese
- — wire words, having, at my own ‘od phosphate | ordinary strength they had been accustomed to, ( te
2 pn the land into a paying pe mien beturne puts on steam vong Pe fact that the application of steam to the miu Of the
tom my landlortsadrantege T was but a fool for my 112 tub! ore the Ce X i Farmers’ Club. after Mr. | the soil would inerease the produce there could be n;
that I ha >: the farm on a — er qas erm | Mzcnurs lectur the subject did tot add question. With regard to the prospects of the future,
ou rent was only MEET OR . wi | materially to our "Knowledge of the ‘subject. Mr. Mr. Smith uu raa them, e the result of his own
rents 2 1 w rhole of the estate, owing ih the i increase | W rich of Bavdon me experience, tha ere was a difference of 1 n
value of land?—that s only | W ILLI vilam 3 to “the IND that day corn per acre between — 5 and horse culture
a little more in proportion than the "addition made | fulness af his estimates read to the club that Believed that’ would prove to be erg, liwe. I
to the others, on account of the 1275 ontlay on my 1 5 year d declared his belief 3 if one- | i hea impo ile rA eh Mir. "in
premises.“ But I would ask, was not the rent i It hird the 5 horse-power 7 s a | prodr 1 808 solid
case fixed, and the rise from 420/. to ew suficiently "s be displaced by steam , 18,000,0 wor
r and
fodder would be së inl ican eL
unt im.
8 ^ « «The food so rescu ned from tiempos E portance to all who are in any way in €
A . o on, ac e h ld t a
land was improved by my outlay of money + usar i fed p a loss, 80,571,500 stones of meat; or 806, — gle nants pag age * a piis
Again, did land increase in value to such an ent in| oxen, of 100 stones each; or 8,057,150 fat sheep o "ts E g eedsmen
four years, or rather betwe E November, 1856, iiia 10 stones each,” eir bearing
I was assur ed no rise was take plac ce, and Es ch, y of horse- Dow it seemed | ; In fo
1858, And, as to the f looked that that with our crop seeds we are canal
allusion to the outlay on the building, does not this the year, and that on ee bus the ch Te s consumed a greater or 5 — proportion
appear a mere pretext for making the rent a Mitto | without yielding any r If s weeds he result
more in proportion to the others, when the letters down for Sundays H + days, Th were virtually handling of the seeds before they reach the fares:
above show that the plan was decided zon an nd in the 10 weeks lost, and reckoning the cost of a horse’s food We huve had further to noties che ina siting
at on S. r week, th t 5l. an
a month before the rent was fixed? Let the teen be | entirely lost. Multiplying the 5“. by 8, that being the 0 a i! Charloc
De emn read, and it Sp Pea ta in pray — " ny number of horses required for a farm of 200 acres, fos 29. ON the bushel aud ates
nclusion ean be arrived that | there od was a dod of E oy annum in favour 11 $8. ld f 2. , ib be
propri ieto r had, at the time of the petere es of stea opposed to horse-p Steam might be|and so or is. a A v: 0 — e-
into consideration all the items of expense, and fixed applied f BE a great variety of 7 — in 1 grown but foreign rubbish has been used for these
his T ordingly. When he read his paper before the Pere hap s laughed nefarious i, ed ; Indian Rape, as our
„I must not omit to state that only 38 of 160 trees, 3 ‘ icti t , hay
which, accor rån ng to our bmp ampi Perms to
grubbing up the hedges, should have co own, were
actually felled ; ; although my part of the .
y
at for 5
— — be employed in grubbing up a odpa erow. Now, . ig wit th ees
e had since applied steam successfully for such pur- tis however ponte ng to o know that our inves-
Lie as that. With a five-horse engine he — — tibus into these matters are gradually working
C Tp dint era el cuir a Eig ME 1 5 t
nse, and wit t any a yt i ing with respectable men,
Mr. PHIPPS does well to p “Mah a d aibi which vig, ive e happened that iens "half the roots were re the followh aee P prey
rs vh
*
abl
t apr has been awakened :—
im 11
tifully the work was di n his own He had| “We take this ELE. of — that the
mr + — cuperem also polled down Lacie. of trees i 8 of the mioty of the readers of the Gardeners
UI ‘have felt warranted in thus far trespassing | on | Same agency.” and Agricultural Gazette are customers me
Mr. FOWLER — 5 8 to the great advan- minds of —.— e 7
A personni grievance, affects not me only but tenant st Fortra now gives to the cultivator of meia farmers ur Del E NN d
a — i OW. "me dus } 1a nat } | when the impositions of the low class of seedsmen were
add, and this I am prepared to show, f: y t ks to
— four years of my — qud Lex. | — — nin account ; — he t t 7 t exposed, they niy, ee Gt he remar! peti
ise in i 0 » semen memi a so that we were
in improving the farm, | power land was worth doxbis what it was s without 5 and samples, &c. before they
f. 10007. beyond what I should rea done had | | that AER owing to the simple fact that six times
n the footing been which I really „|as much power might be applied as could be ——.
1 n a 10-h engine woul
mnt Pel 3 +
render it impossible to give up the farm at lis e end T
the fourth year without ineurring ruinous rag
endured the "700. increase for one year, but te th t
8
E
5
&
e
zh
E
J
&
S
hour, and
horses; and unlik e the h rses, it would dò its work
witho ut at the ie m TREE ng the land. s |
dios:
at T E een only m-
— of that got should terminate my con nection.” yen where 12 us "id t B Dé v mployed, and 10 horses |
he following analyses by Mr. NESBIT of u e 14 horses and 12 oxen ‘hal been used. If an
late e le of Kooria Mooria guano have atonal number of horses was required in the
moniy. pe ens ed: it would be easy to PEN them, an nd if mine ey
L L, 1859 be at
eee, GUAE Th; mate h
E à Mr. (ote referred. in ee to his own |
$2 |s8.| 38 T of applying steam to cultivation, by whic
2 8 #23 | gg the softest bed an ed,
26 a D" along with the hardest 5 for carri v We
R * have already deseri KETT s guideway
Scheme, but shall re x Thereafter ia own „state-
an 9.00 124 | ment of the cost at w ch the s
22.45 | 14:80 | 22.80 | agriculture can by
— — The most — adress — thee evening = me
Pra BN ias | that of Mr. mc
8.82 4.34 ver | Romford. He sai d that all f fear for the yoe n the
| 501} 350| 352 | labourer might be dismissed. hora so badly grown?
„He (Mr. Hart) had applied st be
100.00 pplied steam more extensively, ust
TON perhaps, than y of his neighbours, and yet hee sk defect in c 2 pn (har it ma it;
ployed more labourers than his neighbours, with tho less ; question is what eme wii ohh
| further advantage that he had a hi ighe T cultivation and | following copy: of a circular le —
| produced a greater amount of food,
JJC
| ms Mad as wi smind. He Grass, le which
"d believed | the time Mia dias Vh the farmers might | in Liv — ue orders for which wil tie
T advisable to do that un ct eal bt sy pang acm . 1
ne :
: state o of cultivation than it was EAS Tee ME We need not — that the p
i 12 | keep both engines and horses until i in a better The 16s. per quarter (2s. per
Oxide of iron and alumina x 5 state tivation. With re, to the use of high MIX with Ttali — ie
Phosphoric acid. aa 49.35 | pr » many years ago he that there was a diffi. 7s. per bushel
We sulphate of liie Se tha uen — introducing steam into agriculture, as ld
salts, Ec. 2 ed ren " as farmers est; the cost of their horses per acre), would at
a alf'a-crown a day, wherea In commerce a horse cost | at any pri
100. a day; and an an re daa labourer was con- = E
Total phosphoric acid equal to — a day, a k -
Cr eura ot Hate m } 91.76 | chester 8 de wor 55. a day. msequently, if 1 pst
Mire n éq 5 | burned me proportion of hel that was y, if he bot Pet resin ve ars ya a
= 7 z 0.26 0.26 — chester he E cent. t. It SRM
so-call "rust osphates are extraor- unt profitable. He eame to tlie :
h i dr pen P cid as Mr. | fore that in order to make os Rum dem business (for E NS M
Nessir re as econo; machinery as he co he ought received) should DA to
poss gi
he commenced an engine of 200 Ibs. pressu re, and state boldly for what
Ibs. pressure, without any accident, | cable, t som =
he stren was Drs e pro- | tr
took care, if he went much rejoice to w that
‘which engineers had previously |join with us i denouncing
Max 14, 1859.]
ni and we ato the more a us to persevere in vere i
ions of this zs Aus nien we Piel
y our strie
m
i
h
ers may
finding out where their. true
LAB BOURERS COTTAGES.
{We give the following abstract of the reports of judges
ted by the Agricultural Improvement Society of Treland |
B award the prizes offered by the Society to the landowner
ected o: A property the greatest number |
s, suitable for labourers,
e Cottier
— We
2290 0 mut "dd
pé
the
— P M CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTU
and |
Tenants' Act of |
in the seulle ell as from the
RICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Ja menns of taing ‘still — the relative merits of
P dak m
0 ad pigge nor een the
tanks of the two cottages a most convenient passage
has been constructed, walled on — side, filled in
earth and gra rrowing o
. | feet.
wi ydiw ve estimated the cost
| with reference to E od contents of each house.
| The following is the de p this examination. Plan
Marquis of Bath's estate, contains 6940
r each house, g
r. O’Neill’s 8 7 each 6216 -— —
above rers
ag
arge fec
| accommodation MUS, these "houses are somew ha
| rior UR
cheapest of the thre
t ap
cubic feet, 98s. :
ouses in this point ia view, it appears h
Jo. 2 is, with refer nce to the space contai
This result
pears to be, i ina great measure, owing to their being
and lite the cost, as
of 100
. 7s. for eg M Me g gront nd 1705 ris iles
feet apap by 14 feet; a bedroom, 12 feet by
9 feet, and a sc culle ery and A 12 feet by | 5 feet, the
P
six i He er,
ard. tei mus are situated o
the road leading from Ballinas o Ahascragh, facing
est e total cos ay det p 4201. o
details of the estimate and expen
ry. The
common ha trict, with
ayi pA ap. » roble dressed masonry. The
A the jambs and arches of
of w
y. pr all hich are well finished.
een used in the 88
ndi s
are built s nr 1
which wall
8
Aranés
the | w
n There is no back door to these houses, which we c
sider an objection. "The floor ‘of the kitchen is laid | a
n-
ry the floor i is of |
approved
agricultural labourers,
with tiles; in the bedroom and sculle
M
the adye wo bed-
b 2 hes by "n feet 6 udin;
. The side
ave b
und floor con: vs of one &parimeny as kitchen
y 2
©
"£A
h
in height to jo oist, The ack door is opposite to the
w
opinion, improve this room very mu uch, without 1
15 aspect, exti — a appearance, warmth, ad
the structures, we have no hesitation in
o the Rev. Wm. O'Neill,
well a
considexin ng
superior as they &
more neg d than the others
building which it is th
| —
ced between them to prevent cross draughts of a
. dormer
i as in the firs
Ws,
well and sty grace feted. up with presses and
s of ‘the age — € ; too
y—a commit
| — s wages
shelving,
D creditable.
NEILL's CorrAGES AT RANDALSTO
—viz
—They
are Mi in number, built in one continuous "m The plan
h’s No. e
the
be attributable to € expensive
ight; but we should ies Bale a different distri-
bation of the space by changing the partition, ait thus
h es
houses, —.— seven pairs on that plan,
in a row. The on!
that and Mr. Trench's No. 1 is in
stairs; Mr. Neville having ie. a choice of
In rega
„with the entire light o dorm
rd to size, these houses —
wi 1l ar
4
de d b. which
shal
aan average, 707. for each house. John
Satara
ving
m larger the
Dues which is at present divided. The skyli ght j in “the
rear would nd .give sufficient light to the smaller
room. an ied *
measuring 23 feet by 17 feet, from out to out,
Mr. Tr ench's house. measures 24 feet — 18 feet.
The wer or ground
of mortar, an sweeping in the direction of
‘the f fre lace 555 anne pat ERY we, therefore,
fens oe : t portion, at lea A bed d be tiled
2 e piggery, privy, and ash- pit are convenient]
Meg and the 3 ns are to be allotted from a a ee
* in the rear. We dee cmd it right, as as ther
no e on, e little
or have | pac
„these houses are extremely
good. The e mason work in the front Aa and gables is
alli = strong pups built, of large blocks of fine, com-
black basaltic rock of the district, with tine cu at
rt re re
nden
to find —
bee
e of «TA
Mold successful innovation on the lan;
|t his be agone and his observations, “without doubt,
son ey" of hen same; the rere wall of g
A em arches exi jambs of all the ‘doors. pei
o the chim mn. are built ec Moore's
neat]
such es shelving, or :
foy. for putting up a to ¢ ry
L to xd : 1 rater and. also to to prevent it
inst the in an exposed — e pen
don
Bares e red brick, jointed with white
paint, and which, compared with the black 2 has a
As to i
are agg grenier
ont quality, and the
an er head. This
Marquis of
oor is laid
we consider very
Sys stem by the timid, and by thos se who are deterred
45 5 it by the amount of haid tsi We in its
integrity it 3 His cale just
licit, his argument soun
m as the greatest best f
Ly riecht Her that much may be effectuated on Mi
Smith’s principles without the requirement of such an
amount of hand labour as now, no > lcs
vent its adoption by 2 rr
1 +h
ure
r pr rotection against variations | of temperat
I ench
is finished, both on "front
an tho ing
The entire He of houses
ith: metal aide t. which we consider
and rear,
put of horse-
f 207. was awarded. by our
a very valu
in the houses previously - described, As to the rooms,
e de
as oad cross to Dund dalk, Mr.
scribed in
very
y
expense in — out |
hitec cts plans i in the best manner, ne ery
x- height of t
first part of this
e size of house
ing be dee lit cs
of the necessity of brin ging
| extent he has done, it — is.
ts f
be que stioned, and indeed, M r. Smi th himself seems
t as
responding giten » E 0
s 8 feet
he «
$ 1
rries 1
in the locality affording facilities for su thea which |
in few districts can be surpassed, or, perbape, equalled, |
These houses a 855 fet 1 6 inches wide in the inside, |
and on entering you m a small interior porch
into the ki which is 15 14 feet 6 inches by 12 feet |
bedroom 7 feet |
8 2
Q
aem to the c ane, and of the ect 7 fee t 6|
ecessa ry, S hat the ferit] E
t ceases to be n
8 be rae ty then a shallows
the soil may
nches, walls latter
| from the floor to the sprin g of the roof. The larger
bedroom, which is over the Liteon is lighted by a
good-sized dormer window, the other o y sky light.
There i is also a mon 275 over the stairs.
Eon are by much the cheapest of any that
ted. The entire — of 14 . — s, including a
s shed Meg = Kiii ected in the rear, is stated to
l. for r each house.
work n ow
Whea rich an e or e
la harc
d that, ina
.
a
| take place oftener than
the half of the om bs "e
miim
The
* LO
as i asta dy e and those on the
m Bath’s estate, which are v with
tenth of the. land will ae have to be tg LES
ir and
hands of the country, at the
which Mr. S
we believ
makin; of
or 31. ins on the diac. Staking, then, the
Cost of the 14 houses,
And addin d ES
And for 3 55
erected for
y walls
the
ieh, | work of such P benen g
» and t
ny be eee
3
o risk -of
432 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 14, 1859.
wrested wealth from the domain of the desert. siderable irse This i is done y
| labour ery neat]
for, thou agh i it may make all equal ny the. | — all this m: y be traced the history "of the future of|larly. ut down and ea
The ver we have an ex eel | litter. The turf sliced is next. burn d
d wi or in then dug up by means of a — ; * E
t of produce, cost what it p Mii we indeed | sen p ultur 8 is the stis of all the arts, being | keep to the surface the part most emichkel m »
E of ter ritory the were different | essentially creative, and a fine proof, moreover, ‘of t the | table mou d. If the land has previousl k
he idleness of the grazier * bed supersede the | proverb which is so full of meaning to Eng ish ears ood plan to ba:
indus of the tiller but i eters position, with of a land The leaves which y to any soil, however poor. | the soil is ually »
fall fi ; grad Li gare a
das here rom gutem consolidate the} When d T. id i of the $
ec ‘of gU p
meagre Furze—a land devoted cattle. The plant is and th
— and more philosophi T hig eee seni 3 rd year, and the land is tropped with Buck | oe the field i ins sch h'a manner t er one of E |
to show that there is a future. pre tes. An this even nits iage «di i foritiok an r The manure end is - eure subsoil of th = em de
future | fi d regular crop cropping ins as 4 eld under o; 3 is carr)
ied hp tho history e. Po forage plants come to hand, l, enabling cattle to be kept | squares of turf so that — —— bet
per round many of the towns e villages of the x — | the work of dere len e progresses —— u 3 TL cipal oh
gly A Raus amaz- ing is
— with the fields of waving corn; and eve à d 1 which you could kick u — € soil brou; ae * witn the old su perfici
in the wildest distri ue 8 the eye rests with leas asure ^ | í M i Ey d wit ko, Jon fad a-soil formed. rota The e. ste o € Imit mo at vith =
E oases, spots where some determined, patient, = In bringing ‘heathy land —.— these
into eulti
cultivator has settled down, and by dint of | operation is to pare off the turf, where thus i» uf ae d 8 —— recently a
Max 14, 1859.] THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL AEN 433
=» ius describe the crops which the land carried at the | to the West of England Land Improvement good blood,—and that the p
t Society, established good
by Act of — under which the advances — y it took | y; blood,—a that the purer the breed, the more
of examination :— Five hectares = Wheat of a likely it is to 2 j itted to th
^ — over other charges, which enabled it to dispense with y rumes ed to the offspring."
bets remarkable, the produce bei p= — hectolitres to inquiries into title. He was sorry to have to confess that on his e bra or reco an ence to
he hectare, and E a weight of 70 kilogrammes to the | own Pop the farm-houses and buildings are quite as bad as | blood i
en ecurr Arabian
order to ** infuse into our degenerate breed of
vitalit
two hectares of Rye equally fine. | on that of his neighbours, though he had long contemplated
bectolitre. 2d. Thirty- wok w cds SoA wot * e [o penu and was going now to set about it in — m t. ore E rd o the ov » and more universal so
very wet wea With reference to the projected buildings themselves, he ay t e WI inds with the e puerile theorists ‘who
in made under bad co ouditions—the wld of | begged also to be allowed to say a few words. He had known
Rye is about 27 hectolitres to the hectare, of a weight | instances not infrequent, of landowners proceeding to erect
of 72 kilogrammes to the hectolitre. -$ = oo hee- 25 — and le bales sma the advice of ar — Aig and
gn f O: f which the iR 50d uilders—the result being very pretty things, architecturally WV,
tares of Oats, of whic’ e magnificent omis — but which. . submitted t to the criticism of prac- constitution, hardihood, enduring powers, freedom of
an abundant rA — es yield of fis crop ge generally tical agriculturists, had been found anything but what, had | action, and india pon »
i tolitres to t
high-« caste Arab stallions with our native mares ! : Of their their
is 36 hectolit es of | they been consulted in the first tenes, — would have| and their clean sin wy 1 iro; aut KORE
| fine Buckwheat ; the yield being — of this c crop posed» eror. d Leg emer eva pE of p — 9 - and | for iie type of set fir od rar power—
| 30 hectolitres to the hectare. 5th. Eleven v eur of | befo; called in in architect or builder, to take the advice of is known he universally “ound heathy con-
Clover. 6th. Of 4 hectares of Potatoes; C some "PT — e agricultural friends—some of them dition of their vitals, cp tute an rrangement that
twenty-five hectares of meadows, which giv whom t caw resent had already — their pcm d makes ‘br oken ind* n these stocrats of. the.
kil When he should have shown them the site he had selected,
ogrammes the hect doli which he had chosen as being centrical, but also as bein Pas desert unkn
M. Van der Beke employs eight horses for working |to the best roads, a matter in his opinion not alw ays sufficiently — em what des is objectionable His size, says
the farm, and feeds 36 head of pus of those e — attended to, and furnished them with the precise quantities and | som e ( of | the Sex ansive power of the
| — cows for the use of the estion, ae tem | Pro rtions of arable and Grass land as determining the number | 5 "
5 »
large yield of cm ung „ which ined p the eat cup —— and Bara room, he shoul request Instances are en proving that Arab stallions,
——— g E ben n iml fy ee gone i "prep cre — gu egi v though stalin — rather than dp the size of the
1 serves abundantly for manuring all the ur fal produe ary mares: som pages are occu
Ls The em rj for the transport of the arrangement of farm buildings. "The farm consisted or ich. | with y + — un. Wado not quote
re Ke, hav eels with broad tires; these do| way from Durham to Hartlepool, which runs through the | the de apters on Bre akin, ng, H semanship, Ridi
2 nA light — with the faciliby with which | farm. p. nm again, as he hoped they should do next | Hounds, in each of which will be found information
narrow ones do; great ruts are thus prevented, and Progress, aud he ve entur red to — bat he should ha we esta. | interesting to the country gentleman. The fo
the roads kept in good repair. bush hed, if not qui model farm," yet at least, that passages from the chapter on Stable Management are
| = Hs piee on jin example and specimen of what aud wit | more likely to be useful to the majority of our readers.
“ H
| Sotieties. the ai of han di West of England Land Improvement Com mpany. injustice Pe liver a vigorous animal to a h age,
| vertiser. ? great
| ROYAL AGRICULTURAL OF EN [itis right to add that there are à F
| bili the West of Englan eris Gen eral Land | her thraldom. is the horse in a pe state.
Qi mer keen, open foi held m May i, 1 the magus | Drainage, the Land Ere med Company, &c., whieh | — — is the Pill, — an artificial state? MEA d
to take a rent charge for money ncm: — en : €— "m TE - oes sd
| eservat .|for buildings and other permanent improvements. the close stable and fœtid effluvia; for the cooling
Weg root dpi ni 1857, x moderate dranghts of water, as nature prompt, We
and . with that 1858, "On the Aan RICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT —TThe | have the noxious 8 that the famished animal
J gow deliriously swallows to quench his fiery thirst—for the
y
op Shams M XE Cono to pue half-yearly general meeting succulent blade of his natural dietary has been not only
it had been bruised on the onteides = 8 B c eue Sgro Lo: Ahe Rollowing are extracts suspended, but dry hay, Oats, and Beans have been
of Sweden and Norway, stating that he was pre s dd ne rize shoe! zx 2 iet al e show, to
e!
be | Substituted, in addition to the inflaming q
The | which heaps | of warm clothing are to be borne, .
by Professor. Holst, . of the 1 of Christiana, »
Hn
2 Council beg t 0 — br f cloth
prizes for implements. never he s called u to ce
Societ copies of the first series ol N on the pro- ‘The F armers Gazette Challenge Cup’ is still offered for com- trippe ee i
Ae 3 al farm. z petit 2 but it is . or the implem ent — to the eating tnd ond d penetrating blast. Mors mode ith
tater or this prize. This step bid gs consider a pru: ex | treatment 18 0 s na ure is a vera wi
"e n — of the Council were EE for the above oie, and wil] not ue the en n the implement depart- | his instinct and Amer
—Adjourned to May 18 titt ot Dh
dalk. e peri .
i i ing herbage and elastic sod, so congenial to the feet,
onti m tho middie i is | they are in ey cates ene Haren upon hard stones,
or buri ed n hea ting straw; water,
Farm Buildings.—Durin ng iem m) ings were us
alte
st Darhem, the Council of the y Agri- alterati 1o 3 — a attend
we wore h be ‘ta — n small quantities,
s. r
cu. apd oiher aah — poko 8 ments for the Socioty's show aro | to |to t suit the AR of ‘the small stomach 2 the animal,
z the f rogressing most favourably ; and, from the energy displayed is given — twiee a-day, and i us draughts;
e begu e committee, o: ria — un ha while, to eulminate the poor ee wrongs, some
y | been Tiva: and some useful and — d amendments atrocious and ignoran rascal of AT E to
made. The Society's gold medal offered by your co for give him a ‘coorse o' medicine, simi
la 0 in for the lean, the gross feeder or delicate eater,
the old or the $ all alike are crammed
calomel, ial diuretics,
heaven knows what, that nothing but the most extra-
ordi e c Opie 1 m
Mt. Spearman introduced the subject eounci ha Y.
gentlemen at the other end Of the icon Md ON Id a get also off. — Jon, in each | Light in the Stable.— what principle is p. —
ust been told by bis friend on the — Mr. — of Ireland, for thei zold metal for competition, existing dark —— are tolerated] ? PW it suffice for
total abolition to assure the public, that from tein e uM
i derived the — of defective eyes and total
| blindness, so promine ta feature i in the ills that horse-
flesh is heir to inted wit
the fact] that in his — en perde
b nkn he
h Mr. Royse also cel that the receipts of the ä sima E that ma emn
said that | Society this B nen by 307. the dc durin
f a stronger predisposition to i it natura ally. There is a
addressed, chen he M. | common error, that requires elucidation and correction,
ly defective — x ar ped 25 ar e Soc riety’ s existence; and — viz. the 1 accepted idea, that a dark stable
as read obbyn D, | makes a horse rest better, and — more health
m it, th
e their bibel a balance to tho credit of 5 Bosiaky. of | and
they | 1817. 16s. 4d. à
e
E REL EE d
7 freely after issuing from it, than from a well- ‘lighted
AReviews. [ ut be undeceived as to it it s being the effects of
one.
The du rse and his Master; | with Hints on 3 — Á— 28
shocks and dims his power of vision, which causes a
rig tr we le Pegg on ae C — ROS idey aad “pap mt erect ears, and timid
: e egeta the sori 575 — horse,
Hec eire to breeders and keepers of horses, given
a e
1
R the following ev
eading his way ungui ide ed) —
15 ae erent to the distressing p
speaking wd i breeding in Irelan ere e rmm
distressing,
stable; the poor
«T sé dich mal feels Need at his release vt
gnor and custom hay e much to dete- | influence of a dark prison-house, and in the pleni
mills towards ede onr brood of a and 8 crossing had | his happiness, he * bucks? and jum
ctive in a s time of very undesirable by a sense of freedom ani
st a e The i ntroduction within the last few |
east, vit might implem , by Scotch an 2 coe turists, if
en on calbulated t to improve rover se ave hada materially
Y COCOS e pele aie ae e d f horses, For the increased the fi
thens, it was co — t largor stamp of |;
and rt ir okaro — than the native e Irish one necessary; and in gases,
vues —.— the plenitude of er idled el ignoranes, aped clever | away
s atleti, aie Cid
blessings, air and light, his heritage from
Ventilation.—“ Ventilation
animal
7
regards t
cary of they have been enabled,
& vel
aid, and 2 t merely important institution, r consequent upon i
annual charge. is created u| $
pect of E advance upon | member —A short distance
Ed Be and a i Pigment. towards ye towards extinguishment of never hope that you can produce them a by
in a given tim which possess an
A —
PARK.
which is thus dheis of | the tiktive Iii: Ares an infusion beyond the — —— d pleasant village of
4
434 THE GARDENERS' CHRONIOLE AND AGRIOULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 14, 1859. p.
—
HOWARDS' PRIZE 1 1889 7 M
Delgany, and sheltered from the north by a ridge of
i MES AND FREDR.
hills, lies Tinna Park, the property of John Clark, Esq. Calendar of ee AMES Bedford, beg to — — , Britannia Iron
When Mr. Clark purchased this s place, some seven or ee PATENT STEEL-TOOTH shade — ae
eight years ago, it was very much cove! d with timber,
ict e WARWICKS Owi o the cold and stormy weather —
particularly Beech and other hard woods; but a large VARWICKSHIRE : ing t Si he Dar dicks -arermote closely
tent of this has since been ed o an ne | Which has so much prevailed, the hay a t ar aire
extent 0 Lees 3 worked up than for the last year or two. ist
land which has been thus reclai a is now eure ks i still ihe
into tillage. To prot majority of he
ing of such an extent of Lean timbered QUE would |
a task with whie h few would willingly gra pple,
particularly if a ready market na: the É iie was ac
Siero
RR
ack, do "hir m. _ Extensively engage
the > de » t unles ~~ =e
a large stock of Beer which could be made into reels mii oe iaa AE land-spri n low, and | For which t ee = urit
2 upon which the thread. is wound; and amongst | the midland i
firs& movements, Wrede at Tinna Park, was the |a 8 J. & F. mo RD have discontinued troubling t the Publie
— of an extensive saw mill, for the purpose of Rees RE d ing several = a long Li g] 31 — he 7 her ti mene
cutting the. timber into suitable ‘lengths, previous tO | breaks in this operation. There is — tbe average — of HORSE R 4118 N „ — 0
its being shipped for Scotland. This saw mill is fully | Oak, either coppice or hedge-row, being felled in the district Prize for which slay Have cone: years gain
sixty feet wide, and machinery connected with ae pics efall of raini at the clone of ese PL 9 Uc GHS.
whi * d A e i e
DD dit tto for. one, 5
generally, 1 engin
joining the saw mill are the threshing pen and | them asa PP ditto for rie x ND
cattle houses, and from the pgs construction of the jan ort SKIM COULTER for 5 of PP Plough
whole, the buildings look a e like same may be sa ARROWS,
extensive manufacturing premises than a farm- Yit ley, which has remained long stationary in the ground, A Set of Three 4-Beam HARROWS, viti Wise
No.
" ril. A favourable chan
The threshing barns are three Mittel high, and are Naf ga lag abont ve — "ot April. A ee —
S| increase the pleasures of rural scenery, and Sm the| A Set of Three 3 HA RROWS, with Whipple-
T i e tree, sdaptedfor$ Horses, 10 ft. wide, lapin 11 440
ivi Winte If with Patent Joints, 6s. per extra, i
K E 8.
Small size, 74 feet wide, marked A, with 24 iron teeth 7
Ditto, with Steel Teeth 8 00
Large size, 8} feet wide, marked B, with 28 iron teeth 8 0
Ditto, with oed teeth 8 10
xtra large size, 84 feet wide, marked 6, with 24 steel
teeth . 8
A Set of 15 Prongs, to be attached to the above when
used as io o [ssa
rn
tted up with chaff cutters, Oat bruisers, &c., besides
in
15 0 Wheat has
noi s so over-luxuriant as we sometimes wer mat Ris has haan i anger
3733 bushels, at 60 Ibs. per bushel; but it is defective than usu alin starting on its s but has —
in som ES in|
o
ikely to bi e coming yest, Potatoes T
bour is necess: at dants. The | we write have we seen several farmers still committing them
ya Node sarily entailed upon the cio ten dimensio tothe ground. Fourteen or fifteen years ago May used to be Free Deli
containing room for 180 head, and is 60 feet wide, Tweed, but since the fatal ’46 it has been found that early Gloucester, Hi Hau, TE — . .
inside measurement. This is literally under one Ho planting and e any. raising of the crop is most likely to | Norwich, ottin — Pub bury, bes
without any supporting pillars whatever De ds "en aV. freedom from disease. With the rise in Wheat | cester, and Yo rk; lin, Edinburgh, À Gee
y. Suppe pase 5s naturally expect that Potatoes will realise more o i
are constructed of wood, with an iron ey, £1 v * is so. Mangel "e has not NEW prices
side; tag oe rest of the roof, with the exception. ri the yet go far as might have been déaeniption "dl their Patent, Plougha [ied Horse Rakes,
slates, is. f iron. The ter sion: Nes
copper e and
Bristol, Colchester, 1 5
able. A
ung on n the third week of April could hardly have — — Implements, ding Smith's Steam Cultivators,
a he oe pont "ha. Sal been, and experience shows that the Beet — crops in this district | for hich x A received at entr epe one Medal of mu
LAS Sito s abou are obtained by sowing at the period nam If you havea Agricul n application to
id Eu ; Ventilators are | few of them run to seed, they may be usefully pulled and given d umm run ond Bedford.
Ng d high ERE great span the | to the pigs, or they may be c checked from unsightliness by
roof peri wi the 8 of | Simply cutting off, as often ss required, and in either case, it
X side zs E dat PR x Pact, it d is the most co dede found that at the weight . — — e hu
spicuons : of the building. We Peer sowing. The € din of the threshing machine is again heard X Sr Gaal e e &c., to contain 50 gallons, 258, ;
pit dee 1 1 ih a span, nor do MES think | every direction, and large holders of Wheat would like several of | 30s. each; and 140 gallons, 36s., and fi with tap,
span, ; gallo a
it as krkin as cheap in construction bmi at nae at rer P rr dia bs) eta es t ro M spied the water perfectly swee t and clean ; will -
es of 700 supported on iron pillars whic h we lo Base Vet Ny OOo: 2110 d A tst Cadas T — M eie 1 Cisterns of all e er nag
previously referred to in our descriptions.of Mr, Pol- | will re ä 2 is that there i isa probability bn 5 80 n higher for Liquid Manure or. Domestic Use, 3i n, pume * "s anata, Nel
care | 32s, 6d. each; Tail Pipe for same at from 10d. per ows :
GALVANISED ino SWING int 1 —
lok Danestown, and l ;
Mr. Maxwell’s, near Duleek. The manure pit adjoins stock The 3 before breaking the bui T of his
h
the cattle house, and as the ground upon. which this | who can well afford to hold on for any length of time, atthough for Garden or et —.— N ons, entirely
is a little elevated, the former been con- eren th esee erii 5 es e bestirring themselves in ron, 82s. 6d, each. $
E m County
aor tes * A ng it out of neo of the IE W. ARNER'S e MANTRE :
^ , n ABLE P 3
eet in depth, but i n 1 a e pp le Notices to Correspond are fitted a vith J. i a
e is at the back part, for the convenience Opfrrrarok: T J. Scowlar of Haddin — nd & Sous Patent. Buckets . t
of wheeling out the man d depositing it nt} horse —— —— — Bentall's e * 7 . P oes
parts of the yar e manure yard is size, and w. — — T *
with a stout ‘stone wall, built with mortar, d | soi Memeras: 7 K We do not know the fm you lum feito logs wil old
3 5 supported on! t and the whole may be carri
may be e con pi h ch young cal igi [rises C4 d Tm Mi phe cd e MAU. pond anos hd
= wi inthe ward A me octagonal — — ** I rear short-horn calves at all seasons
receives Dunt 4 e houses. It is al n
present uncoverc d but fb ic dende that it shall be 274 in.
per 111 liquid has been taken out and | an op SPEER UNE OF obvius BOTNE — ps
means a li on to the cow—and fed on. new milk solel, with st
oO a
c of the farm tended been gone over is laid off more ilk is in
min large ri lds, divided from each other by the skim- E. RU! ci about :
wire fences, or ly stone walls pointed and dashed with nd Cun —
vir Linseed. "Tho skim milk ie in diameter
Time, The soil is well adapted for folding sh ud and | by Gor Clov ica he cal silos wes, Ur a dE M ie Gente vn lemen
henee we foun Turni | o ced p
: consumed where they were grown. "The T ana sheltered | ^ May be obtained of any Iron monger ora and!
sheep were allow fie of 1 lb. r o, every mild day ; and as s soon country, at the — E awin Sty 1 |
lowed at t! t per — ewir lt ec ff to past Crescent, Jew
j of crushed Oats, mixed with a g quantity of Pea tentes, DANAA till autumn ona very high an . mam EF
HA TA re r^ situation, and generally do well Th calyea $ j
PUE
J.
PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS, “anno oe
his nr one q^ 1 ei which cannon s foot.
the seep ere doing well und er this : pum a pes fo March to Angust are fed by h a fora dro Atene PATENT ES
^ Wing e — 4 q
unfa
bu t it pier ‘well in the Coun: nty Wicklow. as we
the id Height. (
subsi 3 : 1
the district around it. is only the Aberdeen and also aasee W e Ey y in best 1 — je Pre em 5 ee e ; 5
other soft varieties of um upon which sheep are — — Ehi s Er s—the best of i 5 5 Ej 3
folded at Tinna Park, the Swedes being carried from ihe io POZA 3
the field and stored up at the houses for the use of the
3 Mr. Clark has a capital stock of Clydesdal e
; and for the benefit of these
the vp of cooked food for farm horses, we may
ee TANT “at the stable door a number of ne Wore T. rare 0 and sinks in
ckets of boiled Turnips and light grain, in a! shelter aff ee aod, sud tN » for the supply of coppers
semi-warm state, waiting the eal of She one from ferus fe field mud — e d * —.— "ee. cm an | Wash-houses 2 ln Ho Tore i and Plant
rk hese to l. when desired,
ARY - Mowsiok J G, Yorkshire, Please to give your
ERRA n the report of the Rev. J. C. Clut
— the Farmer? Club at Oxford, the st:
ot ranking | 3. , ditto 3;, 6,
he youngest calves have 9175 ditto 3,, 6 " flanged pipe
meadows, and other fres h Grass fields; |4 ,, ditto 3,, req) “
24,, short, da 15 feet of Lead Pipe
A in. long
m
to
oo SSS SSN.
EN
3
2 14
attached, ready for fixing 1762 18
ditto ditto
41
convenient.
Tie shot barral Pom ie ed e
May de o tained of
** s lecture Plumber in 9 — or
ces, or of the Patentees
chal EA from the water it holds ary antes 30 HN WARNER & SONS,
attrac n by evaporation, is printed “ will C2 pn r
" b
be ia à being omitted. [S z
5 —— g o [See line 5 from the
Duet
Max 14, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
— mtt nct MU
{RON HURDLES, FENCING, &c., MADE BY MACHINERY,
¢ i
1
IOTTAM = Soi fer of Winsley Street, have
— ted m ing Hurdles, &c. ; the bars,
instead o being "inier by p — the = fashioned style,
are . down by the ving a shoulder s to
more effectually tighten E Ay rrr They
are made of — er iron only, and eem — — in dio e wit!
those made by hand from cinder or commo: which so
frequently break. Iron — Gates, and uon on Work of all
kinds, both Plain and Ornamental, Conservatories, Hot Water
A tus an e —
ppara: d Gard:
Illustrated CATALOGUES free on application to COTTAM &
COMPANY, eee rs, 2, iren iet Oxford Street, W.
N.B. Corram & Qo. ayer it known that there is no
longer an atrasos to their 9 from Oxford Street,
but that they have made a second entrance from 2, Winsley
Street, Oxford Street, W., by the side of the old entrance to
their works, opposite the Pantheon
OTTAM'S PATENT INVENTIONS ror STABLE
REQUISITES, awarded a Prize at the Paris EN
and patronised by the English and French Governme:
GREENING & COMPANYS PATENT TE FENCES.
Patronised i by His y His Royal Hig Highness the PRINCE CONSORT.
No. 4 VARIETY.—STRONG HARE AND RABBIT- dipsa dehin
— Horizontal
ur of sabi — wire, $ —
apart; vertical bars of similar
wire, 11 inch asu — the whole
Made in
rolls of " yards, or in other
eo T lengths, to order.
| NUTUS co G. & Co. have been honoured
r with five consecutive orders for
il the Patent Hare and Rabbit
: — d from H. R. H. the Prince
Consort who has also personally
i expressed the
i ; jy work, One ard of No. 4 variety
; ap — is equal in dari ht to 3 yards of
— — —„—
——— rr best Wire Netting made.
CES PER
YAR
wens — inches 1
PR
— inches * 1s. oa, — AT *
1
— m ^ —
E
G. & Co. forward (post free) on oou ation their ILLUS]! TRATED CATALOGUE, containing 3
of the above and other Iron and Wire Fences for Parks, Farms, Gardens, Game Preserves, Poultry ‘Courts, &c.
GREENING & COMPANY, Victoria Iron and Wire Works, 81, Oxford St., Manchester.
AND COMPANY, of Winsley Street, are the original | Was
COTTAM
inventors of the PATENT "ENAMELED MANGER, Water
Trough, an —— ron Rack, united to an iron top-plate,
and form rming one complete and useful ripe gl having Corram’s
patent noiseless halter gude and collar rein aai srr is
taken to the back of t| e UE r, and works with ease and
om up or down the
COTTA AM'S NEW 2415011 SEED- BOX, an important addi-
tion to theabove fittings, € construction, light, and
durable, promotes cleanliness, and is economical in its results.
f
gruss ax
rated moveable . — ge of which prevents
ean be easil
Tue ae 5 — e
— cleaned
elled. a
The New —— cuales and * es, gratis, upon |
Stora Sr Siret COITAM and COMPANY, 2, Winsley Street,
is no
o. beg to make it known that there i
from Oxford Street,
. — aee to their establishment
but that — | have made a second entrance from 2, i mae
old entrance
Street, Oxford Street, W., by the side of the
their works, opposite the "Panth heon.
Bd SELF-ADIUSTING SCYTHES are the
of e 2g
wareman, and Seedsman in the United Kingdom;
zx ruis Wholesal e of the Sole Licensed Makers, WM. Dray & Co.
Pi ew Agricultural Implement Warehouses, Adelaid è
pes WATERING GARDENS, mee
ENGINEERS, MTLE rm asp MACHINI
VuLcANISED
Washers for Hotwater and RS Watering Hose
SMITH & ASHBY,
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERS, STAMFORD.
HAYMAKING MACHINES.
great trial of Hayvmakers took place at — before the Council of the Royal Society of
AsHBY's, Nicholson's, and Sheridan's. The trial
HE last
Ireland, 2 — 2 .Tbe — s exhibited there were SMITH &
b
work sd
— was tel. = ee one that could clear the
ips * clo
goar Prize o nanimo
— to this Machine “This
Five "ty Prizes that hav n
Smir: ASHBY's Machine
sine 2 Salisbury Meeting of the Royal
Agricul
2
7 po ai
7 ir DINE
ral Society of England (1857). Y RED
Price £15 158. P
E
SMITH AND ASHBY,
Ack Wr Tn AL ENGINEERS, Stamford.
has lately m great!
introduction o;
n
Rake. Xron Teeth, £7 10s.
Cum omae with Tull pa 3 by post on application.
— Extra large Size, £10.
MUELSON,
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEER AND MACHINIST,
"p NU
* Ny" (i A =
"m *
inp,
a m.
Steam Join
Do. fitted with Brass Join
Elastic Packing and Valves for lars and Peru zi
Pum Buckets (compound | Trucks, Se.) E
» India: rübber) os ac Van, and
Hosé for Pumps
Fire Engine Hose E CONS improved
Air Beds, Cushions Boso E: * all kinds of Ma-
Water Beds, Pillows, and Feet Rae Springs, Gas Bags
oot Balls, Cricketting Gl
N.B. A Stock of the abo: y moat
ve m on had, and an;
beg made to Pete: Please address all communications to |
AMES LYNE.HANCOCK,
Vales vised WA Works, Goswell Road, London, B.C
^on. o C
436 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Mar 14, — Pr ie n
FOWLER'S PATENT STEAM PLOUGH @
MEN AIN FOLLOWING PRIZES :—
5 e . (Lord Borrow's m c^
AT STIRLING, 1857 ( E es
eu CHESTER, pea IR Ma s dus XE 0
T NORTHALLERTON, 1858 .. zs 255 d 4. E
cuir M
AT LONDONDERRY, 1858 E
AT STIRLING, 1858 U——— cc die ae
A CUT OF FOWLER'S STANDARD ENGINE, WINDLASS, AND WATER CART.
Illustrated Catalogues, ith 7
vill be ready shortly. For further particulars apply to
JOHN FOWLER, $a 28, Cornhill, London, E.C.
"n ri
VETERES 7
J LL f 7 é i
if 7 4 | 7 Ai, / / YU MM 2 Mf j T i
K 1 i 140 ini : numm
- wes — ? TA: "
JOHN WEEKS € COUPANT, —
G'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LON
HORTICULTURAL BUILDERS AND HORWATER APPARATUS
AND IRON FOUNDERS
meme e coe Pid derent RENE
PLANS, ESTIMATES, & ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES FREE ON
” MANUF LOTUR ERE ENGINEERS,
R PIPE.
e STEPHENSON, late 1 — NS PROVED SER find herein *
* 61, Gracechurch Stre et, London, Manufacturer of Tro ee; HORTICULTURIST
Hurdles, Fencing, C., Tourored tron — Copper (Conical S SQ
Boilers and Apparatus for Warming Buildings i i
escrip d
MONRO’S CANNON ogo
ta “power
Estimates furnished upon application. ospher
— at will either Per-
bobine: CONSERVATORIES, FRAMES k LICHTS fectly dry, partial
OR PITS, CUCUMBER X MELON BOXES X LIGHTS. m
ta
The London Warming and Ventilating 00 A Company
26, Great George Street, Westminster, T cub
ARQUEES, TENTS, AND xen Ste he LOTES
M SALE, or HIRE.—
PAXTON WORKS, SHEFFIELD,
MU: as of late been said about BOILERS for
Heating by Hot Wa: ter, but these ese Boilers have now proved
themselves to be the t at
ESTABLISHED ! La
present invented. They are
—.— Md n of building, and are made 4
es. e P
h Cast „„ „ each Í,J AMES vem Worrorss Peron, 8, Claremont
Inch Wro mht ditto os aia . 610 0 Road,
2 anch Cast rong
ecl Oe 1 Hothouses,9, 10, 11, 12, 18, and 14 feet wide, an
36-inch Wroug! ht ditto — oe „ OR eni, emi to 100 feet. Fram
es and Lights f. for Bi - fin;
., Tft. 6 in. „8 ft., an af o end Ligt et bf 1? to
eferences to Gentlemen and Nurse 100 feet. Upward o 200 Cucumber and M Buses and
are now at work. The pt in Lights, from 4 ft. by 3to 10 ft. 6in. by 5 ft. 6 N. kept read
azed with stout sheet glas intel four times, complete,
= — — ‘or immediate use, all m e of best ma l, packed and COOKE’
Of. an any o nt te all me ofthe kingdom.—References may be had tothe
f paratus erected | Nobility, entry, and the Trade in most of the counties in *. and gu c n and Seed
complete in any partof the country, and anl llastrated Catalogi e| "LEN Horticultural iae of d
application to J. JONES, 6, Bankside, Southwark, Lo: don, -
ev escriptio Sold b; ble Nurserymen
on the most approved and ec — pris inel ciples, * —
“yay 14, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZ
437
F^ HORTICULTURAL WORKS,
DANVERS STREET. PAULTON’S SQUARE, CHELSEA, S.W.
i BS DER 5
ESPECTFULLY begs to inform the nobility, gentry, Nurserymen, Gardeners, and others, that he continues
to carry on the business in all its branches at the above old established premises.
CON: —€(——— GREENHOUSES, e G HOUSES, 5 PITS, &c.
f every description, crete’ à the most approved principles,
TING pre T WATER.
J. G. having specially devoted 1) tention for many years to this part of the business, is now fully prepared to Heat every
—— of publie and private buildings, viz :—Churches, Aad — elena omg &c., as n as all structures connected with
orticulture, in the most efficient manner. His system is the most s mple that can be opted—which he 3 bm from
— e which ha to be the best—can be constructed at less cost, ond is more easily mage the n those of omplicated
LOWER T of superior Red Clay, manufactured
y the Arle tte; Li
ance to Terra Cotta at The pele © iy ES
TENTS, &.
Aet Catalogues free.
ENJAMIN. U'EDGINGTOR, E. “Duke Street
London Bridge, S. E.
MONSTER TENTS for large parties.
PRETTY TENTS for Lawns.
S. W.
; — ˙Ü Ü1...... ... ah iaunas Bos) SHES 2
E GUTTA PERCH A SOLES.—IMPORTANT
1 pro to 3 i ie o foll inq bit tole
pleasu acknowledge Papier of the follow etter fro:
8. dixo Y, Esq., thec celebrated Floris M
n o, | Strand, London
„Gentlemen, —I have rn Gutta Percha -s and Heels
these two years, and bein, hes p much in à garden as I neces-
sarily am in all w ME and with the nd I
wit
rdi
that. terii rne defies dam Many a gardener would escape
colds and rheumatism by t e use of Gutta Percha Soles.
“ Your obedient d$ G. esl a
Every variety of Gutta Percha articles, such as Mill
—.— Soles, Goloshes, Sheet. Pimp 5 eer Fire Buckets,
nion Joints, Flasks, Bottles, bowls, Chamber Vosso
Tolet. Trays, Sponge Bags, eu vier e kin c Bat €
Talbotype Trays, &c., mai [^ ‘the * Percha
eee ani E 4 their. 2 dealers z, ^w or
21. i RE ewe Company, Patentees, 18, Wharf
Lond
n E "APPARATUS, FREE FROM NUISANCE.
v PATENT NATIONAL COAL-GAS
rr
of better — 2 and "m ity, and at
e cost, than an is ordinarily sion tained 5 m Public Works. By
bas not t —— nili to racture which those of a more A aem om rr are always .
used for m ears, — hers n the greatest satisfactio:
All — is conducted at t this establishment on the s pe p ith I terial
—
Plans and Estimates furnished on the shortest notice.
SMITI'S STEAM CULTIVATOR, 1859. ;
ICE—40, MARK LANE,
J. & E HOWARD, BEDFORD, MANUFACTURERS.
PRICE OF A SET OF TACKLE ritis EXCLUSIVE OF ENGIN.
indlass, complete, together with 8 Iron Anchors, vem mete 30 Rollers, 3 won
1400 p A az 2 55 — F
p! —— ie m 3
Bow
£192 0 0
SMITH'S AER CAN BE DRIVEN BY AN ORDINARY SEVEN OR Münk pone PORTABLE ENGINE.
early Sets yw in use, about Forty of which have been purchased 2 Tenant Farm
Catalogues, with fei» eden may be had at the Office, 40, Mark Lane, Lo
J. & F. HOWARD, Britannia Iro rien Bedford, or of WILLIAM ORDRE FAM
Bucks, Patentee.
N qeu lid. per yard. Tanned Fish FRUIT TREES, RIPE STRAWBERRIES, ETC.
OM ge " ee — W Net for — ANNED NETTING for eg ecting the above
s Ü Z proved. Sparen! from Frost, B Birds, 2 yards wide, 34.
Sheeting, 2 yards PAS ls. per yard run.—R. RICHARDSON, | yard, or 100 yards, 20s. Can be "nad i in any 7 quantity of Eaton
d Street; | & Deter, 6 and 7, Crooked Lane, London Bridge.
M ARQUEES ow HIRE, to suit the v. | gps Effectually Prctecting the Bloom of Wall
i ted u Trees from Spring A: — withing wns? Be 8 TIFFANY,
, and dont p for any for | DOUBLE STRENGTH. In piec m inches wide,
I 3 —— tention is * sted 2 e 78. 6d. each. —JonN SHA & Co. 0., nies treet, em hester.
akio 1 ue r refreshments. They are — ré 9 5 no ANNED NETTING, for the Protection afr Fruit
Rooms nd other Hed price, "T —.— — eee aged 5 — Frost, Blight, and Birds; also, for the
Houses, poses. Ten! rity de yards,
5 Lor Disi 19s: 810 yarde, de. ; Scrim Canvas, for wall fruit: Garden
5 ory, Bidbo: Mats.—At Epox ro & Co's,, Rick Clo!
Juda Street ; Office; 99, Euston Road, London, ^ et, Cloth Manufacturers, 17, Smithfield Bars, City, & Old
n entirely new and peculiar process it is easily worked b3 a
of din
hat
—— ed — *
onials, &c. en application Forex ne pem et
J.T For & Co., Linc YI
CROS
ac AMADIO'S deres Compound MICRO-
e A. 2s. ; Students’, 31. 13s. 6d.
„Both these are from Amadio, of Throgmorton Street, end
are excellent of the their dra A the more expensive one especially.”
—Howsehoi fords,
— 880; ACHROMATIC MICROSCOPES. |
ing the — of 1000 Microscopi jects, post free, for 4 stampa
PRIZE MEDAL, PARIS EXHIBITION 1855.
METS EICALER, cd COS New Da
P
Aie vid enetrating un
ue Improved je nit Clothes Brushes, and genuine
— — — ; and ev 2 Nos ma
for the Toilet. Toot! search thoroughly
beeen Qi divisions of the Teeth and clean them most effec-
tually—the never e loose. M., B., and Co. are sole
makers of the Oatmeal Camphor and Orris A Soa)
sold in Tablets g their names and ciem ;
LLEN S — 2 . AND
TRA VELLING BAGS, with SQUARE OPENING >
Ladies’ Dress Trunks, Dressing Bags, with Silver Fittin,
Despatch Boxes, Writing — Dressing Cases, and 500 ot er
articles for Home or Continental "Travelling, illustrated in their
RESSING CASES, DRESSING BAGS, and
highly finished * ireke — dieser in great variety ;
Ivory-handlea Table Cutlery; ry requisite for the Toilet
and Work Tables.—MzcHI & “Basar, 112, Regent Street;
4, Leadenhall Street; and ilace, Sydenham.
SOME BRASS AND IKON BEDSIEADs-
EAL & Son’s Show Rooms contain a assort
ment of Brass , suitable both for Home use and for
Tropical Climates; handsome Iron B with Brass
Mountings and el tly Japanned ; P! Bedsteads
Se ts; every description of Wood that is manu-
complete, as well as every description of Bedroom
EAL anp SON 8 1 LLUSTRATED ATA.
LOGUE, containin; and Prices of 100 — e
as well as X 150 rs rticles of Bedroom Furniture, sent
free by post.—H EA: & Box, Bedstead, Bedding, and cud Fr
Furniture pine eta 196, Tottenham Court Road, $
eri sri BATHS, AND LAMPS.—
AM S, BURTON has SIX LARGE 2 ROOMS
Aave vexclusively to the Angie uel DISPLAY
Baths, and Me! eds The stock of ea
largest, nms and most vari ied eversu
of Prices and M m et; and 4, 5, and 6, Perry's
1820.
— e
Ra, | Place,
vO IHE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
Patronised by Her Majesty QUEEN v , His Majesty the EMPEROR of the
FRENCH, and his Royal Highness ¢ the PRINCE of PRUSSIA.
SHANKS’S PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING,
AND VERING MACHINE FOR
"THE ONLY COMPLETE MACHINE FOR HORSE OR PONY POWER.
[May 14,
RO `
AMUELSON'S PATENT T BOYD AS vee
and ROLLING MA HINE, the only -—
‘ass, 10 guaranteed err .
ork:
railway stat on in pe ere m rs aha Curie
Copies of testo als post application te M
don Warehouse, g iin at Weste
DEANE's, London Br ridge; r the Works tei * — v Git
]cseu EY, SIMS, AND COS mif R
RS) PAT TENT LAWN MOWING
OT ar,
A MANOSI other valuable improvements, A. SHANKS anp SON have this season made in their Patent. Wa —
ct
pent ~~ Machines, as fdly deseribed in the Gardeners’ Chromcle be iy ch 5, page 207 ; PEDE Md niit
requeste ed toth ew Patent method of emptying the Grass Box, sere ^A Lr ts i the — Rn buie d sr 5 E 80
ing i i t ty o paving may
> = 1 , if it were ‘poss! ible to fill it, 7 be emptied at the rate of 60 .
appa 3 m mense £ ntages of this inv sp ag must hoiati at once
ili machine t ir k, while abour a is
apparent to th lGardener. It will enable the machine to do at least a third mor ^ wor C
e in working it, as compared with ordinary machines, is three-fourths lessened. If a Lawn whic ch eee Men machino
nine hours to mow, can now be done in six hour. 3, with three-fourths less labour to the man 3 orks the mac 5 g
further is necessary to establish — utility and worth of the invention. as "
a the Machine y complete for level as we 1
dee eee eee Dummy E B ‘ons k n Lawns, has beon sen introduced a ar the bev crifice of dot time
dh
nido
fidence to offer to the world the eign and the most complete
Mowing, Rolling, Collecting, and Delivering Machine extan
PATENT HAND MAC vci for 1859.
N NW Sizes, so simple in construction
an ~ K cal rl
V
Lerch, LANGCASH| zo
P., S., & Co., in introducing : — 7 wn Mo owing Mati
par ticularly . à strict e toss or compaia
trial, for simplicity of construction, E.
th labou:
AP lig i h. SN and are quite free from all super-
K
vi draught, adaptability for mowing e kind. of phis c
recommendation — se ED cular, and verge work. `
ines are peculiarly well fitted for Firstly, we have encased the wheels so as com .
turning and cutting amor gst | tect from rd over borders, shrubs, Ke, au
Flower Beds, Verges, Bowling | the machine, at the same time not bein, ing liable to be
Greens, and for small Lawns. The or damage.
Patent improvements for this sea- Secondly, this machine ean ij on undulated and sloping
son render them complete in ey ery it can b
or be po in
te in ev
part. Th s ce is greatly less-
of the
sunsu: .
The Machines are warranted to give ample satisfaction; failing this (which is barely ater "n may be at once returned.
FURTHER PARTICULAR RS MAY BE HAD ON APPLI ICATION.
ALEXANDER SHANKS & SON, ocala and ae MEE Dens Iron Works,
ath,
Forfar
N.B. To prevent S in delivery early Orders are particularly requested.
PATENT LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MACHINES. | "7-9
=a
_ SAMURLSONS LAWN MOWING MACHINES, E E 5 2?
|... WITH BOYD'S PATENT IMPROVEMENTS.
€ “Doing the work of five or siz men.” —The Times, Sept. 20, 1858.
The a PRICES include the Carriage to any Railway Station in England:
With Boyd and Samuelson's [
Patent Pepe Shar, pen-
ing, and A nata
ra ear tnt
hoü vs 210
12 Nor wide brew wa
16 inch
es wide, eee arran d
ment (for one man ok " |
19 inches wi. wide, ditto (for one man
an
22 inch Wide, ditto (for man io)
22 inches wid ditio, and aL)
fitted With? for a pony,
and a man to work it EE m
2 wide, ditto — x 8
30 ir wide, ditto (for man and pony) 11 Nm
of _ the N. and Gentry "
a Rava to Nitsa Continen
ol Europe, and are
to any other for 5
efficiency, and d; ty. The demand
aad a niak WEN’S -GRAISSE LU .
daily bl du
1857, and 1858 being more — EH , E ;
2100. T. Á vore tha B
Su. = 2 7 and Tot Soap yo
E n " :
tem of e i the highest :
DURS T
E: nus TOILETTE. —OLDRI 30 yand
b rated for
2 1859 should be sent t
vo orders for 1850 delivery and to W nt
disappointment,
atin oP eke it ing 2 Depos done NH
B. SAMUELSON, 76, , Gannon Street West, City London Es od eat Ea,
3
Banb
Chemis ts and Perfumers. Its use
uable.
ury,
ronmonzer or —— in the Kingdom.
Works,
or to Mzssns. DEANE ayp CO. London Bridge; or any respectable 1
am oe
HANKS'S PATENTLAWN MOW ERS HE TENT
Sis EN the most perfect Machines for DA T — . MOWIN
Mowing Lawns, may be — re at ti 1 —— i
y ere at any time, — self-sharpenin;
extant. SHANKs's Horse and P. Machin and adult of tes —— z parts E
; Bend (e Machines that Mow, — i "Colles and Deliver "M — 4. 10s. en mi —— ar Qin —.— i by ^ K
rass London Agents: Cortam & Co., 2, Winsley Bere anufaetured and Sold — ud
Oxford Street, W. e of Mowing MA mens zn » the original
SHANKS'S PATENT MOWING MACHIN Several infringements of their ess taken place.
& C. LEE, Nurs 3 Hammersmith have | the Makers respectfuli t the
^ y caution er — to see that the
r ecommendin, ng these as the mo: ost | oie w Daren" Machi of its
— lete. Mowing Machines offered 1 to the ilio. "Thy ha have | CIE = DEN dp: Phonix Tion orks, Strou
rience wi S'S Machines, and have ever AP AND CORRECT PRINTING
d them do their work admirably, effecting a great cane Sik i
8 ur, aud ot liable to po tout al on order. a i — C Tad RADEN
to the Agents, J J, & C. LEE, 8 Hamme
TH
r terms, apply Roni. EDM. 5 c Cod
rsmith. 7 Street, Snow ow Hill Perder 0 k .
u
pepe t bte lettere nd
e le a
sse n red ink Sold at 20, ion Ca
by Che: omista and Pesfumers.
Var 14, 1859.]
THE GARDENERS’ _— AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
, SURGEONS THE HEADS
WP cone
FIREPROOF SAFES, "ES, DOOR
Illustrated
— ä
BS LOCKS, RS,
Car HES, CASH AND DEED BOXES. -The abov x
roa soso — Illustrating the Nat
can be supplied c Cote
O BE LET, WHITTINGTON NURSER
prm cx —57, St. Paul's sewer dac die London ed m : rper cn te o ural em also Holloway. eee For ti
ool; 16, Market Street, Manchester; an ysiological and Medical Botany, by FRE EU. Sie, who la: ty ^ — per -
en has been eight years in the medical a Bap and — attended Mr Bun * EN Manse * s Esa, iq, Small Pox Hospital ;
verha t d NNEY, ? man, Stratford, Essex.
Li the Lectures of Professors Lindley, Lankester, Hens rex, and WESTBOURNE D Ro
Forbes, and the Botanic Gardens in the vicinity of the Metro- BIGH
Fe SONS CHOCOLAT 55 3 polis Collections mater 2 and mounted, and r BE SOLD, by private contract (owing to the
0 > , 4
— These delicious beverages are now sold at very rata supplied by FR s, Botanist, 85, St. Martin eath of the late Mr. W , this valuable property, with
varie a many of them are higlil iba) Lane, London, m C . | nearly 90 years ed lease, containing 6 Greenhouses,
Eo pilo es, an: : ghiy : . HAN BO BRITI H FERNS. B fitted with hot-water apparatus, and 40 lights of brick fitting ;
- pRYS HOM (EOPATHIC COCOA is an article of unex- DOOK OF h 3 THIRD EDITION, the whole being in working order, doing a good jobbing
tionable i24 FRY'S SOLUBLE COCOA, in Hexagon TuHoMas Moo: S., F.H &c. ire] May now be viewed on application, and taken in the
Pets, and F ARL COCOA, are strongly recommended. containing many Siow illustrations, an Me when the present Stock is sold off, at a reduced pri
p ieties e og British. Ferns. Pric ic ries $ P ned
RY Ax ons Manoraoronmns 10 TO THE QU For e fter particulars to view, &c., apply to Mrs. WX. GIL
F , i th Lond d {BRIDGE & s Soss, 5, derer Row. (sole executrix to the late ai te) on the premi.
th mist, asse vi Sere is ed, price 2s. - — FRUITERERS, — D OREENOR E
CHI DACEA, Part VIII.“
E
Containing
ce, i
— of Cocoa ai can therefore 5 en Oberonia, Alvisia, 8 Restrepia, and AB — in one cating thoroughfares in the
the following statement :—Caffeine and Theine each 3 part es Pleurothallis and also the of M. Prilleux con- | of Bath. To persons w ih e capital e offe y an
only about 29 per cent., whilst Theobromine (or essence of | cernin, of the order. excellent opportunity as halt the rent is snes’ — rmanent
Cocoa) contains upwards of 35 per cent. of nitrogen. Parts 1 II. price 2s. 6d. each, may still be had. 1 The Advertiser having other engagem — price,
ih lt EWS, 5, Upper Wellington St., Covent Garden. | inc nding Pes „ Stock, Fixtures, &c., 50/.—D. "E P., Post
VINEGAR. ent. In —— o new n — 9 he Office = T T.
ONDYS PATENT PURE ONCE ENT RATED country w o desire it can have two copies sent by pest for
Un 8 Families, by using this delicious 07°. stamp, five for two stamps, or eleven for four, in addition SMITH ink. i solicit liis on a ell built
* e purity, and effect a saving of 50 per cent. See to the cost of che "bk for distribu e lean-to G OU dad which can be seen erected on
Report of Dr. SEEREN City Offi Health; Dr. Hassall of Price 3d. eac 10 5 copies for tion among | his "premises, Cottage, King Street, Hammersmith. ,
the Ja jet O Y: n, and others. Six Quart Sample sent ottage Tenantry, delivered anywhere in London, ona rout Constrdeted wh jm best yelow Deal Large sigo q.
any Railway, for 38. 6d. —Sold by the Trade, in bottles, office Order being sent to the Publisher, James MATTHEW! Size of House 24 feet long, by 12 ft. 4 in. in width.—Price 301.
fee ed and oa wholesale, 63, King "William Stree the Office of the Gardeners’ Chr PER e.
London Bridge, E HE COTTAGER'S CALENDAR OF GARDEN
OPERATIONS. | By Sir Sir Joser pes M.P. Sales by Auction.
LENFIELD PATENT STARCH the e —€—€— have al are a eno aana CHRO Up f
Royal Laundry, and pronounced by Her ie Lain: ORCHIDS AND dms JAGE PLANTS, FERNS, CONIFER
dress to be the eas starch she ev ed. When —5 for| J Marr 5, U 2 lint Set Covent Garden, SEEDS, ETC ;
LENFIELD PATENT STA see that you get it, erio) J. C. T n b on at
kinds are often substituted. —Bold by llers, Tiii Edition, considerably enlarged, prico 5e, d A
OTHE N & Co., Glasgow and London. ree by Post, 5s. 10d., TUES FSDAY, May 17, — i iast X^ 227 a collection of
A D. CH n IS Y. | ORCHIDS, FOLIAGE 4 and VARIEGATED ' PLANTS, and
HE ROY BOUQUET. ARD Sorry, F. R. S.
IESSE ax LUBIN, Lr imer TORS, 2, New of the Hoya
uisite perfume has the
By EDW F. G. S. n
Honorary “Member 2 Society of | portation of Plants and Seeds
lan fessor of RR fl to the 8 end of | of Seeds from India,
try in tary —May
s valuable species; a small im-
from Mexico, and a co ment
FERNS, com
consign
including ey hy ^ age Pinus —
Bond Street, London. —“ This is he
> ur D garden at it evening's "ouo. A FRANGIPANNI, Bemimaty at Adäiseombe — &c., &c. hm T ea tot 3 morning of sile
. GO BEDDING PLANTE.
Wong CLUB SCENT, 2. 6d. enc each M. potias tee «|, 5 MM (5 pni ee St., Covent Garden, CAMBERWELL.—8000 BEDDING PLANTS.
tase, 7s.—See to have them with , Presse & LUBIN, * * gt Wege are —
3, New Bond Street, London. Sold ev öd., free t, 1s. 7d. by saag Auction,
ABELS” “FOR TH 'HERBA RIU M, Pide Bechis Aata ^ 0 * pt. George *
pe a4 LUXURIANT HAIR, SISTING OF THE NAMES OF THE Camberwell, on M ONDAY, May 16, at 12 o'Clock, about 8000
WHISKERS, &c.—COUPELLE'S CRINUTRIAR is CLASSES, ALLIANCES, ORDERS, AND SUB-ORDERS, BEDDING and other GREENHOUSE PL ANTS, several Store
produce w moustachios, eyebrows, -— 91 y Liliu: ee lium of sorts, an Aloe, &c.—May
eks with the utmost — PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S "VEGETABLE KINGDOM. kg Pme e= —.— Sale. Catalogues had on the premises,
— E of the Auctioneers, American
ie So printed in large type, that ti they
can be cut out and pasted ki — e
Da RTUM.
Nurs
stages, and reproduce e hair in bal from whatever
d price — 5 — EU — world ; - will — J. MATTHEWS, 5, Upper Wallington Stet Covent Garden.
sent post penny m ndon,
Miss COUPELLE, 00," Cast = ms Newman : treet, Oxf ad ——————— TAPERS OP CORT ROR ESSRS PROT THEROE pt MORRIS have re-
London. ilet ov pfa post free for qo nny TO RUE OF LAND 1 OF 2 FOR ceived instructions — — to ys a air ^ by
postage stamps.“ Tt eompletely . m m aise Davis THE 3 Price 18. 6d., in stamps for post. By Auction, — ** reserv TUESD
My whiskers are J. BArLEY Denton, Engineer to che General Lana — 2 O Hock, on e e Lodge, 2 i l
— 1 — — Company, and Author of “ Land Draina; "E of tb * e x TULIPS S of k Henry 3
O tHe NERV — nage y any new varieties (Seedlings) will — offered at this le
Clergyman., agree R restored — mu m — as — shortly be published by the same writer, p: which have not hitherto been parted with, besides all those 4
after many years of great nervous suffering, is assist DRAINAGE. — The Experiments kinds which ve previously Tpeen sen ree sd this. col
others (free), on on receiving a stamped - — Tabulated, showing the relative discharge from uniform Parallel . —. — 5 od ent remis, ot the pe 8 1 Se Mee
pay of the AUT Direct, iche Drainage in Clays, and from Occasional Drainage in Mixed 10 Don 2 d of the A — 1
Brixton, London. . f the whole System adopted and a State- | done en. MeL
tono; Esset: p 0 e
Uc OOO BEDDING AND OTHER GREENHOUSE PLANTS.
effectually | ROE awd. MORRIS will su submit
treatment, discovered in — to publie com by 2 nd t
rat —— ^ jer dress on receipt dy, wit stam IL. ANCIENT GEO EE aa M. A., | I RDNESDAT. May i8, at 12 o'Clock, — AY zu i d
Mr. H, 27, Alfred Place, Store Street, London, WEISS » ot Hay, - 2 = DING and other GREENHOUSE PLANTS: g R
varieties; also H. other X4
STHM A.—Ds. s P PULMONIC WA AFERS MARITIME „DISCOVERY AND MODERN GEOGRAPHT, ots, Dahlias Tropæota m, Coben, bee Mau-
ive instant relief, and i f Asthma, : permui — ewed lays
— greis 838 as pos — Mp og — — ^ With Copious os to the Sale. Catalogues ma: may be had on the premises, o! the:
— — Ms DIM FI CCTV eee.
Price 13. . andi PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, by D. T. AxsTED, M. A., F. R. S.
eu , 2s: 9d., and ll per box. Sold by all druggists. | BAYS" Gun a pry, by J. R. JACKSON TO GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OT ê
S OINTMENT AND
WAY’ PILLS. —
He GLANDULAR s: ids DERBYSHIRE —— gom
Strand.
F. R. S.
— eae TERMINOLOGY, by Rev. C. G. NICOLAY.
NECK.—Afiections of the he throat — instant IT Y INFLUENCE IN NEUE d DISEASE. | comprising Scarlet and other G Eri i if
attention; they indica‘ e constitution Just published, price 1s., free by post for thirteen Stamps, the p — of — Toten: : Thine”
— — — n vi p — EODND- LIFE: or en NERVOUS | with a large assortme! f Ornamental Plants for Bedding.—
— mont 9 ed : AY — — FOR a MEDICAL WORK intended for the special On view the morning of I Catalogues — pe — eo. s
onset, or used at a Doer period render it milder in its i OR of all "who are s g (roro the 9s od torts o M gn Auct, Amam can Nure 5 ry, Leyo
If properly employed these Varus will remove th symp- Ae PHYSICAL D BBILITY sna Soe * mi IX UL
tom e the virus from the bl micken | COnseduences — nitA eio viue lervatións on ESSRS. -
the action of . .... Ue] LANA ORAE HMM SE yen grey 8 i structed b 15 12 EOF ee Uode
skin to thy actions If the bo: heredi Treatment of these disorders, by infusing tose TA i i Bots Sparo y Auction on the
Bx -— ide 0 — — disease e e severe, | constitutions relaxed or debilitated from va rvating Premises, Hendrie’s Gard Bri Road, ARAN: the
incurable, these m: es happily defer the fatal issu Illustrated with Cases compiled from the. y NoteBook of | Railway Station, on MONDAY, + 28, at 3 o'Clock, a Choice
P S IN BACK, Gravel, Beco z € NE ero twenty y — — tata, — MG named ior Teuton all in por
u Cornhill, i lle 3
1 dod. In In tion, Flatule Nae - lent condition and nearly every root — etd y be viewed
lity, &e—Dr. DE tion, Flatulency, Nerroum. GRAM, UU an . bad of Me, T mre,
been long as a safe and efficacious remedy for the 1 BE LET, BRISTOL NURSERY GROUNDS, | the Auc m Nurse y; la — Essex.
above complaints, discharges of any kind, retention of urine Kemp Town, Brighton ese Gardens are now to Let o —— — —
and diseases of the kidneys, bladder and urinary organs gene- or — with immediate possession. — Any person
rally, which, if neglected, uently end in stone in the bladder | desirous of EE f E DM same may obtain particulars and > oh : igiene
and a lingering death. For depression of spirits, incapacity f. permission to view unds on poca to Mr. R. W. ESSRS. PROTHEROE anp MORRIS are in-
dept study or — confusion, giddiness, drowsiness, me — iid 8 Street, Lo n W.; and of Mr. strueted by Mr. J. Fry to submit to public competition
5 refresh t, fear, nervousness, and Insanity A. Ort +3 Horticultural Valuer, 28, Pri by His Wands- by — = — remises, fall of Nursery, Hun
— Pets rie com! with urinary diseases, wo omerton, hin 5 minutes' k ofthe Hackney Rai
- y their salutary action in correcting SOM H station, on TUESDAY, Way 94, at 12 o'Clock, abont 10,
bile — — the a, they 8 the a- 0 ™ SOMERSETSHIRE ore ict GREENHOUSE P d Sp consisting of 8 of pyri show and Scarlet
Sones i ha De 2s. 9. As. ons of all these 3 § 10 ice, rn Helio ui
healthy
— ir and 33s.
ee on receipt of the
| Street, Street, Oxford Stet. br. De Roos, 10, Berners pasture Land, 40 ac
the rivers Frome W Mells.
MPORTANT INFORMATION. — Ms. f | Dairy or Grazing
Brown, 0 a buildings,
Queen Street, Kingsland, was for years severely afficted | a cloth manufactory, h
with a scorbutie eruption, CDI the back of both hands, | and suitable for a
Brew! Ane, o
Dr, | where an abundant zoe of excellent spring and river w.
2 any other Lad age
de Way be viewed, 2 Cata
— the Auctioneers, — — Nur
o5 i arms. She was
ROBERTAS p - as persuaded to
SCROPHULA v saa E P T iri a and PI LA ANTL | would be desirable. This would be an excellent opport nity
Which Lu s kil, b t ue e wound in her leg | for a manufacturer fond of f ming, or - o Er .ESSRS. “
l medicines. She ^ Boe or | ectually cured by these | sub-let, or it could be let without the Far str
m of the Ointment, which. p^ cted the Pills, and used one| very low; tithe free, and es N
er friends, who wish it to be made public surpris MURTRY BROW FARM, in the parish of Buckland pista.
suffering fellow creatures. D 3 — for the benefit of her | comprising nearly 300 acres of land, the! rtion of which:
... POOR MAN'S | is arable and produces excellent. dropa : Pura
t by P ' experience CROPHU LA have boingav d, | about to be thoroughly mod „and a suitable Tr
of e descri 5 Pix cure of eruptions and | Dwelling House and red Homestead on the best principle | Ei lia,
and — each. 8 1s. 14d. ; 25. 9d. ; 48. 6d. ; | will be immediately *,* No tenant will be Trees, ce
men esale by the Proprietors, Beacu | who has not at the least - available capital of 10. per acre > Sewer and ether
wen Bowne: dharai all re Bridport, and by the but tenants 3 d experience will meet with
‘in the United Kingdony and the Colonfee ine Vendors P F. rng, Orchardieigi m — m
440 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND A6 CULTURAL GAZETTE, [Mar 14, 1859,
GREENS PATENT GRASS CUTTING, G, COLLECTING, & ROLLING MACHINES FOR 1859 1859,
GREE N'S PATENT HAND MACHINE.
= Machine in order, 5s. extra;
mS 2 PT ES a 3 Omm m
„5 ZN 87 We IN
3 S i lt B d Tools f
doce uA S i) EA —
n i : Xe à — with 6
bb - ; N < ard fe
To cut 14 inches, 6l. ; 16 in. 6l. 10s. ; 18 in, 7/.— i 3 T WIRES e i :
orone person. Tocut 20 inches 71. 10s. ; 22 in. ww, 2 Maius E
27 3 .
81.; 24 in. 81. 10s.—for two persons. If with :
Si fy
>
Ay
common i
Suitable for a Don- chain traces, 7s, 61.
Lather boots, suit
Fora Pony, 30 in., E an : / ae , i : f | — feet, 168.5 do. fora
15L; box, tools: i à m -
: j 4 íl un pony, 20s. per set of
x S : 1 y 4 An il b= =2 ‘ =S four» Guard fr
Leather traces, === NES %% 7 í AM ae
ido. "Ef y T f 4 3 * a
covering Wheel u.
on agg bee eT
seu
3 M Biol: A s * a. < 8 NL
, 0 a , 4 E
CIAM,
I Ria aes 4 WMG Í Aka AA
at the London orticaltar: tural Society’s Gardens, Chiswick, June 5, 1857. ‘Four a competi,
third do. on intricate places around trees, &c., when GREEN’S be the
Challoner, Dr. Lindley, and G. M ‘Ewen, n, Esq., the oh dera Julie i
See the Gardeners tron of May 22; 1858, p. 423, under the headin ing of „Garden Memoranda.” of GREEN e :
„Loxpox HORTICULTURAL GARDENS, CHiswicK.— The Grass in Ea uu am and elsewhere "is in 8 condition ; it is kept in order by means of one
Machines, which does its work very satisfactorily, and, co: verior Scythe, effec ving of at least one-h: alf."
T o
TRIAL at
First trial on level ground, second do. on undula!
Tm Times of duced and Garden APE le of June 12, 1858. One Toe
“ TRIAL Or MowiNG MACHINES.—À considerable n Yuriete sizes having been brought to the ground it was agreed that the trial should take p! laco ding beet 0
- — r Sa as nearly as possible of daonn size N oen by themselves, or their men. The ground to be worked «rad rt e s —. — IE 13 bet the best. goigs”
as uniform quality as possible. After trials on level ground and round trees, the Judges, Colonel Challoner and Mr. Edw 7 5 "Easton, decl sg ap BASTON Te
Ma ord d to show,
espectfully informs the Nobility, Gentry, Gardeners, Amateurs, and others, that upwards o DES pout OF ale
di above ve Nine Hundred were sold last season—4 have en to be the best in — cases of ee, E en ntirely remodelled, — d all — p= 75
last Year, are now rectified. The Patentee now considers the Mortis as ir as possible. Although — Machines h so m = A
extra cha ade, excepting for a neat — bes xi — ce — wheel tokeep them clean, and to prevent breakage or pen who w
e Machines are warranted to give satisfaction, nce — by the party paying the barrage back E Leeds. The Pate
in producing the best and reh Mowing, Collecting, nd Roll — Msshines ever brought Dt the public, Hundreds of Testimonials (uns — m
with regard to the superiority of the machines, by app! plyi ng to the Paténtee
T. GREEN, Smithfield Iron Works, Leeds; or, No. 2, sacs Street, bottom of Holbom,
be made ingen TOM the pur e
Gr T. G. urs be ee dd to ind an uem edem as early as 20 as a great di ifteuty u was found las — ie n supplying best at
their Machines repaired may forward them to either the London or Leeds establishment, where
— on = fe ee
Baapzonr, of 13, U Woburn Place, and Faxpxaick Molin gr Evans, of No. 20, Queen's Road West, both in the Parish of St. Pancras in i the Co. _of TUADAT, MAY
‘Precinct Wet ty of London, and published by them at the Office, No. 5, Upper Wellington Sta Parth ut St. Paul's, Covent Garden, in said Cos
»*
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
AGRICULT URAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
No. 21.—1859.]
be Gardenin ing, spring 447 €
€ oquacious. +. 445 b
Glass dealin; — 445 b
Landlord and tenant 452 e
Manures, artificial 449 c
— -Liebigon .. 45l e
Lom Ip
S, how
Rainfall a eee cm 445 5
Rifles ,.......,. 448 €
Soi Sean i ig. 453a
kof Teriperat —.— ow night . 444 b
s, puddle for 1 mid manure for . 4446
8 Turnip: 450 b
ers" 4 — Vines 445 b
Waltonian 445 a
A Wi 45a
L BOTANIC SOCIETY, reren yrs Paxik.—
FIRST EXHIBITION .this Season o f PLA
FLOWERS age’ take n id on WED; €: DAY next, May "95.
e Garde by orders from
Fellows [foe of 2 Society, — — 5s. each, or on the
day of X Exhibition, Ts. 6d. — — Exhibition of AMERICAN
PLANTS will take place in Jun
ERIT OTANI CAL anD HORTICUL
TURAL —The FIRST EXHIBITION of
FRUIT and FLOWERS oi of the Season will be held at the Gar-
dens, Old Trafford, on WEDNESDAY, May 25. — ä
b,
| OYA
Tickets to, *
2 attendance fi 2 Y A
Tickets of admission Aes be e - to the Secre-
tary, or by amen t the
13, Corporati mam May 21 A. WarrWORTE, Sec.
l #5. i mber 15 Forfeited SHARES on Sale.
i X RAND TORRA HIRE GALA—YORK 155 5
. FETE—Prizes a 14th and 15th JUNE, 1
ENTRIES will close on SA UAM: f. 4th of. A UNE aoe
Schedules, Regulations, and = — — y be had o:
eppes — — SDAN. fant Neretary.
13, New Street, C —— = treet.
)
i pow caepit FLORAL AND HIOVTICULTURAL
His Grace the Duke of Ga GRAXTO
The R ht Honourable the Fart o f EUST
Honourable the the Earl of Pour
The ANNUA — 1 be on THURSDAY,
| September 8. AL EXHIBITION will be eld on T county. P E
—Schedules of Prizes can . .
PRR TITE, To
ma 5 AND SURSE FLORICU aren RAL
Autumn Show, WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, Sept. 14
and 15; on the same grand scale as in former years. Schedules
are now ready, and may be obtained of the ——— 96,
St. James's Street; or — E. nn Queen's Graperies, General
8 — of Exhibitio
TTRE Ens EDWARD CARPENTER,
f Co Secretary.
AFER CDI. the first Public Meeting
4+ of _ ae will, by pa ga = = ‘Gouget P
held at the UU ed zd Én tomolog su 8
Row, on m ning, at 8 o'
i Trcic, Secretary.
Price Fivepence.
SATURDAY, MAY 21. in Rudi hec
SKIRVING’S SWEDE—SUTTON'S SELECTED STOCK. HOLLYHO
TTON SONS have a choice UL anp SON have py a large Stock of
SEINS: SWEDE SEED, growth » 1808, 7 they e HOLLYHOCKS, stro ng healthy plants that will bloom
can strongly recy end. Price 9d. pe r lb., r by the | this autamn at the following rates
bushel.—Royal Berks Establishment, LU as at m fine name med sorts 255. per 100
O in separate colours, 30s: to er 100.
HE THAT NEVER MILDEWS. NAMED SORTS, border Powers, So tp lak per MI — o
DOES MPION. - Gardeners’ Chronicle, w flow ers, 24s. to 428, per doz
ay 14, third page. r lb., or cheaper by i HOLLYHOCK sin, bac to 5s. per packet, free by post.
bushel. carriage — to all —— ayment by cheque, or b; es A882 ae nt, 8 A
Post-office orders payable N & Soxs, Reading, Be cd
IN
HAM — WARD P n ge Stock of
EW HA EDY 5 DE. —This Swede
spe est and Best ondition, are
SWE
is hardier than any other kind, grows to a
adapted for sowing upon poor land, is not affected by frost, rand
keeps good in the ground or in store till the end of kay. zu j
and genuine Seed of this excellent Swede, price
m pn free for orders of 30 — and u upwards) m aay S Md o ot
RÄYNBIRD & HARVEY, ov Basingstoke; and 89, Seed
Market, Mark Lane, London,
De
Newes'
ovaries He "
NEW ROSE HYBRID ——. feder DE —
> ENJAMIN — CANT has much n offer-
NE” ZEALAND. BEAN. ing the above Deenliíu] Boss; it'is quite ag and
wart. collection. our deep vivid crim-
Jas. CARTER & h Holborn, London, W. a
ought to be in e — tc
son, of exquisite shape; the petals are disposed in the form ofa
D H. STIRZAKER have still to offer the finest | rosette, which gives it a distinct and at grow ap
ppearance
ADRUMH EAD CATTLE CABBAGE PLANTS at 5 flower ‘medium size, cm and FO £T excellent;
EARLY, of sorts, 2s. 6d.; CURLED SAVOY, 4; CAUL 2 pU tho ra owl d with t
FLO WER, strong, 25s. per 1000. —Tancaster Nu
Jobn's Street N e a
QE. P GOOD.—
BEDDING PLANTS for Sale in T vari
1 ——
—This is quite a distinct variety, and superior to a
other —.— ind, E — flavour, dwarf Eus extra
early, atta * will not run to seed, and every plant prices, at GAINES's Nursery, Su Lm Lane,
3 — to Gabthger ^ ‘Seed d may le had in sealed packets E HOMAS WILD has only a few — trg of his
13 pase stamps, post free, at EDMUND P. Dixon's, 57, Quee: PRIMULA SNO left, at = É r packe
Street, Hull mdi, 1 vid
SORGHUM, OR HO 2 2 ROP x oL UM :
TS iN Sugar C. ASS). HARLES 3 DER, GO Edinburgh,
— 9 ER D SONS, ipti" of this SEED, can Seed of the above at 20s. Per Ib., and 18. 6d.
supply it on liberal terms, according to quantity men per ou
Royal Berkshire Seed Establishment, Readin
GOLDEN CHAIN GERANIU
— HUSSEY . 2 offer “the ete i at
so several thousai
^ LCUS SACCHARATUS, on CHINA SUG
GRASS.—Seed of this lately x in any 9 Fodde
ws pe
ANE
be supplied by NurTING & So:
b Sa Seed Warehouse, 60, Ba:
3 SACCHARATUS, or od China Sagr-
Cane. S pamphlet, “A Visit M t vx i itd —
on od.
English authority on the Cultivatio:
free 6d. Prices of Seel on
varieties of Holcus
putes —
T0 SEED AGRICULTURAL.
d MPLE poi MP MA NURE COMPANY LIMITED
ly every a
—
(G. t ARGENTEUM).—The
‘sted fr be E 5 th iem hi d, x
can suppl un:
RLES NOBLE, Bagshot,
ern m. Taunton, to call
r selection of
4 — 7 1 BARN ES vem to —— bis friends r1
as. that his new PRICED and DESCRIPTIVE
OHN SALTER is now sending o his
Seedlings and other new Rer m as w
ich
ent of choice miscellaneous plants,
Cai 11 bis 887
as those of his unrivalled eral collecti is ths
er
OHN WATERERS” EXHIBITION of RHODO
DENDRONS m be displayed as throughout the
month of JUNE at M M Botanic Gardens, M, E Park,
London.—The Am ejes ry, Bagshot,
,GRAND DISPLAY oF -5 ARDY STA. RHOpO-
DENDRONS, AZALEAS, ETC.
OHN WATERER has the pleasure to announce his
collection of the above Plants is now in bloom = A
I'ma en ind great beauty throu; en the month of Jun
Hea Roding Branch" Station of the Sou th Westen —
Am
OSE OF THE ME
bad 5 8 zby Show, and
ER, and may i — gratis, an:
dy, Sunday 382 at Garves’s Nursery, Surrey tation,
COLLEC TIONS OF
th
E as AMERICAN
we ATERER oy —— AND GODFREY ES ine — — de
Tibe Sth ast.
ICAN P.
12 on and in dr their Nursery willbe in thi
" eges ursery i:
3 C in 40 —
. pia ea breeds: from Waterloo to
B- t Woking station.—K: 3 9. 9
aw Hil N ele, be —
—
RS, Broom-
spum, co
Ms à xe e maximum, roseum peer
perbum, &c.
pus FOR” THE F DENTS GAR
following: Falle, — — yi — à
rs ms, Cc
New Fuchsi f
of ditto, atis, pur dosent per dozen ne
HENRY Mav, The Hope N NS near Bedale, Yorkshire, —
benas, vias,
and packing include, f for
last season, at 6s,
UNRIVAL E TAR 1A
largest in Euro also ran fine now DAHLIAS, English
mii Foreign. 3 Nursery, H —— ncm ks, W. COLE D" e Eee ohh superb torni for
LANTS IN FLO . è Bedding and Pot culture, strong b plants, at . 127.,
- R. i and 20s. — donus also some stro — M bloomed Seedli ing
AND A. SMITH have now in ‘bloom Acacia, Cactus Mita ‘CALCEOL ARIAS, without on at 38. — dozen.
2 Cy iioi ; Erica ventricosa coccinea minor, v. super- I SPECIOSA, strong plants, without pots, 2s. 6d.
biens, v. bi vifora E. i ntermedia, E. Cavi — Ree doz
E. Nanda Fuchsias, Calceo! — He! Met rope, s, Herts.
ydrangea, 883 ger =
The abov — are healthy, strong, and well-grown plants, WANT E D, viz.
prepared for sending away. Prices Lr aa | .1 BROWN TURKEY
Bali We Su feet high, fit for training against
CL PLA T
Jm 2s SMITH — trong, plants à
of COBJEA SCANDENS, ve pi ng er EDDI G PLANTS, the cheapest
and tose: S LOPHOSPERMU M, ECORENOCARPUS, and 100, in England. CATALOGUE sent for one
TROPJEOLUMS, A Prices on application, stamp. —J. T fel sed 8 on.
MIEL. dore. DING LANT S.
AM MBROISE |. VERSCHAFFELT, | NURSERYMAN,
Ghent (Belgium), will now send out "the following NEW
PLANTS:—
BEGONIA LEOPOLDII, one of the fines!
sent out
nici PRINCESS TROUBETZKOY 4 9 splendid }
poy
SANG GUINE
TORENIA PULCHERRI
CLEMATIS SOPHIA FLORE PLENO vx
LYCHNIS HAAGEANA ve
PILOGYNE SUAVIS, Mun SCA
THOMPSON, SEEDS
t Begonias yet $ d.
training
8. per Me
Ores 5 AND ae
100 full of Pes; p mé, some
2s. Ôd., 3s. E 6d. each.
upwards of —
heads, c —.—
— — ‘of FERNS”
ee
EC
"T TIE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND- AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Me 21, 1s
EW SEEDLING AZALEA INDICAS. GRYSTAL PALACE ET
. de 5 mphe de Gand
onifl
mte d
St —
de: bles Rosveflora plena
JEAN VrnscHAFFELT, Ghent, Belgium. begs respectfully R
announce that he is now prepared to send out his eve ed GR AND TI 0 N
Azalea indicas as above, in fine strong plants full in in om. j l
The price of the set is 31. Early orders are requested, as they ,
will be sent in strict rotation. :
The description of the above may be had free on application M A Y 1 8, 1 8 5 9 8
to JEAN VERSCHAFFELT. Plants will be how oc PO
after orders are received. All orders to be dir cted to JEA
VERSCHAFFELT, — Ghent, Belgium.
DING PEANT s OF A ARDS
p. SMITH beg to of the followi t DORÉ ae ES s W / :
UL
strong and Walen
Mimulu SA REENHOUSE PLANTS IN Crass XXIII.—6 FANCY PELARGONT
—— set — A } 1 Im Thum Crass L—20 TO Sewanee (Open). 1st, Mr. James Weir, Gr. to Mrs. Boden A.
Alyssum, variegated fol. | The best scarlet bedding First Prize, Mr. G., S, Dods, Gr. to Sir J. Catheart, Bart, | 2d, Mr. J. James, Gr. to F. W, Watson. Esd, prose T
eee ee | mistar dun, Cattell’s Dwarf | Egham, 251. ; woe dos x6 Treadwell i | 30; Mr. J. Holland, Gr. to R. V. Peake, Esq., Hounslow, l.
ore asturtium ea! A
UR, variegated fo! | ie * ee fo maces È Gr. to W. H. Small-| Cz wm V.—6 FA PELARGONIUMS (N
Calceolaria | Nasturtium, double, various, 1258 Ks LEA The: du „ Mr. O. Rhodes, Gr. to J. Ist, 85 Turn, “Royal aNurseries, Slough, 41; Tue)
Dahlias | QM. = Philip, ie Stamford Hill, 5 T. — guste 3l. ; 3d, Mr. T. Windsor, e =
Nierembergia
— = various | Pentstemon, various Crass II.—12 STOVE AND E PLANTS IN | Crass XXV.—NEW OR RARE PLANTS, in or out of Flog
riped Petunias, various Mo tr Mr. hos x 1 Gr. to W. F. G. Farmer, Egg. (
— » „ new double t, Messrs. J. & J. Fraser, Lea Bridge, 101. ; 2d, Mr. W. J. for Burlin, Farmeri, 3l. ; 9d, — G. 8. Doe br eE
: H unique „ Pyrethrum pleno album Cutbash, Serin Ti. 2 ri ‘Egham Ac eaa Chek à macrostogia, 9L; 8,
; Ros = xeter an — — or Pi e
3 z^ k Salviag, vürlous Crass ILL—10 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS IN Ar. J. (roses te ir 2 rt, . i
Gaillardia Senecio FLOWER 1 10l.; umbellata, mh Extra, Mears “Tory & Sa Reigate and Dork.
Heliotrope, vario Verbenas, white : » E. x "pean Or to Gr. to ^x x Gare 8, 8 eta, E ing, for Azale ea ' Flower of the Day,
T. el T. C. T. * ” "5
Ton Tu ds per ‘dozen xd 2 5 * 3d, Mr. W. Kaile, Gr. 70 the Earl of Lovelace, Ripley, Surrey, CLASS — HARDY pelea = AL PLANTS
laa ume i crimson 5l. ; 4th, Mr. J. ege G Gr. to Baron Hambro, Roehampton, 3l. ; e for fine pes . of foliage). 1
Lobelia Musk, 4s. per dozen | Extra, C. Smith, Gr. to A. Anderson, Esq., Norwood, 2. 2d, Mess: te: et oma RNS Mo» 4 and Chelsea, for rt i
Theabove in strong 8 plants at moderate prices, D GREENHOUSE PLANTS IN |japonieum polymorphum, essrs. Veitch & $n,
according to selectlon.—Dulwi n — —————————— umi COLORIR 4 T Wellingtonia a gigante a, 108.
NE ROSES. ist, Mr. H. Chilman, Gr. to Mrs. Smith, Epsom, 5l. ; 2d, Mr. | Grass XXVIT.—SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS «ita.
3 R. CANT offers the. ndemontioned = La 27 S x s H. AN puo» Lower Norwood, (Prizes withheld.)
ROSES. The plants are now ready, r. arson, , ”
markably fine and health res any of them have: Pee A Shoot Cham, 37. bene Mr. E. A. Hamp, Gr. to James Thorne, Esq., | , — — — 7 OF CINERARIAS,
os 1 wae 2 feet in ms Purchaser of 1 dozen and upwards | South Lambeth, 21. — 8 mo vr s Bora T dh. 3.590, il
wm Pe Supplied at a reduced rate. The trade allowed the) -gins V. OTE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS, esp Dodson & Sons, Iesu Extn Mb did
Variegated Plants included (Nurserymen). Holland, Gr. to R. W. Peake, Esq., Hounslow, 10s
ROSES ror 1859 fa 5s. each :— 1st, Mr. W. Cutbush, Barnet, 71 TES dii ie
Sonor e Comtesse De de Chen Crass VL—O STOVE AND GREENHOUSE PLANTS, Extr M Y. Or. to B a. De GENER, NND
Edith de Murat Imperatrice Eugénie r cu Plants included (Amateurs). ee hens) o Å 1s Mr. W. Leybank, Gr. to T. H. Manis
HYBRID PERPETUALS L'Oriflamme de St. Louis Ist, Mr. Dods, Gr. to Sir J. Cathea 2A Bart,, Egham, | lay, E wer Norwood (Aphelexis), 31 ; Messrs. Veitch &
Altesse Impériale Le Mont Vésu 11. 5 Young, Gr. to W. H. Stone, E Dulwi ich, 5I. ; Son, — 5 and C buie b e 2l5 - 2d, Messrs. Dobson &
Ardoisée de Lyon Orderic Vital m ae x po da LA — W. ^r. Woolley, Esq., 1 3L. ; | Son, N M. 108. r. J. Summers, Gr. to A Mon
Anna Alexieff 8 Olympie Mr. J. Sum , Gr. to A. Mongredien Esq., Forest gredien, Esq., Forest Hill oa Forns), FIN 10s, ; Ditto, Mam-
Anna de Diesbach n s Hr: Os ‘Rhodes „ Gr. to J. Phillpot, Esq., tamford malaria), iL 105. ; — re. ‘=
—— "Also the follow = (Cut Roses), = 10s, nd ma
P ; Gr. to R. on y ie ; action d
dis VIL —20 ORCHIDS OF EXOTIC SPECIES C. urner, — (Seedlin oe mena 1 1
‘Te same
following CHOICE moss at 28. Gd. each, or
dozen
Hy PERPETUALS Mr. Robert Bulle er. 7 F. Bath oolwich — Haee — 8 L 7. v^ prs
3 YBRID = ? 'orteana; k- > — s
Riquet nis Chaix — * a Mr. 8 8. ey, Gr. to Rev. W. ius Hoddes- Farfara), I.; Ditto (Centaurea can
Clermont | Louise d'Autriche ERA W. Carson, Gr. to W. F. G. er, Esq., Gitte (Ferns), * Mr. H. ph er Eltham, Kent
8 E DN ecd rias), II.; Messrs. Paul & Son, Cheshunt (Seedling
1 Poen A E kaii 3 pie aS ORCHIDS OF EXOTIC SPECIES dron), 17. ; 4th, Mr. J. James, Gr. to W. F.
* sieur de * worth nsies), 15s. ; Mr. C. "Turner, E
ibis Ba. Ba. 8 — : „ 8. , Cheshunt, 101. niums), 158. ; Bitte (Auriculas) 1 166. Mr.
E Loe z Tanyas de e Mont t Rouge Crass IX.—12 ORCHIDS OF EXOTIC SPECIES (Gines (Variegated Gerani — 2
raria Slough Riv val), 10
Mac Amateurs).
Pun — Ist, Mr. G. S. Dods, Gr. to Sir J. Cathcart, Bt., Egham, 107. , |
4th, Mr. Osman Rhodes, Gr. to J. Philpott, Ésq. à Stamford Hill F R U I T
*
X.—6 ORCHIDS OF EXOTIC SPECIES (Open). N 3
ute y J. Green, Gr, to Sir E. Antrobus, Bt., enm 5l. ; | Crass A.—PINE APP 1 E fruit ot tho Providenes)~
ad, Mr. T. Page, Gr. to W. Leaf, Esq., Streatham, xbibitors,
Crass XL—10 GREENHOUSE AZALEAS (absurd ake toe ye Pu,
T J. E Ww to Sir E. W. G. F, Farmer Bart., ede a 121.5 Me 3 p. s —— ben 8d, = R.
arson, Gr. heam, | Dixon, Es ] .; Extra
131. ; 3d, Mr. T. Page, Gr. 40 W. Len ; Esq., Streatham, 5i. ; 4th, | Maidenhead, Ise Congleton, p
Mr. J. Peel, Gr. S D oh 1: Streatham, 4l. ; tra,
e 0. Rhodes, Gr. Phillpot, Esq.,
a 15s. per dozen :—
HYBRID PERPETU. — Adelaide Fontain me, Bacch Belle
Anglaise, Cardinal P Patrizzi, Etendard de Sebastopol, fam
Raglan, Madame Vidot, Mathu rin Regnier, Paulini
zeur, Prince L eon, prine cé de la EA E been] 8
de la Reine d'Angleterre, Souvenir de Leveson Gower, Sir
J. Franklin, Victor: T^ ala,
Bourgon : Glorietta, Om acha,
: ay. Nat ^
Tra : Devoniensis, Elise Sauvage, Gloire de Dijon, Madame
Bravy, Souvenir d'un Ami, Vicomtesse de Cazes,
, Mr.
rwood, H Constantine, Gr
to Sir E. Antrobus, Dart, Lower Cheam, | t. | Uxbridge, 153 r1 Mr. Jumes egy, OK
Mr. acie oe to Mrs. Smith, eroe: N.
z Esq., Maidstone,
Ex
A fine collection of the most esteemed older varieties, Stamfo I Hill, 9]. Crass C.—GRAP!
às Caroline de Sansal, Comte de Nan tonil, Colonel à Rotge- USE PIA (icra tin Ist, Mr. T. Frost, Gr. to E. D, Be
Malin, a pr dozen? Jules Margott = quer — ap Se — PLANTS and Dorking 7L; x shiro; 24, ar. T Gr. M ae 5
cem denm 8 Mr. 0. Turner, — — 5 34, Mr. i Xil onshire, 21. ibd E S Stent, Ge. 4
ursery, Cole Clapham Road, 4. 3 — Lea Bridge | Copia Com WE io OS:
— VERBENA 1 Road, 9h. — — — A
The mper varisty, is a Seedling ot 1858 Criss XIIL—5 GREENHOUSE AZALEAS (Amateurs), | 1st Mr. J. Euston, Gr. to Sir J. Duokworth, Ta Ras
: 1st, Mr. B. Peed, Gr. to T. Treadwell, Lower Norwood, | 31. ; 2d, Mr. G. — 7 gren Moodle 1.
5L; 2d, Mr. PA Gr. to the Bat! of E Lovelace, ce, Ripley, 91. ; 3d, E W.B — Barnett, Esq.,
Surrey, 4: — A. Hamp, Gr. 5 E.—GRAPES, 2 ben pm. Onini
"rasa le. at 7. Beli A to A. Moss 255
XIV. ET deeper opcm newest and | Heath, vae „
e pee year, but hohe ride, Slough, 61. : 24, Mesers. F.—GRAPES, 12 Ibs, weight (Market Lr
hny den RUNE in the rines of nur Ivery & Son, Reigate un Dorking, 8 g» Bt. 5 ; Sd Ñr. Í Green, Gr. E Mr. O. French, Burnham, Buk hi se
: art. 9L;
W E It was considered to be the Gr. to W. — eps Streatham, 3i; Ar. . B. Pood, — m
nest and most N ety ever yet grown, throwing | T. Treadwell, Esq., Lower N — & — — rae at
other searlet Verbenas EDO in the back- Ist, Mr, H. — Gr. to C. Mills, j
was the general opinion of the followi tle- Crass XV.—8 CAPE — — (Nurserymen). 2d, Mr. W. Gardiner, Weston House,
en. and gentlemen’ gardeners :—J. Fox, Esq., 1st, Mr. W. — Barnet, 41, c H.—NECTARINES (Single D
(oma vid rod Ev Sak: in Ih Syed cape ee eer ita MELONS, Green
; Mr. E of Messrs. e Peed, Gr. to T. ‘Treadwell 1, Esq., Lower N.
ellingt vind Kursory, Tende Me Neco Bog Peed, Gr. to C. T. Gabriel, Psd, Streatham: Wa, — qe
Caizey, of Messrs. Hugh Lowe & Co. Clapton ‘war
ay, Lewisham,
Roehampton,
Shackell), Olatea None Ramo t War Path Me pes ALL can in Flower, m amd z- “arto, Sat Pat nenen Gne RS sme as
; Bath; Mr. D Green, Gr, to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart., Lower 2 361
3 Bath; Mr. Hann, er, Bouthstoke Rector’ Chain, 7 Mr. R. Bunn, Gr. to J. R. Scott, Beg. Fag Crass K.—FIGS Gage Dia dtf
near Bath ; Mr, Froud, gardener to — Wintle, Esq., ick. | 443. 3, Mr. J. Bummers, Gr. to A. Mongredien Esq., Fo : es tine, Gr. to C. Mill sd. US
gardener t G. Sin iad MEM alter, — Bus vus XVIII. mene dm White (Single Disb).—
„ b ; Mr = Crass —12 R pe.
— Wiltshire, oq. ate re NR E T ener to pict, Messrs. Lan 1o È Bon, Berkhompstea, Ii 10.; 24, Mr. E. P. Crass M,—CHERRIES, Black (ingle DEO.
= , ockerwic| H
the above superb new V. : dai. RE aed Cheshunt, 51 Ist, Mr. E. Shuter, Gr. to the Earl of Wiltom
New Verbena “LOLA MONTES,” colour light, bea _ OSES IN POTS (Amateurs).
shaded rose, fine eye and truss, is a first- Lp iet T. D 5 iowa DN Rosenthal, ——— oral ; =~ Me.
= many me coming as m m — 5 5 large as a shilling an idi Gr. to C. W. Haea etis
good su nce s XX.—6 FUCHSIAS N POTS, distin: i
EMPEROR OF MOROCCO FRR EEE * on seed. f vidso:
1858, colour very dark purple, the nearest des Sta T . mt 5. = Ix ae en
m 3 — — uai that has yet been * di. it — Hill, at ——
is & bedder.
Manchester, 21. *
CLASS WBER ste, Georgos Gf f.
lat, Mr. R. Said, . Twickenham, ir We SEP Tet ;
worth,
A. Gooday, Red., Essex, l.i m
Han bury, Es, . ast Barnet, 105
fine prolific bloomer, and good 2.
Plants 3s. 6d. each. ss XXI.—10 — — (Amateurs) ist, Mr. dtes 2 dcc a
The above are now ready for sending out, strong, well-rooted | „4156 ar ra Wiggins, Gr. to E. Beck, Esq., Isleworth, 8l. ;
mpstead, 6
denham (^ ;
Water Gr. to F. Moore, Esq., Syd Forest H
plants. ims taking d the three varieties will be charged 10s., 2d, Mr. J. Weir, Gr. to Mrs. Hod gson, A. R. pes
rc d package
A remittance m
. : kay, Gr.
Crass XXIL—12 PELARGONTUMS (Nurse pots) i; i Mr C Mac l
3 accompany all orders either in cash or x Pag i: Royal M Slough Si. po. aiid iz oman A tis Hight ;
n 3 8
ey ane, Seeds man, and Florist, | stead, 4/. ; 4th, Messrs, J. & rede d Bridge Boat 27: 250 = 7 -=
Extra, Mr, T, Gaines, Batt isses, X. Lovelace, Ripley,
Mar 21, 1859.]
— ——
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. T
GERMAN AND OTHER FLOWER SEEDS, VEGETABLE, NCH PH FRUIT TREES IN PO
AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, ETC OHN STA NDISH € nd the follo LANE axp SON,t
ARKER Ax» WILLIAMS beg Jas st ta cm recommen 5 Sane, i hie iat Barkamp
i in m, an
i has b ected from the
best English and oim sources, — ev — Kind i is piesien
e, and the finest po: ae qur — Paradise
N — „Seren Bae and Hornsey Road y, London.
ESSRS. ARKER AND 1118 8 to
PA MIR beg
inform their TCI and patrons ee their PRICED
ATALOGUE of Exotic Orchids, Stove,
Ferns, Miscellaneots Stove, Green-
ated and Ornamental foliaged
Indian inu
VARIEGATED GE quein
OHN HALLY, Nun — and FLORIST, opposite
t ilway Station, Blackheath, 8. E., offers the following
the mos
EDDING PLANTS.—As orders are received the
best Plants will — 5 and set aside until eA are
The following 12 dozen Plants can be had for 25s.,
tunias [sim
xl Vines Signe’ |
12 Blue Verbenas 12 Hollyhocks
12 White Vesbohas 12 Heliotropes
n. 200 Plants for 21s., the selec-
JEYES fespectfully invites attention to a very fine
COLLECTION of VERNS.
most beautiful of all variegated
flower beds, or to form a bed of
ed with shrubs, it stands ~~ equalled, and be
and hardy makes it — ne desirable of al
variegated Dl&nts it resembles when n foll leaf finely —
plants of the Golden h arcu iet m
2 Gazania
12 Yel. See 12 Blue Lobelia
12 dark ditto
12 Dahlias
Nurseries.
tha
seler sted Dees he thought the best. They are
very beautiful dwarf , and continue fiowering from June until
October, or until the neg — — — pos — and are
mirably adapted for bedding, perpetual
,
La V Tolapté, roe rose, shot with —.
Madame Suer, white . centre, very dwarf
1 — d Ced white violet —
Monsieur pem quonim
Souvenir jun à *
Surpasse Madame i linge ros hits purple perm very dwarf.
The above 2s. 6d. each, or the lot 21s. P the above J. S.
can supply the finest old sorts from 6s. to per dozen.
BONES for bedding on their own roots, Eu lants :—
Tra: S haw! * hu most beautiful of ng plan Roses,
each, o r doze 7i. per 100
General Jacqueminot, * — * A.
Louis Chaix, 2s. i ane h, —
Madame Vignero: ed ub sas: por PR
Pauline M reed ls. Gd. each, or 12s doken (Of al
Hybrid Pe . Roses this is the best adapted for bedding | 4
its dwarf bushy habit and being always
Pealthy Ae always in bloom
e ouium 1s. 64. each, or
Nor : Triom mpho
E
4. per dozen
ch, or — per dozen.
ts.
HYBRID PERPETU.
Due de Cambridge L'Evéq
Lord Palmerston Louise Me
Marie Portemer Rein Denmark
Thomas Rivers Triomphe des Beaux Arts
NEW og for be grafted on EET strong
lants, 4s.
14
s. each, or 2l. 1
H PERPETUAL Roses.
Ambroise Verschaffelt Beauté de Royghem
Comte de Benuford Celine Forestier
Docteur Bretonneau ngois
Empereur de Maroc Frangois A
Impératrice r Oriflamme de St. Louis
Stephanie n ais
Virginal. 8 Laure de Giraud
: Madame Damaisin Bourpon : Octavie Fontaine
A the hare p are now — t to — 1 — * E
ot ve the above New Roses on the $ 5
e in June.—Bagahot,
A PERFECT SUBSTITUTE FOR GRASS.
LAWNS WITHOUT MOWING.
SPERGULA
PILIFERA,
MESSRS. E. G. HENDERSON & SON
a perfectly hard
y Alpine plant, forming a close, dense, carpet like surface, maintainin
with a rich, sedg ev 8 Mice through all weathers in
picture of gem v vet-like vegetable carpet,
t g the same growt.
winter i summer, presenting in July the
studded over with innumerable snow white
ae s FTN - =
am Rot.
FOR IMMEDIATE
„ Sone
el Pe yyy mt Sch rates :
Special directions for so
— — € Pr^x x
; GREEN HOUSE
E and SUMMER F
E. G. HENDERSON & Son's Xi o GENERAL
SWERING BEDDING PLANTS, which will be ready
"Wellington Nursery, St. John’s Wood, London.
MESSRS. E. Se HENDERSON & SON
NEW GENERAL CATALOGUE vem “SPRING 1187 # ORNAMENTAL BEDDING and |other
SUMMER PLANTS Botar
sale
N A FEW DAYS BE READY
NDA VIOLACEA.
and much needed by all we
ed for,
ve hats: much pleasure in introducing
e publie, and no € — at be ers
yt Mer rtical
of th the finest shrubs h — — far the —
beautiful naan erous large flow:
E petiti ij a tle i be st ts
As a com on mi collections, M iain, in 4
violet-blue es oors a ne w and essential feature in colour,
golden- — ani A. erin, is samo stylo a licate aie the | in
o t rosy-
9f Echites and Dipladenia x “AC ach. za 2
in the —.—
lour those o;
1 a neat-habited plant with S —
and large bright red tubular flowers
intermediately.
dine com ting kinds raised by
"of TA RUN, sd
(So. Ao DIGBY, m and LADY CAROLINE
with large ——.— rosy-
throughout winter" free flow flowering ha
The HYBRID DEGON LAS raised Mr. Stange, D
to Herrn Consul Schiller, B. PICTI U-
RATA and others from D, BPLER NDSA RS Y
none. NEW DAE BIEN ING SY STAR.
TORIA 8 11 cone HLOX DRUMMONDI, VIC-
LOROLARLS AMPLEXIC AULE
une pee xol
on
ALBA, Splendid bead
AND « DELICATA,” with
N.B. The quoter,
WHEREIN WILL BE DESCRIBED
Y BEDDING DAHLIAS, GLOIRE DE FRANCE, AND
UNIQUE.—The post White variety out, and the former
M ‘the most noble formed and richly coloured flower of any
bee — for n a sor vant showing the dwarf
|an e blooming habit may be seen at the Wellington
z NES. NEW FUCHSIAS (9 varieties, 63s.).
| NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS (8 varieties), see Plate XXVI.
in
BREEZE & BANKS'S COLLECTION OF NEW VERBENAS
will include the finest blue out, the best rose, the finest e RS
purple, — bes k, wi white
toits id
ford a beautiful pink
but suffused with
The "mure collection includes a full pet see
karia as the finest eyer sent out by us, and s with
but few exceptions any that we have cultiva: 2 —
BED MS.
DING GERANIUI
NEW NOSEGAY SECTION.
THE IMPERIAL CRIMSON, AND MODEL NOSEGAY
GELANIUMS. Beo descriptions at page
THE RAINBOW, with the finest red-zoned foliage yet seen.
AU.
OTHE SILVER CHAIN, with deep margin of pure white ;
fitting companion to the GOLDEN CHAIN.
NEW OLARÍA AS, scarlet, crimso sód aii of.
pra t e bedding, shrubby, — . bE not
f br. — the maj onis a
THE WHITE NOSEGA Y GERANIUM (for beds).
28 OF ce to
W.
— x prime as 3s. T Pur
elington Nursery. Ee
d en Nosegay, y sipa iion
FRUITING TREES of the — 8 mentioned, s which are -= —
good state for ot being heavy an
to dro Ae PES
ey consist o ACHES, NECTARINES, AP
5s., Ts. 6d., to 08. 6d. each. TUUM,
VINES, iua MNA, pe APPLES, 8s. 6
7
pots,
58. e
FI GS in in pc ts, in a bearing state, 34. Gd. eac!
GOORERERERIES and CURRANTS, ls. 6d. A
Alsoa very large collection 2m EVERGREEN, of which aa
have a fine 8 * arias, edrus Deodara, Ced.
Lebanon, Ou 3 Pines, E: all Bre gre Plants,
6 ft. to 12 ft. high; Rhododendrons, well set with flower
buds, L
"The Home Nurseries are within five minutes' walk of the
Station of | the London and North-Western Railway, Great
Berkhampstead, Herts.
ILLISTONE AND CO., of the Nurseries, Sturmer,
travelling,
d. to 5s. each,
with 5 to 10 [re uel of Fruit,
— Essex, will have Ti pleasure in forwarding
"s receipt of 10s., hamper and carriage paid to
London the following kinds of HARDY CLIMBERS :—
: varieties of fine Toneysuckles 2 17 in hal 22 Flowers
LU i posone
» mew 1 „ Bignon
g Roses Py 11 (tricolor)
The flowing — ditto, per 20 Plants, for 6s. n
hamper, &c.
2 2 Maurandyas in E
2 ala! l
2 Caly — T : Trot ums »
4 8 ms „, potnosas ”
7 BEDDIN LANTS in well grown and
o the YG PL
* — 5 stuff, hamper, &c, 20s. per 100.
— a the best ne £ a NUM 85 per 100.
ANTI
MA Y has now ready ‘for “delivery pe i
A TEE eee
lection of ver Wm
8 rnc
LORD D RBY QUY) Creamy white, with yellow lip,
beautifully striped and igl l
PURPLE KING (Mav's) — Deep rich won self, fine
ike extra.
SURPRISE (May's). >
form god
— — bg AY'8) — White tube, "- crimson lip,
rove
DALATEA TMPROV ED (May’ 8). —Pure white tube, bright
crimson AND Ot m. habit and 22 spike good.
GITA AY's)— Bright vosy purple, white lip,
spike extra.
The above set of eight for 25s., or 3s. 6d. each ae The
usual im ed to the e
Henry May, The H
\ Ñ 7 M. CUTBUSH -— > SON opto to — oo they
can supply m
fine
NG PLANTS. Any
quantity of extra fine E gts annexed :—
Persdoze: 4 — Per dozen.—s.d.
bel peciosa (from
T ie uttings true) thi t
— 2 s pieno, Rin v of eX. SS . 40
lent d —— m Tom Thum bv. 40
: .60 of sorts 45. to 6 0
we 9 is. À:0
B uui, Salvia, of sorts a -. 40
m — —
of all the best Palace variety), a free
ties .. 48., 6s., and 9 0 flowering MEN Mint.
Geraniums, Tom umb scarlet dwarf plant, well
„ —— for flower
», Variegated, ofso s.to 9 go .60
Heliotropo.. +, 40 verbenas, of the best sorts 4 0
Lobelia ramosioides +. £0 onds’ New, of 1859, 18 0
AD RIPTI ATA ve gen
Nursery Stock can be obtained free per post on application.
bright green foliage, with a broad
t scarlet of good aps i inl
arge trusses in a sa
and very robust habit. We tested it last = with a doze:
othe 5 2. ice — perior to any for bedding par
the late meeting 2 * Royal
bited a
Botanic Society, E received a Certificate of M
„ r 21s. per dozen.
SHOW, NOY, & NOH- SPOTTED PELARGONIUMS.
—A large stock of — — ges of the above in
metuo ding sorts, at 12s., 18s., and 24s. per dozen;
or 5l. and 71. 10s. E —
wc e $ HUS sto that thay gan
M. ^ tid that they can Su stron
plants of tne above elegant Conservatory P. erg Pind
at 2s. Od, each; or 24s. p ord e
pi Highgate Nurseries, London, N.
0
SORA ST. CLOUD, a beautiful accompaniment to FONTAIN- | p
e:
The Gardeners’ Chconiclr
SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1859.
MEE 8 FOR THE OR THE FOLLOWING "M
TUESDAY, Ac 24—Li Bae Meet vine )
Wepnespay, — 250 1 Micro: conical
Maxx inquiries concernit
MAKING CHARCOAL have
sirous of
at 955, and also the
ae ted g MISS E |
ariegated Geraniums, MILY DOMVILE will
prove a an TET th Plant (see description in Catalogue).
The tw VED varieties with large-petalled | refuse, their
owers.
ip
forward.
viro t charcoal, whether
444 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [May 91
three or four. stout sticks pro jecting to the outside, my E Beers Mr. NR E
id raised ol J and then to admit a pata — says, zi was is full ly aware Tati,
S-ono6 e alight | iuto action the querulous disposition of som
eor respondents Disbelief appears to he th € of vo
the set attemp
derived from plant
is one of the most useful of all known agents to | which ca
deners. It ope .
takes od -— best of the solid and gaseous matters | it may be kept so for u
A a. ; nd gives E — to o of ti ime, taking care always to ps5 ^et ds RCRUM eene
roots alien M upon to do so. Be ita ich it which is to be thro 250 Id be and combated as rank heresy” Again
s in its owu 8 y | fire breaks ou any spot, The heaps d to am qu uite convinced that according to ordi
of those alkaline and other ingredients on wich sheltered es Six winds, xe ever. allowe o generally received rules there is Sot sedan
every plant m — able to feed. Those who have | burn out into the open air. A p tg costs so much to grow as winter or rer ae hich
i effects may easily see how it thus made may be taken a way e eve ery mont = so Abha rs. In fact, ris ce p t
acts by planting a Straw berry in a pot filled with | from one side of the heap, leaving the we keep vested n a kind o an ? 23 Ste fortes E
earth and charcoal fragments. The new roots will | the fire burning. Any one within reach of a saw- | says, he “has some sma small, Queen
ery s
s = ry er e trouble of carting it. plants.coming into, Been which, b. e says, unl
cling to the charcoal te all the iiith ofa 1 eras ke eee deceived will bring fruit not less th n from A teen
k
in weigh
N
a process which is known by the name eee
"- rok carbonisation in heaps (meules). i The sets — — n s micros = uet 5 result Pe
a their * — est et eultivators is shoe vhareoal can be | arranged in conical i ` hi 5 ae ti d of this result without any bottom-heat ? Hs a tee
pei easily 4 gnus * from such worthles ess —€— | are covered over with a thiek layer he has inthe same house eight kinds of Vines, in
88 were ned. De fore T reply lying to this|coalash. The heap is kindled from the centre, Muscats, Frontignan, Chasselas Musqué, and Mill Hf
it is as cr to consider in harcoal is | where a cavity is kept open for that purpose, and Hamburgh, and that his Grapes are set as w well as exi
different M t bst: m which it is pre- | which descends to the base, In et cavity ri d be d d. d dig
d. ats consist sort arbon, water, charcoal is placed and same sma pieces of woo ow, the matter at ig
darth, alk alkaline, and other e matters, and the air is admitte d by holes formed at the between Mr. Ra in sik myself Leste my bel
2 h d over the
ted a 1
g ^u
tribut iS much, if not mo
as s for instance resins in Coniferous plants, gum in | Aft y "n Ame nbus tabl i: a 555 bie iii ; more,
stone fruit—and so on. The object to be gained in | or chimney is e P remain in open Deni ME e id 0 60 a liis own
making charcoal is to obtain the carbon, without | determine a more active combustion, the | pp they had. did riot dispute the advan agi d ENS
the water or emm secretions of plants. This i is | i hel the |^ low night t "E
If a piece of b | 5 1 i piercing ho x T e| long ere Mr. Ayress little work on
a tem Ary sufficiently high all the water and | covering nearer and nearer to the, eS of the heap c ucumber Culture appeared, a hd that ti sag
other 8 ttian ts bay incom bustible and not carbon as the posco n Acne 8. cal experience in the Ty best gardens
separate e wood, and the charcoal We apprehend that any intelligent workman, in n thio United Kingdom, nd. deo from pes
"Tha t is the whole principle ; after such instruction, would soon form charcoal | thoroughly digested a hich was published some
the eulty consists in er, Ko., | heaps—in whi : mare an excellent ingredjent years prior to Mr. 8 ee 1
ithout settin = latter on fire; ; | —out e refuse within his woo '
den ori i it itself converted | may be substituted anything green or dry —— ean | the A bis pl of bottom-heat. —— - says (see p, 313)
into air and lost. e is phe. are is to heat e Í even freshl onpi rass may A
vegetable substances up to a high temperature | ployed to cover over the heaps so as to exclude 5 É
without all allowing them to burst into fane. That Es for it will become dry in time, eatch fire, aud 8 ques vot themselves. Acor
= done e by not ere air to get to them while then when covered wit other Grass or with was wanting ,
earth will form good charcoal, If he lives grow Cucumbers successfully in winter? My
pe pala crite in a clay country the heaps may be covered with opinion is, and I believe it to he the opinion of most of
Having premised thus much, we will endea- dry clay only, which, if the heaps are large | the practical men in the kingdom, that Mr. Ayres could
your to desoribe two or three simple methods enough, will become red, when it may be itself not grow Cucumbers in winter without bottom-heat—
which, if not very —— are goo — fon eovered over by more dry clay, and so on, as what the night temperature may be, With
such a ro eration making as the core is hot enough. The suooessive falling a steady comfortable bottom-heat, and by carefully
— — most 8 — in of the clay among the cha dde is by n to all the other e s
pieces of wood into lengths SEZ or S feet, and | objectionable—quite the reve persoan E bottom baz d Poor |
: desi Nhi heap we be er — A ae E tel 5 ke SUCCESS ‘of trees, CEN (the eye ene
the level ground or in a pit; but in = latter case espeeiall N TRANSPLANTED, is ©
a openings s cold bé eut in the sides T in n the Proceeding bs Ste Mr Ayres e * T "e a ddd M. S. Tom u
from the bottom of the pit outwards de order to the „Who recom- peras wher e the bo ttomshe was provide -
admit a little draught for the ignition of the wood | mend i following T eres it as 8 d je barka y looked for, and
in the first instance. In the vanie of the space i ing remarkable cacy in reviving- plants dried | » — came not; due: e it mi invidious I could
several long pieces of wood must be fixed so as to by aving had hei eir roots too long out of the several gardens wher the ae E
leave an opening for introducing the kindling ; or ground, and in ensuring their safe removal in late vided i in — md ye the eee "
an opening i 5i iug planti iolated 8 er leaves.” I beg to
e
E.
$
8
EB
fam.
E!
5
E 4
2 .
m
3
E
®
E
d
o
g
"m
[3
"$
um
e
P
$
z
B
LI
et
E
E
et
Li
.
me
a
.
5
B
or
a
CHE
2
9
e
[-]
B
S
a
tER
8s
ina d ET When mpg N — nee of i here the
TO d "s pate is | know several gardens where
ap sb a peer b à
may, however, be arra. ed in the form Et a lg, € m imi into the AR the earth thrown result I beg to tell Mr. A. chat I have too high
several ngs. being left for firing. W after them into the hole sticks i the aen which | opinion of the intelligence and skill of the i
pile is comple d it must be Mise c immediately begin to swell. At the very first the present day to think that = 2
may be further closed by earth or saud as is found movement of sap rootlets e: through thie |e Plants, like animals, can bei 7 Title guit
j process. re turf ea coati -— i the “comforts
; e anci
be easil procured, old mats or any other rubbish and not y brings on but seeures the * ther will be beneficial to some things, m
å that ill prevent the earth from mixing with the | formation of roots. MM = started, there is abundance be given it may kill. ee
wood will afford a tolerab good substitute. nothing more to fear of bottom and top heat is essential
"When all is covered Be the. opening at 1.225 ta M i for anting, seeds | growth of many things, but given 1 part, Ms.
ait near th bot i qajmi injury. n i.
fla
to issue as equally as 8 from ic other | pack too lon of all plants vi
7 : dry weather, and | Intel the 80111 f
inted set rg surface b — Aum sg M holes with a Whose roots have T tos E m Sigo E a good ae and warm — tes. e bottone »
where oes appe opportunity o in e f y te of in t pa
x . of tt — 75 ve m8 ord p noe tans g- M 0 Lv UIZE ET' 8 suit Pine plants in a sta te 0 ues a in EA main
consume sufficient at can be a c Mapia; though it may not b | nths. "te
ae 2 eee must be disregarded. As ne oy — altogether wn 1865 Duy state Ey mode EE fa T
e eated to 212° the Cucumbers. I always sow the last wee ber to
water i is sive en "E i in the E of steam, and the Tx public will learn with Bis 48 mi ce put the plants out the frst week 4 T en endenden io
h. Great care | that Mr. EYLEs, one of the best and most expe- | bottom-heat from T9 o f Rina Da at
i:
is den. necessary to proven flame bursting out; rien 1 Wie 50 in the coun n ap- whe — T — a and Octo v LE
as the heat increases the openings in the covering Poin superintendence of eve — — i n ars
must be reduced, and all must be finally closed Fen of Hortioltre — th in-doors ovary par rumes rM TTD tober: ‘T give ve "c
when the charring is found to be complete. tthe Crys TE Par — — a aot al x d ‘give i it as x desde
Excellent material for mixing with potting earth TE e oe ir N ot the vis ther rmita ivi shark
for striking cuttings. or growing seeds, &c., may N tor TEMPERATURE OF FORCING- HOUSES. | of the day, if the weather be mild, I Ee aiara a
be readily prepared from sawdust. A fire of dry Um Viren I read Mr. Ayres WORME Gall E uperabundance of air, bub T 4
sticks, Ko., being lighted on the ind upon à | Len pret prins! of April 9 on ee I thought it | ap before H ets late = the p 5
space, when it is well alight begin to heap | 4), 3 res d 2 d y o ty Ug down Oe Ee
on sawdust with a shovel, allowing ty of air at sa — —.— 1 p E: wrote the few remarks|off any male blossoms that spi M
ardeners’ Chronicle the fol- ment the pisa are b
& few il tl r as got! lowing week. à a
É x ri a
| then 7 3 the whole over with saw- article j in the du. en ea. deum me A 3 5 — gat no” ma 7 in ol
pat it down with the shovel, bearing Ayres Bat instead of meeting tbe eee in winter any be, by — "attention in 0
Max 21, 1832.]
THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE
AND AGRICULTURA
AL GAZETTE.
condition, I have always had a super-|gro radbur, eof the early writers on t e advertisement to be 12s. 6d. per j
of ucumbers. Owing to the amount of suivi of prre ie speaks of three sorts, the iba e three “ene a am — às. 74. led e
4 — the plants receive during green, the iim Mone and the large ege The| T. M to ask br ati doll
er and tober thes tems are as thick as my first en ws third | natio th t he has —
er- not etiolated, Mr. Ayres—and the leaves are the best. the glass E 8 sends to Irland di - d coe,
much more like pasteboard than tissue paper. .I main- The loquacious Gentleman.— Personality is so ies | | no 4 to - y ertisement when I ga order
uri November, mber,, January, ti sh efuse to kee lass and return ene ud ——
a night temperature of from 55° to 605, which | is out of the question, , and “his desire to know who my order, an v m now threatened with law
a degree or two according to the weather; if it was meant by the foregoing gentle epithet must re. Sled I shall be — obliged by your inserting this
low as 50 IL am red. so long as I know E unsatisfied. i S of qe qM lich he dae in letter i in your Paper, as under the circumstances n homes
have a eid ottom-heat, not a super- describing the class o A ople to whic ugs
3 top-heat of from 60^ to fortunately a small c re how far tie tris
ying a Tittle To we the her. 282 n le of speaking like that of the pahappy K f that te. mi are ra i 8 upon. len
15 nt get superabundance of | beings to be seen by visitors to private asylum ose my card. E. E., May 17.
rs during winter. In March the plants are ine floodgates o of their alt ty are once — dh their s n 0 w ‘ge Potatoes.—To improve the
ned in a little; they get a surface ig of fres ressions are a uced by the wo; thus size of Potatoes, whether planted with small or e,
pruned in a little; they get a surfi g of fresh Jl introduced by the word I; tl tat e aero ait alia. large,
i| and s into a fi growth. By giving ther 2 don't approve of it; x think X know mor than| whole, or ever tatoes, May, when the
necessary attentions they bear; all, through the | most men ;.X hav t i gardé ; I do my own work plants are only a few inches high, let the shoots be
oe ap tlie 1 September, when they ar e| Saag. 3) X wouldn't go. a md 4 "UEM vcre Ye MC vea — 2 — e or at -
repla y youn nts. opinion except my own nan e of the stronges' ne tu will consequently
B the foregoing plan I ha ave never failed to have a i — * in England; X ue a collection of Primroses ; | be fewer and very much larger,
y egoing p g gia
superabundance of Cucumbers at all seasons. Without I x above 20 sorts; X gave half-a-crown apiece for | all fit for market and the table. Every grower will do
the necessary à! of bottom-heat in winter I could | so 5 them; X grow Cabbages; X have a wonderful | well Lo try a few rows by way of experiment, if he dis:
not do it. The plan is as simple, and inexpensive as pta ooseberry ushes; X Roses; X have the| believes the truth of this statement. A. Har ardy,
Mr. pers. and will not disappointments. net Canonia 25 ptiact in England; X 22 five | Maldon, Essex
The readers of the Gardeners’ Chi onicle I leave to shillin for it; ; X don’t mind what I ive; Xam r Morels. ls not t the enclosed sketch an extraordinar,
88. g ry
Alecide 8 Mr. Ayres or myself is right. M. S. g pei creer hella esculenta? Morels 2 the size
as what T now have; X disapprove of consulti ing “gar- of a g have been plentiful this spring in o
2) Co: ex e deners about garden. work; X think all TES veigihonrhod but this week v t —— the one
. Bik = humbu 8; X think the bni ier do oes mo , kno w bis tm ich I made the e and r full
| Wa toni IER Old Subscriber“ and others ug 7 inche n vide, but it wa very irregular im in gere and
ö who are ae as ^t. bart ng off the plan wid Hogg”, “and ‘Thompsons? ; x can und a better | flattened like a cock's com b. The etch represents a
© struck in a Waltonian ‘case, y would at once give up Their house at half tbe Brice I specimen wit! 14 inches.
fears if they were to get sight f one at work. There x have got two Cucumber beds; T recommended th: at, Gathered o the borders of the Fir in King's
we tuo square panes of glass in zine frames which fit | but nobody would fake my recommendati oa nobody Weston Hill. J. S. R; May 11. is by far the
| the top and render the 2 e almost air-tight, whenever LH think them wrong, very wro kW
pol course the heat is fierce may beas moist as you right ; m always right ; 2 is ages
| please according to the state — the sand in the tray. | It is thas “the loquacious gentlem men ga abble on; at ths
^ — Es whieh the lights | little peculiarity, while it leads satirical | persons í to. call wd Aor
meet for support. No ow. by is ing each light over|them Messrs. Ibymyselfi, f | lately
ymy
this so as to Jap one Pen T m v f URS rds ie the seat as to their sanity. Fleta by
Rai . — Cheshire.—Referri: ring ip some remarks SARI under
+
d in your Paper in 3 to you wing short ccount
| as, d give air in the way just stated, for t the the ‘enclosed | may be of inte rest to your r readers, You will | of i of St. Peter's, writes to me
ends ‘Of the case are cool. By 24 hours, the pots notice that for the last 10 mont have had a fair . 1 M oed aud inter Ir
E TS the edge of the 5 quium of rain, and that the EI deficiency here was and si s show that the creatures exist in the
wedged in between t wide of the case and the zine e last t two months ó dee rom the ed
| frame of the light vio is next them "hus they |, m co direc ME.
—. ave full daylight, and a current of warm moist air Libo — — apts dà hiir Bü
i m the e nd them so as is to r eber | SFr EA FE s e curate writes,
.. them for a little while longer; re after > ay | 8 8 8 8 8 54A 3 es | eggs in the
at position they m any w | EB 8 8 PEE | em." The
| 8 E itle m snipe | 8 S E : wd | 0 eing in the eryt all which we may
d are n asily d ribed, but a | | md that the earth beneath the church has been lately dis-
tienced hand finds no difficulty in getting ira | F and that 7 ificial bet —— pm de ward you
moisture, ventilation, &c., simul- Gra m AN nich 1 propose mn AU UK
i can side quite open and the | $ 8 7 $ B 8 e E E ~ THE Ed | 2 definite than miri 1 oposed
- (the ins: ertir Des and | "TUS Ee Deum vds EE cs i
T TEENEST ee re |B 2 . of priority and
because n 485] 898855 888 8 - The drawing I inclose was taken with
oa ont sa mock tly removed from a bi res eer ret E Ra cuc
mcm peru ͤ wo» Lolo Ta SEIT y from
: In a greenhou men The 28 2 2 8 8 8838 g q
| candles with Witch fere bie Amen ing t tis vain 2 cs ere d E 5
|o "hare stered admirably. Mesara. Price & Có. — Lou? es we oe | Te
at least a dozen different kinds for me, and I have care- — 833 m
E fu to determine | S| Hee ee eee oe | B | ct wards, it
i which is the _ best pepe to urpose. I | e| gS rs RSs Pes z | p air the he last 5 the
à man Ps “pointe to to deter- laum: TES 1 sucking disk at the end, and two
mine, and the ditions I regard as esential] | 5| i pee e er LEE 8 mall promi
P. are not Set completely ean Since March 2 22888 888 88 8 „ T |y bdo
: peed 5 e pans of Ricinus, Hibise | t T EDU ee ee ge gee E ock.
Andleyi, Quisqualis g vag Thunbergia s ecies, C cas ES | ww 4 2 a 8 2 38 2 8 he fe
i phærica, Melia e Duranta Cre [uz 5 E 2 & tne third joint oft ie es — h
- Datura fastuosa, and S. American species, Cannas in „ess s „ „ ew | B | isfy ans Pi vs Go drad
variety, Solandras, Abutilon uds, Taga —Q RETEST NR
e occidentalis, fistula, grandi ea; | a NL
asuarina muricata, Asclepias tubero: E^ ja var. | SEN ir E L P 2 |
Lantana trifolia, tus indicus, above 100 chsias, | 5 | 5 8E aS 8 — | - |
740 Pom 3 nearly Asters, and various pe "S
ots of ding an 5 plants. of them | meee | 838
Were put in to test the capabilities of the invention, —— BEE
I I wanted them, and from my experi in| Pines. enclose you a piece of a branch from a Black
La management, I would undertake to propagate in it Barbarossa Vine. They rot off in the way you see Mie,
kind of stove and use plant, and then | when from 12 to 14 inches long, some with.
convert the tray into a Melon bed, = aintain a | Grapes formed on them. Can you tell me the | cause Wilson, according to
t RA with 5 It can be made ready name a remedy? The Vi ave grown, had fruit, a rom the mites, are in the right."
or Pa de five minutes, and again bert to pieces and | are about three years old. Robert Norfolk. [Cases like — abiy Wale eS ee
e Se ae a — short space of time. Shirley this should be inquired into on the spot. The s; becom
lly de
Watere
\ d dodbt t 825 e | rotten all through Py is about to
! ae ilm mays s0 » considered the leaf there i tendency, so that the ds
abundant; and | of the young shoots aa NC eet the
1 an impres- fate. There can be no doub t. the cause is in ithe
ing : Mr. Robertss gar-
) t. ief.
esex, was not satisfied, or perhaps the border and wet, and the
1s gr Wi Kempton | aed insufficiently vested." The mischief — ol to
With a rake he |a goo ied cd 8 n EUR
variety, | cai Pto off by perspiratio pes the
He put pee, plas ts to the pees of nitrogen in excess, | are
20, of | as would arise from an verdose of a iacal matter
the enh
they like. like it ume “ie E
e a " —— pe
co! work.
x * I rex
cold for 8
vaults a
by the ent of the i
Nadal
Wf
pe rt
cue all the i
at the time. ‘Bs I have already ,
assed too much upon your space, 1 will conclude, but I, mention was made in our — of the Horticultural ui Of kinds an excellen Winder en eama
shall be happy : e = bore to enter into — some p Society’s exhibition i in St. James's Ha inel; : - Mr Tumer, A — F and Win
ee ^ wd: ‘vation at some future time. Harry i as mi: Ait t be expected, a grand | In the Amateurs’ class were
vn. Of Azaleas there was, gh xpe g to Mr Md. from MER
—— display. The plants from Messrs. Green & Carson being | gr. to Mrs. Hodgson, of Hampstead ;
UH Arge eid vay full of blossom, and occupying as they | W. F. Watson, Esq., of Isl jette sand M: Yon
Societies. | did conspicuous positions in the principal transept, were to R. W. Peake, Esq., of Hou
y effective, and were deservedly much admired. i ü f 3 5 — pa striking
UL both were good examples of the yellow sinensis, e|tion, the plants in which stood from 8 to calles.
keene gte Honno i oral Exhibition hel h eld others were equally well known kinds. Collections of height at least, and were — well — i
2 f vmm 2 thie adi. ge be ted. to bave smaller plants were abundant. In the Cleon nien W. — all train ed to sin jer — stem
, i a ns. In erarias were i i : m
Successful en M egards Ea rie y & Turner had good collection s exhibited in pe Mf ie "
Ive
been in very respec em ble| Mr. Turner, who sent Slough
company, which, owing to kc unfavourable dats of the b x es white variety; Glory of Sun-| Brilliant (Smith's) crimson, Brilliant (l neom:
kom eoo wes | gs ee 5 Es Hill ad ouble kind pee EN above; and iret oo ; 1 Brillant a as
, : P P F 2
tove, 8 fine- ma pane and | Crit . — i es . sec nished y. Mr ni B e fine plants w
per eas occupied the benches along the sides of variegata, alba lutescens, Ferryana, p Piy 4 ie hich, pton, gr. to A. J. Dorat,
the principal transept: a noble circu x group of Symmetry, and Beauty of Berkshire. Messrs. ee|among which we moticed optima, Loveliness, E
x penan plants ae by a fine specimen and Fraser also showed Azaleas. Of newer kinds, Mr. Hey a Dundas, Lady Paxton, an
of Nor rfolk Iolar Eo the centre at its intersec- Turner sent a group in which were Advance, General Blues. essrs. Dobson had Perfection, Mrs,
he in | Outram, Ule e scarlet ; Criterion, Model, Miltoni, d others, the e names of most of which e
H. Haveloc i
rea
8 0 ) 8 ne
cei, t — — mdp e IM 2 and Prince Jerome, a variety with finely-formed Aorienlas Ne Mia Ultra and Lancashire Hero, beth
ts, rh s of Azaleas, Cape Heaths 8 and . of good colour. , Messrs. . Ivery had Rosy | fine kinds, we own by m
pots, gm pe it may be remarked were shown to Circle, Admiration, white fl le; Duchesse NM "heibiis eous — Me
more advantage than usual owing to the green baize Adelaide de Nassau, a handsome “Americ ead * — — oni . Ki A at x them w Hdby ^ Queen, Yelloy
background against which they were staged having ust 's Gem, Model, and Slider Mr. a el, King of Yellows, Edith, and others, ers, all fiiy
been = rais i am olet others, Gem, deep salmon, and Glory of NE Kr SUME x
Hill. ie Messrs. Ivery, o eckham, came a orists owers consisted of Tulips, eut
E italy from "e be pone - A Latent Shee | P S in which was the new — kind benas, and P ansies. ps, eut Ya.
ca aled Petun iæflora, a rosy peach-coloured sort, of good rui S ated, was scarce, Of
Was fateited.by Me. Dods, gr, to Sir John repre) form, but reported not stand sun well. From Mr. | Apples, one specimen well worthy of special notice n
Pa ea e i
2
a
=
Bart. It contained blue Leschenaultia, Everlastings, jene Victoria e z Koti
— oe’ Glory ol of f Sunning E vorbei se Cape Heaths were produced in large ge ee and in | Leaf, Esq., of Streatham. This was Frater AA
flowered pink variety, which was deservedly the ad- good condition. We however did not observe amoug | Other fruit of this variety came from Messrs, ‘and
miration of all who saw it; inandra " fragrans, | them anyt 4 me dose ab Green 1 Ms Ja miu r. Gillham sent three well grown Black
fusel ted vith terminal lust f ri E] acti wer urnisne T. " L a1Cas,
Muy liom; the carly, flowering amd handeyme Dunn, gr. to J. Rt. Scott, Esq, of Horse. Both ea: | OF Grapes, tho best were exhibitions of Black Han
Boronia pinnata, Pimelea spectabilis Acrophyllum | lecti ions 5 ontained Ad plants of well-known ads, burgh from Messrs, Frost and Hill. Mr. Ellis, gr, Fleet
5 H s oticed a white kind allied to Epi- | House, Devonshire, also sent fine bunches of that variety,
8 bert, Eso. -
hed Roses in pots e tr uly atter Of baskets of 12 bunches bes
of course much de ired. Merk Dx oben s, and eT. came from of Burnham,
y Paulall had um Nace as had also A. Rowland, | TI la Try a didi well abb A good
Es if
red- leaves; Boronia . such a speci j . and Mr. Terry, gr. to C. W. G. Puller, Esq., | ba ske t also came Kom Mr. gus vies, of Starch
rarely seen, bein 9 lite eral ly covered er pasy pink Youngsbury, ate Among them the following names | | Ha Tümersmith. Some fair buncha from 2-year-old
ttom; the handsome lilac Tetra- will be fendlar to our readers, viz., Baronne Prevost, | Vines were shown by Mr. Sorley, of Liverpool. White
—— ericifolia ; p une pic 1 15 white Azalea forming a| Blairi, Paul x ras, Paul Ricaut, Niphetos, Souvenir | Grapes were nót good.
cone, quite a mass of flowers; and Eri "un Ami, 0 — — ed te Tea Roses; Peaches came from Mr. Com to C. Mills,
: oupe kleb“ ‘Souveni e Malm Jules Mar- | Esq., of Hillingdon; and from Mr. G „ Shipston-
ica
depressa, a fine specimen s È anches han d Cou z
ET almost c Jem Cenl the = Heber alen gottin, Gloire de Dijon, — — — Aubernon, on-Stour. The sorts appareh HOAN e.
came from Me T. area Louis ied e, e. bao Chenédolé, — des Of Melons the best were Orion, green-
. to NE: € mbats, Loui me Wille „ and | e — i ed, pig Mr. Peed, T The next in
'voniensis Tis 8 = the exhibition cem 5 point of m s M Ew Hybrid, Mr. Con
tionabiy a plant of General — inot in Messrs, | stantine. Ar. Tegg also showed à nie ite Nil
aes 8 This was in perfection, its igs, Lee’s Perpetual were ‘oe 41
i = Constantir ne. i
e pe Hea ilsoni,
Drummondi, loaded with pretty rosy pink star-sha ped
blossoms ; Francisceas, Pimeleas, Txoras, Eve N E or tower p mer ated. ill Gray ene Sir 5 Napier, were again
and Vincas, „of which there were 14 Was also pre t i E Smith, of Twicke
from private growers and three from nurser rymen, con- ew or rare plants were scarce. We oo as a" d . to A y, Esq. sent some
sisted for the most part of well-grown specimens of Burlingtonia Farmeri; Mr. Dods a finely grown 5 — British Queens, and good pes iof other sorts came ir
plants similar vi se just enumerated, of the orange — "denstyllis maerostegia; Messrs.| Mr. Taylor and Mr. Gillham. Strawberries
lants r au tails for fine foliage there were one Ve ie Pee handso: othos, — asd o the er | were contributed by Mr. Kaile, gr. to Lord Lo
or kund collections The bes Miete from Mr. — = plant: tioned in o report of the Rue. . — l an ng
Barnet, and M: had a b bei Society? s Tute exhibition ; and a sma — —— aters, gr. to F. Moore, Es
ant of i die penne fr r. Gre e plants not | Inman, gr. to J. Elliott,
ribbed, striking and flower Messrs. s ch- — their Holly-le eed. gr.to T. Devas, Esq., Dulwich
Caladiums, Cissus, Japanese Olea, and Acer japonicum polymorphum from | Miss Coutts, Highgate. Cu
ias, and seid of that description. Ja is h — redlich deeply eut leaves, and par ‘om Mr. waa gr. to
f Farfugiam a if har i wu was stated to be, must prove a most im- ford Hill; Mr. Monro, ud P
m marmoratum, and others, | Portant M pes ion. Mr. Carson sent the bright orange Weir, gr. to Mrs. Hodgson, of Ham
s showed plants Apkelaudra Porteana. $
hoir latte zm ong: —_ plants was a variegated variety 5
tolerably good condition. f Barbar ca prieox, one e edd British Winter Cress, Notices of Books. Pe
flower
= It l with, > was also the grey- looking Centaurea ncients 3
i retusum, usum, gutta — These came from The Citrus Wood AL the A A T
EU — alc of flowers ; | likewise e a Mee — Tu velo Tur wa come | pà 2 87 ‘reprinted from the Builder d
lor, and insignis; Aerides odo. | rare Ferns. came a plant of the a by C. 2 14, Clerela land Mews, Fitzroy
C cn a Skinn spore! the snowy white Calanthe I Rhcdédendion Delos, with 14 blossoms The object of the writer of th
rather dull yellowish b blos with five spikes of buff or | On. it all ZEE greatest perfection. Flowered thus | lat, — EM Mendes
Re PR papain "irn os bractescens, | potiri d vue d fando ind effective. Of Rom dh alvi — .
Cypri issimum, a fine aie lifer, the n uadriv is. ms
— m Leer 85 aos ew substitute for lawn Grasses rem are p probably ay with
we quo
with in. is sit ym ts, gr. to A. Mongredien, sent al
Ree W. Elle, Eu lar genus, erue gr. to ‘a panful, "which seemed to excite 3 t a largo
.F. G: Darina, Mas Cheek aik oe Carson, gr. to It was deep green and in excellent condition. that subject :— ien
Tnt — pee class. Ferns — not so plentiful as s might have been at all the 8 Te d TH
tena eee —— with multitudes of blossoms, | Forest Hill, contributed © b MM Citrus. The Greek and Roman writers
yellow Onda: adas Tee surface of the EL the me cla and from Mr. Seve, gto A A. de Grav o, Bat, men tion of this AA CUR ere
i ia rigi etcham, near Leath — It was one of the accusa!
stern Aperi Hom du ET. d Vande a teres, = British kinds, all well ere plants, Med iin Vete that his a :
spikes; various Aerides, Big: with four flow Pelargoniums were as a whole scarcely so fine tM det OFS UE a
iT looms ä gremium, a | have seen them in former years. Mr. ae wet or a A —— — Tu r Diodoro,
plant e d orange Lelia 3 hes formed an exception. His collection af 12 plan ; v eei the orator, e
Cypri villosum. 2^8 ai i b were all that could be desired. —Conspienou abstulisti? writs e (he charge preferred Lei grid
8 De biase: nely - flowered Cattleya them were mmetry E P e was himself = i judg of a Citrean with gold
endrobium albo-sangui ae with ed prettily spotted try, Empress Eugenie, the « Martial comparing this von, e
he b
uote our a author's
ag
flowers, having a brown centre; the i oa ea ee
n ; Sansp; € ‘ impl th i id esteemed t :
Lycaste Skinneri, and a large a of the ^ walle Ce estial, Mappe G — — — te tu : r materi pa mem Bi,
| = — Mr. Dods, | finely spotted Moin d Etna, Viola, Lan lee, "Amon * e sr gem a —
Mr. Woolley sent a handsome group, i la whieh 3n more Fa ir Bese Y stal, We ed Fairest of f the — another her of his ong
particularly remarked Vanda tricolor and iuga. the | and Satirist, reil, Yen Wonderful, Governor: Gener wrod bem —— Srg oar
ox- EI Lelia purpurata, a magni- | showed in this class. nd Gaines also Citrea — , nec
arge cm — — pss In the Amateure class the best plants came from Mr. eTii e with i tho
„ vario iggins, 2 oi o E. Beck, Esq., ed = | aims
Phalænopsis, the de wer d shite and finely flow — — the Circa mener whe Teta 2
, and others of whieh | kinds w ds Bride, Fanny, — ones of the! austerity, in alluding to e vast sums
,
brennt than the original to those who are
familiar with French. What for example are ers
En glish people to understand b y such Ae in essions 2
g n “Thro
every then,
tree, he we owe
m— the. women rep
heir wear
s|of man, ^ "T Ever ery g
| in the santi « rhe fried à P huile, ix in wine, hot or
French, and with no pes ability defends his —
Majesty from all the c — that a hostile press has*
brou ary against him. In like manner Austrian acts are
denounced. Politicians shoal read the pamphlet.
re errem t€ dun
n"
cold,“ “s up asa rena tg » «tt
est has a procès verbal of the
menu”? Such phrases are intelligible * to those
who do not require a French book to be t — ed for
arie we ord, PI
ured map of British Co-
mbia, agp dei, p» "with the gold . —
hid e ing inform atio on permits.
i to € W.
them, but are in ncomprehensible by | those who
a £r
cha — day a
8 I r which, pe ithstan
nding
less a
ed to Ptole meus, king ¢ of
fashion: “ a a bottle with Bigarreaux, leaving on
Add some leaves of
u de veau
this
each a demi. ce ntimétre of queue.
$ anothe: ce,
— — wators,
TO bit of —
Laurel 1 3 and so on,
Ba
es, Thyme,-
by the a Daid — Swee
me
— it was us] of two
joined Te er down the middle,
joi 1 epe
a table, = exceeded
covered with
Emperor or Tiberius h
4 feet in diameter; this, however, was only co
a veneer of Citr wood.
* The prinefpal m merit of t the ables made of this mate-
rial is to have veins arra nged in w 951 ig nes, or spirals,
ad likew
being 43 fect in dia.
am
Notwithstan ding these faults = ‘lively | style of
Mr. Sim any readers
—
onion i
long., ame including a par
territory, à in the United States, úni: the Rocky M
tain range in British territory, with the nowy dis —
covered Kotani Pass from Western Canada in o British
Columbia.
Another map issued by the same active publisher is
that of Dav - Central Europe, 31 inches * 44, giving
allthe Eur ds, and principal places
er the and Den mark, thus
*
ite 1 this map i is singularly free
vering the ground
si}
especially 1
dine except a Frenchm
sec
w ave not a
if they think that n
we do not concur. ault — of middle
—
For one filing the ;visitor n now be
wel — little ide
class dinners is that 4 e
French cooking is —
llent Frenc! — mm is beyond the means of m
like so mauy — In the
ong direction, s for which reason
called eger
and hence give rise to the a
3 ä in esteem to these is the wood with
ost
— e 1 taken almost at random will
of us.
let the r
Choco late. —« The Spanish — of the New World
chocolate to ex Not satisfied with
. o is the term given to |
of gra
t it is tis the col of the - which is ~
fs n
rdwicke: s ue n em
to the metropolis, called
with
ed Ha
Book of London (Hardwicke, Piceadilly
monly good engravings of some o of the n
places to be seen. The price is — but the
tion would be worthy of even a dear book.
ften — reproved by the
finally ee 2 it, an
whose meta were as subtile as his morals were
d the — fath er, Escobar, niu
figure co!
ing
paid ur, size is — to ; wi the dr
eat] mired, and so
iw "di; no doubt, the same material that Homer meent
w ith which Calypso | i
au
t not interfere — fasting, quoting th
hers that lis —
oe of e ry to please a — ho —— int trod uced
‘or
Fer use and gu
lec! V ate di
ii» of Azalea i bout
ee an Phlox early 100
E. G. Hen — Sins (Wellington Road)
Plants inar,
licate ets oink cn how important a
Nurseryman has become We have here
04 closely seas Svo pages got out in in
adba ry & Brans, and con on aini ning
E
— that of
0 fewer ‘du an J
| the best manner by Br
by the wood dos, with he represen nts it. Choe te has been the subject of deep dissertations,
as fumigating her Sid - th a view
at the producing - famous wood? " ae it in the category of hot, cold, or pee
The author believes that no To rum its | food ; — — tiat these ed Garden Memoranda `
origin before himself; and it a ppe dots om ^" have. 3 little to teca —— of 1 the CLIYEDEN, NEAR ree n3 gU oF THE SEATS
writers on Conifero ts have failed to ue ruth. But me and experie ose two SUTHERLAND.— s it has
what the Citrus may have been “The learn: ed Endliche er masters, have established that chocolat carefully I -|now bec v cpa T spring flower ge dening is
indeed the original @vlov (not go r Ovía | pared, is wholesor it is v that it . on curl with great success under the excellent
may have — i — ivalvis, but he does not | nutritious and easy of re that t of Mr. Fle eming, some account of the
so refer it to the KéSpos @avuash of Theophrastus, the the compl xion as coffee i apposed e do, on "the e| appearance of this fine pla ce at the present time may
magna of Puy which the contrary, like | contrary, it clears it; that it he ef n the be
most — de to have been the Cedar of sedentary or mental ocew — n literary men, bar- | tiful lawn: 3 lies betwe een the mansion and the
Leban d 8 But by some eee . — 1 that it will - hurt the — ar 5 when viewed from the noble terrace
writer the we bee n already referred —— ca has proved b nefic ial in in e ho the be
the rof Riley's Pliny 2 the last Es f blossom as pu might, be
neing
pos veda? articulat
s quadri adding, however, the gomme
that “ Desfontai: ine "s pi artieulata is the PR as the
— botanists," itself à variet
So that according
alli pis wee and the Ceda
plau — IY — view authority the
osed” we do not
see specimens of Citrean
m of si ron
These wko are curio
tables will -find one
useu
a
n be seen at the.w e a of ae
C. Cross, working ee 14, Cleveland Mews,
Fitzroy Square.“
Filices Exotice, or Coloured Figures and Descri,
cultivated i ^ ya |
ET. ied b pected to to be ai be * in e id or om
m . e 2. tofthe amr
with length on
August.
n front
a: descr ta w
border edged with a
à first have |
y bad | growing early flowering A i age hind
ocolate ; — outre of purple P: and beyond
delicate tomes h. per a aapi yona the remedy | them d Anemones, NE “Tulips, and a
is easy ; let them have a chop or a e with it and 3i 5 belt. “of dwarf Ttalian Wallflower. Taking the
let them thar Heaven for givi them
digestion. Afte ving made a h
reakfast, swallow a eu chocolate M vnd blue To get-me e Kot j poen. nem en Erysi-
three hours the digestive organs will have performed | mum Peroffskianum, edged with dark Pansies; a pink
their en From zeal for the science, I re- coloured — and Forget-me-Not, the latter now
| quested v sae ladies to ot it; they first said 8 taking ce of former, whose
should die, but fou nd it answer so well that they | is bahnte decline; Ranuneuluses and the
glori P ta ot ite Saxifraga granulata, which is one of the
M. Savarin’s w ating Lar fat little | I iful spring plants of its kind; Scarlet Ranun-
d by the beak, A fier a E Sion over it, take out "we wired with a a pale blue Pansy, a a most effectiv
3h gullet, put the bird clever] o your mouth, bite| bed ; Evergreen Candyt eu Ee with dark Pa msies
| him off cl ur fingers, an 12 im manfully; and 8 illa * Nonsuch, ith the purple Silene
Carda-
Dielytra an
oo Exotic en — as y Sir W. 2 foie didi, the result will be an abundance of j rna to envelope ur poa j Cuckoo dove
PRS. Reeve. 3 big ole V and you will enjoy a pleasure unknown t ne pratensis), Tulips, and bees st bo olsorred th and
he vulgar. ali s, and white Alyssum. It e o
vin superb work contains 100 plates, o wealthy — ch. Is this last method recommended for adoption | te bey of the bulbous plants in the
— the finest F ^R uen a — ow — — | amon: SE over, and that t the viata s
follow : — 55 e guides ks i k Eggs fried in Gravy. iI was travelling one day with which, pt y associate d have alr eady taken
dcs 68 Ea Poy in- | two ladies to "Melun. We left rather late in the fore- pe places withexcell ient effect. TI
hundred plants is panied by le — , and reached Montgeron wi us appetite. | x ^ ds changes at different gage: r their develop-
the fal detholion synon y miris tm = We put up at a very decent-looking inn, but, to our e kind = flower taking the of another as
— i — „ In IONS pi 2 € d gemi -~ A three diligences oa) fan as vs latter goes out of bloom. rode e terrace
— 3 — dra "de — — two post-chai: passed, and the travellers had are beautiful vs s exten ing the whole —— of the
. Upon this point Sir win Hooker is g t eaten up “everything, like nerd from Egypt. We south front of the house bees with Ta f different
the highest of li 2 d F. er one-o ad, however, looked into the tities; 2 saw a very | colou = evene ng t€ suitable os composed of
regret to le friend sr nil ii d —— 990 of mutton turning on the spit | a
peut * tific EE ladies e x eyes. mores terrace vim i left of the
scientific necessity. = 1 mede in the 5 wit | aii e two admirable i
ungry, -sup ecu ed in ed whether | of flowe th n
The Handbook of Dx pu Simpson. Long- we rs not have some jed in the gravy; ; with c » the clou o w
If le do not — AM sap s po uei certainly.’ | a
S teach d w how ow to is vol The cook broke the eggs ie Uh - As the grey looking
e em. It is in ANS emen ur | voit h ed his back, I ici mpm — flower
jokes, ways quite proper, about dining, ers, | travelling-knife, and made two or three incis the
: ed upon the i of | roast the juice e on eyes Mn TUN
e eL E merry mort; l whai h | wate = gs and, when they were i
a - We cannot compliment Mr. Simpson] them to my party. They hc found.
e wes — A — e — executed the task —. had the best part of the mutton."
mpose upon himself
by some, DES over sensible, —.— on dining which S questions have two sides. perae
in the Times newspaper. His prefaceis in very the Present Crisis (Hardwicke, a
translation i is hardly more side of
M. Ward takes the
r oO IY
EI
ua
DI!
1
CHRONICI
E
n AGRICULTURAL
GAZ n
mamenn v sia EDICIONES EVITE C EM ERATUM 2 du t. May ay ow
b unny afternoon on me Sel. 2 e red Ta; i
of the number of plants required to till Sow nA e EXP and the jo taken a d at 40 "clo ck. - xe Densely and unifor east
formed when we state that it requires 500 Pansies for ah per aS previ ously sa ms rorem: fines Hor ly Cue
POS DN. eon ide. | Hane id d p ix E ; “th t 1 ow is the period for gomme eof the week, 1 deg. beloy t
the bon are | commended, remembering that n : CORD OF TRE WEATR he average,
i r » t Fea ihe Gras ad ne beds | INS siia and for applying all the encouragements | Duringt the last 33 years, for the oo
et ei J š vy fo
: 2 of the walk. | acces ther 72 8 7 Fo.
oceupy suitable positions on the o ide o £ m Mer. F E| gS of |G Prevailing Wings
These are fled with Anemones, Tulips, s, suregunded Thre the quality ofthe gti, thotrat| "ESSERE SE e | SES RS
by a broad edging of whit i ATA DIA ml Moe Pu ansy ; PINERIES. wi here | the e 3 Raine | or Rain, sre:
t d ud be ir 3 erue ||| is :
rellow next the Grass is Mond wha hou Sunday 7a 4% 8% 18 [osom | alae
Sona have preferred n summer iia cir- care must be observed to dura the soil abont th he = Mon. 3| 55 $64 i 1 1 1 3 3 i :
lar bed stations for Orange trees of in a rathér ry state during the ripening period, and | wey 3}: 663 | 445 | $34| 14 oa J
cular eds form 2 H t n: e rest of the | Thurs. 28. 668 43.6 55.2 u 0 241321 Bg!
which there are here some very handsome specimens. | where it can 2 don d without injuring th dr a Fri day 2. 69:2 | 332 ant d 0s EE 1
Forming a centre-piece as it were for the ribbon sto ek Be: ntm mosphere should be kopt r rather ry, ad- | Satur. 28.. ae 447 14 09 Li 111131
EA. m t i
borders are two large baskets or vases of Aus A mitting : Re siti P3 S „period occurred on
Seeléy's artificial iso These a e fillel with there is no 6:-thanes of fruit of Heu quality if f the : soil m. therm. 91 deg. ; and — Iri e the 25th, 1839 t therm Wess
cinths, Anemones, and mixed A edged with Fan- is Be wet about the roo s, and the atmosphere ke = —
~ blue Fo 1 -me-Not, and white Candy tuft. and ooo with moisture duri ng the r riper i to Correspo ndents
We now come to the main or agire d ower r garden, period. ease of plan n t gro pa in N Aur RICA N TRE TE si OP. The best, boo pa ind
acing ogethe ichaux's / rb orestie: M
^ $ whole of which The 3 1 . Sg : Ut . e ue ved e ana = im be. 3 to treat hardy as the Tulip tree, and i one. a cos sort ee
rom the terrace. eds are ¢ Tuve ` ing in a park in a rather exposed si d
ach side of mei i turf-covered ae the | them roperly, gee be we a repaid. ^ Use Bote. Boome A COS ney. No book will t dem, h
each si P te on
hole occupying a space of some 5 acres. Here the heat as spari ngly a ay consist with — al unless he possesses some preliminary informim fe
20 on a nla amparate ith the extent of | ing the proper degree of PE 3e very careful health — —.— it does 135 b Seren of t
ey are edged w eb Spruce, and|to keep t the plants properly supplied with water the mble s ily Mx Ardem T awo's edition of
Sweet Briar, oat in the eel of hedges about | root, Lani i 1 P. We should move them in
9 inches i in ho and as much in width. , Bach panel growth, ‘and also to plants swelling their "fruit. end c E of September when the earth is warm, and the ù
7 1 late er damp and cool. October is rather late € have within
Vix NERIES.— Where Muscats are grown for a op specimen 15 fect high removed Wi Nanay A
hicl e 6 feet in width and b i me recommended. Bu kind md
of flowers soe ose in 1 point a size Pounded on de to fall too low teer the bunches „begi in to appear, and oval, whatever the s Careful
outside b; the little hedges just named. ese belts or | a te emperature m 65° to 70° must s — — orca J Cuthill. Your white-spined fruit are very hand
y J lose ome, free from ribs and i remarkably well grown,
some time — at E still on dns the re is estin ng to ensure goo! size RE Pike e Trur a petri
mass of gay flowers. One contained Anemones mixed eep a sharp look out for red s spider o Marin Atta ssd te shots Tue schief probably lios ia
with Limnanthes s Douglasii; another yellow Tulips, and ents where the fr uit 18 N and if this pes the border. Lack te hit
the yellow Lasthenia californica; a third ulips, | make its appearance lose no time in coating the ER S e DUE EE d ub veo à Mere
blue aud white Forget-me-Not, and white i ad | water with sulphur. If not already 1 a m except Rhubarb, Seakale, and such things aswant
a fourth mi ulips and the pink Silene pen- litter removed from the outside borders, but if it is| in winter or spri zen if you tonis obtain light
ese ; a fifth mixed Tulips 2 Forget- me. Not; $ 1 found. that the roots bave er cei into it, which will Sae. 8 e 3 s A 1
sixth alen Tulip engak tha 95 T: form a better material n which t r pots,
ne f place your pots, and ss
h will be essary t ep the house continually watered in
Beyeimam m, E tlie "white and yellow Feder be le. and every caution ted not Se disturb e young | dry weather, the extra cost vil ; its
roots, And if many roots are fou & the surface it 8 durability. Take care that are. so
^ fill Sd ged that the air whieh enters yi them cannot possibly
This constitutes one half; the other half is filled in will he necessary, after ‘removing the litter, to top-dress pass px the donee without being waren BP MPIUS MERE
— i 7 Below, fe der to prevent these getting dried up; a slight effec perhaps by ptor ei Yo orizontal
ination to the whole, is 3 large cirele of mixed coute tu urfy loam, leaf soil, — hor rse- dr oppings will one ed ot whic ich fits the ventilator and tho other rests o
S PM UP eris = j end answ r very well for this pur Na — or Patria The specimens of Dumelow's Scal-
bounding all is a raise? e which the of houses, where the fru 3 is T ing, are not allowed ling and Rymer Feri are unquestionably correct; mn
flower beds. below appear. to much advantage. too dry. Mxtons.—Maintain a rather close, most probably, the Beauty of Kent, although smaller than
al moist, warm MuR to plants recently planted out | | usuat.]|
1
as the AE of ‘th ese beds begin to fade
until they get i
o ful growth,
but avo oid inducing a
cleared of their 8 2
half hardy bedding
s soon
ey are 8
nan
after the roots bir get hold of the soil, for it is
go nerally
of this sort.
Werther r will.
as th th
Ou in.
ousands of which
jd dae
Give air as freely as the state of the
admit, in order to secur e firm
eem ed
p!
emored
vi: A qe are taken out is T "s
last w bis hay wat laid in sd corner and | moder:
well watered until time « Bor ks e fon de ) be Propagating | heat 4 sbout 759 o
| sk dean er rally co week | also to keep
in June; after the beds US teen filled e eh half hardy
plants, cutting are taken off th nem in the usual way,a and meee the
over them, to be planted ont as soon as struck i
borders where piv d grow until autumn, when the beds
l ;t ey are then removed into the borders
them:
he Wallflowers, Forget-me-Not, Silene, ond
mon 3 sown about the second weck in Jun Iti oon
they are dius left till the peti — clear in Sent nn, ana: on
e planted d out. with the > Pan
Ibs of the e Anemones, process
Tu! ud and seis &e., all taken carefully
ex imis d 8
ery p
npon the foliage.
f fruit mai ess Soe
ss flowe
Mié by frost, d he
uch x
cious arang —
damp off unless
Endeavour
the e ina
| avoid hav ine to water while t
r 809 f
tos secure a sir lee
and
1 blos:
GAR
ow v Nigh, time t 2 m of bedding
3, at = uch as
revent t
"eS crop is isting D vel
careful look out for "insects, v us
ves can Ms ee Be
are least
er one a proper
fe ren is lay. Any piad of a cro p |
alth.
g p some d
t liable t
T hardenin ael
a$ to display bv a 2|
"or combinatio: on of both colou
and
NAMES OF PLANTS:
We have bee Y Bero —
ntly decline naming heaps of dried or oi erp
— o request our correspondents to recollect that we
never have or 9 d 2 vierte
ene
ciall əl ul
— assistnee, ‘they box ns oe Serna
fori
this difficult group is not to be satisfactorily named f
— specimens as yours, badly e
especially the stalk and its scales. Eug
the oth am —B G. Not numbered! e larger one
Billardieri; the melior! Cheilanthes Y laa enin-
be. euh pei, Hemadicty on 8e aatan
o flower, and has uu ee t plant" 3
without one: itis not the Arrowr
of some Bignonia.
Niaur 8 Liverpool. We
are
dried, and Mem m 8 io ey ar aras
ont. The S ME difficulty
form.
to ) agree that the various shades of orange and yellows
planted
eet with. e
ese require more attentio
well fla
entham case” was
some e of which were all. but realy t "uj
ehe itself, both with regar
we dcs with the blues; oranges, and reds sow whites
es add that the ben rde and fruit de. however, derange the — — the yallow as also the
mal skill, and that the violet al es, whilst the v red or rose-coloured
p Force d Stra flowers ber ae en
$ | forming abed by dine - Every idual b
d; and a flower garden should, in our opinion, Te" “complete i in
crop: o
ntes
person than Milton who peur [p
5 learn there will of n ssity be
ey opinions—for opinions peg
eater. On wall H FRUIT A N in
are thin PAM ing of XD e be made at once. Throw i:
- ————— a sprinkling of early Dutch Turnips on 1 borde
a e ine digging nor using Hato, It is a mistaken
D: folie Week) ) . |moton to persist in g ground for these in kitchen
8 full of Y l Heit UN bei
gross nder any circu :
CONSERVATORY, ide od e e or trained 1585 stin | Alway > the poorest hardest ground yon ean find
require attention in ri hinning, training, stop- | and merely hoe ed Seed in; by these means you will
f the sun 25 po bogiitly a sli ht always procure good Turnips. "Let full crops of Kidne
shading would be of benefit for a few hours sek | Bes nis be pla planted forthwith, and a row of Knis aht I
day 4 The in pond of such structures „however are Mar arrow Peas or or the British 1 Que een. bande should be bere?
sometimes ver d the | Prepar | _ distan to bo oniy 400 or as
f regoing ae age ze apoioa e EA to | completely saturated with moisture, Tee NE * e iM. 8 vnde vus
New Holland plants, amellias, &c. As 3 on!
: beds.f :
stove plants and Orchids, tlorod h cleanliness, free | — STATE or THE WEAT E tor WO sr — ihe dance
ventilati lenty of atmospheric E isture, E 5 ex ening Mar 39, 1859 as observed ai Sie dem opo € place x "o pene 77 it was om
sionally a slight shading in very bright sunshine, are at Banomer —— Pe Maroh 8 e N refor. 2 nt ae
ent the chief requisites. ' No means g e| Mx. ag bas m —— |. Of the Air ſof be Fart 15 e penny in rod
neglected to encourage a free growth at t iod in Max, | Min. | ax. Min. [Mean 8 P proper quar —— Ed
Orchids, iu order to get their pseudo-bulbs firm, Friday 13| 10 | 30175 | goose | op e orn TT LL | TeovsLesome SERT Hy 3 not, LEES
fed, and well ripened betimes. I ixed greenhonses Ld M "i 29055 | 30.002 | es | 28 | Soe 5 in 3 E people 18 tho E ife atu S s Yo ur frend
fires may now bo MY or entirely dispensed | Mon "Wo 2x 20703 | e b 2s miu 8 % que kinds of
T üs 2 d 2 ied | Tues 17/14 | 20701 mis Sf | 48 | 350 | 914 | E. | .10 - Of the four kin!
gema, and accompanied] wed. 1$ 15 | 9348 | aman | 55 S fess) 3} | 3| N | as Vixe Bono this we rotis
with bright e ag heat ‘sufficient oe! the night may Taue. 19/15 | 29592 | 29619 | 67 15 580! si 85 £1$| B Bia the 5 g E
be secured by shuttin, up early, ever soon! | Average I 29.903 | 29.811 | 62.8 | 426 [ els 5 j 51 = * “i decal i
enough to uc aren ii A gi gen neral rule can 2 be bini May E ja p and cold at ni night. Ris iue call Ei
wn ch cases to 1 mK we Pee and x :
lc guide the inexperienced. On ; cloudy; vain eee cold, made, aso rni.
Max 21, 1859.]
PATENT
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRIC ULTURAL GAZETTE.
NITROPHOS SPHATE OR BLOOD MANURE
COMPANY (LriurrED),
CONSISTING OF TENANT FARMERS, OCCUPYING UPWARDS OF 30,000 ACRES OF LAND.
TRUSTEES.
MAJOR-GENERAL HALL, M. P., Western Colville, Linton,
ABEL Situ, Jun., Esq., Walton House, Ware, Herts.
CHARLES DIMSD4 ALE, Esq., Essendon Place, Herts.
Epwarp BALL, Esq., M. P., 8, Belgrave Road, Pimlico
—
DIRECTORS.
^. —JONAS
Chairn AS Were, Esq., Babraham, Cambridgeshire.
De 8 "e ia COLLINS, Esq., rare eain Square, Pentonville.
P., Warwick Terrace, Belgrave
EDWARD — , Esq., Tottenham, Middlese T LEEDS, Es, Lexham , Norfolk
Jous CLAYDEN, Esq., Littlebury, Essex Romer MoRGAN, Es, 72, — — Villas, Camden Town.
RICHARD fiam Esq., Stanstea "Abbot, me GEORGE SAVILL, Esq. š ingthorpe, near Stam
Tuomas KNIGHT , Esq., Edmonton, Middlese: WILLIAM COLLIN E sre t. John Street N
Bankers.— — BARNETT, aera — b
Solicitors.—Messrs. KINGSFORD & Do: e sess trand.
Auditor.—G. W. Brown — — —— Stroet.
ger. — Mr. JAMES ODAMS. | Secretary.—Mr. C. T. MAcADAM.
Offices 109, Fenchurch Street, London.—Manufactory, Plaistow Marshes, Essex.
are now
Tue Directors beg to inform their Friends and the Agricultural Public that the following Manures
ready :—
ODAMS'S BLOOD, MANURE FOR CORN AND MANGEL.
D
AMS
S BLOOD MANURE FOR ROOTS.
ODAM S'S S n OF LIME.
Full particulars may be had at the Company's Offices, or of the local Agents.
er beige eie Rd &c. — Manufacturers
and n mating ARTIFICIAL MANURES
end obi truction for toate —— & C
a eficient p
esirous of receiving instruction in
Analysesand 1 will find ample facility and accomm a |
tion at A A mer
MANURE
REDER ICK" CORAN WELL begs to i inform
— cultural
supply E SUPERPHOSPHATÉoLL ME" superiortoa an —
yet produced. Each Bag guarant — ——
FART 5 to 116,
IRES vee E. ni ese 1840), havo the
eee Re
SPRING tor. ‘DRESSI NG
Fenchire
p MA
all of
y
— =
In consequence the reduction Sie pelos oF
the London —— Co. are enabled to lower pee ——
their Superphosphate of Lime, and to materially improve the
Corn Manure rate.
t
rom Messrs. A. Gibbs an
AMMONIA, NITRATE OF SODA,
every t ——.— of value. Wholesale
116, Fenchurch Street, E. C. Epwan
The Lond
(direct fi
R, * et r.
NUES 0.
Jonhla M.
V Ux
sent pri
121. = Ton for " Tony and upwards,
13/. 5s. per Ton for 1 Ton up to 30 Tons.
" And, to guard against the
d D
The pre:
e purchase of adulterated mixtures
aud — — Guanos rn to po results equal
Peru nsumers are recommended to apply either to our-
og to ur agents, Seer Gibbs, Bright, & Co., of Liver-
and Bristol, or to dealers of established character, in whose
— and fair dealing they may place LITT confidence.
& Sons.
obtained confirm beyond es bt, Professor Voeleker's report. in
No. 41, a L vol. x Royal Agricul! — iie AY ami
Timental geld, k r Er
ep rst the crop, an no bene-
ficial effect either alone conjunction n with phosphates.
s Government has
: arranger
for AS
Soy le qu | from ea cargoes now on sale,
4L 10s. to 6L 10s. to 66 — — ee ee pci prices,
8t. (one af the Toses the Mene — 20, North p —
, 'vernment : Orb, HIN DSO. YES.
I beg to in
u for T
character, incumbent * stiff ‘slay’ Gas
id
9 st "n
q p oe Lori were * fo
nantities qua ht Cry
EUIS enr Uo - y good one throu ries —is Ei M ode yee g Min
— à heop. cA little quse: — — can be ib
ptem ae AC e, ron nce is in favour of the
Mo “Joun Bark
ie Senne Merchants, Penrith. ue
J. Graha
= — * “Hints —.— LA din x Ri m a la
cargoes here, may ee Broker, at the above . |
ANURE ron ROOT
EDUCTION IN PRICE OF
R. LAWS:
OPS, of first-rate quality
CR
CAE I ysis guaranteed, manufactured by W. ILLIÁNS
k Lan Eae on Mare she — A e 7), — 61. o, ird —
Fre he
LAWES’S MANU
S begs to announce that 2 has this
season reduced the riae of the Manures manufi by
him, viz. :—
TURNI NURE . from £7 to£6 6
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME. * 7 6 :
MINERAL do. 6 to E
BARLEY MANUR
Prof. Way ani Dr, Voelc eer ave sample led fr
0
ou i bulkor s 5000 to
i
cu
S Mis 7 — 1
E TURNER, "wid manufacture
ng
Grinding Mills, Stea x ys
e-
ATENT., STEAM PLOUGH.—
tandard pet of FOWLER'S STEPAN PLOUGHING
ACKLE, upon the most approved principl
For further rtictars appl
28, Cornhill, Lo: — 1
o ed BEAN, EXPOSE & CORN PLANTERS
3 HOES, &c. The ** Multum in Parvo,"
tivator, Horse Hoe, — Plough, Subsoiler, "Broads
to Joux FOWLER,
and other forms; all E anding. Complete, 7L. 75.
spectus sent. C. OWELL, m Sussex.
PEED AND ECONOMY Xe ‘a , Gentl
and Market Gardeners, in the use cok t HOXRES REGIS.
TERED HAND SEED PLANTING MACHINE, which fro
its ies, combined with strength, ligh! m simpli -
city, places it beyond a parallel Its
planting the seeds of Man Aa tas § Turnip, Pars and all
small seeds in patches of equal depth and tig. erent Berg
from 6, 7, 12, 14, 18, 21, 24, to 28 inches apart, raking in n and
rolling co! complete, dur A rot: —— vention. will
act as a drill when required.
London Agent, Mr. B. eo 10 "annon Street, West.
Sold also — r inventor, J. HOARE, 'Old Fishbourne, Chi-
chester, Suss
LEMING S SALTING MACHINE FOR D à.
OYING WEEDS ed egens WALKS,
most useful Machine has giv test satisfaction wher-
ed — been int rod bru p bt the only effectual means of
kee ping Drives and Walks completel Axes E
t from article ‘Trentham 838 ronicle of
January
„And I would o mur d m these unds that
the whol e Grass aad Gravel are kept in the most perfect
order by the aid of Machinery ; the former by a Horse Machine
herever it be worked, a small hand instrument po EES
used in — t access; the latter is kept in by
a SALTIN CHINE, the inyention of Mr. Fleming, ad ya judging
Fon the beautiful condition of the Gravel d Aid direction,
I should say that it was altogether
(The Mowing Machines here referred to — o BEANE 8).
From the gem of April 2.
“The Salti 4 incre will effect
Gravel Walks and D
Testimonials, with: fall particulars and prices, may be di d —
lication to ALEXANDER SHANKS & Son, Dens Iron
7 — Patentees of Improved Mowing. Rolling, ene
iue for Lawns, Hot-water Appa
etually destroy the Weeds on
F GORERIPCCAND BRAINAGE AND IN-
HE GENERAL LAND DRAINAGE and IM-
PROVEMENT vade s i él j err 52, Parliament Street.
00 tons at his factories — — reportand analyses are given Henry Ker SEYMER, „ M. P., Chairman.
i in Ci 0 Lm mpany is — —— — ct of Parliament t
ait wit bt p uy ders m E. TAN "et ws A | facilitate the — Sfk Br a. th Max king of Roads, tho
N. B. pou Pes [ims 1 essrs oct | Erection of Farm Houses, Far uildinzs, ani ;abonrera'
Nitrate of Soda, Sulphate of Am eue cu «€ Chemical vi and other Impr — on all descriptions of Pro-
Manures. American Cotton- — Cake pet ty cid mc re gy i s ndor entail, mortgage, in trust,
T TAUwVISWED ux In no case is any nvestigation of Title necessary.
| EL. meat TUR s m des
& T. P.
w Per
pe poma which 1 all the
Crop, 80 ye TEr i that,
for t.
—
the full development of the Turni
satisfied
od thei d kno — — — on pa —
very extensively u: 88
? MANURE.—
rti — eren = —
ele
they feel
eu E]
Wheat.
420. 05 iiy the Lm of Banter Cn over an VERAT
and U POTATO
on Manure Co, also m PERUVIAN GUANO | MANURES; als» BONE DUST, PERUVIAN GUANO, and
d
fici Manures, 5 Bristol; or PRocroR & RYLAND, Bir-
mingham Alt Wr near Chester.
URNA LACK p CO. S CONCENTRATED
UPE Li
8 Acid soluble,
von = Lime.
r. Voeleker ults
be very 8 uu: you, — e the best — of — N very
high agricul cte:
orna;
imported, free fro ad been 1
have ted
ressed with th.
Bae or ERIS al E —.— ir o of 5 the e doring six years,
such increased facilities for r shipmen -
considerable
SOPA ATE or LIME; guaranteed to contain
ic
ONCEN
to the ah ty
Of these Manures
— .
yards,
No. 2. 55-inch Net, Ta. a yard; No. 3, 8d.
pedal, Lie
o
which chara
e, equivalent to 40 per cent. of Tribasi
ATED TURNIP MANURE, equal in value to
must
Will be md to fs
.
ITTAINS SUMMER SHADING?”
0. 1. —— inh TIETAN Sa a
double strength, 65. 6d. a
55-inch ZEBRA NET, b l. per
h LINEN, 44. to
rature, While at the po
ral influence
(terns
anufacturers,
Notting — — the ey u os
rotection from frost.
61.0 ya
c
— 55
The s
h
umers of the
and air, so essential —
zm ion to T. BRITTAIN & Co.,
es! por
and have never failed. They “modi
e they
— 1
wherever it
ng a ber F
re ud am turists, and ana Nai of the Seedsmen
than
o had in any require rod d
yard run; for
bru Dec. 16, 1
„18
inform bee on ken ed the Kooria | Ta ee hig =
and, floricuitural
AS
thronghout
LC PME
TET a EQ ipis
— ne^ late Mrs.
f Dartford.
entire
their experienced staff, and advance the
r the works. Equal facilities will be afforded
LIE
a xe e Land
owner or his 7 ents, or the any will undertake the
ir da ement b
money required fo:
m eiti or aee f the works and ma
ole « of the works and expenses
* the gore ved, to bo repaid
h charge fixed by the Lider
Er ex! Bacre 50 50 years for Lan: e and 31 Fears
for Farm Buildings, whereby — — — will bo kept
within miia "es e of the improved
"id
NU p pro t ie t en on any Works cies bythe Com-
pany, the seta o aram pue ees by the Inclosure
* w
e Cir
Ces or AGRICULTURE AND » CHEMISTRY,
PRACTICAL and GENERAL eae e —
wer Kennington Lane, Kennington, near Lo:
- uL T C. NESBIT, T, F.G.8., F. C. S., rip
The syst fs es pursued in the College comprises every
branch vreau 27 rand youth for thepursuitsof v rer
Engi Mining, Manufactures, and the Arts; the
Naval E Military A and for the Univer sities.
alyses and Assays of every description are promptly and
. The er and other par-
n to the Principa!
x yo KSHIRE AGRICULTURAL
ae AT SHOW aT H AUGUST 3 AND 4
r Prize 25 — apply to the eee Jonx HANNAM, Land
inet rx 1. 401 Wetherby.—May 21.
AGRICULTURAL a BEY OF -
NGLAN Ta E c a aA
RM GATES must be
38, Lo
tries for LIVE STOC iust be made on or before June 1.
All Ent Hoteies received in ech ease after those respective d:
will without any exception be disqualified and returned to
cm
Prize Sheets may be obtained on 9 at the Offices of
the Society, 12, Hanover Square, L.
“| The Agricultural
TURDAY, MA
uneriNcs FoR THE 1 :
WEDNESDAY, May 2 à
purposes, for preserving Y
the sum. for (2
@ scor — — rays of
frosts.
To | Crop
450
tion to in the soil and d rought, and j on 5 narter of an acre each, the seed used bei eing that | | weighing the whole produce, it [= i
insects, w o mast: 805 eo s inherited . Re ca of White Globe Turn — The sowing of the e 2 | to draw "for ern aei gay two pe
of the seed w Owing to bad management | was done on 19th and 20th June, E 57, and o with th earest the
3n this * ay 2 ms with branched | $ econd series all on "ihe latter day. The hoeing and | was not ae altogether, in sng cr to an ost care it
i erm SML nuits a the result of a tenden ey to era equent treatme sut. of every kin : were as sud as | commixture of the ures in tho > MSS.
e ossible uniform, and the utmost care was et.
EL x = gat, Isi sra g "e xm ts oo nene E s he following gta the results the appli-
are given, along witli the
Sano fo and gru vem of climate and the depre- m. 12 drills, and in tia second series six. etta oF | lied i in the manures as M eed
Having however bees well grown seed, we
. YELLOW ABERDEEN BULLOCK TURN IP.
8 oa Weight of Tur-| Organic Phos- Alkaline | | è Ph
it In eastern, “southern, and midland England nips produced| matter. | phates. | salts. m Sohne tee
more pe iae have aot a suitable Turni Tons. owt. Foo — Con
climate ; and Mangel Wurzel would be much more XL Warsi mance antl guano B0| 38. 841.2. 1 88
easily and success fully gie Even here how-|| IV. Guano alone " 11 16 100 „1 75 „ 105
it i Farm m ire alone 11 15 80| 75 : 3
ever it is rarely that a plant well started does not | vr Somer ville: Me teas 4b E] os
continue to increase ; and CraNDLER's water drill | | | xr. Farm anure, gua and nis xphos. 2 d 92 = 8 2 24
which, if used with diseretion, generally | | n manure end superp osphate .. | 2 25
. : VI. Stenh h uoc 10 40) — 88 | 1 50
pcs the brairding of 7 seed, is a 5 valuable Xm a 8 4 80.5 5 ni nlbrophosphate E ? 16 92 - N
ainst difficulties of climate. oil contain- | | e E ede
ne sufficient quantity of absorbent vegetable | | II. WHITE GLOBE TURNIPS
matter is another great security for success in this no 7 15 Ena —
uan | ..
mand ee Tal de — ERE CENE
the aids at arm man 0, an superp os. 2 2
island will n never be à ble mpete, in either | X — manure Fk superphosphate . n » 56 80 44 1 107
quantity or d of Turnip, ‘with the northern. yr, Bienhonse & Oo. Saperphoej bale : Tec us. 0
As to in tacks, the remedy hitherto xs | v XE: Stenhouse U8: 's nitrophosphate 11 14 60 .. 6|1 1
een to s. k: = 2 dee a condition as manure out of covered court . II NEED T a
e a rapid growth; a is plan is now being
supplemented by the direct action of machi Ms 8 extract ENG ob p "api ine eee tes the churn, and the butter wal
i e,
meets lime and other isto up k — alone and in combination with other fertilisers, stands not feed your cow s with Turnips until they
way t gren eoe Rd 9 : one 3 ‘hed greatly lower in the scale of the second series than it ró p previously milked, by which means the
H does in that of the first, while the other fertilisers, con- | anima 12 hours to get rid of the flavour of the
which had been an attr active fod ‘for them 3 a trasted among themselves, occupy precisely the same | vege etable. Good hay must also iven in sufficient
steful poison. What m e d ulti viz., 1st, guano; 2d need not add great cleanliness not only in
report of Mr. Row LEY’ 8 dust- blast f d, STENHOUSE & Co.'s superphosphate of lime; and 4th, oom: house — in € iry. No stale pieces of
grub we cannot sa ut it may be 5 pales Seas egen DO. "s nitrophosphate of lime. The explana- Turnip — t be allowed to remain in
that of all the di culties to bis the failure of tion of this curious result involves a question of great the mang wht seh. rl ald 755 clan ‘out before dig.
the Turnip crop is owing, more hinges on a defec- interest and importance to agriculturists. In the first | If your ‘correspondent does not feed largely, hec d
tive condition of the soil than on y other cause. uis e — the fi Jotie — ay peeling — Tur — pegs ng — the pice f ia
| rincipa resides,
bn and v — rm a oer X mee deis i zn — teli ap uut h Dit: 8 dh Ej salt 2 per ay purpose i
Kad est -Xus bo sh dupl oil sad Rond y ing to the old-established practice. cond | freeing th n of the strong taste imparted by
: serie it was taken direct from a large rt, vag .
n
obtained answers
from Warwie
ficial ne where it had been trodden upon by feeding cattle ave ickshire,
me d it d i 9 | throug! e previous winter, sheltered entirely from Che Soeren and Devonshire. Some of
ioa ressing of farm dung applied, but i in ‘spite | rain, and little exposed to the atmosphere. In botl f the nuisance to
everything the seed so br airded, and the plant cases ity by easure was the sins ; but it o the growth of some ill-tasted weed at thit
Ub that 29 t will be seen that the weight of — —— manure time; def appear to have bad mo experience of
uffücient to e ensure, edes the ensuing lied instane n that of common | — lained of; the only one who speaks
iof crops, the maintenance of the fertility farm -yard dung in the „ viz., “The cause of the unpleasant in your cor-
of the newly broken land- hile in ordinary years as 12 to 15. This is to be 9d perhaps; but it respondent „Res bu tte er is he Garlic, or what in
the a Snc the district does not exceed 1 y the eel
10 aie : the Swedish Turni was the == —— en to that t of sr ordinarily ndr is often found bei in ridi he leat is
uan of decayin vegeta empl oye ot be worked into t nd it was much like i Lily of the Valle a whi
3 » TE NNUS matter i T tho t turiy | ught i podle to “diminish es ot affi Sn e butter alter
soil, and of soluble mineral matter in the ashes | *
h
e proper
d Ag
reason of 2
ue
d
which this kind
ofmanureisusually me eastred —wasthe same. The the ae
the middle
the cows will not eat 1 he best w.
ty
80 much urged by
of June is, that it is then in flower, when
t it. T
early in ae or now, if not d
oone Joa IAEA
ayin to dipika
si Gss T
is Ner |
eultur bt B. of to parts
^ of management, rei. manure is i ete, appears | althou u T . z^ ard of instane *
xm mber w 0 p to publish stories ex- | to receive no support from these e due ERA sa Nor th m where the butter is not 1
hi d in the applicatio. ^ Art sis stands certain seasons of the year, and the caue W
8 other TOps. f Mr. GRANT relates third in | degree of productiveness, the less dec e ed | | attributed to ill- d plants pe
to the following subst re » at those times, more especially tlie wild Onion, dm
“Tt was resolv p n f th t all events, ‘it would | The herbage, certainly, tos a great deal to that x
viz. :— seem iat — manure, de only slightly fer-| flavour of butter and cheese, I ta
J.B 80
1. With the usual quantit y Wt fuuyud n mented, requires the addition of some special een Clover even affects it; in this county there is
ordinary way, without any othe [to act as a stimulant, or in some other way to render it | to a a old pastures for the .
eet R er Rope available for the nutrition of the * ers in Warwiekshire would examine
2. Half the quantity of perphosphate carefully ‘they — be able às er
s iall 3 Gs ass Uum
Imperial aere. x Sueno at p Ta of 3 evt. pet. combination ‘of {kenge d manure eg ph — zs tier had tho arid ad
ELM | quantity of farmyard m anure, with | e productive than either of them employed = We had about a dessert-s oi So
Lois ot guano at the mite of 1} ew, and alon ved in water, and put into every gallon
same weight of superphosphate of lime, sup- In the co comparison of the farm manure from the before it was churned, and a small bit of eam
plied pr Messrs. STENHOUSE & CO, of Newcastle- 1 court Paar at the bottom of the second was P luto 2 — due. when th
A Panai pne. With Eee y rdi arily rotted in fro the c he cream 45
à; eruvian erario alone, at the rate of 4 cwt, per} sy a epared howevi „0 ö ed that bola water for pe an hour, rn
* the available igit applied in the former | “tile the water cooled before »
Half — quantity of farmyard manure, case. e less re than : mately we h butter, but ce
— ition of superphosphate of lim. me at ti ct that this season of the y r had passed i
rate of 8 ewt, ies imperial acre. EUM they were in a a less available state in — ms inani; bat e — es pen
- STENHOUS e — e It is the cups at this season ay
ir ee, 5 Co, Co., of See yng cr in an immediately ava orsi con ition which i » = x e Sl ek pioa 2 ihe diny ;
7. . hos des wa rth 8), pour into it, in
p XT ae pos supplied F by M Messrs. | diate effect of any fertiliser; and fiis 7 — of T^ (ran a from t T — to a gallo Fer
— ie per i peii in this A ticular need not shake our | it over with a cloth, four times doable, s a
8. Sowers N 5 by Mr. man 8 as m im 1 of that mode — ; then strain and pour — into is resi ;
Ree ES S. M. SOMERVILL aiat Ma: arm whieh exposes cream. .Ihaveneverk 11
e Works, , Montrose, at the die d int e Ar least a atmospherie wast : . or the sut it less the i dairy-maid put a wood en cover o
imperial acr that found upon e — of these Tables „ even when
9. No manure or den ilis f t those manures which contain am removes any unpleasani >
10. Bone-ast ate of 13 EON es superphosphate stana hg Rain ammonia in well fed n. yellow. urnips and A 06
ae ash at the per acre, wi effects upon the Turni — est at Craigo in their — ther: no colouring Carrot,
tbe m additi 10n of double that pi of am appearance of summ b er Big $
NES: = ork.” 5. There is a vp pote
p 1 conducted in duplicate, or in TASTE Sere — whic o
two — es. m 2 recs series half an im] TRR follow? — e se of Turpe x 4 5 pre -
measured off for each experiment and | from previ 1 taste, aud €. nit -
ul : > previous volumes of the od to en
— Tem d T es 11 E
m
“Aberdeen Bullock ;” while for the "second series 3 all the | bad flavour. A drach rd M iy any other and never ver had the a abiti: s ot . disent
f butter put into the water of the via | m. cem. uoti, hot water dry away?
Max 21, 1859.
Turni nerally made
T bette . than . E sap 9 Oe any |
k v
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 451
om 1d. to 2d. per lb. be deduced from a knowledge of agricultural principles ; devoted to the fundamental princi
and th at, suc ch. bei ing! the e case, the question Proposed at der t would be but E — e A
2
|
a
et
E
8 5
BS
&
S
z
Q
8
2rd
2
2 85
E
g
E
e
12
H
255
ma never been known to fail where — rly a
n as 0.
he popu ular remedy in these parts is, to put
— of other questions with regard to these p prin-
ib s have been solved. The . question pea osed is, in-
dee
subject. 'These subjects have been followed in ma y
" e a
ini nsiances 2 Meg i men more with é pet to cond
to
obtain E results from the
sadi evident v g
d solved, but unti 11 1
ppli p ‘once under.
"E A
33254 30128 4} n
21 hat
E quantit ty o
]k, which answers wel
*
asd 8 a w.
got rid of in in 2 butter which I sent u, and
oug
is bn but its Are can hardly be said to
extend to the cheese and depre The writer ER
h so far as the milk
eet zi evil in the
ilk, i
unanswered or 5 80.
H
Ts x wes diet Qe 9 rules, founded upon
cations | of them which go pe incen — me
,
a practice —— has been more or less successful, 1
ad
century.
Now, there is no industrial occu upation the success or
in all agricultural nam — — opted. And in
many in — thes rules har tablished with
Md. f A th
failures of whic ha are more influenced by the operation
ft vesti-
rovince of science to invi
that d
The] erm ien Polos "er up for years wit tha meri a
degree of su y men who have cared meh ona
inal be t
1 +h a
culture. The farmer, then,
may
about such "principles ; “and this success
kee art to the hi oe — of pi
n he
mA Yr
as — of the method by w they we m
‘ucted. Iti is also tam true, — before by Mime bear u
oceani
ie currents, the
ay:
w how the 2 “of a
y le
— ‘et winds, unt 4 the laws of storm s, ships
For | shor
— io tha mee and commerce flou vished,
as stran ded on
evening, on Swedes, I beg
to i and
readers that the oniy precaution adopted i that the | o
e bei
cream, befor placed
ry an unknown 8 or
1 k, hundreds of
nform you
in the churn, shoul ld stand
raised to the vers werd
dious opera
qui
off upon those who patroniso 4
+ A by
thers rode smoothly onwards unharmed. Yet
withstan nding this success, no one doubts the ted
1 y be
principles, 2 thee can
prea iated by a cultivated
such as
only be understood and a
intelligence and an enlightened understan ning sa
1+
benefit that have vd — — the imm ense ex-
e b t
of 65° Fahr. This prevents a tedious o 77 — that har been y the mar itime ieultural
— and, with ordinary € Ten in t UY y. y the | populations until we have suitable agricultural schools
but made will never taste of Turni This is tl ical fi that and colleges at which the work of education shall be
whole: —— of destroying r^ —— of Turnips i in 2 — 3 purely, empirical are —.— 3 in commen nced in n you uth. Here in Ee. herea greater
butter; an experience of a dozen years in a large dairy the hands of empirieists; whenever ei ircumstances are has been bro to bear upon agri-
may be relied on. t bet iab mes cultural pectic sro broth N ‘ther yos 1 the, word
E — ou collect so man ons of cream before with. e nome in ntirely ine licable and are liable ve nd agriculture degree ion
E i Fer e e 3 Sue ch s systems | st rpassing t d ny other part vá kA 7 it has,
into th to begin with, and churn when the usu however, ye 2. ari in ord vail itself of
cont is ie “Quercus” is the authority for and défi of the persons by whom they are deve-| all the nivantages to s derived Noes he MAY of its
t ‘had it from a trie nd of his One — ey — — d the use of lime as — i in.
1 ge q y of ‘the quality the |iniversal panacea for all s e land; an other find ve have been arr this subject. upon the
3
^r. N
—
only object to be derived
spoonful of it to every ewe sation of — as iti is
*
d o the philosopher's stone, — is to fill the farmer's
1 en from da ily e experience, is to Tet your cows | pocket with almighty dollars, On the other hand,
have ps immediately after being could Tu satisfactory evidence that each “and
muked, r time: ry one these everal systems had failed under
10, "8. RS" a for the cause of n butter t
being bad both in texture and —
el Wurzel and Beans,
into i ge Fel
mix th — ui straw:
the plani
crushed, e iie
perhaps would not be a
few Swed
ry utensils, but cream churn
y cows 8 me last — — on Mangel Wurzel cut
a (Moody, F
ed wit 1
week. The butter mi in flavour, but crum
the spring ; I was able
— —— venient — —
the efficacy of which :
"m
n
f agri daun ‘Sipe
other —— thing that experi —— has proved to
ive a satisfactory result in limited circumstances, is
— t — or wood a
ashes es, or Y organic matter, or 0 cal salts, or — —
8 consider the ect of agricultural
When
ee we s shall find that one P] the great t advan-
tages o of the ndy of Mos uem principles i in 3
be
s fed o
with serapulons
uld find instances enough in e ee
Maryland, and Virginia, of the farmers | coming t
tion of the masses of the x M ulation. Iti
fact that = —M €— of England, Ger.
tit
many, and France constitute
the population, ndeed, to sng characterise them as
ignorant. does not convey f the com-
4}
only a week.
me) Turnip-cutter, and |
to do next. Empiricism had well-nigh left A ——
xm dd
moral and mental Serre of the English farm
he
how er is the subject of remark with every y for oreigner
char butter
Nee s |W
add Rape to the abov. e Tod,
=i ate e, and | o
a day to ench cow, 3
eriti with à
es, and a ‘sprinkling at times of Carrots, all cut
m di rt, and . ovine chaff.
think
o tra averses the country. With ter, to occupy
duties of i he farm, he
— salts, and guano.
Not very — 2 since one z v 88 results
ö
p t of our 1 al
the state of vegetation. — —
the most incontestable — e that
rs out a wearied existence, 5 thinkin only of those
duties in connegtion. with the pittance he receives r
a means of
ily necessities. "or principles and prac-
s 1 fe perform what he does, and
why
mnection between one part of his labour an
in the zodiac, and
some had afforded
— planted in the wrong “sign” would — i de which might constitute a theme upon which
9 COP
and that corn
me
er
[ud
2
ae
=
8 2
ç
c
E
b I
have used Beans, but find them neither so — nor so
eap as cake.
twi a
(To be continued).
THEORY OF A
Bv
GRICULTURE.
Dr. Evan PocnH.
(See pages
LETTER III.—TRE Best MEANS
TH
223, 319).
T
or R
E reed PROFIT.
— T to consider i is
ital Mond
under otis plan some
sub-planetary eben exhibit certain pecu uliari
Empiricism had no doubt about the tli 5 its
conclusions ; it did not hesitate to answer such a Ae
tion as that at the head of this i bebe = yes e con
fidence that ignorance ‘ons coul
alchymist with his — losopher's s stone pes ib pet-
experime - fro which 1 moder: chemistr Ty would
or
| shri pai : :
tice wou ld boldiy —.— upon ground where science Our common schoo course, which has as “the refer on
— st invariably the ars, and the only
that is ask
by the aed farmer. He too often
cares little about look king after if he can but
41994
empiric is confident because he
ng.
seen nan are he Ate to know,"
d since it is t his Toad
or | between the individual 1 ings be: pen
not how i us the liter may be, 5
patible one phase of his m may have been wit with
to agriculture as to the er of the moon,
inly p aliv
The trusts
senses rather than to his understanding. Like the Po
on -
"hos when the
ital dly di Animals that v were 6 tore because a more intelligent labourer, he know:
1
.
In or grater Gtd least in the Free States) teas we
have sect cg class, the fath eus d eigen athers
and the children
of hoi been, grand-
children of Mao will Per mply labourers, without any
capital, this EE stultification does not exist, but
ve 1
n there the of oS oim: ral inte igati —
our “hired me Ea the result of a mental
MA devo ted 2 d pio foreign to that of their
da
aily av satione than to these. At the termination of
When. the study of agricultural c Sie of
science in gen neral as applied to schon shall have
8 it is still sufficient to “know” that hi
The man of science, on - ral hand, is ever ready
ses to what manure
— 0 — e what kind of iasbandry shoul
adopted in order to give satisfac alte ar nd then to
ne a. ah 4 1 an d the
e 0 seniti c
sideration of the relations between the manure — or
followed
and
the elect produ ced.
ses if he cannot bring
it into harmony with his understanding. Isola pos fa x
to him have no value. „Facts mportant o
The TE
+. 1 +}
re only i Ben
rJ 41 4
our farm s, th o tof
to our
- | the scaffolding of a eee
e civilised w
gebe ded communi-
| ties, and et such eeh is i brought about, we cannot
ed.
| hope that such clearness can be attain
prineip les. d full
275045 58 ms e wA. the er ise Arg
"
ld will nev
transcendant gti v which £
e | or indeed
S become o of tittle
to do cultural
e parti
ions by which the immortal Newton satisfied himself
that
a ——
caring anything about wh
= be so a i the object
show that no such
— results, 5
he gets them. And it sha =
of t € present. article
e uy
as the square of the distance.
Panes once understood, a
becomes a 8 cng in the d
facts, d in the control of causes.
ey, or raise the
crop at the least ex ies
e E
Practical
rule can be given, except it
ELA ich have contributed
greatness of the present owe
it of their development 2
ce.
that transe
- | the idea of universal een ee but it a never care
— the of the observa- | con:
the gravitating force -—— directly as the mass | si
—
i
D
THE G2 RDENEI its’ CHRONICLE A
Rome, he says and truly says engulfed the agricultural | mixed and wo oed along with Hemp. The fo
prosperi y ft of Italy, then of Sicilya and lastly of a finer and soft ax. The best seed is pos waich is |
Northern e bulky and 5 SE of a clear colour,
| brilliant, add vithont 1 or sour Saad. an wich
nd
AGRICULTURAL GARETT
riner giv es | of
' Overstone, has kii 205 M
Mr. Baker's SEA Mr. Wallis
ait
by the papers he has read — — Pa
iid ew E to d ie ud r
or Considera
however,
—
t
p
n followed i e | sinks in wate n burn t consumes rap idly and |
present moment the ag so ans wealth of England, clearly, A
Scotlan o and Ireland is carron away by the sewers mination.
of towns great and small, nerer to be
partially and for a time from the guano islan ds, nto
These kingdoms are in thg position o of a
ne 5 ea arms and
bl o pro n or no dde provision
made to keep ap his strength and repair his los In
dire
very
5 this test pe
d in vs sta
which they plac f
takes place Pe w within ga hours ihe see
relied upon ; is retarded to a space: of thr
days, ess N ee unequal the xd is no
relied u Two-yea -old se ed. may be sown | without
d towns, the indirectly. the ich,
‘that
poor isa Say but
fer from the retention ee ould, f | ha rvest—
ied,
not mix xed—so that it will germinate "i.
seed may. serve for three or four years; after th at it
degenerates rape: Y us rotatic cn adopted exercises an
e
influence most im
Zt
ped
t profitable
Rebirws,
andlord, Tenant, and Ia in
a their Inter ests. By W. 1 ere of Pa
way, Piccadi Vti
s is the leu “elective title
. Fisher
H his
ofa rd et i t in whi
Bec rsho 1 on Cop yho pee
fer of EUR respes ecti ely wh which h Md d on ele
before the Central Farmers’ Club.
" p l'he co onclasions to which the Club were led "x
crop. In co N E this it may b
axiom that the more rarely the crop c upor
| the same soil the better the produce. Short rotations
exercise a most unfavourable influence upon the
» | andi w hereyer they have been introduced with a vi ew E
oduct
tailing misery
and d
3, Wellington Ped p: se May 12
oe orre responden ues
xii of the ae WES
with the) nature are required, m rotation extends over a period
— Il lof 18 or 20 year g 5 from the
grown makes upon the e
f the Flax. Where Flax i 5 pun
—
BRUG: Bc Apri
Flax districts of Flande ers ym Su ex tras
agrieultur ieh y no mea nef pro
Wirin abi “localities marked by
of the fields, by the depth of ae cultivation,
: and ne ric chm S of their e crops, if P T i is 2
east very nearly per yn s to | tion exter od of 5 to 10 years; in E:
elevate. the. agricultural ‘position ri "this wonderful | Flanders, of which ch Ghent i is the chief f town, i x extends
country at the expense of that of E Gf 5 to 0! is Pus rop s
deem our statement to
and has no equa
try. g can ced the untiring indus
the farmer in e soil "e e v APP ing the mare
and car 3 c— the the plant i
its st ages;
mar at garden od
from the iur Genntity of manure erb ed, as in i the
case of the Onion, &c.
h| Tn West Flanders a six- years’ rotation is as follows:
Ist year, Potatoes; 2d, 1100 «piu Pad ada S being |
rs wagte d; 3d, Flax; 4 ; 5th, I
Eis nine-years' rT Rod: is as follows :
e is; 24, Flax ad pee 3d, Wheat, che,
olza wi Clo
cultural operations. You ough
districts which convey the idea of i entia
and it is only by
E
o | ford, ten. ant, and
“1, On the Beer-shop System.—That the: 4
: ; stem. at off
beer-shop — stem is to coterie’ in the ste! of te Pra
character — Peg of t ultural
does to
onesty. o
2
TO
duty ofevery one
suppression of —— 3. Titi
eo ro eter pal
e req or
or erai and Es tr
capi
injurious ‘to the public, and inconvenient to
the tenant. nia
t
ct
(za
c
1
these tenures mud in effected as soon as
equitable terms, due regard being had to the
cla ain ns 5 a parties
nd Transfer.—1. That the difficulties att
the 33 of land have generally become 80 many and eri-
888 — 9 der Sre — the serious attention of the
ing effect
bis andj
them.
aidander
nent —— — as buildings. — ——
properly come from the landlord ; and to thé
who are consequently deprived of those opportüni pin-
vestment, an d the advantages of increase sese rtm ag
would otherwise enjoy. 3. That the first and most
means for removing these difficulties would be the im
nent of the laweof real pro; impli titles
Hi
These perfectly jus i
ments Ux statements preceding to n ed
worth the perusal of any one seeking information oa
SEDED us here call attention to the immense store of
valuable agricultural pope. 1 v3 EN
he Farm e
a survey of their that you . — to 5 olutions are
ee AME the rae o of — which must have at, Rye or 1 7th, — — e Ur € Scr S, Oats s is xii ti
2 — wes ndi by en Clover, e DEL with Wheat; 9th, Clove
ro at ite; looked upon as a Sivit which Seles more d Bo ad e 99 ce s (Bast P tates: Hemp,
8 E T EA S Qu QUAE Nd mci 24% a after er Polatocs Ea Hemp, E ne.
Wheat; 3d, after Rye or Wheat, Flax and C
Flax. cultivation involves uc decem good P» and Carrots ; ach, Clover, t if € Vedder now v of many y ears’ duratio
PETEAR rn. Es
own i dünne ie 3d _— as above,
| Bats, aer the Es Barley Buck.
| mox r Rye, a after Barley: ES Ry s Where
the ih ginous plants are cultivat ed, sA Ra ape, the
ti P,
e pr actice
while i Es s
what means e Flemish farmers e
r
7 modes of relier it is wo Rje; 0
ing r how, and b
fro
reatest Miet 1 uten or ts
ualified to discuss them, must include zd
8 acces:
sible tha an it resent is.
74
followin g isa nine-years’ rotation: —1st. ye
2d, , lax nd Turnips; 3d, Oats with Cnr: "us
z Stb, 9 M Rye, 7th, Colza; 8th, Barle ey;
ee and T
e manures employed and the
resilt of its enlti it t i
f pr eparing H the land for the r reception of the
t
i ore frequently Beten upon as a robin
rei. That it is
Tr
— cum rei ot = the dom | remain x tee of practical i o be
of it dverted to — e to ones ii RE and
| an early ese nication
We bare Mit us a —.— le of soil taken n fun a ne |
1 district. at — sede — —
English farmer à
Societies.
cf Scd AGRICUUTURAL L OF EN 3
The es of cai roposed for election were
read.
The eet A of — Belgian Legation
y WEE Cov held We E
Ms ay PN s present Col. — d in the Chair
4 ndidates p;
y cartyi
ing, the wee de dà Aaa t there |
Er to the
is who might, "T are persuaded, with tie penp m
of the authors, edit a num un of useful volumes
the materials thus at ipo te xs
would command a large eres of readers. i.
nl
Miscellan
Halkett’s Guidewa 2 Ü
of laying down rails p 1 farm 1
ae and carts for the carriage requir advan-
travelling upon geb rails. 1 5 a following at wl
tages are thus gain
€ ma bed for the ETC
ot car ris a nd —_
transmitted |
Eh
et
coming more than ever an u
econom iie cartage of the farm; nbi one
ng
rot:
ation, . Sun d copies of th of the International Exhibition
dide same sS ans —.— — > all thie that the at Mesping Machines. to Lec riores under
fi ess in Flax cu Fl the a re of the Central 7 — Society of
essentia beir : of Pies S Hon, Leslie — laid before the Council
soi as apparatus adapted to
Even a soil of sw e Lighting fum be dings and nd ables and private Lev —
ving iself for a year he w
led
He sta bourer could es
mee sit,
oils. EIE ii the - wa the cost of gas v aried from 2s. 944.
experience r is that Ere: = =
0| rations of F the year, — as we as ma Š
Be ng the ground in
n, the
the vean
i
END
ue
—— tions, besides those o f ploughing, 8" do
soiling, rolling, harrowing, &c., which
On ? some lands, after a long continuance
follow e
i
o ‘Gen price —.— the rond used. —
on .
ced farm
— and fertile; ne eit ther (M Fiaker
a P nin x
i
d by perhaps two days of rain,
wee ther, the mon is dry, but un pe pig
hole is as tender t
Mr. Fisher H xp detail | 80
| tive to the Turnip mom and his ——
ravages made by it. The Council ex ir hope
that Mr. Fisher Hobbs would. — ches eee —
this statement at the — Council to be held
Wednesday next, the 25th
Adjo "mE to Week kly Council, on 25th inst.
.
r too w ry.
finest Flax di yx ous j
or In the strong, ft, hum
good s seasons grows toa
m site filaments.
1
rer
fir
y. In Co i
is dee: élayey sa sa - In -—- neighbourh
Bruges the soil is dn as also in the Pays de Waes,
2 2 East Flanders Ae, for the fineness of
i a
he choice of seed exercises one impo ortant influen
‘lai s
TI
upon the Flax cro isi ie Dis
iseussion, We
en Wie re still too SES
stan
which i p ape next — of the paas Club. Ar. sed Wa i
whi
„ W, which is cultivated
cde trong Flax,
ience rela- “8
in lessening the | Wi
ii
ed with a feather. —
i
irf
a
n [And shp fue mer can y et go a
g the
e pla
a rine e the surface
er
E
3
s
system I can hoe froin
ith the greatest precision, without pu
d: jg:
a favou
earth fine, or.for put
EIS
set
i
E
d
$e
| Max. 31, 1859. | THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE _AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE,
453
L———& acres of 1 be drilled. The] TURNIPS FOR EA ———
150 or r 200 acres of land m may
| iive — carrying out the various operations I will not UTTON’S LINCOENSHIRE RED "GLOBE; ithe Te Lo, either. wholly s rt
| manner ht. I refer gentlemen esirous of heaviest cropper wh. This sort is superb collection of Exhibit s ,
to to-night. 8 Red C y Turnip — na S grown in 1 The CACTI, CEREUS, EPIPHYLLI, — (s mens. TALL
amining th subject to the professional papers of original stock M presented te to Messrs. Surron by the late | been exhibited at all the Metro plitan Shows for They have
exa ber, 1857, r ead at the F fi avern, and Philip Pas — 8 Zsq., with the carnest desire that he might be | Being large and numerous the owne vishesdo ed Lngd iem
17 1858 before the Society of Arts. But allow me to poppe annually with Seed of the same sort. Price 10d. Per Ib.“ Z bon € in exchange for Camellias, —— * - "-
^ e bushe UNN, G r to J. R. we
draw your a arts of the subject not ge ar SOMERA! ANIAN WHITE GLOBE TURNIP; the largest End, Hornsey, N Scott, Esq., Harringay Park, Crouch
discussed. Let me, for p oara consider a rotation of parr en urni e 9d. per lb., or naa! by the bushel. — —
taking first the Gras Inasmuch as my my deni thrive well o st soils, and are good - Y TARNER'S IMPROVED LIQUID MANURE
"op the carriages run n the rails, the economic feeding be previous to Wheat pete rtg "Goods delivered carriag OR GENERAL PORTAB
pee are so great that I am enabled to cart water —Royal Berke Seed Establishment, Reading. && Sox's Putent are i died with J. w.
and distribute it on the land at 1s. per acre, giving about | Two HUNDRED GUINEAS IN EICHT PRIZES. and cannot clog in action. Tbe barrel
gallons on that space. Secondly, I am enabled to Qm Ss ve is of g ilv —. iron, not likely to
mow by the machine at a grea saving; and I 2 à corrode, n be raised
n cart the large crops which some of the artificial & 3 , ua Ha cd n Mad
G ill yield, if watered and repeatedly cut, at au Eee shoulder to any pond ortank required.
ually reduce rge. If this be considered, it will | Fon Four Years T era d. ae Price of 4) in, Pump, with legs, SI. 36.
equally T' i-i ol cant b orkid PRINCE Loue Pags "OPE t p AWARD ; If with planished copper barrel and
beseen what a large herd of cattle may be supporte — CHAMPION 0 at the thie t qudm be iron handle, &c., 14s. extra,
with summer food, besides raising a o pur SE rm Rud Bóüth; Bit 0 8 Agrien — ^ 1855, he barrel is 27] in. long, and the legs
manure. The root crop also, for the r 1856, TU, PE. j 5 pes m r lb., em ER. hig igh. gi
chea] r the bushel, carriage free. ese Pumps are also e without
stated, of better c ginem a fom the grent 2: bun um Roy al Berkshire Seed Establishment, ecg the legs, with strong wrought-iron
l ance of manure, will yield much, larg straps for scrowing on to any ordinary
~ jnereased quantity of meat will thus be raised —whilst water butt or cart, and fitted i vith E à
tte land being richer, the cereals al 1 inch brass union coc
| crops. —— Independent — = 4 15 m r i sts a Hh incu Gutta Percha- 0 A
E Lia — — x " ROYAL SOUTH HANTS SEED Lügen, qi. PHP uad
ant UNDER THE PATRONAGE OF THE PRINCE CONSO!
| for interest v renewal, w ili appear strange rr AND G AGRI- SP 6 fort o odor brane -— inches in diameter, 2 lengths
the profits afford thus a very ere interest upon the CULTURISTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, re a pes ni re
capital hid Es x show ld look for the s system to be AGE AND TOOGOOD S ST TOCKS have produced E. ay be peice ge "X any Ironmonge er or Plumber in town ot
adopted as er of course? The amount of the the finest s ae exhibited at EX: and are so untry, at the above prices, or of the Patentees aud Wa
- ied i is — mo “moment at all; in fact, the — — „ with ang house a Tri he trade, 2 som Warner & Sons, Jewin St., London.
rond eee E T y EN ~ Puen f ‘heir pies oie m NER'S PATENT Nr ING STANDARD.
i^ bett Per lb.—s. d. * e
upon what security can pout opita vi e 5% | Hardy Green Round. 0 6 | | PATENT CAST-IRON PUMPS feed with J, W. & Bowe
than on | . All that is is wanted is to ascertain n that | Ex e 2- 098 — Weeks .. 0 6| Patent Buckets -— — which cannot 7 9 for
the system is true. I, grant there is a “difficulty at the | Ashcroft se 06 . 2 6 | Farms, Cottages, and Wells, not exceeding 28 feet
present; for the farmer who takes the e greatest interest |-G Op ^. ws 906 Yellow Globe Mangel |... 0 6 8
ime or Jeffery's .. 0 9, Page’ C GER „Orai * 1 ^ — a E ae Picked bl f, £. M
9301 d Glo! sho: in. lead, \ 1 10 0
believe "will corroborate my 27 of the work poor e eN Turnip 0 6 | Elvetham Lon "e 7 7 » long 3, 3, | gutta pec] 119
illing to lay out goo» on his 1 e Page'sImproved Red Globe 0 8 ae MT : 6 17 er $ » $5 E cast iron E E 9
po^ not suffi Scotch or Bullock. .. 0 7,| Long Yellow 0 7 34, ditto 3,, 6,, anged pipe 2
prope perty ace Wo its adó tion. But —— Pomeranian White Globe 0 6 | White Belgian Carrot e , ditto 3, 6, ( asrequired. 5 30
appreciate the sys A the | Early Green Globe | .. 0 6 | New Red vds 247, short, with 15 feet of Lead Pipe
proved, money m y be borro wed for the Purpose, the „„ White Tankard . . 0 7| Long Altringham .. 418 attached, Le for be fixing +-..214 0
same g Red Tankard + 501 Cattle Cabbage 10 diis: Deus e
ee eee: a . .9 i ve
e yen, by C56 0r + = will L eati) S Yellow di . 0 74 Dwarf Essex w 04 The short barrel Pum; onvenient
system. nd if i Pana this Furie ty have acquired the enormous weight for fixing in situations dr anten height and
then receives, after payi als, a net income | op 2 — shown at Sealed Gub. quot eM the supply of opem and sinks in
of 4000“. a year, there i is p^ "Title doubt; that his| BUCKWHEAT, MUSTARD, LINSEED, TARES, SAIN- ith soft water from under-
— will be followed wheresoever it can be. Afr. FEN Coin LeTC M SIS ian AN RYE A Y: $0 ots Foreing X desired,
ER - uses ; ^ may be when desirc
Halkett at the late meeting of t — Lon m Farmers’ GRASS, CLOVER, &c., at lowest m. meter tae
Club. Special contracts for large 888 packed for May be obta tained of any Ironmonger or
—— to all parts of the world. : Plumber in Town or — try, at the above
Calendar of pe ford Street and Above Bar, Southampton er ag rof the Patentees and Manufacturers,
> JOHN WARNER & SONS, 8, Crescent, Jewin Strect ndon.
VURNIPS AND MANGEL WURZEL $ kH Sii Every description of Machinery for cer Water by means.
W. 160. E ES derfully short spac eu Gente. AND s eig of ia 18 hom of W hoole Rams, Deep Well Pumps, & so e ey and Garden
ESTER Ross: May —1 na wondertuliy shor e St; t, the Ls ri ural Socie' & e
of time we have from the extreme cold and E 8 of E land," X aed o ths Tas Ape hé Bock Engin c. Kc. Engra vings s sent o on “applic
vee a and drought of Sud g Dat U The Feola and sgricalturists generally that they hase still o a hand a pa ARD ILES ws 18 p
only since we su of the differen AND itannia Ira
could not be wn becanse of wet: Gare | also. selected stocks of HYBRIDS, SWEDES, and. other Works, $m BRED Es HOWARD Kriba y
complained of violent east rel rebar n E SF TURNIPS en paneer ATENT PRIZE HARROW P
now we say the weather is unbearably hot and dry. As low 6r Orange Globe; Led slots de: — MAU.
is not yet any great want of D where the ground not : z UEXIP "acc "es à
3 UR. , à |
peatedly stirred, and as the othe ground hee no wl aaan ton Palio’ I — . imi
way replay. ^ ys of sock heit ENS Green top RI vik. strongly mended, and bears
cro} m
. late sowing.
uch as they would Baye been with a more Purple-t op Swedes S ing’s Swedes
T r Oats which were = sown wet, and in Globe cd | — HH sorts
dition, bere. come away nicely, and are making GRASS SEEDS or Permanent Putas, Cemeteries, and
: arley also presents a regu ir and vigorous ü as | Church Yards, pho and Grass
got a start.
y good e
gu aeri and h
good start. Wheatis advancing rapidly, but ald
ofa
lac
rass plots, &c.
RENOVATING MIXTURES for old Swards.
shower, as the dark green is already PRICED Li
e toa gre
ISTS sent free on application.
beginnin giv a green greatly lighter, and much
more unpromisi good shower within a few days would
be greatly advan ous. Potato planting is ne finished, |
d the earlier planti are c bove und.
' toes have been very low priced this sez ing on]
from 27: 30s, per ton, the common are planting more y
CORNER OF
HALF- ON St.
— — MO
marketa great = ny beasts changed, bande. ripe 3 of PiccapriLy, Lonpon. W.
Ke:
some 10 per cent. upon the ar] Pri ze for the Best Ge neral Purpose Bine.
be sf of pe cattle were . pe Keri whet prices TURAL GRASS SEEDS. The First Prize for the Best Light Harrows.
we the seller had a considerable profit notwith- R, E NSON AND SO THE The First Prize — the Best Drag Harrows.
eR Tow farmers i » this = rhood some week QUE PP uine | For which mere -— All 8 om last offered by the
ago. so eir winter stock to a uld- a ho failed Royal Agricul — ng! „ VIZ
dc - à money, or take off 2 cattle — e EE) [he valuable kinds e 12 pi * EE Ho 5 88 the ate
r being kept for some weeks, were disposed of at a loss of . $ pin to their Implemen
some 2. per head. Upon the declaration of war Wheat rushed gr —— ds e Spader 148 eSI — the Mops fast state Apt. ‘or F P 'PLOUGHS, HARROWS, and
up some e r quarter, and farmers weré con- S Railway Ban E RAKES, several years gained everg
gratulating other upon their unexpected windfalls, the y Prive for which the — api Bet —
price as rapidly tum tumbled “down aga in, leaving us disappointed PRICED LISTS may be had free on pi PLOU N H Bi
littl and will for e time be, busily tion.—PETER —— & Sos, 27, Great George D PLOUGH, fora Pay * £2 8
weather — . pla for Turddpé, a — more suitable Street, Westm DD ditto for one Horse 85 T či 6$ 0554
tha FETT “JACK OF NEWBURY” SWEDE, ETC. PP icto for general pr purpose e uos
LIU m t t ETER €—— AND SON, THE| SKIM COULTER for P or PP Plough „ So AE
Notices to Cérrespo 4 5
HARR
Abpresses : G H Haig.
ow
A Set of Three ee z ARROWS, with Wuippletree,
ndents. E
Ch me m qute Ami Mr Coleman,
N tention to their genuine S
. recommended reral Seed Harrows, 9] feet >
Slight, engineer, Edinb : ressing machine, Mr. f i the LO' as 5 No. 31
Game: R. An association. been formed at Chester *' n ji A Bet. of Three ons HARROWS, with
of the Un national evil by enforcing the existing laws S/S ha a very fine tree, adap uri Horses, 10 ft. wide, mm
ot [oe are opposed, letter and spirit, b o m :
preserver of game and. the injurious to the morality of the of which w ere shown at or 8
degree as th „ Stands . mer Club | Show.
— — — r mence with — may no
— if these ace NOES rd wil to dual preservers, as — ppm r. the T e th
7 for nuisances. T bs followed by indictm: not — E bo filler u wp goes 8 thao is a partial
: Tur CurwEsE Sucar SoRGHo: X. In the Trench ing ot — a ess, — weight ae
5 it is —— on e authority of the d P4 pot Swede, 5 dioi:
P. L. & Sow also selected a. first-rate Stock of
MANGEL WORZEL. SEED; which hey can confidently
recommend. Their natural GRASS SEEDS have been also
saved with very great care, and they are ready to sup y them j
ase Oy Permanent 4
the Sines e a on or the p cattle, the journal of or 5 for laying down
one-half, and Ag exhi
of f smo." bited e
Tug Hon. 5
dc D Mr. S. PurPPs.
1 ina a leading" article last week. Weta wierd irtypo
Mc Ene. Lai t appears to us S the successful rejoinder of
aust postpone their publication for a week.
454 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Mar 21, 180
JJV D ra a1 2 BM
SHANKS PATENT LAWN MOWING MACHINES
USED IN ALL THE ROYAL GARDENS.
NEW AND PEON IMPROVEMENTS FOR MOWING, ROLLING,
COLLECTING, AND DELIVERING.
ES OF THE HORSE POWER PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, DELL e G, AND DELIVERING MACHINE
RICE
1 sed b Macbine—(usually drawn by a ) Machine—(usually n by a Po
= — oen — drawn by a Horse) 24 o 0 No. cs E inch do.—(usually Pers d n Py. a P or Donkey)
we. ae do. (usu drawn by a Horse or Pony) 2010 0 Wo, 5.— 25-inch do.— (made light for a smal Do key) 1 10
Machines Nos. 1 i 1, 2, 8, & 4 have the Patent Delivering Apparatus * No. 5 can either be had with or without this i improvement; b
if with it, 30s.
en OF TEM Ben ‘MOWING pom ROLLING arr metn
Wo. 6.—22-inch Machine "a 7 ides 8.—16-inch Machin 4 el àé
Wo. 7.—19nch Machine . 9.—13-inch Machin „ M :
"mm pes uae ned y on application. :
LONDON AGEN
MESSRS. J. B. BROWN & CO., 18, CANNON STREET, CITY, LONDON, E.C.
AWNS—IN USE IN THE ROYAL GARDENS. PATENT LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MACHINES.
AMUELSON'S | Eig BOYD LAWN MOWING
and ROLLING HINE, the only one that w.
bandied, and feadily 1 5 X SAMUELSON'S LAWN MOWING M ACHINIS,
UU UD EUER S ecd W. ITH BOYD'S PATENT IM PROV EM EN TS.
: . Tondon n Bridge; or the | Works, Banbury, Oxon. ai u Doing tds work of five MEC PARU na d. : 2 ads
E S es, ep. > .
y ie E EW PATENT M
- — — 1 at any berg 7 self. —
and a ult o the use of duplicate sets of cutting parts. rices
gud i Y idu pan AS i st „ cone Ps dy —— The following PRICES include the Carriage to any Railway Station in England:
eee Oo die ricco With Boyd and Samuelson’s
introducere n Eus taken place, — gad Adi usting
M Makers ctfully caution the public to see that the y g
tt FERRABEE'S Patent." are c: on every Machine.
JAMES FERRABEE & Co., Phoenix Iron Works, Stroud 9 inches wide, for ve: — — — 4 borgan)
ae 8 PATENT “TA WN MOWERS I2inches wide
have ed to be the best by the appointed ju n
all — of Componer Full illustrations, with bare er of of xv 3 heces isterod arrange-
improvements for the present season „ will appear in this 19 Sachen wide, "ditto i tbe om màn) 8
: E next week. 22 inches wide, ditto (for man and boy)
OMAS GREEN, Patentee and Sole Manufacturer, Smithfield 22 inches wide, ditto for ditto, and E
Iron Works, Leeds, Yorkshire; and 2, Victoria Street, bottom fitted with dra ht fhks for spon
of Hi x, Repairs ne at either of the Establish- | and a man 90 work it ENT $15 Ses
ments, where every information may be obtained, —— err y be obtained. 25 inches wide, ditto. 11 11 0
HANKS'S PATENT LAWN MOWERS are — — 30 inches wide, ditto idee n pony 1 M 3 13
tionably the most perfect Machines for M. Box of Tools, Oil Can, ther
Vi extant. SHANKSS Horse es Machines e; Sirius ds of — nisiken,
aan See MN Ral Collect, No Deliver the | naw — um
ooo oo
Case included.
SHANKS’S PATENT MOWING INES. of Europe, are pronounced SUPERIOR
AND C. LEE, NURSERYMEN, s Hummerenit, have to amy other for lightness of draughi
e great confidence in recommending these as the most |efüciency, and durability. The deman
complete Mowing Machines offered to the pullis They have | for them is yearly increasing the number
had ‘perience with SHANKs’s Machines, and have ever | supplied by Mr. S. uring the
found them do their work admirably, effecting a great prenn years 1856, 1857, and 1858 being more than
in la hw and em liable to get out of a Forterms,apply |2100. Testimonialsare continually being
to the Agents, J. . LEE, Nurserym me received from gentlemen ‘having them in
ICKSLEY, SIMS, avp CO/S (by Rovat Lor | i3, ofthat efclngy. s en
TERS) PATENT LAWN MOWING MACHINE. an e the only Machines that will
well as dry Grass without
Mop. the knives.
— for 1859 should be sent at once
to in u delivery and to prevent
—— intme —
| B. SAMUELSON, 7, ‘Cannon Siret “West ES E =
Manufactory, Britannia
, Oxon
Gaedaman in the Kingli
— —
or to MESSRS. —- ASD es London ac or any Runs i
CARSON'S
ORIGINAL. ANTI- CORROSION PAIN,
ATRONISED BY
w 4)
CANAL —
LEIGH, Lan LLIERIES,
P., 8. Tun British GOVERNMENT, Hon, East in COMPAN RAILWAY AND
Sut ~ genen hi awa — — n d HE FRENCH GOVERNMENT, Most or THE NOBILITY ENE GENTRY, THE PRINCIPAL CO!
Tor n elt i TE Rosas GOVERNMENT, New River COMPANY, — OWNERS,
aplicity of construction, nes “regularity of SRJ sna Dus QoNSORE Tar Doc 0 Ko. &.
samy ante work for mowing every kind of plain, cir- A — ind of
eos 5 uy 1 t orie vir abra uim “Ee, wh etely to po The ANTI-CORROSION PAINT is now used extensively for all
4 beteaction
the machine, at the Eu. aga WORK
or [0d , of ose
no cnr ee y can be try rand o € dies and slopin sping | Se Such as heus Wood, Stone, Brick, Compo, Cement, &c., and has been proved, after d re sn e rana f l
Ee date being th hrust forward or be drawn from be other Paint; and being et ei tad "ia Conservatories, a d any n ipt
Thirdly, this is ihe ont my machine made that will work round descriptions, ts constantly used by eus Chee n 5 eminent Hi no enil 0 i Anti-
quick curves ; it will work easily and effectively round circular It i Ea — lower in Price and lasts gm as se Leni e Lead, and can
—— p boom Obata My ice the front pare rt 7: GN diae € various Colours, reiting S — .
the machine our newly. invented universal acti weed self i a powder, and will keep any len ngth
—— — — a we l guiding balls. The — corse:
revolving of these spherical guiding balls, under the i e n Tos
7 — — gate falis g most White — mieu — 85 . 848. per cwt. Light and Dark Lead .. t ake NAUES per ort
Fourthly, we have attached to this machine a rack and pinion Light 3 Light and Dark Chocola Loro
motion, for adjusting the cutting parts (there- being à rack Diab or Portland 8 = . ht Ponto) 2
and pin S on -— side of the machine to act conjointly at Bath do. zx v. 325 ” —— A» (or Brick 428. „
the same time upon the full len — pe of ery knives), in other Light and Dark Yellow do. in d z pu
machines a cing tedious, and uncertain operation, into one Copper. s i — 605.
of quickness, ease, and — m zz Light and Dark Ok. EL Blue (for nd Deep Gree tei ans PETER
Patent. Lawn 3 Fx Machine ^ 19 m pei OIL. TURPENTINE, AND BRUSHES, ;
tto t 16 -— TN
Ditto ditt dito „ Lo610 À Copy of Testimonials (700), will be sent upon = plication to 1 pr
22 „ Grea’
Patent eid and Gorse gme: * £2 5 to 92 ? WALTER CARSON & To (Successors to Inventors), 9, t wi
a t Mi r ee 310to 101 4
CEE pnw — 3 ar the Ro — London, E.C. M
„ Bone Mills.. ve 27 10 to 150 0 . e pee pu me SE
» . Mangles, various 210 es 12 10 NO AGENTS THROUGHOUT TEE UNITED EIN NEU.
ILLUSTRATED C CATALOGUES can be had gra |
Max 21, 1859.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 455
COTTAM & _COMPy, Engineers, Founders, &e., [ESSENGEI. Honticvrrenas, e and
2
e PAT
WINSLEY STRE ET, Maxu FACTURER, Loughboro 25 *
»
T — Eee m emend Divisionless Horticultural pm ions,
with — — by — 1 the or front
he ength of house —
complete ‘satisfaction Aus numerous Testi-
y
. a n show), for the 8:—They are Ae
ULTURE. — — appea —— more Mart and
cheaper an any other ca
A SEOW ROOM D DEVOTED ENTIRELY 10 ARTICLES — ae Three years’ iri wed his PATENT BOILER to be
NEW ILI ditm CATALOGUE UPON wes superior to - hitherto * 2 of houses
M inns Hand-glass Frames Gard ee Flower Sticks ut: be bested at ono with. "this "Bo e facility of
—— me aking B ach Hera Matting i Syringes See roe NIA any " e 3 uy
Hot water Apparatus P asma — 2 Mini m 2 tp rg Garden Arches, &o. | approved T GARDEN ENGINES sont — free ree upon api ein on;
. . e mat
Hurdles, Strained Wire Fencing, Game Netting, : uilding or Heating:
E „ p Plain, Ornamental, Cast and Wrought T on, and Wire Work. TO PIG AND POULTRY FEEDERS AND MILLERS.
ue — pie RICE, 8s. per ewt., in bags
PRIZE ES AND ENAMEL MANGERS. V owt 7
N. B. COTTAM anD COY. beg to ma. — it known that there is no longer an entrance to their establishment from Oxford Street, | 13 ewt.each. ont CE MEAL, 6s. 6d. to 88. 6d. per cwt. RIC
nt roe by the side of the old entrance to their | for grinding. American Oileake and Locust Beans, per =
— that they have made a second entrance from 2, Winsley Street, 7 only.—All Sold for Casb, and an allowance per ton, b
orks, opposite the Pantheon. W. — Jvrr, Rice Merc! hants, 6, Cross Lane, St. Mary-at-H:
— —
GARDEN ENGINES AND SYRINGES. —
ONS, Warwick Lane, Newgate [10 BE LET, BRISTOL NURSERY GROUNDS,
E. C., beg to call attention to their very for — m 1 — are Fonte — Let
f GARDEN ENGINES end SYRINGES, desirous of treating for the same may obtain particulars and
rmission to view the unds on en to => W.
J LOR AND
e Street, —
superior manufacture o
— CHA NDLE R, Horticultura! Valuer, 28, Priory Read. W.
rth Road, x
O BE LET, WHITTINGTON. NURSERY, Upper
olloway, to be entered upon im iately. For —
culars apply to J. — Esq., Small SH Hospital ;
Mr. BNET, Nurserym ratfor 5
DISPOS =a oF 5 BUSINE 288 in the
SEED TRADE, where ir — retail trade may be
we done. Proof or trade shown, E —.— satisfactory reasons
AYNOR AND KE’S warranted W "Cd for leaving given.—Addre - Z., Gardeners’ Chronicle Office.
PRUNING and DING — SCISSO e.— = A x rg giren. Address — — —
pre . J. Tvron & Sons’ BARROW G —— ar in| —.— +
he NER SONS Crescent) Jewin ‘well “painted Oak tub, fi m- EEI
OHN RNER AND SONS, Crescent, vest well painted 0 Universal Joint, and Registered Snas, EROR E AND BEDDING PLANTS. :
: TUB GA 8 R. PREECE instructed to Seil by Auetion
Street, E e Which answers the purpose of the separate rose, fan, and (vidas meint) e MONDAY, May 35, 13 11 for 13
ENGINE, with ue Registered 18 5 ee ODE, wpon the premise OF Mr. W Brey,’ Star” Nur
mmended, for, e A and low price, 10 gallons 28 gallons sery, Slough, several thousands of BEDDING-OUT and other
1 De sites in wood or 4 gallon: - = do. TINNED IRON TUB choice "Plants, Geraniums, ems — Dablias, Geia 8,
» gallons, and 35 gallons. y. be obtained of g. 599. — — : Picotees, Fuchsias, Pot, Roses, talogues on application.
y Ironmonger or Plumber in es rote pate Sgallons 12gallons 16 gallons 24 gallons 30 gallons ES LIP S
alanu en | 2215 £3 5 £4 25 £5 18 ESSRS. ‘PROTHEROE AwD MORRIS are in-
factur x ens 1 E ^ J. Hep p tA Sell by Antion on the
^ E R—⅛ = endrie’s Gardens, Lea ridge E the
alsoMachinery 2 Railway Station, on MONDAY, May 23, at 3 0" Clo aC *
raising Water Bed of TULIPS, — 5 144 rows of the finest strains
fromanydepth Ta named varieties, and of ni med Bn rs, all in und.
iy height lent condition and * den 2 — oming. —May be —
Steam, | Fig. 618. No. 1. REGIST E, with India- necs ior toe — — p Catalogues had c of Mr. J. —— wee
Horse, or Man- —2 tube, one rose Hs M E ach. | the Auctio ursery, Leytonstone, Esse
c ower, No. Ditto ditto 1 Y » NOBEKTON NURSERY. —10,000 ORNAMENTAL dus
Tie a on Telescope Branch Pipe for ditto .. vw MAIO. A DING AND GREEN HOUSE PLA NTS.
application ;
RSE) > „ D
ringes of j ESSRS. PROTHEROE AND RRIS are in-
is con- structed by Mr. J. Fry to submit to publie competition
structions and — op GARDEN SYRINGE, . 128. 6d. each | by - d on the femi Homerton Nursery, High
zes from 93. Bite ditt — aa 6d. „ | Street, merton, within 5 minutes’ walk of the Hackney
upwards. EO: String from 5d. to 1s. 3d. per Ib. ied dit Os. Gd. D Stations, SERT D ihe e 20 PER Sk
d To ers jet, 8s. about 10, -
MONRO'S CANNON BOILERS. 2 — 3 QA MN SYRINGE, vii one j GREENHOUSE PLANTS, consisting of Bue show peg i
els - tro raniums of sorts, Azalea indiea, Ericas, Metro: ————
8 - - e ES ge Diosma, Cacti, Hydrangea, Calla, Sones in pots, Heliotropium,
Verbenas, Fuchsias, Petunias, Calceolarias, Lobelias, Double
Fig. 623. READ’S SYRINGE, with two roses M 188. 6d. | Wallflowers, Intermediate Stocks, — „ and
MONRO S — BOILER X — — SYRINGE, with one em: and jet c y eximium, Tropeolum, Thunbergia, Loph rmum, Ferns,
J. Jon - e. „ 625. Improved ditt dit y be view — three days prior to he Sale. Catalogues
BANKS! : a 628. Ditto Atte dit ds `
&c.—Ma;
may be had on the —— ; ofthe prineipal áp
can N.
in
Manufaeturers of Pumps and wet gines Ss shatlow or | London; x € of the Auctioneers, Ameri n-
deep Wells) Plumbers' Brass Foundry a stone, Ess
— MM d Closets, Copper and Tinn aths. E WIN ON.
rer an gines
ds, &. Estimates given for Hot-water and Bath Ep EE fruns ws savers A
ESSRS. PROTHE —— —
N — n nes TET
u
— Bo 26, at 12 IU the CHOI
ani
"00 GREENHOUSE AND p PLANTS. ——
RRIS |
i
— cultivation, co
n said about BOILERS for a
M ating by Hot W: ves but these Boilers have now p s X
adapted Aud E est at present invented. — € — een
milio. every d: 2
of Various sizes z hie? 0 Pur t ees of building, and are — Senrist u
ast
Mo Wow ito zo Do 1 ÉZ JOm 0a. oach Wo premises aid of the au
uch Wann ß j Leytonstone: at ORISTS, AND OTHERS.
References to Quei g „ AX PROPRE. axp MORRIS will Sell
Boilers are now at entlemen and Nurs men where these sting exercise. They h dmm on Y, May 27, at
Stock, and arc t j^ work. Tho c Can n Boile ers are now kept in of public —— for — years, and for —— ease, 4 a nent £ on REN DOUSR PLANTS,
every deenaa to bo had. only of T Tomes, 6, Bankside. Also, | economy, — rability are gr di cen ended. Upwards} 12 o eee ‘and other Geraniums, Ericas, E ia
Pines and CMM ud Saddle and Cylinder Boilers. Hot Water x m 00 of thom have been sold. To be had of every et — arietes. of Fuchsias, Verbenas, and D. —
house in I A ons at prices qower than pense = any other wareman, and Seedsman in the United Ki t of Ornamental Plants for Beddia
complete — Estimates for Hot-water Apparatus erected and dea of the Sole Licensed Makers, War. DRAY Co. with a Sieg descr ing of rials. Catalogues had at the Mart, ad
on PAT KER TRA and an Illustrated Catalogue at bhei New Agrioaltüral Tmplament Warehouses, Adelaido | On — —
Nursery, Leytonstone, Essex.
Bankside, Southwark, London, Place, London ioneers, American Nw
456 i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ` [Mar 21, 1
ian as
By Her Majesty’ s 2 * Letters Patent.
cH
., E — = — =
= v. Sy N Va W^ a= SE - d
5, Y ; y f À * J Va 74 W/ \ 77 p
ORMSON'S
PATENT JOINTLESS TUBULAR BOILER.
TIMONI
*'Sig,—I feel much pleasure in Head testimony to the |
efficiency of your Eaten Jointless Tubular Boiler which you
have erected for Baron de Rothschild, at; Gunnersbury Park,
ee the number of hothouses T great extent bof pipe
you have heated from one boiler, I now feel confident it is
decidedly the most powerful, m a and safe boiler yet in-
vented. Top had the working of the Wr ought-iron Arch,
and Cast-iroi n Corrugated Arch Boilers in these gardens I have
to either or them in every respect.—Yours truly,
e Wir IIa FORSYTH.
** The Gardens, Gunnersbury Park, Acton, Middlesex."
It is with 3 satisfaction I give my testimony in
gnus ome ips a t: eed Tubular Boiler, being
4-inch peo “and doing the
mes tile more fuel than was re-
s — the ta ion of your
—— heat, r- —
would with ease heat as much
pod
fuel and Adae Man E. ipated. In additi
to the great power and economy of your boiler it possesses |-
another most important advantage over all other tubular
boilers which have eome under my notice, in the fact of its
fro!
age. n
only use o; a
for the arched boilers which you took out.—I am, Sir, yours
spect J. FRASER.
“The e Gardens, Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire.’
enry Au n, Sir, —I | beg to inform you of my enti
— À r Hot-water Apparatus in gen 4 and
your Pat nt Jenes Tubular Bo: ler in partie: — as Stel up
eee f £ Hol 1 uses you s ive recently erected for ord
Pow — aE Palmin for thr $
ivi
e
ving of fuel will be the consequence from using these : ET : i "
wil r No. 6.—GnEENHousz, from 18 to 90 ft. wide.
I should havı pr candid
j to you I must dis-
n Het — b HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS
| — MANUFACTURED BY STEAM POWER MACHIN Y
i * 8 1 ii ch pleasure in ying to the excellent! $ 5
1 e CERIS $ BEST MATERIALS AND LOWEST PRICES.
fuel and en IU am, Sir, "ie Tespectfi
Holland House Gardens, K $ ensington.“ D
* fi
regard to Patent Jointless Tubular *
C T e NE HENRY ORMSON,
l and euin wan et ee ied ; AT
pec e was | HORTICULTURAL BUILDER & HOT-WATER APPAR
SS | MANUFAC i
TURER,
NIS us o UMS TES BRIDGE, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, LONDON:
Boilers. The two small boilers you put up here are doing thi
e
work of six fires, with the addition of a range of lofty euch. : i ost
houses which were afterwards attached. The amount St fuel is Deeply grateful for the y liberal and kind patronage 8 up ie 5 2 no
little more, and the attention much less, t asrequirelfor|:o inform the Nobility, —.— Nurserymen, &c., that it his determination to spare
msiderabl; 3 3 y
the whole of the hot-water apparatus works sa rA, spe- | increasing orders punctually, and at the lowest possible. cost anki with th
88 the Er pung. boxes you Fes Tp in the Fruiting Pin * 1 ^
Stove, which I c E ir sat quisition, Spira! d Workmanship), he has erected a most Sap set of Steam Power Machines, peculiarly a
pei a constan cs bess f pride air to the plants, | purposes of his
“Tam, § are in sonsequence sturd d d andi inthe n. Jons Can 2 P " I t the
— Am Sir, yours respectfu 4 2 " jd
S Gai lens, Cobham Hall, Gravesend, Kon PART — e INFORMATION as to prices, &e., will, by referring
receive immed attention. pe^
pesce TIONS, and ESTIMATES for plain and inexpensive prac fal
for ms most — — Architectural Erections, either in Wood or Iron, forwarded on app
. 8 1 5 Ji oon E Boilers
may be seen operation at Mr.
Veitch’s, Royal] Exotic Wires King s Road, | r *
j , rinted by WILLIaAx BRADBURY, P, oburn Place, and Farnenrcx Morrert Evans, of No. Å
Š dá h of S itefriars,
— e brad. irri caso RATE
No. 22.—1859.]
EX.
Agardh, late Bishop India, Cinchonas for
Agriculture, Liebi,
Agri. Soc. of Englan
letters on ra =
; —— z
Lini
2
ri
—
ERE)
: 17 7
308 a
468 e
470 e
464 b
406 ò . 469
466 a . 464
468 e . 466
472a 471
. 466 b . 473
- 464
465 b —. 471
+. 466 5 | Trade, ies of . . 466
472 4 nip y da 473
Cum PALACE.—FLOWER SHOW.—
SECOND GRAND — ih and Somos cw
-TURAL of the n will be held on
WED) à Doo 6 — "T 12. mission free
= Tw. cA yn a Tickets ; 4 8 Pree G —— Season
Íckets. on payment of 2s. 6d. ; by D. ickets, 6d., or if
yaen dar 12, half-
p ie». I ha
andat the usual A
CHEDULES “OF THE SECOND GRAND
NATIONAL ROSE SHOW, to — a a v the Hanover
Squire Rooms, on THURSDA Yo y be had on
application to the Honorary Secretai
v. —— Horx,
taken before the day of the Show, E
en the Cry:
stal Palace, at 2, Exeter Hall,
The
Caunton Manor, — Nottin,
N
“ae
be had o
= on T DAY, Jun
are now assembling for the Agricultu: ral
his occasion is read a Feed 5 *
for whom a ts (ink of the Schedule
the ‘on
—— —
R. Russert, 5, Lower Parade, Leamington "
RAND. FLORAL AND. HORTICULTURAL
on Ferg. AT oru doe SHOW of the
on tho mune magaldcent aose i derne der
“two 7
very
Prizes aV.
T ROSES
PLANTS, open to all E afforded —
— . tag the Sch
JouHNSON, Hon. Sec.
OHN' WATERER'S- EXHIBITION of RHODO-
DENDRO?
vri 72 RET RHODO-
rà oid ONS, AS; ETC.
) ON WATERER has 4 pt re to announce his
collection of the above Piants is now !
continue in great beauty throughout the month of June.
Nursery is near the Sunningdale Station
Railway, Reading Branch
he American Nursery, Bagshot, S
BAKER begs to inform um
ublic tnat his
HARDY RHODODENDRONS, AZA
are now — — tion, ai may
ill
The
of the South-Western
nobility,
extensive collection ad
A: 8 a .
ee
indlesham, near Bagshot, Surrey 1 mile ter: p
— of Bead Staines ‘atid bab Sp Railway,
ys to be had).—May 28.
T H “SEED, Se
IMPLEMENT. AND MANURE COMPANY on a
supply every requisite e for the Farm and the Garden
E facili
gr Biles e free ‘on I'M
e 1
and all the
SATURDAY, MAY 28.
THE SWEDE THAT NEVER MILDE MILDEW $.
QUTTON’S CHAMPION.—See Gardeners’ ——
D lb., or cheaper b
kJ May 14, third page. uw E the
bushel. Carriage free to al —— nt by Bending! Da or sed
Post-offi e yable 5 d
E HARDY WHITE Lc nae is x
is hardier than any other kind, gro size,
adapted for sowing upon is not b; t, and
keeps good in th und or — store till the end of m New
and genuine Seed of this —— Swede, — 2€ 8. per lb.
(carriage free for orders of 30 ‘ie. and —.— a. may be had of
RavwsimD & Harvey, Seedsmen, Basings ; and 89, Seed
Market, Mark Lane, London, E. 0.
n — — BEAN.
Pri
Jas, CARTER & Co., Seeds adr . a High olborn, London, W.C.
EMP'S INCO —— EARLY CABBAGE.
—This is quite a distinct v. y, —— to any
r known kind, — — AS habit, extra
early, attains a t run , and every plant
w. ted to mine ó me rm for
18 tago ** MUND [3 Drxon’s, 57, Queen
Si ull.
SORGHUM, OR HOLCUS SACCHARATUS
(CHINESE SUGAR CANE Gra "is
IN AND SONS, I EE. can
cf
ce
H l OLCU; — — — or North China Sugar-
Cane. mphlet, “A — —5 — rra wd Lo i
3 authority on the Cultiva
6d. ices of Seed on spplieation — en Fon
varieties of "Holens remitted free by t on emp of 105.
W. CLARKE, Whittlezer C. A ire.
TR AOLUM CANA
po ed ALEXANDER, Simp Edinburgh,
ers New Seed of the above at 20s er Ib., and ls, 6d,
erotti ce.
ite Idee
— — ousan ad by Ses Non
AMES'S HALL, ut
» mU
c Tor cee M
- now supply LARGE and SMALL plants (at reduced
prices) of the :
MUSCAT — — GRAPE;
WOOD GOLDEN HAMBURGH.,
best leading Grape Vines of the day, suitable fo
p — r = the presen: — season. Prices eed, be yos e c ox
applicat —Pine Apple Place, Edgware
1 N E 2 — 2 IA
ED FROM THE
NEW
ORTS.
UCOMBE, PINCE, ND CO. have —— ready for
ending out SEEDS of of «— * superi.
— s NERA A 8,
Which e been ith — ek care from fine
— owes of t ie best — varieties. The -— satis-
— which their Cinerarias e given aor many ante Tet
u m to pay even Eu tention to ihe quality,
mM Ez & Co. to 1 their Beet Ed iy
presen: ving as astly s
previously sen nent out ty them :—
. 0d. ee Post free, sealed and war-
— P d 6 ranted by L., P., & Co.
The
e isan excellent time for sowing, and as their
stock owing to its select quality is limited, early orders are
respectfully solicited.
E Registered Offices, Union Road, "uua aem Exeter Nursery, Exeter, Established 1720.
Olen an DER ay obea ood planta of CHOICE SEEDS.
the following i equi cm 1 at a Eel AREER AND ILLIAMS
“Ts :; ibium ampullaceum, d patrons that they can now supply | PLANTS :—
tum, tatu , guttatum teum, ttatum
E ey em. pr cr — ac: aeni RE prc — Me Shoe pean all of which are warranted
‘ er packet—s. d. Per packet—s.
Fis REES A N T E D, — viz, | Calceclaria, herbaceous .. 2 6| Gaillardia grandiflora — 06
x WHITE MARSEILLES n 1 BROWN TURKEY neraria, from named vars. 2 6 | Primula sinensis, mixed.. 1 6
S cesi nera — f fit for training ta | Clianthus Dampieri 26 Pansy, from genet vius: 10
W. p? Gall Conserv GM prios ce and par- Holiyhook, from named KL d
E T "Paradise ‘Nursery, Seven Sisters * Hornsey
jd SOLD, eii her wholly or i 89 part, P T. SELECT NEW 20888 FS FOR 5!
91 n Specimens of TALL | 1859.
GAOT, CEREUS, EPIPHYLLI, md theip hybrids, Thos They have | TRANCIS AD ARTHUR DICKSON & SONS
, Metropol Shows for yt ffer the following rb NEW e —
for cash or in ugs the owner to dispose of them are er ui of the best of f tho ev BA EE
CODES in Liz on dg LX um
Hornsey N. y Parl "HYBRID PERPETUALS. | Orifamme de Bt Louis,
- tesse Im
(ANGE, LEMON, 1x» SHA TREES, Anna de Dies irginal,
2 ai fuil LM Bloom, and some with Anna Alexieff.
CAUTE EE EN EU m
mn e.
errant T planis m 4p ER mag tyre e Roya,
3 6d., 8s. DX Comtesse de Chabrilland.
FERNS and Empereur de Maroc.
x mti — Veg oder d of genaue : . gat ik
8 FRANCIS & ARTHUR DICKSON & Soxs, Upton Nurseries,
E
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley.
con Fivepence,
STAMPED Fortron, 64.
RN CATALO
OBERT SIPS NEW DE SCR RIPTIVE AND
PRICED CATALOGUE, No. 6 (62 pages) of his [7-4
TION of BRITISH Ase EXOTIC FERNS, can
for 8 stamps. Gratis to
e d ey oote Cray; Kent BE, 5 O
P uy BARNES begs to inform his friends and
that his new PRIOED and DESCRIPTIVE
CATALOGUE is is now ready, and can be had t pé Men
It contains the eX selections of Indian
rias, Cale p Ve T y AE Holiybocke:
Liliu 2 Phlox Ro: ms, an ee
Ferns, Stove 881 ee p ita d wel very large
assortment of choice miscellanebus AM
54 Nursery, C
MESS PARKER. anp WILLIAMS to
cO their friends and patrons that their te d
od mete EI AP ed E of Exotic hids, 8
pep en
Orc!
a Taria Miscellaneous Stove, om,
5 — y da — tal foliaged
a Gerten — Ms Indian —
forwarded post free on aj Sic tho Pra dine Net
post on application.— ursery,
Sem and Ho; vt , Holloway, London, N. d
RIVALLED SHRUBBY ent qn
J. COLE has on hand so buperb var for
Bedding and Pot culture, be a y plants, 2 e 12s.,
15s., and 20 373 dozen ; also some strong unbloomed Seedling
He mM CALCEOLARIAS, without pots, at 8s, per dozen.
8 MM rong | E ts, without pots, — 6d.
per doze e abovo for K.
Rept eld Nursery, St. ene Herts.
N RYSANTHEMUMS AND DA :
J a ALTE w sending out his splendid
Seedlings and other new CHRYSANTHEMUMS, as we
as those of his um led gen collection, which is the
eral
largest in Europe; also severalfine now acr, AS, English
and Fore reign.— Versailles Nursery, Hammer: mith Turnpi ike, W.
N
diss EA "ELEGANS. alata dower MS
6 and $-
2 ROSES fo for 1850. —A choice selection
DICKSON & Nurseries,
8 YELLOW PRINCE OF ORANGE.
son Sern, —— the best of its s new 9 at pea,
68. per doz.—
Eine 5 Nur
ABBAG
Saag: a the
JG aces
oicest sorts of Early 8 all at 2s. 6d. per 1000.—
oe Gardens,
By THOAS WELLAND, Surre;
, Godalming, Surrey.
Packing and —— included.
Li
IN G P-L
23 AND K. "SMITH have now dy X g plants
COBJEA SCANDENS, MAURANDYAS ble, —
and Foe , BCOREMOCARPUS Feet TROPEZ T in larg
Dulwich, —
BEDDING- mS — The “flowin
es 11. ls. per nein d :—Vi € ScarletGeraniums,
, Calceo! erastrum
Fuchsias, 4 2 — larias, Koeniga variegai
gre &c., the best 1 plant wt for an D having
ery foliage ar and white flowers. Sold in ary WA 25 of a
AX —E. SH a 5 5 78 NC Nursery, n, N.W.
Hints on their
Broome, of the Temple Gardens; Wyness, Royal Gardens,
Buckingham Pal Ie m and oa "ihe Gardens, Lincoln's Inn
IA FELT, NURSERYMAN,
im), will now send out "ihe following vui
8.
BEGONIA LEOPOLDII, one of the finest yet sent out.. 8 0
TYDJEA d NE three i ee
X i
TORENIA À APULCHERBIMA 7 :
:
3
3
|
459 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE
i GAEL
LIST OF THE AWARD OF PRIZES
AT THE FIRST EXHIBITION,
ROYAL BOTAN
REGENT’S. PARK, MAY 25, 1859.
IC GARDENS,
EXTRA GOLD MEDAL.
Mr. G. Dods, Gr. to Sir J. Cathcart, Bart., Coo perik;
Surrey, for 16 Stove and Greenhouse P!
Mr. Gedney, Gr. to Mrs. Ellis, Hoddesdon, — for 20 Exotic
Orchids
Egham,
ayaa COLD MEDAL.
o H. Colyer, Esq., Dartford, Kent, for
tove ates e Plants
; Esq., Wool
Mr. lim ear
Mr. Plan, Gr.to J. Butler, wich, for 20 Exotic
Orchids
MEDIUM COLD
Mr. B. Peed, Gr. to T. Tredwell, pe = = Lodge, Nor.
wood, for 16 Stove and Greenh ouse Plants
W. Cutbush, Nurseryman, Barnet, Herts, for 12 Stove and
Greenhouse Plants
„Gr. to J. Spode, Esq., Hawkesyard Park, Ruge-
aio — — 10 Stove and Greenhouse Plants
3 FI & Son, rserymen, Dorking and Reigate, for
use “ales
G. Farmer, Esq., Nonsuch Park,
S , for 8 Aide a Azaleas
Mr. Carson, Gr. to W. F. G. Farmer, Esq., for 20 Exotie Orchids Mr. G
Mr. S. Mei Nurseryman, Cheshunt, Herts, for 16 Exotic
ee Messrs.
T Cath
Mic MEDAL. z
Sou
Mr. Hamp, Gr. to J. Thor Esq. Mawby House,
nd T Plants
Lambeth, for 10 Stove — — Sttsediid, f
Mr.
Mr. Groon: G Gr. to Sir
Mr. Page, Gr. to W. Leaf, Esq., for 6 Exotic Orchids
Mr. 8 ae to A. Doxat, Esq., Putney Heath, for
6 Cinerari:
Messrs. J. & J. Trason. Nurserymen, for 12 Pelargoniu
. Hodson, the Elms, — for
1
e
nslow.
r, Nurserym a H.
Mr. ud Gr. LW. Pea — $ "
for 6 Fancy [sace
Messrs. Veitch, Nurserymen, Chelsea and Exeter, for Cattleya
sp. (nova)
Messrs. Mese for Seis Species
Mr. Williams, Nur ^ Fortis Green, Muswell Bib. for
Cal ladium Agri
s Henderson, for a collection of New Plants
ir E. An tee 8 for 6 Tall Cacti
Se
— bee & Son, 8 Baal, ects for 10 Roses |
HE GÀ RDENERS ROYAL
L
SIXTEENT
FESTIVAL will take place at The Crystal Pala i Su BB
WEDNESDAY, June 8,the day of the Grand Fig Se
x JUSTICE -
he Honourable Mr. Jus, ALIBURTON in the
Stewards.
R JOSEPH PAXTON, M.P.
Samuel S Esq. John Green, Esq,
Henry G. Bohn, Esq. Thos. Hancock,
R. Boyd, Esq. has. Horsley, Esq,
M. Busby, Esq: m. Hoskins,
: Wm. S. Jemen a,
Edwin Chadwick, Esq. John Laudi n,
Captain Trevor Clark JR: Mackay, Bet,
Joh en, Esq. R. Marnock, f
G. E. Cockerell, Esq. Chas, Ratcliffe, Es
James Cutbush, Esq. Thos. Rivers, Ex.
F. Davies, M.D. George Roliisson, Esq
has. L. Dorrien, Esq. Stains, Esq. id
Benjamin Edgington, Esq. F. B Thomas, Esq.
Wm. Edgar, Esq. James Vickers, :
T. N. 2 Esq. d Wilder, By,
F. J. Gral —— — h: tterquist, Baq.
In or - ed the wishes a great number of the Patris
and of. us Society, art 3 have been made fe
the spe of LADIES to the Dinner, z the bii
liberality of the Directors of the Crystal Palace
tickets Ed the Dinner will include AD. MISSION we
PALAC
Tickets :—Gentlemen, 20s. ; Ladies, 10s. May be had of ug
of the above-mentioned Gentlemen, and and vtt
14, Tavistock Row, Covent Garden, Wc
Dinner 2 785 SS at Half-past Five o Clock precisely n
the SOUTH
e
YAL e HORTICULTURAL
pria cii
The SUMM — — of teen — —
holden in the Gardens of Worcester College, Out a
DE iow sey, 5, when, in addition to the prizes cot-
a
eie
nine varieties: Ist prize, EUN ; ES p E 3d
Heaths, six varieties: Ist prize, 51.; 2d do., 4l.
(not fancies) in 8-inch pots, 12 varieties: er prin, 12 2 —
Sion person will be allowed to take
class:
ntention to exhibit must be given to the Secretary |
in 13-inch pots * No tice of i
MALL SILVER MEDAL. by wp onor — Saturday, June 25.
OLD MEDAL Mr. Bax: E to H. Smallpiece, Esq., de SUPE Heaths ihe Flowers must be labe fed with their names, and
Mesas. J. & J. Fraser, Nurserymen, Not Essex, for Mr. Page, Gr. to W. Teat, Fd for 6-Cape pus. 5 — —ç — ae . ‘be reas m oved the close
19 Stove end Greenhouse PI — G Mr. Green, Gr. to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart., AR eaths the 1 Exhibition (7 o'clock, P
Mr. Green, Gr. Bart, Lower Cheam Mr. R. Atlee, Nurseryman, Clapham — — 10 Greenhouse Exhibitors it be required t5 0 a declaration that the
* Surrey, for: 10 ‘Sto brib — Grecia Plants T 55 Beg HR M I E oa... | flow ná fide their Saser: or te. property of ther
r. W. Cutbush, Barnet, for 10 Cape Heaths essrs. J. Ivery n, Nurserymen, ior ployer
ME — S ceti aed E er etm land, Sion House, for | The Judges have the e power ofw gatet the firat or ary
CT ; " Bucks, for 10 Green: 6 Exotic Orchids other — if the lowers exhibii E
| Mr. Farmer, Gr. to S. Morley, Esq., Stamford Hill, for 6
, Cinerarias
Mr. Pe Gr. to W. Leaf, Esq. Park Hill, Norwood, for 8 ___
The — of the Coldstream Gi
aftern W. R. Ho
"Mr, O. Rhodes, Gr. to J. Philpott, Bad., for 12 Exotic Orchids
HASAS 18-inch
Mr. O. Turner, N for 12 Pelargoniums - me
Mr. — — s Gr. to W. F. Watson, Esq., Isleworth, for 6 —
Pelargoniums
LARGE suver GILT MEDAL.
Messi. Véltóh, ics
Messrs. Veitch, for Begonia Queen Vi
Mr. Baxendine, G: Guildford. £u£rdr
tt, Esq., Stamford Hill, for 16
O. Rhodes,
Stove — Gre UM lants
enk
Mr. W. J. Ep; irse Maidsto:
aE pps, Ni — ne, Kent, for 12 Stove
Mr. J. Peed, Gr. to C. T Gebr, E: Norfolk Ho Streat- |
am, for 10 Stove and lüreenhouse Plants.
to T.
t
. Maudsla; „Lower Ni
tet sonhouso [2-4 Dita orwood, for.6 |
raser, Nurserymen, Leyton, Essex, for 10
— gs Siin
— Hertford, for 10 Toses ann
Messrs. Parker &
species
Messrs. Parker and Williams, for Tydæa Leopardi
— eo em derson,
i Whitbread, Gr to el Colyer, Esq., for Corréct Labels:
pae óf — eem
[bm uy uu die n, for 3 Boxes of cut Roses
— Hamp, Gr. to J. Thorne, En, for 6 tall Cacti
essrs. Dobson, for 6 Herbaceous Calceolarias
as BRONZE MEDAL.
Mr. Chilman, Gr. to Mrs. Smith, for 6 Cape Heaths
Mr. E ee. es, Nurseryman, Battersea, for 10 Greenhouse
à B, Peed, Gr. to T. Treadwell, Esq., for 8 Greenhouse Anm
— e . Greenho use Azaleas
— Nurserymen, Isleworth, for 12 Pelar- |
LL Gry to K. Book, He, Isleworth, for 10 Pelar-
1 y O Bior — — Ashtead House, Epsom, for
. Peed, Gr. to C. T. Gabriel, Esq., for 8 Cape Heaths
Mr. Laybank, Gr. to T. Mandslay, eath
‘Mr. O. Tarner, a 5
Green, Gr. E. Antrobus, Bart for6 Exotic Orchids |
"wu — 6 Piney Pelargontimm :
=e minec Shardiloes, Amersham,
SILVER GILT MEDAL.
M Lovelace, East Horsley Towers,
— — bos W. Taylo:
T ‘for 10 ylor; Esq., Croft Lodge, Kentish | °™
Mr; Lady Goldsmid, St. John’s Lodge,
^s Park, for 6 Faney Polargoni x s
Mr. C. Turn for 36 Pansi
Mr. Hol: GEO Rev. — Maryatt, Eton College; for 24 me
der,
Mr. Turner, for 18 Tulips
Mr. a — ides d. Dunn, Esq., Pymmes Park, for Bignomier
essrs. Parker. Williams, for Tydæa Duc de Brabant
essrs. Parker Le Bas Tydeea Princess Charlotte
+O, Ries Gr. to J. ipott, Esq., for Correct Labels
E doen, Gr. to Sir E. pee don s; Bart, for Correct Labels
r. B. 3 ,
— for ditto
Lane,
* — for 6 onias
fr. Gaines, Nurseryman, for 15 20 Amaryllis =
CERTIFICATE OF MERIT.
Ty A see Pelargonium Spar!
— i — Sii — auen Fl 3 of the Day
Gr. to J. Philpott, Esq; for 8 Greenhouse
to Earl of Lov:
Mr. Kaile, Gr.
Mr. 6 H. Bunney, enri yetkan — for 6 Exotic
Mr. Windsor, eer tae Child's Hill, puse for 12
7
il
i
ji
E
Esq:, for Correct Labels
. Peed, Gr. to T. Treadwell, Esq., for Correct Labels
lection of cut Verbenas
er, for Seedling Pelargonium Hero
in argonium
Pel:
RARE $n
bl
g
King of Purples
E — Reading for Pelargonium:
Pel
MT M
. to Mrs. Hodson, for 6 ond Pelargoniums
Bes
eas
Angelina
Carson, Gr. to W. F.
Porteana
Foster, Clewer Manor, for 3 — 3
Kent, St. Alban’ fax RS t
ctoria
Williams, Nürserymen, Holloway, for Vanda
Wellington Nursery, for Grevillea i
largonium Miss Arabella Goddard
aid of the Fund for
lum will be hold at Blisworth Gai
"— under the special 3 e of
. O. NETHEROOTE, :
Sesion nn
Secretary, or by Mr. W.
Berngnte; Northampton, t whom all com
AZALE
GA SEEDLING Triomphe
d
e that
— indiens = above,
The price of the set is 3.
will be sentin strict rotation.
2. SCINTILLATUM. —Foliage
Mnt Deva o4 a black ice Het Es
i scarlet ? d P
2 0d. sach: The: discount to the
HERRIES, PLU RS, APPLE
VINES, in pots yes, with 5 to
, each.
7108, in pot: in a bearini
GOOSE RIES and C and CURRAN
Also a ve
They consist: of PEACHES,
56, 78. 6d., to 108. G48. PEARS; APP’
from eyes, with 5
5s
Leban
1 pir “Aphelandra } buds
rr
— — 28, Eo. THEO GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 459
N n (or AMES PETET T
STEP PHENSON, late STEPHENSON AND SONS, 1r AMES PHILLIPS AND COS PRICES of GLASS
|
, k cl London, «Manufacturer of tron hi
AND A. SM mi begt to oer “the following varieties, ^ 1, Gracechurch Street, 5 for the prese th.
E Fencing, sa ä Iron and Co oppas Conical HORTICUL
ps m ane Boilers and fA sc m Warming Buildings of every UUTURAL GLASS, Sroc Rus, i 190 feet boxes.
2 | Nasturtium, Fimm Thumb; -— | by Hot Wa II by 9, 12 by 9, 13 by, 14 byw n 4
ee - fol. The best scarlet bedding Prices and Sa furnished upon application. — » 1» 8 a 19, it i 19, 15 „ 10 MIL Ba. 128.64.
“i „ il, , » 15 16,, 11 "
Anagallis plant out. = N.H O U.S E S. M39 352 1 9» 1b » Z
M variegated fol. Pasar i um, Cattell's Dwarf HEN E 2r AN, HorHovsE BUILDER and 8.42 19 P i — 1 * wW 2 r ma
e LL "MaxurACTOny, Triangle, 18 , 13, 19 , 19, 20 „ 13, 21, ds s. 6d. 14s.0d.
Dira Rm m av eee Es tablished 20 years. Good substantially-built 155. la War dae fe s R 5 " » s
Faci Nierembergia Greenhouses fixed in any part of the kingdom; for cash. 42 E 20 n $ dr
— scarlet various Pentstemon, various long — 18 ft., 900. 21 ft. by 18 kl., 50L ; 124 fl. by 10 fL, 30. Boxes included bi D
: od Petunias, various Ai -class Conservatory, 30 ft. by "16 ft., 1301. A large e Face za : Casts
— = . d pt. Estimates for Heating. 20 —. 2: 5
, , unique ^, Pyrethrum pleno album z 4 309 feet y E 0 a} 16 oz.
" ;seented = Roses 0 oe,
Ivy » — various ^a CHARD Toben SIZES, as vifa 4 V 7 — y^ to'Mr. Rivers.
20 in, by 12 in. 210z.
Heliotrope, various Ver "A white 20 in. by 18in. Common e. Š 1485 £1 1s.
— tegen 6s. per dozen kus or purple G. MESSENGER, — BUILDER and 20 in. by 14 in. Superior do. 16 6 15
— iegata — ^ 8 HM Tane — and GARDEN ENR 20 in. by 16 in.) English Glass x4 9 1.49
AOTURER, Boxes included and not jnre
lobelia” . „h Musk, 4s. per r dozon 2 E Aland -Horticulluzal Besten SMALL SQUARES,—Per 100
— 8 in strong establish F entilated with anism b; which ihe top or font 9 by 4 by 44 7 by 5 " b LU 3 s
Srey. lights are opened ti — Sur Menge of the hoüse momentarily, 8, 6 LI „ 6% 4 »1 M „ 74
——— . to — ps e mer satisfaction (as — Testi- M 10 „ 8 ud x
can show), for the followin, 2 — —They are muc!
ENJ. AMIN" R., CANT. gi the. adita ed lighter in appearance, more durable, much stronger, “and
NEW ROSES. The plants are now ready, and are re- ne i than any other can — be. 180, Bishopecnte ‘St. Without. contin; E. O.
markably fine and healt ye many of them have re strong shoots Three. years’ trial has proved: h j PATENT BOILER to be CLASS RVATORIES, ETC.
from 1 to 2 feet in length. Purch M of1 and upwards | superior to any hitherto M: ET reat number of M ETLEY m "7 ant — 16. ie SHEET GLASS
will be supplied at a reduced rate. "The can bo heated at once with this ‘Boiler, with the facility of H TY um CQ. s pr .
usual dis ^ i pa K
nosis For 1859 at bs ahi strated des iptions and prices of his Pat à gren tly | Poet arg e for the e ny thousands of
Tun: Madam: e Dam prov sent free upon — — .
BOURBON * Docteur Berthet Prin Cecile d de s Chabrillan |a ap Es ates, D See pas for Build . or Heatin PATENT ROUGH PLATE TRI TRICK CROW OWN. N EI GLASS
2 ith de Murat Imperatrice Eu, e g nicle,
M cu MA 1" rifam de St, Louis a and SIA TES, WATER PIPES. PROPAGATING
N D, the Address of any Gardener or h GLASS MILK PAN S, .PATENT PLATE.GLASS,
Lyon MCA M HE g to have 1 ee with Prices and QENAN DOW GLASS, and GLASS SHAD ES,
ca merere Testimonia , of HAYTHORN'S HEXAGON a and CHISWICK | to JAMES Homey, & Qo., 35,
pope m Princess Olympia GARDEN NETS, now used in most Gardens and recommended | Sies Gawdeners’ 'in-eagh 1
Beauté de Royghem Virginal ira tha principal Gendengra = Totes direct" Mr. HAYTHORE, "HORTICULTURAL DLAM CEDE TARIFF.
Also the followin, buo -— at 2s. 6d. 5 or — ri
g ae OR -Effectually Protecting — : of wi an^ HOMAS "ER is. reduced Tariff of
Tea: Souvenir d'Elise udis PERPETUAIGS: Trees from g Frosts use SHaw's No. 8 TIFF A
— Caroline UE Louis Chaix — 94 8 Min lecce 18 yards EU: by x — s wide, 64 "s " Mn em $i Wi ol 9) TAM 3: perio fect, "
» t | Louise e d'Autricho s. 6d, each. —Joun 8 T 125. 6d. ; „ 14s. 4d.
^" Madame — Lord Pal obw A mc 04,1 | by 10}, 15 by 11
É ae ai Se Mario Thierry : Ae i -— — wins "m E creat 10} by 84, 124 by 91, 13 by 10, i by 10, 134 by m
R PERPETUALS :— — 3 11 by 9, 13 by 9, 137 10, 12 by 11, — —
n e rozy —— e Rick Cloth for Sale, Cheap, p. — ie at — 11} by 94}, 12 by 10, 14 by 10, 12 1 a
Benas hs de SG 25. 6d. Reine de * Samples sent free. —A ddress FRED: * EDGING Y eu 12) , by 10, 12} by
Gloire de Lyon Triomphe de — p tme - .. ̃ ͤ London, SB 2 5518 per 100 feet 1607. 2107
General MacMahon S ANNED NETTING, for the Projection of Fruit 20. b 44 n 3e.
Superi 18 2
NS. Trees from F 20 by 15 mnm
Hysmm Perr — Bacchus, Belle 1; 200 yards,
Anglaise, C Cardinal Etendard de Sebastopol, Lord 12s 5 500- yards, 258. ; Sc House . Riv
2p Madame Vidot, Mathurin Regnier, Pauline Lanse- 2At Evorsarox & Co's, Riek Cloth, "Tent, — — Hartley's eee . Glass from. se tog fin thickness.
pg r, Prince dg — 2 oo gyn Ea Rebecca, ied Cloth Manufacturers, 17, Smithfield Bars, City, & Old Kent Rd. Coloured Glass in e and 1s. foot.
le eTa Reine = de Leveson Gower, Si F Paints, Genuine White Lead, Linseed Oil, Boiled Oil, Turpen-
: T e] — Colours, Varnishes, Brushes, Lamp Glasses, &c.
87, Bishopsgate Street Without, same side -
3 Frost, b Birds de. D yards wide, — n
“Gloire de : : fs coms TN EC E E iiaia
inte dC e — — — BATON | 7 AZIERS DIAMONDS for CUTTING HO TI.
UPTING CULTURAL andothor GLASS, to be had of the Whole- e-
R D EN NETTING | sie Manufacturer, J Si Sharp's Ale,
Ping uds — Dens A » | Smithfield, London EC. -Prices from 102. to: . dl.
and 4.yards-( ene HO RTICULTURAL E
t Sot the NO Nobis
b in bondon and
and I.
of SECOND.
price. An 1
West End taabishment „32, Charin;
FBENJAMIN EDGINGTON, 2, Duke Street, London
TE 4
— een —— a on receipt of o
dum quality, 5s z 1
5 — strong and hte oo
ples).
* ES . «CARSON'S
ATENT GUTTA PERCHA SOLES erst ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION PAINT,
pue to acknowledge the receipt of thet following letter from
GLENNY, RA ey the celebrated Po *
PATRONISED BY
*«490, | Strand, London
BnrrisH/GOVERNMENT, ON. East INDIA Comp ‘Comp i
en,—I have worn -— Borcha Soles and ——2 T. FRENCH: GOVERNMENT, Most Ms or fasi N Ea AND . | | ee „„ Tm
es all ears and being wo t with: 2 8 oe all eus T THE — GOVERNMENT, New RIVER COMPANY, HD MILL
übbo account be Withon than * - HyReH. -THE-PRINOE-CONSORT, TüE Dock CoMPANIES, IRON MASTERS, &c. &c.
. lwould recommend Gardeners to use t them, oe the ma;
pur the worn part at all tim mes es by warming the — The ANTL-CORROSION E is now used extensively for all kinds of
W easily as B were di que ch dough. I think it the d! fall |” :
who must occasio: mally wet th — to adopta material s dT Wood. Sto Brick, C ee 2 — os
de a gardener would escape in as Iron, Woo ne, Bri ompo, Cement, &c., and has been proved, after tical test of 70 3
olds and rhe ders by tho uso of of Gutta Seer Soles. „It — soy o other Paint; S being — ut y adapted 5 e — and Frames of-all
“Every variety of G —— x: —— df 8 "T ud eripiions. onstantly used by S aye n, as also many eminent Horticulturists, po E
Soles, es; Sheet: Sine ‘oh as M Buckets, It is —.— e and lasts — — as the best White Loud, and can be eas EA
Union Joints, “Flasks, Bottles, Bowls, Chamber Vessels, | Labourer, Perses ut in various ame. F uiri = ly to be mixed (no di
15 : eq: ng ad (no grinding is
Tie! e SCREEN Corrosion is a powder, anü will keep any length
del Beet ‘Gutta itta Poreha — — f White Stone 34. cou t and Dark Lead
. oe t : s. per 5
t and Dark Choeclate |
(Gres Go TOTUNE BAROMETER.—" Equals Deaborfortiaed. s os: os lga ju ao
mores geen Tus ttenom. Path | do. x nud sapi) ;
qu be equally Acht and Dark Yellow do. e *
Chronicle; Bop 1857. dn EY " 2 Bree 4
sudden changes of tan iria s — 4 ens ma the weather — and : Light * Dark Oak T s» s: baon 1 1
is POPULAR SERIES of SO SOIENTIFIC GARDEN INSTRU, OIL, TURPENTINE. AND BRUSHES, E
MENTS no
ouse Then’ includes the Cottage Barometer, 11s. 6d. ;
upon application to a
s), gres Winchester Street.
— ag ermometer, 1 Is. ne Ga "Thenhometer, to hogistor A Copy of Testimonials (700), will be
ny inGat WALTER
. M ‘Window Thermo-
Fine or Melon 6d. ; Garden eee - QOCEBUIP K
s, Or Su belos =
fd. and 21s, — Lis oo receipt of sam, near ‘the Royal Exchange)
GREAT SUCCESS OF —
SHANKS' PATENT MOWING, ROLLING, COLLECTING,
AND DELIVERING MACHINE FOR LAWNS, &c.
4
THE ONLY COMPLETE MACHINE FOR HORSE OR PONY rm
|
460 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZÉTTE dn s x
uc UE | NR HORSE AND PONY LAWN MOWERS
the Gra e man leaving the handles or stopping the horse. These immense ee enable the Machi
1 1
1 P. tu
the man wh The Machines answer exceedingly well for une po^
strong and very 8 while d the — of the work cannot be surpassed.
SHANKS PATENT HAND MACHINE for 1859,
— with all the new improvements, is the most E and complete Hand Mower that has ever been before the public. For convenience in turning and CM
mall Lawns, Vi erges, around Flower Beds, &c., it has ual.
ven as well as leve]
Read the following Testimonials in favour of Saanks’ new Horse Machine before ordering :—
HEAR ardener ie 185 Marquis of aan DDALE, Fester Garden, May 13, 1859.
“Gent wy e to con 2 . E eise of you! — s Cuttin achine which we got the other day from you, especially the delivering part; itis:
echanical tri u kn nó- that 1 T expressed my — to you about r3 before I got the Machine, but — cut all our Grass with it I must say that it acts far beyond Peers
and it pa ei ump you — in your prospectus. We tan n w go on the whole day without stopping, except to oil the e paria t that require it. The men are quite in love wit - | ad pw
of its utility.—I am, Gentlemen, yours respectfully,
From Mr. MACKIE, Gardener to His Grace the Duke of ATHOLL, The Gardens, ae € ier am 9. 2: i:
ENTL — trials ing Ma 22 as now fitted up with your Delivering Apparatus, I have muc aying that I now consider your Machine
com dex We can de erben — ork in Mag Ew — aito to n: ten hours, with the old plan of stopping to empty the Grass — and with far greater ease both to Ph and horse,
His Grace is so well —— with the — of the Apparatus, and the saving of time effected by it, that he has ordered the Machine from Blair Castle to be sent through. to you to be fitted
up in the same way as the one here.—I am, Gentlemen, yours, &c. % JAMES
* i E "lad Js Aa 4 34 2. 1 "ipw 3 rAd £215.
Illustrated Price Lists with furt! pp
The Machines are
thicé} t n n n
o r 5
ALEXANDER SHANKS & SON, Patentees and Sole Manufsctirifi
DENS IRON WORKS, ARBROATH, FORFARSHIRE
PATENT LAWN MOWING AND ROLLING MACHINES.
= STEM p
Ap
a
30-inch wide Mikawa Machine, made also of smaller sizes for Hand Power.
SAMUELSON'S LAWN MOWING MACHINES
WITH BOYD'S PATENT IMPROVEMENTS.
“Doing the work of five or six men. — The Times, September 20, 1858.
aro now in Ss.
housands of these Machines ty, the no bit
The following PRICES include the Carriage to any Railway Station in England :— || , Bom poros on the Lawns of Royal pa tho e
ted K Kingdom other
“Patent Cleaning, S Prope, amd are pron a g d rni "
atent Cleaning, Sharp d hi "éfticienc y, and
ening, and Adju dnd fà r then is z ‘ig i 1857, mgr e
Apparatus. by Mr. SAMUELSON dur 9 w
9 inches wide, fi 555 — a
Uc eene V» 5 | nga ae, te hering in s
4 inches wid — with ur arrangement (for one m gu) : : 5. 1 - 1 y 8 3 speak in the highest terms of their a 3
i i : for one man) 7 6 a will cut
22 inches dit ES SER 5176. .617 6 V3 wissen tak
: y». | 3 re the only Mac ives.
E 22 inches wie, as for ditto, and also fitted with — links fora pony and aman to work it i| $ 15 ol ; 1 $ H N piace without clogging the Ent a .
30 inches wide, ditto (for man and pony) 9 9 o) nuo jg sent at once to
Box of Tools, Oil Can, and other requisites, sent with each Machine, 55. IC Ot Orders for 1850 should pe
delivery and to prevent disappoin ntment.
— ———
pies of Testimonials will be forwarded post free on application to |
B. SAMUELSON, 76, Cannon Street West, City, London: |
TO THE MANUFACTORY, BRITANNIA WORKS, BANBURY, OXON; dom.
or to Messrs, DEANE & CO., London Bridge; or any respectable Ironmonger or 3 in the King
Max 28, 1859.]
MEIKLEJON’S PATE
No. 1 rE Ps ^: ft. long by 2 ft. 3 in.
wide, having 60 feet of heating
. £9
Os. Od.
Set of Furnace Mountings for ditto 3 10 O0
„ including Front, with flue door... 1 18 6
Two Tubes for each Boiler, 3s. 6d., also included
THE GARDENERS'
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 461
NT CRUCIFORM OR WEBBED BOILER.
No. 2 BOILER, 3 ft. m af 2 ft.
wide, h
heating surface . £6 Os. Od.
Set of Furnace Mountings for ditto ... 2 5 0
» including Front with flue doors i$ 9
Delivered in Edinburgh and Leith.
MEIKLEJON'S PATENT VALVES, forming Valve, Expansion Box, and Bend, 42s. each.
JOHN
WESTFIELD IRON WORKS,
n ed to lay before the * his vL BOILER which, for the last twelve months
ved them (wit
MEIKLEJON, HORTICULTURAL ENGINEER,
DALKEITH,
great number of Gardens
has been in constant use in a
ithout one ene exception) highly satisfactory opa ials =. been received.
kingdoms, and from all parties who e thus pro
P io: experience and — practice in vun large ranges of every description have enabled him to ed his durable, cheap, and efficien
Boiler, possessing advantages which he is certain will r mend it to all parties — in Hortieultaral pu uits. M em also draw the attention of his
Customers and others to THOMSONS IMPROVED SINGLE RETORT BOILERS, of the only authorised aite
No. 1. SINGLE RETORTS ... ew .£4 0 0 AMATEUR BOILER ... .4210 0
Set of Furnace Mountings, complete... 1 15 0 Set of Furnace Mountings complete 115 0
.One Tube for. each Boiler, 1s. 6d. Including front 018 0
TESTIMONIALS:— é
e ES "Sir —I have much ere in Dearing 2 the rde Gardens, Norton Hall, Sheffield, March 10, E
Dear Sir, —Àt the time I ordered five of th x ue; =r diintiot speak too highly of your No. 1 Cruci
form Boil
e heating apparatus you hav
t the ey w
Sinco. the
t in my own sind
—
fitted 37 47 1
constructed upon sound theoretical puntos
directions of Mr. Thomson, Dalkeith Gardens. ero undor | ale tions. 1 cann ot speak,
have seen Several of them at wor k, and am
my opinion of their great efficacy in practi ice, nor is this
full capabi lities
very setere sent we have 55 e Tike sufficient ane eee with
my
rm you that
d), but I find in ordinary v wen — " — — its powers. It consumes a very s uantity of —
- th all co! en dene equally well with Ather) and require
q
© during the DUE
winter s speak m me e highest terms st the
5 littl „while the peculiarity of its form ed
| the anh of 2 an ak mat pu d T common bricklayer-
md nearly 4000 feet of Inch —— besides numerous
er ve
rticul-
Ho
tural Engineering, that you will r a Mo G 9 re-
ads and patent valves fixed in n — 5 [i
each wA feet long bys 20 = es Med "e | ,
P1 31 (Signed)
N M ADAMS.”
ward for your exertions t
qualified a
eap
han any expression I can give you
of my un m, &c.,
proval of them.—I a
(S — — ruin
* Garden Architect and Landscape Gardener."
The Gardens, Dalkeith xim April 28, 1859.
“Dear Sir,—I bear willing testim the — —
manufact:
the te houses in width and od 1 ned find your New
Patent Stop Valves answer admirably. d
(Signed) H. Rose.”
“The Gard
5 Fatent Boiler gives entire
B 8 P
3 3 n m £f fuel d lh doubt
ens, Dalhousie Castle, April 28,
aiiis, 5 and 1
“The Gardens; Bothwell Castle, April 11, 1859.
A | 1 but it ill be f md t heating
Crucif Webbed Boiler, lately fitted up here for tl | hoth uses, churches, 40 Your Patent Ground Valves also
in which you BAS qs Retort Boi
hh.
e getting up of
as well as t P >
he re
these Boilers. I am iis
ing to my specification ns in the new range of glass, deem
erected for his Grace the Duke - wee y^ sem astle,
Me I emi our Patent Brass Stop Valve ——
Te eim » eni: a good Stop Valve
gore apes qd yet 0 simple as not to be easily
osion.—I am, &
(Signed)
. WüIian THOMSON.”
md efficiently, with a considerab! Je Ne of Pigs 5 and RE
l, what was formerly heated by five fire
(Signed) ix 9
zx Yuki STEWART."
(Signed)
tt Culereuch, Stirlingshire, March 11, 1859.
vi Sir, + Having now Tire fair trial of the Hot-water Appa- |
erected |
p by y the new range of ouses
| for A. G. S iers, Esq., I beg to inform you of my entire satis-
ith it as a e, and m particularly with y
SAN mlanrig Gardens, d March 10, No. 2 Patent Boiler, Its heatin are very great, con- | tha
Patent Cru — 2 iid — e = saying that — simple, management remarkably easy, and what is 2
0 ebbe — win ou have ere ted erat dart a great quanti! of fuel. 2 Pillars oh
here for his Grace the Duke of Buc each s : d = Morena d 1 T
facti | š
* short tim of p houses. Altogether the work execui
Healy proving — value and capabilities of your Boiler, Toa the usual quantity or coal —— for one fire. I con " — has been döne in a very superior
Boller, being moon ili eof gre ee NE testimony to its
out my experi zn h
Boiler th t inn
&c
(Signed) “James poses.
engaged in pursuits, but more — — Signed) Piu Maas,
Seta MD Unum | «Gr to the Rt. Hon. Hon. Lord Panmure, Panmure Castle, N. B.“
~I am, (Sign t
THE GARDENERS'
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.
| May 28, 1859,
L STO! m * co; * e Nurseries, Sturmer,
Halstead, Essex, will have gr = pleasure in n forwarding
to any part “upon recat of 10s., ham pen and o caning ie Pal id to
BER:
SPERGULA
THE NEW GRASS SUBSTITUTE FOR EN
LA PIII ERA.
KB ROWWN
few thousand ready for sale of this handsome Grass- like pen plant, well Sent dee =
London, the following kinds of HA
P varieti of : Tone H 2 varieties of [mcam Flowers
Cle: fine Ivies
Ü ~ Solanum
O BASS &
* Climbing Roses 1 Ampelopsis (tricolor)
The Pane Summer ditto, W 20 Pianta for 6s. (viz.),
hamper, LH E
2 Maur: ind as in varieties 2 Ke — in varieties ngos per dozen; or damp-moss "am
2 lampen s 4 Tropæolum d. per — extr 25 or Gd. per dozen for more t
2 1 . AT
3 » 4 Ipomoea plants. Bas WwN'S etn CA
Also the usual. BE LANTS in well ens and | Bedding Plants, — on applicatio!
Goods (20s. and
ING P.
edened stuff, hamper, &c, 20s, per 100.
HERBACEOUS, all the best two of a kind, 20s. pey
a doz
TALOGUE, 0 their Superb Achimenes,
requested, and sent
8 as to distance and Hs. "eani
Gloxinia 5; Geert nt
Dir vere
) Carriage free to all Stations in London, &c. See Catalogue
oii ll NTS.—As orders — the
Plants We ‘be selected, and set iilo until they are
SEED & NURSERY ESTABLISHMENT, SUDBURY, SUFFOLK,
bes
coqui, The ee 12 dozen Plants can be had for 258.,
package includ
12 Scarlet — |
12 Yel. Calceolarias
2 dark ditto
12 Gazania
12Petunias [sima!
12 Blue Lobelia
12 Vinca elegantis-
H Blue Verbenas
2 White Verbenas
Thirteen Plants to SS dozen. 200 Plants for 21s.,
8 left to JOHN JEYES.
EYES respectfully invites attention to a very fine
COLLECTION of FERNS.
—The most beautiful of all variegated
an evergreen a
resembles when in fo
CHOICE BEDDING PLANTS, &
AGERATUM ALBUM, white, 4s. per doz
CGRLESTIN UM, blue, best variety p per v
SO ;LUCIDA VARIEGATA, beautiful for edging, 90s.
VAGALLIS, large red, do. blue, 4s, per dozen
LANTIRRHIN UM YOUELLI, a beautiful vari riety
bushy habit. The flowers a
with white tube, dozen. uced in
ium.
mpton Nurseries.
A TM. CUTBUSH AND SON beg to state that they
can supply the following BEDDING . 5 Any
quantity of extra fine plants at the prices ann
P —s.d. pm er dozen.—s;d.
Lobelia speciosa ureu
M remis true) the bes
eat profusion on dense
Ageratum
Bt Ee regalium of bloom. 6s. Rea,
fo ore 2 lden yel- S 0
— excellent t plant RSS —.— Tom Thumb. 4 0 a —
1 rlarge Es 0 e. ^ to 6 0
Saler ven — i 40 . 40 BELLIS P pow Beigian Daisies, of the best
, 2*0 j ~40 BE Lis AUGUBA OLIA, a handsome variety, with
Jas, ot, all th is. to 9 0 repa meis gans(Crystal golden blovohed foli o and e scarlot . — 6s, per doz.
Fuchsias, of all the best Palace variety), a fre BERBERIS DARWINI, fine golden yellow, 6s. per dozen.
— teal .. 48, 65, and 9 0 Sowas br peni orange- CALYSTEGIA PUBESCENS (rose col double-flowering
Ge: d 15 Tom 1 — rer "ep — * Convolvulus), a good hardy climber, 6s. per dozen.
Vari ot e E 15 ? ? prx deris ower :6 5 CALCEOLARÍA AUREA FLORIB BUNDÁ, the most desirable
Heli "ad 8 of the PICO t of all M ye oe wering varieties. Strong plants, 4s. per
Lobelia ramosi En 0 „Edmonds er 18 0 | CALCEOLARIAS, of best kinds for bedding, assorted in
colours, 6: dozen.
— OR; GARGANICA, blue, very pretty,
s. per do:
CHRYSAN ^ ——2 yellow, 4s.
per
by name, 18s.
Der —— name, 188. and
Ditto, pee — 9 20s. and 30s. per dozen pairs.
low
— est mixed m MON, 125 vo EI — 9s. ditto
True old CLOVE CARNATI
Scarlet ditto
2s, 6d.
NCY, & FRENCH-SPOTTED PELARGONIUMS.
rge stock of remarkably ré plants of the above in
48- Su of all the — sorts, at 12.
ä FA
| LOPH
6s. p er di;
best named varieties, 4s. per dozen ; 80s. Lnd,
of dwarf, HELIOTROPES. of choice kinds, 6s. per doz
ES MS a brilliant orange scarlet | KONIGA VARIEGATA, vi
spikes | LANTA
very pretty for edging 48.,
NAS, 10 new and very bi beautiful edging 4 ia dopen,
of sorts, 68. per dozen.
ne selections of all the best named kinds, | LINUM FLAVUM, bright yellow, 6s. per
r dozen.
LOBELIA SPECIOSA, the best of. the. dart b Ble mati 4
er dozen.
3? 3
OSPERMUM
LYCHNIS CORON ATA cre — Scarlet, 95. per dozen.
MAURANDYA BARCLAYANA, blue and white, 4s. per dozen.
MATHIOLA TRISTIS, night-scented Stock, 6s. pe
ä T
E DE
NASTURTIUM TRIOM D, ) fine for baskets, 61.
LILLE SCHMIDT r dozen.
DOUBLE esi AND DOUBLE YELLOW, 63.
per doze:
NIEREMBERGIA FILICAULIS, white, lavender eye, very.
er dozen,
0 Athy FLONIBUSD A AND BOSRA U
e bed o: JW per dozen.
GNOTHERA 1 MACROCARPA, arpo yellow id - dozen, 25s.
rd
AXACIFOLIA, large white, 6s. per dozen.
PETUNIAS_M e pan MES 12 new, |
— uble vari 3
» Double of E por d 65. pei r dom.
* oie of Suffolir, be beautiful v ipis im tin
rge p!
ditt Ec
ic i aud 7E 108 O , 188., and 24s. per dozen; NEW ener ue Í EXTRAVAGANZA" For particulars sorts, asso col and 6s. per dozen.
e Advertisement, 26. Price 3s. 6d. per pair, PM SES Finest Ars t-c ow varieties, by name, 98. p. dds.
LIMANTHUM S RUSSELLIANUS. TEMONS, of sorts, i — the new kinds, 66.
w. C. & Son beg to intimate that they can supply strong | PINKS.— The —— t class show me, 98, per doz. iR LOXES- t and select collection of
ES. of the above elegant Conservatory Plants in 48-pots, x mixed border PINKS, 6s. per per pele SR. airs jaa s fine and newly intro-
at 25. Gd. each; or 248, per doz OBJEA SCANDENS, fine strong plants, 6s. per doz beautiful showy tribe, comprising oe y En per dozen, y
GUPHEAS, of sorts; 4s. per.dozen Guced varieties: framatho. ee Li
Hig seis Tendon CHRYSANTHEMUMS, ‘the of. the new arge | pq ior variptios, 80 temen Mis
NEW FRENCH flowering and Pompone kinds, 6s, per tot. re PHYGELIUS CAPENSIS, a handsome Fentstemon ae
OHN. STANDISH can 5 the Um CHEIRANTHUS: pope eL — produc: | SALVIAS 0 pnt — ucing» tu tube shaped loca 9 5
? best that were sent out last year, ho ho ent T e STATICE” MARITIMA -ROSEA AND. PSEUDO RMERL
in bloom, and selected t he AS, fino. URPLE ZÜLUN xe ie b mamor Tl pet ides Strong plants o — — — and hard
Scarlet, 6s. M. per dosen. — — a prof
the m
ET UAI. and permanent ed of, tie mie MEDIA A handsome -hardy